The second question concerns the jurisdiction of the Court by
virtue of the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act 1890. It appears in
the first place that the Commonwealth Act of 1914, No. 11, was
assented to by the Governor-General on 29th October 1914. Strictly
speaking, it should have been reserved for the King's personal assent,
in accordance with sec. 4 of the Imperial Act. On 7th September
1916 His Majesty gave his royal assent to the law, and this fact
was notified by publication of a copy of the King's Order in Council
in the Commonwealth Government Gazette on 16th November 1916.
It was on the part of the defendant objected that the Bill, having
been assented to in the first place by the Governor-General, could not
be said to have been subsequently "reserved" either within the
meaning of sec. 4 of the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act 1890 or
within the meaning of sec. 58 of the Constitution. Consequently,
so ran the argument, the King's assent was nugatory and the so-called
Act is void. This contention regards sec. 4 of the Act of 1890 as a
tigid enumeration of three several conditions mutually exclusive of
each other and of all other methods. It assumes that one of these
three methods must be definitely adopted before any other course
is taken, the sanction being invalidity. The three conditions are :
(1) Prior approval of the Sovereign; (2) reservation for the
Sovereign's pleasure, and (3) a suspending clause until His Majesty's
pleasure is signified. Avowedly (1) and (3) do not apply. But, as
to (2), the argument advanced is that, the Bill having been assented
to by the Governor-General in fact, he was functus officio and
thereafter he could not " reserve " the Bill for the signification of the
King's pleasure. The contention cannot be sustained. Sec. 4 of
the Act of 1890 is not intended as a weakening of the royal prerogative
or the common law of the Constitution as to the King's relation to
his appropriate legislature. The Act is dealing with a subject
concerning the whole Empire, and by sec. 4 retains, as a condition
of a new and very extensive Imperial grant of legislative power to
the dominions, a right of Imperial oversight in respect of the
legislation. That condition is the royal approval, guided, of course,