Given the national adjudication scheme established under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ('Act), which 'deals distinctly' with matters concerning liquidation and distribution of federal jurisdiction among federal and state courts,' this article demonstrates it is 'plainly wrong' for Australian courts to continue to apply the principle propounded in Re Maidstone Palace of Varieties that the 'proper remedy for anyone aggrieved by [the liquidator's] conduct is to apply to [the] Court in the action in which he was appointed'. That the appointing court may invoke its inherent power to control the circumstances in which its own officers are to be subjected to personal pecuniary liability does not derogate from the fact that the requirement of ap...
The idea of introducing a monetary remedy for harm arising out of the misdirected exercise of public...
This article critically analyses the landmark reform of the Victorian court system from a comparativ...
This article seeks to discern trends emerging in several key decisions (Plaintiff M70/2011 v Ministe...
In November 2020, the NSW Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal seeking to overturn a decision refusi...
This Article argues that the decision in Miller v The Queen [2016] HCA 30 is supported neither by co...
Recently the Federal Court of Australia found that a Commonwealth Minister had committed the tort of...
Prompted by the Australian High Court’s decision in Commonwealth Bank of Australia v. Barker,1 this ...
In Australia, a supreme court has a supervisory role over the statutory adjudication process that ha...
In Australia, statutory construction adjudication is a fast payment dispute resolution process desig...
The grant of the prerogative writs and relief under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) in Austral...
Not all companies in Australia are amenable to a winding up order pursuant\ud to the Corporations Ac...
In a landmark decision in 1996, a majority of the High Court found that the principle of separation ...
The High Court has rejected the view that a state-appointed decision maker’s conduct can be immune f...
This article argues that the recent decision of the High Court of Australia in John Pfeiffer Pty Ltd...
The Kable principle is transforming Australian constitutional law. This article examines one aspect ...
The idea of introducing a monetary remedy for harm arising out of the misdirected exercise of public...
This article critically analyses the landmark reform of the Victorian court system from a comparativ...
This article seeks to discern trends emerging in several key decisions (Plaintiff M70/2011 v Ministe...
In November 2020, the NSW Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal seeking to overturn a decision refusi...
This Article argues that the decision in Miller v The Queen [2016] HCA 30 is supported neither by co...
Recently the Federal Court of Australia found that a Commonwealth Minister had committed the tort of...
Prompted by the Australian High Court’s decision in Commonwealth Bank of Australia v. Barker,1 this ...
In Australia, a supreme court has a supervisory role over the statutory adjudication process that ha...
In Australia, statutory construction adjudication is a fast payment dispute resolution process desig...
The grant of the prerogative writs and relief under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) in Austral...
Not all companies in Australia are amenable to a winding up order pursuant\ud to the Corporations Ac...
In a landmark decision in 1996, a majority of the High Court found that the principle of separation ...
The High Court has rejected the view that a state-appointed decision maker’s conduct can be immune f...
This article argues that the recent decision of the High Court of Australia in John Pfeiffer Pty Ltd...
The Kable principle is transforming Australian constitutional law. This article examines one aspect ...
The idea of introducing a monetary remedy for harm arising out of the misdirected exercise of public...
This article critically analyses the landmark reform of the Victorian court system from a comparativ...
This article seeks to discern trends emerging in several key decisions (Plaintiff M70/2011 v Ministe...