Maurice Byers played a role in the
1975 Australian constitutional crisis, which brought his former colleagues
Gough Whitlam and (now Sir)
John Kerr into conflict in the most dramatic way. Whitlam was now the
Labor Prime Minister, and in 1974 he had appointed Kerr
Governor-General. Byers' predecessor as Solicitor-General was
Bob Ellicott, who had served under Whitlam but resigned in 1973 to enter politics himself and was now a
Liberal Party member of the
House of Representatives and a member of the Shadow Cabinet of
Opposition Leader Malcolm Fraser. As the crisis caused by the
Senate's blocking of Supply deepened, Ellicott issued a legal advice on 16 October 1975, to the effect that the Governor-General had the power to dismiss Whitlam, and should do so forthwith if Whitlam could not state how he would obtain Supply. Kerr rang Whitlam on 19 October, asking permission to consult with the Chief Justice of the
High Court, Sir
Garfield Barwick (who was himself a former Liberal politician and
Attorney-General, and who happened to be Bob Ellicott's cousin). Whitlam advised Kerr not to consult with Barwick, quoting precedent stretching back over 50 years. On 21 October Kerr requested that the Government provide him with a written legal opinion rebutting Ellicott's opinion. On 22 October Whitlam asked his Attorney-General
Kep Enderby to prepare such advice, and he in turn delegated the task to his Solicitor-General, Maurice Byers, who prepared a 6,000-word document. Enderby disagreed with parts of the advice, and when he handed it to Kerr on 6 November, he did so with Byers' name crossed out and his own inserted. By now Kerr had determined to sack Whitlam if he would not advise an election to break the impasse and guarantee Supply. But he formed the view that Whitlam should be given no hint of his thinking, and he (Kerr) should seek his own counsel. Contrary to Whitlam's express instruction, Kerr met with Barwick and asked him for a written opinion, which was provided on 10 November, and which concurred with Ellicott's view. On 11 November, Kerr dismissed Whitlam's government and commissioned Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister; it was a condition of Fraser's appointment that he guarantee Supply and immediately advise a general election. Later that day, the Senate granted Supply, an election was called for
13 December, and Parliament was dissolved in a
double dissolution. On 17 November, Maurice Byers' opinion was leaked to
The Australian Financial Review, and it acutely embarrassed both Kerr and Barwick. Byers said parts of the Ellicott opinion were "clearly wrong" and said "the mere threat of, or indeed the actual rejection of, Supply neither calls for the ministry to resign nor compels the Crown's representative thereupon to intervene". The leak undermined the justification Kerr had given for his action, and led to him disclosing the advice he had taken from the Chief Justice, contrary to his Prime Minister's instruction. ==Later career==