Principle
The Melbourne Corporation principle is an implied limit on Commonwealth legislative power under the Constitution of Australia. The principle renders constitutionally invalid any Commonwealth law that is otherwise valid under a head of power in s51 or some other part of the Constitution if it: # Places a special burden on the states; # Significantly impairs, curtails or weakens the capacity of states or state agencies to exercise their constitutional powers or functions..Significance
This constitutional protection is one of the few reliable protections in the Australian Constitution against legislative and executive power, the other main protection being the Chapter III Separation of Powers Doctrine.Recent developments
The recent case of '' Austin v Commonwealth''. conflated the original two-limbed test of the original case into an expanded 1st limb so that a commonwealth law that affects a state's ability to administer itself is constitutionally invalid.See also
* '' Re Australian Education Union''External links
* (2003) 31(3) Federal Law Review 507.References
1947 in Australian law 1947 in case law Australian constitutional law High Court of Australia cases History of Melbourne Intergovernmental immunity in the Australian Constitution cases {{Australia-law-stub