and his wife Jessie (first and second from right respectively), photographed at
Telopea Park in 1926 On the day that Federation was completed and Australia created, 1 January 1901, Garran, feeling like "a junior barrister suddenly promoted to the final court of appeal", was appointed secretary and Permanent Head of the
Attorney-General's Department by the first
Attorney-General of Australia,
Alfred Deakin. Garran was the first, and for a time the only, public servant employed by the
Government of Australia. Garran later said of this time that: I was not only the head [of the department], but the tail. I was my own clerk and messenger. My first duty was to write out with my own hand
Commonwealth Gazette No. 1 proclaiming the establishment of the Commonwealth and the appointment of ministers of state, and to send myself down with it to the government printer. In this role, Garran was responsible for organising the
first federal election in March 1901, and for organising the transfer of various government departments from
the states to the federal government, including the
Department of Defence, the
postal and
telegraphic services (now part of the
Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts) and the Department of Trade and Customs (now part of the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade). As parliamentary drafter, Garran also developed legislation to administer those new departments and other important legislation. The Act also conferred the right to vote on women federally, a cause Garran was, in private, gently mocking of. Garran and his fellow staff aimed for a simple style of legislative drafting, a goal enabled by the fact that there was no pre-existing federal legislation on which their work would have to be based. However, Garran himself admitted that his drafting could be overly simplistic, citing the first customs and excise legislation, developed with the Minister for Trade and Customs
Charles Kingston and Assistant Parliamentary Draftsman Gordon Castle, The other Crown Solicitors that Garran worked with were Gordon Castle (with whom he had also worked as a drafter) and
William Sharwood. In 1912, Garran was considered as a possible appointee to the High Court, following the expansion of the bench from five seats to seven and the death of Richard O'Connor.
Billy Hughes, Attorney-General in the
Fisher government at the time, later said Garran would have been appointed "but for the fact that he is too valuable a man for us to lose. We cannot spare him." Garran worked with eleven Attorneys-General as Permanent Head of the Department. Garran regarded the first Attorney-General, Alfred Deakin, as an excellent thinker and a natural lawyer, and on occasion "[spoke] of Deakin as the
Balfour of Australian politics." He was also very much impressed with the fifth Attorney-General,
Isaac Isaacs, who was an extremely diligent worker, and two time Attorney-General
Littleton Groom, who was "probably one of the most useful Ministers the Commonwealth has had."
Solicitor-General . Garran is in the front row, seated, second from left. Also pictured are
Billy Hughes, front centre, and Sir
Joseph Cook, seated, second from right. In 1916, Garran was made the first
Solicitor-General of Australia by Billy Hughes, who had since become Prime Minister as well as Attorney-General. The creation of the office and Garran's appointment to it represented a formal delegation of many of the powers and functions formerly exercised by the Attorney-General. Garran developed a strong relationship with Hughes, giving him legal advice on the
World War I conscription plebiscites and on the range of
regulations which were made under the
War Precautions Act 1914. The
War Precautions Regulations had a broad scope, and were generally supported by the High Court, which adopted a much more flexible approach to the reach of the Commonwealth's
defence power during wartime. A substantial amount of Garran's work during the war involved preparing and carrying out the regulations. Many of them were directed at maximising the economic aspect of the war effort and ensuring supplies of goods to Australian troops; others were directed at controlling citizens or former citizens of the enemy
Central Powers living in Australia. On one occasion, when Hughes had been informed that at a party hosted by a
German man, the band had played "
Das Lied der Deutschen", Hughes asked Garran "By the way, what is this tune?" to which Garran replied that it was
Haydn's melody to "
Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser", and as it was used as the tune to several
hymns "it was probably sung in half a dozen churches in Sydney last Sunday." Hughes then said "Good Heavens! I have played that thing with one finger hundreds of times." The partnership between Garran and Hughes is regarded by some as unusual, given that Garran was "tall, gentlemanly, wise and scholarly", and patient with his staff, whereas Hughes was "short of stature [and] renowned for bursts of temper." Nevertheless, the partnership was a successful one, with Hughes recognising the importance of Garran's constitutional expertise, remarking once about the World War I period that "the best way to govern Australia was to have Sir Robert Garran at [my] elbow, with a fountain pen and a blank sheet of paper, and the
War Precautions Act." Likewise, Garran respected Hughes's strong leadership style, which had been important in guiding the country through the war, although in describing the
Nationalist Party's loss in the
1922 federal election, Garran later said that "Hughes also overestimated his own hold on Parliament [although] his hold on the people was probably undiminished." Garran accompanied Hughes and
Joseph Cook (then the Minister for the Navy) to the 1917 and 1918 meetings of the
Imperial War Cabinet in London, United Kingdom, and was also part of the
British Empire delegation to the 1919
Paris Peace Conference in
Paris, France. There he was on several of the treaty drafting committees, and contributed to many provisions, notably the portions of the
League of Nations Covenant relating to
League of Nations mandates. Observing the proceedings, Garran admired the "moral and physical courage" of French premier
Georges Clemenceau, whom he regarded as determined to protect France from Germany but in a measured and temperate way; in Garran's words, Clemenceau "always withstood the excessive demands of the French chauvinists, of the French army, and of
Foch himself". Garran viewed some similarities between
British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and
United States President Woodrow Wilson where others saw only differences, since Lloyd George "also had a strong vein of idealism in his character", and Wilson could be pragmatic when the situation called for it, such as in discussions relating to American interests. Garran also met other political and military leaders at the conference, including
T. E. Lawrence, "an
Oxford youth of 29 – he looks 18", who was modest and "without any affectation... in a company of two or three [he] could talk very interestingly, but at a larger gathering he was apt to be dumb." Following the war, Garran worked with Professor
Harrison Moore of the University of Melbourne and
South Australian judge Professor
Jethro Brown on a report about proposed constitutional amendments which ultimately became the referendum questions put forward in the
1919 referendum. Through the 1920s and early 1930s, Garran prepared annual summaries of legislative developments in Australia, highlighting important individual pieces of legislation for the
Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law. Towards the end of his time as Solicitor-General, Garran's work included the preparation of the Debt Conversion Agreement between the Government of Australia and the governments of the states, which involved the federal government taking over and managing the debts of the individual states, following the
1928 referendum. In 1930, he was asked by the Scullin government to provide an opinion on whether
Norman Lindsay's novel
Redheap was indecent and obscene within the terms of section 52(c) of the
Customs Act 1901. He concluded that it was, and the
Department of Trade and Customs subsequently banned the book from being imported into Australia, the first book by an Australian author to suffer such a ban. It has been suggested that
Frank Forde, the Acting Minister for Trade and Customs, had already decided to ban the book, and sought Garran's advice primarily as a buffer against political criticism. ==Personal life and retirement==