Commonwealth Coat of Arms of Australia

Marriage Act 1961

No. 12, 1961

Compilation No. 27

Compilation date:   26 October 2018

Includes amendments up to: Act No. 130, 2018

Registered:    9 November 2018

 

About this compilation

This compilation

This is a compilation of the Marriage Act 1961 that shows the text of the law as amended and in force on 26 October 2018 (the compilation date).

The notes at the end of this compilation (the endnotes) include information about amending laws and the amendment history of provisions of the compiled law.

Uncommenced amendments

The effect of uncommenced amendments is not shown in the text of the compiled law. Any uncommenced amendments affecting the law are accessible on the Legislation Register (www.legislation.gov.au). The details of amendments made up to, but not commenced at, the compilation date are underlined in the endnotes. For more information on any uncommenced amendments, see the series page on the Legislation Register for the compiled law.

Application, saving and transitional provisions for provisions and amendments

If the operation of a provision or amendment of the compiled law is affected by an application, saving or transitional provision that is not included in this compilation, details are included in the endnotes.

Editorial changes

For more information about any editorial changes made in this compilation, see the endnotes.

Modifications

If the compiled law is modified by another law, the compiled law operates as modified but the modification does not amend the text of the law. Accordingly, this compilation does not show the text of the compiled law as modified. For more information on any modifications, see the series page on the Legislation Register for the compiled law.

Selfrepealing provisions

If a provision of the compiled law has been repealed in accordance with a provision of the law, details are included in the endnotes.

 

 

 

Contents

Part I—Preliminary

1 Short title

2 Commencement

2A Objects of this Act

5 Interpretation

5A Application of the Criminal Code

6 Act not to exclude operation of certain State and Territory laws

7 Validity of certain marriages not affected

8 Extension of Act to Territories etc.

9 Arrangements with State

9A Persons who may exercise certain powers may be restricted by Proclamation

Part IA—Marriage education

9B Grants to approved organisations

9C Approval of voluntary organisations

9E Reports and financial statements of approved organisations

Part II—Marriageable age and marriages of minors

10 Application of Part

11 Marriageable age

12 Authorisation of marriage of person under age of 18 years in exceptional circumstances

13 Marriage of minor not to be solemnised without consent of parents etc.

14 Persons whose consent is required to the marriage of a minor

15 Prescribed authority may dispense with consent in certain cases

16 Consent by magistrate where parent etc. refuses consent etc.

17 Rehearing of applications by a Judge

18 Provisions applicable to inquiries by Judge or magistrate

19 Restriction on applications under sections 12, 15 and 16

20 Effect of consent of magistrate or Judge

21 Consent by magistrate or Judge and dispensation with consent to be ineffective after 3 months etc.

Part III—Void marriages

Division 1—Marriages solemnised on or after 20 June 1977 and before the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985

22 Division to be subject to application of private international law

23 Grounds on which marriages are void

Division 2—Marriages solemnised after the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985

23A Application of Division

23B Grounds on which marriages are void

Part IV—Solemnisation of marriages in Australia

Division 1—Authorised celebrants

Subdivision A—Ministers of religion

25 Interpretation

26 Recognised denominations

27 Registers of ministers of religion

28 Transfer of State registers

29 Qualifications for registration under this Subdivision

30 Registrar to register applicant

31 Applicant may be refused registration in certain circumstances

32 Effect of registration

33 Removal from register

34 Review of refusal to register or removal from register

35 Change of address etc. to be notified

36 Transfer to another State etc.

37 Furnishing of information by recognised denominations

38 Registrars to furnish information to AttorneyGeneral

Subdivision B—State and Territory officers etc.

39 Authorisation of State and Territory officers etc.

Subdivision C—Marriage celebrants

39A Registrar of Marriage Celebrants

39B Register of marriage celebrants

39C Entitlement to be registered as a marriage celebrant

39D Registration as a marriage celebrant

Subdivision D—Religious marriage celebrants

39DA Entitlement to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants

39DB Request to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants

39DC Identification as a religious marriage celebrant

39DD Transitional provisions for existing marriage celebrants

39DE Process of identification on the register as a religious marriage celebrant

Subdivision E—General provisions relating to all marriage celebrants

39F Effect of registration

39FA Celebrant registration charge: liability to pay charge

39FB Celebrant registration charge: consequence of nonpayment

39G Obligations of each marriage celebrant

39H Performance reviews

39I Disciplinary measures

39J Review of decisions

39K Additional functions of the Registrar

39L Registrar not liable for damages

39M Evidence of registration etc.

Division 2—Marriages by authorised celebrants

40 Application of Division

41 Marriages to be solemnised by authorised celebrant

42 Notice to be given and declaration made

42A Commissioner of Australian Federal Police or approved authority may issue special notice

43 Marriage may be solemnised on any day etc.

44 Witnesses

45 Form of ceremony

46 Certain authorised celebrants to explain nature of marriage relationship

47 Ministers of religion may refuse to solemnise marriages

47A Religious marriage celebrants may refuse to solemnise marriages

47B Bodies established for religious purposes may refuse to make facilities available or provide goods or services

48 Certain marriages not solemnised in accordance with this Division to be invalid

49 Authorised celebrant to retain consents, statutory declarations etc.

50 Marriage certificates

51 Incorrect marriage certificates

Division 3—Marriages by foreign diplomatic or consular officers

52 Interpretation

53 Application of Division

54 GovernorGeneral may declare countries to be proclaimed overseas countries

55 Solemnisation of marriages in Australia by foreign diplomatic or consular officer

56 Recognition of marriages

57 Registrar and Deputy Registrar of Foreign Marriages

58 Register of Foreign Marriages Solemnised in Australia

59 Searches and certified copies

Part V—Marriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

Division 1—Registrar of Overseas Marriages

60 Definitions

61 Registrar of Overseas Marriages

62 Acting appointments

63  Register of Overseas Marriages

64 Searches and certified copies

Division 3—Marriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

71 Marriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

71A Marriage officers

72 Form and ceremony of marriage

Division 4—General

73 Validity of marriages

74 Declaration to be made before authorised celebrant

75 Authorised celebrant to be satisfied of parties’ identity

76 Additional consent to marriage of minor domiciled outside Australia

77 Restriction on solemnisation of marriages under this Part

78 Solemnisation of marriages where a party to the marriage is not an Australian citizen etc.

79 Authorised celebrant to retain consents etc.

80 Marriage certificate and registration of marriages

81 Power to refuse to solemnise marriage

82 Marriages may be solemnised on any day and at any time

83 Validity of marriages under this Part

84 Registration of overseas marriages attended by an authorised celebrant

85 Certificates of marriages solemnised in accordance with local law in an overseas country

86 Evidence

87 Validity of marriages otherwise than under this Part not affected

88 Imperial Foreign Marriage Acts

Part VA—Recognition of foreign marriages

88A Object of Part

88B Interpretation

88C Application of Part

88D Validity of marriages

88E Validity of certain marriages not affected by this Part

88F Incidental determination of recognition of certain foreign marriages

88G Evidence

Part VI—Legitimation

89 Legitimation by virtue of marriage of parents

90 Legitimacy of children of certain foreign marriages

91 Legitimacy of children of certain void marriages

92 Declarations of legitimacy etc.

93 Operation of certain State and Territory laws

Part VII—Offences

94 Bigamy

95 Marrying person not of marriageable age etc.

98 Contravention of subsection 13(3)

99 Solemnising marriage where notice or declaration not given or made etc.

100 Solemnising marriage where reason to believe there is a legal impediment

101 Solemnisation of marriage by unauthorised person

103 Going through ceremony of marriage before person not authorised to solemnise it

104 Giving defective notice etc.

105 Failure to comply with notice under section 51

106 Failure by interpreter to furnish certificate etc.

Part VIII—Transitional provisions

107 Exercise of powers etc. before commencement of Act

108 Application of offence provisions to notices etc. given before commencement of this Act

109 Consents etc. given under State or Territory laws

Part IX—Miscellaneous

111 Certain marriages and legitimations to be valid in all the Territories

111A Abolition of action for breach of promise

112 Interpreters at marriage ceremonies

113 Second marriage ceremonies

114 Correction of errors in marriage registries

115 Publication of lists of authorised celebrants

116 Judicial notice of signatures of Registrars, celebrants etc.

117 Evidence of registration etc.

118 Right of ministers of religion to receive fees

119 Approved forms

120 Regulations

Schedule 1—Consent to the marriage of a minor

1 Consent to the marriage of a minor

Endnotes

Endnote 1—About the endnotes

Endnote 2—Abbreviation key

Endnote 3—Legislation history

Endnote 4—Amendment history

An Act relating to Marriage

Part IPreliminary

 

1  Short title

  This Act may be cited as the Marriage Act 1961.

2  Commencement

 (1) Sections 1, 2 and 3, subsection 5(1), section 9, Parts III and VIII and section 120 shall come into operation on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.

 (2) The remaining provisions of this Act shall come into operation on a date to be fixed by Proclamation.

2A  Objects of this Act

  It is an object of this Act to create a legal framework:

 (a) to allow civil celebrants to solemnise marriage, understood as the union of 2 people to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life; and

 (b) to allow ministers of religion to solemnise marriage, respecting the doctrines, tenets and beliefs of their religion, the views of their religious community or their own religious beliefs; and

 (c) to allow equal access to marriage while protecting religious freedom in relation to marriage.

5  Interpretation

 (1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:

Ambassador includes Minister, Head of Mission and Chargé d’Affaires.

approved organisation means an organisation approved or deemed to be approved under Part IA.

artificial conception procedure includes:

 (a) artificial insemination; and

 (b) the implantation of an embryo in the body of a woman.

Australia includes Norfolk Island.

Australian Consular Officer and Australian Diplomatic Officer have the same respective meanings as in the Consular Fees Act 1955.

authorised celebrant means:

 (a) in relation to a marriage proposed to be solemnised in Australia:

 (i) a minister of religion registered under Subdivision A of Division 1 of Part IV; or

 (ii) a person authorised to solemnise marriages under Subdivision B of Division 1 of Part IV; or

 (iii) a marriage celebrant; or

 (iv) a religious marriage celebrant; or

 (b) in relation to a marriage proposed to be solemnised in accordance with Division 3 of Part V:

 (i) a chaplain; or

 (ii) an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903), other than a chaplain, authorised by the Chief of the Defence Force under section 71A to solemnise marriages under that Division.

celebrant registration charge: see subsection 39FA(1).

chaplain means a chaplain in the Defence Force.

charge payment day: see subsection 39FA(2).

Consul includes ConsulGeneral, ViceConsul, ProConsul and Consular Agent.

Family Court of a State means a Family Court of a State that has jurisdiction under the Family Law Act 1975 by virtue of a Proclamation under section 41 of that Act.

Judge, in relation to the performance of a function under this Act in a State or Territory, means a person who is:

 (a) a Judge of the Family Court of Australia, or a Judge of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia, who is appointed by the Minister to be a person authorised to perform that function;

 (b) a Judge of a court of that State in respect of whom an appropriate arrangement in force under section 9 is applicable; or

 (c) a Judge of the Supreme Court of that Territory.

magistrate means:

 (a) in relation to a State—a person who holds office as a Chief, Police, Stipendiary, Resident or Special Magistrate of the State and in respect of whom an appropriate arrangement in force under section 9 is applicable; and

 (b) in relation to a Territory—a person who holds office as a Chief, Police, Stipendiary, Resident, Special Magistrate or Judge, or acting Judge, of a Local Court of the Territory.

marriage means the union of 2 people to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life.

marriage celebrant means a person registered under Subdivision C of Division 1 of Part IV.

medical practitioner has the meaning given by the Health Insurance Act 1973.

minister of religion means:

 (a) a person recognised by a religious body or a religious organisation as having authority to solemnise marriages in accordance with the rites or customs of the body or organisation; or

 (b) in relation to a religious body or a religious organisation in respect of which paragraph (a) is not applicable, a person nominated by:

 (i) the head, or the governing authority, in a State or Territory, of that body or organisation; or

 (ii) such other person or authority acting on behalf of that body or organisation as is prescribed;

  to be an authorised celebrant for the purposes of this Act.

minor means a person who has not attained the age of 18 years.

overseas country means a country or place other than a part of the Queen’s dominions, and, in Part V, includes a vessel which is for the time being in the territorial waters of such a country or place.

prescribed authority means:

 (a) in relation to a marriage proposed to be solemnised in Australia—a person, being an officer or employee of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, appointed by the Minister to be a prescribed authority;

 (c) in relation to a marriage proposed to be solemnised in accordance with Division 3 of Part V—a chaplain or an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903), other than a chaplain, authorised by the Chief of the Defence Force under section 71A to solemnise marriages under that Division.

recognised denomination means a religious body or a religious organisation in respect of which a Proclamation under section 26 is in force.

religious marriage celebrant means a person identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants under Subdivision D of Division 1 of Part IV.

Territory means:

 (a) the Australian Capital Territory; or

 (b) the Northern Territory; or

 (c) Norfolk Island; or

 (d) the Territory of Christmas Island; or

 (e) the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands.

the commencement of this Act means the time of commencement of the provisions other than the provisions referred to in subsection 2(1).

the Queen’s dominions includes a British protectorate and a British protected State.

 (2) Where:

 (a) a marriage is solemnised in the presence of a person, being a person in whose presence a marriage may, in accordance with this Act, be lawfully solemnised; and

 (b) that person consents to the marriage being solemnised in his or her presence;

that person shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to solemnise the marriage.

 (3) Any appointment or authorisation under this Act may be an appointment or authorisation of:

 (a) a named person only; or

 (b) every person from time to time holding or acting in a specified office of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory.

5A  Application of the Criminal Code

  Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.

Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.

6  Act not to exclude operation of certain State and Territory laws

  This Act shall not be taken to exclude the operation of a law of a State or of a Territory, in so far as that law relates to the registration of marriages, but a marriage solemnised after the commencement of this Act is not invalid by reason of a failure to comply with the requirements of such a law.

7  Validity of certain marriages not affected

  Subject to the operation of the Part repealed by the Marriage Amendment Act 1976 before the date fixed under subsection 2(2) of this Act, this Act does not affect the validity or invalidity of a marriage that took place before the date so fixed.

8  Extension of Act to Territories etc.

 (1) The whole of this Act extends to the following Territories:

 (a) Norfolk Island;

 (b) the Territory of Christmas Island;

 (c) the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands.

 (2) Part V applies both within and without Australia.

 (3) Part VII applies to and in relation to:

 (a) marriages solemnised, or intended or purporting to be solemnised, in Australia; and

 (b) marriages solemnised, or intended or purporting to be solemnised, under Part V;

and, in relation to such marriages, applies both within and without Australia.

 (4) Section 73, Part VA and section 111 extend to all the external Territories.

9  Arrangements with State

 (1) The GovernorGeneral may make arrangements with the Governor of a State:

 (b) for the performance by all or any of the persons who from time to time hold office as Judges of any Court of that State of the functions of a Judge under sections 12, 16 and 17;

 (c) for the performance by all or any of the persons who from time to time hold office as Chief, Police, Stipendiary, Resident or Special Magistrates in that State of all or any of the functions of a magistrate under this Act;

 (d) for the performance by officers of that State of the function of solemnising marriages in accordance with Division 2 of Part IV;

 (e) for enabling officers of that State to be appointed as prescribed authorities;

 (f) for enabling officers of that State to be appointed as Registrar and Deputy Registrar of Ministers of Religion for that State under Subdivision A of Division 1 of Part IV; and

 (g) for enabling officers of that State to be appointed as authorised officers for the purposes of section 51.

 (2) A copy of each arrangement made under this section shall be published in the Gazette.

9A  Persons who may exercise certain powers may be restricted by Proclamation

 (1) The GovernorGeneral may, by Proclamation, declare that, on and after a date fixed by the Proclamation, a power or function under this Act that is specified in the Proclamation, being a power or function expressed by this Act to be exercisable by a Judge, or by a Judge or magistrate, is not to be exercised, or is not to be exercised in a specified part of Australia, otherwise than by a Judge who is a Judge of the Family Court of Australia or of the Family Court of a State or a Judge of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia.

 (2) Proclamations under this Part in respect of different parts of Australia may be made from time to time.

Part IAMarriage education

 

9B  Grants to approved organisations

  The Minister may, from time to time, out of moneys appropriated by the Parliament for the purposes of this Part, grant to an approved organisation, upon such conditions as the Minister thinks fit, such sums by way of financial assistance as the Minister determines for the conduct of programs of marriage education.

9C  Approval of voluntary organisations

 (1) A voluntary organisation may apply to the Minister for approval under this Part as an organisation conducting programs of marriage education.

 (2) The Minister may approve the organisation if the Minister is satisfied that the organisation is willing and able to conduct programs of marriage education.

 (3) The approval of an organisation under this section may be given subject to such conditions as the Minister determines.

 (4) Where the approval of an organisation is subject to conditions, the Minister may, from time to time, revoke or vary all or any of those conditions or add further conditions.

 (5) The Minister may, at any time, revoke the approval of an approved organisation where:

 (a) the organisation has not complied with a condition to which the approval of the organisation is subject;

 (b) the organisation has not furnished, in accordance with section 9E, a statement or report that the organisation was required by that section to furnish; or

 (c) the Minister is satisfied that the organisation is not adequately carrying out programs of marriage education.

 (6) Notice of the approval of an organisation under this section, and notice of the revocation of the approval of an approved organisation, shall be published in such manner as the Minister considers appropriate.

9E  Reports and financial statements of approved organisations

 (1) An approved organisation that has received a grant under this Act in the period of 12 months that ended on 30 June in any year shall, not later than 30 September in that year, furnish to the Minister, in respect of that period of 12 months:

 (a) an audited financial statement of the receipts and payments of the organisation, in which receipts and payments in respect of its marriage education activities are shown separately from other receipts and payments; and

 (b) a report on its marriage education activities, including information as to the programs conducted by the organisation during the period and the number of participants in those programs.

 (2) Where the Minister is satisfied that it would be impracticable for an organisation to comply with the requirements of subsection (1) or that the application of those requirements to an organisation would be unduly onerous, the Minister may, by writing signed by the Minister, exempt the organisation, wholly or in part, from those requirements.

Part IIMarriageable age and marriages of minors

 

10  Application of Part

 (1) The whole of this Part applies, notwithstanding any common law rule of private international law, in relation to:

 (a) marriages to which Division 2 of Part IV applies; and

 (b) marriages under Part V.

 (2) Sections 11 and 12 and, so far as they have application in relation to those sections, sections 18 and 19 apply in relation to:

 (a) marriages to which Division 3 of Part IV applies; and

 (b) the marriage of a person domiciled in Australia, wherever that marriage takes place.

11  Marriageable age

  Subject to section 12, a person is of marriageable age if the person has attained the age of 18 years.

12  Authorisation of marriage of person under age of 18 years in exceptional circumstances

 (1) A person who has attained the age of 16 years but has not attained the age of 18 years may apply to a Judge or magistrate in a State or Territory for an order authorising him or her to marry a particular person of marriageable age despite the fact that the applicant has not attained the age of 18 years.

 (2) The Judge or magistrate shall, subject to subsection (4), hold an inquiry into the relevant facts and circumstances and, if satisfied that:

 (a) the applicant has attained the age of 16 years; and

 (b) the circumstances of the case are so exceptional and unusual as to justify the making of the order;

the Judge or magistrate may, in his or her discretion, make the order sought, but otherwise the Judge or magistrate shall refuse the application.

 (3) Subject to subsection (5), where a Judge or a magistrate has made such an order, the person on whose application the order was made is, in relation to his or her marriage to the other person specified in the order, but not otherwise, of marriageable age.

 (4) Where a Judge or a magistrate to whom an application is made under this section is satisfied that the matter could more properly be dealt with by a Judge or a magistrate sitting at a place nearer the place where the applicant ordinarily resides, the Judge or magistrate may, in his or her discretion, refuse to proceed with the hearing of the application, but such a refusal shall not, for the purposes of section 19, be deemed to be a refusal of the application.

 (5) Where an order is made under this section and the marriage to which the order relates does not take place within 3 months after the date of the order, the order ceases to have effect.

13  Marriage of minor not to be solemnised without consent of parents etc.

 (1) Subject to this Part, where a party to an intended marriage, not having previously been married, is a minor, the marriage shall not be solemnised unless there is produced to the person by whom or in whose presence the marriage is solemnised:

 (a) in respect of each person whose consent is required by this Act to the marriage of the minor, not being a person to whom paragraph (b) is applicable:

 (i) the consent in writing of that person, duly witnessed and dated not earlier than 3 months before the date on which the marriage is solemnised or, in such cases as are prescribed, such other evidence that the consent of that person to the intended marriage has been given not earlier than that time as the regulations declare to be sufficient for the purposes of this section; or

 (ii) an effective consent in writing of a magistrate or a Judge under this Part in place of the consent of that person; and

 (b) in respect of any person whose consent to the marriage of the minor has been dispensed with by a prescribed authority—the dispensation in writing signed by the prescribed authority.

 (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the consent of a person is only duly witnessed if the signature of that person was witnessed:

 (a) if the consent is signed in Australia—by one of the following persons:

 (i) an authorised celebrant;

 (ii) a Commissioner for Declarations under the Statutory Declarations Act 1959;

 (iii) a justice of the peace;

 (iv) a barrister or solicitor;

 (v) a medical practitioner;

 (vi) a member of the Australian Federal Police or the police force of a State or Territory; or

 (b) if the consent is signed in any other place—by one of the following persons:

 (i) an Australian Diplomatic Officer;

 (ii) an Australian Consular Officer;

 (iii) a minister of religion of that place;

 (iv) a judge of a court of that place;

 (v) a magistrate or justice of the peace of or for that place;

 (vi) a notary public;

 (vii) an employee of the Commonwealth authorised under paragraph 3(c) of the Consular Fees Act 1955;

 (viii) an employee of the Australian Trade and Investment Commission authorised under paragraph 3(d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955.

 (3) A person shall not subscribe his or her name as a witness to the signature of a person to a consent to a marriage unless:

 (a) the person is satisfied on reasonable grounds as to the identity of that person; and

 (b) the consent bears the date on which the person subscribes his or her name as a witness.

 (4) A person shall not solemnise a marriage if the person has reason to believe that:

 (a) a person whose consent in writing to the marriage of one of the parties is or has been produced for the purposes of this section has revoked his or her consent;

 (b) the signature of a person to a consent produced for the purposes of this section is forged or has been obtained by fraud;

 (c) a consent produced for the purposes of this section has been altered in a material particular without authority; or

 (d) a dispensation with the consent of a person that has been produced in relation to the marriage has ceased to have effect.

14  Persons whose consent is required to the marriage of a minor

  Before a minor may marry, consent is required from the persons specified in Schedule 1 to this Act in relation to the minor.

15  Prescribed authority may dispense with consent in certain cases

 (1) Subject to this section, a prescribed authority may, upon application in writing by a minor, dispense with the consent of a person to a proposed marriage of the minor where the prescribed authority:

 (a) is satisfied that it is impracticable, or that it is impracticable without delay that would, in all the circumstances of the case, be unreasonable, to ascertain the views of that person with respect to the proposed marriage;

 (b) has no reason to believe that that person would refuse his or her consent to the proposed marriage; and

 (c) has no reason to believe that facts may exist by reason of which it could reasonably be considered improper that the consent should be dispensed with.

 (2) An application under this section shall be supported by a statutory declaration by the applicant setting out the facts and circumstances on which the application is based and may be supported by the statutory declaration of some other person.

 (3) The applicant shall state in his or her statutory declaration whether he or she has made any previous applications under this section that have been refused and the date on which each such application was refused.

 (4) This section does not authorise a prescribed authority to dispense with the consent of a person to a marriage of a minor where any other person whose consent to the marriage is required by this Act has refused to give consent, unless a magistrate or a Judge has, in pursuance of this Part, given consent in place of the consent of that other person.

 (5) For the purposes of this section, the fact that a person does not reside in, or is absent from, Australia shall not of itself be deemed to make it impracticable to ascertain the views of that person.

16  Consent by magistrate where parent etc. refuses consent etc.

 (1) Where, in relation to a proposed marriage of a minor:

 (a) a person whose consent to the marriage is required by this Act refuses to consent to the marriage; or

 (b) an application by the minor under section 15 to dispense with the consent of a person to the marriage is refused;

the minor may apply to a Judge or magistrate for the consent of a Judge or the magistrate to the marriage in place of the consent of that person.

 (2) The Judge or magistrate shall, subject to subsections (2A) and (3), hold an inquiry into the relevant facts and circumstances and, if satisfied:

 (a) in a case to which paragraph (1)(a) applies—that the person who has refused to consent to the marriage has refused consent unreasonably; or

 (b) in a case to which paragraph (1)(b) applies—that, having proper regard for the welfare of the minor, it would be unreasonable for the Judge or magistrate to refuse consent to the proposed marriage;

may give consent to the marriage in place of the consent of the person in relation to whose consent the application is made.

 (2A) A Judge or magistrate shall not proceed with an inquiry in accordance with subsection (2) unless:

 (a) there has been produced to the Judge or magistrate a certificate signed by a family counsellor certifying that the applicant has received counselling from the family counsellor in relation to the proposed marriage; or

 (b) the Judge or magistrate is satisfied that counselling by a family counsellor is not reasonably available to the applicant.

 (3) Where a magistrate to whom an application is made under this section is satisfied that the matter could more properly be dealt with by a magistrate sitting at a place nearer the place where the applicant ordinarily resides, the magistrate may, in his or her discretion, refuse to proceed with the hearing of the application, but such a refusal shall not, for the purposes of sections 17 and 19, be deemed to be a refusal of the application.

 (4) Where a magistrate grants an application under subsection (1), the magistrate shall not issue consent in writing to the marriage before the expiration of the time prescribed for the purposes of section 17 and if, within that time, a request for a rehearing is made under that section, the magistrate shall not issue consent unless that request is withdrawn.

 (5) Where a Judge or magistrate gives consent to the marriage of a minor in place of the consent of a person who has refused to consent to the marriage, the Judge or magistrate may also, upon application by the minor, give consent in place of the consent of any other person if the Judge or magistrate is satisfied that it is impracticable, or that it is impracticable without delay that would, in all the circumstances of the case, be unreasonable, to ascertain the views of that person with respect to the proposed marriage.

 (6) For the purposes of subsection (5), the fact that a person does not reside in, or is absent from, Australia shall not of itself be deemed to make it impracticable to ascertain the views of that person.

 (7) In this section family counsellor has the same meaning as in the Family Law Act 1975.

17  Rehearing of applications by a Judge

 (1) Where:

 (a) an application to a magistrate under subsection 16(1) or (5) is refused; or

 (b) an application to a magistrate under subsection 16(1) is granted;

the applicant or the person in relation to whose consent the application was made, as the case requires, may, in the prescribed manner and within the prescribed time, request that the application be reheard by a Judge in the State or Territory in which it was heard, and a Judge may rehear the application accordingly.

 (2) The provisions of subsections 16(2), (5) and (6) apply, so far as they are applicable, in relation to the rehearing of an application made under section 16 and, for the purpose of such a rehearing, references in those provisions to the magistrate dealing with an application shall be read as references to the Judge rehearing the application.

18  Provisions applicable to inquiries by Judge or magistrate

 (1) In conducting an inquiry under this Part, a Judge or a magistrate:

 (a) is not bound by the rules of evidence; and

 (b) shall give to the applicant and, so far as is reasonably practicable, any person whose consent to the marriage of the applicant is required by this Act, an opportunity of being heard.

 (2) An inquiry by a Judge or a magistrate under this Part shall be held in private.

 (3) An applicant or other person who is given an opportunity of being heard at an inquiry under this Part may be represented by a barrister or solicitor.

19  Restriction on applications under sections 12, 15 and 16

 (1) Where, in relation to a proposed marriage of a minor to a particular person:

 (a) an application under section 15 has been refused by a prescribed authority;

 (b) an application under section 16 has been refused by a magistrate or a Judge; or

 (c) an application under section 12 has been refused by a magistrate or a Judge;

a further application under the same section by the same person in relation to the proposed marriage shall not be considered by any prescribed authority, magistrate or Judge within 6 months after the refusal of the application, unless the applicant satisfies the prescribed authority, magistrate or Judge to whom the further application is made that there has been a substantial change in the relevant facts or circumstances since the refusal of the former application.

 (2) The fact that an application is heard or dealt with in contravention of subsection (1) does not affect the validity of an order made, or the effectiveness of a consent given, upon the application or the rehearing of the application or make ineffective any dispensation with a consent granted on the application.

20  Effect of consent of magistrate or Judge

  Subject to section 21, where a magistrate or a Judge gives his or her consent to the marriage of a minor in place of the consent of another person, his or her consent operates, for the purposes of this Act, as the consent of that other person.

21  Consent by magistrate or Judge and dispensation with consent to be ineffective after 3 months etc.

 (1) A consent to a marriage given by a magistrate or a Judge in place of the consent of another person ceases to have effect if the marriage does not take place within 3 months after the date of the consent.

 (2) A dispensation with the consent of a person to a marriage ceases to have effect if:

 (a) the marriage does not take place within 3 months after the date of the dispensation; or

 (b) before the marriage takes place, the person whose consent has been dispensed with notifies, by writing signed by the person or in any other prescribed manner, the person to whom notice of the intended marriage has been given under this Act or, in the case of an intended marriage under Division 3 of Part V, the authorised celebrant by whom or in whose presence the marriage is intended to be solemnised, that the firstmentioned person does not consent to the marriage.

 (3) Where a consent by a magistrate or a Judge or a dispensation with the consent of a person by a prescribed authority has ceased to have effect, the provisions of this Act apply as if the consent had not been given or dispensed with, as the case may be.

Part IIIVoid marriages

Division 1Marriages solemnised on or after 20 June 1977 and before the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985

22  Division to be subject to application of private international law

  Subject to section 10, Part V, section 56 and any regulations made in accordance with paragraph 120(f), this Division has effect subject to the common law rules of private international law.

23  Grounds on which marriages are void

 (1) A marriage that took place on or after 20 June 1977 and before the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985 is void where:

 (a) either of the parties was, at the time of the marriage, lawfully married to some other person;

 (b) the parties are within a prohibited relationship;

 (c) by reason of section 48 the marriage is not a valid marriage;

 (d) the consent of either of the parties was not a real consent because:

 (i) it was obtained by duress or fraud;

 (ii) that party was mistaken as to the identity of the other party or as to the nature of the ceremony performed; or

 (iii) that party was mentally incapable of understanding the nature and effect of the marriage ceremony; or

 (e) either of the parties was not of marriageable age;

and not otherwise.

 (2) Marriages of parties within a prohibited relationship are marriages:

 (a) between a person and an ancestor or descendant of the person; or

 (b) between a brother and a sister (whether of the whole blood or the halfblood).

 (3) Any relationship specified in subsection (2) includes a relationship traced through, or to, a person who is or was an adopted child, and, for that purpose, the relationship between an adopted child and the adoptive parent, or each of the adoptive parents, of the child, shall be deemed to be or to have been the natural relationship of child and parent.

 (4) Nothing in subsection (3) makes it lawful for a person to marry a person whom the firstmentioned person could not lawfully have married if that subsection had not been enacted.

 (5) For the purposes of this section:

 (a) a person who has at any time been adopted by another person shall be deemed to remain the adopted child of that other person notwithstanding that any order by which the adoption was effected has been annulled, cancelled or discharged or that the adoption has for any other reason ceased to be effective; and

 (b) a person who has been adopted on more than one occasion shall be deemed to be the adopted child of each person by whom he or she has been adopted.

 (6) For the purposes of this section:

adopted, in relation to a child, means adopted under the law of any place (whether in or out of Australia) relating to the adoption of children.

ancestor, in relation to a person, means any person from whom the firstmentioned person is descended including a parent of the firstmentioned person.

Division 2Marriages solemnised after the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985

23A  Application of Division

 (1) Notwithstanding subsection 42(2) of the Family Law Act 1975, but subject to subsection (2) of this section, this Division applies in relation to:

 (a) all marriages solemnised in Australia; and

 (b) all marriages under Part V.

 (2) This Division does not apply in relation to marriages to which Division 3 of Part IV applies.

23B  Grounds on which marriages are void

 (1) A marriage to which this Division applies that takes place after the commencement of section 13 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985 is void where:

 (a) either of the parties is, at the time of the marriage, lawfully married to some other person;

 (b) the parties are within a prohibited relationship;

 (c) by reason of section 48 the marriage is not a valid marriage;

 (d) the consent of either of the parties is not a real consent because:

 (i) it was obtained by duress or fraud;

 (ii) that party is mistaken as to the identity of the other party or as to the nature of the ceremony performed; or

 (iii) that party did not understand the nature and effect of the marriage ceremony; or

 (e) either of the parties is not of marriageable age;

and not otherwise.

 (2) Marriages of parties within a prohibited relationship are marriages:

 (a) between a person and an ancestor or descendant of the person; or

 (b) between 2 siblings (whether of the whole blood or the halfblood).

 (3) Any relationship specified in subsection (2) includes a relationship traced through, or to, a person who is or was an adopted child, and, for that purpose, the relationship between an adopted child and the adoptive parent, or each of the adoptive parents, of the child shall be deemed to be or to have been the natural relationship of child and parent.

 (4) Nothing in subsection (3) makes it lawful for a person to marry a person whom the firstmentioned person could not lawfully have married if that subsection had not been enacted.

 (5) For the purposes of this section:

 (a) a person who has at any time been adopted by another person shall be deemed to remain the adopted child of that other person notwithstanding that any order by which the adoption was effected has been annulled, cancelled or discharged or that the adoption has for any other reason ceased to be effective; and

 (b) a person who has been adopted on more than one occasion shall be deemed to be the adopted child of each person by whom the firstmentioned person has been adopted.

 (6) For the purposes of this section:

adopted, in relation to a child, means adopted under the law of any place (whether in or out of Australia) relating to the adoption of children.

ancestor, in relation to a person, means any person from whom the firstmentioned person is descended including a parent of the firstmentioned person.

Part IVSolemnisation of marriages in Australia

Division 1Authorised celebrants

Subdivision AMinisters of religion

25  Interpretation

 (1) In this Subdivision:

 (a) a reference to a Registrar shall be read as a reference to a Registrar of Ministers of Religion; and

 (b) a reference to a register shall be read as a reference to a register kept for the purposes of this Subdivision.

 (2) For the purposes of this Subdivision, a person who is serving outside Australia as a member of the Defence Force and was, immediately before the person became a member of the Defence Force, ordinarily resident in a State or Territory shall be deemed, while the person is so serving, to be ordinarily resident in that State or Territory.

26  Recognised denominations

  The GovernorGeneral may, by Proclamation, declare a religious body or a religious organisation to be a recognised denomination for the purposes of this Act.

27  Registers of ministers of religion

 (1) For the purposes of this Subdivision, there shall be, for each State and Territory, a Registrar of Ministers of Religion and a Deputy Registrar of Ministers of Religion, who shall be appointed by the Minister.

 (2) In the event of the absence, through illness or otherwise, of the Registrar, or of a vacancy in the office of the Registrar, the Deputy Registrar has all the powers, and shall perform all the duties and functions, of the Registrar during the absence or vacancy.

 (3) Unless and until another person is appointed to be the Registrar of Ministers of Religion for a particular Territory, the person having, under the law of that Territory, the function of maintaining a register of all marriages solemnised in that Territory shall be the Registrar for that Territory.

 (4) The Registrar for a State or Territory shall keep a register, in such form as the Minister determines, of ministers of religion ordinarily resident in the State or Territory who are entitled to registration under this Subdivision.

28  Transfer of State registers

 (1) The GovernorGeneral may make arrangements with the Governor of a State for the transfer to the Commonwealth of any register of persons authorised to solemnise marriages in that State kept by an officer of that State immediately before the commencement of this Act.

 (2) A copy of each arrangement made under this section shall be published in the Gazette.

 (3) A register of a State transferred to the Commonwealth in pursuance of an arrangement made under this section, and a register of persons authorised to solemnise marriages kept in relation to a Territory immediately before the commencement of this Act, shall be deemed to form part of the register kept for that State or that Territory, as the case may be, for the purposes of this Subdivision.

 (4) A person registered in a register so transferred or kept who is, immediately after the commencement of this Act, a minister of religion of a recognised denomination shall be deemed to be so registered in pursuance of this Subdivision, and the Registrar by whom the register is kept shall remove from that register the name of any other person.

29  Qualifications for registration under this Subdivision

  Subject to this Subdivision, a person is entitled to registration under this Subdivision if:

 (a) the person is a minister of religion of a recognised denomination;

 (b) the person is nominated for registration under this Subdivision by that denomination;

 (c) the person is ordinarily resident in Australia; and

 (d) the person has attained the age of 21 years.

30  Registrar to register applicant

 (1) Subject to this Subdivision, the Registrar for a State or Territory shall, on application in writing by a person ordinarily resident in that State or Territory who is entitled to registration under this Subdivision, register that person in the register kept by that Registrar.

 (2) The particulars set out in an application for registration under this Subdivision shall be verified by the applicant by statutory declaration.

31  Applicant may be refused registration in certain circumstances

 (1) A Registrar to whom an application for registration under this Subdivision is made may refuse to register the applicant if, in the opinion of the Registrar:

 (a) there are already registered under this Subdivision sufficient ministers of religion of the denomination to which the applicant belongs to meet the needs of the denomination in the locality in which the applicant resides;

 (b) the applicant is not a fit and proper person to solemnise marriages; or

 (c) the applicant is unlikely to devote a substantial part of his or her time to the performance of functions generally performed by a minister of religion.

32  Effect of registration

  A minister of religion who is registered under this Subdivision in any register may solemnise marriages at any place in Australia.

33  Removal from register

 (1) Subject to this section, a Registrar shall remove the name of a person from the register kept by that Registrar if he or she is satisfied that:

 (a) that person has requested that his or her name be so removed;

 (b) that person has died;

 (c) the denomination by which that person was nominated for registration, or in respect of which that person is registered, no longer desires that that person be registered under this Subdivision or has ceased to be a recognised denomination;

 (d) that person:

 (i) has been guilty of such contraventions of this Act or the regulations as to show him or her not to be a fit and proper person to be registered under this Subdivision;

 (ii) has been making a business of solemnising marriages for the purpose of profit or gain; or

 (iii) is not a fit and proper person to solemnise marriages; or

 (e) that person is, for any other reason, not entitled to registration under this Subdivision.

 (2) A Registrar shall not remove the name of a person from a register under this section on a ground specified in paragraph (1)(d) or (e) unless:

 (a) the Registrar has, in accordance with the regulations, served on the person a notice in writing:

 (i) stating the Registrar’s intention to do so on that ground unless, not later than a date specified in the notice and being not less than 21 days from the date of service of the notice, the person satisfies the Registrar that the person’s name should not be removed from the register; and

 (ii) informing the person that any representations made to the Registrar before that date will be considered by the Registrar;

 (b) the Registrar has considered any representations made by the person before the date specified in the notice; and

 (c) the removal takes place within 14 days after the date specified in the notice.

 (3) Where notice is served on a person under subsection (2), that person shall not solemnise a marriage unless and until:

 (a) the person is notified by the Registrar that the Registrar has decided not to remove the person’s name from the register;

 (b) a period of 14 days has elapsed from the date specified in the notice under subsection (2) and the person’s name has not been removed from the register; or

 (c) the person’s name, having been removed from the register, is restored to the register.

34  Review of refusal to register or removal from register

 (1) An application may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for a review of a decision of a Registrar made on or after 1 July 1976:

 (a) refusing to register a person who has applied for registration under this Subdivision; or

 (b) removing the name of a person from a register in pursuance of section 33.

 (3) The reference in subsection (1) to a decision of a Registrar includes a reference to a decision of a Deputy Registrar of Ministers of Religion given in pursuance of subsection 27(2).

 (4) Where the Tribunal sets aside a decision refusing to register a person or a decision under section 33 removing the name of a person from a register, the appropriate Registrar shall forthwith register the person, or restore the name of the person to the register, as the case requires.

 (5) For the purposes of the making of an application under subsection (1) and for the purposes of the operation of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 in relation to such an application, where a person has made application under subsection 30(1) for registration under this Subdivision and, at the expiration of a period of 3 months from the day on which the application was made, the person has not been registered and has not been notified by the Registrar that that person’s application has been refused, the Registrar shall be deemed to have decided, on the last day of that period, not to register that person.

35  Change of address etc. to be notified

 (1) Where a person registered under this Subdivision:

 (a) changes his or her name, address or designation; or

 (b) ceases to exercise, or ceases to be entitled to exercise, the functions of a minister of religion of the denomination by which he or she was nominated for registration or in respect of which he or she is registered;

the person shall, within 30 days thereafter, notify the Registrar by whom the register in which the person is registered is kept of that fact in accordance with the regulations.

 (2) The Registrar may, upon receiving notification of a change of name, address or designation under subsection (1) or if the Registrar is otherwise satisfied that the particulars shown in the register in respect of a person are not correct, amend the register accordingly.

36  Transfer to another State etc.

 (1) Where a person whose name is included in the register for a particular State or Territory is ordinarily resident in another State or Territory, the Registrar by whom the register is kept shall, subject to this section, remove the name of that person from that register.

 (2) Where the name of a person referred to in subsection (1) is not included in the register for the State or Territory in which the person is ordinarily resident, the Registrar for that State or Territory may enter the name of that person in the register kept by that Registrar, and the name of that person shall not be removed from a register by virtue of subsection (1) unless and until it has been so entered.

37  Furnishing of information by recognised denominations

  The regulations may make provision for, and in relation to, the furnishing to Registrars by each recognised denomination of:

 (a) information as to matters affecting the right to registration under this Subdivision of persons who are so registered as ministers of religion of that denomination; and

 (b) an annual list of persons registered under this Subdivision as ministers of religion of that denomination who are exercising the functions of a minister of religion of that denomination.

38  Registrars to furnish information to AttorneyGeneral

  Each Registrar shall, if the Secretary of the Department so requests, furnish to the Secretary:

 (a) a list of ministers of religion registered by that Registrar under this Subdivision during the period specified in the request, showing the full name, designation, residential or postal address and religious denomination of each minister; and

 (b) particulars of any other alterations to the register kept by that Registrar under this Subdivision made during that period.

Subdivision BState and Territory officers etc.

39  Authorisation of State and Territory officers etc.

 (1) A person who, under the law of a State or Territory, has the function of registering marriages solemnised in the State or Territory or a part of the State or Territory may solemnise marriages in that State or Territory or in that part of the State or Territory, as the case may be.

 (2) The Minister may, by instrument in writing, authorise other officers of a State or Territory to solemnise marriages.

 (3) An authorisation under subsection (2):

 (a) may authorise a person to solemnise marriages at any place in Australia or only in the part or parts of Australia specified in the instrument of authorisation; and

 (b) is subject to such conditions (if any) as are specified in the instrument.

 (4) An authorisation under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.

Subdivision CMarriage celebrants

39A  Registrar of Marriage Celebrants

 (1) There is to be a position occupied (on an acting, permanent, fulltime or parttime basis) by an APS employee in the Department, the duties of which are expressed to consist of, or include, the performance of the functions given to the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants by or under this Act.

 (2) The APS employee occupying the position from time to time is the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants.

 (3) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants is to perform those functions and has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of those functions.

39B  Register of marriage celebrants

  The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants is to maintain on the internet a register of marriage celebrants.

39C  Entitlement to be registered as a marriage celebrant

 (1) A person is only entitled to be registered as a marriage celebrant if the person is an individual and the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants is satisfied that the person:

 (a) is aged 18 years or over; and

 (b) has all the qualifications, and/or skills, determined in writing to be necessary by the Registrar in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (c) is a fit and proper person to be a marriage celebrant.

 (2) In determining whether the Registrar is satisfied that the person is a fit and proper person to be a marriage celebrant, the Registrar must take into account:

 (a) whether the person has sufficient knowledge of the law relating to the solemnisation of marriages by marriage celebrants; and

 (b) whether the person is committed to advising couples of the availability of relationship support services; and

 (c) whether the person is of good standing in the community; and

 (d) whether the person has been convicted of an offence, punishable by imprisonment for one year or longer, against a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; and

 (e) whether the person has an actual or potential conflict of interest between his or her practice, or proposed practice, as a marriage celebrant and his or her business interests or other interests; and

 (f) whether the person’s registration as a marriage celebrant would be likely to result in the person gaining a benefit in respect of another business that the person owns, controls or carries out; and

 (g) whether the person will fulfil the obligations under section 39G; and

 (h) any other matter the Registrar considers relevant to whether the person is a fit and proper person to be a marriage celebrant.

 (3) Nothing in this section affects the operation of Part VIIC of the Crimes Act 1914 (which includes provisions that, in certain circumstances, relieve persons from the requirement to disclose spent convictions and require persons aware of such convictions to disregard them).

39D  Registration as a marriage celebrant

Applying for registration

 (1) A person may apply, in writing, to the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants to be registered as a marriage celebrant.

 (1A) An application is taken to be made if, and only if:

 (a) the application complies with subsection (1); and

 (b) the applicant has either:

 (i) paid the registration application fee in respect of the application; or

 (ii) been granted an exemption from liability to pay the registration application fee.

Note: The application is made on the day on which paragraphs (a) and (b) are first satisfied in relation to the application.

Registration application fees

 (1B) The regulations may require a fee (a registration application fee) to be paid in respect of an application.

 (1C) The regulations may also do all or any of the following:

 (a) provide for the granting of exemptions, on grounds specified in the regulations, from liability to pay a registration application fee;

 (b) require a fee to be paid in respect of an application for an exemption;

 (c) provide for internal review of decisions to refuse to grant exemptions.

 (1D) Regulations made for the purpose of subsection (1B) or paragraph (1C)(b) may specify a fee, or provide for a fee to be determined by the Minister by legislative instrument.

 (1E) Regulations made for the purpose of paragraph (1C)(c) must provide that the outcome of an internal review of a decision to refuse to grant an exemption is either:

 (a) that the refusal decision is confirmed; or

 (b) that an exemption is granted, with effect from when the internal review decision is made.

How Registrar deals with applications

 (2) The Registrar must deal with applications in the order in which they are made (see subsection (1A)).

 (3) In dealing with an application, the Registrar:

 (a) must have regard to the information in the application; and

 (b) may have regard to any other information in his or her possession; and

 (c) is not required to seek any further information.

 (4) The Registrar must register a person as a marriage celebrant if:

 (a) the person has made an application (see subsection (1A)); and

 (b) the Registrar is satisfied that the person is entitled to be registered as a marriage celebrant.

The Registrar must not register a person as a marriage celebrant in any other circumstances.

 (5) The Registrar registers a person as a marriage celebrant by entering in the register of marriage celebrants all details relating to the person that are required by regulations made for the purposes of this subsection.

 (6) If the Registrar registers a person as a marriage celebrant, the Registrar must, as soon as practicable, give the person written notice of the registration.

 (7) If the Registrar decides not to register a person as a marriage celebrant after dealing with the person’s application, the Registrar must, as soon as practicable, inform the applicant in writing of:

 (a) the decision; and

 (b) the reasons for it; and

 (c) the person’s right under section 39J (if any) to apply for review of the decision.

Subdivision DReligious marriage celebrants

39DA  Entitlement to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants

  A person is entitled to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants if:

 (a) the person is registered as a marriage celebrant under Subdivision C of this Division; and

 (b) the person is a minister of religion.

39DB  Request to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants

 (1) A person may, in writing, give the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants notice that the person wishes to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants.

 (2) The notice must be in a form approved by the Registrar, and include all of the information required by the form.

39DC  Identification as a religious marriage celebrant

  The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must identify a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants if:

 (a) the person has given the Registrar notice in accordance with section 39DB that the person wishes to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register; and

 (b) the person is entitled to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register.

39DD  Transitional provisions for existing marriage celebrants

Marriage celebrants who are ministers of religion, but not ministers of religion of a recognised denomination

 (1) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must identify a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants if:

 (a) the person was registered as a marriage celebrant under Subdivision C of this Division immediately before Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 commenced; and

 (b) the person is a minister of religion.

Marriage celebrants who wish to be religious marriage celebrants on the basis of their religious beliefs

 (2) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must identify a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants if:

 (a) the person was registered as a marriage celebrant under Subdivision C of this Division immediately before Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 commenced; and

 (b) the person gives the Registrar notice that the person wishes to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register:

 (i) in writing; and

 (ii) in a form approved by the Registrar; and

 (iii) within 90 days after Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 commences; and

 (c) the choice is based on the person’s religious beliefs.

39DE  Process of identification on the register as a religious marriage celebrant

 (1) The Registrar identifies a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants by annotating the register to include that detail.

 (2) If the Registrar identifies a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants, the Registrar must, as soon as practicable, give the person written notice of that fact.

 (3) If the Registrar decides not to identify a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants, the Registrar must, as soon as practicable, inform the person in writing of:

 (a) the decision; and

 (b) the reasons for it; and

 (c) the person’s right under section 39J to apply for a review of the decision.

Subdivision EGeneral provisions relating to all marriage celebrants

39F  Effect of registration

  A person who is registered as a marriage celebrant may solemnise marriages at any place in Australia.

39FA  Celebrant registration charge: liability to pay charge

 (1) A person is liable to pay celebrant registration charge to the Commonwealth in respect of a financial year if:

 (a) the person:

 (i) is a marriage celebrant on 1 July in that financial year (except if paragraphs (1A)(b) and (c) apply in relation to the person on that day); or

 (ii) becomes a marriage celebrant later in that financial year; or

 (iii) is liable to pay the charge under subsection (1A); and

 (b) the person has not, before the end of the charge payment day, been granted an exemption from liability to pay the charge.

The charge must be paid by the end of the charge payment day.

Note: For the imposition and rate of the charge, see the Marriage (Celebrant Registration Charge) Act 2014.

Marriage celebrants appealing decision to be deregistered

 (1A) A person is liable to pay celebrant registration charge to the Commonwealth in respect of a financial year if:

 (a) the person is a marriage celebrant on 1 July of that financial year; and

 (b) before that day:

 (i) the Registrar decided to deregister the person as a marriage celebrant; and

 (ii) the person applied to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for review of the decision; and

 (c) that application, or any later application to a court that relates to that application, has not been finally determined by that day; and

 (d) that or any later application is finally determined in that financial year; and

 (e) after the application is finally determined, the person is not deregistered.

Notice of charge

 (2) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must, in respect of a financial year, send each person who is liable to pay the celebrant registration charge in respect of the financial year a written notice that:

 (a) specifies:

 (i) the amount of celebrant registration charge that is payable by the person (unless the person is granted an exemption); and

 (ii) the charge payment day (being a day that is at least 30 days after the day on which the notice is sent); and

 (b) complies with any other requirements prescribed by the regulations relating to the content of the notice, or how it is to be sent.

Exemptions

 (3) The regulations may do all or any of the following:

 (a) provide for the granting of exemptions, on grounds specified in the regulations, from liability to pay celebrant registration charge in respect of a financial year;

 (b) require a fee to be paid in respect of an application for an exemption;

 (c) provide for internal review of decisions to refuse to grant exemptions.

 (4) Regulations made for the purpose of paragraph (3)(b) may specify a fee, or provide for a fee to be determined by the Minister by legislative instrument.

 (5) Regulations made for the purpose of paragraph (3)(c) must provide that the outcome of an internal review of a decision (the original decision) is either:

 (a) that the original decision is confirmed; or

 (b) that a different decision is substituted for the original decision, with effect from the time when the original decision was made.

Charge debt due to the Commonwealth

 (6) An amount of celebrant registration charge that a person is liable to pay:

 (a) is a debt due by the person to the Commonwealth; and

 (b) may be recovered by action in a court of competent jurisdiction.

39FB  Celebrant registration charge: consequence of nonpayment

 (1) If a person has not, by the end of the charge payment day, paid an amount of celebrant registration charge that the person is liable to pay, the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must, as soon as practicable after that day, send the person a written notice in accordance with subsection (2), unless the Registrar considers that the notice should not be sent at that time because:

 (a) the person’s liability to pay the charge may be affected by:

 (i) the outcome of an application for internal review of a decision to refuse to grant an exemption; or

 (ii) any other circumstance of which the Registrar is aware; or

 (b) the person’s details have been removed from the register under paragraph 39I(2)(d) or 39K(a) before the notice is sent.

Note: Depending on the outcome of matters referred to in paragraph (1)(a), it may turn out that the person is not liable to pay the charge.

 (2) The notice referred to in subsection (1) must:

 (a) advise the person that, because the person has failed to pay celebrant registration charge, the person will be deregistered as a marriage celebrant on the day specified in the notice (being a day that is at least 7 days after the day on which the notice is sent); and

 (b) comply with any other requirements prescribed by the regulations relating to the content of the notice, or how it is to be sent.

 (3) The person is taken to have been deregistered by the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants at the start of the day specified in the notice.

Note: A person who wishes to become a marriage celebrant again may reapply under section 39D.

 (4) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must remove the person’s details from the register of marriage celebrants.

39G  Obligations of each marriage celebrant

 (1) A marriage celebrant must:

 (a) conduct himself or herself in accordance with the Code of Practice for marriage celebrants prescribed by regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (b) undertake all professional development activities required by the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (ba) comply with any disciplinary measures taken against the marriage celebrant under section 39I; and

 (c) notify the Registrar, in writing, within 30 days of:

 (i) a change that results in the details provided by the person to the Registrar no longer being correct; or

 (ii) the occurrence of an event that might have caused the Registrar not to register the person as a marriage celebrant if the event had occurred before the person was registered; and

 (d) disclose that the celebrant is a marriage celebrant, and whether or not the celebrant is a religious marriage celebrant, in any document relating to the performance of services as a marriage celebrant (including advertisements) by the celebrant.

Note 1: If a marriage celebrant fails to comply with these obligations, the Registrar may take disciplinary measures under section 39I.

Note 2: For subparagraph (1)(c)(i), a person may notify the Registrar by updating the person’s details using a portal provided by the Registrar.

 (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the regulations may require a fee to be paid in respect of an application for an exemption from requirements prescribed by regulations made for the purpose of paragraph (1)(b). The regulations may specify the fee, or provide for the fee to be determined by the Minister by legislative instrument.

 (3) The regulations may specify the details that must be notified to the Registrar for the purposes of subparagraph (1)(c)(i).

39H  Performance reviews

 (1) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants may, from time to time, review the performance of a marriage celebrant in respect of a period to determine whether the Registrar considers that the celebrant’s performance in the period is satisfactory.

Note: The period to which a review relates is at the discretion of the Registrar.

 (3) In reviewing the performance of a marriage celebrant, the Registrar:

 (a) must consider the matters prescribed by regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (b) may have regard to any information in his or her possession, but is not required to seek any further information.

 (4) The Registrar must not determine that a marriage celebrant’s performance in respect of a period was not satisfactory unless:

 (a) the Registrar has given the marriage celebrant a written notice:

 (i) stating the Registrar’s intention to make the determination unless, before the date specified in the notice (which must be at least 21 days after the date on which the notice was given), the marriage celebrant satisfies the Registrar that the marriage celebrant’s performance in respect of the period was satisfactory; and

 (ii) informing the marriage celebrant that any representations made to the Registrar before that date will be considered by the Registrar; and

 (b) the Registrar has considered any representations made by the marriage celebrant before the date specified in the notice; and

 (c) the determination is made in writing within 14 days after the date specified in the notice.

39I  Disciplinary measures

 (1) The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants may only take disciplinary measures against a marriage celebrant if the Registrar:

 (a) is satisfied that the marriage celebrant is no longer entitled to be registered as a marriage celebrant; or

 (aa) is satisfied that the marriage celebrant is no longer entitled to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants; or

 (b) is satisfied that the marriage celebrant has not complied with an obligation under section 39G; or

 (c) has determined in writing under section 39H that the marriage celebrant’s performance in respect of a period was not satisfactory; or

 (d) is satisfied that it is appropriate to take disciplinary measures against the marriage celebrant after considering a complaint in accordance with the complaints resolution procedures established under paragraph 39K(c); or

 (e) is satisfied that the marriage celebrant’s application for registration was known by the marriage celebrant to be false or misleading in a material particular; or

 (f) is satisfied that the marriage celebrant’s notice under section 39DB or paragraph 39DD(2)(b) (notice requesting to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant) was known by the marriage celebrant to be false or misleading in a material particular.

 (2) The only disciplinary measures that the Registrar may take against a marriage celebrant are to:

 (a) caution the marriage celebrant in writing; or

 (b) in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph, require the marriage celebrant to undertake professional development activities determined in writing by the Registrar; or

 (c) suspend the marriage celebrant’s registration for a period (the suspension period) of up to 6 months by annotating the register of marriage celebrants to include:

 (i) a statement that the registration is suspended; and

 (ii) the dates of the start and end of the suspension period; or

 (d) deregister the marriage celebrant by removing his or her details from the register of marriage celebrants; or

 (e) if the marriage celebrant is identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants:

 (i) remove the identification of the marriage celebrant as a religious marriage celebrant from the register for a period (the suspension period) of up to 6 months by annotating the register of marriage celebrants to include a statement that the celebrant is not identified as a religious marriage celebrant, and the dates of the start and end of the suspension period; or

 (ii) remove the identification of the marriage celebrant as a religious marriage celebrant permanently from the register.

Note: A decision to suspend a marriage celebrant’s registration, or to deregister a marriage celebrant, is reviewable under section 39J.

 (3) If the Registrar suspends a marriage celebrant’s registration for a particular period, section 39F does not apply in respect of the marriage celebrant during the period.

 (3A) If the Registrar removes the identification of a marriage celebrant as a religious marriage celebrant for any period under paragraph (2)(e), section 47A does not apply in respect of the celebrant during that period.

 (4) If the Registrar decides to take disciplinary measures against a marriage celebrant (including a religious marriage celebrant), the Registrar:

 (a) must give the marriage celebrant written notice of:

 (i) the decision; and

 (ii) the reasons for it; and

 (iii) the disciplinary measure that is being taken; and

 (iv) if the marriage celebrant has a right under section 39J to apply for review of the decision—that right; and

 (b) may inform the community, in any way the Registrar thinks appropriate, including by electronic means, that the disciplinary measure is being taken against the marriage celebrant.

39J  Review of decisions

 (1) An application may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for a review of a decision of the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants:

 (a) not to register a person as a marriage celebrant; or

 (b) to suspend a person’s registration as a marriage celebrant; or

 (c) to deregister a marriage celebrant (including under section 39FB); or

 (d) not to identify a person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants; or

 (e) to remove the identification of a person as a religious marriage celebrant from the register of marriage celebrants, either for a specified period or permanently.

 (2) For the purposes of both the making of an application under subsection (1) and the operation of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 in relation to such an application, if:

 (a) a person has made application for registration as a marriage celebrant (see subsection 39D(1A)); and

 (b) at the end of 3 months after the day on which the application was made, the person has not been:

 (i) registered; or

 (ii) notified by the Registrar that that person’s application has been refused;

the Registrar is taken to have decided, on the last day of the 3 month period, not to register that person as a marriage celebrant.

 (2A) For the purposes of both the making of an application under subsection (1) and the operation of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 in relation to such an application, if:

 (a) a person has given notice under section 39DB or paragraph 39DD(2)(b) (notice requesting to be identified as a religious marriage celebrant); and

 (b) at the end of 3 months after the day on which the notice was given, the person has not been:

 (i) identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants; or

 (ii) notified by the Registrar that the Registrar has decided not to identify the person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants;

the Registrar is taken to have decided, on the last day of the 3 month period, not to identify that person as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants.

 (3) The Registrar must take such action as is necessary to give effect to the Tribunal’s decision.

39K  Additional functions of the Registrar

  The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants must:

 (a) amend the register of marriage celebrants in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (b) keep records relating to marriage celebrants, and the register of marriage celebrants, in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; and

 (c) establish complaints resolution procedures, in accordance with regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph, to resolve complaints about the solemnisation of marriages by marriage celebrants; and

 (d) perform any additional functions specified in regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph.

39L  Registrar not liable for damages

  The Registrar of Marriage Celebrants is not liable to an action or other proceeding for damages in respect of anything done, or omitted to be done, in good faith in:

 (a) the exercise or performance; or

 (b) the purported exercise or performance;

of powers or functions under this Act.

39M  Evidence of registration etc.

  A certificate, signed by the Registrar of Marriage Celebrants, stating that, at a specified time, or during a specified period:

 (a) a person was registered as a marriage celebrant; or

 (b) a person’s registration as a marriage celebrant was suspended; or

 (c) a person was not registered as a marriage celebrant; or

 (d) a person was identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants; or

 (e) a person was not identified as a religious marriage celebrant on the register of marriage celebrants;

is prima facie evidence of that fact.

Division 2Marriages by authorised celebrants

40  Application of Division

 (1) Subject to subsection (2), this Division applies to and in relation to all marriages solemnised, or intended to be solemnised, in Australia.

 (2) This Division does not apply to or in relation to marriages to which Division 3 of this Part applies.

41  Marriages to be solemnised by authorised celebrant

  A marriage shall be solemnised by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant who is authorised to solemnise marriages at the place where the marriage takes place.

42  Notice to be given and declaration made

 (1) Subject to this section, a marriage shall not be solemnised unless:

 (a) notice in writing of the intended marriage has been given in accordance with this section and has been received by the authorised celebrant solemnising the marriage not earlier than 18 months before the date of the marriage and not later than 1 month before the date of the marriage;

 (b) there has been produced to that authorised celebrant, in respect of each of the parties:

 (i) an official certificate, or an official extract of an entry in an official register, showing the date and place of birth of the party; or

 (ii) a statutory declaration made by the party or a parent of the party stating that, for reasons specified in the declaration, it is impracticable to obtain such a certificate or extract and stating, to the best of the declarant’s knowledge and belief and as accurately as the declarant has been able to ascertain, when and where the party was born; or

 (iii) a passport issued by a government of an overseas country, showing the date and place of birth of the party; or

 (iv) an Australian passport, showing the date and place of birth of the party; and

 (c) each of the parties has made and subscribed before that authorised celebrant a declaration, in writing, as to:

 (i) the party’s conjugal status;

 (ii) the party’s belief that there is no legal impediment to the marriage; and

 (iii) such other matters as are prescribed.

 (2) A notice under subsection (1):

 (a) must contain such particulars in relation to the parties as are prescribed; and

 (b) must be signed by each of the parties; and

 (c) if a party signs the notice in Australia—must be signed in the presence of:

 (i) an authorised celebrant; or

 (ii) a Commissioner for Declarations under the Statutory Declarations Act 1959; or

 (iii) a justice of the peace; or

 (iv) a barrister or solicitor; or

 (v) a medical practitioner; or

 (vi) a member of the Australian Federal Police or the police force of a State or Territory; and

 (d) if a party signs the notice outside Australia—must be signed in the presence of:

 (i) an Australian Diplomatic Officer; or

 (ii) an Australian Consular Officer; or

 (iii) a notary public; or

 (iv) an employee of the Commonwealth authorised under paragraph 3(c) of the Consular Fees Act 1955; or

 (v) an employee of the Australian Trade and Investment Commission authorised under paragraph 3(d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955.

 (3) However, if the signature of a party to an intended marriage cannot conveniently be obtained at the time when it is desired to give notice under this section, a notice duly signed by the other party and otherwise complying with the provisions of this section shall, if it is signed by the firstmentioned party in the presence of an authorised celebrant before the marriage is solemnised, be deemed to have been a sufficient notice.

 (4) Where a party to an intended marriage is unable, after reasonable inquiry, to ascertain all of the particulars in relation to that party required to be contained in a notice under this section, the failure to include in the notice such of those particulars as the party is unable to ascertain does not make the notice ineffective for the purposes of this section if, at any time before the marriage is solemnised, that party furnishes to the authorised celebrant solemnising the marriage a statutory declaration as to that party’s inability to ascertain the particulars not included in the notice and the reason for that inability.

 (5) Despite a notice required by subsection (1) having been received later than 1 month before the date of the marriage, a prescribed authority may authorise an authorised celebrant to solemnise a marriage if the authority is satisfied that one or more of the circumstances prescribed in the regulations have been met.

 (5A) An authorised celebrant shall, as soon as practicable after receiving the notice referred to in subsection (1), give to the parties a document outlining the obligations and consequences of marriage and indicating the availability of marriage education and counselling.

 (6) Where, by reason of the death, absence or illness of an authorised celebrant to whom a notice of intention to marry has been given, or for any other reason, it is impracticable for that person to solemnise the marriage, the marriage may be solemnised by any authorised celebrant who has possession of the notice.

 (7) The declarations of the parties required by subsection (1) shall both be written on the one paper and on the same side of that paper.

 (8) An authorised celebrant shall not solemnise a marriage:

 (a) unless the authorised celebrant has satisfied himself or herself that the parties are the parties referred to in the notice given under this section in relation to the marriage; or

 (b) if the authorised celebrant has reason to believe that:

 (i) a notice given under this section; or

 (ii) a declaration made and subscribed under this section, or a statutory declaration made for the purposes of this section;

in relation to the marriage, contains a false statement or an error or is defective.

 (9) An authorised celebrant may permit an error in a notice under this section to be corrected in his or her presence by either of the parties at any time before the marriage to which it relates has been solemnised and may treat the corrected notice as having been originally given in its corrected form.

 (10) Where the declaration made by a party under subsection (1) states that that party is a divorced person or that that party’s last spouse has died, an authorised celebrant shall not solemnise the marriage unless there is produced to him or her evidence of that party’s divorce, or of the death of that party’s spouse, as the case requires.

42A  Commissioner of Australian Federal Police or approved authority may issue special notice

 (1) If the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police or a person who is an approved authority for the purposes of the Witness Protection Act 1994 gives to a Registrar a certificate under section 14 of that Act stating that the person has received the evidence referred to in paragraphs (b) and (c) of that section and the statutory declaration referred to in paragraph (d) of that section, the Registrar:

 (a) if he or she is to solemnise the marriage himself or herself—is to treat the certificate as satisfying the requirements of section 42; or

 (b) in any other case—is to give to the celebrant a notice stating that the celebrant should treat the requirements of section 42 of this Act as having been met.

 (2) The names specified in the certificate are to be used in the marriage certificate.

43  Marriage may be solemnised on any day etc.

  A marriage may be solemnised on any day, at any time and at any place.

44  Witnesses

  A marriage shall not be solemnised unless at least 2 persons who are, or appear to the person solemnising the marriage to be, over the age of 18 years are present as witnesses.

45  Form of ceremony

 (1) Where a marriage is solemnised by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant, being a minister of religion, it may be solemnised according to any form and ceremony recognised as sufficient for the purpose by the religious body or organisation of which he or she is a minister.

 (2) Where a marriage is solemnised by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant, not being a minister of religion, it is sufficient if each of the parties says to the other, in the presence of the authorised celebrant and the witnesses, the words:

“I call upon the persons here present to witness that I, A.B. (or C.D.), take thee, C.D. (or A.B.), to be my lawful wedded wife (or husband, or spouse)”;

or words to that effect.

 (3) Where a marriage has been solemnised by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant, a certificate of the marriage prepared and signed in accordance with section 50 is conclusive evidence that the marriage was solemnised in accordance with this section.

 (4) Nothing in subsection (3) makes a certificate conclusive:

 (a) where the fact that the marriage ceremony took place is in issue—as to that fact; or

 (b) where the identity of a party to the marriage is in issue—as to the identity of that party.

46  Certain authorised celebrants to explain nature of marriage relationship

 (1) Subject to subsection (2), before a marriage is solemnised by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant, not being a minister of religion of a recognised denomination, the authorised celebrant shall say to the parties, in the presence of the witnesses, the words:

“I am duly authorised by law to solemnise marriages according to law.

“Before you are joined in marriage in my presence and in the presence of these witnesses, I am to remind you of the solemn and binding nature of the relationship into which you are now about to enter.

“Marriage, according to law in Australia, is the union of 2 people to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life.”;

or words to that effect.

 (2) Where, in the case of a person authorised under subsection 39(2) to solemnise marriages, the Minister is satisfied that the form of ceremony to be used by that person sufficiently states the nature and obligations of marriage, the Minister may, either by the instrument by which that person is so authorised or by a subsequent instrument, exempt that person from compliance with subsection (1) of this section.

47  Ministers of religion may refuse to solemnise marriages

Refusing to solemnise a marriage despite this Part

 (1) A minister of religion may refuse to solemnise a marriage despite anything in this Part.

 (2) In particular, nothing in this Part prevents a minister of religion from:

 (a) making it a condition of solemnising a marriage that:

 (i) notice of the intended marriage is given to the minister earlier than this Act requires; or

 (ii) additional requirements to those provided by this Act are complied with; and

 (b) refusing to solemnise the marriage if the condition is not observed.

Refusing to solemnise a marriage on the basis of religious beliefs etc.

 (3) A minister of religion may refuse to solemnise a marriage despite anything in this Part, if any of the following applies:

 (a) the refusal conforms to the doctrines, tenets or beliefs of the religion of the minister’s religious body or religious organisation;

 (b) the refusal is necessary to avoid injury to the religious susceptibilities of adherents of that religion;

 (c) the minister’s religious beliefs do not allow the minister to solemnise the marriage.

Grounds for refusal not limited by this section

 (4) This section does not limit the grounds on which a minister of religion may refuse to solemnise a marriage.

47A  Religious marriage celebrants may refuse to solemnise marriages

 (1) A religious marriage celebrant may refuse to solemnise a marriage despite anything in this Part, if the celebrant’s religious beliefs do not allow the celebrant to solemnise the marriage.

Grounds for refusal not limited by this section

 (2) This section does not limit the grounds on which a religious marriage celebrant may refuse to solemnise a marriage.

47B  Bodies established for religious purposes may refuse to make facilities available or provide goods or services

 (1) A body established for religious purposes may refuse to make a facility available, or to provide goods or services, for the purposes of the solemnisation of a marriage, or for purposes reasonably incidental to the solemnisation of a marriage, if the refusal:

 (a) conforms to the doctrines, tenets or beliefs of the religion of the body; or

 (b) is necessary to avoid injury to the religious susceptibilities of adherents of that religion.

 (2) Subsection (1) applies to facilities made available, and goods and services provided, whether for payment or not.

 (3) This section does not limit the grounds on which a body established for religious purposes may refuse to make a facility available, or to provide goods or services, for the purposes of the solemnisation of a marriage, or for purposes reasonably incidental to the solemnisation of a marriage.

 (4) To avoid doubt, a reference to a body established for religious purposes has the same meaning in this section as it has in section 37 of the Sex Discrimination Act 1984.

 (5) For the purposes of subsection (1), a purpose is reasonably incidental to the solemnisation of marriage if it is intrinsic to, or directly associated with, the solemnisation of the marriage.

48  Certain marriages not solemnised in accordance with this Division to be invalid

 (1) Subject to this section, a marriage solemnised otherwise than in accordance with the preceding provisions of this Division is not a valid marriage.

 (2) A marriage is not invalid by reason of all or any of the following:

 (a) failure to give the notice required by section 42, or a false statement, defect or error in such a notice;

 (b) failure of the parties, or either of them, to make or subscribe a declaration as required by section 42, or a false statement, defect or error in such a declaration;

 (c) failure to produce to the authorised celebrant a certificate or extract of an entry or a statutory declaration as required by section 42, or a false statement, defect or error in such a statutory declaration;

 (d) failure to comply with any other requirement of section 42, or any contravention of that section;

 (e) failure to comply with the requirements of section 44 or 46;

 (f) failure to comply with the requirements of section 13.

 (3) A marriage is not invalid by reason that the person solemnising it was not authorised by this Act to do so, if either party to the marriage, at the time the marriage was solemnised, believed that that person was lawfully authorised to solemnise it, and in such a case the form and ceremony of the marriage shall be deemed to have been sufficient if they were such as to show an intention on the part of each of the parties to become thereby the lawfully wedded spouse of the other.

49  Authorised celebrant to retain consents, statutory declarations etc.

  An authorised celebrant to whom a consent, dispensation with consent or statutory declaration is produced under this Act shall retain it in his or her possession until he or she deals with it in accordance with section 50.

50  Marriage certificates

 (1) Where an authorised celebrant solemnises a marriage, the authorised celebrant shall:

 (a) prepare a certificate of the marriage, in accordance with the prescribed form, for the purpose of issue to the parties to the marriage; and

 (b) prepare 2 official certificates of the marriage.

 (1A) Notwithstanding paragraph (1)(b), the regulations may provide that the person for the time being holding or acting in a specified office of a specified State or Territory shall prepare only 1 official certificate under that paragraph.

 (2) Immediately after the solemnisation of the marriage, the authorised celebrant, each of the parties to the marriage and 2 witnesses of the marriage who are, or appear to the authorised celebrant to be, over the age of 18 years shall sign each of the certificates so prepared.

 (3) One of the official certificates or the official certificate, as the case may be, shall be on the reverse side of the paper bearing the declarations made by the parties under section 42.

 (4) The authorised celebrant shall hand the certificate referred to in paragraph (1)(a) to one of the parties to the marriage on behalf of the parties, and:

 (a) where 2 official certificates have been prepared:

 (i) within 14 days after the solemnisation of the marriage, forward the official certificate to which subsection (3) applies, together with the notice under section 42, the order (if any) under section 12 and any statutory declarations, consents and dispensations with consents relating to the marriage that are in his or her possession, to the appropriate registering authority of a State or Territory ascertained in accordance with the regulations; and

 (ii) retain the other official certificate and deal with it in accordance with the regulations; or

 (b) where only 1 official certificate has been prepared—retain that certificate and deal with it in accordance with the regulations.

 (5) Where the authorised celebrant dies without having prepared and signed the certificates of the marriage, or where by reason of other special circumstances the Minister thinks it necessary to do so, the Minister may, if satisfied that the marriage was duly solemnised, prepare and sign the certificates with such modifications as are appropriate.

 (6) A certificate prepared and signed by the Minister under subsection (5) has the same force and effect as if it had been prepared and signed, in accordance with this section, by the authorised celebrant.

 (7) The regulations may make provision for and in relation to the furnishing of a substitute certificate in the event of the loss or destruction of a certificate of a marriage previously forwarded in pursuance of this section.

51  Incorrect marriage certificates

 (1) Where an authorised officer is satisfied, by statutory declaration or otherwise, that any particular in a certificate of marriage prepared and signed under section 50 is incorrect, the authorised officer may:

 (a) in the case of a certificate that has been handed to a party to the marriage or retained by the authorised celebrant—correct the certificate; and

 (b) in the case of a certificate that has been forwarded to a registering authority—certify to that authority that a specified correction is necessary.

 (2) For the purposes of exercising his or her powers under paragraph (1)(a) in relation to a certificate, an authorised officer may, by notice in writing served on a party to the marriage, or the authorised celebrant, as the case requires, require the party or the authorised celebrant to produce or forward the certificate to the authorised officer within a period (not being less than 7 days from the date of service of the notice) specified in the notice.

 (2A) Where a marriage has been solemnised, or purports to have been solemnised, under this Part, and the marriage is void, an authorised officer may, by notice in writing served on a party to the marriage, require the party to deliver or forward to the authorised officer, within a period (not being less than 7 days from the date of service of the notice) specified in the notice, the certificate required, by subsection 50(4), to be handed to a party to the marriage.

 (3) A notice referred to in subsection (2) or (2A) may be served by post.

 (4) In this section, authorised officer means a person authorised by the Minister to perform the functions of an authorised officer under this section.

Division 3Marriages by foreign diplomatic or consular officers

52  Interpretation

  In this Division, unless the contrary intention appears:

diplomatic or consular officer, in relation to an overseas country, means a person recognised by the Government of the Commonwealth as a diplomatic or consular representative of that overseas country in Australia.

proclaimed overseas country means an overseas country in respect of which a Proclamation under section 54 is in force.

the Registrar means the Registrar of Foreign Marriages.

53  Application of Division

  This Division applies to marriages, in accordance with the law or custom of a proclaimed overseas country, between parties of whom one at least possesses the nationality of that country.

54  GovernorGeneral may declare countries to be proclaimed overseas countries

  The GovernorGeneral may declare by Proclamation that a country is a proclaimed overseas country for the purposes of this Division if he or she is satisfied that the country’s law or custom authorises the solemnisation, by or in the presence of either or both diplomatic or consular officers of that country, of marriages outside that country.

55  Solemnisation of marriages in Australia by foreign diplomatic or consular officer

  Nothing in this Act prevents the solemnisation in Australia of a marriage to which this Division applies by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of a proclaimed overseas country if:

 (a) neither of the parties is an Australian citizen; and

 (b) the marriage, were it a marriage to and in relation to which Division 2 of this Part applied, would not be void by reason of a circumstance set out in paragraph 23B(1)(a), (b) or (e).

56  Recognition of marriages

 (1) Subject to subsection (2), a marriage solemnised in Australia by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of a proclaimed overseas country, being a marriage to which section 55 was applicable, shall be recognised as valid in Australia if:

 (a) the marriage is recognised as a valid marriage by the law or custom of the overseas country; and

 (b) the marriage has been registered under this Division.

 (2) Subsection (1) does not apply in relation to a marriage where, if the marriage were a marriage to and in relation to which Division 2 of this Part applied, the marriage would be void by reason of a circumstance set out in paragraph 23B(1)(d).

57  Registrar and Deputy Registrar of Foreign Marriages

 (1) For the purposes of this Division, there shall be a Registrar of Foreign Marriages, who shall be appointed by the Minister.

 (2) The Registrar shall have a seal, which shall be in such form as the Minister determines.

 (3) The Minister may appoint a person to be Deputy Registrar of Foreign Marriages and, in the event of the absence, through illness or otherwise, of the Registrar, or of a vacancy in the office of Registrar, the Deputy Registrar has all the powers, and shall perform all the duties and functions, of the Registrar during the absence or vacancy.

 (4) The Deputy Registrar appointed under this section may, during any such absence, or vacancy in the office, of the Registrar, certify copies of entries, or extracts of entries, in the Register of Foreign Marriages Solemnised in Australia under his or her signature and the seal of the Registrar, and a copy or extract so certified has the same force and effect as if it had been certified by the Registrar under his or her signature and seal.

58  Register of Foreign Marriages Solemnised in Australia

 (1) The Registrar shall keep a register, to be called the Register of Foreign Marriages Solemnised in Australia, in such form as the Minister directs.

 (2) The Registrar shall register in the Register every marriage notified to the Registrar that he or she is satisfied:

 (a) is a marriage to which section 55 was applicable; and

 (b) has been solemnised in Australia by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of a proclaimed overseas country who was competent to solemnise the marriage.

 (3) The Registrar shall keep an index of the entries in the Register.

59  Searches and certified copies

 (1) Subject to payment of the prescribed fee, a person may, upon satisfying the Registrar that the person has good reason for so doing, cause a search to be made for an entry in the Register of Foreign Marriages Solemnised in Australia and receive a copy of the entry, or an extract of the entry, certified by the Registrar under his or her signature and seal to be a copy of the entry or an extract of the entry, as the case may be.

 (2) A copy of an entry in the Register certified in accordance with subsection (1) is, for all purposes, evidence of the marriage recorded in the entry.

Part VMarriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

Division 1Registrar of Overseas Marriages

60  Definitions

  In this Part:

Registrar means the Registrar of Overseas Marriages appointed under section 61.

61  Registrar of Overseas Marriages

 (1) There is to be a Registrar of Overseas Marriages.

 (2) The Registrar is to be appointed, by written instrument, by the Minister.

 (3) The Registrar must have a seal, which is to be in the form the Minister determines.

62  Acting appointments

  The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Registrar:

 (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Registrar (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or

 (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Registrar:

 (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or

 (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.

Note: For rules that apply to acting appointments, see sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.

63   Register of Overseas Marriages

 (1) The Registrar must keep a register, to be called the Register of Overseas Marriages, in the form the Minister directs.

 (2) The Register of Overseas Marriages that was kept under section 8 of the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955 is taken to form part of the Register kept under this section.

 (3) The Registrar must register in the Register all marriages required to be registered by this Part.

 (4) The Registrar may register in the Register:

 (a) a marriage solemnized under the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955 that has not been registered under that Act; or

 (b) a marriage (except a marriage that has been registered under the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955) that was solemnized before the commencement of this Act and in respect of which a certificate has been forwarded:

 (i) under section 25 of the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955; or

 (ii) under section 84 of this Act.

 (5) The Registrar must keep an index of the entries in the Register.

Note: For errors or misstatements in the Register, see section 114.

64  Searches and certified copies

 (1) A person may search the register if:

 (a) the person satisfies the Registrar that the person has a good reason for searching the register; and

 (b) the person has paid any fee prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.

 (2) After searching the register for an entry, the person may be given:

 (a) a certified copy of the entry or extract of the entry; or

 (b) if the Registrar finds that there is no such entry in the register—a certificate stating that fact.

 (3) A certified copy mentioned in paragraph (2)(a) or a certificate mentioned in paragraph (2)(b):

 (a) must be certified by the Registrar by signed writing and under seal; and

 (b) is prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the copy or certificate.

Division 3Marriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

71  Marriages of members of the Defence Force overseas

 (1) Subject to this Part, a marriage between parties of whom one at least is a member of the Defence Force may be solemnised in an overseas country by or in the presence of an authorised celebrant.

 (2) The GovernorGeneral may, by Proclamation, declare that a part of the Queen’s dominions that has been occupied by a state at war with the Commonwealth and in which facilities for marriage in accordance with the local law have not, in the opinion of the GovernorGeneral, been adequately restored shall be deemed to be an overseas country for the purposes of this section.

71A  Marriage officers

  The Chief of the Defence Force may, by instrument in writing, authorise an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903), other than a chaplain, to solemnise marriages under this Division.

72  Form and ceremony of marriage

 (1) A marriage under this Division shall be solemnised:

 (a) at such place as the authorised celebrant thinks fit, in the presence of at least 2 witnesses who are, or appear to the authorised celebrant to be, over the age of 18; and

 (b) according to such form and ceremony as the authorised celebrant thinks proper.

 (2) Unless, having regard to the form and ceremony of the marriage, the authorised celebrant considers it unnecessary for the parties to the marriage to do so, each of the parties shall, in some part of the ceremony and in the presence of the authorised celebrant and the witnesses, say to each other the words:

“I call upon the persons here present to witness that I, A.B. (or C.D.), take thee, C.D. (or A.B.), to be my lawful wedded wife (or husband, or spouse)”;

or words to that effect.

Division 4General

73  Validity of marriages

  A marriage solemnised under this Part, being a marriage which, if it had been solemnised in Australia in accordance with Division 2 of Part IV would have been a valid marriage, is valid throughout Australia and the external Territories.

74  Declaration to be made before authorised celebrant

 (1) A marriage shall not be solemnised under this Part unless each of the parties to the marriage has made and subscribed before the authorised celebrant solemnising the marriage a declaration as to:

 (a) the party’s conjugal status;

 (b) the party’s belief that there is no legal impediment to the marriage; and

 (c) such other matters as are prescribed.

 (2) The declarations of the parties required by subsection (1) shall both be written on the one paper and on the same side of that paper.

 (3) An authorised celebrant shall not solemnise a marriage under this Part if he or she has reason to believe that a declaration made and subscribed under this section in relation to the marriage contains a false statement or an error or is defective.

75  Authorised celebrant to be satisfied of parties’ identity

  An authorised celebrant shall not solemnise a marriage under this Part unless the authorised celebrant has satisfied himself or herself as to the identity of the parties.

76  Additional consent to marriage of minor domiciled outside Australia

 (1) Where:

 (a) a party to an intended marriage under this Part, not being an Australian citizen, has not attained the age of 18 years and is domiciled in a place outside Australia; and

 (b) the law of that place requires the consent of a person, other than a person whose consent is required under Part II, to the marriage of that party;

the marriage shall not be solemnised unless the authorised celebrant is satisfied that consent to the marriage has been given by that person.

 (2) The requirement of subsection (1) is in addition to the requirements of Part II with respect to consents to the marriages of minors.

77  Restriction on solemnisation of marriages under this Part

 (1) A marriage shall not be solemnised in an overseas country under this Part unless the authorised celebrant is satisfied:

 (a) that each of the parties to the intended marriage is an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force;

 (b) where 1 party to the intended marriage is not an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force:

 (i) that that party is not a subject or citizen of the overseas country; or

 (ii) that sufficient facilities do not exist for the solemnisation of the marriage in the overseas country in accordance with the law of that country;

 (c) where 1 party to the intended marriage is a subject or citizen of the overseas country, that objection will not be taken by the authorities of that country to the solemnisation of the intended marriage under this Part; or

 (d) that a marriage in the overseas country between the parties in accordance with the law of that country would not be recognised throughout Australia.

 (2) In this section, overseas country includes a country that is deemed to be an overseas country for the purposes of section 71.

78  Solemnisation of marriages where a party to the marriage is not an Australian citizen etc.

 (1) Subject to subsection (2), a marriage shall not be solemnised under this Part if 1 party to the intended marriage (in this section called the nonAustralian) is not an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force.

 (2) Subsection (1) does not apply where the authorised celebrant is satisfied:

 (a) that the marriage will be recognised by the law of the country to which the nonAustralian belongs;

 (b) that some other marriage ceremony, in addition to the ceremony under this Part, has taken place, or is about to take place, between the parties and that the other ceremony is, or, when it has taken place, will be, recognised by the law of the country to which the nonAustralian belongs; or

 (c) that the Minister has approved of the solemnisation of the marriage under this Part.

79  Authorised celebrant to retain consents etc.

  An authorised celebrant to whom a consent, dispensation with consent or statutory declaration is produced under this Act shall retain it in the possession of the authorised celebrant until he or she deals with it in accordance with section 80.

80  Marriage certificate and registration of marriages

 (1) Where an authorised celebrant solemnises a marriage under this Part, the authorised celebrant shall:

 (a) prepare a certificate of the marriage, in accordance with the prescribed form, for the purpose of issue to the parties to the marriage; and

 (b) prepare 2 official certificates of the marriage.

 (2) Immediately after the solemnisation of the marriage:

 (a) the authorised celebrant; and

 (b) each of the parties to the marriage; and

 (c) 2 witnesses of the marriage who are, or appear to the authorised celebrant to be, over the age of 18 years;

shall sign each of the certificates so prepared.

 (3) One of the official certificates shall be on the reverse side of the paper bearing the declarations made by the parties under section 74.

 (4) The authorised celebrant shall:

 (a) hand the certificate referred to in paragraph (1)(a) to one of the parties to the marriage on behalf of the parties;

 (b) forward the official certificate referred to in subsection (3), together with any statutory declarations, consents or dispensations with consents relating to the marriage that are in his or her possession, to the Registrar; and

 (c) retain the other copy of the certificate in his or her possession for the prescribed period and, upon the expiration of that period, deal with the copy in accordance with the regulations.

 (5) Where the authorised celebrant dies without having prepared and signed the certificates of the marriage, or where by reason of other special circumstances the Minister thinks it necessary to do so, the Minister may, if satisfied that the marriage was duly solemnised, prepare and sign the certificates with such modifications as are appropriate.

 (6) A certificate prepared and signed by the Minister under subsection (5) has the same force and effect as if it had been prepared and signed, in accordance with this section, by the authorised celebrant.

 (7) Upon the receipt by the Registrar of the official certificate required to be forwarded to the Registrar in respect of a marriage, the Registrar shall register the marriage.

 (8) In the month of January in each year, an authorised celebrant by whom, or in whose presence, a marriage has been, or marriages have been, solemnised in the preceding year shall forward to the Registrar written notice of the marriage, or of each of the marriages, stating the following:

 (a) the date and place of the marriage;

 (b) the full name of each party to the marriage;

 (c) such other particulars as are prescribed.

 (9) If the certificate of a marriage is not received by the Registrar, the authorised celebrant by whom it was issued shall, at the request of the Registrar:

 (a) prepare a copy of the certificate;

 (b) certify, by writing signed by the authorised celebrant, that the copy is a true copy of the certificate; and

 (c) forward the copy to the Registrar.

 (10) A certified copy of a certificate prepared by an authorised celebrant under subsection (9) has, for all purposes, the same force and effect as the certificate of which it is a copy.

81  Power to refuse to solemnise marriage

 (1) An authorised celebrant (including a chaplain) may refuse to solemnise a marriage under this Part on any grounds which appear to the authorised celebrant to be sufficient and, in particular, on the ground that, in the opinion of the authorised celebrant, the solemnisation of the marriage would be inconsistent with international law or the comity of nations.

Refusing to solemnise a marriage on the basis of religious beliefs etc.

 (2) A chaplain may refuse to solemnise a marriage despite anything in this Part, if any of the following applies:

 (a) the refusal conforms to the doctrines, tenets or beliefs of the religion of the chaplain’s religious body or religious organisation;

 (b) the refusal is necessary to avoid injury to the religious susceptibilities of adherents of that religion;

 (c) the chaplain’s religious beliefs do not allow the chaplain to solemnise the marriage.

Grounds for refusal not limited by this section

 (3) This section does not limit the grounds on which an authorised celebrant (including a chaplain) may refuse to solemnise a marriage.

82  Marriages may be solemnised on any day and at any time

  A marriage under this Part may be solemnised on any day and at any time.

83  Validity of marriages under this Part

 (1) A marriage under this Part is not invalid by reason of all or any of the following:

 (d) failure of the parties, or either of them, to make or subscribe a declaration required by section 74, or a false statement, defect or error in such a declaration;

 (e) the fact that the marriage was solemnised in contravention of any provision of section 72, 74, 75, 76, 77 or 78;

 (f) failure to comply with the requirements of section 13.

 (2) A marriage under this Part is not invalid by reason that the person solemnising it was not an authorised celebrant if either party to the marriage, at the time the marriage was solemnised, believed that that person was lawfully authorised to solemnise it, and in such a case the form and ceremony of the marriage shall be deemed to have been sufficient if they were such as to show an intention on the part of each of the parties to become thereby the lawfully wedded spouse of the other.

84  Registration of overseas marriages attended by an authorised celebrant

 (1) Where:

 (a) an authorised celebrant has attended a marriage in an overseas country between parties of whom at least one was an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force; and

 (b) the authorised celebrant is satisfied that the marriage has taken place in accordance with the law of that country; and

 (c) a party to the marriage informs the authorised celebrant, in writing, that he or she desires the marriage to be registered under this section;

the authorised celebrant shall forward to the Registrar a certificate in respect of the marriage.

 (2) Upon receipt by the Registrar of a certificate under subsection (1) in respect of a marriage, the Registrar shall, subject to the regulations, register the marriage.

85  Certificates of marriages solemnised in accordance with local law in an overseas country

 (1) Where:

 (a) a marriage takes place in a prescribed overseas country in accordance with the law of that country between parties of whom one at least is an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force;

 (b) a party to the marriage who is an Australian citizen or a member of the Defence Force produces to an authorised celebrant in the country in which the marriage was solemnised:

 (i) a copy of the entry in respect of the marriage in the marriage register of that country certified by the appropriate authority in that country to be a true copy of that entry; and

 (ii) if the copy of that entry is not in the English language—a translation into the English language of that copy; and

 (c) the authorised celebrant is satisfied that the copy of the entry in the marriage register is a true copy and that the translation, if any, is a true translation;

the authorised celebrant shall certify, upon the copy, that he or she is satisfied that the copy is a true copy of the entry in the marriage register and, upon the translation, that he or she is satisfied that the translation is a true translation of the copy and shall transmit the copy and the translation to the Registrar.

 (2) The Registrar shall, upon payment of the prescribed fee, issue to a person who so desires a copy of any document received by the Registrar under subsection (1) certified by the Registrar, under his or her signature and seal, to be a true copy of that document.

 (3) A document relating to a marriage in an overseas country transmitted in pursuance of section 26 of the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955 and received by the Registrar of Overseas Marriages appointed under that Act shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to have been, in pursuance of this section, transmitted to, and received by, the Registrar of Overseas Marriages appointed, or deemed to have been appointed, under this Act.

 (4) A document relating to a marriage in an overseas country issued under subsection (2) is admissible in evidence in any proceedings as if it were a certificate duly issued by the authorities of that country.

86  Evidence

  A notice, certificate or other document kept in pursuance of this Part by any person, or in the records of the office of any person, is admissible in evidence on its mere production from the custody of that person or from the custody of an officer of the Department.

87  Validity of marriages otherwise than under this Part not affected

  Nothing in this Part in any way affects the validity of a marriage solemnised in an overseas country otherwise than under this Part.

88  Imperial Foreign Marriage Acts

  This Act shall not be taken to repeal or amend the Imperial Acts known as the Foreign Marriage Acts, 1892 and 1934, in so far as those Acts are part of the law of the Commonwealth.

Part VARecognition of foreign marriages

 

88A  Object of Part

  The object of this Part is to give effect to Chapter II of the Convention on Celebration and Recognition of the Validity of Marriages signed at The Hague on 14 March 1978.

88B  Interpretation

 (1) In this Part, unless the contrary intention appears:

Australia includes the external Territories.

local law, in relation to a marriage solemnised in a foreign country, means the law in force in the foreign country or in that part of the foreign country in which the marriage was solemnised.

 (2) A marriage shall be taken, for the purposes of this Part, to have been solemnised in a foreign country by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of another foreign country if the marriage was solemnised in the firstmentioned foreign country by or in the presence of a person who was recognised by the government of that country as a diplomatic or consular representative of the other foreign country.

 (3) In this Part, a reference to a marriage includes a reference to a purported marriage that is void or voidable but does not include a reference to a marriage solemnised under Part V.

88C  Application of Part

 (1) This Part applies to and in relation to every marriage solemnised, whether before or after the commencement of this Part, in a foreign country where:

 (a) under the local law, the marriage was, at the time when it was solemnised, recognised as valid; or

 (b) if the marriage was solemnised by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of another foreign country:

 (i) under the law of that other foreign country, the marriage was, at the time when it was solemnised, recognised as valid; and

 (ii) at the time when it was solemnised, the solemnisation of the marriage was not prohibited by the local law.

 (2) Where a marriage (not being a marriage referred to in subsection (1)) that was solemnised, whether before or after the commencement of this Part, in a foreign country:

 (a) is, at any time in relation to which the validity of the marriage falls to be determined, recognised as valid under the local law; or

 (b) if the marriage was solemnised by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of another foreign country and, at the time when it was solemnised, the solemnisation of the marriage was not prohibited by the local law—is, at any time in relation to which the validity of the marriage falls to be determined, recognised as valid under the law of that other foreign country;

this Part applies to and in relation to the marriage from and including that time.

88D  Validity of marriages

 (1) Subject to this section, a marriage to which this Part applies shall be recognised in Australia as valid.

 (2) A marriage to which this Part applies shall not be recognised as valid in accordance with subsection (1) if:

 (a) either of the parties was, at the time of the marriage, a party to a marriage with some other person and the lastmentioned marriage was, at that time, recognised in Australia as valid;

 (b) where one of the parties was, at the time of the marriage, domiciled in Australia—either of the parties was not of marriageable age within the meaning of Part II;

 (c) the parties are within a prohibited relationship within the meaning of section 23B; or

 (d) the consent of either of the parties was not a real consent for a reason set out in subparagraph 23B(1)(d)(i), (ii) or (iii).

 (3) Where neither of the parties to a marriage to which this Part applies was, at the time of the marriage, domiciled in Australia, the marriage shall not be recognised as valid in accordance with subsection (1) at any time while either party is under the age of 16 years.

 (4) A marriage solemnised in a foreign country, being a marriage to which this Part applies, shall not be recognised as valid in accordance with subsection (1) at any time while the marriage is voidable:

 (a) except in a case to which paragraph (b) applies—under the local law; or

 (b) if the marriage was solemnised in a foreign country by or in the presence of a diplomatic or consular officer of another foreign country—under the law of that other foreign country.

 (5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Part, where:

 (a) a marriage (in this subsection referred to as the initial marriage) has, whether before or after the commencement of this Part, been solemnised in a foreign country;

 (b) at the time of the solemnisation of the initial marriage, that marriage was not recognised in Australia as valid;

 (c) after the solemnisation of the initial marriage, and whether before or after the commencement of this Part, either party to that marriage entered into another marriage (in this subsection referred to as the subsequent marriage); and

 (d) at the time when the subsequent marriage was solemnised:

 (i) the subsequent marriage was recognised in Australia as valid; and

 (ii) the initial marriage was not recognised in Australia as valid;

the initial marriage shall not be recognised at any time in Australia as valid.

88E  Validity of certain marriages not affected by this Part

 (1) Subject to subsection (2), a marriage solemnised in a foreign country that would be recognised as valid under the common law rules of private international law but is not required by the provisions of this Part apart from this subsection to be recognised as valid shall be recognised in Australia as valid, and the operation of this subsection shall not be limited by any implication arising from any other provision of this Part.

 (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), a marriage of a person domiciled in Australia, being a marriage solemnised in a foreign country, shall not be recognised in Australia as valid if, at the time of the marriage, either party to the marriage was not of marriageable age within the meaning of Part II.

 (3) Where a marriage solemnised in a foreign country is not required by virtue of this Part to be recognised in Australia as valid, this Part shall not be taken to limit or exclude the operation of a provision of any other law of the Commonwealth, or of a law of a State or Territory, that provides, expressly or impliedly, for such a marriage to be recognised as a valid marriage for the purposes of the law in which the provision is included.

 (4) This Part shall not be taken to limit or exclude the operation of a provision of any other law of the Commonwealth, or of a law of a State or Territory, that deems a union in the nature of a marriage to be a marriage for the purposes of the law in which the provision is included.

88F  Incidental determination of recognition of certain foreign marriages

  Notwithstanding any other law, the question whether a marriage solemnised in a foreign country is to be recognised in Australia as valid shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this Part, whether or not the determination of the question is incidental to the determination of another question.

88G  Evidence

 (1) A document purporting to be either the original or a certified copy of a certificate, entry or record of a marriage alleged to have been solemnised in, or under the law of, a foreign country and purporting to have been issued by:

 (a) in the case of a marriage alleged to have been solemnised in a foreign country—an authority of that country or of that part of the country in which the marriage was allegedly solemnised; or

 (b) in the case of a marriage alleged to have been solemnised under the law of a foreign country—an authority of that country;

is, for all purposes, prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the document and of the validity of the marriage to which the document relates.

 (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to or in relation to a document if it is proved that the authority of the foreign country or of the part of a foreign country by which the document purports to have been issued was not, at the time of issue, a competent authority.

 (3) In subsection (2), competent authority means:

 (a) in relation to a foreign country:

 (i) any authority that is prescribed in relation to that country by regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; or

 (ii) any other authority that is competent, under the law in force in that country, to issue the original or a certified copy of a certificate, entry or record of a marriage solemnised in, or under the law of, that country; and

 (b) in relation to a part of a foreign country:

 (i) any authority that is prescribed in relation to that part of that country by regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph; or

 (ii) any other authority that is competent, under the law in force in that part of that country, to issue the original or a certified copy of a certificate, entry or record of a marriage solemnised in that part of that country.

Part VILegitimation

 

89  Legitimation by virtue of marriage of parents

 (1) A child (whether born before or after the commencement of this Act) whose parents were not married to each other at the time of his or her birth but have subsequently married each other (whether before or after the commencement of this Act) is, by virtue of the marriage, for all purposes the legitimate child of his or her parents as from his or her birth or the commencement of this Act, whichever was the later.

 (2) Subsection (1) applies in relation to a child whether or not there was a legal impediment to the marriage of his or her parents at the time of his or her birth and whether or not the child was still living at the time of the marriage or, in the case of a child born before the commencement of this Act, at the commencement of this Act.

 (3) Subsection (1) does not apply in relation to a child unless:

 (a) at the time of the marriage of the child’s parents:

 (i) where that marriage took place before the commencement of section 24 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985—the child’s father was domiciled in Australia; or

 (ii) in any other case—one of the child’s parents was domiciled in Australia; or

 (b) the marriage of the child’s parents took place in Australia, or outside Australia under Part V of this Act or under the Marriage (Overseas) Act 1955.

 (4) Nothing in this section renders ineffective any legitimation that took place before the commencement of this Act by or under a law of a State or Territory or shall be taken to exclude the continued operation of such a law in relation to such a legitimation.

 (5) This section does not apply in relation to a child so as to affect any estate, right or interest in real or personal property to which a person has become, or may become, entitled, either mediately or immediately, in possession or expectancy, by virtue of a disposition that took effect, or by devolution by law on the death of a person who died, before the marriage of the parents of the child or the commencement of this Act, whichever was the later.

90  Legitimacy of children of certain foreign marriages

 (1) Where:

 (a) the parents of a child born illegitimate have married each other or the parents of a child born in a place the law of which did not recognise the status of illegitimacy have married each other;

 (b) the marriage took place outside Australia;

 (c) neither parent of the child was domiciled in Australia at the time of the marriage; and

 (d) the law of the place where a parent of the child was then domiciled did not recognise the status of illegitimacy or, if the law of the place where a parent of the child was then domiciled did recognise that status, the child was, by that law, legitimated by virtue of the marriage;

the child is for all purposes the legitimate child of his or her parents as from the time of the marriage or the commencement of section 25 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985, whichever was the later.

 (2) Where the relationship of a child and his or her father and mother is, for the purposes of the law of a place, required by a law in force in that place to be determined irrespective of whether or not the father and mother are or have been married to each other, the law of that place shall, for the purposes of this section, be taken not to recognise the status of illegitimacy.

 (3) Subsection (1) applies in relation to a child:

 (a) whether the child was born before or after the commencement of section 25 of the Marriage Amendment Act 1985, whether the marriage of the parents of the child took place before or after that commencement and whether or not the child was still living at the time of the marriage or, in the case of a child born before that commencement, at that commencement; and

 (b) in the case of a child born illegitimate who, by virtue of the marriage of the child’s parents, was legitimated by the law of the place where a parent of the child was domiciled at the time of the marriage—whether or not the law of the place in which that parent or the other parent was domiciled at the time of the birth of the child permitted or recognised legitimation by subsequent marriage.

91  Legitimacy of children of certain void marriages

 (1) Subject to this section, a child of a marriage that is void shall be deemed for all purposes to be the legitimate child of his or her parents as from his or her birth or the commencement of this Act, whichever was the later, if, at the time of the intercourse that resulted in the birth of the child or the time when the ceremony of marriage took place, whichever was the later, either party to the marriage believed on reasonable grounds that the marriage was valid.

 (2) Subsection (1) does not apply unless one of the parents of the child was domiciled in Australia at the time of the birth of the child or, having died before that time, was domiciled in Australia immediately before his or her death.

 (3) Subsection (1) applies in relation to a child whether the child was born before or after the commencement of this Act, whether the ceremony of marriage took place before or after the commencement of this Act and whether the ceremony of marriage took place in or outside Australia.

 (4) This section does not apply in relation to a child so as to affect any estate, right or interest in real or personal property to which a person has become, or may become, entitled, either mediately or immediately, in possession or expectancy, by virtue of a disposition that took effect, or by devolution by law on the death of a person who died, before the birth of the child or the commencement of this Act, whichever was the later.

92  Declarations of legitimacy etc.

 (1) A person may apply to the Family Court of Australia, the Federal Circuit Court of Australia, a Family Court of a State or the Supreme Court of a State or Territory for an order declaring:

 (a) that the person is the legitimate child of his or her parents; or

 (b) that the person or his or her parent or child or a remoter ancestor or descendant is or was a legitimated person;

and the Court may, in its discretion, make the order.

 (2) The Supreme Courts of the States and any Family Court of a State are invested with federal jurisdiction and jurisdiction is conferred, to the extent that the Constitution permits, on the Supreme Courts of the Territories, to hear and determine applications under this section.

 (4) The Court to which an application under this section is made may:

 (a) direct that notice of the application be given to such persons (who may include the AttorneyGeneral of the Commonwealth or of a State or the Northern Territory) as the Court thinks fit;

 (b) direct that a person be made a party to the application; or

 (c) permit a person having an interest in the matter to intervene in, and become a party to, the proceedings.

 (5) Where the Court makes an order upon the application, it may include in the order such particulars in relation to the legitimacy or legitimation of the person to whom it relates as the Court finds to be established.

 (6) An order made under this section binds the Crown in right of the Commonwealth or of a State or the Northern Territory, whether or not notice was given to the AttorneyGeneral of the Commonwealth or of that State or Territory, but does not affect:

 (a) the rights of another person unless that other person was:

 (i) a party to the proceedings for the order or a person claiming through such a party; or

 (ii) a person to whom notice of the application for the order was given or a person claiming through such a person; or

 (b) an earlier judgment, order or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, whether in exercise of federal jurisdiction or not.

 (7) The GovernorGeneral may, by Proclamation, fix a date as the date on and after which proceedings under this section may not be instituted in, or transferred to, the Supreme Court of a State or Territory specified in the Proclamation and that Supreme Court shall not hear and determine any such proceedings so instituted in, or transferred to, that Court on or after that date.

93  Operation of certain State and Territory laws

 (1) Nothing in this Part shall be taken to operate in relation to a child so as to affect the validity or effect of an adoption of the child, whether the adoption took place before, or takes place after, the commencement of this Act.

 (2) Nothing in this Part shall be taken to exclude the operation of a law of a State or Territory in so far as it provides for the making or altering of entries in a register, but a legitimation under this Part is not affected by any failure to comply with such a law.

 (3) Nothing in this Part shall be taken to affect the validity or effect of a law of a State or Territory (however expressed and whether enacted before or after the commencement of this subsection) that operates to require a child born to a woman as a result of the carrying out of an artificial conception procedure in relation to the woman:

 (a) to be treated as the child of the woman;

 (b) to be treated as the child of the woman and a particular man; or

 (c) to be treated as the child of a particular man.

Part VIIOffences

 

94  Bigamy

 (1) A person who is married shall not go through a form or ceremony of marriage with any person.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.

 (1A) For the purposes of an offence against subsection (1), strict liability applies to the physical element of circumstance, that the person was married when the form or ceremony took place.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

 (2) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence against subsection (1) if the defendant proves that:

 (a) at the time of the alleged offence, the defendant believed that his or her spouse was dead; and

 (b) the defendant’s spouse had been absent from the defendant for such time and in such circumstances as to provide, at the time of the alleged offence, reasonable grounds for presuming that the defendant’s spouse was dead.

 (3) For the purposes of subsection (2), proof by a defendant that the defendant’s spouse had been continually absent from the defendant for the period of 7 years immediately preceding the date of the alleged offence and that, at the time of the alleged offence, the defendant had no reason to believe that the defendant’s spouse had been alive at any time within that period is sufficient proof of the matters referred to in paragraph (2)(b).

 (3A) To avoid doubt, section 9.2 of the Criminal Code (mistake of fact) does not apply in relation to the matters mentioned in subsections (2) and (3).

 (4) A person shall not go through a form or ceremony of marriage with a person who is married, knowing, or having reasonable grounds to believe, that the latter person is married.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.

 (5) It is not an offence against this section for a person to go through a form or ceremony of marriage with that person’s own spouse.

 (6) In a prosecution for an offence against this section, the spouse of the accused person is a competent and compellable witness for either the prosecution or the defence.

 (7) In a prosecution for an offence against this section, the fact that, at the time of the alleged offence, a person was married shall not be taken to have been proved if the only evidence of the fact is the evidence of the other party to the alleged marriage.

 (7A) In a prosecution for an offence against this section, the court may receive as evidence of the facts stated in it a document purporting to be either the original or a certified copy of a certificate, entry or record of a marriage alleged to have taken place whether in Australia or elsewhere.

 (8) This section operates to the exclusion of any law of a State or Territory making it an offence:

 (a) for a person who is married to go through a form or ceremony of marriage with any person; or

 (b) for a person to go through a form or ceremony of marriage with a person who is married;

but does not affect the operation of such a law in relation to acts and things done before the commencement of this Act.

95  Marrying person not of marriageable age etc.

 (1) A person shall not go through a form or ceremony of marriage with a person who is not of marriageable age.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.

 (1A) For the purposes of an offence against subsection (1), strict liability applies to the physical element of circumstance, that the person is not of marriageable age.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

 (2) A person shall not go through a form or ceremony of marriage with a person (in this subsection referred to as the other party to the marriage) who is a minor unless:

 (a) the other party to the marriage has previously been married; or

 (b) the written consent of the person, or of each of the persons, whose consent to the marriage of the other party to the marriage is required by this Act, has been given or dispensed with in accordance with this Act.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

 (2A) For the purposes of an offence against subsection (2), strict liability applies to the physical element of circumstance, that the other party to the marriage is a minor.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

 (3) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence against subsection (1) if the defendant proves that he or she believed on reasonable grounds that the person with whom he or she went through the form or ceremony of marriage was of marriageable age.

 (3A) To avoid doubt, section 9.2 of the Criminal Code (mistake of fact) does not apply in relation to the matters mentioned in subsection (3).

 (4) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence against subsection (2) if the defendant proves that he or she believed on reasonable grounds:

 (a) that the person with whom he or she went through the form or ceremony of marriage had attained the age of 18 years or had previously been married; or

 (b) that the consent of the person, or of each of the persons, referred to in paragraph (2)(b) had been given or dispensed with in accordance with this Act.

 (5) To avoid doubt, section 9.2 of the Criminal Code (mistake of fact) does not apply in relation to the matters mentioned in subsection (4).

98  Contravention of subsection 13(3)

  A person shall not subscribe his or her name as a witness to the signature of a person to a consent to the marriage of a minor in contravention of subsection 13(3).

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

99  Solemnising marriage where notice or declaration not given or made etc.

 (1) An authorised celebrant shall not solemnise a marriage under Division 2 of Part IV in contravention of section 42 or 44.

 (3) An authorised celebrant shall not solemnise a marriage under Division 3 of Part V in contravention of section 74, 75, 76, 77 or 78.

 (4) A person shall not solemnise a marriage in contravention of section 13 or 112.

 (5) A person shall not solemnise a marriage in contravention of subsection 33(3).

 (6) A person shall not, in contravention of subsection 113(1), purport to solemnise a marriage between persons who inform the firstmentioned person that they are already legally married to each other or whom the firstmentioned person knows or has reason to believe to be already legally married to each other.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

100  Solemnising marriage where reason to believe there is a legal impediment

  A person shall not solemnise a marriage, or purport to solemnise a marriage, if the person has reason to believe that there is a legal impediment to the marriage or if the person has reason to believe the marriage would be void.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

101  Solemnisation of marriage by unauthorised person

  A person shall not solemnise a marriage, or purport to solemnise a marriage, at a place in Australia or under Part V unless the person is authorised by or under this Act to solemnise marriages at that place or under that Part, as the case may be.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

103  Going through ceremony of marriage before person not authorised to solemnise it

  A person shall not go through a form or ceremony of marriage with another person knowing that the person solemnising the marriage is not authorised to solemnise it and having reason to believe that the other party to the marriage believes that the person solemnising the marriage is so authorised.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

104  Giving defective notice etc.

  A person shall not give a notice to an authorised celebrant under section 42, or sign a notice under section 42 after it has been given, if, to the knowledge of that person, the notice contains a false statement or an error or is defective.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

105  Failure to comply with notice under section 51

 (1) A person on whom a notice under section 51 has been duly served shall not fail to comply with the notice.

Penalty: 1 penalty unit.

 (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the person has a reasonable excuse.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).

 (3) Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

106  Failure by interpreter to furnish certificate etc.

  A person who has acted as interpreter at the solemnisation of a marriage shall not:

 (a) fail to comply with subsection 112(3); or

 (b) intentionally make a false statement in a certificate under that subsection.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 5 penalty units.

Part VIIITransitional provisions

 

107  Exercise of powers etc. before commencement of Act

 (1) Section 4 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 applies in relation to the provisions that are to come into operation on a date to be fixed by Proclamation as if those provisions were an Act.

 (2) For the purpose of enabling marriages to be solemnised in Australia in accordance with Division 2 of Part IV from the commencement of this Act:

 (a) a notice of intention to marry may be given, and a declaration may be made, under section 42;

 (b) any consent to the marriage of a minor required by Part II may be given; and

 (c) any power conferred on a prescribed authority may be exercised;

at any time after the day on which the Proclamation under section 2 has been published in the Gazette and before the commencement of this Act, as if the provisions of this Act to which the Proclamation relates had come into operation on that day.

 (3) For the purposes of the operation of subsection (2), any person who is authorised under a law of a State or Territory to solemnise marriages shall be deemed to be an authorised celebrant.

108  Application of offence provisions to notices etc. given before commencement of this Act

 (1) The provisions of sections 98 and 104 apply to and in relation to acts done, notices given and declarations made before the commencement of this Act in relation to marriages that take place in Australia after the commencement of this Act or that have not taken place but were intended to be solemnised in Australia in accordance with this Act.

 (2) For the purposes of the application of sections 98 and 104 to and in relation to an act done or a notice given at a time before the commencement of this Act in relation to such a marriage, a person who at that time was authorised under a law of a State or Territory to solemnise marriages shall be deemed to have been an authorised celebrant at that time.

109  Consents etc. given under State or Territory laws

 (1) A consent in writing to the marriage of a minor given by a person before the commencement of this Act in accordance with the law of a State or Territory shall, if the marriage in respect of which the consent was given takes place after the commencement of this Act in that State or Territory, be deemed to have been duly given and witnessed for the purposes of section 13.

 (2) Where the consent of a person to the marriage of a minor has, before the commencement of this Act, been dispensed with in pursuance of a law of a State or Territory, the consent of that person shall, if the marriage in respect of which it was dispensed with takes place after the commencement of this Act in that State or Territory, be deemed to have been dispensed with by a prescribed authority under Part II.

 (3) Where a person or authority has, before the commencement of this Act, in pursuance of a law of a State or Territory, given consent to the marriage of a minor in place of the consent of a person whose consent would otherwise be required, the consent so given shall, if the marriage in respect of which the consent was given takes place after the commencement of this Act in that State or Territory, be deemed to have been given by a magistrate under Part II.

Part IXMiscellaneous

 

111  Certain marriages and legitimations to be valid in all the Territories

 (1) A marriage solemnised in accordance with Division 2 of Part IV that is a valid marriage in Australia is valid in the external Territories.

 (2) A person who is, or is deemed to be, as from a particular time, the legitimate child of that person’s parents by virtue of section 89, 90 or 91 is, or shall be deemed to be, for all purposes the legitimate child of that person’s parents as from that time in the external Territories.

 (3) The operation of subsection (2) in relation to a child to whom section 89 or 91 applies is subject to a like qualification to that provided by subsection 89(5) or 91(4), as the case requires.

 (4) Subsection (2) shall not be taken to operate in relation to a child so as to affect the validity or effect of an adoption of the child, whether the adoption took place before, or takes place after, the commencement of this Act.

111A  Abolition of action for breach of promise

 (1) A person is not entitled to recover damages from another person by reason only of the fact that that other person has failed to perform a promise, undertaking or engagement to marry the firstmentioned person.

 (2) This section does not affect an action for the recovery of any gifts given in contemplation of marriage which could have been brought if this section had not been enacted.

112  Interpreters at marriage ceremonies

 (1) Subject to this section, where the person by whom or in whose presence a marriage is to be solemnised considers that it is desirable to do so, the person may use the services of an interpreter, not being a party to the marriage, in or in connexion with the ceremony.

 (2) A person shall not solemnise a marriage in or in connexion with the ceremony of which the services of an interpreter are used unless the person has received a statutory declaration by the interpreter stating that the interpreter understands, and is able to converse in, the languages in respect of which he or she is to act as interpreter.

 (3) A person who has acted as interpreter in or in connexion with a ceremony of marriage shall, forthwith after the ceremony has taken place, furnish to the person solemnising the marriage a certificate signed by the firstmentioned person of the faithful performance of the firstmentioned person’s services as interpreter.

 (4) This section applies in relation to marriages to which Division 2 of Part IV applies and marriages under Part V.

113  Second marriage ceremonies

 (1) Except in accordance with this section:

 (a) persons who are already legally married to each other shall not, in Australia or under Part V, go through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other; and

 (b) a person who is authorised by this Act to solemnise marriages shall not purport to solemnise a marriage in Australia or under Part V between persons who inform the firstmentioned person that they are already legally married to each other or whom the firstmentioned person knows or has reason to believe to be already legally married to each other.

 (2) Where:

 (a) 2 persons have gone through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other, whether before or after the commencement of this Act; and

 (b) there is a doubt:

 (i) whether those persons are legally married to each other;

 (ii) where the form or ceremony of marriage took place outside Australia, whether the marriage would be recognised as valid by a court in Australia; or

 (iii) whether their marriage could be proved in legal proceedings;

those persons may, subject to this section, go through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other in accordance with Division 2 of Part IV or under Part V as if they had not previously gone through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other.

 (3) Where 2 persons wish to go through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other in pursuance of subsection (2), they shall furnish to the person by whom, or in whose presence, the form or ceremony is to take place or be performed:

 (a) a statutory declaration by them stating that they have previously gone through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other and specifying the date on which, the place at which and the circumstances in which they went through that form or ceremony; and

 (b) a certificate by a barrister or solicitor, being a certificate endorsed on the statutory declaration, that, on the facts stated in the declaration, there is, in his or her opinion, a doubt as to one of the matters specified in paragraph (2)(b).

 (4) The person by whom or in whose presence a form or ceremony of marriage takes place or is performed in pursuance of subsection (2) shall make an endorsement in accordance with the regulations on each certificate issued in respect of it.

 (4A) A marriage which takes place after the commencement of this subsection in pursuance of subsection (2) is not invalid by reason of any failure to comply with the requirements of subsection (3) or (4).

 (5) Nothing in this Act shall be taken to prevent 2 persons who are already legally married to each other from going through a religious ceremony of marriage with each other in Australia where those persons have:

 (a) produced to the person by whom or in whose presence the ceremony is to be performed a certificate of their existing marriage; and

 (b) furnished to that person a statement in writing, signed by them and witnessed by that person, that:

 (i) they have previously gone through a form or ceremony of marriage with each other;

 (ii) they are the parties mentioned in the certificate of marriage produced with the statement; and

 (iii) they have no reason to believe that they are not legally married to each other or, if their marriage took place outside Australia, they have no reason to believe that it would not be recognised as valid in Australia.

 (6) The provisions of sections 42, 44, 50 and 51 do not apply to or in relation to a religious ceremony of marriage in accordance with subsection (5) and the person by whom, or in whose presence, the ceremony is performed shall not:

 (a) prepare or issue in respect of it any certificate of marriage under or referring to this Act; or

 (b) issue any other document to the parties in respect of the ceremony unless the parties are described in the document as being already legally married to each other.

 (7) A person who is not an authorised celebrant does not commit an offence against section 101 by reason only of his or her having performed a religious ceremony of marriage between parties who have complied with the requirements of subsection (5) of this section.

114  Correction of errors in marriage registries

 (1) In this section, the registrar means the Registrar of Foreign Marriages or the Registrar of Overseas Marriages.

 (2) Where the registrar is satisfied that a register of marriages kept by the registrar contains an error or a misstatement in, or an omission from, the particulars of a marriage entered in it, the registrar may correct the register by causing the true particulars of the marriage or the particulars omitted from the register, as the case may be, to be entered in the margin of the register opposite to the entry of the marriage.

 (3) Where the registrar causes particulars to be entered in the margin of a register under this section, the registrar shall sign his or her name immediately under those particulars and write in the margin the date on which the particulars were so entered.

 (4) The registrar may, before correcting an error, misstatement or omission under this section, require the true particulars of the marriage, or the particulars omitted from the register, as the case may be, to be verified by the statutory declaration of the parties to the marriage or a person who satisfies the registrar that that person has personal knowledge of those particulars.

 (5) Subject to subsection (6), where a copy of, or extract from, an entry in a register of marriages that has been corrected under this section is issued, the copy or extract shall contain the particulars that would be contained in the entry if the particulars in fact contained in the entry were corrected so as to accord with the particulars entered in the margin of the register.

 (6) A copy of, or extract from, an entry in a register shall contain the particulars contained in the entry and the particulars entered, in relation to the entry, in the margin of the register if the registrar is satisfied that the person requiring a copy or extract has proper reasons for requiring a copy or extract containing those particulars.

115  Publication of lists of authorised celebrants

 (1) The Minister shall cause to be published in such manner as the Minister considers appropriate:

 (a) a list of the persons who are ministers of religion registered under Subdivision A of Division 1 of Part IV; and

 (aa) a list of the persons who, or positions that, are authorised to solemnise marriages under Subdivision B of Division 1 of Part IV; and

 (ab) a list of the persons who are marriage celebrants; and

 (ac) a list of the persons who are religious marriage celebrants; and

 (b) a list of the persons who, or positions that, are prescribed authorities in relation to marriages in Australia.

 (2) A list of persons published under subsection (1) must show the information set out in the following table for each person included in the list.

 

Requirements for lists

Item

The list of persons published under this provision …

must show the following information …

1

paragraph (1)(a)

the full name, designation, address and religious denomination of each minister of religion registered under Subdivision A of Division 1 of Part IV.

2

paragraph (1)(aa)

the full name, designation (if any) and address of each person in the list who is authorised to solemnise marriages under Subdivision B of Division 1 of Part IV.

3

paragraph (1)(ab)

the information required to be entered in the register of marriage celebrants for the purposes of subsection 39D(5).

3A

paragraph (1)(ac)

the information required to be entered in the register of marriage celebrants for the purposes of subsection 39D(5); and

where appropriate, the religious body or religious organisation to which the person belongs.

4

paragraph (1)(b)

full name, designation (if any) and address of each person in the list who is a prescribed authority.

Inclusion of names in latest list—prima facie evidence

 (3) The inclusion of the name of a person in the latest list published under paragraph (1)(a), (aa), (ab) or (ac) is prima facie evidence that the person is authorised to solemnise marriages under Division 1 of Part IV.

 (4) The inclusion of the name of a person in the latest list published under paragraph (1)(b) is prima facie evidence that the person is a prescribed authority.

Inclusion of positions in latest list—prima facie evidence

 (5) The inclusion of a position in the latest list published under paragraph (1)(aa) is prima facie evidence that a person in, or acting in, the position is authorised to solemnise marriages under Division 1 of Part IV.

 (6) The inclusion of a position in the latest list published under paragraph (1)(b) is prima facie evidence that a person in, or acting in, the position is a prescribed authority.

116  Judicial notice of signatures of Registrars, celebrants etc.

 (1) Judicial notice shall be taken of the signature of a person who holds or has held, or is acting or has acted in, the office of:

 (a) Registrar of Foreign Marriages;

 (b) Deputy Registrar of Foreign Marriages;

 (c) Registrar of Overseas Marriages;

appearing on a document under this Act and of the fact that, at the time the document was signed by the person, he or she held, or was acting in, that office.

 (2) Judicial notice shall be taken of the signature of a person who is, or has been, an authorised celebrant appearing on a document under this Act and of the fact that, at the time the document was signed by the person, he or she was an authorised celebrant, as the case may be.

 (3) Judicial notice shall be taken of the signature of a person who has, at any time:

 (a) performed the functions of a Judge or magistrate under Part II of this Act or of a Judge under the Part repealed by the Marriage Amendment Act 1976;

 (b) performed the functions of a prescribed authority under this Act; or

 (c) kept a register under Division 1 of Part IV of this Act;

appearing on a document under this Act and of the fact that, at the time the document was signed, that person was duly authorised to perform those functions or to keep that register, as the case may be.

117  Evidence of registration etc.

 (1) A certificate under the hand of a person by whom a register under a Subdivision of Division 1 of Part IV (other than Subdivision C or D of that Division) is kept stating that a specified person was, at a date specified in the certificate, registered under that Subdivision in the register kept by the firstmentioned person for the purposes of that Subdivision is evidence that the person specified in the certificate was registered under that Subdivision at the date so specified.

 (2) A certificate under the hand of the Minister stating that a person specified in the certificate was not, at a date specified in the certificate, registered under a Subdivision of Division 1 of Part IV (other than Subdivision C or D of that Division) is evidence that the person specified in the certificate was not registered under that Subdivision at the date so specified.

 (2A) A certificate under the hand of the Minister stating that a specified person was at a specified date:

 (a) a person authorised under section 39 to solemnise marriages at the place and subject to the conditions (if any) specified in the certificate; or

 (b) an officer or employee of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, appointed by the Minister to be a prescribed authority;

is prima facie evidence of the matters stated in the certificate.

 (3) In a prosecution for an offence against this Act, an averment by the prosecutor in the information or complaint that the defendant or any other person specified in the averment is identical with the person specified in a certificate under this section is evidence of that fact.

118  Right of ministers of religion to receive fees

  Nothing in this Act affects the right of a minister of religion who is an authorised celebrant to require or receive a fee for or in respect of the solemnisation of a marriage.

119  Approved forms

 (1) The Minister may, in writing, approve a form for the purpose of a provision of this Act or the regulations. If the Minister approves a form, that form must be used.

 (2) An approved form may do any of the following:

 (a) require the form to be accompanied by specified documents;

 (b) require documents or information to be verified by statutory declaration.

 (3) The Minister must ensure that an approved form is in force for each of the following provisions:

 (a) subsection 30(1) (application for registration of minister of religion);

 (b) subsection 39D(1) (application for registration as a marriage celebrant);

 (c) paragraph 42(1)(a) (notice of intended marriage);

 (d) paragraph 42(1)(c) (declaration by parties to marriage);

 (e) paragraph 50(1)(b) (official certificate of marriage);

 (f) subsection 74(1) (declaration to be made before authorised celebrant);

 (g) paragraph 80(1)(b) (official certificate of marriage);

 (h) subsection 84(1) (certificate of overseas marriage);

 (i) subsection 112(3) (interpreter’s certificate);

 (j) any provision of the regulations specified by the regulations for the purpose of this paragraph.

120  Regulations

  The GovernorGeneral may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, prescribing all matters which by this Act are required or permitted to be prescribed, or which are necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act, and, in particular:

 (b) prescribing the practice and procedure in relation to inquiries under Part II by a Judge or a magistrate, including the summoning of witnesses, the production of documents, the taking of evidence on oath or affirmation, the administering of oaths or affirmations and the payment to witnesses of fees and of allowances for expenses;

 (c) prescribing the manner of making application for registration under Division 1 of Part IV;

 (e) prescribing the conditions under which, and the manner in which, marriages solemnised in accordance with the law of an overseas country may be registered under section 84;

 (f) making provision for the recognition in Australia of marriages solemnised under a law in force in a place outside Australia, being a law which makes provision appearing to the GovernorGeneral to be similar to any provision made by Part V;

 (g) requiring the furnishing, to the persons by whom registers of births are kept under a law of the Commonwealth or a State or of any Territory, of information with respect to:

 (i) legitimations effected by sections 89, 90 and 91; and

 (ii) orders made under section 92;

 (h) making provision for and in relation to:

 (i) registration of legitimations effected by sections 89, 90 and 91 in cases where the births of the legitimated children are not registered in any register of births kept under a law of the Commonwealth or a State or of any Territory (including provision requiring the furnishing of information); and

 (ii) the issue and effect of certificates in respect of any such registration; and

 (j) prescribing penalties not exceeding a fine of 2 penalty units for offences against the regulations.

Schedule 1Consent to the marriage of a minor

Note: See section 14.

 

 

1  Consent to the marriage of a minor

  The following table sets out whose consent is required before a minor may marry.

 

Persons whose consent is required

Item

If …

then this person’s consent is required …

1

(a) at least one parent of the minor is alive; and

(b) there is no court order in force in relation to parental responsibility for the minor; and

(c) the minor does not have a guardian as referred to in item 3 or 4 of this table

each parent.

2

there is a court order in force granting parental responsibility for the minor to one or more persons (whether or not those persons are the minor’s parents)

each person who, under the order, has (whether explicitly or implicitly) parental responsibility for giving consent to the minor’s marriage.

3

there is a guardianship order in force that:

(a) relates to the minor; and

(b) is made by a court, tribunal or other body of a State or Territory;

each guardian of the minor under the order.

4

a person is under an Act of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, or an Ordinance of a Territory, a guardian of the minor to the exclusion of any other person

each guardian of the minor under the Act or Ordinance.

5

a person is under an Act of a State or a Territory, or an Ordinance of a Territory, a guardian of the minor in addition to any other person whose consent is required in accordance with this table

each guardian of the minor under the Act or Ordinance and each other person whose consent is required in accordance with this table.

6

no other item of this table applies

a prescribed authority.

Endnotes

Endnote 1—About the endnotes

The endnotes provide information about this compilation and the compiled law.

The following endnotes are included in every compilation:

Endnote 1—About the endnotes

Endnote 2—Abbreviation key

Endnote 3—Legislation history

Endnote 4—Amendment history

Abbreviation key—Endnote 2

The abbreviation key sets out abbreviations that may be used in the endnotes.

Legislation history and amendment history—Endnotes 3 and 4

Amending laws are annotated in the legislation history and amendment history.

The legislation history in endnote 3 provides information about each law that has amended (or will amend) the compiled law. The information includes commencement details for amending laws and details of any application, saving or transitional provisions that are not included in this compilation.

The amendment history in endnote 4 provides information about amendments at the provision (generally section or equivalent) level. It also includes information about any provision of the compiled law that has been repealed in accordance with a provision of the law.

Editorial changes

The Legislation Act 2003 authorises First Parliamentary Counsel to make editorial and presentational changes to a compiled law in preparing a compilation of the law for registration. The changes must not change the effect of the law. Editorial changes take effect from the compilation registration date.

If the compilation includes editorial changes, the endnotes include a brief outline of the changes in general terms. Full details of any changes can be obtained from the Office of Parliamentary Counsel.

Misdescribed amendments

A misdescribed amendment is an amendment that does not accurately describe the amendment to be made. If, despite the misdescription, the amendment can be given effect as intended, the amendment is incorporated into the compiled law and the abbreviation “(md)” added to the details of the amendment included in the amendment history.

If a misdescribed amendment cannot be given effect as intended, the abbreviation “(md not incorp)” is added to the details of the amendment included in the amendment history.

 

Endnote 2—Abbreviation key

 

ad = added or inserted

o = order(s)

am = amended

Ord = Ordinance

amdt = amendment

orig = original

c = clause(s)

par = paragraph(s)/subparagraph(s)

C[x] = Compilation No. x

    /subsubparagraph(s)

Ch = Chapter(s)

pres = present

def = definition(s)

prev = previous

Dict = Dictionary

(prev…) = previously

disallowed = disallowed by Parliament

Pt = Part(s)

Div = Division(s)

r = regulation(s)/rule(s)

ed = editorial change

reloc = relocated

exp = expires/expired or ceases/ceased to have

renum = renumbered

    effect

rep = repealed

F = Federal Register of Legislation

rs = repealed and substituted

gaz = gazette

s = section(s)/subsection(s)

LA = Legislation Act 2003

Sch = Schedule(s)

LIA = Legislative Instruments Act 2003

Sdiv = Subdivision(s)

(md) = misdescribed amendment can be given

SLI = Select Legislative Instrument

    effect

SR = Statutory Rules

(md not incorp) = misdescribed amendment

SubCh = SubChapter(s)

    cannot be given effect

SubPt = Subpart(s)

mod = modified/modification

underlining = whole or part not

No. = Number(s)

    commenced or to be commenced

 

Endnote 3—Legislation history

 

Act

Number and year

Assent

Commencement

Application, saving and transitional provisions

Marriage Act 1961

12, 1961

6 May 1961

s 1–3, 5(1), 9, 22–24, s 107–110, 120: 6 May 1961 (s 2(1))
Remainder: 1 Sept 1963 (s 2(2) and gaz 1963, p 1977)

 

Statute Law Revision (Decimal Currency) Act 1966

93, 1966

29 Oct 1966

First Sch: 1 Dec 1966 (s 2(1))

Marriage Act 1973

35, 1973

27 May 1973

1 July 1973 (s 2 and gaz 1973, No 70, p 3)

s 8(2) and 12(2)

Statute Law Revision Act 1973

216, 1973

19 Dec 1973

Sch 1: 31 Dec 1973 (s 2)

s 9(1) and 10

Marriage Amendment Act 1976

209, 1976

20 Dec 1976

s 1, 2 and 30: 20 Dec 1976 (s 2(1))
s 14 and 31: 1 July 1976 (s 2(2))
Remainder: 20 June 1977 (s 2(3), (4) and gaz 1977, No S93)

s 2(4), 14(2), 15(2), 23(2) and 30

Domicile (Consequential Amendments) Act 1982

2, 1982

4 Mar 1982

s 3: 1 July 1982 (s 2)

Marriage Amendment Act 1985

7, 1985

29 Mar 1985

s 4, 10–13 and 23: 7 Apr 1986 (s 2(2) and gaz 1986, No S153)
Remainder: 26 Apr 1985 (s 2(1))

s 8(2), (3) and 25(2)

Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1988

38, 1988

3 June 1988

Sch 1: 3 June 1988 (s 2(1))

Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1990

115, 1990

21 Dec 1990

Sch: 21 Dec 1990 (s 2(1))

Sex Discrimination Amendment Act 1991

71, 1991

25 June 1991

s 11–17: 1 Aug 1991 (s 2(1))

s 3 and 17

Territories Law Reform Act 1992

104, 1992

30 June 1992

Sch 4: 1 July 1992 (s 2(3))

Witness Protection Act 1994

124, 1994

18 Oct 1994

Sch: 18 Apr 1995 (s 2(2))

Family Law Reform (Consequential Amendments) Act 1995

140, 1995

12 Dec 1995

Sch 1 (Pt 7): 11 June 1996 (s 2(4))

Statute Law Revision Act 1996

43, 1996

25 Oct 1996

Sch 5 (item 79): 25 Oct 1996 (s 2(1))

Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1999

125, 1999

13 Oct 1999

Sch 13: 13 Oct 1999 (s 2(1))

Criminal Code Amendment (Theft, Fraud, Bribery and Related Offences) Act 2000

137, 2000

24 Nov 2000

Sch 2 (items 269–273, 418, 419): 24 May 2001 (s 2(3))

Sch 2 (items 418, 419)

Law and Justice Legislation Amendment (Application of Criminal Code) Act 2001

24, 2001

6 Apr 2001

s 4(1), (2) and Sch 34: 24 May 2001 (s 2(1)(a))

s 4(1) and (2)

Marriage Amendment Act 2002

77, 2002

8 Oct 2002

Sch 1: 1 Sept 2003 (s 2(1) item 2 and gaz 2003, No. GN31)
Sch 2 (items 1–14, 16–56): 5 Nov 2002 (s 2(1) items 3, 5)
Sch 2 (item 15): 8 Apr 2003 (s 2(1) item 4)

Sch 1 (item 27) and Sch 2 (items 5, 10, 17)

as amended by

 

 

 

 

Statute Law Revision Act 2012

136, 2012

22 Sept 2012

Sch 2 (item 30): 22 Sept 2012 (s 2(1) item 22)

Marriage Amendment Act 2004

126, 2004

16 Aug 2004

16 Aug 2004 (s 2)

Family Law Amendment (Shared Parental Responsibility) Act 2006

46, 2006

22 May 2006

Sch 4 (items 114–117): 1 July 2006 (s 2(1) item 5)

Statute Law Revision Act 2010

8, 2010

1 Mar 2010

Sch 5 (item 137(a)): 1 Mar 2010 (s 2(1) item 38)

Statute Law Revision Act 2011

5, 2011

22 Mar 2011

Sch 4 (items 1–25): 22 Mar 2011 (s 2(1) items 11, 12)
Sch 7 (item 92): 19 Apr 2011 (s 2(1) item 18)

Federal Circuit Court of Australia (Consequential Amendments) Act 2013

13, 2013

14 Mar 2013

Sch 1 (items 328–330): 12 Apr 2013 (s 2(1) item 2)

Marriage Amendment (Celebrant Administration and Fees) Act 2014

25, 2014

9 Apr 2014

Sch 1 and 2: 1 July 2014 (s 2(1) item 2)

Sch 1 (items 12–14) and Sch 2 (items 26–28)

Statute Law Revision Act (No. 1) 2014

31, 2014

27 May 2014

Sch 1 (item 48): 24 June 2014 (s 2(1) item 2)

Norfolk Island Legislation Amendment Act 2015

59, 2015

26 May 2015

Sch 2 (item 248): 1 July 2016 (s 2(1) item 5)
Sch 2 (items 356–396): 18 June 2015 (s 2(1) item 6)

Sch 2 (items 356–396)

as amended by

 

 

 

 

Territories Legislation Amendment Act 2016

33, 2016

23 Mar 2016

Sch 2: 24 Mar 2016 (s 2(1) item 2)

Law and Justice Legislation Amendment (Northern Territory Local Court) Act 2016

26, 2016

23 Mar 2016

Sch 1 (items 29, 34, 35): 1 May 2016 (s 2(1) item 2)

Sch 1 (items 34, 35)

Trade Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 2016

31, 2016

23 Mar 2016

Sch 2 (item 21): 1 May 2016 (s 2(1) item 3)

Statute Update Act 2016

61, 2016

23 Sept 2016

Sch 1 (items 306–315): 21 Oct 2016 (s 2(1) item 1)

Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017

129, 2017

8 Dec 2017

Sch 1 (items 1–62, 64, 65, 69–71), Sch 3 (items 24, 25) and Sch 4: 9 Dec 2017 (s 2(1) items 2, 3, 5, 7)
Sch 1 (items 66–68): 26 Oct 2018 (s 2(1) item 4)

Sch 1 (items 69–71), Sch 3 (item 25) and Sch 4

Civil Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 2018

130, 2018

25 Oct 2018

Sch 9: 26 Oct 2018 (s 2(1) item 11)

Sch 9 (items 5, 17, 19, 22, 24, 26, 31, 35)

 

Endnote 4—Amendment history

 

Provision affected

How affected

Part I

 

s 2.....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 2A....................

ad No 129, 2017

s 3.....................

rep No 216, 1973

s 4.....................

am No 209, 1976

 

rep No 38, 1988

s 5.....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 2, 1982; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 104, 1992; No 77, 2002; No 126, 2004; No 5, 2011; No 13, 2013; No 25, 2014; No 26, 2016; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 5A....................

ad No 24, 2001

s 6.....................

rs No 209, 1976

 

am No 5, 2011

s 7.....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 31, 2014

s 8.....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 104, 1992; No 5, 2011

s 9.....................

am No 209, 1976; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 9A....................

ad No 209, 1976

 

am No 77, 2002; No 13, 2013

Part IA

 

Part IA heading.............

am No 7, 1985

Part IA..................

ad No 209, 1976

s 9B....................

ad No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011

s 9C....................

ad No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No115, 1990; No 5, 2011

s 9D....................

ad No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 140, 1995

 

rep No 46, 2006

s 9E....................

ad No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011

Part II

 

s 10....................

am No 209, 1976

s 11....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rs No 71, 1991

s 12....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 71, 1991

s 13....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 31, 2016; No 130, 2018

s 14....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rs No 130, 2018

s 15....................

am No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 16....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 140, 1995; No 46, 2006; No 25, 2014

s 17....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 19....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 20....................

am No 7, 1985

s 21....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

Part III

 

Part III..................

rs No 209, 1976

Division 1

 

Division 1 heading..........

ad No 7, 1985

 

rs No 5, 2011

ss 22, 23.................

rs No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985

Division 2

 

Division 2 heading..........

rs No 5, 2011

Division 2................

ad No 7, 1985

s 23A...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 5, 2011

s 23B...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 24....................

rep No 209, 1976

Part IV

 

Part IV heading.............

rs No 5, 2011

Division 1

 

Division 1 heading..........

rs No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

Subdivision A

 

Subdivision A heading........

ad No 77, 2002

s 25....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002

s 26....................

am No 5, 2011

s 27....................

am No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 28....................

am No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 29....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 30....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 25, 2014

s 31....................

am No 35, 1973; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 32....................

am No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 33....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 34....................

rs No 209, 1976

 

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002

s 35....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002

s 36....................

am No 7, 1985

s 37....................

am No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

s 38....................

rs No 35, 1973

 

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011

Subdivision B

 

Subdivision B heading........

ad No 77, 2002

s 39....................

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 130, 2018

Subdivision C

 

Subdivision C..............

ad No 77, 2002

s 39A...................

ad No 77, 2002

s 39B...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 8, 2010; No 130, 2018

s 39C...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 5, 2011

s 39D...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 25, 2014

Subdivision D

 

Subdivision D.............

ad No 129, 2017

s 39DA..................

ad No 129, 2017

s 39DB..................

ad No 129, 2017

s 39DC..................

ad No 129, 2017

s 39DD..................

ad No 129, 2017

s 39DE..................

ad No 129, 2017

Subdivision E

 

Subdivision E heading........

ad No 129, 2017

s 39E...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

(1) exp 1 Sept 2008 (s 39E(2))

 

rep No 25, 2014

s 39F...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 5, 2011

s 39FA..................

ad No 25, 2014

 

am No 130, 2018

s 39FB..................

ad No 25, 2014

 

am No 130, 2018

s 39G...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 39H...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 25, 2014

s 39I....................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 39J....................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 39K...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 5, 2011

s 39L...................

ad No 77, 2002

s 39M...................

ad No 77, 2002

 

am No 129, 2017

Division 2

 

s 40....................

am No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 41....................

am No 5, 2011

s 42....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014; No 31, 2016; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 42A...................

ad No 124, 1994

 

am No 25, 2014

s 43....................

am No 5, 2011

s 44....................

am No 209, 1976; No 5, 2011

s 45....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 46....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 47....................

am No 43, 1996; No 5, 2011

 

rs No 129, 2017

s 47A...................

ad No 129, 2017

s 47B...................

ad No 129, 2017

s 48....................

am No 209, 1976; No 5, 2011

s 49....................

am No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 50....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014

s 51....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 43, 1996; No 125, 1999; No 5, 2011

Division 3

 

s 52....................

am No 209, 1976; No 5, 2011

s 54....................

am No 209, 1976

 

rs No 77, 2002

 

am No 5, 2011

s 55....................

am No 216, 1973; No 209, 1976

 

rs No 7, 1985

 

am No 5, 2011

s 56....................

am No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 57....................

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011

s 58....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 5, 2011

s 59....................

am No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

Part V

 

Part V heading.............

rs No 77, 2002

Division 1

 

Division 1................

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

s 60....................

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

s 61....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

s 62....................

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

s 63....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

s 64....................

am No 7, 1985

 

rep No 77, 2002

 

ad No 130, 2018

Division 2................

rep No 77, 2002

s 65....................

rep No 77, 2002

s 66....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

rep No 77, 2002

s 67....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rep No 77, 2002

s 68....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

rep No 77, 2002

s 69....................

am No 209, 1976

 

rep No 77, 2002

s 70....................

rep No 77, 2002

Division 3

 

Division heading............

rs No 77, 2002

s 71....................

am No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 71A...................

ad No 129, 2017

s 72....................

am No 209, 1976; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

Division 4

 

s 73....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 74....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017

s 75....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 76....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 77....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 71, 1991; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 78....................

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 71, 1991; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 79....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 129, 2017

s 80....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017

s 81....................

am No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 82....................

am No 5, 2011

s 83....................

am No 209, 1976; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 84....................

am No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017

s 85....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 86....................

am No 38, 1988

s 87....................

am No 5, 2011

Part VA

 

Part VA..................

ad No 7, 1985

s 88A...................

ad No 7, 1985

s 88B...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 126, 2004; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

s 88C...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 5, 2011

s 88D...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 71, 1991; No 5, 2011

s 88E...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 71, 1991; No 5, 2011

s 88EA..................

ad No 126, 2004

 

rep No 129, 2017

s 88F...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 71, 1991; No 5, 2011

s 88G...................

ad No 7, 1985

 

am No 71, 1991; No 5, 2011

 

ed C26

Part VI

 

s 89....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 90....................

rs No 7, 1985

 

am No 5, 2011

s 91....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 92....................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 13, 2013; No 59, 2015

s 93....................

am No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988

 

ed C26

Part VII

 

s 94....................

am No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 24, 2001

s 95....................

am No 93, 1966; No 35, 1973; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 24, 2001; No 61, 2016

s 96....................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rep No 137, 2000

s 97....................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rep No 137, 2000

s 98....................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 137, 2000; No 61, 2016

s 99....................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016; No 129, 2017

s 100...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

s 101...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

s 102...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rep No 137, 2000

s 103...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

s 104...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

s 105...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 24, 2001; No 61, 2016

s 106...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 24, 2001; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

Part VIII

 

s 107...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 108...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 137, 2000; No 5, 2011; No 61, 2016

s 109...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

s 110...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985

 

rep No 77, 2002

Part IX

 

s 111...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 111A..................

ad No 209, 1976

s 112...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014

s 113...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 5, 2011

s 114...................

am No 7, 1985

s 115...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 116...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017; No 130, 2018

s 117...................

am No 209, 1976; No 7, 1985; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 129, 2017

 

ed C26

s 118...................

am No 5, 2011

s 119...................

am No 209, 1976

 

rep No 7, 1985

 

ad No 25, 2014

 

am No 129, 2017

s 120...................

am No 93, 1966; No 209, 1976; No 38, 1988; No 77, 2002; No 5, 2011; No 25, 2014; No 61, 2016

The Schedule..............

am No 35, 1973; No 38, 1988; No 129, 2017

 

rep No 130, 2018

Schedule 1

 

Schedule 1................

ad No 130, 2018

c 1.....................

ad No 130, 2018