Huddersfield had been employed. I accept, substantially, the
accounts of Messrs. Fogarty and Fripp of this interview. I do not
think the Minister was at that time considering the question of
cancelling the agreement nor do I think any such possibility was
brought home to the directors of the contractor. No doubt the
statement lodged by the contractor with the Minister covered
good deal of the ground which the Minister afterwards considered
in arriving at his decision to determine the agreement, but the
question of determining the agreement only arose, in my opinion,
after the Minister saw the Administrator, Mr. Urquhart, a
February 1925. His decision to determine the agreement was then
based upon the inefficiency of the vessels employed by the contractor _
in the Northern Territory shipping service and the disorganization
of the contractor's business arrangements at Darwin. Th
contractor had no fair or sufficient notice of the extent of the
grounds upon which the Minister proceeded and no opportunity of
answering them, if the Minister was bound to give it any such
notice. In my opinion, however, the Minister was not, in point of
Jaw, bound to give any such notice. Again the question turns upon
the truejmeaning of clause 15. If the clause places the Minister
a judicial or quasi-judicial position then no doubt the rule Aud
alteram partem applies (Wood v. Woad (1) ); if, however, the clause
gives the Minister absolute power to determine the agreement
without anything in the nature of a judicial inquiry, the rule ha
no application. Whether the authority is judicial or absolute m
turn upon the terms of the particular agreement. (illen v. Laff
(2), by which I am bound, is an illustration of the former ¢
this case, in my opinion, belongs to the latter. The Minister is
empowered to act on his own belief or opinion uncontrolled by the
Courts, if that belief is honestly entertained. It is, in truth, a powel
given for the protection of the Commonwealth and as a convenient
and decisive test of non-performance of the agreement. No word!
are introduced as in (rillen v. Laffer suggesting evidence or
quasi-judicial inquiry, and there is nothing in the agree
suggesting an obligation upon the Minister "to act as a tribt
or to state the grounds on which he decides for himself"