substantial, and proximate. Has the Act now under considera- tion such an effect on inter-State commerce ? And further, supposing this question to be answered in the affirmative, and AUSTRALIAN having due regard to the cases of The King v. Barger 1 and Osborne v. The Commonwealth 2, is the enactment on its face, when fairly construed, an attempt to deal with inter-State commerce, as delimited by the reasoning I have quoted, or is it an attempt at social reform, or any other "matter outside the ambit of the powers conferred" ? If the three Australian cases
I have mentioned are to remain authorities of this Court, the above seem to me to be the questions we are to deal with.
First, then, is the effect upon the operation of inter-State commerce direct, substantial, and proximate ? This seems to me to depend upon the question whether it regulates that commerce
SO as really and substantially "to foster, protect, control," or "restrain" " it "with appropriate regard for the welfare of those who are immediately concerned and of the public at large." think we are not concerned in this case with the last eighteen words. At any rate, my conclusion is the same, whether they are material or not.
The argument in support of the enactment contends that its effect is, in the sense of these terms, to foster and protect the operations of commerce between the States.
The first sub-section of sec. 5 purports to render the employer liable to pay compensation if personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment is caused to a seaman. But by sub-sec. 2 (c) compensation, where the accident is caused by the serious and wilful misconduct of the seaman, is limited to cases in which the accident results in death or serious and permanent disablement. In the absence of such misconduct the liability purports to extend to all injuries, whether fatal or dis- abling or not, caused by any accident, and apart from any act or omission of the shipowner, to a seaman employed by him, SO long as the accident has arisen out of and in the course of his employment.
In the case of injury by accident arising from the negligence of the employer, whether that negligence be his own or vicarious
16 C.L.R., 41. 212 C.L.R., 321.