Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Act 1915
Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Act 1915 | |
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Parliament of Australia | |
| |
Citation | No. 19 of 1915 |
Territorial extent | Australia |
Enacted by | Senate |
Enacted | 20 May 1915 |
Enacted by | House of Representatives |
Enacted | 8 July 1915 |
Royal assent | 14 July 1915[1] |
Legislative history | |
First chamber: Senate | |
Bill title | Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Bill |
Introduced by | Edward Russell |
First reading | 13 May 1915[2] |
Second reading | 14 May 1915[3] |
Third reading | 20 May 1915[4] |
Second chamber: House of Representatives | |
Bill title | Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Bill |
Member(s) in charge | William Archibald |
First reading | 20 May 1915[5] |
Second reading | 8 July 1915[6] |
Third reading | 8 July 1915[7] |
Amended by | |
No. 70 of 1955, No. 216 of 1973, No. 164 of 1986, No. 109 of 1988 (consequential of No. 106 of 1988), No. 28 of 1991, No. 143 of 2001 | |
Related legislation | |
Seat of Government Surrender Act 1915 (No. 9 of 1915 (NSW)) | |
Summary | |
Allows for the transfer of the land now known as the Jervis Bay Territory from New South Wales to the Commonwealth. | |
Status: Amended |
The Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Act 1915 is an Act of the Parliament of Australia which followed the New South Wales Seat of Government Surrender Act 1915. The Act created the Territory of Jervis Bay, subject to the laws of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). While the Act's use of the language of "annexed" is sometimes interpreted as implying that the Jervis Bay Territory was to form part of the Federal Capital Territory, the accepted legal position is that it has been a legally distinct territory from its creation, despite being subject to FCT/ACT law and (prior to ACT self-government in 1988) being administratively treated as part of the FCT/ACT.[8]
See also
References
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ "ParlInfo - Search Results".
- ^ Benjamin Spagnolo (22 October 2015). The Continuity of Legal Systems in Theory and Practice. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 65. ISBN 978-1-84946-884-8.
While the Jervis Bay Territory was constituted as a separate Territory on acceptance by the Commonwealth, it was 'annexed' to the Federal Capital Territory, to the extent that the laws there in force from time to time were 'applied' in the still legally distinct Jervis Bay Territory.
Further reading
- National Archives of Australia - Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Act 1915
- Jervis Bay Territory Acceptance Act 1915 (NO. 19, 1915) (as passed)
- JERVIS BAY TERRITORY ACCEPTANCE ACT 1915 (consolidated version, incorporating subsequent amendments)