The first work dealing comprehensively with jurisdiction in the Australian legal system.
What are the limits of federal jurisdiction?
How is federal jurisdiction conferred and invested on Federal and State courts within the Australian legal system?
What is â oeaccrued jurisdictionâ ?
What is a â oematterâ ?
What is jurisdictional error?
What is a jurisdictional fact?
Why are there no Australian courts of unlimited jurisdiction?
What does it mean to say that a court has jurisdiction to decide its own jurisdiction?
How is a court's jurisdiction invoked?
These questions are of vital practical and conceptual importance; the purpose of this work is to answer them, by providing a comprehensive account of the role of jurisdiction in Australia.
Although the book extends to all aspects of jurisdiction, it covers the whole of federal jurisdiction, and provides not only an accessible analysis for practitioners and courts, but also a thoughtful and detailed account of the underlying principle and decisions. All classes of federal â oemattersâ are addressed, but with an emphasis on those arising most commonly in practice, as well as the essential statutory provisions by which State and federal jurisdiction is conferred and qualified and excluded. Separate chapters deal with invoking jurisdiction, jurisdictional error, service, and appeals and appellate jurisdiction, in State and federal courts.
About the Author: Mark Leeming has practised at the New South Wales Bar since 1995. He was appointed Senior Counsel in 2006. He has also taught at the University of Sydney part-time since 1995, where he is Challis Lecturer in Equity.
He is the co-author of two leading practitioner texts and a casebook on equity and trusts, and has published widely in the areas of constitutional law, administrative law, equity, trusts and intellectual property.
Mark has been a member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Equity since 2005. On 1 July 2011, he was appointed a Director of The Federation Press.