Cole v Whitfield (Australia, 1988): The Day the Meaning of s 92 “Absolute Freedom” Changed
“They say inter-State trade is absolutely free”… but was that “absolute” really absolute?
When I first encountered Cole v Whitfield, I looked at the text of s 92 and, frankly, thought about it in a very simple way: “If trade between States is absolutely free, then any law that burdens trade must be invalid, right?” But once you follow the reasoning of the judgment, you see that this case is effectively the point where the Court said, “We are scrapping the old s 92 approach; from now on, read it like this.” What is even more interesting is that the factual setting was not a grand trade war, but an extremely practical regulation—something like a crayfish size restriction. Today, I will focus on what Cole v Whitfield changed and how to structure it cleanly for an exam or report, capturing only the essentials.
Table of Contents
Case background: “How did a crayfish size rule become a constitutional case?”
On its face, Cole v Whitfield began with a very small-scale regulation. Tasmania had enacted a law to protect its coastal crayfish resources, prohibiting possession of crayfish below a certain size. The key detail was that the restriction was not limited to “Tasmanian crayfish”; it applied equally to crayfish caught outside the State.
Cole imported into Tasmania small crayfish that had been lawfully caught in South Australia, and he was prosecuted for breaching the Tasmanian law. That is where the case becomes constitutional. The question emerged: “If the product is legal in another State, can it really be punished just because it crosses the border?”
The dispute therefore shifted away from crayfish and toward a more fundamental issue: Are all State laws that restrict inter-State trade automatically unconstitutional?
Core issue: Interpreting “absolutely free” in Constitution s 92
Section 92 of the Australian Constitution provides: “trade, commerce, and intercourse among the States… shall be absolutely free.” This sentence had troubled courts for decades, for one recurring reason: what does “absolutely free” actually mean?
| Earlier approach | Problem |
|---|---|
| Burden on trade → unconstitutional | Almost any regulation could be unconstitutional |
| Rights-based focus on individual freedom | Clashes with the structure of federalism |
In Cole v Whitfield, the High Court concluded that this interpretive approach had reached its limits, and it moved to a blunt conclusion: “We need to read s 92 again, from the ground up.”
New standard: The “protectionist discrimination” test
The doctrinal heart of the case is the creation of a new test. The Court redefined the purpose of s 92 as promoting economic integration among the States and preventing protectionism.
- Does the law discriminate against inter-State trade?
- If so, does that discrimination have a protectionist purpose or effect?
- Distinguish mere regulatory burdens from market barriers
With this standard, s 92 ceased to operate as a provision that “attacks every regulation,” and instead became a constitutional safeguard targeted at protectionism.
Application and result: Why it was not unconstitutional
After setting out the new standard, the High Court applied it immediately to Cole. The key was whether the Tasmanian law discriminated against inter-State trade, and—if so—whether that discrimination was protectionist in character.
The Court focused on the fact that the regulation treated Tasmanian and out-of-State crayfish the same. Possession of undersized crayfish was prohibited regardless of origin, and the measure was not structured to protect a particular State’s producers.
The legislative purpose was also assessed as resource conservation and environmental management, rather than industrial protection. Accordingly, while the law imposed a practical burden on inter-State trade, it was held not to amount to the kind of protectionist discrimination prohibited by s 92.
Significance: The sentence that reshaped later s 92 cases
The real significance of Cole v Whitfield lies less in its outcome than in its shift in methodology. After this decision, s 92 litigation moved away from semantic fights about “absolute freedom” and into a domain of substantive evaluation.
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| Focus on formal “burdens” | Discrimination + protectionism analysis |
| Broad risk of invalidity | Greater stability for regulatory legislation |
Exam/assignment template: IRAC in five sentences
- Issue: Does the State law restrict inter-State trade?
- Rule: s 92 prohibits protectionist discrimination only (Cole v Whitfield)
- Application: Analyze discrimination + purpose/effect
- Conclusion: If there is no protectionist discrimination, the law is valid
Frequently Asked Questions (Cole v Whitfield)
Earlier cases tended to focus mainly on whether any burden on inter-State trade existed. As a result, even ordinary regulatory laws were placed at risk of invalidity, and it was difficult to establish a consistent standard.
Because the High Court expressly abandoned the earlier approach and, drawing on the historical context of federation, established a purpose-based interpretation centred on preventing protectionism.
No. Under the post–Cole v Whitfield standard, even if there is discrimination, it may be permissible unless it has a protectionist purpose or effect.
They can be reviewed, but if the regulatory purpose is legitimate and the measure treats in-State and out-of-State goods equally, it will usually be upheld as valid. This case is a leading example.
After Cole v Whitfield, it is generally not treated that way. It is understood as an institutional provision designed to secure a federal free-trade structure among the States, rather than an individual rights guarantee.
“Section 92 prohibits only protectionist discrimination against inter-State trade; a mere regulatory burden is not unconstitutional.”
In closing: How to read “absolute freedom” as “no protectionism”
Once you have Cole v Whitfield properly organized, s 92 no longer feels like a bizarre “sentence puzzle.” Instead of clinging to the phrase “absolutely free” and driving every regulation toward invalidity, the analysis becomes one clear question: does the law “discriminate” against inter-State trade, and does that discrimination create “protectionism”? If you hold onto that sentence, you can preserve legitimate regulations for environment, health, and safety, while accurately filtering out barriers that subtly push out out-of-State goods. Ultimately, the value of this decision lies less in its result (the crayfish rule was valid) than in the fact that it created a workable standard that makes the federal free-trade structure operate realistically. In an exam or a report, when s 92 appears, if you immediately think “protectionist discrimination,” you are already halfway to the correct answer.




