Commonwealth Coat of Arms

Family Law Regulations 1984

Statutory Rules 1984 No. 426 as amended

made under the

Family Law Act 1975

Compilation start date:   12 April 2013

Includes amendments up to: SLI No. 51, 2013

About this compilation

The compiled instrument

This is a compilation of the Family Law Regulations 1984 as amended and in force on 12 April 2013. It includes any amendment affecting the compiled instrument to that date.

This compilation was prepared on 8 May 2013.

The notes at the end of this compilation (the endnotes) include information about amending Acts and instruments and the amendment history of each amended provision.

Uncommenced provisions and amendments

If a provision of the compiled instrument is affected by an uncommenced amendment, the text of the uncommenced amendment is set out in the endnotes.

Application, saving and transitional provisions for amendments

If the operation of an amendment is affected by an application, saving or transitional provision, the provision is identified in the endnotes.

Modifications

If a provision of the compiled instrument is affected by a textual modification that is in force, the text of the modifying provision is set out in the endnotes.

Provisions ceasing to have effect

If a provision of the compiled instrument has expired or otherwise ceased to have effect in accordance with a provision of the instrument, details of the provision are set out in the endnotes.

 

 

 

 

Contents

Part I—Preliminary

1 Name of regulations

2 Commencement

3 Interpretation

3A Prescribed contract limit

Part II—General

4 Directions as to practice and procedure

5 Noncompliance with Regulations

6 Court or registrar may relieve from consequences of noncompliance

7 Appointment of family consultants (Act s 11B)

8 Prescribed information about noncourt based family services and court’s processes and services (Act s 12B)

8A Prescribed information about reconciliation (Act s 12C)

8B Prescribed information about Part VII proceedings (Act s 12D)

10 Record of proceedings

10A Proceedings for divorce order not to be instituted in a court of summary jurisdiction other than a prescribed court (Act s 44A)

12A Prescribed pensions, allowances or benefits—subsection 4 (1) of the Act

12AB Appeal division—prescribed number of members (Act s 22 (2AC))

12B Child welfare law—prescribed law of a State or Territory

12BA Child welfare officer—prescribed office of a State or Territory

12BB Family violence order—prescribed laws of State or Territory

12BC De facto relationships—prescribed laws and relationships

12C Artificial conception procedures: child of woman and other intended parent—prescribed laws

12CA Artificial conception procedures: child of woman—prescribed laws

12CAA Children born under surrogacy arrangements—prescribed laws

12CAB Other circumstances in which court may hear application for Part VII order (Act s 60I(9)(f))

12CB Commonwealth information orders—prescribed Departments and Commonwealth instrumentalities

12CC Registration of court decision (Act s 68R(6))

12CD Evidence relating to child abuse or family violence—prescribed State or Territory agencies (Act s 69ZW(1))

12CE Evidence relating to professional confidential relationship privilege—prescribed laws

12D Registration of State child orders—prescribed States

13 Authentication of consent in writing

14 Meaning of prescribed overseas jurisdiction

14A Prescribed maximum period—sentence or order (Act s 70NFC(6), 112AG(6))

15 Institution etc of proceedings by persons holding certain offices

15AA Third party expenses (Act s 90AJ)

15AB De facto relationships—prescribed laws

15A Leave to appeal—prescribed decrees (Act s 94AA)

17 Registration of decrees

17A Declaration—definition of forfeiture order

17B Declaration—definition of restraining order

17C Definition of State or Territory proceeds of crime law

17D Definition of proceeds of crime authority

18 Interstate enforcement of affiliation and similar orders

19 Operation of State and Territory laws—prescribed laws (Act s 114AB)

20 Priority of attachment orders

21 Conversion of currency

Part IIAAA—Protected names and symbols

21AAA Protected names (Act s 9A)

21AAB Protected symbols (Act s 9A)

Part IIAB—Service under the Hague Service Convention

Division 1—Preliminary

21AC Definitions for Part IIAB

21AD Provisions of this Part to prevail

Division 2—Service abroad of local judicial documents

21AE Application of Division

21AF Application for request for service abroad

21AG How application to be dealt with

21AH Procedure on receipt of certificate of service

21AI Payment of costs

21AJ Evidence of service

Division 3—Default judgment following service abroad of initiating process

21AK Application of Division

21AL Restriction on power to enter default judgment if certificate of service filed

21AM Restriction on power to enter default judgment if certificate of service not filed

21AN Setting aside judgment in default of appearance

Part IIAC—Service in countries that are parties to conventions other than the Hague Service Convention

21AO Application of Part

21AP Definitions for Part IIAC

21AQ Service in accordance with convention

21AR Request for service

21AS Certificate of service

Part IIA—Parentage testing procedures and reports

Division 1—General

21A Application of Part

21B Interpretation

21C Parentage testing procedures

21D Compliance with Regulations

Division 2—Collection, storage and testing of samples

21E Samplers

21F Provision of information by donor—Form 2

21G Collection of blood samples

21H Collection of bodily samples for DNA typing

21I Container to be sealed and labelled

21J Statement by sampler—Form 4

21K Packing and storage requirements

21L Testing of bodily samples

Division 3—Reports

21M Reports—Form 5

Division 4—Miscellaneous

21N Notification of accredited laboratories and nominated reporters

Part III—Overseas orders

Division 1—Overseas child orders

23 Registration of overseas child orders

24 Transmission of orders to overseas jurisdiction

Division 2—Maintenance

24A Definitions for Division 2

25 Reciprocating jurisdictions

28 Dealing with provisional overseas maintenance orders

28A Hearings about applications about provisional overseas maintenance orders

28B Making of orders about provisional overseas maintenance orders

28C Dealing with United States petitions

28D Hearing of applications based on United States petitions

28E Effect of orders about United States petitions

29 Power to make provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

29A Dealing with provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

29B Taking of further evidence

29C Confirmation of provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

30 Proceedings for enforcement of overseas maintenance entry liabilities

31 Cancellation of registration in reciprocating jurisdiction

32 Cancellation of registration of overseas maintenance orders

34 Cancellation of registration of overseas maintenance agreements

36 Party in Australia may apply to vary etc overseas maintenance order, agreeement or liability

37 Discharge etc of overseas maintenance order or liability made in absence of party

38 Variation etc orders—status

38A Making and effect of provisional variation etc orders

38B Taking of further evidence

39 Confirmation of variations made provisionally in reciprocating jurisdiction

Part IIIB—Parentage

39B Extension of provisions of Act

39BA Jurisdictions

Part IIIC—Jurisdiction of courts and related matters

39BB Certain jurisdiction of Family Court must not be exercised in States and Territories

39C Jurisdiction of courts

39D Convention countries

Part IV—Convention on recovery abroad of maintenance

40 Interpretation of Part IV

45 Immunity of Secretary from orders to pay costs

48 Convention countries

50 Applications by persons in convention countries for recovery of maintenance under Commonwealth, State or Territory law

50A Proceedings on behalf of persons in convention countries for recovery of maintenance

50B Return of applications

51 Certain requests to be made only with leave of court

53 Taking of evidence at request of appropriate authority in convention countries

54 Obtaining evidence in convention countries for purposes of proceedings under this Part

55 Admissibility of evidence given in convention countries

56 Orders of court in convention countries

Part 5—Arbitration

67A Definitions for Part 5

67B Prescribed requirements for arbitrator (Act s 10M)

67C Matters that may not be arbitrated

67D Application for referral to arbitration (Act s 13E)

67E Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration (Act s 13F)

67F Arbitration agreement

67G Notice of arbitration

67H Costs of arbitration

67I Duties of arbitrator

67J Oath or affirmation by arbitrator

67K Suspension of arbitration—failure to comply with direction

67L Termination of arbitration—lack of capacity

67M Appearance in arbitration

67N Attendance of persons to give evidence

67O Application of rules of evidence

67P Making an award

67Q Registration of award (Act s 13H)

67R Notice of registration of award

67S Enforcement of registered awards

67T Registration of decree affecting registered award

Part VI—Repeal and savings

78 Repeal of former Family Law Regulations

79 Savings—proceedings instituted before 5 January 1976

80 Savings in relation to the former Regulations

81 Transitional matters in connection with Family Law Amendment Regulations 2000 (No. 2)

82 Shared Parental Responsibility Act—end of transition period

83 Transitional matters relating to Family Law Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 4)

Schedule 1 

Form 1A—Request for service abroad of judicial documents and certificate

Form 1B—Summary of the document to be served

Form 2—Parentage testing procedure Affidavit by/in relation to donor

Form 4—Parentage testing procedure Collection of bodily samples

Form 5—Parentage testing procedure report

Form 6—Application for arbitration

Form 7—Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration

Form 8—Application to register arbitration award

Form 9—Application to register decree affecting registered arbitration award

Schedule 1A—Countries or parts of countries, declared to be prescribed overseas jurisdictions for certain purposes

Schedule 2—Reciprocating jurisdictions

Schedule 3—Convention on the recovery abroad of maintenance

Schedule 4—Convention countries

Schedule 4A—Jurisdictions and convention countries

Schedule 5—Prescribed laws—definition of child welfare law in subsection 4 (1) of the Act

Schedule 8—Family violence order—prescribed laws of State or Territory

Schedule 9—Evidence relating to child abuse or family violence—prescribed State or Territory agencies

Schedule 9A—Professional confidential relationship privilege—prescribed laws

Schedule 10—Protected Names

Schedule 11—Protected Symbols

Endnotes

Endnote 1—Legislation history

Endnote 2—Amendment history

Endnote 3—Uncommenced amendments

TransTasman Proceedings Legislation Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 1) (No. 10, 2012)

Family Law Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 3) (No. 211, 2012)

Endnote 4—Misdescribed amendments [none]

Part IPreliminary

 

1  Name of regulations

  These regulations are the Family Law Regulations 1984.

2  Commencement

  Subject to section 111 of the Act, these Regulations shall come into operation on 2 January 1985.

3  Interpretation

 (1) In these Regulations, unless the contrary intention appears:

Act means the Family Law Act 1975.

application means an application to a court for the purpose of instituting proceedings under the Act or an application to a registrar made under these Regulations.

certified copy means a copy of an order, decree or document certified to be a true copy by an officer of the court that made the order or by which the order has been registered or confirmed or, in the case of an overseas order, by the Secretary.

Child Support Registrar means the Child Support Registrar mentioned in section 10 of the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988.

filed has the same meaning as in the applicable Rules of Court.

Hague Service Convention means the Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, done at The Hague on 15 November 1965.

intervener means, in relation to proceedings, the AttorneyGeneral or any other person when intervening or applying to intervene under Part IX of the Act, or a child independently represented under subsection 68L(2) of the Act.

legal practitioner means a person enrolled as a barrister, a solicitor, a barrister and solicitor, or a legal practitioner, of the High Court of Australia, or of the Supreme Court of a State or Territory.

party to proceedings means an applicant, respondent or intervener in proceedings under the Act.

Principal Registrar means the Principal Registrar of the Family Court.

registrar includes the Principal Registrar, a Registrar within the meaning of section 4 of the Act, a Deputy Registrar and, in relation to a court of summary jurisdiction, the clerk of the court, clerk of petty sessions or other person holding or performing the duties of a similar office in the court.

respondent means, in relation to proceedings, a party to the proceedings other than an applicant or an intervener.

sealed means sealed with the seal of the court or otherwise endorsed by an officer of the court.

Secretary means:

 (a) the Secretary of the AttorneyGeneral’s Department; or

 (b) a person authorised by the Secretary to perform a function in relation to which the expression is used.

Shared Parental Responsibility Act means the Family Law Amendment (Shared Parental Responsibility) Act 2006.

State Family Court means a court to which section 41 of the Act applies.

the former Regulations means Statutory Rules 1975 No. 210 as amended by the other Statutory Rules repealed by regulation 78.

Note: The following expressions used in these Regulations are defined in subsection 4 (1) of the Act:

 (2) A reference in these Regulations, other than in regulation 10, to the Family Court shall be read as including a reference to a State Family Court.

3A  Prescribed contract limit

  For subsection 38A(4) of the Act, a higher amount of $1,000,000 is prescribed.

Part IIGeneral

 

4  Directions as to practice and procedure

 (1) Where a court is satisfied in the circumstances of a particular case that:

 (a) the provisions of the Act, these Regulations and the applicable Rules of Court do not make adequate provision for practice and procedure; or

 (b) a difficulty arises or doubt exists as to practice and procedure;

the court may give such directions with respect to the practice and procedure to be followed in the case as the court considers necessary.

 (2) In proceedings to which section 9 of the Act applies, the court or a registrar may give directions in all matters of practice and procedure.

 (3) Directions under this regulation shall be directed to providing a speedy and inexpensive hearing of the matters in issue between the parties and shall be consistent with these Regulations and the applicable Rules of Court.

5  Noncompliance with Regulations

 (1) Noncompliance with these Regulations, or with a rule of practice or procedure in a court exercising jurisdiction under the Act, does not render proceedings in that court void unless the court so directs.

 (2) In exercising its discretion under this regulation, the court shall have regard to the real merits of the case, the minimizing of expense, and whether any party to the proceedings has suffered injustice or has been prejudicially affected by noncompliance with these Regulations.

 (3) In relation to proceedings that commenced before the commencement of these Regulations, a reference, in subregulation (1), to these Regulations shall be read as including a reference to the former Regulations in their application to those proceedings.

6  Court or registrar may relieve from consequences of noncompliance

 (1) Subject to the Act and these Regulations:

 (a) the court or a registrar may, at any time, upon such terms as the court or registrar thinks fit, relieve a party from the consequences of noncompliance with these Regulations, a rule of practice and procedure of the court applicable to the proceedings or an order made by a registrar;

 (b) the court may at any time, upon such terms as the court thinks fit, relieve a party from the consequences of noncompliance with an order made by a court; and

 (c) the court may, upon such terms as the court thinks fit, dispense with the need for compliance by a party with any provision of these Regulations.

 (2) Where these Regulations fail to make provision on any matter, the court is empowered to give, and shall give, such directions as to practice and procedure as the court thinks fit.

 (3) In relation to proceedings that commenced before the commencement of these Regulations, a reference, in subregulation (1) or (2), to these Regulations shall be read as including a reference to the former Regulations in their application to those proceedings.

7  Appointment of family consultants (Act s 11B)

  For paragraph 11B(c) of the Act, a family consultant may be appointed in writing by:

 (a) the Chief Executive Officer of the Family Court of Australia; or

 (b) the Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Circuit Court.

8  Prescribed information about noncourt based family services and court’s processes and services (Act s 12B)

  For section 12B of the Act, the information that must be included in documents provided to persons under Part IIIA of the Act in relation to noncourt based family services and court’s processes and services is information about:

 (a) the legal and possible social effects of the proposed proceedings (including the consequences for children whose care, welfare or development is likely to be affected by the proceedings); and

 (b) the services provided by family counsellors and family dispute resolution practitioners to help people affected by separation or divorce; and

 (c) the steps involved in the proposed proceedings; and

 (d) the role of family consultants; and

 (e) the arbitration facilities available to arbitrate disputes in relation to separation and divorce.

8A  Prescribed information about reconciliation (Act s 12C)

  For section 12C of the Act, the information that must be included in documents provided to persons under Part IIIA of the Act is information about family counselling and family dispute resolution services.

Note: Section 13B of the Act allows a court to adjourn proceedings to give the parties the opportunity to consider a reconciliation. The parties will be advised in such circumstances to attend family counselling or other appropriate services.

8B  Prescribed information about Part VII proceedings (Act s 12D)

  For section 12D of the Act, the information that must be included in documents provided under Part IIIA of the Act to persons involved in Part VII proceedings, is information about family counselling services available to assist the parties and the child or children concerned in the proceedings to adjust to the consequences of orders made under Part VII of the Act.

Note: Part VII deals with issues including parental responsibility, parenting orders and maintenance orders in relation to a child or children concerned in the proceedings.

10  Record of proceedings

 (1) Wherever practicable, all proceedings in the Family Court shall be fully recorded.

 (2) Proceedings in the Family Court need be transcribed only where a Judge or registrar so orders.

10A  Proceedings for divorce order not to be instituted in a court of summary jurisdiction other than a prescribed court (Act s 44A)

  For section 44A of the Act, proceedings for a divorce order in relation to a marriage may not be instituted in, or transferred to, a court of summary jurisdiction other than the following prescribed courts:

 (a) a court constituted by a stipendiary magistrate who is the Principal Registrar, or a Registrar, of the Family Court of Western Australia;

 (b) the Magistrates Court constituted by section 4 of the Magistrates Court Act 1930 of the Australian Capital Territory;

 (c) the Court of Petty Sessions of Norfolk Island.

12A  Prescribed pensions, allowances or benefits—subsection 4 (1) of the Act

  For the purposes of the definition of income tested pension, allowance or benefit in subsection 4(1) of the Act, each of the following pensions, allowances or benefits is prescribed:

 (a) the following entitlements under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:

 (i) a service pension within the meaning given by subsection 5Q(1) of that Act;

 (ii) a Defence Force Income Support Allowance (DFISA) within the meaning given by subsection 5Q(1) of that Act;

 (iii) income support supplement under Part IIIA of that Act;

 (b) a social security pension or a social security benefit within the meaning given by subsection 23(1) of the Social Security Act 1991;

 (c) a family tax benefit within the meaning given by subsection 3 (1) of the A New Tax System (Family Assistance) Act 1999, the Part A rate of which is higher than the base rate under clause 4 of Schedule 1 to that Act;

 (ca) so much of an allowance under the Aboriginal study assistance scheme, within the meaning given by subsection 23(1) of the Social Security Act 1991, as is means tested;

 (d) the amount of a boarding allowance under the Assistance for Isolated Children Scheme, referred to in paragraph (a) of the definition of current special educational assistance scheme in subsection 3(1) of the Student Assistance Act 1973, that is greater than the non means tested amount of the allowance;

 (e) a payment under the scheme known as the New Enterprise Incentive Scheme;

 (f) an AUSTUDY benefit under Part 2 of the Student and Youth Assistance Act 1973 as in force immediately before 1 July 1998.

12AB  Appeal division—prescribed number of members (Act s 22 (2AC))

  For subsection 22(2AC) of the Act, the prescribed number of members is 9.

12B  Child welfare law—prescribed law of a State or Territory

 (1) For the purposes of the definition of child welfare law in subsection 4(1) of the Act, each of the following classes of laws is prescribed, namely, any law of:

 (a) the State of New South Wales;

 (b) the State of Victoria;

 (c) the State of Queensland;

 (d) the State of Western Australia;

 (e) the State of South Australia;

 (f) the State of Tasmania;

 (g) the Australian Capital Territory;

 (h) the Northern Territory; or

 (i) the Territory of Norfolk Island;

that relates to the imprisonment, detention or residence of a child upon being dealt with for a criminal offence.

 (2) For the purposes of the definition of child welfare law in subsection 4(1) of the Act, each law specified in Column 2 of an item in Schedule 5, being a law of the State or Territory specified in Column 3 of that item, is prescribed.

12BA  Child welfare officer—prescribed office of a State or Territory

  For paragraph (a) of the definition of child welfare officer in subsection 4(1) of the Act, each of the following is a prescribed office:

 (a) for New South Wales—the offices of:

 (i) Minister for Community Services, in relation to
the Adoption Act 2000 (NSW) and the Children
and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998 (NSW); and

 (ii) Minister for Disability Services, in relation to the Guardianship Act 1987 (NSW);

 (b) for Tasmania—the office of Secretary to the Department of Health and Human Services;

 (c) for Victoria—the office of Secretary to the Department of Human Services;

 (d) for Queensland—the office of the Chief Executive of the Department of Communities;

 (e) for the Australian Capital Territory—the offices of:

 (i) Chief Executive of the Department of Education Youth and Family Services; and

 (ii) Chief Psychiatrist appointed under section 112 of the Mental Health (Treatment and Care) Act 1994 (ACT);

 (f) for the Northern Territory—the office of the Minister for Health and Community Services.

12BB  Family violence order—prescribed laws of State or Territory

  For the purposes of the definition of family violence order in subsection 4(1) of the Act, each of the laws specified in column 2 of an item in Schedule 8 is a prescribed law of the State or Territory set out in column 3 of that item.

12BC  De facto relationships—prescribed laws and relationships

  For paragraph 4AA(2)(g) of the Act, the following are prescribed:

 (a) a law mentioned in an item of the following table;

 (b) a kind of relationship, mentioned in the item, that is or was registered under the law.

 

Item

Law

Kind of relationship

1

Relationships Register Act 2010 (NSW)

A registered relationship as defined in section 4 of that Act

2

Relationships Act 2008 (Vic)

A registered domestic relationship as defined in section 3 of that Act

2A

Relationships Act 2011 (Qld)

A relationship as a couple between 2 adults who meet the eligibility criteria mentioned in section 5 of that Act for entry into a registered relationship

3

Relationships Act 2003 (Tas)

A significant relationship as defined in section 4 of that Act

4

Civil Partnerships Act 2008 (ACT)

A relationship as a couple between 2 adult persons who meet the eligibility criteria in section 6 of that Act for entry into a civil partnership

12C  Artificial conception procedures: child of woman and other intended parent—prescribed laws

  For subparagraph 60H(1)(b)(ii) of the Act, the laws mentioned in the following table are prescribed.

 

Item

Law

1

Status of Children Act 1996 (NSW)

2

Status of Children Act 1974 (Vic), sections 10A, 10B, 10C, 10D, 10E, 13 and 14

3

Status of Children Act 1978 (Qld), sections 17, 18, 19, 19C, 19D and 19E

4

Artificial Conception Act 1985 (WA)

5

Family Relationships Act 1975 (SA), sections 10A, 10B, 10C, 10D and 10E

6

Status of Children Act 1974 (Tas), Part III

7

Parentage Act 2004 (ACT), section 11

8

Status of Children Act(NT), sections 5A, 5B, 5C, 5D, 5DA, 5E and 5F

12CA  Artificial conception procedures: child of woman—prescribed laws

  For paragraph 60H(2)(b) of the Act, the laws mentioned in the following table are prescribed.

 

Item

Law

1

Status of Children Act 1996 (NSW), section 14

1A

Status of Children Act 1974 (Vic), section 15 and 16

2

Status of Children Act 1978 (Qld), section 23

3

Artificial Conception Act 1985 (WA)

4

Family Relationships Act 1975 (SA), sections 10B and 10C

5

Status of Children Act 1974 (Tas), Part III

6

Parentage Act 2004 (ACT), subsections 11 (2) and (3)

7

Status of Children Act 1978 (NT), sections 5B, 5C and 5E

12CAA  Children born under surrogacy arrangements—prescribed laws

  For subsection 60HB(1) of the Act, the laws mentioned in the following table are prescribed.

 

Item

Law

1

Status of Children Act 1974 (Vic), section 22

2

Surrogacy Act 2010 (Qld), section 22

3

Surrogacy Act 2008 (WA), section 21

4

Parentage Act 2004 (ACT), section 26

5

Family Relationships Act 1975 (SA), section 10HB

6

Surrogacy Act 2010 (NSW), section 12

12CAB  Other circumstances in which court may hear application for Part VII order (Act s 60I(9)(f))

  For paragraph 60I(9)(f) of the Act, the circumstance that an application has been made to the court for any other order in proceedings in which a certificate under subsection 60I(8) of the Act has been filed is specified.

12CB  Commonwealth information orders—prescribed Departments and Commonwealth instrumentalities

  For the purposes of paragraph 67N(3)(b) of the Act, the following Departments and Commonwealth instrumentalities are prescribed:

 (a) Department of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs;

 (b) Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade;

 (c) Department of Health and Family Services;

 (d) Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs;

 (e) Department of Human Services;

 (f) Department of Veterans’ Affairs;

 (g) Australian Institute of Family Studies.

12CC  Registration of court decision (Act s 68R(6))

 (1) For subsection 68R(6) of the Act, if, in relation to family violence proceedings before a court, the court:

 (a) makes a final family violence order or a final order varying a family violence order; and

 (b) revives, varies, discharges or suspends an order, injunction or arrangement mentioned in subsection 68R(1) of the Act;

the registrar of the court must send a sealed copy of the decision mentioned in paragraph (b) to the registrar of the Family Court, as soon as practicable.

 (2) On receiving the sealed copy of the decision, the registrar must register the decision by:

 (a) filing the sealed copy; and

 (b) noting on the sealed copy the fact and date of registration.

Note: For the definition of family violence order, see subsection 4(1) of the Act and regulation 12BB.

12CD  Evidence relating to child abuse or family violence—prescribed State or Territory agencies (Act s 69ZW(1))

  For subsection 69ZW(1) of the Act, an agency mentioned in column 2 of an item in Schedule 9 is a prescribed agency for the State or Territory mentioned in column 3 of the item.

12CE  Evidence relating to professional confidential relationship privilege—prescribed laws

  For paragraph 69ZX(4)(b) of the Act, each law mentioned in an item in Schedule 9A, being a law of the State or Territory mentioned in the item, is prescribed.

12D  Registration of State child orders—prescribed States

  For the purposes of section 70C of the Act, each of the following States and Territories is a prescribed State:

 (a) the State of New South Wales;

 (b) the State of Victoria;

 (ba) the State of Queensland;

 (bb) the State of Western Australia;

 (c) the State of South Australia;

 (d) the State of Tasmania;

 (e) the Australian Capital Territory;

 (f) the Northern Territory;

 (g) the Territory of Norfolk Island.

13  Authentication of consent in writing

  For paragraphs 65Y(2)(a), 65Z(2)(a), 65ZA(3)(a) and 65ZB(3)(a) of the Act, a consent in writing must be authenticated by a person mentioned in section 8 of the Statutory Declarations Act 1959 endorsing on the consent a statement that:

 (a) the person is satisfied about the identity of the person signing the consent; and

 (b) the consent was signed in the person’s presence.

14  Meaning of prescribed overseas jurisdiction

  For the purposes of the definition of prescribed overseas jurisdiction in subsection 4(1) of the Act:

 (a) each country or part of a country, set out in column 2 of an item in Schedule 1A is declared to be a prescribed overseas jurisdiction for the purposes of:

 (i) subsection 4(1) of the Act, in relation to the definition of overseas child order; and

 (ii) sections 70M and 70N of the Act; and

 (b) each country, or part of a country, set out in Schedule 2 as a reciprocating jurisdiction is declared to be a prescribed overseas jurisdiction for the purposes of:

 (i) subsection 4(1) of the Act, in relation to the definition of overseas maintenance agreement; and

 (ii) paragraph 89(b) of the Act.

14A  Prescribed maximum period—sentence or order (Act s 70NFC(6), 112AG(6))

  For the definitions of maximum period in subsections 70NFC(6) and112AG(6) of the Act, 200 hours is prescribed in relation to each State and Territory.

15  Institution etc of proceedings by persons holding certain offices

 (1) For the purposes of sections 69D and 89A and paragraph 125(1)(f) of the Act, each of the following offices under a law of a State or of a Territory is specified:

 (a) Collector of Maintenance;

 (b) Deputy Collector of Maintenance;

 (c) Assistant Collector of Maintenance.

 (2) A person for the time being holding an office referred to in subregulation (1) is authorized, in his or her discretion, to institute, continue or prosecute proceedings with respect to the maintenance of a party to a marriage or of a child, on behalf of that party or child.

 (3) For the purposes of paragraph 125(1)(f) of the Act, each person for the time being holding an office referred to in subregulation (1), and each officer of a court of summary jurisdiction of a State or Territory, is a person entitled, in his or her discretion, to institute, continue or prosecute proceedings, on behalf of the person entitled to moneys payable under child maintenance order under Part VII of the Act, or a maintenance order under Part VIII of the Act, for the purpose of enforcing payment of those moneys.

15AA  Third party expenses (Act s 90AJ)

 (1) For subsection 90AJ(4) of the Act, this regulation provides for matters relating to the expenses of a third party in relation to a marriage in situations where the court has not made an order under subsection 90AJ(2) in relation to those expenses.

 (2) A third party in relation to a marriage may charge reasonable fees to cover the reasonable expenses of the third party incurred as a necessary result of an order made or an injunction granted, in accordance with Part VIIIAA of the Act, in relation to the marriage.

 (3) Without limiting subregulation (2), the fees may cover the reasonable expenses incurred by the third party in complying with the order or injunction.

Examples: Expenses incurred for any of the following matters could be covered in the fees charged by the third party:

 legal and registration fees

 valuation fees

 government charges and duties

 searching, obtaining and producing documents

 postage, delivery, transport or other transmission of documents

 communications with the parties to the marriage or another person.

 (4) Each of the parties to the marriage is separately liable to pay to the third party half of the total amount of the fees charged.

 (5) Jurisdiction is conferred on a court having jurisdiction under the Act:

 (a) to decide whether fees charged by a third party under subregulation (2) are reasonable; and

 (b) to make an order in relation to the collection or recovery of such reasonable fees.

15AB  De facto relationships—prescribed laws

  For paragraph 90SB(d) of the Act, the laws mentioned in the following table are prescribed.

 

Item

Law

1

Relationships Register Act 2010 (NSW)

2

Relationships Act 2008 (Vic)

2A

Relationships Act 2011 (Qld)

3

Relationships Act 2003 (Tas)

4

Civil Partnerships Act 2008 (ACT)

15A  Leave to appeal—prescribed decrees (Act s 94AA)

 (1) For items 1 to 5 of the table in subsection 94AA(1) of the Act, a prescribed decree is:

 (a) an interlocutory decree (other than a decree in relation to a child welfare matter); or

 (b) an order under section 102PE of the Act.

 (2) In this regulation:

child welfare matter means a matter relating to:

 (a) the person or persons with whom a child is to live; or

 (b) the person or persons with whom the child is to spend time or communicate; or

 (c) any other aspect of parental responsibility, within the meaning of Part VII of the Act, for a child.

17  Registration of decrees

 (1) A decree (other than a divorce order or a decree of nullity of marriage) may be registered in any court having jurisdiction under the Act by filing a sealed copy of the decree in that court.

 (2) For the purposes of subregulation (1), a decree may be filed:

 (a) by a party to the proceedings in which the decree was made;

 (b) by a child entitled to benefit under the decree;

 (c) by an officer of the court;

 (d) by an officer, authority or person entitled under paragraph 125(1)(f) of the Act to take proceedings for the enforcement of the decree; or

 (e) with the leave of the court, by any other person.

 (3) A decree filed and registered under subregulation (1) shall be numbered in accordance with the applicable Rules of Court.

17A  Declaration—definition of forfeiture order

  Each kind of order declared by regulation 5 of the Proceeds of Crime Regulations 2002 to be within the definition of interstate forfeiture order in section 338 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 is declared to be a forfeiture order for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of forfeiture order in subsection 4(1) of the Act.

17B  Declaration—definition of restraining order

  Each kind of order declared by regulation 7 of the Proceeds of Crime Regulations 2002 to be within the definition of interstate restraining order in section 338 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 is declared to be a restraining order for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of restraining order in subsection 4(1) of the Act.

17C  Definition of State or Territory proceeds of crime law

  Each law declared by regulation 4 of the Proceeds of Crime Regulations 2002 to be a law that corresponds to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 is, for the definition of State or Territory proceeds of crime law in subsection 4(1) of the Act, declared to be a law that corresponds to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.

17D  Definition of proceeds of crime authority

Forfeiture orders

 (1) For subsection 4C(4) of the Act, each person or body mentioned in an item of the following table is prescribed to be a proceeds of crime authority, in relation to a forfeiture order, for sections 79B, 79C, 79D, 79E, 90M, 90N, 90P, 90Q, 90VA, 90VB, 90VC and 90VD of the Act.

 

Item

Person or body

1

The Commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Recovery Act 1990 of New South Wales

2

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Proceeds of Crime Act 1989 of New South Wales

3

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

4

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

5

A prescribed person, or a person belonging to a prescribed class of persons, for the purposes of subsection 37 (1) of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

6

The commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

7

A police officer approved by the commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland, for the purposes of subparagraph 12(1)(a)(ii) of that Act

8

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

9

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 of Western Australia

10

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Confiscation Act 2005 of South Australia

11

An authorized officer, within the meaning of the Crime (Confiscation of Profits) Act 1993 of Tasmania

12

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Criminal Assets Act 2003 of the Australian Capital Territory

13

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

14

A police officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

Restraining Orders

 (2) For subsection 4C(4) of the Act, each person or body mentioned in an item of the following table is prescribed to be a proceeds of crime authority, in relation to a restraining order, for sections 79B, 79C, 79D, 79E, 90M, 90N, 90P, 90Q, 90VA, 90VB, 90VC and 90VD of the Act.

 

Item

Person or body

1

The Commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Recovery Act 1990 of New South Wales

2

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Proceeds of Crime Act 1989 of New South Wales

3

An authorised officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Proceeds of Crime Act 1989 of New South Wales

4

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

5

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

6

A prescribed person, or a person belonging to a prescribed class of persons, for the purposes of subsection 16(2) of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

7

A prescribed person, or a person belonging to a prescribed class of persons, for the purposes of subsection 36K(1) of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

8

The commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

9

A police officer approved by the commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland, for the purposes of subparagraph 12(1)(a)(ii) of that Act

10

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

11

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 of Western Australia

12

A police officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 of Western Australia

13

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Confiscation Act 2005 of South Australia

14

An authorised officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Confiscation Act 2005 of South Australia

15

An authorized officer, within the meaning of the Crime (Confiscation of Profits) Act 1993 of Tasmania

16

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Criminal Assets Act 2003 of the Australian Capital Territory

17

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

18

A police officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

Forfeiture applications

 (3) For subsection 4C(4) of the Act, each person or body mentioned in an item of the following table is prescribed to be a proceeds of crime authority, in relation to a forfeiture application, for sections 79B, 79C, 79D, 79E, 90M, 90N, 90P, 90Q, 90VA, 90VB, 90VC and 90VD of the Act.

 

Item

Person or body

1

The Commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Recovery Act 1990 of New South Wales

2

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Proceeds of Crime Act 1989 of New South Wales

3

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

4

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

5

A prescribed person, or a person belonging to a prescribed class of persons, for the purposes of subsection 37(1) of the Confiscation Act 1997 of Victoria

6

The commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

7

A police officer approved by the commission, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland, for the purposes of subparagraph 12(1)(a)(ii) of that Act

8

An appropriate officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 of Queensland

9

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 of Western Australia

10

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Assets Confiscation Act 2005 of South Australia

11

An authorized officer, within the meaning of the Crime (Confiscation of Profits) Act 1993 of Tasmania

12

The DPP, within the meaning of the Confiscation of Criminal Assets Act 2003 of the Australian Capital Territory

13

The DPP, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

14

A police officer, within the meaning of the Criminal Property Forfeiture Act of the Northern Territory

18  Interstate enforcement of affiliation and similar orders

 (1) This regulation applies to orders to which section 109 of the Act applies.

 (2) A reference in this regulation to an order made by a court shall be read as including a reference to an order made by another court on an appeal in connection with proceedings that originated in the firstmentioned court.

 (3) For the purposes of this regulation, a person working in a place, whether temporarily or permanently, shall be deemed to be resident in that place as well as in the place in which he or she is in fact resident.

 (4) Where an order to which this regulation applies is still in force and it appears that the person against whom the order has been made is resident in, or proceeding to, a State or Territory, other than the State or Territory in which the order was made, the registrar of the court in the State or Territory in which the order was made may, of his or her own motion, or on the application of a person for whose benefit the order was made, send to a court having jurisdiction under the Act in that other State or Territory:

 (a) 3 certified copies of the order;

 (b) a certificate setting out the amounts payable and remaining unpaid under the order;

 (c) such information and material (if any) as the registrar possesses for ascertaining the identity and whereabouts of the person against whom the order has been made; and

 (d) a request in writing that the order be made enforceable in that State or Territory.

 (5) Where the registrar of a court receives the documents referred to in subregulation (4), the registrar of that court shall, if there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person against whom the order has been made is resident in or proceeding to the area over which the court has jurisdiction, register the order by filing in the court a certified copy of the order and certificate and noting the fact and date of the registration on that certified copy.

 (6) An order registered under subregulation (5) is, until the registration is cancelled, enforceable in the court in which the certified copy of the order is filed both with respect to any moneys or arrears presently payable under the order and with respect to amounts becoming due under the order after it is so registered as if it were an order made under the Act.

 (7) Upon registration under subregulation (5) of an order, the registrar of the court shall:

 (a) notify the registrar of the requesting court of the registration; and

 (b) cause a certified copy of the order to be served upon the person against whom the order has been made, together with a notice of registration of the order in the court specifying:

 (i) the amount, if any, (including arrears) due under the order; and

 (ii) the person, authority or court to whom or to which money payable under the order is to be paid.

 (8) Service of the documents may be effected by:

 (a) delivering the documents to the person personally; or

 (b) sending the documents by prepaid post to the person at the person’s last known address; or

 (c) posting, faxing or delivering the documents to the person at the person’s address for service within the meaning of the applicable Rules of Court.

 (8A) Documents served under paragraph 8(b) must be accompanied by a form of acknowledgment of service for completion by the person served.

 (9) Where an order has been registered in a court in accordance with this regulation and there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person against whom the order has been made is no longer resident in the State or Territory in which the order has been registered but is or is about to be resident in another State or Territory, the registrar of the court in which the order has been registered shall forthwith notify the registrar of the court in which the order was made accordingly and shall give to that registrar such information as the registrar of the firstmentioned court possesses concerning the whereabouts and intended movements of that person.

 (10) Where:

 (a) an order has been registered in accordance with this regulation; and

 (b) the registrar of a court receives from the requesting court a request in writing that the order be no longer enforced;

the registrar shall cancel the registration by noting the fact and date of the cancellation on the certified copy of the order filed in the court.

 (11) Upon the cancellation of the registration of an order:

 (a) the order ceases to be enforceable by the court in which it has been registered;

 (b) the order remains unenforceable by that court unless and until it is again registered in that court; and

 (c) every warrant or other process arising out of the registration of the order ceases to have force or effect.

 (12) Where:

 (a) an order to which this regulation applies made by a court in a State or Territory was, before the commencement of the Act, registered in a court in another State or Territory (being a court that has jurisdiction under the Act); and

 (b) the registration had not been cancelled before the commencement of this subregulation;

subregulations (6), (9), (10) and (11) apply in relation to that order as if it were an order registered in the lastmentioned court in accordance with this regulation.

19  Operation of State and Territory laws—prescribed laws (Act s 114AB)

  For section 114AB of the Act, the following are prescribed laws:

 (a) the Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007 (NSW);

 (b) the Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic);

 (c) the Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 2012 (Qld) and the Peace and Good Behaviour Act 1982 (Qld);

 (d) Parts 1 to 6 of the Restraining Orders Act 1997 (WA);

 (e) the Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) Act 2009 (SA);

 (f) the Family Violence Act 2004 (Tas) and Part XA of the Justices Act 1959 (Tas);

 (g) the Domestic Violence and Protection Orders Act 2008 (ACT);

 (h) the Domestic and Family Violence Act 2007 (NT);

 (i) the Domestic Violence Act 1995 (NI).

20  Priority of attachment orders

  For the purposes of the Maintenance Orders (Commonwealth Officers) Act 1966, an order made under the applicable Rules of Court for the attachment of moneys payable by the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or the Administration of a Territory or by an authority of the Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory (other than moneys as to which it is provided by any law of the Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory that they are not liable to attachment) shall be regarded as having been made under this regulation and shall have the same force and effect as an order made under the Third Schedule to the repealed Act.

21  Conversion of currency

 (1) If the Child Support Registrar has calculated the amount in Australian currency (the Australian amount) that is equivalent to an amount expressed in a currency of an overseas country in a document to which this regulation applies, the calculation done by the Child Support Registrar also applies for these Regulations.

 (2) If the Child Support Registrar has not done the calculation mentioned in subregulation (1), the calculation must be done in the way set out in this regulation.

 (3) The Australian amount is calculated by using the telegraphic transfer rate of exchange prevailing on the day on which the order, agreement or liability relevant to the document becomes enforceable in Australia.

 (4) If the Secretary calculates the Australian amount for a document to which this regulation applies, the Secretary must endorse on the document the rate of exchange used for the calculation.

 (5) This regulation applies to the following documents:

 (a) an overseas maintenance order (including a provisional order);

 (b) an overseas maintenance agreement;

 (c) a document about an overseas maintenance entry liability for Division 2 in Part III;

 (d) a certificate or notice, originating in an overseas jurisdiction, about an overseas maintenance order or agreement.

Part IIAAAProtected names and symbols

 

21AAA  Protected names (Act s 9A)

  For the definition of protected name in subsection 9A(4) of the Act, each of the names specified in Schedule 10 is prescribed.

21AAB  Protected symbols (Act s 9A)

 (1) Each symbol whose design is set out in Schedule 11 is a protected symbol for the purposes of the definition of that term in subsection 9A(4) of the Act.

 (2) A symbol mentioned in subregulation (1) does not cease to be a protected symbol by reason only of the symbol being expressed in a colour, combination of colours, font or size different from that set out in Schedule 11.

Part IIABService under the Hague Service Convention

Division 1Preliminary

Note 1: This Part forms part of a scheme to implement Australia’s obligations under the Hague Service Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters. Under the Convention, the AttorneyGeneral’s Department of the Commonwealth is designated as the Central Authority (under Article 2 of the Convention) and certain courts and government departments are, for certain purposes, designated as ‘other ‘ or ‘additional ‘ authorities (under Article 18 of the Convention).

Note 2: This Part provides (in Division 2) for service in overseas Convention countries of local judicial documents (documents that relate to proceedings in the court) and (in Division 3) for default judgment in proceedings in the court after service overseas of such a document.

Note 3: The AttorneyGeneral’s Department of the Commonwealth maintains a copy of the Convention, a list of all Convention countries, details of declarations and objections made under the Convention by each of those countries and the names and addresses of the Central and other authorities of each of those countries. A copy of the Convention can be found at http://www.hcch.net.

21AC  Definitions for Part IIAB

  In this Part:

additional authority, for a Convention country, means an authority that is:

 (a) for the time being designated by the country, under Article 18 of the Hague Service Convention, to be an authority (other than the Central Authority) for the country; and

 (b) competent to receive requests for service abroad emanating from Australia.

applicant, for a request for service abroad, means the person on whose behalf service is requested.

Note: The term applicant may have a different meaning in other provisions of these Regulations.

Central Authority, for a Convention country, means an authority that is for the time being designated by that country, under Article 2 of the Hague Service Convention, to be the Central Authority for that country.

certificate of service means a certificate of service that has been completed for the purposes of Article 6 of the Hague Service Convention.

certifying authority, for a Convention country, means the Central Authority for the country or some other authority that is for the time being designated by the country, under Article 6 of the Hague Service Convention, to complete certificates of service in the form annexed to the Hague Service Convention.

civil proceedings means any judicial proceedings in relation to civil or commercial matters.

Convention country means a country, other than Australia, that is a party to the Hague Service Convention.

defendant, for a request for service abroad of an initiating process, means the person on whom the initiating process is requested to be served.

foreign judicial document means a judicial document that originates in a Convention country and relates to civil proceedings in a court of that country.

forwarding authority means the Registrar.

initiating process means any document by which proceedings (including proceedings on any crossclaim or third party notice) are commenced.

local judicial document means a judicial document that relates to civil proceedings in the court.

request for service abroad means a request for service in a Convention country of a local judicial document mentioned in subregulation 21AF(1).

21AD  Provisions of this Part to prevail

  The provisions of this Part prevail to the extent of any inconsistency between those provisions and any other provisions of these Regulations.

Division 2Service abroad of local judicial documents

21AE  Application of Division

 (1) Subject to subregulation (2), this Division applies to service in a Convention country of a local judicial document.

 (2) This Division does not apply if service of the document is effected, without application of any compulsion, by an Australian diplomatic or consular agent mentioned in Article 8 of the Hague Service Convention.

21AF  Application for request for service abroad

 (1) A person may apply to the Registrar, in the Registrar’s capacity as a forwarding authority, for a request for service in a Convention country of a local judicial document.

 (2) The application must be accompanied by 3 copies of each of the following documents:

 (a) a draft request for service abroad, which must be in accordance with Part 1 of Form 1A in Schedule 1;

 (b) the document to be served;

 (c) a summary of the document to be served, which must be in accordance with Form 1B in Schedule 1;

 (d) if, under Article 5 of the Hague Service Convention, the Central Authority or any additional authority of the country to which the request is addressed requires the document to be served to be written in, or translated into, an official language of that country, a translation into that language or 1 of the official languages of both the document to be served and the summary of the document to be served.

 (3) The application must contain a written undertaking to the court, signed by the legal practitioner on the record for the applicant in the proceedings to which the local judicial document relates or, if there is no legal practitioner on the record for the applicant in the proceedings, by the applicant:

 (a) to be personally liable for all costs that are incurred:

 (i) by the employment of a person to serve the documents to be served, being a person who is qualified to do so under the law of the Convention country in which the documents are to be served; or

 (ii) by the use of any particular method of service that has been requested by the applicant for the service of the documents to be served; and

 (b) to pay the amount of those costs to the Registrar within 28 days after receipt from the Registrar of a notice specifying the amount of those costs under subregulation 21AH(3); and

 (c) to give such security for those costs as the Registrar may require.

 (4) The draft request for service abroad:

 (a) must be completed (except for signature) by the applicant; and

 (b) must state whether, if the time fixed for entering an appearance in the proceedings to which the local judicial document relates expires before service is effected, the applicant wants service to be attempted after the expiry of that time; and

 (c) must be addressed to the Central Authority, or to an additional authority, for the Convention country in which the person is to be served; and

 (d) may state that the applicant requires a certificate of service that is completed by an additional authority to be countersigned by the Central Authority.

 (5) Any translation required under paragraph (2)(d) must bear a certificate (in both English and the language used in the translation) signed by the translator stating:

 (a) that the translation is an accurate translation of the document to be served; and

 (b) the translator’s full name and address and his or her qualifications for making the translation.

21AG  How application to be dealt with

 (1) If satisfied that the application and its accompanying documents comply with regulation 21AF, the Registrar:

 (a) must sign the request for service abroad; and

 (b) must forward 2 copies of the relevant documents:

 (i) if the applicant has asked for the request to be forwarded to a nominated additional authority for the Convention country in which service of the document is to be effected—to the nominated additional authority; or

 (ii) in any other case—to the Central Authority for the Convention country in which service of the document is to be effected.

 (2) The relevant documents mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) are the following:

 (a) the request for service abroad (duly signed);

 (b) the document to be served;

 (c) the summary of the document to be served;

 (d) if required under paragraph 21AF(2)(d), a translation into the relevant language of each of the documents mentioned in paragraphs (b) and (c).

 (3) If not satisfied that the application or any of its accompanying documents complies with regulation 21AF, the Registrar must inform the applicant of the respects in which the application or document fails to comply.

21AH  Procedure on receipt of certificate of service

 (1) Subject to subregulation (5), on receipt of a certificate of service in due form in relation to a local judicial document to which a request for service abroad relates, the Registrar:

 (a) must arrange for the original certificate to be filed in the proceedings to which the document relates; and

 (b) must send a copy of the certificate to:

 (i) the legal practitioner on the record for the applicant in the proceedings; or

 (ii) if there is no legal practitioner on the record for the applicant in the proceedings—the applicant.

 (2) For the purposes of subregulation (1), a certificate of service is in due form if:

 (a) it is in accordance with Part 2 of Form 1A in Schedule 1; and

 (b) it has been completed by a certifying authority for the Convention country in which service was requested; and

 (c) if the applicant requires a certificate of service that is completed by an additional authority to be countersigned by the Central Authority—it has been countersigned.

 (3) On receipt of a statement of costs in due form in relation to the service of a local judicial document mentioned in subregulation (1), the Registrar must send to the legal practitioner or applicant who gave the undertaking mentioned in subregulation 21AF(3) a notice specifying the amount of those costs.

 (4) For the purposes of subregulation (3), a statement of costs is in due form if:

 (a) it relates only to costs of a kind mentioned in paragraph 21AF(3)(a); and

 (b) it has been completed by a certifying authority for the Convention country in which service was requested.

 (5) Subregulation (1) does not apply unless:

 (a) adequate security to cover the costs mentioned in subregulation (3) has been given under paragraph 21AF(3)(c); or

 (b) to the extent to which the security so given is inadequate to cover those costs, an amount equal to the amount by which those costs exceed the security so given has been paid to the Registrar.

21AI  Payment of costs

 (1) On receipt of a notice under subregulation 21AH(3) in relation to the costs of service, the legal practitioner or applicant, as the case may be, must pay to the Registrar the amount specified in the notice as the amount of the costs.

 (2) If the legal practitioner or applicant fails to pay that amount within 28 days after receiving the notice:

 (a) except by leave of the court, the applicant may not take any further step in the proceedings to which the local judicial document relates until the costs are paid to the Registrar; and

 (b) the Registrar may take such steps as are appropriate to enforce the undertaking for payment of the costs.

21AJ  Evidence of service

  A certificate of service in relation to a local judicial document (being a certificate in due form, within the meaning of subregulation 21AH(2)) that certifies that service of the document was effected on a specified date is, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, sufficient proof that:

 (a) service of the document was effected by the method specified in the certificate on that date; and

 (b) if that method of service was requested by the applicant, that method is compatible with the law in force in the Convention country in which service was effected.

Division 3Default judgment following service abroad of initiating process

21AK  Application of Division

  This Division applies to civil proceedings for which an initiating process has been forwarded following a request for service abroad to the Central Authority (or to an additional authority) for a Convention country.

21AL  Restriction on power to enter default judgment if certificate of service filed

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) a certificate of service of initiating process has been filed in the proceedings (being a certificate in due form, within the meaning of subregulation 21AH(2)) that states that service has been duly effected; and

 (b) the defendant has not appeared or filed a notice of address for service.

 (2) In circumstances to which this regulation applies, default judgment may not be given against the defendant unless the court is satisfied that:

 (a) the initiating process was served on the defendant:

 (i) by a method of service prescribed by the internal law of the Convention country for the service of documents in domestic proceedings on persons who are within its territory; or

 (ii) if the applicant requested a particular method of service (being a method under which the document was actually delivered to the defendant or to his or her residence) and that method is compatible with the law in force in the country, by that method; or

 (iii) if the applicant did not request a particular method of service, in circumstances where the defendant accepted the document voluntarily; and

 (b) the initiating process was served in sufficient time to enable the defendant to enter an appearance in the proceedings.

 (3) In paragraph (2)(b), sufficient time means:

 (a) 42 days from the date specified in the certificate of service in relation to the initiating process as the date on which service of the process was effected; or

 (b) such lesser time as the court considers, in the circumstances, to be a sufficient time to enable the defendant to enter an appearance in the proceedings.

21AM  Restriction on power to enter default judgment if certificate of service not filed

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) a certificate of service of initiating process has not been filed in the proceedings; or

 (b) a certificate of service of initiating process has been filed in the proceedings (being a certificate in due form, within the meaning of subregulation 21AH(2)) that states that service has not been effected;

and the defendant has not appeared or filed a notice of address for service.

 (2) If this regulation applies, default judgment may not be given against the defendant unless the court is satisfied that:

 (a) the initiating process was forwarded to the Central Authority, or to an additional authority, for the Convention country in which service of the initiating process was requested; and

 (b) a period that is adequate in the circumstances (being a period of not less than 6 months) has elapsed since the date on which initiating process was so forwarded; and

 (c) every reasonable effort has been made:

 (i) to obtain a certificate of service from the relevant certifying authority; or

 (ii) to effect service of the initiating process;

  as the case requires.

21AN  Setting aside judgment in default of appearance

 (1) This regulation applies if default judgment has been entered against the defendant in proceedings to which this Division applies.

 (2) If this regulation applies, the court may set aside the judgment on the application of the defendant if it is satisfied that the defendant:

 (a) without any fault on the defendant’s part, did not have knowledge of the initiating process in sufficient time to defend the proceedings; and

 (b) has a prima facie defence to the proceedings on the merits.

 (3) An application to have a judgment set aside under this regulation may be filed:

 (a) at any time within 12 months after the date on which the judgment was given; or

 (b) after the expiry of that 12month period, within such time after the defendant acquires knowledge of the judgment as the court considers reasonable in the circumstances.

 (4) Nothing in this regulation affects any other power of the court to set aside or vary a judgment.

Part IIACService in countries that are parties to conventions other than the Hague Service Convention

 

21AO  Application of Part

  This Part applies to the service of a document in a convention country subject to the provisions of the convention.

21AP  Definitions for Part IIAC

  In this Part:

convention means a convention (other than the Hague Service Convention), that is in force for Australia, about legal proceedings in civil and commercial matters.

convention country means a country that is a party to a convention (other than the Hague Service Convention), that is in force for Australia, about legal proceedings in civil and commercial matters.

21AQ  Service in accordance with convention

  If the convention provides that a document may be served in a convention country only in accordance with the convention, the document must be served in accordance with this Part.

21AR  Request for service

 (1) A party to proceedings may request service of a document relating to the proceedings on a person in a convention country by:

 (a) filing a request for service of the document in accordance with Forms 1A and 1B in Schedule 1; and

 (b) giving to the Registrar of the court in which the proceedings are pending the following documents:

 (i) the document to be served;

 (ii) a translation of the document into the language of the convention country;

 (iii) copies of the document to be served and the translation;

 (iv) any further copies of the document and translation required by the convention.

 (2) The Registrar must seal the documents mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) with the seal of the court and give them to the Secretary for transmission to the convention country for service.

 (3) For subparagraph(1)(b)(ii), the translation must include a certificate, in the language of the convention country, by the person who made the translation, certifying that it is a translation of the document of which it purports to be a translation.

21AS  Certificate of service

 (1) A certificate certifying that a document has been served on a person on a date specified in the certificate is evidence of the matters stated in the certificate if:

 (a) it is made by a judicial authority in a convention country; and

 (b) it is received by the Registrar in accordance with the convention.

 (2) If the document must be served by delivering it personally to the person, the certificate must state:

 (a) the means by which the person who served the document identified the person served; or

 (b) how the document came to the notice of the person on whom it was to be served.

Part IIAParentage testing procedures and reports

Division 1General

21A  Application of Part

  This Part applies to a parentage testing procedure that is required to be carried out on a person under a parentage testing order made by the court under subsection 69W(1) of the Act.

21B  Interpretation

  In this Part, unless the contrary intention appears:

bodily sample is not limited to a sample of blood.

donor means the person required to provide a bodily sample for the purposes of a parentage testing procedure.

HLA means human leucocyte antigen.

NATA means the National Association of Testing Authorities, Australia.

nominated reporter means the person nominated by a laboratory to prepare a report relating to the information obtained as a result of carrying out a parentage testing procedure at that laboratory.

report means a report in accordance with regulation 21M.

sample means a sample taken from a donor for the purposes of a parentage testing procedure.

sampler means a person who takes a bodily sample from a donor for the purposes of a parentage testing procedure.

testing means the implementation, or any part of the implementation, of a parentage testing procedure.

21C  Parentage testing procedures

  For the purposes of the definition of parentage testing procedure in subsection 4(1) of the Act, the following medical procedures are prescribed:

 (a) red cell antigen blood grouping;

 (b) red cell enzyme blood grouping;

 (c) HLA tissue typing;

 (d) testing for serum markers;

 (e) DNA typing.

21D  Compliance with Regulations

  A parentage testing procedure is taken to be carried out in accordance with these Regulations if:

 (a) it is carried out:

 (i) in compliance with Division 2; and

 (ii) at a laboratory that is accredited by NATA for
the purpose of carrying out parentage testing procedures; and

 (iii) in accordance with standards of practice that entitle the laboratory to be so accredited; and

 (b) it is supplemented by a report under Division 3.

Division 2Collection, storage and testing of samples

21E  Samplers

  A person must not take a bodily sample from a donor for the purposes of a parentage testing procedure unless:

 (a) the person is a registered medical practitioner; or

 (b) the person is employed by a hospital, a pathology practice, a parentage testing practice or a registered medical practitioner for the purpose of taking a bodily sample from a donor.

21F  Provision of information by donor—Form 2

 (1) A sampler must not take a bodily sample from a donor unless the donor or, if appropriate, a person described in subregulation (3), has:

 (a) immediately before the sampler takes the bodily sample, completed an affidavit in accordance with Form 2 in Schedule 1, to which is attached a recent photograph of the donor named in the affidavit; and

 (b) either:

 (i) provided to the sampler a recent photograph of the donor, measuring approximately 45 millimetres by 35 millimetres, that shows a full face view of the donor’s head and the donor’s shoulders against a plain background; or

 (ii) made a written arrangement with the sampler for a photograph of that kind to be taken.

 (2) The photograph required by paragraph (1)(b) is in addition to the photograph that is required to be attached to Form 2.

 (3) If the donor is a child under the age of 18 years, or a person who is suffering from a mental disability, the affidavit referred to in paragraph (1)(a) may be completed only by:

 (a) in the case of a child under the age of 18 years—a person who is responsible for the longterm care, welfare and development of the child; or

 (b) in the case of a person who is suffering from a mental disability:

 (i) a trustee or manager in relation to the person under a law of the State or Territory whose laws apply to the person; or

 (ii) a person who is responsible for the care, welfare and development of the person suffering from a mental disability.

21G  Collection of blood samples

 (1) A sampler may take a sample of blood from a donor only with a needle or syringe that:

 (a) has not been used for any purpose; and

 (b) has been sterilised; and

 (c) is disposable.

 (2) Before taking a sample of blood from a donor, the sampler must ensure that the area of the donor’s skin into which the needle is to be inserted to withdraw the blood has been cleaned with an antiseptic.

21H  Collection of bodily samples for DNA typing

 (1) This regulation applies to the taking of a bodily sample (except a sample of blood) from a donor for the purposes of a parentage testing procedure that is DNA typing.

 (2) A sampler must not take a bodily sample from a donor with a swab unless the swab:

 (a) has not been used for any purpose; and

 (b) has been sterilised.

 (3) If the bodily sample to be taken from a donor is a skin scraping or a hair root, the implement used by the sampler to take the sample must have been sterilised before use.

21I  Container to be sealed and labelled

 (1) If a bodily sample is taken from a donor, the sampler must ensure that:

 (a) the sample is placed in a container:

 (i) immediately after it is taken; and

 (ii) in the presence of the donor; and

 (b) the container has not previously been used for any purpose; and

 (c) the container is sealed in a way that, if it were opened after being sealed, that fact would be evident on inspection of the container; and

 (d) the container is labelled in a way that:

 (i) if the label, or any part of the label, were removed; or

 (ii) if writing on the label were impaired by alteration or erasure;

  the removal of the label, or the impairment, would be evident on inspection of the container; and

 (e) the particulars on the label are inscribed in ink and include:

 (i) the full name of the donor; and

 (ii) the date of birth and the sex of the donor; and

 (iii) the date and time at which the sample was taken; and

 (f) when paragraph (e) is complied with—the sampler and the donor sign the label, in ink.

 (2) If the donor is a child under the age of 18 years:

 (a) the procedure specified in paragraph (1)(a) must be completed in the presence of the person who is responsible for the longterm care, welfare and development of the child; and

 (b) the procedure specified in paragraph (1)(f) is taken to be satisfied only if the person who is responsible for the longterm care, welfare and development of the child signs the label.

 (3) If the donor is a person who is suffering from a mental disability:

 (a) the procedure specified in paragraph (1)(a) must be completed in the presence of:

 (i) a trustee or manager in relation to the person under a law of the State or Territory whose laws apply to the person; or

 (ii) a person who is responsible for the care, welfare and development of the person suffering from a mental disability; and

 (b) the procedure specified in paragraph (1)(f) is taken to be complied with only if the label is signed:

 (i) by a trustee or manager in relation to the person under a law of the State or Territory whose laws apply to the person; or

 (ii) by a person who is responsible for the care, welfare and development of the person suffering from a mental disability.

21J  Statement by sampler—Form 4

  After taking a bodily sample from a donor, the sampler must:

 (a) complete a statement in accordance with Form 4 in Schedule 1; and

 (b) affix the photograph of the donor referred to in paragraph 21F(1)(b) to the statement; and

 (c) sign his or her name partly on the photograph and partly on the statement in a way that, if the photograph were later removed from the statement, the removal would be evident from inspection of the statement.

21K  Packing and storage requirements

 (1) A bodily sample must be packed, stored and transported to a laboratory for testing in a manner that:

 (a) will preserve the integrity of the sample; and

 (b) ensures that the testing of the sample will produce the same results as would have been obtained if the sample had been tested immediately after collection.

 (2) The sampler must ensure that the following documents are sent to the laboratory with the sample:

 (a) the affidavit completed under paragraph 21F(1)(a);

 (b) the statement completed under regulation 21J.

21L  Testing of bodily samples

 (1) A laboratory to which a bodily sample has been sent for testing must ensure that the testing is completed:

 (a) if the proposed procedure is red cell antigen blood grouping, red cell enzyme blood grouping or testing for serum markers—within 6 days after the sample is taken; or

 (b) if the proposed procedure is HLA tissue typing—within 3 days after the sample is taken; or

 (c) if the proposed procedure is DNA typing—within a reasonable time after the sample is taken.

 (2) If the proposed procedure is red cell enzyme blood grouping or testing for serum markers, paragraph (1)(a) is complied with if a dried sample of the bodily sample to be tested is prepared within 6 days after the sample is taken from the donor.

Division 3Reports

21M  Reports—Form 5

 (1) For the purposes of paragraph 69ZB(b) of the Act, a report must be prepared, in accordance with this regulation, relating to the information obtained as a result of carrying out a parentage testing procedure.

 (2) The report must be in accordance with Form 5 in Schedule 1.

 (3) Part I of the report must be completed by the nominated reporter identified in the report.

 (4) Part II of the report must be completed by:

 (a) the person who carried out the parentage testing procedure; or

 (b) the person under whose supervision the parentage testing procedure was carried out.

 (5) A report completed otherwise than in accordance with this regulation is taken to be of no effect.

Division 4Miscellaneous

21N  Notification of accredited laboratories and nominated reporters

 (1) NATA must prepare, for each financial year:

 (a) a list of any laboratories that are accredited by NATA to carry out parentage testing procedures; and

 (b) for each accredited laboratory—a nominated reporter.

 (2) Immediately before the beginning of each financial year, NATA must give a copy of the list to:

 (a) the AttorneyGeneral; and

 (b) the Chief Executive Officer of the Family Court of Australia; and

 (c) the Registrar of the Family Court of Western Australia; and

 (d) the Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Circuit Court.

 (3) The AttorneyGeneral must publish the list in a manner determined by the AttorneyGeneral.

 (4) If NATA amends the list during the year to which it applies, it must give written notice of the amendment to each person referred to in subregulation (2).

 (5) If NATA gives notice under subregulation (4), the AttorneyGeneral must publish a revised list in a manner determined by the AttorneyGeneral.

Part IIIOverseas orders

Division 1Overseas child orders

23  Registration of overseas child orders

 (1) Subregulation (1A) applies if:

 (a) the Secretary receives:

 (i) from a prescribed overseas jurisdiction a certified copy of an overseas child order that was made in that jurisdiction; and

 (ii) a certificate signed by an officer of a court or by some other authority in that jurisdiction relating to the order and containing a statement that the order is, at the date of the certificate, enforceable in that jurisdiction; and

 (b) there are reasonable grounds for believing that any of the following persons is ordinarily resident in, present in, or proceeding to, Australia:

 (i) the child who is the subject of the order;

 (ii) a parent of that child;

 (iii) a person having the right to have the child live with him or her, or the right of custody of or access to the child, or the right to spend time or communicate with the child.

 (1A) The Secretary must send the documents mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) to:

 (a) a registrar of the Family Court; or

 (b) the registrar of a State Family Court; or

 (c) the Registrar of a Supreme Court of a State or Territory.

 (2) When the registrar of a court receives from the Secretary the documents referred to in subregulation (1), the registrar shall register the order by filing in the court a certified copy of the order and the certificate relating to the order and noting the fact and the date of the registration on the certified copy.

 (3) Where an overseas child order has been registered in accordance with subregulation (2), the order may, on the application of the registrar of a court or a person interested in the order (including the child who is the subject of the order), be registered concurrently in any other court having jurisdiction under the Act.

 (4) A certificate by a court that the order has been registered in that court in accordance with subregulation (2) shall be sufficient evidence to enable a concurrent registration to be made.

 (5) An overseas child order registered in accordance with this regulation is enforceable throughout Australia until the registration (including a concurrent registration) has been cancelled.

 (6) Where it appears to a court that the documents referred to in subregulation (1) have been received by the court other than from the Secretary, the court may, if all other requirements of subregulation (1) are satisfied, register the order.

 (7) Where a court exercising jurisdiction under section 70J of the Act substantially varies the order, the registrar of the court shall forthwith forward to the court or to the appropriate authority in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction:

 (a) 3 certified copies of the order of the court and the reasons for the order;

 (b) a copy of the depositions; and

 (c) such further material as the court directs.

 (8) This regulation does not prevent a court that has jurisdiction under the Act from receiving evidence of an order made in an overseas jurisdiction (whether or not the jurisdiction is a prescribed overseas jurisdiction), being an order that:

 (a) deals with the person with whom a child is supposed to live, spend time or communicate; or

 (b) provides for a person to have custody of, or access to, a child.

24  Transmission of orders to overseas jurisdiction

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) a State child order, or a parenting order other than a child maintenance order, is made by a court in Australia in relation to a child who is under 18; and

 (b) the order may be enforced in a prescribed overseas jurisdiction under provisions corresponding to Subdivision C of Division 13 of Part VII of the Act.

 (2) If the registrar of the court in which the order was made, registered or last varied, receives a written request from a person mentioned in subregulation (3) to send the order to the prescribed overseas jurisdiction for registration and enforcement in that jurisdiction, the registrar must send the documents mentioned in subregulation (4) to the appropriate court or authority in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction.

 (3) For subregulation (2), a request may be made by a person:

 (a) with whom the child is supposed to live, spend time or communicate under the order; or

 (b) who has a right to custody of, or access to, the child under the order.

 (4) For subregulation (2), the documents are as follows:

 (a) 3 certified copies of the order;

 (b) a certificate signed by the registrar stating that the order is, at the date of the certificate, enforceable in Australia;

 (c) any information and material the registrar holds that may assist in identifying and locating the child or any other person who is subject to the order;

 (d) a request in writing that the order be made enforceable in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction.

 (5) If:

 (a) the order is registered in a court in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction; and

 (b) a court in that jurisdiction makes an order under a law corresponding to section 70J of the Act (the overseas order);

a court having jurisdiction under the Act may treat the overseas order as an overseas child order for the purposes of exercising jurisdiction under that section.

 (6) If a court exercises jurisdiction under section 70J of the Act in relation to a child who is the subject of the overseas order, the registrar of the court must send to the court in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction:

 (a) 3 certified copies of any order made by the court and the reasons for the order; and

 (b) such further material as the court directs.

 (7) Nothing in this regulation prevents a person having a right of custody of or access to a child, or a right to spend time or communicate with the child, under the order from:

 (a) obtaining certified copies of the order; or

 (b) applying to a court in an overseas jurisdiction (whether or not it is a prescribed overseas jurisdiction) for registration and enforcement of the order in that jurisdiction.

 (8) In this regulation:

custody, in relation to a child, includes:

 (a) guardianship of the child; and

 (b) responsibility for the longterm or daytoday care, welfare and development of the child; and

 (c) responsibility as the person or persons with whom the child is to live.

overseas child order has the meaning given by section 70F of the Act.

Division 2Maintenance

24A  Definitions for Division 2

  In this Division:

maintenance order means:

 (a) a maintenance order within the meaning of section 110 of the Act; and

 (b) an order made under section 67D or 67E of the Act.

overseas maintenance entry liability means an overseas maintenance entry liability included in the Child Support Register under section 25A of the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988.

reciprocating jurisdiction has the same meaning as in section 110 of the Act.

registered maintenance liability means a registrable maintenance liability under section 18A of the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988.

25  Reciprocating jurisdictions

  Each of the jurisdictions specified in Schedule 2 is declared to be a reciprocating jurisdiction for the purposes of section 110 of the Act.

28  Dealing with provisional overseas maintenance orders

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) a maintenance order has been made in a reciprocating jurisdiction; and

 (b) the order has no effect under the law of that jurisdiction unless and until it is confirmed by a court outside that jurisdiction; and

 (c) the Secretary has received:

 (i) a certified copy of the order; and

 (ii) a copy of the depositions of the witnesses in the proceedings in which the order was made; and

 (iii) a statement of the grounds on which the order could have been opposed if the person against whom the order was sought (the respondent) had appeared at the hearing; and

 (d) there are reasonable grounds for believing that:

 (i) the respondent is ordinarily resident in, is present in, or is proceeding to, Australia; and

 (ii) the order will have effect under the law of the overseas jurisdiction if it is confirmed by a court having jurisdiction under the Act.

 (2) The Secretary must make an application calling upon the respondent to show cause why that order should not be confirmed.

Note: For application, see subregulation 3 (1).

 (3) The Secretary must serve a copy of the application on the respondent.

Note: Service is dealt with by the applicable Rules of Court.

28A  Hearings about applications about provisional overseas maintenance orders

 (1) This regulation explains what may happen on the hearing of an application under subregulation 28(2).

 (2) It is open to the respondent to raise any ground of opposition that the respondent could have raised in the original proceedings or any ground of opposition that the respondent could have raised if the proceedings leading to the making of the provisional overseas order had been heard in Australia.

 (3) The statement mentioned in subparagraph 28(1)(c)(iii) is conclusive evidence of the grounds of opposition that could have been raised in the original proceedings.

 (4) A court must not determine the application if an application could properly be made at that time, under the Child
Support (Assessment) Act 1989, read with the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988, for administrative assessment of child support (within the meaning of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989) by a person seeking payment of child support for the child from the respondent.

 (5) Subregulation (4) has effect whether or not an application for administrative assessment of child support for the child has in fact been made.

 (6) The court may:

 (a) confirm the provisional order (either with or without modification); or

 (b) discharge the provisional order; or

 (c) adjourn the proceedings, and remit the provisional order to the court that made it with a request that that court take further evidence and further consider its provisional order.

28B  Making of orders about provisional overseas maintenance orders

 (1) This regulation is about orders made under subregulation 28A(6).

 (2) An order confirming a provisional order may specify:

 (a) the time or times by which the money payable under the order is to be paid; and

 (b) the person, authority or court to whom or to which that money is to be paid; and

 (c) where necessary, the means by which that money must be paid or disbursed.

 (3) A provisional order that is confirmed (whether with or without modification) is enforceable in Australia, as so confirmed, and has effect in Australia as if it were an order made under the Act.

 (4) If the court adjourns the proceedings, the court may make a temporary order for periodic payments by the respondent.

 (5) The Secretary must notify an officer of the court or other authority in the overseas jurisdiction of a decision of the court confirming or discharging an order.

28C  Dealing with United States petitions

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) a petition is filed in a court in a State or Territory of the United States of America seeking a support order against a person claimed in the petition to have a duty of support; and

 (b) that court gives a certificate to the effect that the petition sets out facts from which it may be determined that the person owes a duty of support; and

 (c) the Secretary has received certified copies of the petition and the certificate, together with a copy of the provisions of the law of the State or Territory to which the petition and certificate relate; and

 (d) there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person is ordinarily resident in, present in, or proceeding to, Australia.

 (2) The Secretary must make an application calling on the person claimed in the petition to owe a duty of support to show cause why an order in the same terms as the order sought in the petition should not be made.

Note: For application, see subregulation 3(1).

 (3) The Secretary must serve a copy of the application on the person.

Note: Service is dealt with by the applicable Rules of Court.

 (4) In this regulation, a reference to a duty of support is a reference to a duty of support within the meaning of the law under which the relevant petition is filed in a State or Territory of the United States of America.

28D  Hearing of applications based on United States petitions

 (1) This regulation explains what may happen on the hearing of an application under subregulation 28C(2).

 (2) It is open to the respondent to raise any ground of opposition that the respondent:

 (a) could have raised to the petition in the relevant court in the United States of America; or

 (b) could raise in proceedings in relation to the provision of maintenance in a court having jurisdiction under the Act in Australia.

 (3) A court must not determine the application if an application could properly be made, at that time, under the Child
Support (Assessment) Act 1989, read with the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988, for administrative assessment of child support (within the meaning of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989) by a person seeking payment of child support for the child from the respondent.

 (4) Subregulation (3) has effect whether or not an application for administrative assessment of child support for the child has in fact been made.

 (5) The court may:

 (a) make an order for the provision of maintenance in the terms of the order sought in the petition (with or without modification); or

 (b) refuse to make an order; or

 (c) adjourn the proceedings and remit the petition and certificate to the court in which the petition was originally filed with a request that that court take further evidence and further consider the certifying of the petition.

 (6) In this regulation:

certificate means a certificate mentioned in paragraph 28C(1)(b).

28E  Effect of orders about United States petitions

 (1) An order that is made under regulation 28D may specify:

 (a) the time or times by which the money payable under the order is to be paid; and

 (b) the person, authority or court to whom or to which that money is to be paid; and

 (c) where necessary, the means by which that money must be paid.

 (2) If the court adjourns the proceedings under paragraph 28D(5)(c), the court may make a temporary order for periodic payments by the respondent.

 (3) As soon as practicable after the court makes or refuses to make an order under this regulation, the Secretary must give notice of the decision to the court in which the petition was filed or other authority in the United States of America which caused the petition to be sent to the Secretary.

 (4) In this regulation:

petition means a petition mentioned in paragraph 28C(1)(a).

29  Power to make provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

 (1) If a court is satisfied that a respondent to an application for
a maintenance order is resident in, or on the way to, a reciprocating jurisdiction, the court may make an order in the absence of the respondent.

 (2) Subregulation (1) applies even if the respondent has not been served with the application and has not consented to the order.

 (3) The court can make any order that it could have made under subregulation (1) if the application had been served on the respondent and the respondent had failed to appear at the hearing of the application.

 (4) A court must not make an order under subregulation (1) if
an application could properly be made, at that time, under
the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989, read with the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988, for administrative assessment of child support (within the meaning of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989) by a person seeking payment of child support for the child from the respondent.

 (5) Subregulation (4) has effect whether or not an application for administrative assessment of child support for the child has in fact been made.

 (6) An order under subregulation (1) is:

 (a) provisional; and

 (b) of no effect:

 (i) unless it is expressed to be provisional; and

 (ii) unless and until confirmed (either with or without modification) by a competent court in a reciprocating jurisdiction or a jurisdiction with restricted reciprocity in which the respondent is resident at the time of confirmation.

29A  Dealing with provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

 (1) This regulation applies if a court makes an order under subregulation 29(1).

 (2) The registrar of the court must send to the Secretary:

 (a) a copy of the depositions of the witnesses; and

 (b) 3 certified copies of the order; and

 (c) a statement of the grounds on which the making of the order could have been opposed if the respondent had appeared at the hearing; and

 (d) the information and material (if any) which the registrar has for working out the identity and whereabouts of the respondent.

 (3) The Secretary must, on receipt of the documents and information mentioned in subregulation (2), send them to a court in the jurisdiction in which the respondent is resident or to which the respondent is proceeding, with a request in writing that proceedings be started for the confirmation and enforcement of the provisional order.

29B  Taking of further evidence

 (1) If a court in a reciprocating jurisdiction remits an order sent to it under subregulation 29A(3) to the court in which the order was made for the taking of further evidence, the court must take the evidence, and must cause the depositions of the witnesses to be sent to the court in the reciprocating jurisdiction.

 (2) Before taking the evidence, notice must be given to such persons and in such manner as the court thinks fit.

 (3) If, on the taking of further evidence, it appears that the order ought not to have been made, the court may revoke the order or may make a fresh provisional order under subregulation 29(1).

 (4) A court that takes evidence because of a request made under subregulation (1) may, for subregulation (3), have regard to the evidence given in that other court.

29C  Confirmation of provisional order against person in reciprocating jurisdiction

 (1) This regulation applies if a court in a reciprocating jurisdiction in which the respondent is resident for the time being confirms (either with or without modification) an order made under regulation 29.

 (2) The order has effect in Australia as so confirmed.

 (3) In proceedings arising out of or relating to the order, it must be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, that the respondent was resident in the overseas jurisdiction at the time the order was confirmed.

30  Proceedings for enforcement of overseas maintenance entry liabilities

 (1) This regulation is about enforcement proceedings for an overseas maintenance entry liability.

 (2) Proceedings may be taken as if the liability were an order made under Part VII or VIII of the Act.

 (3) The Act, these Regulations and the applicable Rules of Court, so far as they are applicable, and with such modifications as are necessary, apply in relation to the proceedings.

 (4) Proceedings may be taken:

 (a) by the person who would be entitled to take proceedings if the liability were an order under Part VII or VIII of the Act, as mentioned in subregulation (2); or

 (b) by the Secretary, on behalf of the person.

31  Cancellation of registration in reciprocating jurisdiction

 (1) Where:

 (a) a maintenance order made in Australia is, under the law of a reciprocating jurisdiction or a jurisdiction with restricted reciprocity, enforceable in that jurisdiction; and

 (b) the court in which the order was made is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the person against whom the order was made is not resident in, or proceeding to, that reciprocating jurisdiction, or it appears to the court that there is some good reason why the order should no longer be enforceable in that jurisdiction;

the court may direct that steps be taken to cancel the registration of the order in that jurisdiction.

 (2) Where a court directs under subregulation (1) that steps be taken to cancel the registration of an order in a jurisdiction, the registrar of that court shall send to an appropriate authority in that jurisdiction a request in writing that the order be no longer enforceable in that jurisdiction.

 (3) Where a court directs under subregulation (1) that steps be taken to cancel the registration of an order in a jurisdiction, the order shall cease to be enforceable in that jurisdiction for the purposes of these Regulations.

32  Cancellation of registration of overseas maintenance orders

 (1) Where:

 (a) an overseas maintenance order is registered or confirmed under these Regulations; and

 (b) the court in which the order is registered or confirmed receives a request in writing made by the court that made the order or some other competent authority in the overseas jurisdiction that the order be made no longer enforceable in Australia;

the firstmentioned court shall direct its registrar to cancel the registration of the order by noting the fact and date of the cancellation on the certified copy of the order filed in the court.

 (2) Upon the cancellation of the registration of an overseas maintenance order, the order ceases to be enforceable in Australia.

 (3) Where the registrar of a court cancels the registration of an overseas maintenance order in pursuance of a request in writing having been received from a court or authority referred to in paragraph (1)(b), the registrar shall cause notice in writing of the fact that the registration has been cancelled, and of the date of the cancellation, to be given to the person who was required to make payments under the order.

 (4) In this regulation:

registered means registered before 1 July 2000.

34  Cancellation of registration of overseas maintenance agreements

 (1) Where:

 (a) an overseas maintenance agreement is registered under these Regulations; and

 (b) the court in which the agreement is registered receives a request in writing from:

 (i) the parties to the agreement; or

 (ii) the court or other authority in the prescribed overseas jurisdiction an officer of which signed the certificate for the agreement mentioned in paragraph 33(2)(b) as in force before 1 July 2000;

  that the agreement be no longer enforceable in Australia;

the firstmentioned court shall direct its registrar to cancel the registration of the agreement by noting the fact and date of cancellation on the certified copy of the agreement filed in the court.

 (2) Upon the cancellation of the registration of an overseas maintenance agreement under subregulation (1), the agreement ceases to be enforceable in Australia.

 (3) Where the registrar of a court cancels the registration of an overseas maintenance agreement in pursuance of a request in writing having been received from a court or authority referred to in subparagraph(1)(b)(ii), the registrar shall cause notice in writing of the fact that the registration has been cancelled, and of the date of the cancellation, to be given to the person who was required to make payments under the agreement.

 (4) In this regulation:

registered means registered before 1 July 2000.

36  Party in Australia may apply to vary etc overseas maintenance order, agreeement or liability

 (1) This regulation applies to:

 (a) an overseas maintenance order or agreement registered in a court before 1 July 2000; and

 (b) an overseas maintenance entry liability or a registered maintenance liability.

 (2) Application may be made to a court having jurisdiction under the Act for an order discharging, suspending, reviving or varying an order, agreement or liability to which this regulation applies.

 (3) An application may be made by:

 (a) the person for whose benefit the order or agreement was made, or for whose benefit the liability was created; or

 (b) the person against whom the order was made or the person who is liable to make payments because of the agreement or the liability; or

 (c) the Secretary, on behalf of a person mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b).

 (4) The law to be applied to determination of an application is the law in force in Australia under the Act.

37  Discharge etc of overseas maintenance order or liability made in absence of party

 (1) This regulation applies to an application that is made under subregulation 36(1) if:

 (a) the applicant is the person against whom an overseas maintenance order was made or the person who is liable to make payments because of a liability mentioned in paragraph 36(1)(b); and

 (b) the applicant did not have notice of the proceedings giving rise to the order or liability, did not appear in those proceedings and did not consent to the making of the order or to the creation of the liability; and

 (c) the application is made within 6 months after the applicant was given notice that the order or liability is enforceable in Australia.

 (2) On the hearing of the application, the applicant may raise any matter that the applicant could have raised under Part VII or VIII of the Act if the proceedings giving rise to the order or to the liability had been heard in Australia.

38  Variation etc orders—status

 (1) An order made under regulation 36 is provisional if the relevant reciprocating jurisdiction is one of the following jurisdictions:

  Brunei, Canadian Provinces and Territories mentioned in Schedule 2, Territory of Christmas Island, Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Cook Islands, Cyprus, Fiji, Gibraltar, Hong Kong, India, Republic of Ireland, Kenya, Malawi, Malaysia, Malta, Nauru, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leone, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom, including the Channel Islands mentioned in Schedule 2.

 (2) Such an order is final if the reciprocal jurisdiction is any other jurisdiction.

Note: For reciprocating jurisdiction, see regulation 24A.

38A  Making and effect of provisional variation etc orders

 (1) This regulation applies if an order mentioned in subregulation 38 (1) is provisional.

 (2) The order is of no effect:

 (a) unless it is expressed to be provisional; and

 (b) unless and until it is confirmed (either with or without modification) by a competent court of the reciprocating jurisdiction in which the overseas maintenance order affected by the provisional order was made (the foreign court).

 (3) The order may be made even though the respondent has not been served with the application and has not consented to the order proposed in the application.

Note: For application, see subregulation 3(1).

 (4) The registrar of the court making the order must send a certified copy of the order, together with a copy of the depositions of the witnesses, to the Secretary.

 (5) The Secretary must send a certified copy of the order, together with a copy of the depositions of the witnesses, to the foreign court.

 (6) If the foreign court confirms the order (with or without modification), the order has effect in Australia as so confirmed.

38B  Taking of further evidence

 (1) If the foreign court remits an order mentioned in subregulation 38(1) for the taking of further evidence, the court to which the order has been remitted (the receiving court), after giving notice under subregulation (3), must take the evidence.

 (2) The registrar of the receiving court must send a copy of the depositions of the witnesses whose evidence is taken under subregulation (1) to the foreign court.

 (3) The receiving court must give notice of the taking of further evidence to the applicant for the order and to any other person the court thinks fit.

 (4) The notice may be given in such manner as the court thinks fit.

 (5) If, upon taking the further evidence, it appears to the court that the order ought not to have been made, the court may revoke the order and may make a new order.

39  Confirmation of variations made provisionally in reciprocating jurisdiction

 (1) This regulation applies if the Secretary receives:

 (a) a certified copy of a provisional order made by a court in a reciprocating jurisdiction varying, discharging, suspending or reviving a maintenance order:

 (i) made in Australia and enforceable in that jurisdiction; or

 (ii) made in that jurisdiction and enforceable in Australia; and

 (b) a copy of the depositions of the witnesses who gave evidence at the hearing of the application upon which the provisional order was made.

 (2) The Secretary must apply to a court for an order confirming the provisional order.

 (3) The Secretary must serve a copy of the application on the respondent.

Note: Service is dealt with by the applicable Rules of Court.

 (4) The court may:

 (a) confirm the provisional order (with or without modification); or

 (b) discharge the provisional order; or

 (c) adjourn the proceedings and remit the provisional order to the court that made it with a request that the court take further evidence and further consider its provisional order.

 (5) A provisional order that is confirmed under this regulation (whether with or without modification) has effect in Australia as if it were an order made by a court having jurisdiction under the Act.

 (6) In this regulation, a reference to a provisional order includes a reference to a provisional variation of:

 (a) an Australian maintenance agreement; or

 (b) an overseas maintenance agreement.

Part IIIBParentage

 

39B  Extension of provisions of Act

 (1) Subdivisions D (except subsection 69U(3)) and E of Division 12 of Part VII of the Act apply, subject to this regulation, to proceedings for the purposes of an international agreement or arrangement with a reciprocating jurisdiction or a jurisdiction mentioned in Schedule 4.

 (2) For subregulation (1), each reciprocating jurisdiction and each jurisdiction mentioned in Schedule 4 is a prescribed overseas jurisdiction.

 (3) Matters mentioned in this regulation are taken to be matters arising under the Act for the purposes of the application of section 69H of the Act in relation to those matters.

 (4) Despite subsections 69S(1) and 69U(3) of the Act, the presumption of parentage provided for by subsection 69S(1) is taken, for these Regulations, to be rebuttable under subsection 69U(1) of the Act.

Note: Subsection 69U(3) is not extended by subregulation (1).

39BA  Jurisdictions

  For subsections 69S(1A) and 69XA(4) of the Act, a country mentioned in Schedule 4 or 4A is a jurisdiction.

Part IIICJurisdiction of courts and related matters

 

39BB  Certain jurisdiction of Family Court must not be exercised in States and Territories

 (1) For subsection 40(1) of the Act, from 21 April 2012 the jurisdiction of the Family Court must not be exercised in relation to proceedings under paragraph 31(1)(c) of the Act in the following States and Territories:

 (a) New South Wales;

 (b) Victoria;

 (c) Queensland;

 (d) Western Australia;

 (e) South Australia;

 (f) Tasmania;

 (g) Australian Capital Territory;

 (h) Northern Territory;

 (i) Norfolk Island;

 (j) Territory of Christmas Island;

 (k) Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands.

 (2) For subsection 40(1) of the Act, from 21 April 2012 the jurisdiction of the Family Court must not be exercised in Western Australia, the Territory of Christmas Island or the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands in relation to proceedings under the following provisions of the Act:

 (a) paragraph 31(1)(a);

 (b) paragraph 31(1)(aa);

 (c) paragraph 31(1)(b);

 (d) paragraph 31(1)(d);

 (e) subsection 39(5);

 (f) paragraph 39B(1)(a);

 (g) paragraph 93A(1)(aa);

 (h) paragraph 93A(1)(b).

 (3) However, paragraph (2)(g) applies only so far as proceedings under paragraph 93A(1)(aa) of the Act relate to appeals under subsection 94AAA(1) of the Act.

39C  Jurisdiction of courts

  To the extent that subsections 39(5) and (6) and section 69H of the Act do not invest the courts of a State or Territory mentioned in those provisions with federal jurisdiction, or confer jurisdiction on a federal court mentioned in those provisions, for proceedings mentioned in Part III or IIIB, the relevant courts are invested with jurisdiction, or jurisdiction is conferred on them for those proceedings, by this regulation.

Note: Subsection 124A(2) of the Act authorises the making of regulations conferring jurisdiction on a court or investing a court with jurisdiction.

39D  Convention countries

  For section 117AC of the Act, a country listed in Schedule 4A is a convention country.

Part IVConvention on recovery abroad of maintenance

 

40  Interpretation of Part IV

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

Convention means the Convention on the Recovery Abroad of Maintenance, referred to in section 111 of the Act, a copy of the English text of which is set out in Schedule 3.

convention country means a country that under regulation 48 is a convention country.

Receiving Agency has the meaning it has in the Convention.

Transmitting Agency has the meaning it has in the Convention.

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

 (a) a reference to payment of money for the maintenance of a child includes a reference to payment of money for the education of that child; and

 (b) a reference to proceedings under this Part in a court includes a reference to proceedings on appeal from original proceedings under this Part.

 (3) The purpose of this Part is to give effect to section 111 of the Act.

45  Immunity of Secretary from orders to pay costs

  The Secretary must not be made subject to any order to pay costs over the exercise of powers or performance of functions given to the Secretary under these Regulations.

Note: Secretary includes a person authorised to perform a function: see subregulation 3(1).

48  Convention countries

  For the purposes of this Part, each of the following countries is a convention country:

 (a) a country specified in Schedule 4;

 (b) any other country in respect of which the Convention has entered into force for Australia.

50  Applications by persons in convention countries for recovery of maintenance under Commonwealth, State or Territory law

 (1) This regulation applies if:

 (a) the Secretary receives from a Transmitting Agency in a convention country an application for:

 (i) recovery of maintenance that a person claims is required, under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, to be paid by another person; or

 (ii) variation of an existing order for maintenance; and

 (b) there are no reasonable grounds for believing that the other person is not subject to the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory.

 (2) The Secretary may do anything required to be done on behalf of the claimant by a Receiving Agency under the Convention to recover the maintenance.

 (3) Things that may be done by the Secretary do not include registration or enforcement of an order mentioned in, or sought by, the application.

 (4) However, an Australian court may, in proceedings under this Part, have regard to the application and the record of proceedings of a court that made any order to which the application relates.

 (5) This regulation does not affect the operation of Part III of these Regulations.

50A  Proceedings on behalf of persons in convention countries for recovery of maintenance

 (1) This regulation applies to proceedings under this Part in a court on behalf of a claimant.

 (2) The court must proceed as if the claimant were before the court.

 (3) A court must not make a maintenance order in proceedings under this Part if an application could properly be made at that time, under the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989, read with the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988, for administrative assessment of child support (within the meaning of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989) by a person seeking payment of child support for the child from the respondent.

 (4) Subregulation (3) has effect whether or not an application for administrative assessment of child support for the child has in fact been made.

 (5) The Secretary may do anything that is required or authorised to be done by an applicant in proceedings in that court in relation to maintenance.

 (6) In any document to be filed in, or issued out of, the court, the Secretary may be described as the Secretary of the Attorney General’s Department acting on behalf of the claimant whose name must be set out in the document.

50B  Return of applications

 (1) If, in relation to an application mentioned in subregulation 50(1) received from a Transmitting Agency in a convention country, a summons or other document that requires the other person mentioned in that subregulation to appear in proceedings under this Part cannot be served on the other person, the Secretary must send to that Agency a statement giving whatever information the Secretary has been able to obtain concerning the whereabouts of that other person and must return the application to that Agency.

 (2) For section 89A of the Act, the office of Secretary is a prescribed office.

 (3) Subregulation (2) does not limit the functions of the Secretary under this Part.

51  Certain requests to be made only with leave of court

Notwithstanding any other provision of these Regulations, in order to prevent proceedings under this Part from being unduly protracted a respondent must not seek, without leave of the court:

 (a) a request for answers to specific questions; or

 (b) a request to make discovery of documents; or

 (c) a notice to produce documents; or

 (d) a notice to admit facts or documents.

53  Taking of evidence at request of appropriate authority in convention countries

 (1) This regulation applies if the Secretary receives a request from the appropriate authority to obtain evidence concerning specified matters about an application under the law of a convention country:

 (a) to recover maintenance from another person; or

 (b) to the variation of an order made in that country for payment of maintenance by another person;

  where the person is subject to the jurisdiction of that country.

 (2) The Secretary and any court exercising jurisdiction under the Act must do anything required to be done under the Convention to obtain the evidence.

 (3) When the evidence is obtained, the Secretary must send a certified copy of a record of the evidence to the appropriate authority.

 (4) If under subregulation (2), the Secretary requests a court to take evidence for the proceedings mentioned in subregulation (1), the court must give notice of the time when, and the place where, the evidence is to be taken to:

 (a) the Secretary; and

 (b) the person from whom the maintenance is claimed; and

 (c) the appropriate authority.

 (5) The notice must be sufficient, in the opinion of the court, to enable the parties to the proceedings to attend or be represented at the taking of the evidence.

 (6) In this regulation:

appropriate authority, in relation to a request to obtain evidence for proceedings in a convention country, means:

 (a) the Transmitting Agency for that country under the convention; or

 (b) a court in that country; or

 (c) if the request is made through the Child Support Registrar, that Registrar.

54  Obtaining evidence in convention countries for purposes of proceedings under this Part

 (1) In proceedings under this Part in a court on behalf of a claimant in a convention country, the court may require the Secretary or an authorized person to request the Transmitting Agency in the convention country to obtain evidence required for the proceedings.

 (2) A requirement by a court under this regulation shall set out:

 (a) the names and addresses of the claimant and respondent in the proceedings;

 (b) the name and address of any person whose evidence is to be taken; and

 (c) the matters concerning which evidence is required.

 (3) The Secretary shall transmit to the Transmitting Agency in the convention country a request that the Secretary has been required under this regulation to make and shall request the Agency to give the Secretary and the respondent in the proceedings notice of the time when, and place where, the evidence is to be taken in order that the respondent may attend, or be represented at, the taking of the evidence.

 (4) Nothing in this regulation affects the power of a court to order or request the taking of evidence within or outside Australia.

55  Admissibility of evidence given in convention countries

  In a proceeding under this Part in a court, a statement contained in a document that purports:

 (a) to set out or summarise evidence given in a proceeding in a court in a convention country and to have been signed by the person before whom the evidence was given; or

 (b) to set out or summarise evidence taken in a convention country for the purpose of a proceeding under this Part (whether in response to a request made by the court or otherwise) and to have been signed by the person before whom the evidence was taken; or

 (c) to have been received as evidence in a proceeding in a court in a convention country and to have been signed by a judge or other officer of the court;

is admissible as evidence of any fact stated in the document to the same extent as oral evidence of that fact is admissible in the proceeding, without proof of the signature of the person purporting to have signed it or of the official position of that person.

56  Orders of court in convention countries

  In proceedings under this Part in a court, a document purporting to be an order, or a copy of an order, of a court in a convention country and to have been signed by a judge or other officer of the court is admissible as evidence of that order without proof of the signature of the person purporting to have signed it or of the official position of that person.

Part 5Arbitration

67A  Definitions for Part 5

  In this Part, unless the contrary intention appears:

arbitration means arbitration under section 13E of the Act or relevant property or financial arbitration.

arbitration agreement means an agreement made under regulation 67F between the parties to an arbitration.

67B  Prescribed requirements for arbitrator (Act s 10M)

  For the definition of arbitrator in section 10M of the Act, a person meets the requirements for an arbitrator if:

 (a) the person is a legal practitioner; and

 (b) either:

 (i) the person is accredited as a family law specialist by a State or Territory legal professional body; or

 (ii) the person has practised as a legal practitioner for at least 5 years and at least 25% of the work done by the person in that time was in relation to family law matters; and

 (c) the person has completed specialist arbitration training conducted by a tertiary institution or a professional association of arbitrators; and

 (d) the person’s name is included in a list, kept by the Law Council of Australia or by a body nominated by the Law Council of Australia, of legal practitioners who are prepared to provide arbitration services under the Act.

67C  Matters that may not be arbitrated

  A Part VIII proceeding, a part of a Part VIII proceeding, or a matter arising in a Part VIII proceeding, with respect to property to which an approved maintenance agreement under section 87 of the Act applies, must not be dealt with by arbitration under the Act.

67D  Application for referral to arbitration (Act s 13E)

  An application for an order under section 13E of the Act in relation to a Part VIII proceeding, a part of a Part VIII proceeding, or a matter arising in a Part VIII proceeding, must be:

 (a) in accordance with Form 6; and

 (b) made jointly by all parties to the proceeding; and

 (c) accompanied by a financial statement in accordance with the applicable Rules of Court.

67E  Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration (Act s 13F)

 (1) An application, under section 13F of the Act, for an order to facilitate the effective conduct of the relevant property or financial arbitration of a dispute must be in accordance with Form 7.

 (2) For the avoidance of doubt, an application may be made:

 (a) by a party to the arbitration; or

 (b) jointly by all parties to the arbitration.

67F  Arbitration agreement

 (1) The parties to an arbitration may make an agreement in relation to the arbitration (an arbitration agreement).

 (2) An arbitration agreement must:

 (a) be in writing; and

 (b) set out the information mentioned in subregulation (3) in relation to the arbitration; and

 (c) give details of the arrangements agreed by the parties in relation to the payment of the costs of the arbitration; and

 (d) include a statement to the effect that each party agrees to pay his or her agreed share of the costs of the arbitration within 28 days, or another specified period agreed by the parties and the arbitrator, after an award has been made; and

 (e) be signed by each party to the arbitration.

 (3) For paragraph (2)(b) the information is as follows:

 (a) the name, address and contact details of each party to the arbitration;

 (b) the name of the arbitrator;

 (c) the date, time and place at which the arbitration is to be conducted;

 (d) the issues to be dealt with in the arbitration;

 (e) the estimated time needed for the arbitration;

 (f) information about how the arbitration will be conducted (for example, information about the exchange of documents and witness statements, scheduling and receiving expert evidence);

 (g) the circumstances in which the arbitration may be suspended or terminated;

 (h) the estimated costs of the arbitration, including the costs of any disbursements that may be incurred in respect of the arbitration (for example, hire of a venue for the arbitration).

67G  Notice of arbitration

 (1) This regulation does not apply if the parties to an arbitration have made an arbitration agreement in relation to the arbitration.

 (2) Before conducting an arbitration, the arbitrator must give to each party to the arbitration a written notice setting out:

 (a) the information mentioned in subregulation 67F(3) in relation to the arbitration; and

 (b) in relation to the costs of the arbitration, information explaining the effect of regulation 67H.

 (3) The notice must also state that any party to the arbitration may attend, and be heard at, the arbitration.

 (4) The notice must be given at least 28 days before the arbitration is conducted, unless the parties have agreed on another period of notice.

67H  Costs of arbitration

 (1) The costs of an arbitration are to be shared equally between the parties to the arbitration unless the parties agree, in writing, otherwise.

 (2) If the parties have not made an arbitration agreement, each party must inform the arbitrator, in writing, before the arbitration starts, that he or she agrees to pay his or her equal or agreed share of the costs of the arbitration, within 28 days, or another period agreed by the parties and the arbitrator, after an award has been made.

 (3) If the parties have not made an arbitration agreement, and do not comply with subregulation (2), the arbitrator must:

 (a) proceed no further with the arbitration; and

 (b) for an arbitration under section 13E  of the Act, refer the matter to the court that ordered the arbitration.

67I  Duties of arbitrator

 (1) In an arbitration, an arbitrator must determine the issues in dispute between the parties to the arbitration in accordance with the Act.

 (2) An arbitrator must conduct an arbitration with procedural fairness (for example, giving each party to the arbitration a reasonable opportunity to be heard and to respond to anything raised by another party).

 (3) An arbitrator must inform each party, in writing, if during the arbitration, the arbitrator becomes aware of anything that could lead to direct or indirect bias in favour of or against any party.

67J  Oath or affirmation by arbitrator

  An arbitrator must, before acting in the capacity of an arbitrator, make an oath or affirmation in the following form:

  I [name of arbitrator] do swear by Almighty God [or solemnly and sincerely affirm and declare] that I will not disclose to any person any communication or admission made to me in my capacity as arbitrator, unless I reasonably believe that it is necessary for me to do so:

 (a) to protect a child; or

 (b) to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to:

 (i) the life or health of a person; or

 (ii) the property of a person; or

 (c) to report the commission, or prevent the likely commission, of an offence involving:

 (i) violence or a threat of violence to a person; or

 (ii) intentional damage to property of a person or a threat of damage to property; or

 (d) to enable me to discharge properly my functions as an arbitrator; or

 (e) if a child is separately represented by a person under an order under section 68L of the Act—to assist the person to represent the child properly.

67K  Suspension of arbitration—failure to comply with direction

  If a party to an arbitration does not comply with a procedural direction given by the arbitrator, the arbitrator:

 (a) may suspend the arbitration; and

 (b) if the failure to comply exceeds 28 days, must, for an arbitration under section 13E  of the Act, refer the matter to the court that ordered the arbitration.

67L  Termination of arbitration—lack of capacity

 (1) If an arbitrator considers that a party to an arbitration does not have the capacity to take part in the arbitration, the arbitrator must:

 (a) terminate the arbitration; and

 (b) for an arbitration under section 13E  of the Act, refer the matter to the court that ordered the arbitration.

 (2) For subregulation (1), a person who is a party to an arbitration does not have the capacity to take part in the arbitration if:

 (a) the person does not understand the nature and possible consequences of the arbitration; or

 (b) the person is not capable of:

 (i) giving adequate instruction to his or her representative for the conduct of the arbitration; or

 (ii) satisfactorily appearing in person in the arbitration.

67M  Appearance in arbitration

  In an arbitration, a party may appear in person, or be represented by a legal practitioner.

67N  Attendance of persons to give evidence

 (1) An arbitrator conducting an arbitration may require a person (whether a party to the arbitration or not):

 (a) to attend the arbitration to give evidence; or

 (b) to produce documents; or

 (c) to attend the arbitration to give evidence and produce documents.

 (2) A party to an arbitration may apply to the court for the issue of a subpoena requiring a person (whether a party to the arbitration or not):

 (a) to attend the arbitration to give evidence; or

 (b) to produce documents; or

 (c) to attend the arbitration to give evidence and produce documents.

 (3) An application under subregulation (2) must be made in accordance with the applicable Rules of Court.

Note: If a person does not comply with a requirement under subregulation (1), or a subpoena issued under subregulation (2), in relation to an arbitration, a court may make such orders as it considers appropriate to facilitate the effective conduct of the arbitration—see subsection 13E(2) of the Act in relation to arbitration under section 13E of the Act, and section 13F of the Act in relation to relevant property and financial arbitration.

67O  Application of rules of evidence

 (1) Subregulation (2) applies to an arbitration if all parties to the arbitration consent to its application.

 (2) In conducting an arbitration, an arbitrator is not bound by the rules of evidence but may inform himself or herself on any matter in any way that he or she considers appropriate.

67P  Making an award

 (1) At the end of an arbitration, the arbitrator must make an award.

 (2) The award must include a concise statement setting out:

 (a) the arbitrator’s reasons for making the award; and

 (b) the arbitrator’s findings of fact in the matter, referring to the evidence on which the findings are based.

 (3) The award must:

 (a) be mechanically or electronically printed; and

 (b) be contained in a single document.

 (4) The arbitrator must:

 (a) give a copy of the award to each party to the award; and

 (b) if the award was made in an arbitration under section 13E  of the Act—inform the court that ordered the arbitration that:

 (i) the arbitration has ended; and

 (ii) an award has been made in relation to all, or part, of the proceeding to which the arbitration relates.

67Q  Registration of award (Act s 13H)

 (1) For section 13H of the Act, an application to register an award made in an arbitration must be in accordance with Form 8.

 (2) The applicant must serve a copy of the application on each other party to the award.

 (3) A party on whom an application is served may, within 28 days after service, bring to the attention of the court any reason why the award should not be registered.

Note: An example of a way of bringing a matter to the attention of the court is by filing an affidavit.

 (4) If nothing is brought to the court’s attention under subregulation (3), the court must register the award.

 (5) If a party brings a matter to the court’s attention under subregulation (3), the court must, after giving all parties a reasonable opportunity to be heard in relation to the matter, determine whether to register the award.

Note: For the effect of registration, see subsection 13H(2) of the Act.

67R  Notice of registration of award

 (1) If a court registers an award, the court must give notice of the registration to each party to the award.

 (2) The notice must state:

 (a) the date when the award was registered; and

 (b) the place where the award was registered.

67S  Enforcement of registered awards

  A party to a registered award may apply for enforcement of the award as if the award were an order made under Part VIII of the Act.

67T  Registration of decree affecting registered award

 (1) If a decree is made by a court under section 13J or 13K of the Act in relation to a registered award, the party who registered the award must apply for registration of the decree in the court in which the award is registered.

 (2) The application must be in accordance with Form 9.

Part VIRepeal and savings

 

78  Repeal of former Family Law Regulations

  Statutory Rules 1975 No. 210, 1976 Nos. 97 and 213, 1977 No. 172, 1979 No. 146, 1980 No. 215, 1982 Nos. 244 and 295, 1983 Nos. 243, 273 and 280 and 1984 No. 139 are repealed.

79  Savings—proceedings instituted before 5 January 1976

  Subject to section 9 of the Act, regulation 4 and the standard Rules of Court, the Matrimonial Causes Rules and the rules, regulations, practice and procedure of any court having jurisdiction under the repealed Act as in force immediately before 5 January 1976 continue to apply to proceedings instituted before 5 January 1976, and the filing and serving of pleadings including affidavits may be continued as if the repealed Act had continued in force.

80  Savings in relation to the former Regulations

 (1) Subject to subregulations(4) and (5), proceedings pending or orders or directions made, appointments made or authorizations given, documents filed or served, or any other act or thing done, before the commencement of these Regulations, in accordance with the former Regulations, shall, if of a kind to which these Regulations or the standard Rules of Court apply, be treated as if pending, made, given, filed, served, or done, as the case requires, in accordance with these Regulations or those Rules, as the case requires.

 (2) Subject to subregulations(4) and (5), an obligation incurred or undertaking given under the former Regulations before the commencement of these Regulations if of a kind to which these Regulations or the standard Rules of Court apply shall be treated as if incurred or given under these Regulations or the standard Rules of Court, as the case requires.

 (3) Subject to subregulations(4) and (5), where a person has, before the commencement of these Regulations, omitted to do any act or thing in accordance with the former Regulations and the act or thing is one to which these Regulations apply, the act or thing shall be treated as if omitted to be done under these Regulations unless subsequently done in accordance with these Regulations.

 (4) These Regulations do not operate to revive any period of time for the doing of any act or thing, being a period of time which, under the former Regulations, had expired before the commencement of these Regulations.

 (5) A period of time that commenced under the former Regulations but had not expired before the commencement of these Regulations shall, if the matter in respect of which that period has commenced is a matter to which these Regulations apply, continue as if these Regulations had not come into operation.

81  Transitional matters in connection with Family Law Amendment Regulations 2000 (No. 2)

 (1) The former Regulations continue in force in relation to:

 (a) pending proceedings; and

 (b) acts or things that have been done, or that may or must be done, in accordance with those Regulations.

 (2) An act or thing that may or must be done by the Controller or an authorised person under Part IV of the former Regulations, as continued in force, may or must be done by the Secretary.

 (3) In this regulation:

former Regulations means the Family Law Regulations 1984 as in force immediately before 1 July 2000.

pending proceedings means proceedings that were started in accordance with the former Regulations before 1 July 2000 but were not completed before that date.

82  Shared Parental Responsibility Act—end of transition period

  For the definition of transition period in subitem 118(2) of Schedule 4 to the Shared Parental Responsibility Act, the day prescribed is 30 June 2009.

83  Transitional matters relating to Family Law Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 4)

 (1) Despite the amendments made by the Family Law Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 4), these Regulations, as in force immediately before 1 January 2013, (the old Regulations) continue to apply to a fee for a service requested under the old Regulations before 1 January 2013, unless another transitional provision says otherwise.

 (2) However, subregulation 11(9) of the old Regulations continues to apply to a settingdown requested before 1 January 2013 only if the settingdown fee (within the meaning given by the old Regulations) was paid before 1 January 2013.

Schedule 1

(regulation 12)

Form 1ARequest for service abroad of judicial documents and certificate

(regulations 21AF and 21AH)

Part 1 Request for service abroad of judicial documents

Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, done at The Hague on 15 November 1965

 

Identity and address of the forwarding authority requesting service

 

Identity and address of receiving authority [Central Authority/additional authority]

The undersigned forwarding authority (on the application of [name and address of applicant on whose behalf forwarding authority requests service]) has the honour to transmit – in duplicate – the documents listed below and, in conformity with Article 5 of the abovementioned Convention, requests prompt service of one copy thereof on the addressee, ie:

(identity and address) ...................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

*(a) in accordance with the provisions of subparagraph (a) of the first paragraph of Article 5 of the Convention.

*(b) in accordance with the following particular method (subparagraph (b) of the first paragraph of Article 5): ............................................................

 ............................................................................................................

*(c) by delivery to the addressee, if he or she accepts it voluntarily (second paragraph of Article 5).

The receiving authority [Central Authority/additional authority] is requested to return or to have returned to the forwarding authority a copy of the documents – and of the annexes* – with a certificate as provided in Part 2 of this Form on the reverse side.

List of documents

................................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

Done at.............................................. , the....................................................

Signature or stamp (or both) of forwarding authority.

*Delete if inappropriate.

Part 2 Certificate

Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, done at The Hague on 15 November 1965

The undersigned authority has the honour to certify, in conformity with Article 6 of the Convention:

 *1. that the documents listed in Part 1 have been served

   the (date)........................................................................................

   at (place, street, number) .......................................................................

   in one of the following methods authorised by Article 5:

 *a) in accordance with the provisions of subparagraph (a) of the first paragraph of Article 5 of the Convention.

 *b) in accordance with the following particular method: ....................

  ..........................................................................................................

 *c) by delivery to the addressee, who accepted it voluntarily.

  The document referred to in the request, has been delivered to:

   (identity and description of person) ..............................................

  ..........................................................................................................

   relationship to the addressee (family, business or other.) ..............

  ..........................................................................................................

  ..........................................................................................................

 *2. that the document has not been served, by reason of the following facts:...............................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

*In conformity with the second paragraph of Article 12 of the Convention, the forwarding authority is requested to pay or reimburse the expenses detailed in the attached statement.

Annexes

Documents returned: ....................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

In appropriate cases, documents, establishing the service: ...........................

......................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

Done at.............................................. , the....................................................

Signature or stamp (or both)

*Delete if inappropriate.

Form 1BSummary of the document to be served

(regulation 21AF)

Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, done at The Hague on 15 November 1965

(Article 5, fourth paragraph)

Identity and address of the addressee [Central Authority/additional authority]:

 

 

 

IMPORTANT

THE ENCLOSED DOCUMENT IS OF A LEGAL NATURE AND MAY AFFECT YOUR RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS. THE SUMMARY OF THE DOCUMENT TO BE SERVED WILL GIVE YOU SOME INFORMATION ABOUT ITS NATURE AND PURPOSE. YOU SHOULD HOWEVER READ THE DOCUMENT ITSELF CAREFULLY. IT MAY BE NECESSARY TO SEEK LEGAL ADVICE.

IF YOUR FINANCIAL RESOURCES ARE INSUFFICIENT YOU SHOULD SEEK INFORMATION ON THE POSSIBILITY OF OBTAINING LEGAL AID OR ADVICE EITHER IN THE COUNTRY WHERE YOU LIVE OR IN THE COUNTRY WHERE THE DOCUMENT WAS ISSUED.

ENQUIRIES ABOUT THE AVAILABILITY OF LEGAL AID OR ADVICE IN THE COUNTRY WHERE THE DOCUMENT WAS ISSUED MAY BE DIRECTED TO: ...........................................................................................

SUMMARY OF THE DOCUMENT TO BE SERVED

Name and address of the forwarding authority: .........................................

......................................................................................................................

Particulars of the parties: .............................................................................

......................................................................................................................

**JUDICIAL DOCUMENT

Nature and purpose of the document: ..........................................................

......................................................................................................................

Nature and purpose of the proceedings and, where appropriate, the amount in dispute: ..................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

......................................................................................................................

Date and place for entering appearance: ......................................................

......................................................................................................................

Court in which proceedings pending/judgment given: ..................................

......................................................................................................................

**Date of judgment (if applicable): .............................................................

Time limits stated in the document: ..............................................................

......................................................................................................................

Form 2Parentage testing procedure Affidavit by/in relation to donor

(subregulation 21F(1))

PARENTAGE TESTING PROCEDURE

AFFIDAVIT BY/IN RELATION TO DONOR

NAME OF CHILD WHOSE PARENTAGE IS IN ISSUE: (insert child’s name)

NAME OF DONOR: (insert donor’s name)

DATE OF BIRTH OF DONOR: (insert donor’s date of birth)

*RELATIONSHIP/*PUTATIVE RELATIONSHIP OF DONOR TO CHILD WHOSE PARENTAGE IS IN ISSUE: (if donor is not the child whose parentage is in issue, insert relationship of donor to child)

DATE OF TAKING SAMPLE FROM DONOR: (insert date sample is to be taken)

I, (insert name), of (insert address), (insert occupation), *make oath and say/*affirm:

 

IMPORTANT

Either Part 1 or 2 of this form must be completed and duly sworn or affirmed by the person completing it, and the signature witnessed, on the day the donor’s sample is taken.

PART 1

Part 1 must be completed if the person swearing or affirming the affidavit is the donor.

1. I am the person appearing in the photograph attached to this affidavit, being Attachment ‘A’.

2. My racial background is (insert details).

3. In the last 2 years:

(a) I *have/*have not suffered from leukaemia;

(b) I *have/*have not received a bone marrow transplant.

*4. The particulars of the *leukaemia/*bone marrow transplant are as follows:

 (insert particulars).

5. I *have/*have not received a transfusion of blood or a blood product within the last 6 months.

*6. The particulars of the transfusion of blood or blood product are as follows:

 (insert particulars).

7. I consent to:

(a) the taking of *a bodily sample/*bodily samples from me on (insert date sample is to be taken) at (insert place sample is to be taken) for the purposes of *a parentage testing procedure/*parentage testing procedures; and

(b) the carrying out of *that procedure/*those procedures on the *sample/*samples.

PART 2

Part 2 must be completed on behalf of a child or adult who is not capable of swearing or affirming the affidavit. Under subsection 69Z (2) of the Act, a parentage testing procedure must not be carried out in relation to a child without the consent of a parent or guardian of the child or a person who, under a specific issues order, is responsible for the child’s longterm or daytoday care, welfare and development.

1. I am the (state relationship or other status in relation to the donor) of (insert name of donor) who was born on (insert date of birth of donor).

2. (insert name of donor) is the person appearing in the photograph attached to this affidavit, being Attachment ‘A’.

3. (insert name of donor) is a person whose racial background is (insert details).

4. In the last 2 years:

(a) the donor *has/*has not suffered from leukaemia;

(b) the donor *has/*has not received a bone marrow transplant.

*5. The particulars of the *leukaemia/*bone marrow transplant are as follows:

 (insert particulars).

6. The donor *has/*has not received a transfusion of blood or a blood product within the last 6 months.

*7. The particulars of the transfusion of blood or blood product are as follows:

 (insert particulars).

8. I consent to:

(a) the taking of *a bodily sample/*bodily samples from the donor on (insert date sample is to be taken) at (insert place sample is to be taken) for the purposes of *a parentage testing procedure/*parentage testing procedures; and

(b) the carrying out of *that procedure/*those procedures on the *sample/*samples.

 

*SWORN/*AFFIRMED by the
deponent at

on 20

 (Signature of deponent)

BEFORE ME: (insert name of person
before whom the affidavit is sworn
or affirmed)

 (Signature of person

 before whom affidavit is

 sworn or affirmed)

Attach a recent photograph of the donor named in the affidavit, measuring approximately 45 millimetres by 35 millimetres, that shows a full face view of the donor’s head and the donor’s shoulders against a plain background. The photograph must be marked ‘A’, and must bear a statement, signed by both the person before whom the affidavit is sworn or affirmed and the deponent, identifying it as the photograph mentioned in the affidavit.

*Omit if not applicable.

Form 4Parentage testing procedure Collection of bodily samples

(regulation 21J)

PARENTAGE TESTING PROCEDURE

COLLECTION OF BODILY SAMPLES

NAME OF CHILD WHOSE

PARENTAGE IS IN ISSUE: (insert child’s name)

1. I, (insert name of sampler), of (insert professional address), (insert occupation), took the *bodily sample/*bodily samples specified below at (insert time) *am/*pm on (insert date) at (insert place of collection) from the following *person/*persons:

 (a) (insert name of person, type of bodily sample and person’s photograph);

 *(b) (insert name of person, type of bodily sample and person’s photograph);

 *(c) (insert name of person, type of bodily sample and person’s photograph);

 *(d) (insert name of person, type of bodily sample and person’s photograph).

2. When I took the *bodily sample/*bodily samples specified above, I strictly observed the procedures provided under Part IIA of the Family Law Regulations.

3. I placed the *bodily sample/*each of the bodily samples specified above in a container that was immediately sealed and then labelled in accordance with regulation 21I of the Family Law Regulations.

DATED:

(Signature of sampler)

*Omit if not applicable.

Form 5Parentage testing procedure report

(regulation 21M)

PARENTAGE TESTING PROCEDURE REPORT

NAME OF CHILD WHOSE

PARENTAGE IS IN ISSUE: (insert child’s name)

PART I

1. I, (insert name of nominated reporter), of (insert street address of laboratory where testing was performed), (insert occupation), am a person nominated by the laboratory specified below to prepare a report for the purposes of paragraph 69ZB (b) of the Family Law Act 1975.

2. I report that *a parentage testing procedure/*parentage testing procedures being:

 *(a) red cell antigen blood grouping;

 *(b) red cell enzyme blood grouping;

 *(c) testing for serum markers;

 *(d) HLA tissue typing;

 *(e) DNA typing;

 *has/*have been carried out on the bodily *sample/*samples contained in the sealed *container/*containers bearing the *name/*names of the following *donor/*donors:

 (a) (insert donor’s name, date of birth and relationship to child whose parentage is in issue);

 *(b) (insert donor’s name, date of birth and relationship to child whose parentage is in issue);

 *(c) (insert donor’s name, date of birth and relationship to child whose parentage is in issue);

 *(d) (insert donor’s name, date of birth and relationship to child whose parentage is in issue).

3. Each bodily sample referred to in item 2 is the same bodily sample as the bodily sample specified in the statement completed on (insert date) by (insert name of sampler) in accordance with Form 4 in Schedule 1 of the Family Law Regulations.

4. The parentage testing *procedure was/*procedures were carried out at (insert name and street address of *laboratory/*laboratories where testing was performed) on (insert date/s).

5. The results of the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures are set out in Part II of this report.

*6. I report that the results of the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures carried out on the bodily *sample/*samples of the donors specified above show that (insert name of putative parent) is not excluded from identification as the *father/*mother of (insert name of child whose parentage is in issue).

[OR]

*6. I report that the results of the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures carried out on the bodily *sample/*samples of the donors specified above show that (insert name of putative parent) is excluded from identification as the *father/*mother of (insert name of child whose parentage is in issue).

*7. I further report that the probability that (insert name of putative parent) is the genetic *father/*mother of (insert name of child whose parentage is in issue) has been calculated as follows:

Putative *father/*mother is (insert figure) times more likely to produce a child with the required alleles than a *man/*woman drawn randomly from the general population.  This equates to a Relative Chance of *Paternity/*Maternity of (insert figure).

[OR]

*7. I further report that the exclusion is based on contradictions of the laws of genetic inheritance in (insert amount) of the (insert amount) genetic markers: (insert the names of the genetic markers and whether the contradictions are of the first or second order).

*8. I further report (if necessary, provide further explanation of results detailed in item 6 or 7, or both).

DATED:  19 .

(Signature of nominated reporter)

PART II

1. The bodily *sample/*samples referred to in Part I of this report were received at (insert name and street address of laboratory at which parentage testing *procedure was/*procedures were carried out) on the following date/s:

 (a) (specify sample)  (insert date)

 *(b) (specify sample)  (insert date)

 *(c) (specify sample)  (insert date)

 *(d) (specify sample)  (insert date)

 *(e) (specify sample)  (insert date).

2. The following identification *number was/*numbers were allocated respectively to the bodily *sample/*samples in the *container/*containers in respect of which the parentage testing *procedure was/*procedures were carried out:

 (a) (insert name of donor and identification number);

 *(b) (insert name of donor and identification number);

 *(c) (insert name of donor and identification number);

 *(d) (insert name of donor and identification number).

3. The results obtained from the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures are: (set out the results).

Complete this item if the parentage testing procedure carried out was red cell antigen blood grouping, red cell enzyme blood grouping, HLA tissue typing or testing for serum markers

 Item applying if parentage testing procedure carried out was red cell antigen blood grouping, red cell enzyme blood grouping, HLA tissue typing or testing for serum markers

*4. The results set out above in item 3 refer to the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures carried out *by me/*under my supervision on (insert date/s).  The bodily *sample was/*samples were tested with the same reagents and in parallel with appropriate known controls. Results from controls show that all reagents were of correct specificity and normal potency.  I am satisfied that the results obtained are true and that they have been correctly transcribed from the laboratory records.

[OR]

 Item applying if parentage testing procedure carried out was DNA typing

*4. The results set out above in item 3 refer to the parentage testing *procedure/*procedures carried out *by me/*under my supervision on (insert date/s).  The bodily *sample was/*samples were tested with the same probes/primers and in parallel with appropriate known controls.  Fragment length and/or hybridisation patterns were in accordance with scientifically accepted standards.  I am satisfied that the results obtained have been correctly coded from the fragment and/or hybridisation pattern and that they have been correctly transcribed from the laboratory records.

DATED:

(Signature of person who carried

out parentage testing procedure

or person under whose

supervision parentage testing

procedure was carried out)

*Omit if not applicable.

Form 6Application for arbitration

(regulation 67D)

 

[name of court]



Application for arbitration




Form 6 — Family Law Regulation 67D
 

Fill in box A (file numbers)

A File
 Number

 

B Filed at

 

 

 

C Hearing date

Hearing time

AM

PM

 

Application

The parties seek an order referring the matter, details of which are given below, to arbitration

 

Notice

Take notice that:

 this application is set down for hearing before the Court sitting at the time and place in box C above

 if you do not appear at the hearing, the Court may hear and decide the matter in your absence

 

Details of parties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Names of parties making this application

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 attach extra page if you need more space

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

2 Postal address for service of documents on each applicant

 

Applicant 1

send to solicitor/s in 3       other    give details:

 

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

Applicant 2

send to solicitor/s in 3       other    give details:

 

Attach separate sheet for any others

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

 

 

3 Solicitor for each applicant

 

Applicant 1

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

Applicant 2

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

Attach separate sheet for any others

 

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

Details of issue(s) to be arbitrated

4

 

 

 

 

Details of arbitrator

 

5 If the parties have agreed on an arbitrator, give brief details of the proposed arbitrator, including name and address

 

Signature

 

Signed

 

Date

 

 

 

 applicant(s)  solicitor for applicant(s)

This application was prepared by     applicant           solicitor           counsel

(print name if solicitor/counsel)

 

Form 7Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration

(regulation 67E)

 

[name of court]



Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration




Form 7 — Family Law Regulation 67E
 

Fill in box A (file numbers)

A File
 Number

 

B Filed at

 

 

 

C Hearing date

Hearing time

AM

PM

 

Application

The parties seek an order, details of which are given below, in relation to the relevant property or financial arbitration of a dispute

 

Notice

Take notice that:

 this application is set down for hearing before the Court sitting at the time and place in box C above

 if you do not appear at the hearing, the Court may hear and decide the matter in your absence

 

Details of parties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Names of parties making this application

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 attach extra page if you need more space

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

2 Postal address for service of documents on each applicant

 

Applicant 1

send to solicitor/s in 3       other    give details:

 

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

Applicant 2

send to solicitor/s in 3       other    give details:

 

Attach separate sheet for any others

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

 

 

3 Solicitor for each applicant

 

Applicant 1

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

Applicant 2

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

Attach separate sheet for any others

 

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

Details of order sought

4

 

 

 

 

Details of arbitration

 

5 Give brief details of the arbitration or proposed arbitration, including the name and address of the arbitrator (if already appointed), whether any arbitration proceedings have already taken place (and, if so, when and where)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attach copy of any award made

Signature

 

Signed

 

Date

 

 

 

 applicant(s)  solicitor for applicant(s)

This application was prepared by     applicant           solicitor           counsel

(print name if solicitor/counsel)

 

Form 8Application to register arbitration award

(regulation 67Q)

 

[name of court]



Application to register arbitration award




Form 8 Family Law Regulation 67Q
 

Fill in box A (file numbers)

A File
 Number

 

B Filed at

 

 

 

Hearing date

(if hearing needed)

Hearing time

AM

PM

 

Notice

Take notice that:

 the applicant seeks registration of the award described below

 within 28 days of service of this application, another party to the award may bring to the court’s attention any reason why the award should not be registered

 if nothing is brought to the court’s attention, the court must register the award

 

Application

The applicant seeks registration of the award described below

 

Details of parties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Name(s) of applicant(s) making this application

 

family name (surname)

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 attach extra page if you need more space

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

2 Name(s) of respondent(s)

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 (other parties to the award, if any)

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

3 Postal address for service of documents on applicants

send to solicitor in 4       other    give details:

 

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

 

 

4 Solicitor for applicant(s)

 

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

 

Details of award

 

5 Give brief details of the award, including date made and name and address of arbitrator

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attach a copy of the award

Signature

 

Signed

 

Date

 

 

 

 applicant(s)  solicitor for applicant(s)

This application was prepared by     applicant           solicitor           counsel

(print name if solicitor/counsel)

 

Form 9Application to register decree affecting registered arbitration award

(regulation 67T)

 

[name of court]

Application to register
decree affecting
registered arbitration award

Form 9 — Family Law Regulation 67T

Fill in box A (file numbers)

A File
 Number

 

B Filed at

 

 

 

 

Application

The applicant seeks registration of the decree described below

 

Details of parties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Name(s) of applicant(s) making this application)

 

family name (surname)
 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 attach extra page if you need more space

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

2 Name(s) of respondent(s)

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 (other parties to the award, if any)

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

 

 

 

 

 

 give details for each

 

family name (surname)

 

 

given names

3 Postal address for service of documents on applicants

send to solicitor in 4       other    give details:

 

 

 

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     )

 

 

4 Solicitor for applicant(s)

 

  name

  firm name

  address

  phone/fax/DX

 

 

 code

 postcode

tel (     ) fax (     ) DX and suburb/town

 

 

Details of decree

 

5 Give brief details of the decree and the award affected by the decree, including date the decree made and name and address of arbitrator who made the award

 

 

 

 

 

Attach a copy of the decree

Signature

 

Signed

 

Date

 

 

 

 applicant(s)  solicitor for applicant(s)

This application was prepared by     applicant           solicitor           counsel

(print name if solicitor/counsel)

 

Schedule 1ACountries or parts of countries, declared to be prescribed overseas jurisdictions for certain purposes

(regulation 14)

 

Column 1
Item No

Column 2
Country or part of a country

1

Alabama

2

Alaska

3

Arizona

4

Arkansas

4A

Austria

5

California

6

Colorado

7

Connecticut

8

Delaware

9

District of Columbia

10

Florida

11

Georgia

12

Hawaii

13

Idaho

14

Illinois

15

Indiana

16

Iowa

17

Kansas

18

Kentucky

19

Louisiana

20

Maine

21

Maryland

22

Massachusetts

23

Michigan

24

Minnesota

25

Mississippi

26

Montana

27

Nebraska

28

Nevada

29

New Hampshire

30

New Jersey

31

New York

31A

New Zealand

32

North Carolina

33

North Dakota

33A

Ohio

34

Oklahoma

35

Oregon

36

Papua New Guinea

37

Pennsylvania

38

Rhode Island

39

South Carolina

39A

Switzerland

40

Tennessee

41

Texas

42

Utah

43

Vermont

44

Virginia

45

Washington

46

West Virginia

47

Wisconsin

48

Wyoming

Schedule 2Reciprocating jurisdictions

(regulation 25)

 

Austria

Belarus

Belgium

Brunei

Canada, the following Provinces and Territories:

  Alberta

  British Columbia

  Manitoba

  New Brunswick

  Newfoundland

 Northwest  Territories

  Nova Scotia

  Nunavut

  Ontario

 Prince Edward  Island

  Saskatchewan

  Yukon

Territory of Christmas Island

Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands

Colombia

Cook Islands

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Fiji

France

Germany

Gibraltar

Kazakstan

Hong Kong

India

Republic of Ireland

Italy

Kenya

Luxembourg

Malawi

Malaysia

Malta

Nauru

Niue

Netherlands

New Zealand

Norway

Papua New Guinea

Poland

Portugal

Sierra Leone

Singapore

Slovak Republic

South Africa

Spain

Sri Lanka

Sweden

Switzerland

Tanzania (excluding Zanzibar)

Trinidad and Tobago

Turkey

United Kingdom, including Alderney, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Jersey and Sark

United States of America

Western Samoa

Zambia

Zimbabwe

Schedule 3Convention on the recovery abroad of maintenance

(regulation 40)

 

PREAMBLE

 Considering the urgency of solving the humanitarian problem resulting from the situation of persons in need dependent for their maintenance on persons abroad,

 Considering that the prosecution or enforcement abroad of claims for maintenance gives rise to serious legal and practical difficulties, and

 Determined to provide a means to solve such problems and to overcome such difficulties,

 The Contracting Parties have agreed as follows:

Article 1

SCOPE OF THE CONVENTION

 1. The purpose of this convention is to facilitate the recovery of maintenance to which a person, hereinafter referred to as claimant, who is in the territory of one of the Contracting Parties, claims to be entitled from another person, hereinafter referred to as respondent, who is subject to the jurisdiction of another Contracting Party. This purpose shall be effected through the offices of agencies which will hereinafter be referred to as Transmitting and Receiving Agencies.

 2. The remedies provided for in this Convention are in addition to, and not in substitution for, any remedies available under municipal or international law.

Article 2

DESIGNATION OF AGENCIES

 1. Each Contracting Party shall, at the time when the instrument of ratification or accession is deposited, designate one or more judicial or administrative authorities which shall act in its territory as Transmitting Agencies.

 2. Each contracting party shall, at the time when the instrument of ratification or accession is deposited, designate a public or private body which shall act in its territory as Receiving Agency.

 3. Each Contracting Party shall promptly communicate to the SecretaryGeneral of the United Nations the designations made under paragraphs 1 and 2 and any changes made in respect thereof.

 4. Transmitting and Receiving Agencies may communicate directly with Transmitting and Receiving Agencies of other Contracting Parties.

Article 3

APPLICATION TO TRANSMITTING AGENCY

 1. Where a claimant is in the territory of one Contracting Party, hereinafter referred to as the State of the claimant, and the respondent is subject to the jurisdiction of another Contracting Party, hereinafter referred to as the State of the respondent, the claimant may make application to a Transmitting Agency in the State of the claimant for the recovery of maintenance from the respondent.

 2. Each Contracting Party shall inform the SecretaryGeneral as to the evidence normally required under the law of the State of the Receiving Agency for the proof of maintenance claims, of the manner in which such evidence should be submitted, and of other requirements to be complied with under such law.

 3. The application shall be accompanied by all relevant documents, including, where necessary, a power of attorney authorizing the Receiving Agency to act, or to appoint some other person to act, on behalf of the claimant. It shall also be accompanied by a photograph of the claimant and, where available, a photograph of the respondent.

 4. The Transmitting Agency shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the requirements of the law of the State of the Receiving Agency are complied with; and, subject to the requirements of such law, the application shall include:

(a)  the full name, address, date of birth, nationality, and occupation of the claimant, and the name and address of any legal representative of the claimant;

(b)  the full name of the respondent, and, so far as known to the claimant, his addresses during the preceding five years, date of birth, nationality, and occupation;

(c) particulars of the grounds upon which the claim is based and of the relief sought, and any other relevant information such as the financial and family circumstances of the claimant and the respondent.

Article 4

TRANSMISSION OF DOCUMENTS

 1. The Transmitting Agency shall transmit the documents to the Receiving Agency of the State of the respondent, unless satisfied that the application is not made in good faith.

 2. Before transmitting such documents, the Transmitting Agency shall satisfy itself that they are regular as to form, in accordance with the law of the State of the claimant.

 3. The Transmitting Agency may express to the Receiving Agency an opinion as to the merits of the case and may recommend that free legal aid and exemption from costs be given to the claimant.

Article 5

TRANSMISSION OF JUDGMENTS AND OTHER JUDICIAL ACTS

 1. The Transmitting Agency shall, at the request of the claimant, transmit, under the provisions of article 4, any order, final or provisional, and any other judicial act, obtained by the claimant for the payment of maintenance in a competent tribunal of any of the Contracting Parties, and, where necessary and possible, the record of the proceedings in which such order was made.

 2. The orders and judicial acts referred to in the preceding paragraph may be transmitted in substitution for or in addition to the documents mentioned in article 3.

 3. Proceedings under article 6 may include, in accordance with the law of the State of the respondent, exequatur or registration proceedings or an action based upon the act transmitted under paragraph 1.

Article 6

FUNCTIONS OF THE RECEIVING AGENCY

 1. The Receiving Agency shall, subject always to the authority given by the claimant, take, on behalf of the claimant, all appropriate steps for the recovery of maintenance, including the settlement of the claim and, where necessary, the institution and prosecution of an action for maintenance and the execution of any order or other judicial act for the payment of maintenance.

 2. The Receiving Agency shall keep the Transmitting Agency currently informed. If it is unable to act, it shall inform the Transmitting Agency of its reasons and return the documents.

 3. Notwithstanding anything in this Convention, the law applicable in the determination of all questions arising in any such action or proceedings shall be the law of the State of the respondent, including its private international law.

Article 7

LETTERS OF REQUEST

 If Provision is made for letters of request in the laws of the two Contracting Parties concerned, the following rules shall apply:

 (a) A tribunal hearing an action for maintenance may address letters of request for further evidence, documentary or otherwise, either to the competent tribunal of the other Contracting Party or to any other authority or institution designated by the other Contracting Party in whose territory the request is to be executed.

 (b) In order that the parties may attend or be represented, the requested authority shall give notice of the date on which and the place at which the proceedings requested are to take place to the Receiving Agency and the Transmitting Agency concerned, and to the respondent.

 (c) Letters of request shall be executed with all convenient speed; in the event of such letters of request not being executed within four months from the receipt of the letters by the requested authority, the reasons for such nonexecution or for such delay shall be communicated to the requesting authority.

 (d) The execution of letters of request shall not give rise to reimbursement of fees or costs of any kind whatsoever.

 (e) Execution of letters of request may only be refused:

 (1) If the authenticity of the letters is not established;

 (2) If the Contracting Party in whose territory the letters are to be executed deems that its sovereignty or safety would be compromised thereby.

Article 8

VARIATION OF ORDERS

 The provisions of this Convention apply also to applications for the variation of maintenance orders.

Article 9

EXEMPTIONS AND FACILITIES

 1. In proceedings under this Convention, claimants shall be accorded equal treatment and the same exemptions in the payment of costs and charges as are given to residents or nationals of the State where the proceedings are pending.

 2. Claimants shall not be required, because of their status as aliens or nonresidents, to furnish any bond or make any payment or deposit as security for costs or otherwise.

 3. Transmitting and Receiving Agencies shall not charge any fees in respect of services rendered under this Convention.

Article 10

TRANSFER OF FUNDS

 A Contracting party, under whose law the transfer of funds abroad is restricted, shall accord the highest priority to the transfer of funds payable as maintenance or to cover expenses in respect of proceedings under this Convention.

Article 11

FEDERAL STATE CLAUSE

 In the case of a Federal or nonunitary State, the following provisions shall apply:

 (a) With respect to those articles of this Convention that come within the legislative jurisdiction of the federal legislative authority, the obligations of the Federal Government shall to this extent be the same as those of Parties which are not Federal States;

 (b) With respect to those articles of this Convention that come within the legislative jurisdiction of constituent States, provinces or cantons which are not, under the constitutional system of the Federation, bound to take legislative action, the Federal Government shall bring such articles with a favourable recommendation to the notice of the appropriate authorities of States, provinces or cantons at the earliest possible moment;

 (c) A Federal State Party to this Convention shall, at the request of any other Contracting Party transmitted through the SecretaryGeneral, supply a statement of the law and practice of the Federation and its constituent units in regard to any particular provision of the Convention, showing the extent to which effect has been given to that provision by legislative or other action.

Article 12

TERRITORIAL APPLICATION

 The provisions of this Convention shall extend or be applicable equally to all nonselfgoverning, trust or other territories for the international relations of which a Contracting Party is responsible, unless the latter, on ratifying or acceding to this Convention, has given notice that the Convention shall not apply to any one or more of such territories. Any Contracting Party making such a declaration may, at any time thereafter, by notification to the SecretaryGeneral, extend the application of the Convention to any or all of such territories.

Article 13

SIGNATURE, RATIFICATION AND ACCESSION

 1. This Convention shall be open for signature until 31 December 1956 on behalf of any Member of the United Nations, any nonmember State which is a Party to the Statute of the International Court of Justice, or member of a specialized agency, and any other nonmember State which has been invited by the Economic and Social Council to become a Party to the Convention.

 2. This Convention shall be ratified. The instruments of ratification shall be deposited with the SecretaryGeneral.

 3. This Convention may be acceded to at any time on behalf of any of the States referred to in paragraph 1 of this article. The instruments of accession shall be deposited with the SecretaryGeneral.

Article 14

ENTRY INTO FORCE

 1. This Convention shall come into force on the thirtieth day following the date of deposit of the third instrument of ratification or accession in accordance with article 13.

 2. For each State ratifying or acceding to the Convention after the deposit of the third instrument of ratification or accession, the Convention shall enter into force on the thirtieth day following the date of the deposit by such State of its instrument of ratification or accession.

Article 15

DENUNCIATION

 1. Any Contracting Party may denounce this Convention by notification to the SecretaryGeneral. Such denunciation may also apply to some or all of the territories mentioned in Article 12.

 2. Denunciation shall take effect one year after the date of receipt of the notification by the SecretaryGeneral, except that it shall not prejudice cases pending at the time it becomes effective.

Article 16

SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES

 If a dispute should arise between Contracting Parties relating to the interpretation or application of this Convention, and if such dispute has not been settled by other means, it shall be referred to the International Court of Justice. The dispute shall be brought before the Court either by the notification of a special agreement or by a unilateral application of one of the parties to the dispute.

Article 17

RESERVATIONS

 1. In the event that any State submits a reservation to any of the articles of this Convention at the time of ratification or accession, the SecretaryGeneral shall communicate the text of the reservation to all States which are Parties to this Convention, and to the other States referred to in article 13. Any Contracting Party which objects to the reservation may, within a period of ninety days from the date of the communication, notify the SecretaryGeneral that it does not accept it, and the Convention shall not then enter into force as between the objecting State and the State making the reservation. Any State thereafter acceding may make such notification at the time of its accession.

 2. A Contracting Party may at any time withdraw a reservation previously made and shall notify the SecretaryGeneral of such withdrawal.

Article 18

RECIPROCITY

 A Contracting Party shall not be entitled to avail itself of this Convention against other Contracting Parties except to the extent that it is itself bound by the Convention.

Article 19

NOTIFICATIONS BY THE SECRETARYGENERAL

 1. The SecretaryGeneral shall inform all Members of the United Nations and the nonmember States referred to in article 13:

 (a) of communications under paragraph 3 of article 2;

 (b) of information received under paragraph 2 of article 3;

 (c) of declarations and notifications made under article 12;

 (d) of signatures, ratifications and accessions under article 13;

 (e) of the date on which the Convention has entered into force under paragraph 1 of article 14;

 (f) of denunciations made under paragraph 1 of article 15;

 (g) of reservations and notifications made under article 17.

 2. The SecretaryGeneral shall also inform all Contracting Parties of requests for revision and replies thereto received under article 20.

Article 20

REVISION

 1. Any Contracting Party may request revision of this Convention at any time by a notification addressed to the SecretaryGeneral.

 2. The SecretaryGeneral shall transmit the notification to each Contracting Party with a request that such Contracting Party reply within four months whether it desires the convening of a Conference to consider the proposed revision. If a majority of the Contracting Parties favour the convening of a Conference it shall be convened by the SecretaryGeneral.

Article 21

LANGUAGES AND DEPOSIT OF CONVENTION

 The original of this Convention, of which the Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited with the SecretaryGeneral, who shall transmit certified true copies thereof to all States referred to in article 13.

Schedule 4Convention countries

(subregulations 39B(1) and (2) and regulations 39BA and 48)

 

 

Algeria

Argentina

Austria

Barbados

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Brazil

Burkina Faso

Cape Verde

Central  African
Republic

Chile

Croatia

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

Ecuador

Estonia

Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro)

Finland

Former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia

France

Germany

Greece

Guatemala

Haiti

Holy See

Hungary

Israel

Italy

Luxembourg

Mexico

Monaco

Morocco

Netherlands

Niger

Norway

Pakistan

Philippines

Poland

Portugal

Republic of Ireland

Romania

Slovak Republic

Slovenia

Spain

Sri Lanka

Suriname

Sweden

Switzerland

Tunisia

Turkey

United Kingdom

Uruguay

 

Schedule 4AJurisdictions and convention countries

(regulations 39BA and 39D)

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

France

Germany

Greece

Italy

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

Portugal

Slovakia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Turkey

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Schedule 5Prescribed laws—definition of child welfare law in subsection 4 (1) of the Act

(subregulation 12B(2))

 

 

Item

Prescribed Law

State or Territory

1

Adoption Act 2000

New South Wales

2

Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998

New South Wales

3

Community Services (Complaints, Reviews and Monitoring) Act 1993

New South Wales

4

Guardianship Act 1987

New South Wales

5

Adoption Act 1984

Victoria

6

Children, Youth and Families Act 2005

Victoria

7

Education and Training Reform Act 2006

Victoria

8

Maintenance Act 1965

Victoria

9

Mental Health Act 1986

Victoria

10

Adoption Act 2009

Queensland

11

Child Protection Act 1999

Queensland

12

Maintenance Act 1965

Queensland

13

Mental Health Act 2000

Queensland

14

Public Health Act 2005

Queensland

15

Adoption Act 1994

Western Australia

16

Children and Community Services Act 2004

Western Australia

17

Family Court Act 1997

Western Australia

18

Mental Health Act 1996

Western Australia

19

Adoption Act 1988

South Australia

20

Children’s Protection Act 1993

South Australia

21

Family and Community Services Act 1972

South Australia

22

Mental Health Act 1993

South Australia

23

Adoption Act 1988

Tasmania

24

Children, Young Persons and Their Families Act 1997

Tasmania

25

Youth Justice Act 1997

Tasmania

26

Mental Health Act 1996

Tasmania

27

Adoption of Children Act

Northern Territory

28

Community Welfare Act

Northern Territory

29

Mental Health and Related Services Act

Northern Territory

30

Guardianship of Infants Act

Northern Territory

31

Adoption Act 1993

Australian Capital Territory

32

Children and Young People Act 1999

Australian Capital Territory

33

Guardianship and Management of Property Act 1991

Australian Capital Territory

34

Mental Health (Treatment and Care) Act 1994

Australian Capital Territory

35

Adoption of Children Ordinance 1932

Norfolk Island

36

Child Welfare Ordinance 1937

Norfolk Island

37

Infants’ Maintenance and Protection Ordinance 1913

Norfolk Island

38

Lunacy Ordinance 1932

Norfolk Island

 

Schedule 8Family violence order—prescribed laws of State or Territory

(regulation 12BB)

   

 

Item

Prescribed law

State or Territory

1

Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007

New South Wales

2

Property (Relationships) Act 1984

New South Wales

3

Family Violence Protection Act 2008

Victoria

4

Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 2012

Queensland

5

Restraining Orders Act 1997

Western Australia

6

Criminal Law (Sentencing) Act 1988

South Australia

7

Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) Act 2009

South Australia

8

Youth Court Act 1993

South Australia

9

Family Violence Act 2004

Tasmania

10

Justices Act 1959

Tasmania

11

Domestic Violence and Protection Orders Act 2008

Australian Capital Territory

12

Domestic and Family Violence Act 2007

Northern Territory

13

Domestic Violence Act 1995

Norfolk Island

Schedule 9Evidence relating to child abuse or family violence—prescribed State or Territory agencies

(regulation 12CD)

 

Item

Prescribed agency

State or Territory

1

Department of Community Services

New South Wales

2

NSW Police (established under section 4 of the Police Act 1990 (NSW))

New South Wales

3

Department of Human Services (Office for Children)

Victoria

4

Police Force (constituted under the Police Regulation Act 1958 (Vic))

Victoria

5

Department of Communities

Queensland

6

Queensland Police Service (established under section 2.1 of the Police Service Administration Act 1990 (Qld))

Queensland

7

Department for Community Development

Western Australia

8

Police Force (constituted under the Police Act 1892 (WA))

Western Australia

9

Department for Families and Communities

South Australia

10

South Australia Police (established under section 4 of the Police Act 1998 (SA))

South Australia

11

Department of Health and Human Services

Tasmania

12

Department of Police and Emergency Management

Tasmania

13

Department of Disability, Housing and Community Services

Australian Capital Territory

14

Australian Federal Police (constituted under section 6 of the Australian Federal Police Act 1979 )

Australian Capital Territory

15

Department of Health and Community Services

Northern Territory

16

Police Force of the Northern Territory (established under section 5 of the Police Administration Act (NT))

Northern Territory

Schedule 9AProfessional confidential relationship privilege—prescribed laws

(regulation 12CE)

 

 

Item

Prescribed law

State or Territory

1

Evidence Act 1995

New South Wales

Schedule 10Protected Names

(regulation 21AAA)

 

 

Item

Protected Name

1

Family Relationship Centre

2

Family Relationship Advice Line

3

Family Relationships Online

4

familyrelationshipadviceline.com

5

familyrelationshipadviceline.com.au

6

familyrelationshipadviceline.net

7

familyrelationshipadviceline.net.au

8

familyrelationshipadviceline.org

9

familyrelationshipadviceline.org.au

10

familyrelationshipcentre.com

11

familyrelationshipcentre.com.au

12

familyrelationshipcentre.net

13

familyrelationshipcentre.net.au

14

familyrelationshipcentre.org

15

familyrelationshipcentre.org.au

16

familyrelationshipcentres.com

17

familyrelationshipcentres.com.au

18

familyrelationshipcentres.net

19

familyrelationshipcentres.net.au

20

familyrelationshipcentres.org

21

familyrelationshipcentres.org.au

22

familyrelationshipsadviceline.com

23

familyrelationshipsadviceline.com.au

24

familyrelationshipsadviceline.net

25

familyrelationshipsadviceline.net.au

26

familyrelationshipsadviceline.org

27

familyrelationshipsadviceline.org.au

28

familyrelationshipscentre.com

29

familyrelationshipscentre.com.au

30

familyrelationshipscentre.net

31

familyrelationshipscentre.net.au

32

familyrelationshipscentre.org

33

familyrelationshipscentre.org.au

34

familyrelationshipscentres.com

35

familyrelationshipscentres.com.au

36

familyrelationshipscentres.net

37

familyrelationshipscentres.net.au

38

familyrelationshipscentres.org

39

familyrelationshipscentres.org.au

40

fral.com.au

41

fral.net.au

42

frc.org.au

43

familyrelationshipadviceline.gov.au

44

familyrelationshipcentre.gov.au

45

familyrelationships.gov.au

46

familyrelationship.gov.au

47

familyrelationship.com

48

familyrelationship.com.au

49

familyrelationship.net

50

familyrelationship.net.au

51

familyrelationship.org

52

familyrelationship.org.au

53

familyrelationships.com

54

familyrelationships.com.au

55

familyrelationships.net

56

familyrelationships.net.au

57

familyrelationships.org

58

familyrelationships.org.au

59

fralcms.gov.au

60

fralcms.com

61

fralcms.com.au

62

fralcms.net

63

fralcms.net.au

64

fralcms.org

65

fralcms.org.au

66

fral.org.au

67

fral.gov.au

68

frc.com.au

69

frc.net.au

70

frc.org

71

frc.com

72

frc.net

73

fral.org

74

fral.com

75

fral.net

76

familyrelationshipsadviceline.gov.au

77

familyrelationshipcentres.gov.au

78

familyrelationshipscentre.gov.au

79

familyrelationshipscentres.gov.au

80

familyrelationshiponline.com

81

familyrelationshiponline.com.au

82

familyrelationshiponline.net

83

familyrelationshiponline.net.au

84

familyrelationshiponline.org

85

familyrelationshiponline.org.au

86

familyrelationshipsonline.com

87

familyrelationshipsonline.com.au

88

familyrelationshipsonline.net

89

familyrelationshipsonline.net.au

90

familyrelationshipsonline.org

91

familyrelationshipsonline.org.au

92

familyrelationshiponline.gov.au

93

familyrelationshipsonline.gov.au

Schedule 11Protected Symbols

(regulation 21AAB)

 

 

Item

Symbol

1

2

3

4

FAMILY RELATIONSHIP CENTRE:  HELPING FAMILIES BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS

5

HELPING FAMILIES BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS

 

Endnotes

 

Endnote 1—Legislation history

This endnote sets out details of the legislation history of the Family Law Regulations 1984.

 

Number and year

Gazettal or FRLI registration date

Commencement
date

Application, saving and transitional provisions

1984 No. 426

20 Dec 1984

2 Jan 1985 (see r. 2)

 

1985 No. 183

31 July 1985

1 Aug 1985

1986 No. 140

26 June 1986

rr. 2 and 3: 1 July 1986
r. 4: 1 Sept 1986 Remainder: 26 June 1986

rr. 2, 3 and 4(3), (4)

1986 No. 393

12 Jan 1987

12 Jan 1987

1987 No. 85

27 May 1987

27 May 1987

1987 No. 175

31 Aug 1987

1 Sept 1987

1988 No. 42

24 Mar 1988

1 Apr 1988 (see Gazette 1988, No. S83)

1988 No. 44

30 Mar 1988

1 Apr 1988

1988 No. 164

30 June 1988

1 July 1988

1988 No. 165

30 June 1988

1 July 1988 (see Gazette 1988, No. S191)

1989 No. 8

13 Feb 1989

13 Feb 1989

1989 No. 53

14 Apr 1989

14 Apr 1989

1989 No. 74

4 May 1989

4 May 1989

1989 No. 155

30 June 1989

1 July 1989

1989 No. 205

7 Aug 1989

7 Aug 1989

1989 No. 235

5 Sept 1989

5 Sept 1989

1989 No. 326

30 Nov 1989

1 Dec 1989

r. 3

1990 No. 294

21 Sept 1990

21 Sept 1990

1990 No. 373

6 Dec 1990

6 Dec 1990

1991 No. 401

12 Dec 1991

27 Dec 1991 (see r. 1)

1991 No. 447(a)

19 Dec 1991

(see r. 1)

r. 6

1992 No. 33

7 Feb 1992

r. 5: 1 Apr 1992
Remainder: 7 Feb 1992

1992 No. 160

12 June 1992

12 June 1992

1992 No. 287

8 Sept 1992

8 Sept 1992

1992 No. 376

30 Nov 1992

30 Nov 1992

1992 No. 404

16 Dec 1992

16 Dec 1992

1994 No. 86

7 Apr 1994

7 Apr 1994

1994 No. 343

18 Oct 1994

18 Oct 1994

1995 No. 297

26 Oct 1995

1 Nov 1995

1995 No. 400

19 Dec 1995

19 Dec 1995

1995 No. 419

22 Dec 1995

1 Jan 1996

1996 No. 71

5 June 1996

11 June 1996

1996 No. 188

30 Aug 1996

1 Sept 1996

as amended by

 

 

 

1996 No. 201

11 Sept 1996

1 Sept 1996

1996 No. 253

26 Nov 1996

1 Dec 1996

rr. 3 and 6

1996 No. 265

11 Dec 1996

1 Jan 1997

r. 7

1997 No. 157(b)

30 June 1997

1 July 1997

1997 No. 232

10 Sept 1997

10 Sept 1997

1997 No. 251

24 Sept 1997

24 Sept 1997

1997 No. 376

24 Dec 1997

1 Jan 1998

r. 4

1998 No. 39

25 Mar 1998

25 Mar 1998

1998 No. 121

9 June 1998

9 June 1998

1998 No. 222

7 July 1998

7 July 1998

1998 No. 270

1 Sept 1998

1 Sept 1998

1998 No. 329

16 Dec 1998

16 Dec 1998

1999 No. 39

24 Mar 1999

24 Mar 1999

1999 No. 173

1 Sept 1999

1 Sept 1999

2000 No. 16

15 Mar 2000

15 Mar 2000

2000 No. 81

26 May 2000

1 July 2000

2000 No. 207

31 July 2000

31 July 2000

2000 No. 254

15 Sept 2000

15 Sept 2000

2001 No. 31

1 Mar 2001

1 Mar 2001

2001 No. 117

6 June 2001

6 June 2001

2001 No. 264

5 Oct 2001

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1: 5 Oct 2001
Remainder: 1 Jan 2002

2003 No. 339

23 Dec 2003

23 Dec 2003

2004 No. 319

25 Nov 2004

17 Dec 2004 (see r. 2)

2004 No. 370

23 Dec 2004

23 Dec 2004

2004 No. 371

23 Dec 2004

23 Dec 2004

2005 No. 207

19 Sept 2005 (see F2005L02673)

1 Oct 2005 (see r. 2)

2006 No. 128

15 June 2006 (see F2006L01760)

1 July 2006

2006 No. 256

6 Oct 2006 (see F2006L03252)

9 Oct 2006

2007 No. 82

16 Apr 2007 (see F2007L00988)

17 Apr 2007

2007 No. 212

23 July 2007 (see F2007L02256)

26 July 2007

2007 No. 293

27 Sept 2007 (see F2007L03678)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1: 28 Sept 2007
Remainder: 15 Oct 2007

2008 No. 104

20 June 2008 (see F2008L02125)

21 June 2008

2008 No. 182

22 Sept 2008 (see F2008L03471)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1: 1 Jan 2009
Schedule 2: 1 July 2009

2008 No. 258

17 Dec 2008 (see F2008L04634)

18 Dec 2008

2008 No. 259

17 Dec 2008 (see F2008L04631)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1: 18 Dec 2008
Schedule 2: 30 Mar 2009
Schedule 3: 18 Dec 2008 (see r. 2(2)(b))

2009 No. 17

5 Feb 2009 (see F2009L00262)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1:
6 Feb 2009
Schedule 2: 1 Mar 2009
Schedule 3: 1 Mar 2009 (see r. 2(c))

2009 No. 322

27 Nov 2009 (see F2009L04294)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1:
1 Dec 2009
Schedule 2: 1 Jan 2010 (see r. 2(b))

2010 No. 76

11 May 2010 (see F2010L01220)

1 Nov 2010 (see r. 2)

2010 No. 165

29 June 2010 (see F2010L01845)

1 July 2010

2010 No. 242

15 Oct 2010 (see  F2010L02720)

1 Nov 2010

r. 4

2010 No. 255

28 Oct 2010 (see F2010L02823)

29 Oct 2010

2010 No. 290

25 Nov 2010 (see F2010L03072)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1:
26 Nov 2010
Schedule 2: 1 Dec 2010 (see r. 2(b))

2011 No. 20

10 Mar 2011 (see F2011L00408)

rr. 1–3 and Schedule 1:
11 Mar 2011
Schedule 2: 11 Mar 2011 (see r. 2(b))
Schedule 3: 9 Dec 2011
(see r. 2(c))

2011 No. 120

30 June 2011 (see F2011L01364)

1 July 2011

2012 No. 9

23 Feb 2012 (see F2012L00394)

ss. 1–3 and Schedule 1 (items 3, 4): 24 Feb 2012
Schedule 1 (items 1, 2): 8 Mar 2012 (see s. 2(b))

s. 2 (b)(am. by 2012 No. 18, Sch. 1, Part 2 item 2)

as amended by

 

 

 

2012 No. 18

8 Mar 2012 (see F2012L00545)

8 Mar 2012

2012 No. 10

24 Feb 2012 (see F2012L00405)

[see s. 2 and Endnote 3]

2012 No. 50

20 Apr 2012 (see F2012L00903)

21 Apr 2012

2012 No. 211

31 Aug 2012 (see F2012L01818)

ss. 1–3 and Schedule 1: 1 Sept 2012
Schedule 2: 17 Sept 2012
Schedule 3: 12 Dec 2012
Schedule 4: [see s. 2(d) and Endnote 3]

2012 No. 278

11 Dec 2012 (see F2012L02391)

1 Jan 2013

51, 2013

11 April 2013 (see F2013L00649)

Schedule 1 (item 58): (c)

 

(a) Statutory Rules 1991 No. 447 was disallowed by the Senate on 3 March 1992.

(b) Statutory Rules 1997 No. 157 was disallowed by the Senate on 24 November 1997.

(c) Section 2 (item 2) of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia Legislation (Consequential Amendments) Regulation 2013 (No. 1) provides as follows:

 2 Each provision of this regulation specified in column 1 of the table commences, or is taken to have commenced, in accordance with column 2 of the table. Any other statement in column 2 has effect according to its terms.

 

Provision(s)

Commencement

Date/Details

2.  Schedule 1

Immediately after the commencement of Schedules 1 and 2 to the Federal Circuit Court of Australia Legislation Amendment Act 2012.

12 April 2013

 

Endnote 2—Amendment history

This endnote sets out the amendment history of the Family Law Regulations 1984.

 

ad. = added or inserted    am. = amended    rep. = repealed    rs. = repealed and substituted    exp. = expired or ceased to have effect

Provision affected

How affected

Part I

 

r. 1.....................

rs. 1998 No. 270

r. 3.....................

am. 1996 No. 71; 1999 No. 39; 2000 Nos. 81 and 207; 2001 No. 31; 2006 No. 128; 2007 No. 82; 2008 No. 182; 2010 Nos. 76, 242 and 290; 2012 No. 278

Note to r. 3 (1) .............

ad. 2000 No. 207

r. 3AA..................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 3A....................

ad. 1998 No. 222

 

am. 2010 No. 242

Part II

 

r. 4.....................

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 7.....................

rep. 1996 No. 71

 

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

rs. 2007 No. 82

 

am. No. 51, 2013

r. 7A....................

ad. 1991 No. 401

 

rep. 1996 No. 71

r. 7B....................

ad. 1992 No. 376

 

rep. 1996 No. 71

r. 8.....................

rs. 2006 No. 128; 2007 No. 82

r. 8A....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

r. 8B....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

r. 9.....................

rep. 1996 No. 71

r. 9A....................

ad. 1991 No. 401

 

rep. 1996 No. 71

r. 10....................

am. 1988 No. 164

r. 10A...................

ad. 1988 No. 165

 

am. 1989 No. 8; 1998 No. 329; 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 11....................

am. 1985 No. 183; 1987 No. 175; 1988 No. 44; 1989 No. 155; 1995 No. 419

 

rs. 1996 No. 188 (as am. by 1996 No. 201)

 

am. 1996 No. 253; 1998 No. 39; 2000 Nos. 16 and 207; 2001 No. 264; 2005 No. 207; 2006 Nos. 128 and 256; 2007 No. 293; 2010 Nos. 165 and 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 11A...................

ad. 2010 No. 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 11B...................

ad. 2010 No. 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 11C...................

ad. 2010 No. 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 12....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2010 No. 76

r. 12A...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1994 No. 86; 1996 No. 71; 1998 No. 329; 2000 No. 16; 2004 No. 370

r. 12AB..................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 12AC..................

ad. 2001 No. 264

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2008 No. 104

 

rep. 2012 No. 211

r. 12B...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1996 No. 71; 2006 No. 128

r. 12BA..................

ad. 1992 No. 287

 

am. 1992 No. 404; 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 1998 No. 329

 

am. 2001 No. 117; 2003 No. 339; 2004 No. 370; 2006
No. 128; 2011 No. 20

r. 12BB..................

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 12BC..................

ad. 2009 No. 17

 

am. 2009 No. 322; 2010 No. 255; 2012 Nos. 9 and 211

r. 12C...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2009 No. 17

 

am. 2009 No. 322; 2010 No. 255

r. 12CA..................

ad. 1989 No. 74

 

am. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2009 No. 17

 

am. 2009 No. 322; 2010 No. 255

r. 12CAA................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

 

ad. 2009 No. 17

 

rs. 2009 No. 17

 

am. 2009 No. 322

 

rs. 2010 No. 255

 

am. 2011 No. 20

r. 12CAB.................

ad. 2009 No. 17

r. 12CB..................

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2005 No. 207; 2011 No. 120

r. 12CC..................

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 12CD..................

ad. 2006 No. 128

r. 12CE..................

ad. 2007 No. 212

r. 12D...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1994 No. 343; 1996 No. 71

r. 13....................

am. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 1998 No. 329

r. 14....................

rs. 1988 No. 164; 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Heading to r. 14A...........

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 14A...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 15....................

am. 1988 Nos. 42 and 164; 1989 No. 74; 1996 Nos. 71
and 188

r. 15AA..................

ad. 2004 No. 319

r. 15AB..................

ad. 2009 No. 17

 

am. 2010 No. 255; 2012 Nos. 9 and 211

r. 15A...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2004 No. 370

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2012 No. 211

r. 16....................

am. 1985 No. 183; 1987 No. 175; 1988 Nos. 44 and 164; 1989 No. 155; 1995 No. 419; 1996 No. 188; 2000 Nos. 16 and 207; 2005 No. 207; 2006 No. 128; 2010 No. 165

 

rs. 2010 No. 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

Note to r. 16 (1) ............

ad. 1996 No. 188

 

rep. 2010 No. 242

r. 16A...................

ad. 1996 No. 188

 

am. 2010 No. 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 17....................

am. 2000 No. 207; 2006 No. 128

r. 17A...................

ad. 2012 No. 211

r. 17B...................

ad. 2012 No. 211

r. 17C...................

ad. 2012 No. 211

r. 17D...................

ad. 2012 No. 211

r. 18....................

am. 1999 No. 39; 2000 No. 207

r. 18A...................

ad. 1990 No. 294

 

rep. 2001 No. 31

r. 19....................

am. 1985 No. 183; 1986 No. 393; 1987 No. 175; 1988 No. 164; 1989 Nos. 74, 205 and 235; 1997 No. 251; 2004 No. 370

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2008 No. 259; 2011 No. 20; 2012 Nos. 9 and 211

r. 20....................

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 21....................

rs. 2000 No. 81

Part IIAAA

 

Part IIAAA...............

ad. 2006 No. 128

r. 21AAA................

ad. 2006 No. 128

r. 21AAB................

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

 

Part IIAA................

ad. 1996 No. 188

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 21AA..................

ad. 1996 No. 188

 

rs. 2010 Nos. 165 and 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

r. 21AB..................

ad. 1996 No. 188

 

am. 1996 No. 253; 2010 Nos. 165 and 242

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

Part IIAB

 

Part IIAB.................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Division 1

 

r. 21AC..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AD..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Division 2

 

r. 21AE..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AF..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AG..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AH..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AI..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AJ..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Division 3

 

r. 21AK..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AL..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AM.................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AN..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Part IIAC

 

Part IIAC.................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AO..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AP..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AQ..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AR..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

r. 21AS..................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Part IIA

 

Part IIA..................

ad. 1988 No. 42
rs. 1996 No. 265

Division 1

 

r. 21A...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

r. 21B...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1989 No. 74

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

r. 21C...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 21D...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1989 No. 74; 1992 No. 404

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

Division 2

 

r. 21E...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

Heading to r. 21F...........

rs. 2001 No. 117

r. 21F...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 2001 No. 117; 2004 No. 370

r. 21G...................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

r. 21H...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

r. 21I...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

r. 21J...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

r. 21K...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 2001 No. 117

r. 21L...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

Division 3

 

r. 21M...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

Division 4

 

r. 21N...................

ad. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 2004 No. 370; No. 51, 2013

Part III

 

Division 1

 

Heading to Div. 1 of
Part III

ad. 2000 No. 81
rs. 2004 No. 371

r. 22....................

rs. 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

Heading to r. 23............

rs. 2004 No. 371

r. 23....................

am. 1987 No. 85; 1996 No. 71; 1999 No. 39; 2004 No. 371; 2006 No. 128

r. 24....................

am. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2004 No. 371

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Division 2

 

Heading to Div. 2 of
Part III

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 24A...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2008 No. 258

r. 26....................

am. 1987 No. 85; 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 27....................

am. 1990 No. 373; 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 28....................

am. 1987 No. 85; 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

Note to r. 28 (3)............

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 28A...................

ad. 1987 No. 85

 

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2008 No. 258

r. 28B...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 28C...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

Note to r. 28C(3)............

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 28D...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2008 No. 258

r. 28E...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 29....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2008 No. 258

r. 29A...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 29B...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 29C...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 30....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 32....................

am. 2000 No. 81

r. 33....................

am. 1987 No. 85; 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 34....................

am. 2000 No. 81

r. 35....................

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 36....................

rs. 2000 No. 81

Note to r. 36 (3)............

ad. 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 37....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

r. 38....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2000 No. 254

r. 38A...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 38B...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 39....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

Note to r. 39 (3)............

ad. 2000 No. 207

Part IIIA.................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

rep. 2007 No. 293

r. 39A...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

rep. 2007 No. 293

Part IIIB

 

Part IIIB.................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 39B...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2007 No. 293

Note to r. 39B(1)............

rep. 2007 No. 293

r. 39BA..................

ad. 2007 No. 293

Part IIIC

 

Part IIIC.................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 39BB..................

ad. 2012 No. 50

 

am. 2012 No. 211

r. 39C...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

Note to r. 39C..............

rs. 2007 No. 293

r. 39D...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

rs. 2007 No. 293

Part IV

 

r. 40....................

am. 2000 No. 81

rr. 41–44.................

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 45....................

rs. 2000 No. 81

r. 46....................

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 47....................

am. 1985 No. 183

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 48....................

rs. 1995 No. 400

r. 49....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 50....................

am. 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

r. 50A...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2008 No. 258

r. 50B...................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 51....................

am. 1999 No. 39

r. 52....................

rep. 2000 No. 81

r. 53....................

rs. 2000 No. 81

 

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 54....................

am. 1999 No. 39; 2000 No. 81

r. 55....................

rs. 2004 No. 371

Part 4A..................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 1 of Part 4A............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 57....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 2 of Part 4A............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 58....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 58A...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 58B...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 58C...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Part 4B..................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 1 of Part 4B............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 59....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 59A...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 59B...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No,. 182

Div. 2 of Part 4B............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60....................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60A...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60B...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60C...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60D...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60E...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60F...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60G...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60H...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60J...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60K...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60L...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

am. 2007 No. 293

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60M...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 60N...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 3 of Part 4B............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 61A...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

am. 2007 No. 293

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 61B...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 61C...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Part 4C..................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 1 of Part 4C............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 61D...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Div. 2 of Part 4C............

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 61E...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Part V...................

rep. 1989 No. 326

Part 5

 

Heading to Part 5...........

rs. 2006 No. 128; 2008 No. 182

Part 5...................

ad. 1996 No. 71

Div. 1 of Part 5.............

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 57....................

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 58....................

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 62....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 62A...................

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

am. 2007 No. 293

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 63....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 64....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 65....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2001 No. 31

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

rep. 2008 No.182

Div. 2 of Part 5.............

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 59....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 60....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 1998 No. 270; 1999 No. 173

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 61....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 66....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 67....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

Heading to Div. 2A of Part 5
Renumbered Div. 2..........

2006 No. 128
rep. 2008 No. 182

Heading to r. 67A...........

rs. 2006 No. 128; 2008 No. 182

r. 67A...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128; 2008 No. 182

Heading to r. 67B...........

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 67B...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67C...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

Heading to r. 69D...........

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 67D...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2004 No. 370; 2006 No. 128

Heading to r. 67E...........

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 67E...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67F...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67G...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67H...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67I...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67J...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67K...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67L...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67M...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67N...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2004 No. 370

Note to r. 67N.............

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67O...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67P...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Heading to r. 67Q...........

rs. 2006 No. 128

r. 67Q...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Note to r. 67Q(5)............

am. 2006 No. 128

r. 67R...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67S...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

r. 67T...................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Div. 3 of Part 5.............

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 68....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2001 No. 31

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 69....................

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 70....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 71....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 72....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

Heading to Subdiv. 4
of Div. 3 of Part 5

rs. 2001 No. 31
rep. 2006 No. 128

Heading to r. 73............

rs. 2001 No. 31

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 73....................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

 

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 2001 No. 31

 

rep. 2006 No. 128

r. 74....................

rep. 1989 No. 326

rr. 75–77.................

am. 1986 No. 140

 

rep. 1989 No. 326

Part VI

 

r. 79....................

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 80....................

am. 2000 No. 207

r. 81....................

ad. 2000 No. 81

r. 82....................

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

rs. 2007 No. 82

Heading to r. 83............

rs. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

r. 83....................

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

 

rs. 2012 No. 278

Schedule 1AA.............

ad. 2010 No. 165

 

rs. 2010 No. 242

 

am. 2010 No. 290

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

Note 1 to Schedule 1AA.......

rep. 2010 No. 290

Note 2 to Schedule 1AA.......

rep. 2010 No. 290

Note to Schedule 1AA........

ad. 2010 No. 290

 

rep. 2012 No. 278

Schedule 1

 

Heading to Schedule 1........

rs. 1989 No. 74

Schedule 1................

am. 1988 No. 42; 1989 No. 74; 1996 No. 265; 1997 No. 376; 1999 No. 39; 2000 No. 207; 2001 Nos. 31
and 117

Heading to Form............

rep. 1989 No. 74

Form...................

1984 No. 426

Heading to Form 1..........

ad. 1989 No. 74

 

rep. 2010 No. 76

Form 1..................

am. 1999 No. 39; 2000 No. 207; 2001 No. 117

 

rep. 2010 No. 76

Form 1A.................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Form 1B.................

ad. 2010 No. 76

Form 2..................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265; 2001 No. 117; 2004 No. 370

Form 3..................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

 

rep. 2001 No. 117

Form 4..................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1989 No. 74

 

rs. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 2001 No. 117

Form 5..................

ad. 1996 No. 265

 

am. 1997 No. 376; 2001 No. 117

Form 6..................

ad. 2001 No. 31

Heading to Form 7..........

rs. 2006 No. 128

Form 7..................

ad. 2001 No. 31

 

am. 2006 No. 128

Form 8..................

ad. 2001 No. 31

Form 9..................

ad. 2001 No. 31

Schedule 1A

 

Heading to Schedule 1A.......

rs. 1996 No. 71

Schedule 1A..............

ad. 1988 No. 164

 

am. 1992 Nos. 33 and 160; 1996 No. 71

Schedule 2

 

Schedule 2................

am. 1985 No. 183; 1986 No. 393; 1987 No. 175; 1988 No. 164; 1989 No. 53; 1992 Nos. 33 and 160; 1995 No. 400; 1996 No. 71; 1997 No. 232; 1998 No. 121; 1999 No. 39

 

rs. 2000 No. 81

Schedule 4

 

Heading to Schedule 4........

rs. 2007 No. 293

Schedule 4................

am. 1995 No. 400; 1996 No. 71; 1999 No. 39

Schedule 4A

 

Schedule 4A..............

ad. 2007 No. 293

Schedule 5

 

Schedule 5................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1989 No. 74; 1992 No. 404; 1995 No. 297

 

rs. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 1996 No. 265; 1998 No. 329; 2001 No. 117; 2003 No. 339

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2011 No. 20

Schedule 6................

ad. 1988 No. 42

 

am. 1989 No. 74; 1996 No. 71; 2003 No. 339

 

rep. 2009 No. 17

Schedule 7................

ad. 1989 No. 74

 

am. 1996 No. 71

 

rep. 2009 No. 17

Schedule 7A..............

ad. 2007 No. 82

 

rep. 2008 No. 182

Schedule 8

 

Schedule 8................

ad. 1996 No. 71

 

am. 1996 No. 265; 1997 No. 251; 2003 No. 339; 2004 No. 370

 

rs. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2008 No. 259; 2011 No. 20

 

rs. 2012 No. 9

 

am. 2012 No. 211

Schedule 9

 

Schedule 9................

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

am. 2011 No. 20

Schedule 9A

 

Schedule 9A..............

ad. 2007 No. 212

Schedule 10

 

Schedule 10...............

ad. 2006 No. 128

Schedule 11

 

Schedule 11...............

ad. 2006 No. 128

 

 

Endnote 3—Uncommenced amendments

This endnote sets out amendments of the Family Law Regulations 1984 that have not yet commenced.

TransTasman Proceedings Legislation Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 1) (No. 10, 2012)

Schedule 1

1  Regulation 3, definition of filing fee

omit

14 or 16

insert

14, 16 or 17

2  Subregulation 11A (4)

substitute

 (4) However, the full fee is payable by the person if:

 (a) the fee is mentioned in item 17 of the table in Schedule 1AA; or

 (b) the full fee is less than the reduced fee.

3  Subregulation 11A (6)

after

item 14

insert

or 17

4  Schedule 1AA, after item 16

insert

17

Filing an application to register a New Zealand judgement under the TransTasman Proceedings Act 2010

$95

 

Family Law Amendment Regulation 2012 (No. 3) (No. 211, 2012)

Schedule 4

1  Paragraph 15A (1)(b)

omit

102PE

insert

102PE, 102QF or 102QG

 

Endnote 4—Misdescribed amendments [none]

There are no misdescribed amendments.