PGA v The Queen [2012] HCA 21 (30 May 2012)

Last Updated: 31 July 2012

HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA

FRENCH CJ,



GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ

PGA APPELLANT

AND

THE QUEEN RESPONDENT

PGA v The Queen [2012] HCA 21



30 May 2012



A15/2011

ORDER

Appeal dismissed.

On appeal from the Supreme Court of South Australia

Representation

D M J Bennett QC with P F Muscat SC and A L Tokley for the appellant (instructed by Legal Services Commission (SA))

M G Hinton QC, Solicitor-General for the State of South Australia with K G Lesses for the respondent and intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General for the State of South Australia (instructed by Director of Public Prosecutions (SA))

S J Gageler SC, Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth with G A Hill intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General of the Commonwealth (instructed by Australian Government Solicitor)

J D McKenna SC with G J D del Villar intervening on behalf of the Attorney-General of the State of Queensland (instructed by Crown Law (Qld))

Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law Reports.

CATCHWORDS

PGA v The Queen

Criminal law – Rape – Husband's immunity from prosecution for rape of wife – Presumption of consent to intercourse by wife in marriage – Appellant charged in 2010 with two counts of rape contrary to s 48 of Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) – Alleged rapes committed in 1963 against then spouse – Legislative amendments enabled institution of proceedings despite lapse of time – Elements of offence of rape in 1963 supplied by common law – Whether in 1963 common law of Australia presumed consent by wife in marriage.

Precedent – Judicial method – Development of common law – Whether presumption of consent by wife in marriage was part of common law of Australia – Whether statement of common law in R v L [1991] HCA 48; (1991) 174 CLR 379 applied to events alleged to have occurred in 1963.

Words and phrases – "common law", "marital exemption", "marital immunity", "presumption of consent", "rape", "retrospective application".

Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA), s 48.



Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 (UK) (20 & 21 Vict c 85).

FRENCH CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE, CRENNAN AND KIEFEL JJ. The appellant and his wife, the complainant, were lawfully married in South Australia on 1 September 1962. At the relevant times in 1963 they remained lawfully married and were cohabiting in South Australia as husband and wife at the house of her parents; there were in force no legal orders or undertakings of any kind which affected their matrimonial relationship.





The charges

On 5 July 2010, by information of the Director of Public Prosecutions of South Australia, the appellant was charged for trial in the District Court of South Australia with two counts of carnal knowledge, with four counts of assault occasioning actual bodily harm and, what is immediately relevant for this appeal, with two counts of rape (counts 3 and 5) contrary to s 48 of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) ("the CLC Act"). The particulars of count 3 were that between 22 March 1963 and 25 March 1963, at Largs Bay in South Australia, the appellant had vaginal sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent. The particulars of count 5 were that on or about 14 April 1963, also at Largs Bay, the appellant had vaginal sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent.



The issue before the Court is whether the appellant is correct in his contention that, as a matter of the common law, upon their marriage in 1962 his wife had given her consent to sexual intercourse and thereafter could not retract her consent, at least while they remained lawfully married, with the result that he could not be guilty of raping her as charged by counts 3 and 5.



The proposition of law upon which the appellant relies has its source in a statement in extra-judicial writings of Sir Matthew Hale, Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench (1671-1676), which were first published in 1736 as The History of the Pleas of the Crown. The statement by Hale is more fully set out later in these reasons [1] A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown, published in 1803 [2] A Practical Treatise on the Criminal Law, published in 1816 [3] A Treatise on Crimes and Misdemeanors, the first edition of which was published in 1819 [4]



Given this state of affairs, it is perhaps not surprising that the Canadian Criminal Code of 1892 (s 266) and the Criminal Code of Queensland of 1899 (s 347), in defining the crime of rape, included the phrase "not his wife" [5] [6] [7] [8]





"New cases will arise which will elude the most carefully constructed formula. The common law, proceeding, as we have pointed out, by a series of successive approximations – by a continual reconciliation of cases – is prepared for this, and simply modifies the form of its rule. But what will the court do with a code? If the code is truly law, the court is confined to a verbal construction of the rule as expressed, and must decide the case wrong. If the court, on the other hand, is at liberty to decide ex ratione legis, – that is, if it may take into account that the code is only intended to declare the judicial rule, and has done so defectively, and may then go on and supply the defect, – the code is not law, but a mere text-book recommended by the government as containing all at present known on the subject."

Indeed, in 1888, among the 13 judges sitting in the Court for Crown Cases Reserved, on the case stated in R v Clarence [9] Offences against the Person Act 1861 (UK) [10]



Thereafter, in the annotation to s 48 of the 1861 UK Act which appeared in Halsbury's Statutes of England, published in 1929 [11]





"It is said that a husband cannot be guilty of rape upon his wife as a principal in the first degree". (emphasis added)

The 28th edition of Archbold's Pleading, Evidence & Practice in Criminal Cases, published in 1931, four years before the enactment of the CLC Act, cited Hale for the proposition expressed as:

"It is a general proposition that a husband cannot be guilty of a rape upon his wife ... but it would seem that the proposition does not necessarily extend to every possible case" [12]

In the intervening period there appears to have been no reported case in England in which a husband had been prosecuted for the rape of his wife during their cohabitation [13]

As it stood in 1963, s 48 of the CLC Act stated:





"Any person convicted of rape shall be guilty of felony, and liable to be imprisoned for life, and may be whipped."

It is accepted that the elements of the offence of rape identified in s 48 were supplied by the common law.



Section 4 of the CLC Act had wholly repealed The Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1876 (SA). As amended by s 13 and the Schedule to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1925 (SA), s 60 of the 1876 statute had read:





"Whosoever shall be convicted of the crime of rape shall be guilty of felony, and, being convicted thereof, shall be liable to be imprisoned for life, with hard labor, and may be whipped." [14]

The scheme of the legislation in South Australia, in its various forms, was to classify the offence of rape as a felony and to specify the range of punishments upon conviction. This followed the pattern in s 48 of the 1861 UK Act. The legislative emphasis upon the classification of the crime and the punishments which might be inflicted, leaving the elements of the crime itself to the common law, reflected past fluctuations in the statute law. Shortly after the enactment of the 1861 UK Act, there appeared in the 5th edition (1877) of Russell's work, A Treatise on Crimes and Misdemeanors [15]





"This offence formerly was, for many years, justly visited with capital punishment; but it does not appear to have been regarded as equally heinous at all periods of our Constitution. Anciently, indeed, it appears to have been treated as a felony, and, consequently, punishable with death; but this was afterwards thought too hard; and, in its stead, another severe but not capital punishment was inflicted by William the Conqueror, namely, castration and loss of eyes, which continued till after Bracton wrote, in the reign of Henry III. The punishment for rape was still further mitigated, in the reign of Edward I, by the statute of Westm 1, c 13, which reduced the offence to a trespass, and subjected the party to two years' imprisonment, and a fine at the King's will. This lenity, however, is said to have been productive of terrible consequences; and it was, therefore, found necessary, in about ten years afterwards, and in the same reign, again to make the offence of forcible rape a felony, by the statute of Westm 2, c 34. The punishment was still further enhanced by the 18 Eliz c 7, s 1."

The lapse of time

Something should be said respecting the legal significance of the length of time between the alleged conduct in 1963 and the institution of proceedings in 2010. As the CLC Act stood in 1963, it included s 76a [16] Criminal Law Consolidation Act Amendment Act 1985 (SA). However, in R v Pinder [17] Criminal Law Consolidation (Abolition of Time Limit for Prosecution of Certain Sexual Offences) Amendment Act 2003 (SA). The result was that a person, such as the appellant, who had acquired immunity by reason of the operation of the repealed s 76a had lost that immunity and could now be prosecuted.



Changes have been made to the elements of the offence of rape, beginning with the Criminal Law Consolidation Act Amendment Act 1976 (SA), but it has not been submitted that these changes to the elements of the offence apply retrospectively.





The permanent stay application

On 6 July 2010 Herriman DCJ gave reasons for dismissing an application by the appellant for a permanent stay of proceedings. His Honour's reasons included the following passage:





"The complainant's evidence is that in 1960 and 1961, when she was 15 or 16, the accused was in a relationship with her and she says that at that time they were living in her parents' house, albeit that he slept in a separate room. They were ultimately married in September 1962, when she was 17, but she says that before that age she had sexual intercourse with him on two occasions. Those two occasions represent counts 1 and 2 on the information.



The parties then lived as husband and wife in her parents' house until mid-1963, when they went to their own premises. They separated in 1969.



The complainant says that on two occasions, in March and April 1963, which she relates to times immediately before and soon after the birth of their first child, the accused had forcible sexual intercourse with her against her will.



She says that she did not, at any time during the marriage, complain of carnal knowledge or, indeed, of that forced sexual intercourse.



The time for laying of any such charges was then within three years of the act, so that the time for laying a complaint with respect to the carnal knowledge counts expired in about 1964 and, with respect to rape, in about 1966. Those time limits were not abolished until the year 2003. More importantly, there was, and, indeed, there remains, a real question as to whether in 1963 an offence of rape in marriage, as it is commonly called, was then part of the common law of this State."

His Honour went on to stay the trial pending the statement for the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia of a case under s 350(2)(b) of the CLC Act. This dealt with the argument of the appellant that at the time of the alleged offences in 1963, he could not, as a matter of law, have committed the crime of rape upon his wife.



What was said in 1991 by four of the five members of this Court in R v L [18] at least as having the result that by 1991 it was no longer the common law in Australia that by marriage a wife gave irrevocable consent to sexual intercourse with her husband. Herriman DCJ saw the outstanding issue for determination as being "was the offence of rape by one lawful spouse of another ... an offence known to the law of South Australia as at 1963?". A question to this effect was stated for consideration by the Full Court [19]





"The defendant is liable at law to be found guilty of the offences of rape charged in count 3 and count 5 of the Information, notwithstanding that at the time of the alleged offence he was married to the alleged victim and was cohabiting with her, the marriage giving rise to no presumption of consent on her part to intercourse with her husband, and giving rise to no irrebuttable presumption to that effect."

Gray J was of the contrary opinion and would have answered the question in the negative and applied the presumption of irrevocable consent.

The appeal to this Court

By special leave the appellant appeals to this Court seeking an order setting aside the answer given by Doyle CJ and White J. By Notice of Contention the respondent submits that, regardless of what follows from the decision in R v L [20]



For the reasons which follow, if the "marital exemption" ever was part of the common law of Australia, it had ceased to be so by the time of the enactment in 1935 of s 48 of the CLC Act and thus before the date of the commission of the alleged offences charged as count 3 and count 5. It follows that the appeal must be dismissed. That conclusion does not involve any retrospective variation or modification by this Court of a settled rule of the common law. At the time of the commission of the alleged offence the common law rule for which the appellant contends did not exist.





The term "the common law"

The references above to "the common law" and "the common law of Australia" require further analysis before consideration of the immediate issue concerning the crime of rape upon which this appeal turns.



In his contribution under the heading "common law" in The New Oxford Companion to Law [21] [22]



In that regard, Sir George Jessel MR emphasised in In re Hallett's Estate [23]



The fourth and fifth senses of "common law" identified by Professor Simpson are as follows:





"The term 'common law' came, in a fourth sense, to have the connotation of law based on cases, or law evolved through adjudication in particular cases, as opposed to law derived from the analysis and exposition of authoritative texts. Indeed sometimes 'common law' is more or less synonymous with the expression 'case law'. Since the common law was developed by the judges, interacting with barristers engaged in litigation, the expression 'common law' came, in a related fifth sense, to mean law made by judges."

This draws attention to a difficulty in the appellant's reliance in this case upon a principle of the common law based upon a statement in a text published in 1736, many years after the death of the author, without citation of prior authority and lacking subsequent exposition in cases where it has been repeated.

In that regard, observations by six members of the Court in the Native Title Act Case [24]



Writing at the time of the establishment of this Court, and when he was Professor of Law at the University of Adelaide, Sir John Salmond said [25]





"The statement that a precedent gains in authority with age must be read subject to an important qualification. Up to a certain point a human being grows in strength as he grows in age; but this is true only within narrow limits. So with the authority of judicial decisions. A moderate lapse of time will give added vigour to a precedent, but after a still longer time the opposite effect may be produced, not indeed directly, but indirectly through the accidental conflict of the ancient and perhaps partially forgotten principle with later decisions. Without having been expressly overruled or intentionally departed from, it may become in course of time no longer really consistent with the course of judicial decision. In this way the tooth of time will eat away an ancient precedent, and gradually deprive it of all authority and validity. The law becomes animated by a different spirit and assumes a different course, and the older decisions become obsolete and inoperative."

The term "the common law of Australia"

Finally, in his treatment of "common law", Professor Simpson refers to the expansion of British imperial power and the creation of "a common law world". The common law was received in the Province of South Australia with effect 19 February 1836, but despite the differing dates of the reception of the common law in the Australian colonies, the common law was not disintegrated into six separate bodies of law; further, what was received included the method of the common law, which in Australia involved judicial determination of particular parts of the English common law which were inapplicable to local conditions [26]



The "common law" which was received did not include the jurisdiction with respect to matrimonial causes (including suits for declarations of nullity of marriage, judicial separation (a mensa et thoro) and restitution of conjugal rights) which in England was exercised by the ecclesiastical courts. This exclusion appears to have been a deliberate decision by the Imperial authorities [27] [28] [29]



The result was that the jurisdiction with respect to matrimonial causes, as well as divorce, which has been exercised by the colonial and State courts always has been derived from local statute law, not received "common law".



Further, in Skelton v Collins [30]





"To suppose that this was a body of rules waiting always to be declared and applied may be for some people satisfying as an abstract theory. But it is simply not true in fact. It overlooks the creative element in the work of courts. It would mean for example, that the principle of Donoghue v Stevenson [31]

Inductive and deductive reasoning

This creative element of both inductive and deductive reasoning in the work of the courts in Australia includes the taking of such steps as those identified by Sir Owen Dixon in his address "Concerning Judicial Method" [32]



To these steps may be added one which is determinative of the present appeal. It is that where the reason or "foundation" [33]



An example is provided by a division of opinion in Brown v Holloway [34] Edwards v Porter [35] Married Women's Property Act 1882 (UK) ("the 1882 UK Act") and its Queensland counterpart [36] Thompson v Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd [37]





"The issue [in Edwards v Porter] concerned the effect of the provision in [the 1882 UK Act] that married women were to be capable of suing or being sued as if each were a feme sole, the immediate issue being whether a husband remained liable at common law with his wife for a tort committed by her during joint coverture. In this Court it had previously been decided by Griffith CJ, O'Connor and Isaacs JJ that the liability of the husband was gone [38] [39]



In Edwards v Porter, without consideration of the reasoning of this Court in Brown v Holloway, their Lordships divided 3:2 in favour of a decision that, notwithstanding the legislation, the husband remained liable to suit with his wife for her torts [40] [41]



'The whole reason and justification for joining a husband in an action against his wife for her post-nuptial tort has therefore disappeared; and it would seem to follow, upon the principle "cessante ratione cessat lex," that he is no longer a necessary or proper party to such an action.'"

It is with this reasoning in mind that there is to be understood the earlier statement by Dawson J in R v L [42]





"whatever may have been the position in the past, the institution of marriage in its present form provides no foundation for a presumption which has the effect of denying that consent to intercourse in marriage can, expressly or impliedly, be withdrawn. There being no longer any foundation for the presumption, it becomes nothing more than a fiction which forms no part of the common law."

That statement points the way to the resolution of this appeal.

The common law crime of rape

The point should first be made that, the issue of irrevocable consent by a wife apart, the common law with respect to the crime of rape did not remain static.



Sir Edward Coke in The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England early in the 17th century wrote [43]





"'Rape.' Raptus is, when a man hath carnall knowledge of a woman by force and against her will."

In 1957 in their joint reasons in Papadimitropoulos v The Queen [44]

"The modern history of the crime of rape shows a tendency to extend the application of the constituent elements of the offence. The 'violenter et felonice rapuit' of the old Latin indictment is now satisfied although there be no use of force: R v Bourke [45] contra voluntatem suam' requires only a negative absence of consent; (as to the need of the man's being aware of the absence of consent, see R v Lambert [46] violenter et felonice carnaliter cognovit' is established if there has been some degree of penetration although slight, and no more force has been used than is required to effect it: R v Bourke [47] R v Burles [48]

Their Honours added [49]

"To return to the central point; rape is carnal knowledge of a woman without her consent: carnal knowledge is the physical fact of penetration; it is the consent to that which is in question; such a consent demands a perception as to what is about to take place, as to the identity of the man and the character of what he is doing. But once the consent is comprehending and actual the inducing causes cannot destroy its reality and leave the man guilty of rape."

The reference in Papadimitropoulos to "[t]he modern history of the crime of rape" may be seen as foreshadowing two points with respect to the development of the common law made by Dixon CJ shortly thereafter. In Commissioner for Railways (NSW) v Scott [50]





The statement by Hale

What now follows in these reasons emphasises that some care is required when visiting what Professor Glanville Williams described as "the museum of the English criminal law" [51]



The relevant passage in The History of the Pleas of the Crown appears in Ch 58, headed "Concerning felonies by act of parliament, and first concerning rape". The importance of statutory intervention in this respect may be seen from the passage from Russell's treatise set out earlier in these reasons [52]



Hale referred to the statement by Bracton that it was a good exception to an appeal (ie formal accusation) of rape that the parties were living in amicable concubinage, adding





"and the reason was, because that unlawful cohabitation carried a presumption in law, that it was not against her will".

Hale went on to say:

"But this is no exception at this day[. I]t may be an evidence of an assent, but it is not necessary that it should be so, for the woman may forsake that unlawful course of life." (emphasis added)

This is followed by the critical statement:





"But the husband cannot be guilty of a rape committed by himself upon his lawful wife, for by their mutual matrimonial consent and contract the wife hath given up herself in this kind unto her husband, which she cannot retract." (emphasis added)

Several points may be made immediately. First, it is apparent from Hale's treatment of Bracton's view in the 13th century of concubinage that he did not regard what had been said in past times as necessarily expressing the common law "at this day" four centuries later.



Secondly, Hale gave, as the reason for the proposition that a husband cannot be guilty of a rape upon his wife, the nature in law of the matrimonial relationship. But, in that regard, it was well settled that marriage was constituted by the present consent of the parties expressed under such circumstances as the law required, but without the requirement for consummation to complete the marriage [53] [54]



Thirdly, Hale did not explain the character in law of the proposition respecting rape in marriage, whether it stated an element of the offence, a defence, or an immunity. Nor did Hale refer to any prior cases which might be said to illustrate and support the proposition. From the immediately preceding treatment by Hale of Bracton it is apparent that the proposition is more than a bar to the reception of evidence by the wife or a statement of her absolute testimonial incompetence in this respect. This is further apparent from what immediately follows in Hale's text. This is a treatment of what had been decided at the trial of Lord Audley before the House of Lords in 1631 [55]





"A the husband of B intends to prostitute her to a rape by C against her will, and C accordingly doth ravish her, A being present, and assisting to this rape: in this case these points were resolved, 1. That this was a rape in C notwithstanding the husband assisted in it, for tho in marriage she hath given up her body to her husband, she is not to be by him prostituted to another. 2. That the husband being present, aiding and assisting, is also guilty as a principal in rape, and therefore, altho the wife cannot have an appeal of rape against her husband, yet he is indictable for it at the king's suit as a principal. 3. That in this case the wife may be a witness against her husband, and accordingly she was admitted, and A and C were both executed."

It should be added that in the 19th century, it was held in the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts [56] [57]

"Such an averment has never been deemed essential in indictments for rape, either in this country or in England. The precedents contain no such allegation. See authorities before cited. A husband may be guilty at common law as principal in the second degree of a rape on his wife by assisting another man to commit a rape upon her; Lord Audley's case, 3 Howell's State Trials, 401; and under our statutes he would be liable to be punished in the same manner as the principal felon. Rev Sts c 133, §1. An indictment charging him as principal would therefore be valid.



Of course, it would always be competent for a party indicted to show, in defence of a charge of rape alleged to be actually committed by himself, that the woman on whom it was charged to have been committed was his wife. But it is not necessary to negative the fact in the indictment."

Thus it will be seen that whatever its character in law, Hale's proposition was not framed in absolute terms, given his treatment of Lord Audley's Case. But what is important for the present appeal is further consideration of the reason given by Hale, which was based in an understanding of the law of matrimonial status in the second half of the 17th century when he wrote.





Matrimonial status and its incidents in England

In the period in which Hale wrote, and until the significant legislative changes in the course of the 19th century, each of the three jurisdictions in England represented by the courts of common law, the courts of equity and the ecclesiastical courts, had distinct roles in matters affecting matrimonial status [58]



As already observed [59] In re Hallett's Estate [60] feme sole [61] [62]





"The wife being enabled in equity to act upon property in the hands of her trustees, she is treated in that court as having interests and obligations distinct from those of her husband. She may institute a suit, by her next friend, against him, and she may obtain an order to defend separately suits against her; and when compelled to sue her husband in equity, the court may order him to make her a reasonable allowance in money to carry on the suit."

The provision in the 1882 UK Act and in the corresponding colonial married women's property legislation [63] feme sole, "without the intervention of any trustee", represented a triumph in statutory form of the principles of equity [64] Hunt v Hunt [65]



Ecclesiastical courts in England had limited powers to order separation of spouses but could not order the dissolution of marriage. This required a statute. Hale wrote in a period in which Parliamentary intervention was beginning. In 1669 a private Act was granted to Lord de Roos, and in 1692 to the Duke of Norfolk; only five such divorces were granted before 1714, but between 1800 and 1850 there were 90 [66] [67] [68]



However, it should be noted that in Scotland since the 16th century, provision had been made for judicial grant of divorce on grounds of adultery of either spouse or malicious desertion for at least four years [69] [70]



In 1891, the English Court of Appeal held that habeas corpus would issue to free a wife confined by her husband in his house in order to enforce restitution of conjugal rights [71]



In R v L [72]





"The ecclesiastical courts made decrees for the restitution of conjugal rights but the decree commanded a general resumption of cohabitation and did not purport to compel a spouse to do or abstain from doing particular acts in performance of a connubial obligation [73]



The courts exercising jurisdiction in matrimonial causes recognized the mutual rights of husband and wife relating to sexual intercourse and, in granting or withholding their decrees, ascertained whether either party had wilfully and persistently refused to accord the right of sexual intercourse to the other party. From the days of the ecclesiastical courts, however, it was accepted that no mandatory order to compel sexual intercourse would be made."

In 1933, when describing the nature and incidents of a decree for restitution of conjugal rights under the jurisdiction conferred by Pt III (ss 6-11) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1899 (NSW), Dixon J observed in Bartlett v Bartlett [74] that, so long as this remedy was retained, it must be treated as a process imposing an obligation, the performance or non-performance of which is ascertainable, and he added [75]





"On the one hand, it is clear that the obligation requires cohabitation, a physical dwelling together. On the other hand, it is clear that it does not require the resumption of sexual intercourse. It cannot, in fact, and in principle ought not to be understood as attempting to, control motives, feelings, emotions, sentiment or states of mind. Its operation must be limited to overt acts and conduct. ... Perhaps, all that can be said is that the decree of restitution requires the spouse against whom it is directed again to dwell with the other spouse in outward acceptance of the relationship, to act as if they were husband and wife maintaining a matrimonial home and to commence no course of conduct intended to cause a separation."

Evatt J set out [76] Fielding v Fielding [77] Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act 1908 (NZ) for the issue of decrees for restitution of conjugal rights, Salmond J had said:





"The Ecclesiastical Courts [in England] never professed or attempted by means of decrees for restitution of conjugal rights, and imprisonment for disobedience to such decrees, to enforce any duty of sexual intercourse between husband and wife. The basis of such a decree was the wrongful refusal of matrimonial cohabitation. The duty enforced was merely the duty of husband and wife to live together under the same roof in the normal relationship of husband and wife, but without reference to the question of intercourse."

The divorce legislation

The passage of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 (UK) [78] [79] [80]





"It is less easy to explain why, given the long availability of judicial divorce in Scotland and its spread to other Protestant countries, the step did not come earlier. Jeremy Bentham, for instance, had been an advocate of fully consensual divorce, but subject to time delays for reflection and a bar on the re-marriage of a guilty party." (footnote omitted)

The 1857 UK Act terminated the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts in matrimonial matters (s 2) and vested that jurisdiction in the new Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes (s 6), but the Court was to act on the principles and rules which had been applied by the ecclesiastical courts (s 22). A decree dissolving marriage might be pronounced on a petition by the husband alleging adultery by the wife, and on a wife's petition, alleging adultery coupled with desertion for at least two years and without reasonable excuse, or alleging adultery with aggravated circumstances including "such Cruelty as without Adultery would have entitled her to a Divorce à Mensâ et Thoro" (ss 27 and 31).



In 1858 the Secretary of State for the Colonies conveyed to all colonial governors and legislatures the wish of the Imperial Government that steps be taken to introduce, "as nearly as the circumstances of the Colony will admit", the provisions of the 1857 UK Act [81]



The colonies acted accordingly, but at different paces: Matrimonial Causes Act 1858 (SA), Matrimonial Causes Act 1860 (Tas), Matrimonial Causes Act 1861 (Vic), Matrimonial Causes Act 1863 (WA), Matrimonial Causes Act 1865 (Q), Matrimonial Causes Act 1873 (NSW). This legislation did not need to abolish in the colonies the non-existent jurisdiction of ecclesiastical courts. Rather, it conferred jurisdiction in matrimonial causes on the Supreme Courts. The differential treatment in the 1857 UK Act between the grounds of divorce available to husbands and wives was carried into the initial colonial legislation. But there followed attempts by New South Wales and Victoria to assimilate and expand the grounds for divorce; the Governor's Instructions required these Bills to be reserved for the Royal Assent on advice of the Imperial Government and, initially, in circumstances of considerable controversy in the colonies, the Royal Assent was refused [82]



Pressure for reform of legislation respecting divorce was, however, maintained, particularly in the more populous colonies of New South Wales and Victoria [83] The Divorce Act 1889 provided extended grounds for divorce [84] [85] Divorce Amendment and Extension Act 1892 (NSW) was expressed in terms similar to those of the Victorian Act. The extended grounds gave colonial women greater access to divorce than their contemporaries in the United Kingdom.





Conclusions

What was the immediate significance of these 19th century legislative measures for the continued vitality of the reasoning upon which Hale in the 17th century had based his proposition respecting "rape in marriage"?



In answering that question it is convenient first to repeat what was said by the Supreme Court of New Jersey in State v Smith [86]





"We believe that Hale's statements concerning the common law of spousal rape derived from the nature of marriage at a particular time in history. Hale stated the rule in terms of an implied matrimonial consent to intercourse which the wife could not retract. This reasoning may have been persuasive during Hale's time, when marriages were effectively permanent, ending only by death or an act of Parliament [87]

To that may be added the statement in that case [88]

"If a wife can exercise a legal right to separate from her husband and eventually terminate the marriage 'contract', may she not also revoke a 'term' of that contract, namely, consent to intercourse?"

In similar vein is the statement made from the New South Wales Supreme Court bench by Sir William Windeyer in 1886, in which he regretted that while the State regarded marriage as a civil contract and in this case the contract had been destroyed by the husband "having done his best to degrade you", by reason of the then limited grounds of divorce then available to her in New South Wales, she had no redress [89]

Insofar as Hale's proposition respecting the nature of the matrimonial contract was derived from an understanding of the principles applied by the ecclesiastical courts, the following may be said. First, as Lord Brougham observed in R v Millis [90]





"[Marriage] was always deemed to be a contract executed without any part performance; so that the maxim was undisputed, and it was peremptory, 'Consensus, non concubitus, facit nuptias vel matrimonium.'"

Secondly, with respect to the exercise of their jurisdiction in suits for restitution of conjugal rights, the ecclesiastical courts did not accept that the exercise of the mutual rights of spouses was to be an occasion of abuse and degradation. The following further remarks of Brennan J in R v L [91]

"To acknowledge a connubial obligation not to refuse sexual intercourse wilfully and persistently is to acknowledge that the giving of consent to acts of sexual intercourse is necessary to perform the obligation. It would have been inconsistent with such an obligation to hold that, on marriage, a wife's general consent to acts of sexual intercourse has been given once and for all. If no further consent was required on the part of a wife, how could there be a wilful and persistent refusal of sexual intercourse by her? The ecclesiastical courts never embraced the notion of a general consent to sexual intercourse given once and for all on marriage by either spouse."

Thirdly, and in any event, in the Australian colonies jurisdiction with respect to matrimonial causes was not part of the general inheritance of the Supreme Courts. They received such jurisdiction only by local statute in the second half of the 19th century. That legislation, as interpreted in the period before the enactment of the CLC Act in 1935, did not require, for compliance with a decree for restitution of conjugal rights, more than matrimonial cohabitation; in particular the duty of matrimonial intercourse was one of imperfect legal obligation because it could not be compelled by curial decree [92]

Finally, although Hale did not expressly rely upon it, his proposition respecting irrevocable consent could not have retained support from any common law concept that the wife had no legal personality distinct from that of her husband. This was never wholly accepted by the Court of Chancery, given the development there of the trust. The references earlier in these reasons to the significance of the married women's property legislation [93]



To that may be added the significance of the conferral by the Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 (Cth) of the universal adult franchise [94] [95] [96] [97]





"In the Commonwealth of Australia almost the first Act of the first Parliament was the enfranchisement of women. The national feeling of Australia had been stimulated and the sense of national responsibility deepened by the events which led to the Federation of the Independent States of the Australian Continent."

By 1930 Isaacs J was able to say that [98]





"women are admitted to the capacity of commercial and professional life in most of its branches, that they are received on equal terms with men as voters and legislators, that they act judicially, can hold property, may sue and be sued alone".

By the time of the enactment in 1935 of the CLC Act, if not earlier (a matter which it is unnecessary to decide here), in Australia local statute law had removed any basis for continued acceptance of Hale's proposition as part of the English common law received in the Australian colonies. Thus, at all times relevant to this appeal, and contrary to Hale's proposition, at common law a husband could be guilty of a rape committed by him upon his lawful wife. Lawful marriage to a complainant provided neither a defence to, nor an immunity from, a prosecution for rape.



To reach that conclusion it is unnecessary to rely in general terms upon judicial perceptions today of changes in social circumstances and attitudes which had occurred in this country by 1935, even if it were an appropriate exercise of legal technique to do so. The conclusion follows from the changes made by the statute law, as then interpreted by the courts, including this Court, before the enactment of the CLC Act.





Order

The appeal should be dismissed.





HEYDON J. The events giving rise to this appeal allegedly took place in 1963. At that time it was universally thought in Australia that a husband could not be convicted of having sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent save where a court order operated or where there were other exceptional circumstances. This immunity from conviction was thought to exist because Sir Matthew Hale, who died in 1676, had asserted its existence in The History of the Pleas of the Crown, published in 1736. The reason he assigned was that on marriage wives irrevocably consented to sexual intercourse with their husbands [99]



By what warrant did the State of South Australia seek in 2010 to prosecute the appellant for allegedly having sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent more than 47 years earlier? A sufficient answer to that question would be: "It had none, for the reasons that Bell J powerfully states." However, in deference to the arguments put by South Australia, a fuller answer should be given.



One matter must be put aside, though the appellant may wish to rely on it at a later stage in these proceedings. This appeal is not directly concerned with any oppressiveness that results from the delay in prosecution. But that tardiness does support the appellant's submission that in 1963 there was no crime of rape for which he could be charged. One primary explanation which South Australia gave to the District Court for its delay was that the immunity created considerable doubt as to whether the appellant was liable for rape. Yet prosecutors have to demonstrate with clarity that the crimes they charge exist. South Australia tells the District Court that the appellant's liability was thought doubtful. It tells this Court that it is certain. South Australia's stance in the District Court is inconsistent with its dogmatic and absolute submissions in this Court. The first of its submissions in this Court was that the immunity never existed [100] [101]



South Australia put only those two submissions. It did not put a third submission – that even if the immunity existed and even if it had not ceased to exist up to now, it should be abolished now. That was a course which the English courts took in 1991 [102]





South Australia's first submission: the detailed contentions

South Australia's first submission was that it had never been the law, in England or in Australia, that a husband was immune from prosecution for having sexual intercourse with his wife without her consent. The Commonwealth supported that submission. It was based on a number of contentions.



The first group of contentions centred on the following points. Hale's work was published 60 years after he died. The relevant part had not been revised before his death. Hale had not supported his statement with any reference to authority. Standing alone his proposition would not constitute the common law. At best it reflected "his view of a custom in 17th century England." As Blackstone asserted, "judicial decisions are the principal and most authoritative evidence, that can be given, of the existence of such a custom as shall form a part of the common law." [103]



A second group of contentions concerned ecclesiastical law. In the ecclesiastical courts there was no support for Hale's proposition. In ecclesiastical law each spouse had a right to sexual intercourse, but it was only to be exercised reasonably and by consent. This undermined the foundation of Hale's proposition. It revealed him to be mistaken in thinking that the wife's consent was irrevocable. It caused his proposition to be affected by "frailty".



South Australia then turned to the history of Hale's proposition after he had enunciated it. It relied on Lord Lowry's very extreme statement that "Hale's doctrine had not been given the stamp of legislative, judicial, governmental and academic recognition." [104]



So far as "academic recognition" was concerned, South Australia submitted that the only statement of support for the immunity in absolute terms was that of Hale, and that there was no support for it in Blackstone.



So far as "judicial ... recognition" was concerned, South Australia submitted that Hale's proposition "was never authoritatively declared as part of the common law in Australia." It also submitted that no case had Hale's proposition as its ratio decidendi. There were only dicta and assumptions that the proposition existed. In some of the cases stating the dicta or resting on the assumptions Hale's proposition was cut down. There were also dicta to the contrary. Hale's proposition was further said to be inconsistent with some authorities.



South Australia did not advance detailed submissions about any lack of "legislative" and "governmental" recognition. Perhaps it is hard to say much in support of negative propositions. However, there is a lot to be said against those two.



Finally, South Australia submitted that the immunity was completely outdated and offensive to human dignity.



It is convenient to deal with South Australia's first submission under the following headings.





Defects in Hale's statement of the immunity

It is immaterial that Hale's work was published 60 years after his death, that the reference to the immunity appears in a part of it which Hale had not revised, and that he stated no elaborate reasons justifying the immunity. Hale's work is capable of being an accurate account of the law of his day despite these things. There is no reason to suppose that, had he revised the relevant part of his work, he would have considered it desirable to change it.



South Australia is not alone in complaining about Hale's failure to cite authorities [105] [106] [107]





"the decision of courts of justice, though by virtue of the laws of this realm they do bind, as a law between the parties thereto, as to the particular case in question, till reversed by error or attaint; yet they do not make a law, properly so called; – for that only the king and parliament can do; yet they have a great weight and authority in expounding, declaring, and publishing what the law of this kingdom is; especially when such decisions hold a consonancy and congruity with resolutions and decisions of former times. And though such decisions are less than a law, yet they are a greater evidence thereof than the opinion of any private persons, AS SUCH, whatsoever".

Hale's work often does not contain the dense citation of authorities characteristic of modern books. Indeed, many parts of it refer to only a few authorities. That is so of the passages in which he discusses the crime of rape. Hale did not cite direct authority for the immunity, or for his justification of the immunity. Whether there were in fact "authorities" of any kind to be cited on the present point is a matter which a 21st century court cannot easily deal with. It would need the assistance of close research into the question by modern legal historians with high expertise [108] [109] [110]



Subject to the research difficulties referred to in the previous paragraph, a lack of support from earlier authors such as Coke is, as Bell J explains, not significant and does not reveal Hale to be wrong [111]



Windeyer J once said: "an accepted rule of law is not to be overthrown by showing that history would not support it" [112]





Hale and ecclesiastical law

South Australia's appeal to ecclesiastical law encounters two difficulties.



The first is that while the civil law of marriage was a matter for the ecclesiastical courts, the criminal law was a matter for the common law courts. Thinking in the ecclesiastical courts does not necessarily vitiate an account of the criminal law as administered in the common law courts.



The second difficulty is that ecclesiastical law in the 17th century is another field not to be entered without expert assistance. In R v L [113]



Lord Lane CJ in R v R [114] R v L [115] Popkin v Popkin [116] [117]



The submissions of the parties in this appeal did not take the matter further than Brennan J's researches took it. The parties did not cite any expert material throwing light on ecclesiastical law in or before Hale's time. For that reason, it is imprudent to examine it.





Post-Hale writers

South Australia submits that there is no statement of support for Hale's proposition except Hale himself, and that Hale's proposition has received no "academic recognition". That submission is extremely ambitious. It is also utterly incorrect.



It is true that Hale's proposition is neither confirmed nor denied by Blackstone or Hawkins. Blackstone was writing at a considerable level of generality about much wider issues than those Hale wrote about. Whether or not it is right to describe Hawkins as "a somewhat second-rate institutional writer" [118]



South Australia echoes the Crown's complaint to the House of Lords in R v R [119] History of the Pleas of the Crown was published in 1736. In truth, Hale has enjoyed a great reputation. Lord Denning called him "the great Chief Justice Sir Matthew Hale" [120] [121] [122] [123] [124]



One source of law is "informed professional opinion" [125] [126] Communis error facit jus may seem a paradox but it is a fact." [127] [128] [129]





"It seems to me that the consequences of that statement is this: if he was right, then practitioners would follow what he said. Equally, however, if he was wrong, practitioners would follow what he said."

Hale's proposition in the courts

South Australia relied on Lord Lowry's statement that Hale's proposition had not been "given the stamp of ... judicial ... recognition." [130] [131] [132]



An illustration is provided by South Australia's submission in relation to R v Clarence:





"The exemption was first the subject of judicial comment in R v Clarence. [133] R v Clarence, seven of the thirteen judges declined to comment on the issue; [134] [135] [136] [137] R v Clarence were obiter dicta, however, taken as a whole they indicate that even as at 1888 there existed no settled view."

It is true that the few things said about Hale's proposition in R v Clarence were dicta. The submission is otherwise very misleading. It suggests that only A L Smith J and Pollock B favoured Hale's proposition. In fact the position is as follows. Stephen J supported Hale's proposition [138] [139] [140] [141] [142] [143] [144] [145] [146] [147] [148] [149] [150]



South Australia correctly submitted that English trial judges assumed that Hale's proposition was correct, but qualified its operation in special circumstances. Examples of special circumstances included where there was a court non-cohabitation order [151] [152] [153] [154] [155] [156]



On one view, each of the courts that reached these decisions was attempting to achieve justice by tailoring the absolute nature of Hale's proposition to the circumstances before it. Even if the wife could be said to have given consent by marriage, in those cases it had been withdrawn as a matter of practical reality either because the wife had successfully invoked court process or because the spouses had reached a formal agreement negating consent. Another view is that these cases travel down a road "potholed with ever greater illogicalities"; produce "a gaggle of technical and anomalous distinctions" and "absurdity"; and lack any "relationship to the real world." [157]



In two of the cases just referred to, the correctness of Hale's proposition, in the absence of special circumstances, was specifically acknowledged by quotation [158] [159] R v Miller [160] R v Miller renders false South Australia's submission that "no binding precedent can be found where [Hale's] principle represented the ratio decidendi." Contrary to that submission, R v Miller was an "authoritative declaration of the common law on the matter." R v Miller also demonstrates that McGarvie J was wrong to say in R v McMinn [161] R v Miller was a binding precedent in England until 1991. A second case which applied Hale's proposition is R v J – (rape: marital exemption) [162]



There are numerous cases, including Australian cases, in which courts have assumed Hale's proposition to be correct at common law [163] R v Kowalski [164] R v Bellchambers [165] [166] R v L [167]





"Irrespective of the validity of Hale's reason for declaring that a husband could not be guilty as a principal in the first degree of rape of his wife, it appears that a substantive rule of the common law was established by his declaration."

That statement followed more than 10 pages denouncing Hale's reasoning. Thus these last two cases, too, reveal the enduring toughness of Hale's proposition in legal thought.

South Australia proffered three authorities that, in its submission, reveal that contrary to Hale's proposition, there was no irrebuttable presumption that on marriage the wife irrevocably consented to sexual intercourse with her husband. In R v Lister [168] R v Jackson [169] R v Reid [170]



These cases do not support South Australia's submission. They do not proceed on the basis that on marriage there was a presumption that the wife consented to having her liberty restrained and that she could rebut that presumption by withdrawing her consent. Indeed, in R v Reid [171] R v Miller that it was "impossible to stretch that doctrine to the extent of saying that on marriage a wife impliedly consents to being taken away by her husband using force or threats of force from the place where she is living." Accordingly, these cases are not inconsistent with Hale's proposition.



In 1991, the English Court of Appeal and the House of Lords overturned Hale's proposition [172] [173] [174] [175] [176]





Governmental recognition

South Australia also relied on Lord Lowry's statement that Hale's proposition "had not been given the stamp of ... governmental ... recognition." [177]



Hale's proposition has received indirect governmental recognition – by the Executive – in two ways.



One form of governmental recognition took place in a report of the Criminal Law and Penal Methods Reform Committee of South Australia published in 1976. That report acknowledged that Hale's proposition represented the common law [178] [179] [180]



Another form of governmental recognition has taken place. Not only in South Australia but in many other places, the authorities did not prosecute charges against husbands accused of raping their wives. This Court was not told of any prosecutions having been brought in England between Hale's time and 1949. In the second half of the 20th century, as exceptions developed to Hale's proposition, there were attempts to prosecute husbands, not for non-consensual sexual intercourse with their wives, but for crimes committed in connection with that conduct, such as assault or false imprisonment. So far as these crimes were distinct from sexual intercourse without consent, the prosecutions rested on sound legal thinking, though they were at peril of failing if there were difficulties in establishing that the husband's conduct had gone beyond sexual intercourse without consent [181]





Legislative recognition

Finally, South Australia relied on Lord Lowry's statement that Hale's proposition "had not been given the stamp of legislative ... recognition." [182]



Some forms of "legislative recognition" are of limited materiality. A statute expressly adopting Hale's proposition in South Australia would have superseded the common law. A statute expressly adopting it outside South Australia would have had slight relevance only to what the common law was in South Australia. Statutes rejecting it would have had little relevance to the position at common law unless they reflected a consistent legislative view of what the public interest demanded [183]



The South Australian Parliament did not adopt the recommendation of the Criminal Law and Penal Methods Reform Committee of South Australia to abolish the immunity when husband and wife were living separately. Instead two provisions relevant to the common law were enacted. First, s 73(3) of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) was introduced, removing any presumption that consent to sexual intercourse flowed from marriage. Secondly, s 73(5) was introduced: it prevented a spouse from being convicted not only of rape but also of indecent assault, attempted rape or indecent assault, and assault with intent to commit rape or indecent assault, unless the alleged offence was accompanied by various forms of aggravated conduct [184] s 73(5) referred. That state of affairs continued until 1992 [185]



"Legislative recognition" in places other than South Australia assuming that the immunity existed at common law is relevant to the content of South Australian law – particularly Australian legislation, since there is a single common law in Australia. There are three points to be made. First, in the Code States (Queensland, Tasmania and Western Australia), the definition of rape excluded sexual intercourse by a husband with his wife. The relevant statutes assumed the correctness of Hale's proposition [186] [187] [188] [189]





An anachronistic and offensive proposition?

There are no doubt many criticisms to be made of Hale's proposition if it is to be applied in the circumstances of 2012. But these criticisms do not show that his proposition was necessarily anachronistic or offensive in 17th century circumstances. That would depend on historical analysis which the parties' submissions did not perform. The criticisms therefore do not demonstrate that Hale's proposition was wrong from the outset. They are, however, appropriate arguments to consider when deciding whether Hale's proposition ought to be abandoned. It is a question which legislatures answered affirmatively from the 1980s on. It is not a question which South Australia places before this Court. Whether they are appropriate arguments to consider when deciding whether Hale's proposition dropped out of the law at some point before 1963 is a question which relates to South Australia's second submission.





South Australia's first submission rejected

It was inherent in South Australia's first submission that all the writers, all the judges, all the government officials, all the law reformers, all the public servants advising Ministers, all the prosecution authorities and all the legislatures who wrote or acted on the assumption that Hale's proposition was the law were wrong. South Australia explicitly adopted a statement to this effect in the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia [190]





South Australia's second submission

On the assumption that Hale's proposition was correct for some time after he stated it, South Australia put various contentions denying its applicability in 1963.



South Australia contended that before 1963 the law had changed so as to nullify Hale's proposition, even though no case had stated this before 1991. This is an unusual invocation of the judicial process. South Australia's contention is different from a contention that this Court should now declare Hale's proposition to be wrong, and do so with effect retrospective to 1963. This latter course presents in an overt form the considerable difficulties which cluster around the making of retrospective changes to the criminal law. South Australia did not choose to tackle these difficulties head on. It did not suggest that this Court should now change the law. Rather, it submitted that the dicta of four Justices in R v L [191] R v L suggests that the demise of Hale's proposition took place at any specific time before 1991, such as 1963. South Australia's thesis that R v L bound the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia to reach this conclusion must be rejected.



South Australia relied on the following arguments as indications that Hale's proposition had ceased to be the law before 1963.



South Australia submitted that in R v Jackson [192] the denial of the husband's right to use physical coercion on his wife suggested that the immunity had disappeared from the law. But it does not follow that a husband lost the immunity where he had not employed physical coercion against his wife.



South Australia also submitted that Hale's proposition was based on the doctrine of coverture – that the legal status of a wife is assimilated with that of her husband. And it submitted that by the turn of the 20th century the law had come to acknowledge the rights of married women as independent of their husbands' rights. In effect, it submitted that so many inroads had been made on the doctrine of coverture that it could no longer support Hale's proposition. This submission has the drawback that Hale did not base his proposition on the doctrine of coverture.



However, the developments on which South Australia relied could be used, and to a degree were used, to support an argument that by the mid-20th century the rights and privileges of married women in Australia were inconsistent with any theory that on marriage wives gave their husbands irrevocable consent to sexual intercourse. South Australia advanced detailed submissions on the capacity of wives, gained by statute, to own property, to sue and be sued, to vote, to have custody of children, and to compel payment of and be compelled to pay child maintenance. It also relied on the termination by statute of discrimination between husbands and wives in relation to the grounds of divorce.



In that way South Australia advances an argument for permitting the appellant to be prosecuted now for conduct which allegedly occurred in 1963. Whether it should be accepted depends on four matters. One is whether in fact the changes in the rights and privileges of wives by 1963 were, to use the words of South Australia's written submissions, "entirely inconsistent with the principle that a wife gave irrevocable consent to sexual intercourse with her husband upon marriage." A second concerns the need for certainty in the criminal law. A third concerns whether South Australia's argument could, in a practical sense, work a retrospective change in criminal law. A fourth is whether the task being undertaken is appropriate for the courts as distinct from the legislature. It is convenient to deal with these points in order.





Is there inconsistency between the modern rights and privileges of wives and the immunity of husbands for rape?

Bell J gives convincing reasons for answering this question in the negative [193] R v Morgan [194] R v Morgan was decided on 30 April 1975, seven months before the then Attorney-General for the State of South Australia requested the Criminal Law and Penal Methods Reform Committee of South Australia to report on the law relating to rape and other sexual offences. It was the very first topic the Committee dealt with [195]



Further, the reasons underlying the legislation which has altered the status of wives over the last 150 years are not necessarily inconsistent with the immunity. To describe Hale's proposition as creating a presumption which no longer has any foundation, and as a fiction not forming part of the common law [196] [197] [198] [199] R v R in 1991. The House of Lords decision has been supported on the ground that Hale's proposition was one which "nobody defended on the merits." [200] [201]



It is true to say, though, that R v R was based, as Lord Lowry later said, "on a very widely accepted modern view of marital rape" [202] [203] [204] Consistency of Certain Danzig Legislative Decrees with the Constitution of the Free City [205]



Professor Robertson has contrasted R v R with C (A Minor) v Director of Public Prosecutions, in which the House of Lords declined to alter the common law rule that there is a rebuttable presumption that a child aged between 10 and 14 is doli incapax [206] R v R contained "almost no argument", only "a bald statement" [207] R v R rested on "the assumption, though it is an untested one, that there is wide consensus in the general public on the question of marital rape." [208] R v R with a decision not to change it in C (A Minor) v Director of Public Prosecutions was "specious" [209] [210]





"The abolition of the rule on rape, though occasioned by a rape where the man and wife were separated, would in fact apply inside an ongoing marriage. It is sociologically extremely unlikely that this view would command anything like as much support amongst the mass public as would a rule that allowed the conviction of thirteen-year-old auto-thieves. The fact that there had been several cases where judges had attempted to convict husbands for rape is on par with the attempt by the Divisional Court to change the doli incapax rule, where there was extensive quotation from judges who had wanted to but were dutiful to precedent. What is true is that liberal elite opinion was uniform in the rape context, and largely missing in the criminal capacity case. Asked how to square the two results, one Law Lord who had been a member of the bench in C but not in R v R threw his hands in the air and admitted he could not imagine how they squared it. Another though, who had heard C, indicated that his decision was prompted by a desire to force the Government's hand and make it legislate." (emphasis in original)

The task of assessing public opinion, or even the full range of legal opinion, whether now or in the past, is not an enterprise that is easy for courts to carry out. "The court does not, and cannot, carry out investigations or enquiries with a view to ascertaining whether particular common law rules ... command popular assent." [211] R v R about the general public's opinion is correct. The point is that if the general public's opinion is a relevant criterion, it is a criterion for the legislature to consider, not the courts [212]

Certainty in the criminal law

Those who seek to foster the rule of law prize certainty. Ordinarily, certainty in the common law is assisted by the doctrine of precedent. Normally, a common law rule is supported by authorities. If an intermediate or ultimate appellate court decides to change the rule, it overrules the authorities and its decision creates a new binding authority. South Australia's submission is not that Hale's proposition be rejected, so that this Court's decision would be a new binding authority with retrospective effect. Instead South Australia submits that at some time which is not clearly specified, Hale's proposition ceased to be the law. At some time in the past that which had a solid existence is said to have dissolved into nothingness.



In State Government Insurance Commission v Trigwell [213] Gibbs J said:





"Although the rules of the common law develop as conditions change, a settled rule is not abrogated because the conditions in which it was formulated no longer exist. It is now fashionable to criticize the rule in Searle v Wallbank [214]]

A fortiori, it does not follow from anachronism that a rule simply dissolves without any court ruling at the time it dissolved, leaving its dissolution to be detected by a court many years or decades later.

To the extent that they may be changed retrospectively, uncertainty is inherent in common law rules. But the standard technique is to make the change in a particular case. It is announced as having happened at the time of that case. Even though it operates retrospectively, that retrospective operation tends to affect only quite recent conduct. That was so in R v R and other cases following it: the conduct charged took place only a short time before the law changed. At least in non-criminal fields, if the change is the result of altering "the law's direction of travel by a few degrees" as distinct from setting "it off in a different direction" [215] R v R is an example of the standard technique. It relied on quite recent changes in the status of married women. It did not purport to announce that a change had taken place many years ago, by reason of changes in status even earlier. South Australia's urging of the latter course engenders much more uncertainty. It invites Bentham's reproach [216]





"Nebuchadnezzar put men to death for not finding a meaning for his dreams: but the dreams were at least dreamt first, and duly notified. English judges put men to death very coolly for not having been able to interpret their dreams, and that before they were so much as dreamt."

Retrospective change in the criminal law and the appropriate institutions to effectuate it

South Australia's arguments involve a retrospective change in the criminal law. Indeed, they willingly embrace it. They involve the proposition that conduct no-one saw as attracting criminal liability in 1963 in fact attracted that liability because an historical investigation in 2010-2012 is said to reveal that changes in legal and social conditions at some unspecified time before 1963 caused the conduct to become criminal. And this proposition involves a very serious crime. Rape in 1963 was punishable by life imprisonment and whipping [217]



The law's aversion to the judicial creation of crimes. In those circumstances, though it may be trite to do so, it is desirable to recall the law's aversion to the judicial creation or extension of crimes. In the early 17th century Bacon put the central difficulty in a retroactive criminal law thus in Aphorism 8 of his treatise De Augmentis [218]





"Certainty is so essential to law, that law cannot even be just without it. 'For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?' [219]

And Aphorism 39 read in part [220]

"Let there be no authority to shed blood; nor let sentence be pronounced in any court upon capital cases, except according to a known and certain law. ... Nor should a man be deprived of his life, who did not first know that he was risking it."

Hobbes stated in 1651 [221] [222]

"A Law is the Command of him, or them that have the Soveraign Power, given to those that be his or their Subjects, declaring Publickly, and plainly what every of them may do, and what they must forbear to do."

Similarly, Glanville Williams said [223]

"The citizen must be able to ascertain beforehand how he stands with regard to the criminal law; otherwise to punish him for breach of that law is purposeless cruelty. Punishment in all its forms is a loss of rights or advantages consequent on a breach of law. When it loses this quality it degenerates into an arbitrary act of violence that can produce nothing but bad social effects."

Stephen J stated in R v Price [224] [225] [226]

South Australia submitted, however, that the change it favoured "does not create a new offence, it merely removes a protection, arguably, formerly held by husbands." It submitted that there was no inhibition against judicial legislation which fell short of creating a new offence. South Australia relied on the following statement by the English Court of Appeal in R v R about the judicial abolition of the immunity [227]





"The remaining and no less difficult question is whether ... this is an area where the court should step aside to leave the matter to the Parliamentary process. This is not the creation of a new offence, it is the removal of a common law fiction which has become anachronistic and offensive and we consider that it is our duty having reached that conclusion to act upon it."

With respect to both South Australia and the English Court of Appeal, this is captious. The substantive effect of South Australia's argument is to expose persons to a risk of criminal prosecution for conduct which was not believed to be criminal at the time it was carried out. That is true even though South Australia sees this reasoning as doing nothing more pernicious than removing an anachronistic and offensive fiction. Sir John Smith said, correctly, "it is not clear that there is a difference in principle" between the judicial creation of a new offence in Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions [228] [229]



Zecevic v Director of Public Prosecutions (Vict). South Australia also relied on the following statement of Deane J (dissenting) in Zecevic v Director of Public Prosecutions (Vict) [230]





"There may be circumstances in which an ultimate appellate court is justified in overruling a previous decision of its own with the consequence that what had previously been accepted as a defence to a charge of murder is no longer, and never was, such a defence".

This was a somewhat selective quotation. There are three reasons why it does not support South Australia's case.

First, Deane J gave as an illustration the case of R v Shivpuri. In that case the House of Lords departed from earlier authority in order to state the true construction of a statute [231] [232]





"The absence of sensible reliance or liberty considerations in the case meant that the prohibition on criminal retroactivity was, without diminishing the strength of that prohibition in general, eminently susceptible to being justifiably overcome in Shivpuri."

Secondly, Deane J gave very detailed reasons for not applying his tentative observation to the case before him in Zecevic v Director of Public Prosecutions (Vict). They do not support South Australia's argument.



Thirdly, Deane J made it plain that the undesirability of retroactive changes in criminal law adverse to the accused applies as much to abolishing defences as it does to creating new offences. Thus he said [233]





"It is simply wrong that an accused may be adjudged not guilty or guilty of murder according to the chance of whether his trial is completed before or after this Court has abolished a defence which, under the law which the Court itself had definitively settled at the time the offence was committed, reduced the offence from murder to manslaughter."

He called this "a macabre lottery". The macabre character of the lottery is heightened in this case. Those who have caused the prosecution to be brought have allowed 47 years to pass before charging the appellant.

Another problem with South Australia's argument is that it invites retrospective judicial legislation which collides with legal structures created by parliamentary legislation. Thus Brennan J, the only Justice in R v L not to state that Hale's proposition had ceased to exist, succinctly and correctly said [234]





"a mere judicial repeal of the [exception] would extend the liability for conviction of the crime of rape to cases which would be excluded from liability for conviction by s 73(5) of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act." [235]

Brennan J's point was that s 73(5) permitted convictions for rape in the aggravated circumstances stated in the sub-section, but otherwise preserved the common law "exception" from liability. To "repeal" the common law "exception" would expose husbands to a greater risk of prosecution for acts carried out before s 73(5) was enacted in 1976 than after it. Section 73(5) did not apply retrospectively. The greater exposure of husbands to risk of prosecution would depart significantly from the legislative scheme. It would mean that in 1976 Parliament narrowed the scope of a husband's liability for sexual offences committed against his wife, rather than expanded it. And yet the seeming function of the legislation was to expand liability, not narrow it.

Professional attitudes in 1963-1965. The retrospectivity involved in South Australia's arguments is highlighted by considering the following question. What would actually have happened if, instead of the appellant being charged with rape in 2010, he had been charged immediately after the second of the alleged offences had occurred in April 1963?



Lord Reid said: "the law is what the judge says it is." [236] [237] [238] [239]



What would a bad man in South Australia have learned if he had asked for a prophecy as to what the South Australian courts, and this Court, would be likely to say in the years 1963 to 1965, for example, if he had been charged in April 1963 with raping his wife in March and April and he had challenged the validity of the indictment or appealed against a conviction?



There were at that time seven judges in the Supreme Court of South Australia. The Chief Justice was Sir Mellis Napier, in his 40th year of service on that Court. The senior puisne judge was Sir Herbert Mayo, in his 22nd year of service. Next in seniority came Sir Reginald Roderic St Clair Chamberlain: universally known as "Joe", he did not share the impulsiveness or the radicalism of his namesake. The other judges were Justices Millhouse, Travers, Hogarth and Bright. This Court comprised Chief Justice Dixon and Justices McTiernan, Kitto, Taylor, Menzies, Windeyer and Owen. It is hard to see where a majority of two was to be found in the Supreme Court of South Australia in favour of the view that Hale's proposition never was, or had ceased to be, the law in South Australia. It is equally hard to see where a majority of three or four in favour of that view was to be found in this Court. Indeed, it is hard to find even one vote for that proposition.



This is not simply a crass piece of legal "realism". It does not rest on the personal idiosyncrasies of the individual judges. The probabilities were strongly against either majority because of the particular ideas of the time. They were universal ideas among the Australian judiciary. To overturn Hale's proposition, or to deny that it ever had been the law, or to hold that it had earlier dissolved into nothingness, was to widen the criminal law. It was a legal commonplace in the middle of the 20th century that it was wrong for judges "to declare new offences": that "should be the business of the legislature." So spoke Lord Goddard CJ, Sellers and Havers JJ in 1953, in R v Newland [240] [241]





"the judges to declare new crimes and enable them to hold anything which they considered prejudicial to the community to be a misdemeanor. However beneficial that might have been in days when Parliament met seldom or at least only at long intervals it surely is now the province of the legislature and not of the judiciary to create new criminal offences."

And in Director of Public Prosecutions v Withers, in 1974, Lord Simon of Glaisdale said [242]

That view was well-entrenched among judges, practising lawyers and academic lawyers. Contemporary reaction to two surprising decisions of the House of Lords in 1960 and 1961 demonstrates how well-entrenched it was.



Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith. The first was a murder case, Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith. The trial judge (Donovan J) directed a jury that if the accused, in doing what he did, must as a reasonable man have contemplated that serious harm was likely to occur to the victim, he was guilty of murder – whether or not the accused actually had that contemplation. The Court of Criminal Appeal (Byrne, Sachs and Winn JJ) allowed Smith's appeal and substituted for the verdict of capital murder a verdict of manslaughter. On 28 July 1960, the House of Lords (Viscount Kilmuir LC, Lords Goddard, Tucker, Denning and Parker of Waddington) allowed a prosecution appeal and restored the conviction for capital murder. Viscount Kilmuir LC said that an accused person who was accountable for his actions and who carried out an unlawful and voluntary act was guilty of murder if the ordinary reasonable man would, in all the circumstances of the case, have contemplated grievous bodily harm as the natural and probable result of that act [243]



Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions. The second case was decided on 4 May 1961. The House of Lords (Viscount Simonds, Lords Tucker, Morris of Borth-y-Gest and Hodson; Lord Reid dissenting) held in Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions that the courts could create new crimes. Viscount Simonds said that the courts had:





"a residual power, where no statute has yet intervened to supersede the common law, to superintend those offences which are prejudicial to the public welfare. Such occasions will be rare, for Parliament has not been slow to legislate when attention has been sufficiently aroused. But gaps remain and will always remain since no one can foresee every way in which the wickedness of man may disrupt the order of society." [244]

Lord Reid, whose reputation, still high, was extremely high in the early 1960s, dissented. He quoted with approval the second passage from R v Newland set out above [245] [246]

Contemporary reactions to Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions. Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions attracted heavy criticism [247] [248] [249]



An example of the contemporary reaction to Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions is what P J Fitzgerald, a prominent Anglo-Irish criminal lawyer, wrote in 1962 [250]





"Few cases in recent years have been quite so disturbing as this. The resuscitation of the judicial power to create crimes runs counter to two cardinal principles of free and democratic government."

Fitzgerald put the first as follows [251]





"[T]he idea of the rule of law ... is based on the demand that the citizen should be ruled by laws and not by the whims of men. In the sphere of criminal law this idea has become crystallized as ... a principle according to which only breaches of existing criminal law should be punishable. The justification of this principle, which has been adopted as an actual rule in some legal systems, though not in the English legal system, is that the citizen should be able to know beforehand what conduct is permitted and what forbidden; for only in this way can he order his affairs with certainty and avoid coming into conflict with the law. It is this demand for certainty with regard to the provisions of the criminal law that militates against retrospective criminal legislation. When Parliament creates a new crime, it almost invariably legislates for the future only. This, however, is just what the courts cannot do. Our legal system is such that a court can only decide a point of law which arises in some actual case before the court, and consequently the court's decision always relates back to the facts of this case, facts which of course precede the decision. If, therefore, a court manufactures a new crime, it thereby determines after the event that the defendant's conduct, which at the time of commission was not prohibited by law, is a criminal offence. To countenance this type of retrospective criminal legislation means that certainty and consequently freedom are at an end. Bentham long ago pointed out that when the judges make law like this, they are treating the citizen as a man treats his dog, hitting him every time he does something to which the master takes exception. Animals and young children can only be trained in this way. Sane and adult members of a free society, however, are entitled to demand first to be told what conduct is forbidden so that they may choose whether or not to keep within the law."

Fitzgerald put the second objection to "the creation of new offences by the courts" thus [252]





"Even suppose that a court could decide that the kind of act which the defendant had done would in future, though not in the instant case, constitute a crime, there is still the objection that this type of proceeding is not consonant with democratic government. If Parliament creates a new crime, the citizens whose liberty is thereby restricted have the consolation that this was done by their elected representatives whom they chose to perform this sort of activity, and whom in due course they may re-elect or reject. The judges, on the other hand, are appointed by the Crown, virtually irremovable and in practice accountable to no one. That such a body should have the power to decree that certain acts shall constitute crimes is totally incompatible with the notion of democracy."

In similar vein, Lord Reid said that judicial legislation should be avoided when "public opinion is sharply divided on any question" [253]



Lord Reid employed arguments similar to those of Fitzgerald in Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions [254] R v Newland [255] [256]





"it is hardly probable that any attempt would be made to exercise [a power of declaring new offences] at the present day; and any such attempt would be received with great opposition, and would place the bench in an invidious position. ...



In times when legislation was scanty, [that power was] necessary. That the law in its earlier stages should be developed by judicial decisions from a few vague generalities was natural and inevitable. But a new state of things has come into existence. On the one hand, the courts have done their work; they have developed the law. On the other hand, parliament is regular in its sittings and active in its labours; and if the protection of society requires the enactment of additional penal laws, parliament will soon supply them. If parliament is not disposed to provide punishments for acts which are upon any ground objectionable or dangerous, the presumption is that they belong to that class of misconduct which it is not desirable to punish. Besides, there is every reason to believe that the criminal law is, and for a considerable time has been, sufficiently developed to provide all the protection for the public peace and for the property and persons of individuals which they are likely to require under almost any circumstances which can be imagined; and this is an additional reason why its further development ought to be left in the hands of parliament."

Lord Diplock used similar reasoning in Knuller (Publishing, Printing and Promotions) Ltd v Director of Public Prosecutions [257] to advocate a retreat from Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions.

The views of a scholar who received his legal education in Adelaide shortly before the appellant allegedly committed the conduct charged are representative of how lawyers thought at that time and in that place [258]





"the administration, or working-out, of the criminal law's prohibitions is permeated by rules and principles of procedural fairness ('due process of law') and substantive fairness (desert, proportionality), which very substantially modify the pursuit of the goal of eliminating or diminishing the undesired forms of conduct: such principles as nulla poena sine lege (and rather precise leges, at that), and the principles which outlaw retroactive proscription of conduct (at the known cost of letting some dubious characters slip through the net), and restrain the process of investigation, interrogation, and trial (even at the expense of that terror which a Lenin knows is necessary for attaining definite social goals)." (emphasis in original)

Ideas of this kind, though perhaps less congenial to the mentalities of recent decades, were very familiar to Australian judges in the early 1960s. They universally assented to those ideas.



Contemporary reactions to Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith. Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith, too, attracted immediate criticism. In Australia it was rightly seen as an extension of the law of murder. Shortly before his death, Sir Wilfred Fullagar, then a Justice of this Court, entered Sir Owen Dixon's chambers and observed: "Well, Dixon, they're hanging men for manslaughter in England now." [259]



The doctrine stated in Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith was soon abolished by statute in England [260] [261] [262] Parker v The Queen. Judgment was delivered on 24 May 1963. That was at or shortly before the time the present appellant could have had the question of his immunity from prosecution for allegedly raping his wife in March and April 1963 considered by the courts, had the complainant, the police, the prosecuting authorities, and the courts moved expeditiously. Dixon CJ delivered a dissenting judgment. But it concluded with a passage [263] [264] [265] [266]





"In Stapleton v The Queen [267] [268] Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith [269] Smith's Case [270]

Dixon CJ then said that Smith's case "should not be used as authority in Australia at all."

Those were terrible words. They were brooding, sombre and unusually passionate. In them the aged Chief Justice revealed that at the end of his career he had plumbed the depths of an intolerable nightmare. His reaction shows the Court being provoked by a retrospective judicial expansion of criminal liability in England into a determination to preserve crucial common law principles in Australia, not applaud or foster their destruction. This Court had changed its own rules of stare decisis in order to preserve Australian law. Those rules are fundamental to the judicial method. The change was very substantial. Though the High Court continued to be bound by Privy Council decisions, on most points of law there was much more authority from the House of Lords and the English Court of Appeal than the Privy Council. For those reasons Parker v The Queen astonished the Australian legal profession. But its repudiation of the thinking underlying Director of Public Prosecutions v Smith accorded with the ideas of the Australian legal profession.



What would the courts have done in 1963-1965? Had the appellant been charged with rape in April 1963, the immediate background to any claim by him of immunity from prosecution would have included the following elements. There was a continuing furore in which Lord Reid's dissent in Shaw v Director of Public Prosecutions was receiving overwhelming favour. There had been an explicit repudiation of English authority for the first time in Australian history [271] [272] [273] [274]



















available in 1963 [275] [276] [277]



Against that background, four questions arise. What prospect was there that the South Australian courts or the High Court would accede to an attempt by South Australia to effect a judicial extension, retrospectively, of criminal liability? What prospect was there that they would rule that the immunity had never existed? What prospect was there that they would accede to a submission that though the immunity had existed for a long time, it had disappeared some decades earlier? What prospect was there that they would accede to a submission that though the immunity had existed up to 1963, it should be abolished (necessarily with retrospective effect)? To each of those four questions the answer must be: "None". That answer is supported by the fact that once they came to consider the problem, neither the Australian nor the English courts wavered, until 1991, from the view asserted and assumed until then that Hale's proposition was substantially correct [278] [279] R v R [280]



Foreseeability. South Australia did not rely on an argument which appealed to the European Court of Human Rights. But it is convenient to mention it. That Court held that the United Kingdom was not in contravention of Art 7 of the European Convention on Human Rights by reason of the decision in R v R because the abolition of the immunity was reasonably foreseeable [281] [282]



The significance of R v L. South Australia submitted that statements in R v L supported its second submission [283]



Conclusion on South Australia's second submission. A decision by the legislature of South Australia after 1963 to enact a law retrospectively providing that the immunity was abolished with effect from a date before 1963 would have been subject to criticism from many quarters. That would have been significant, not because the critics would have been numerous, but because their criticisms would have been most trenchant [284]



For those reasons South Australia's second submission must be rejected.





Issues which need not be resolved

The appellant contended that a common law rule should be created by this Court to the effect that when there is a judicial change to the common law it only operates prospectively, not retrospectively. This would involve overruling prior authority [285]





Orders

The appeal should be allowed. For the answer to the question of law given by the majority in the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia there should be substituted the answer: "No".





BELL J. In 2010, an Information was filed in the District Court of South Australia, charging the appellant with offences including two counts of rape. The complainant in each count was his then wife, GP, with whom he was living at the time. The offences of rape are alleged to have occurred in March and April 1963. It cannot be sensibly suggested that the appellant would have been prosecuted for those offences, had the allegations come to the attention of the authorities in 1963. This is because at that time it was understood that the crime of rape could not be committed by a husband against his wife with whom he was living ("the immunity"). A husband was amenable under the criminal law for any other offence of violence committed against his wife.



The imposition of criminal liability on a person for an act or omission to which criminal liability did not attach at the date the act was done or omitted to be done is contrary to fundamental principle [286] R v L [287]





Procedural history

The appellant was due to stand trial in the District Court of South Australia (Herriman DCJ) on 5 July 2010. On 29 June 2010, he applied to quash the counts in the Information charging him with rape contrary to s 48 of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) ("the CLC Act"). Herriman DCJ stated a case reserving a question of law for the determination of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia [288]





"Was the offence of rape by one lawful spouse of another, in the circumstances as outlined above, an offence known to the law of South Australia as at 1963?"

The Full Court, by majority (Doyle CJ and White J, Gray J dissenting), answered the question [289] [290]





"The defendant is liable at law to be found guilty of the offences of rape charged in count 3 and count 5 of the information, notwithstanding that at the time of the alleged offence he was married to the alleged victim and was cohabiting with her, the marriage giving rise to no presumption of consent on her part to intercourse with her husband, and giving rise to no irrebuttable presumption to that effect."

By special leave, the appellant appeals to this Court against the answer given by the majority in the Full Court.





The law of rape in South Australia

Before turning to the Full Court's reasons, some reference should be made to the history of the law governing liability for rape in South Australia and to the decision in R v L.



In 1963, the punishment for the offence of rape was provided by s 48 of the CLC Act:





"Any person convicted of rape shall be guilty of felony, and liable to be imprisoned for life, and may be whipped."

The elements of the offence of rape were supplied by the common law.



The understanding that a husband could not be guilty as a principal in the first degree of the rape of his wife is traced to the statement of Sir Matthew Hale in The History of the Pleas of the Crown [291]





"But the husband cannot be guilty of a rape committed by himself upon his lawful wife, for by their mutual matrimonial consent and contract the wife hath given up herself in this kind unto her husband, which she cannot retract."

There does not appear to have been a single case in which a husband had been prosecuted for the rape of his wife with whom he was living in any common law jurisdiction at the date of the conduct with which the appellant is charged. By that date, as will appear, the justification for the immunity may have come to rest more upon the notion that the criminal law ought not to intrude into the marital bedroom, than upon the fiction of the wife's irrevocable consent. By the 1970s, the idea that there could be any justification for conferring immunity on a husband for the rape of his wife was the subject of critical academic attention and pressure for reform of the law [292]



South Australia was the first of the Australian jurisdictions to respond to the call for reform of the law of rape. In December 1975, the Attorney-General appointed a Committee of persons distinguished for their knowledge of the criminal law to report on the law relating to sexual offences [293] [294] [295] [296]



Following receipt of the Committee's Report, the South Australian Parliament amended the CLC Act [297]





"(3) No person shall, by reason only of the fact that he is married to some other person, be presumed to have consented to sexual intercourse with that other person.



...



(5) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section, a person shall not be convicted of rape or indecent assault upon his spouse, or an attempt to commit, or assault with intent to commit, rape or indecent assault upon his spouse (except as an accessory) unless the alleged offence consisted of, was preceded or accompanied by, or was associated with –



(a) assault occasioning actual bodily harm, or threat of such an assault, upon the spouse;



(b) an act of gross indecency, or threat of such an act, against the spouse;



(c) an act calculated seriously and substantially to humiliate the spouse, or threat of such an act; or



(d) threat of the commission of a criminal act against any person."

In the period following the South Australian reforms, the parliaments of each of the States and Territories enacted legislation with the evident intention of modifying or abolishing the immunity. This process of reform was completed by December 1991, when R v L was decided. In the Code States, this was achieved by removing the words "not his wife" from the definition of the offence [298] Criminal Code (NT) in terms that did not limit rape to an offence outside marriage [299] [300] [301] [302]





R v L

In R v L, the validity of s 73(3) of the CLC Act was challenged on the ground of inconsistency with Commonwealth law. The claimed inconsistency was with s 114(2) of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), which conferred power on the Family Court of Australia to make an order relieving a party to a marriage from any obligation to perform marital services or to render conjugal rights. The Court held that there was no direct or indirect inconsistency between the State and Commonwealth laws [303] R v L did not require consideration of proof of the offence of rape under the common law. Among the submissions advanced on L's behalf was that s 114(2) of the Commonwealth statute preserved the common law inability of a wife to withhold her consent to sexual intercourse with her husband. In their joint reasons, Mason CJ, Deane and Toohey JJ said that, "if it was ever the common law that by marriage a wife gave irrevocable consent to sexual intercourse by her husband, it is no longer the common law" [304]





The Full Court

Doyle CJ, writing for the majority in the Full Court, answered the reserved question on the footing that it was likely that Hale's statement of the immunity would have been accepted as a correct statement of the common law of Australia in 1963 [305] [306] [307]





"Mr P is charged with offences against the then s 48 of the [CLC Act]. In 1963 the elements of that offence were determined by the common law. Today, those elements are determined by the common law as stated by the majority in R v L."

Gray J dissented. His Honour considered that the majority in R v L had not declared the common law with respect to liability for rape [308] [309] [310]





Developments in Scotland and England

Before returning to the decision in R v L, reference should be made to judicial development of the law relating to the immunity in Scotland and England.



In S v HM Advocate [311] [312] Textbook of Criminal Law [313]





"A husband is legally incapable of perpetrating rape upon his wife unless the parties 