Supreme Court of Christmas Island
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Supreme Court of Christmas Island was the highest court for Christmas Island, an external territory of Australia. The court was originally established in 1958 after sovereignty over the island was transferred from the United Kingdom to Australia. The court had jurisdiction to deal with all serious crimes and major civil claims for damages occurring on the island. The court was abolished on 10 May 2002.
Judges from Australian courts were appointed to be judges of the court. Those judges would travel to the island to hear, consider and determine cases. In 1992, courts in Western Australia were given concurrent authority to deal with cases on the island, and those courts became the main venue in which litigation was conducted. Since the court's abolition, its functions have been replaced by the Supreme Court of Western Australia, which now has sole jurisdiction on the island.
First courts on the island
Europeans first discovered the island of Christmas Island on Christmas Day, 25 December 1643. Captain William Mynors gave the island its name because of the day it was found.
The British Crown annexed the uninhabited island on 6 June 1888 following the discovery of phosphate on the island. The island was annexed to the Straits Settlements colony on 10 June 1900. Japanese Imperial Forces occupied the island during the Second World War. After the end of the Second World War, a military court was set up in Singapore to prosecute seven people for mutiny during the war. With the dissolution of the Straits Settlements in 1946, the island was included within the new Singapore colony. On 1 October 1958, sovereignty over the island was transferred to the Australian Government following a payment to the Government of Singapore,[1] after a brief period as a separate British colony.
Until 1992, Singapore laws continued to apply to the island, although this changed when legislation was passed bringing the laws of the country into line with Australian law.[2][3]
Court history
In 1958 Australia accepted Christmas Island as a territory,[4] and established the court under the Christmas Island Act 1958.[5] The court was designated a superior court of record and had all the same powers that other supreme courts in Australia had. The court was to be constituted according to local ordinances made by the Governor-General of Australia on the advice of the Australian Government.[6][7]
The court was a superior court and a court of record. Judges appointed by the Governor-General constituted it as required. The court was permitted to sit anywhere in Australia as the interests of justice required, and was not confined to hearing a case on the island.[8] When hearing criminal cases, the court sat with a jury to determine an accused person's guilt.[9] If the court sat outside the island, the court could use jurors from the State or Territory that the court was actually sitting at.[10]
In 1987, a murder trial before the court was aborted by Justice John Gallop on the grounds that no impartial jury could be found among the island's residents.[11] The trial was subsequently moved to Perth, where a local jury found two men guilty of murdering Soo Ten Chan in order to steal his gambling winnings.[12] The case exposed a number of issues with Christmas Island's justice system: the local assembly had to pass an ordinance to allow for a jury trial, as there was previously no such legal right, and the federal government subsequently had to amend the Christmas Island Act to allow for the court to be moved to Perth.[13]
Judges of the court
| Name | Position | From | To | Term | Comments | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Edward Arthur Dunphy | Judge | 9 March 1961 | 31 December 1982 | 21 years, 297 days | Commonwealth Industrial Court (1956–1982) ACT Supreme Court (1958–1982) Supreme Court of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands (1961–1982) Supreme Court of Norfolk Island (1969–1982) Court of Appeal of Nauru (1967–1982) | [14][15] |
| Sir William Forster | Judge | 20 September 1979 | 30 January 1989 | 9 years, 132 days | NT Supreme Court (1971–1985) | [16][17] |
| John Gallop | Additional Judge | 20 September 1979 | 8 May 1989 | 9 years, 230 days | ACT Supreme Court (1982–2000) | [16] |
| Judge | 9 May 1989 | 30 July 2000 | 11 years, 82 days | [17] | ||
| Robert French | Additional Judge | 9 May 1989 | 15 November 2000 | 11 years, 190 days | [17] |
References
- Jupp, James (2001). The Australian People. Cambridge University Press. p. 323. ISBN 0-521-80789-1.
- Rumley, D; Forbes, V.L. & Griffin, C (2006). Australia's Arc of Instability. Springer Publishing. p. 74. ISBN 1-4020-3825-9.
- Christmas Island Act 1958 (Cth).
- Cowan, Zelman (1959). Federal Jurisdiction in Australia. Oxford University Press. p. 144. ISBN 0-19-550054-7.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - Allan, D E (1959). "Review of Legislation: II Commonwealth". University of Western Australia Law Review.(1959) 4 University of Western Australia Law Review 496 at p 532.
- "Justice Gallop aborts Christmas Island trial". The Canberra Times. 17 November 1987.
- "Christmas Is. men guilty of murder". The Canberra Times. 2 May 1988.
- "Law on Indian Ocean islands is 'hopelessly outdated'". The Canberra Times. 25 June 1989.
- "Appointment of Edward Arthur Dunphy as Acting Judge of the Supreme Court of Christmas Island" (PDF). Cth Gazette. 23 March 1961. p. 1199.
- "Appointment of Edward Arthur Dunphy as Judge of the Supreme Court of Christmas Island" (PDF). Cth Gazette. 8 June 1961. p. 2175.
- "Appointment of William Forster & John Gallop to the Supreme Court of Christmas Island" (PDF). Cth Gazette. 9 October 1979. p. 3.
- "Federal Court of Australia judicial changes the first 30 years (1977-2007)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 February 2017.