transmitting and receiving messages by wireless telegraphy as H. C. therein mentioned, and it empowers the Governor-General to make regulations, not inconsistent with the Act, prescribing all matters CARBINES which by the Act are required or permitted to be prescribed, or which are necessary or convenient to be prescribed, for carrying out or giving effect to the Act.
It was said that manufacture was a necessary ingredient of the establishment of wireless stations or appliances for the purpose of transmitting or receiving messages, or else that the monopoly demanded the full regulation of all those engaged in operating transmitters or receivers, including those manufacturing such appliances, in order to prevent abuses, or the use of inefficient plant, or infringements of the Act and Regulations. The Act, as Lord Davey said in Rossi v. Edinburgh Corporation 1, ought to be construed fairly' and "so " as reasonably to effect the " purposes of the Legislature. But it ought not to be extended, by implication, to matters beyond those necessary to accomplish those purposes, which are the transmission and receipt of wireless messages. A power to set up or to erect wireless appliances does not necessarily involve the manufacture of such appliances they may be otherwise acquired. And the regulation of those engaged in transmitting and receiving wireless messages does not warrant, in my opinion, the regulation of those engaged in the manufacture of wireless appliances.
Some reliance was placed upon the words in sec. 10 of the Act giving power to the Governor-General to make regulations convenient for carrying out or giving effect to the Act. But those words carry the case no further, for the regulations they refer to must be regulations convenient for carrying out the purposes of the Act, that is, the transmission and receipt of wireless messages, and not the purpose of manufacturing plant.
The appeal should be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed with costs. Solicitor for the appellant, Gordon H. Castle, Crown Solicitor for the Commonwealth.
Solicitor for the respondent, H. H. Hoare.
1(1905) A.C., at p. 27