Indigenous customary law Indigenous Australian customary law varied between language groups, clans, and regions. It developed over time from accepted norms within indigenous societies. The laws regulated human behaviour and relationships, mandated sanctions for misdeeds, and connected people with the land and each other through a system of relationships. Such law is often intertwined with cultural customs, stories, and practices. These customs were and are passed on intergenerationally through
oral tradition, often incorporated within cultural works such as
songlines, stories and dance.
Reception of English law The laws of England had evolved over centuries, with the common law emerging following the 1200s. This law was introduced to Australia through the colonisation of Australia by the British. By 1824, a court system based on the English model had been established through Acts of the
British Parliament. The
New South Wales Act 1823 provided for the establishment of a
Supreme Court with the power to deal with all criminal and civil matters "as fully and amply as Her Majesty's Court of
King's Bench,
Common Pleas and
Exchequer at
Westminster". This was confirmed by the
Australian Courts Act 1828 an act of the Imperial Parliament which had the effect of ensuring that all English common and statute law up to 28 July 1828 was to have effect in New South Wales and Tasmania, and later Victoria and Queensland when they separated from New South Wales. The reception of English law in Western Australia and South Australia was later deemed by statute to have occurred on 1 June 1829 and 28 December 1836 respectively. The earliest civil and criminal courts established from the beginnings of the colony of New South Wales were rudimentary, adaptive and military in character. A
Court Martial in the colony, for instance, required the presence of no less than five commissioned officers. Although
legality was not always observed, the courts limited the powers of the
Governor, and the law of the colony was at times more egalitarian than in Britain. Representative government emerged in the 1840s and 1850s, and a considerable measure of autonomy was given to local legislatures in the second half of the nineteenth century. Colonial Parliaments introduced certain reforms such as
secret ballots and
female suffrage, which were not to occur in Britain until many years later. Nevertheless, Acts of the
United Kingdom Parliament extending to the colonies could override contrary colonial legislation and would apply by "paramount force". New doctrines of English common law continued to be treated as representing the common law of Australia. For example, the doctrine of the famous case of
Donoghue v Stevenson from which the modern
negligence law derived, was treated as being latent already within the common law at the time of reception.
Federation and divergence Following a number of
constitutional conventions during the 1890s to develop a federal nation from the several colonies, the
Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act (Imp) was passed and came into force on 1 January 1901. Section 9 of this act contains Australia's constitution, to this day within a British act. Following federation, Britain's role in the government of Australia became increasingly nominal in the 20th century. However, there was little momentum for Australia to obtain legislative independence. The Australian States did not participate in the conferences leading up to the
Statute of Westminster 1931, which provided that no British Act should be deemed to extend to the
dominions without the consent of the dominion. The Australian Government did not invoke the provisions of the statute until 1942. The High Court also followed the decisions of the Privy Council during the first half of the twentieth century. Complete legislative independence was finally established by the
Australia Act 1986, passed by the United Kingdom Parliament. It removed the possibility of legislation being enacted at the consent and request of a dominion, and applied to the States as well as the Commonwealth. It also provided for the complete abolition of appeals to the Privy Council from any Australian court. The Australia Act represented an important symbolic break with Britain, emphasised by
Queen Elizabeth II's visit to Australia to sign the legislation in her legally distinct capacity as the Queen of Australia. Legislative independence has been paralleled by a growing divergence between Australian and English common law in the last quarter of the 20th century. In addition, a large body of English law received in Australia has been progressively repealed in state parliaments, such as in New South Wales by the
Imperial Acts Application Act 1969. == Sources of law ==