Page:Hocking v Director-General of the National Archives of Australia.pdf/96

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

90.

reduced back to its original material (blank paper that might be owned by the Commonwealth)[1].

235 With a dearth of modern authority, some judges have, like the submissions of the respondent, relied upon the rule adopted by Justinian's Institutes[2]. However, this rule: (i) was a forced compromise between two schools of thought[3]; (ii) was arguably intended to apply only where there was common ground between the schools[4]; (iii) has been powerfully criticised as taking "no account of the relative importance of the materials and of the maker's skill" and therefore leading to potentially bizarre consequences[5]; (iv) has not generally been adopted in English or Australian law[6]; and (v) is the subject of considerable variation in practice among Civilian jurisdictions[7] with dispute even in Scotland, where the dominant rule is closest to, but still not identical with, the Roman rule[8].


  1. Citing Inst II.1.25. See Justinian's Institutes, tr Birks and McLeod (1987) at 57: "if the thing can be turned back into its materials, its owner is the one who owned the materials; if not, the maker".
  2. International Banking Corporation v Ferguson, Shaw, & Sons 1910 SC 182; McDonald v Provan (of Scotland Street) Ltd 1960 SLT 231 at 232. See also Borden (UK) Ltd v Scottish Timber Products Ltd [1981] Ch 25 at 35, 44, 46; Associated Alloys Pty Ltd v Metropolitan Engineering and Fabrications Pty Ltd (1996) 20 ACSR 205 at 209–210.
  3. See D 41.1.7.7 (Gaius, Common Matters or Golden Things, bk 2): The Digest of Justinian, tr ed Watson, rev ed (1998), vol 4 at 3.
  4. Thomas, Textbook of Roman Law (1976) at 175, fn 4.
  5. Nicholas, An Introduction to Roman Law (1962) at 137.
  6. Glencore International AG v Metro Trading International Inc [2001] 1 All ER (Comm) 103 at 165 [178]. Compare Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1766), bk II at 404; Associated Alloys Pty Ltd v Metropolitan Engineering and Fabrications Pty Ltd (1996) 20 ACSR 205 at 209–210.
  7. Compare, for instance, Code Civil, Arts 570, 571 (France); Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, s 950 (Germany).
  8. McDonald v Provan (of Scotland Street) Ltd 1960 SLT 231. See Scottish Law Commission, Corporeal Moveables: Mixing Union and Creation, Memorandum No 28 (1976) at [19]–[20].