other than the one it assigns. Nevertheless, as we say, two com-
peting constructions are presented, and, as the award is a Federal
award applying to every State in Australia, the relative values of
those constructions cannot be appreciated until some general view is
obtained of the Navigation Acts in force throughout Australia. It
must not be imagined that the clause in the award is to be restricted
in its scope to the New South Wales Act. The Acts in force, so far
as we can gather with the materials at our command, are these, in
order of date: Tasmania, 38 Vict. No. 2, amended by 59 Vict. No.
27; Queensland, 41 Vict. No. 3; South Australia, 44 & 45 Vict. No.
237 ; New South Wales, 1901, No. 60; Western Australia, 1904, No.
59, amended by 1918, No. 33; Victoria, 1915, No. 2688. Without
entering unnecessarily into the details of these enactments, we may
observe that there is a strong family resemblance in their main pro-
visions with reference to inquiries into casualties and misconduct.
Speaking generally, tribunals are created with powers practically
identical with those possessed by the Court of Marine Inquiry in
New South Wales. Speaking generally also, the decision, besides
having effect as such, is made the subject of a "report." The report
may be made to the Governor or a Board, but probably the intention
is to communicate it in a case of this kind to the Board of Trade in
England. That is expressly so provided in sec. 22 of the Tasmanian
Act 59 Vict. No. 27. There are some provisions in some of the
Acts which are not unimportant in this connection. In sec. 192 of
the Victorian Act a Court of Marine Inquiry may reserve any ques-
tion of law in the form of a special case for the opinion of the Supreme
Court. By sec. 194 the Court of Marine Inquiry may make such
order with respect to the costs of any investigation or any portion
thereof as it deems just. So in sec. 27 of the Western Australian
Act. The constitution of the Court differs in different States. InSouth
Australia, in certain classes of cases where a certificate is in peril,
there must be at least one Judge of the Supreme Court present with
nautical or engineering assessors. In some of the States a prelimin-
ary inquiry is provided for as in England. That is not so in New
South Wales in the sense in which a preliminary inquiry is regarded
as a precedent stage to a formal inquiry. (See Hx parte Setterfield (1).)
(1) (1900) 21 N.S.W.L.R. (L.), 331.