Held, by Latham C.J., Evatt and McTiernan JJ., that this section was not ultra vires as imposing a duty of excise contrary to sec. 90 of the Constitution.
Crothers v. Sheil, (1933) 49 C.L.R. 399, applied.
APPEALS, by way of order to review, from a Court of Petty Sessions of Victoria.
Thomas Walsh, an inspector under the Dried Fruits Act 1928 (Vict.), laid an information against Frank Hartley in the Court of Petty Sessions at Mildura, alleging that on 27th March 1937 at Mildura the defendant sold certain dried fruits, to wit, forty-eight sweat boxes of currants, which had not been packed in a registered packing shed, contrary to reg. 22 of the Dried Fruits Regulations 1936, made under the provisions of the Dried Fruits Act. The informant also laid similar informations against Alfred Edwards, Herbert Windsor Tickell and Charles Dennett.
The evidence showed that the defendants, who were growers of dried fruit, sold some of their produce to Frederick A. James, a South Australian packer of dried fruits and the proprietor of a packing shed in that State, that James bought the produce in Victoria for the purpose, apparently, of conveying it to his packing shed in South Australia, that the produce sold was "unprocessed" and had not been packed in a registered packing shed, and that James was not registered as a shed owner or dealer in Victoria. The police magis- trate found as against each of the defendants that a sale in contra- vention of reg. 22 had been proved and that the regulations did not conflict with sec. 92 of the Constitution. The defendants were accordingly convicted of a breach of the regulations.
From these decisions the defendants appealed, by way of order nisi to review, to the High Court.
Ward, for the appellants. Reg. 22 places a restriction on a factory proprietor's acquiring unprocessed fruit from Victorian producers and thus interferes with the freedom of inter-State trade. In the administration of the Act there is a discrimination between the packing sheds in Victoria and in other States. James v. The Commonwealth 1 rejected the theory that every regulation or
1(1936) A.C. 578; 55 C.L.R. 1.