Constitution (pronounced kon-sti-too-shun)
(1) The
formal or informal system of primary principles and rules regulating a
government or other institution.
(2) In
law, a legal document describing such a formal system.
(3) In
Roman Catholicism, a document issued by a religious authority serving to
promulgate some particular church laws or doctrines.
(4) A
person's physical makeup or temperament, especially in respect of robustness; the
general health of a person (now less common except in technical use).
1350-1400:
From the Middle English constitucioun
& constitucion (edict, law,
ordinance, regulation, rule, statute; body of laws or rules, or customs; body
of fundamental principles; principle or rule (of science); creation), from the twelfth
century Old French constitucion (constitution,
establishment) (which persists the in modern French constitution), a learned
borrowing from the Latin cōnstitūtiō
& cōnstitūtiōnem (character,
constitution, disposition, nature; definition; point in dispute; order,
regulation; arrangement, system), from cōnstituō
(to establish, set up; to confirm; to decide, resolve). A common use of cōnstitūtiōnem was as a noun of state from past-participle stem of constituere (to cause to stand, set up,
fix, place, establish, set in order; form something new; resolve), The construct was constitute + -ion. Constitute
was from the Middle English constituten,
from the Latin cōnstitūtum (neuter of
cōnstitūtus, past participle of cōnstituō (to put in place, set up,
establish). The
–ion suffix was from the Middle English -ioun,
from the Old French -ion, from the
Latin -iō (genitive -iōnis).
It was appended to a perfect passive participle to form a noun of action
or process, or the result of an action or process. Constitution & constitutionality are nouns, constitutionally
is an adverb, constitutional is an adjective; the noun plural is constitutions.
The meaning
“action of establishing; creating" dates from circa 1400 while that of "way
in which a thing is constituted" was from circa 1600. The once common sense of "physical
health, strength and vigor of the body" was from the 1550s, extended some
thirty year later to "temperament & character", both now rare
though not yet archaic. The sense of
"mode of organization of a state" emerged around the turn of the
seventeenth century, evolving gradually to by the 1730s conveying the idea of a
"system of principles by which a community is governed", finally by the
late eighteenth century being understood as “document of basic or foundational
laws”, something which reflected the influence of the US and French
constitutions. Although rare, constitutions
of nations can be described as “unwritten” which is a little misleading because
probably every aspect of an “unwritten” constitution in a modern state does
exist somewhere in writing (statute, legal judgments etc) so a better
expression is probably “un-codified”.
The best known example of the “unwritten constitution” is that of England
where it’s understood as the collective name for the fundamental principles
established by the political development of the English people embodied variously
in common law, statute and in long-accepted precedents. Liking the flexibility afforded, no British
government has ever seriously contemplated a written constitution.
The
adjective constitutional dates from the 1680s in the sense of "pertaining
to a person's (physical or mental) constitution" and came to be used to
mean "beneficial to bodily constitution" in the mid-eighteenth
century and came later to be applied adjectivally to heath remedies as varied
as morning walks and the odd medicinal brandy.
The meaning in legal judgements "authorized or allowed by the
political constitution" was first used in 1765 while the “constitutional
monarchy” (a monarchy constrained by law and democratic institutions) was first
described (in France and apparently without irony) in 1801. From constitutional as a legal concept came
the inevitable adverb constitutionally, recorded first in 1767 although the
noun constitutionality (quality of being in accord with a constitution) seems
not to have left the judicial pen until 1787.
The
substantive moments in Australian constitutional development
1770: Captain James Cook, on a voyage under
the auspices of the Admiralty, claims eastern coastline of Australian continent
for the British Crown.
1788: Government of the UK conducts successful
invasion on 26 February. Colony of NSW
established and occupation of the continent begins as a colonial project,
initial as a penal settlement.
1825: Limited
self-government granted by the Colonial Office which (with variations in detail)
is between 1825-1890 introduced for the colonies of NSW, Tasmania, New Zealand,
Victoria, South Australia, Queensland and Western Australia.
1901: The six Australian colonies
federate as the Commonwealth of Australia.
The Australian Constitution, an act of the Imperial Parliament, becomes
basic law on 1 January 1901 creating the Parliament of Australia which
subsequently also passes the act of constitution, thus creating the nation
state in its original form.
1903: High Court of Australia
constituted.
1927: Division of the Imperial
Crown which, in effect, creates the Kingdom of Australia although this will not
be formalised until 1973. This was the
mechanism which began the process of the relationship with the monarch being
one increasingly disconnected from the UK government.
1931: Statute of Westminster
granted (almost complete) legislative independence to the Dominions (including
Australia) although it would be some time before the Australian government
sought to formalize the implications of this.
1949: Australian citizenship
created.
1969: The removal of rights of
appeal from federal courts to the Judicial Appeal Committee (the board) of the Privy
Council. This had the effect of making rulings
of the High Court final in all matters of Commonwealth law while appeals to London from state and territory courts remained possible.
1986: The Australia Acts
(simultaneous acts of the UK and Australian parliaments) sunder last remaining
legal connections between the two parliaments and legal systems (section 74 of the constitution notwithstanding).
The passage of the Australia Acts meant
Australia retained two remote constitutional connections of which, strictly
speaking, only one was with the United Kingdom.
The first is through the monarch, not as the King of England but of
Australia and of each of the states and the relationship between the monarch
(as head of state) and the Commonwealth is purely personal and wholly
unconnected with the UK. Were the UK to
become a republic this would have no constitutional effect in Australia and the
head of state would remain whomever is the relevant living successor in the
line of succession from Queen Victoria (1819-1901; Queen 1837-1901). The argument that more correctly the line of
succession should begin from a later monarch because of the change in
constitutional relationship is an interesting one for legal theorists but
because of the biological continuity, there’s no difference in consequence.

King William IV sits before a pie
containing two dozen blackbirds, served to him by Lord Melbourne (1836),
colored lithograph by HB (John Doyle (1797-1836). Lord Melbourne (1779–1848; UK prime-minister
1834 & 1835–1841) was the last prime minister dismissed by the monarch,
William IV (1765–1837; King of the United Kingdom & King of Hanover 1830-1837)
determining his commission in 1834.
The relationship is of interest because in
legal theory, everything done by the governments (state and federal) is lawful
because of powers which can be traced back to those of the monarch. These powers are a construct of conventions,
codified law, legal fictions and precedent and can be understood when
deconstructed rather than observed in operation. For example, the King, being the Lord
Paramount in Australia technically owns all the land and other traditional forms
of ownership (leasehold & freehold) are actually grants from the crown
which may be revoked. This is of course
best thought of as a legal fiction and more of a trustee relationship but does
illustrate the way that all power exercised by governments is ultimately
derived from those held by the monarch.
A saltwater crocodile.The powers of the
monarch of course exist but can’t in most cases be exercised by the
monarch. Of great interest to
Australians is the right of the monarch to dismiss a prime-minister and this
power still exists in the UK (those who suggest otherwise have no basis on
which to base the assertion) but because in Australia the powers have been
delegated to a governor-general, the monarch does not usually retain this
personal authority. However, although
it’s not certain, it’s probable that a monarch does re-assume the power if
standing on Australian soil but its exercise is politically unthinkable so were the need to arise to sack an Australian prime-minister while a Monarch was visiting, they
would immediately be taken for a day’s deep-sea fishing, it being necessary
only to be 12 miles (20 km) off the coast to be in international waters, thus
allowing a governor-general do their dirty work. If the need was to dismiss a state premier or
territory chief minister, then the monarch would need only to go for a swim
because once beyond the low-water line off the coast, they would be splashing
around in commonwealth waters and the governor would be free to swing the
axe. That sound tactic would be fine
except in the Northern Territory because up there, anyone stepping foot in the ocean will
probably be eaten by a saltwater crocodile (known up there, almost affectionately, as "salties") so a wise monarch will make a sudden
dash for the Queensland, South Australian or Western Australian border, presumably choosing whichever is the closer. Even
though the Northern Territory government has (most unfortunately) done away
with the de-restricted (ie no speed limits) roads in the outback, the monarch is
exempt from such tiresome rules so it’d be a quick trip.

In the pink, taking a morning constitutional: Lindsay
Lohan out walking, Los Angeles, 2010.
The other connection has long been thought
a historic relic. Section 74 of the
constitution provides for an appeal from the High Court to the Privy Council if
the court issues a certificate that it is appropriate for the Privy Council to
determine an inter se (a case concerning constitutional relations between the
Commonwealth and one or more states or between states) matter. The only such certificate was issued in 1912
and in 1985, the High Court judges (unanimously) observed that the power to
grant such a certificate “…has long since been spent… and is
obsolete". However, it’s there with
full legal force so, in the strict constitutional sense, an appeal from the
High Court, however unlikely, remains possible.