covenants, and cl. 3 was in the following terms: The with the Minister and the Board that the date hereinbefore mentioned as the date of allotment" (scil. 1st December 1950) shall be the commencing date of any lease or grant of the said land which may hereafter be granted or made to the licensee pursuant to any Statute of Parliament passed in that behalf, and that the rental payable under such lease shall be not less than the sum of £170 in respect of the land and £60 in respect of improvements thereon." The board, after the passing of the War Service Land Settlement Act 1950 (Tas.), determined to calculate rents of allotments on a new basis from that set out in the earlier circulars. The plaintiff contended that he had a con- tractual right to have the rent of lot 22 determined in accordance with the
Held, that no contract had been established because, inter alia, the circulars were not contractual documents and, in any event, the terms on which the parties had not agreed were not such as might be implied by law.
Defendants in an action in the Supreme Court of Tasmania, although successful, were ordered to bear their own costs because they had raised by their defence the Statute of Frauds and another technical defence, on neither of which they subsequently relied or needed to rely. The unsuccessful plaintiffs having unsuccessfully appealed to the High Court,
Held, that the defendants were entitled to their costs in the Supreme Decision of the Supreme Court of Tasmania (Morris C.J.), varied.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Tasmania.
Edward Nicholson Milne, Neil Peter Mulcahy, William Edward Maxwell, Lionel Percy Milne, Alan Richard Butters, Alexander Lexicon Graeme-Evans, Frank Burgess Powell, George William Brasher, Devlin James Nickolls, Edward Louis Archer, Paul Philip Nichols, Philip Hilyer Mason, Vincent George Manning, Ross Allen Johnston, Roy Alexander Gourlay, Edgar William Bannister, Frank Maxwell Downham, Dermot Glynn Rice and Randolph Wybert Bannister on 2nd December 1952 commenced an action in the Supreme Court of Tasmania against the Attorney- General for the State of Tasmania, the Closer Settlement Board, the Honourable John James Dwyer who was sued as Minister for Agri- culture of the State of Tasmania and Raymond James Veale who was sued as the Director of Land Settlement for the State of Tasmania.
The action was heard before Morris C.J. The case of Edward Nicholson Milne being typical it was agreed that it should be the only case heard. On 12th November 1954 Morris C.J., in a written judgment, held that judgment should be entered for the defendants.