its currency to the present appellant, and when it expired, as it
did on 14th July 1954, the appellant held over without the consent of the commissioner, and the latter at once took proceedings in
INVESTMENTS a court of petty sessions under S. 23 of the Landlord and Tenant
Act 1899-1948 (N.S.W.) to recover possession of the premises. At the hearing the commissioner proved all that was necessary to entitle him to succeed if he was not bound by S. 62 of the Landlord (N.S.W.).
and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1948-1952, but he did not prove com- pliance with Pt. III of that Act. In particular he did not prove that he had given the appellant any notice to quit satisfying the conditions prescribed by sub-s. (3) of S. 62, or that any of the pre- scribed grounds enumerated in sub-s. (5) of that section existed. The magistrate, however, adjudged the commissioner entitled to possession and ordered a warrant to issue to give him possession accordingly. The appellant then obtained from the Supreme Court of New South Wales an order nisi for statutory prohibition. The Full Court, after argument, discharged the order nisi, and the appellant appeals to this Court by special leave.
It is not in dispute that the premises in question are "pre- scribed premises" in the sense which that expression has in S. 62 by virtue of the definition in S. 8 (1); nor that by reason of the provision in S. 8 (2) the appellant and the respondent are respectively the lessee and the lessor of the premises within the meaning of S. 62 notwithstanding that the lease has expired. It is clear, therefore, that if the commissioner is bound by S. 62 the magistrate's order was wrongly made and the order nisi for prohibition should have been made absolute. The commissioner, however, contends that the Crown is not bound by S. 62, and that as a consequence he himself is not bound by it. That the Crown is not bound is clear, for S. 5 specifically provides that the Act shall not bind the Crown in right of the Commonwealth or of the State. Whether the asserted consequence follows is the question we have to consider.
In the affidavit relied upon by the appellant the ground of prohibition was described in a familiar form of words. It was said that " the Commissioner for Railways is not the Crown and is bound by the Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1948-1952 It is, of course, quite common, where some immunity or advantage is claimed for an individual or a body by reference to a special position which the law accords to the Crown, to speak of the individual or body as being or not being the Crown. This use of language is open to the objection that not only is it for obvious reasons technically inexact but it tends to obscure the real nature of the problem. The Sovereign alone is the Crown. In this country,