Bank of New South Wales v Commonwealth

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Bank of NSW v Commowealth
High Court of Australia
Full case name Bank of New South Wales v The Commonwealth
Date decided 11 August 1948
Citations
Judges sitting Latham CJ, McTiernan, Starke, Dixon, Rich and Williams JJ
Case history
Prior actions: none
Subsequent actions: Appeal to Privy Council
Case opinions
Failure to provide for the provision of interest on compensation makes the acquisition of bank shares and business and acquisition in violation of the protection provided by pl.(xxxi)

Bank of New South Wales v The Commonwealth (1948) 76 CLR 1, also known as the Bank Nationalisation Case, is a very famous case of the High Court of Australia

[edit] Background

Comfortable in government after two strong election wins, the Labor government of Ben Chifley announced in 1947 its intention to nationalise private banks in Australia. It achieved this process by passing the Banking Act 1947. The policy was that Banks would be purchased by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which in turn would be owned by the Federal Government. The policy proved very controversial, and the Bank of New South Wales challenged the constitutional validity of the law.

[edit] Decision

The Court hearing lasted for a record 47 days. A number of arguments were put to the Court. The Court rejected most of these arguments. However it did eventually decided that the mechanism used to nationalise the banks was not on "just terms" and ergo violated the protections placed into the Constitution in placitum (xxxi).

[edit] Aftermath

The case was appealed to the Privy Council. The Chifley Government lost power ostensibly due to the problems regarding this legislation and the Court case.