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1 July – All states

1 July 2024 by By Lawyers

1 July updates are always a big focus for By Lawyers. Many Commonwealth and state legislative instruments provide for the scheduled indexing of relevant monetary amounts, and adjustments – usually increases – in government fees and charges. These regular updates occur at the start of every financial year and they impact many different areas of law, and therefore numerous By Lawyers publications.

The 1 July updates include court filing fees, lodgment fees for property dealings, land tax thresholds, minimum weekly compensation amounts for Workers Compensation, the cap on damages in defamation claims, and penalty units for fines for various criminal offences and civil penalty provisions.

By Lawyers always monitor and apply these changes for our subscribers. Each year we ensure our publications are amended where necessary to reflect 1 July updates.

We also monitor and update for similar legislative indexing and increases which occur regularly at other times of the year. These include 1 January changes and other specific dates for various areas of law as prescribed by some statutes.

The 1 July updates have been applied this year, or are in the process of being applied as they get released, to the following By Lawyers publications:

  • Conveyancing and Property;
  • Business and Franchise;
  • Criminal;
  • Defamation & Protecting Reputation
  • Wills;
  • Estates; and
  • Injuries.

Quite separately, there is also new and amending legislation from both Commonwealth and state parliaments that commences on 1 July. Substantive amendments have been made to a number of By Lawyers publications to account for the commencement of such legislation. Please see the various other By Lawyers News & Updates posts dealing with those updates.

By Lawyers is always up to date!

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Business and Franchise, Conveyancing and Property, Federal, Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia, Wills and Estates, Workers Compensation Tagged With: filing fees, fines, litigation, lodgement fees, property law, uniform defamation law, workers compensation

Fair Work Act – FED

1 July 2024 by By Lawyers

The final tranche of amendments to the Fair Work Act 2009, under the Fair Work Act Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2024 apply from 1 July 2024.

The changes introduce a detailed definition of casual employment, and a limited right to disconnect from work.

Casual employment under the Fair Work Act

Section 15A of the Fair Work Act 2009 sets out a general rule for when an employee is a casual, along with detailed guidance for applying the rule, and some exceptions to it.

The general rule is that an employee will be a casual if:

  • the employment relationship is characterised by an absence of a firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work; and
  • the employee would be entitled to a casual loading or a specific rate of pay for casual employees under the terms of a fair work instrument if the employee were a casual employee, or the employee is entitled to such a loading or rate of pay under the contract of employment.

Whether the relationship is characterised by an absence of a firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work is to be assessed on the basis:

  • of the real substance, practical reality, and true nature of the employment relationship; and
  • that a firm advance commitment can be in the form of the contract of employment or, in addition to it, in the form of a mutual understanding or expectation between the employer and employee.

The section sets out a number of considerations that may indicate the presence of such a commitment, and includes notes about how the commitment might be manifested.

There are also some specific exceptions to the general rule for academic and teaching staff at higher education institutions.

The right to disconnect under the Fair Work Act

Section 333M of the Act provides that an employee can refuse to monitor, read, or respond to contact, or attempted contact, from their employer or a third party if the contact relates to their work and is outside their working hours, unless the refusal is unreasonable.

Sub-section 333M(3) sets out a non-exclusive list of matters that can be taken into account to determine whether the refusal is unreasonable, including:

  • The reason for the contact;
  • How the contact is made and how disruptive it is to the employee;
  • The extent to which the employee is compensated to be available or to work outside their normal hours;
  • The nature of the employee’s role and their level of responsibility;
  • The employee’s personal circumstances including any family or caring responsibilities.

The right to disconnect is a workplace right for the purpose of s 341 of the Act, which means the adverse action protections apply.

The Fair Work Commission can deal with disputes about the right to disconnect, including by making orders to stop an employee refusing contact or an employer requiring it. Contravention of an order is a civil remedy provision under Part 4-1 of the Act for which fines apply.

The commentary and precedents in the By Lawyers Employment Law guide has been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Employment Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: employee, employer, employment agreement, Employment law, Fair Work Act, fair work commission

Defamation law – FED

1 July 2024 by By Lawyers

The long-awaited second stage of the uniform defamation law reform has effect in NSW and ACT from 1 July 2024 with all states except South Australia to follow.

The 2024 amendments include:

Exemption from liability as publishers for digital intermediaries

Division 2A of the various state Defamation Acts now provides an exemption from liability in defamation for digital intermediaries providing caching, conduit, or storage services, provided the intermediary did not:

  1. initiate the steps required to publish the matter;
  2. select any of the recipients of the matter;
  3. encourage the poster of the defamatory material to publish the matter;
  4. edit the content of the matter whether before or after it was published; or
  5. promote the matter whether before or after it was published.

The section applies regardless of whether the digital intermediary knew or ought reasonably to have known the digital material was defamatory.

Exemption from liability under defamation law for search engine providers

Like digital intermediaries, search engine providers are not liable for defamatory material comprising search results if the provider’s role is limited to providing an automated process for the search engine user to generate search results or hyperlinks, provided the search results or hyperlinks are not promoted or prioritised by the search engine provider receiving a payment or another benefit by or on behalf of a third party.

The provision applies regardless of whether the search engine provider knew or ought reasonably to have known the digital matter was defamatory.

Early determination of digital intermediary exemptions

The court must determine whether a defendant has a digital intermediary exemption and whether the exemption is established as soon as practicable before the trial commences unless there are good reasons to postpone the determination. In doing so, the court can make any orders it considers appropriate, including dismissing the proceedings, if satisfied the digital intermediary exemption is established.

Content of offer to make amends

The digital intermediary exemptions from liability as publishers include changes to offers to make amends, in that an offer in the case of digital matter may include an offer to prevent access to the defamatory material, instead of, or in addition to, other offers to make amends.

Orders for preliminary discovery about posters of digital matter

Defamation litigants can take advantage of pre-litigation or preliminary discovery to assist in identifying the poster of defamatory material or the physical or digital address of the poster, to allow concerns notices and court proceedings to be served.

Defence for publications involving digital intermediaries

This new defence is available if a digital intermediary has provided an accessible complaints mechanism for an aggrieved person to use and they use it to make a complaint.

The digital intermediary must have taken reasonable steps to prevent access to the defamatory material, either before the complaint was received, or within seven days of the complaint .

The complaints mechanism must be an easily accessible address, location or other mechanism available for the plaintiff to use to complain to the defendant about the publication of the digital matter concerned.

Defence available to content moderators

The defence of digital intermediary is available to defendants who moderate content by taking steps to detect or identify and remove, block, disable, or otherwise prevent access to content that may be defamatory, or that breaches the terms or conditions of the online service.

Orders against non-party digital intermediaries

If a plaintiff secures judgement, or an injunction, against a defendant in proceedings the court may order a non-party digital intermediary to take access prevention steps, or other steps the court considers necessary to prevent or limit the continued publication or re-publication of the matter complained of.

Such an order may require access prevention steps to be taken in relation to all or only some of the users of an online service.

The new section does not limit other powers of the court to grant injunctions or make other orders for access prevention.

Service of notices and other documents

The amendments expand the existing options for serving notices and documents to include messaging or other electronic communication to an electronic address or location indicated by the recipient.

Extension of the defence of absolute privilege

Concerns were raised in the Stage 2 review of the uniform defamation law about liability in defamation for someone reporting a person to the police for suspected wrongdoing, and then being sued by that person in defamation if the police dismiss the complaint for lack of evidence or absence of culpability on the part of the person reported.

These concerns were addressed by amending the absolute defence provisions of the uniform defamation law to provide that defamatory matter published to a police officer while the officer is acting in an official capacity is covered by the defence of absolute privilege.

Publication updates

The By Lawyers Defamation and Protecting Reputation publication has been updated accordingly.

Further updates to this publication for recent defamation cases are also imminent.

 

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Defamation and Protecting Reputation, Legal Alerts, Litigation, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: defamation, uniform defamation law

New visa – FED

3 June 2024 by By Lawyers

New visa

The Australian Government has introduced a new permanent residence visa, subclass 192, from 3 June 2024 which permits eligible nationals of participating Pacific Island countries and Timor-Leste to apply if they are first selected in a ballot.

The new visa is intended to deepen connections and improve mobility and migration opportunities within the Pacific region.  It gives priority to countries with limited permanent migration opportunities to Australia, or citizenship rights with New Zealand, France, and the United States.

Three thousand places are allocated for this visa annually.

To be eligible to apply for the visa, an applicant has to be randomly selected in a ballot. The ballots are intended to ensure a fair and transparent process and equal access to the new visa for persons of any skill level, occupation, and gender. A separate annual ballot is held for each country and registration through the Department of Home Affair’s ImmiAccount is required.

Eligibility requirements to take part in the ballot are:

  • aged between 18-45 years at the commencement of the ballot registration period for the particular country
  • hold a valid passport issued by one of the participating countries
  • be born in, or have a parent that was born in, any of the participating countries, or Australia, New Zealand, Samoa, or the Marshall Islands
  • not be a citizen of New Zealand
  • not already be registered in the same ballot
  • pay the registration fee of AUD25.

Registration for the ballot has to occur within the registration period when the ballot is open.

If an applicant is selected, they can submit their visa application within 120 calendar days.

To apply for the permanent visa, selected applicants have to be between 18 and 45 years old, have a formal job offer in Australia, and meet general visa requirements

More details can be found in the full commentary in the By Lawyers Immigration guide.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Federal, Immigration, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: Immigration, permanent visa, subclass 192, visa application

Employment Law updates – FED

29 May 2024 by By Lawyers

As employment lawyers would be well aware, employment law updates have been more frequent over the past few years than in any other area of law.

The By Lawyers Employment Law publication has been regularly updated since December 2022 to reflect the staged commencement of various changes under federal legislation including:

  • Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Secure Jobs, Better Pay) Act 2022
  • The Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023
  • Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes No. 2) Act 2024

The Fair Work Commission has also implemented new rules to reflect these legislative changes.

To ensure coherence and consistency following all these employment law updates, the Employment Law matter plans and commentary have recently been reviewed by our author and our in-house legal editorial team.

Topics covered in the commentary that have been amended and reviewed because of the various employment law updates include:

  • The Overview including the objects of the Fair Work Act;
  • Equal remuneration requirements;
  • Prohibitions on pay secrecy;
  • Anti-discrimination and special measures;
  • Prohibiting sexual harassment in connection with work;
  • Flexible work arrangements;
  • Extensions of unpaid parental leave;
  • Small business redundancy;
  • Regulating labour hire arrangements – fixed term contracts and labour hire orders;
  • Added protection against discrimination under the National Employment Standards, especially concerning family violence;
  • The definition of casual employee;
  • Casual conversion; and
  • Unfair contracts.

See the following By Lawyers News and Updates posts for more details of the changes:

  • Family and domestic violence leave – FED
  • Sexual harassment – FED
  • Paid parental leave – FED
  • Employment Law – FED
  • Employment Law – FED
  • Domestic violence leave – FED
  • Fixed term employment contracts – FED
  • Closing Loopholes – FED
  • New FWC rules – FED 

The By Lawyers Employment law publication is up to date with all changes.

Legislative amendments impacting various aspects of enterprise agreements are largely beyond the scope of the publication.

Relevant cases have also been added to 101 Employment Law Answers in the Reference Materials folder on the matter plan, including Feldschuh v Strong Room Technology Pty Ltd [2024] FWCFB 254, in which the Full Bench of the Fair Work Commission (FWC) held that a company director was not also an employee.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Employment Law, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: employment agreement, employment dispute, Employment law, Fair Work Act

Parenting – FED

6 May 2024 by By Lawyers

The significant changes to family law parenting applications have been incorporated into the By Lawyers Family Law – Children guide.

The amendments to the Family Law Act 1975 and to the Court’s procedure arise under two separate pieces of legislation that commenced on 6 May 2024.

Family Law Amendment Act 2023

The amendments to how parenting orders are dealt with under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), include:

  • a refined list of factors for the court to consider when determining the best interests of the child, the emphasis now being on safety and the needs of individual children;
  • a new subsection requiring the court to consider the right of an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child to connect with their family, community, culture, country, and language;
  • provisions that allow the court to consider any views expressed by the child to the independent children’s lawyer;
  • the repeal of the presumption of equal shared parental responsibility and the related equal time and substantial and significant time provisions;
  • codification of the rule in Rice & Asplund that requires a court to be satisfied that a significant change in circumstances has occurred before varying final parenting orders; and
  • a mechanism for the court to address repetitive filing of applications by one party to oppress another party.

Family Law Amendment (Information Sharing) Act 2023

  • establishes a new regime for information about domestic violence, children at risk, and firearms licensing to be shared between the relevant State authorities and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia;
  • makes such material admissible in parenting matters, subject to exceptions and safeguards, for example legal professional privilege.

Publication updates

The Family Law – Children publication has been updated accordingly. To assist firms in understanding and transitioning to the changes a heading Changes effective 6 May 2024 has been added under the Overview in the commentary and on the matter plan, with a concise summary of the amendments and a Comparative table detailing the changes to the Family Law Act effective 6 May 2024 has been added as an Appendix to the commentary, with a link on the matter plan.

101 Family Law Answers has also been updated. Summaries and links to Rice & Asplund and related cases remain available.

Our family law authors and our in-house team will continue to monitor developments and update the publications further as the jurisprudence around these amendments develops.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: children orders, family law, federal circuit and family court of Australia, parenting orders

Electronic signing and witnessing

15 April 2024 by By Lawyers

A new guide to Electronic Signing and Witnessing has been added to the Reference Materials folder on all By Lawyers matter plans.

This helpful resource summarises the various legislation across all Australian jurisdictions for electronic transactions.

Electronic signing and witnessing

In Australia under federal, state, and territory legislation many transactions can be completed electronically.

Electronic signing and witnessing are available for many, but not all, transactions and documents encountered in every day practice. However, the availability of electronic signing and witnessing is considerably different in each jurisdiction.

The new guide summarises the applicable legislation in each jurisdiction, to assist practitioners understand when electronic signing and witnessing is permitted and how it can be done.

Legislation

The Commonwealth took the lead on legislation to enable electronic transactions at the turn of the millennium, and sought the cooperation of the states in enacting consistent laws across all jurisdictions, resulting in the following legislation:

Electronic Transactions Act 2001 (ACT)

Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (CTH)

Electronic Transactions Regulations 2020 (CTH)

Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW)

Electronic Transactions Regulation 2017 (NSW)

Electronic Transactions (Queensland) Act 2001 (QLD)

Electronic Transactions (Northern Territory) Act 2000 (NT)

Electronic Transactions (Northern Territory) Regulations 2001 (NT)

Electronic Communications Act 2000 (SA)

Electronic Communications Regulations 2017 (SA)

Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (TAS)

Electronic Transactions Regulations 2021 (TAS)

Electronic Transactions (Victoria) Act 2000 (VIC)

Electronic Transactions (Victoria) Regulations 2020 (VIC)

Electronic Transactions Act 2011 (WA)

Electronic Transactions Regulations 2012 (WA)

Unfortunately, the approach taken by each state and territory to implementing this legislation differs to various degrees from both the Commonwealth’s and each other’s. Each jurisdiction has exempted certain statutes, transactions, and documents from the operation of their Act or some of its provisions.

This means that, while all jurisdictions have laws providing for electronic transactions and electronic signing, and some have laws for audio visual witnessing, the documents that can be electronically signed and the requirements for execution vary between the jurisdictions.

The new guide brings all of this information together for practitioners to easily reference in any matter they are working on.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Business and Franchise, Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation, Conveyancing and Property, Employment Law, Federal, Litigation, Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Practice Management, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia, Wills and Estates Tagged With: electronic signing and witnessing, Electronic transactions, remote execution procedure, remote signing and witnessing, signing, witnesses, Witnessing

New FWC Rules – FED

28 March 2024 by By Lawyers

The Fair Work Commission (FWC) rules regulate the work of the Fair Work Commission. They include the procedures and requirements for filing and serving applications and responses in the various types of employment disputes under the Fair Work Act 2009 (FWA) and other legislation.

There are new FWC rules from 27 March 2024. The Fair Work Commission Rules 2024 (Cth) have replaced the Fair Work Commission Rules 2013 (Cth).

The new FWC rules remake and update the 2013 version. In addition to updates for some amended legislation and procedure, the rules have been substantially rearranged and renumbered.

There are now separate chapters of the rules for matters under the FWA, matters under other legislation, and for appeals and reviews.

The chapter for FWA matters is divided into separate parts that accord with all the areas of possible applications under the Act:

  1. National Employment Standards;
  2. Modern awards;
  3. Enterprise agreements;
  4. Regulated labour hire arrangement orders;
  5. Transfer of business;
  6. Fixed term contracts;
  7. General protections, unfair dismissal and unlawful termination;
  8. Industrial action;
  9. Right of entry;
  10. Sexual harassment and bullying;
  11. Regulated workers; and
  12. Disputes under dispute procedures in awards, enterprise agreements et cetera.

The requirements for service of applications and responses are now all contained within Schedule 1 to the new rules.

The transitional provisions provide that the new FWC rules apply to new matters and to any step in a matter already on foot, however the FWC can order that the previous rules continue to apply to a matter already on foot.

The By Lawyers Employment Law guide has been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Employment Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, Litigation, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: employment dispute, Employment law, Fair Work COmmission Rules 2024, Fair Work Rules 2024

Changes to Family Law- FED

26 February 2024 by By Lawyers

A summary of the upcoming changes to family law parenting applications has been added to the By Lawyers Family Law – Children guide.

The upcoming changes to family law arise under two separate pieces of legislation, each of which commences on 6 May 2024.

Family Law Amendment Act 2023

Significant amendments to the way parenting orders are dealt with under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth), include:

  • a refined list of factors for the court to consider when determining the best interests of the child, the emphasis now being on safety and the needs of individual children;
  • a new subsection requiring the court to consider the right of an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child to connect with their family, community, culture, country, and language;
  • provisions that allow the court to consider any views expressed by the child to the independent children’s lawyer;
  • the repeal of the presumption of equal shared parental responsibility and the related equal time and substantial and significant time provisions;
  • codification of the rule in Rice v Asplund that requires a court to be satisfied a that significant change in circumstances has occurred before varying parenting orders; and
  • a mechanism for the court to address repetitive filing of applications by one party to oppress another party.

Family Law Amendment (Information Sharing) Act 2023

This legislation:

  • seeks to establish a regime for information about domestic violence, children at risk, and firearms licensing to be shared between the relevant State authorities and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (FCFCOA);
  • amends the Family Law Act to make such material admissible in children’s matters, subject to exceptions and safeguards, for example legal professional privilege.

The 2nd reading speeches note that the measures in each Act are complementary and that both Acts will work together to create a family law system that meets the needs of its users, centring the voices and best interests of children, and ensuring their safety and wellbeing is the paramount consideration.

Publication updates

By Lawyers guides are always up to date. When these changes to family law commence, the Family Law – Children publication will be updated accordingly. In the interim, the following content has been added to the guide too assist firms in understanding and transitioning to the changes:

  • an Alert has been added at the top of the matter plan and the top of the full commentary;
  • a heading Changes effective 6 May 2024 has been added under the Overview in the commentary and on the matter plan, with a concise summary of the amendments;
  • a Comparative table detailing the changes to the Family Law Act effective 6 May 2024 has been added as an Appendix to the commentary, with a link on the matter plan.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: family law, family law act, federal circuit and family court of Australia, parenting orders

Closing loopholes – FED

8 January 2024 by By Lawyers

A raft of amendments closing loopholes in the Fair Work Act 2009 commenced on 15 December 2023.

Changes introduced by the Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023 include:

Redundancy

Entitlement to a redundancy payment is extended to employees of a small business, being one with fewer than 15 employees, in certain circumstances. Generally, such businesses are exempt from the requirement to pay redundancy. However, under the amended provisions employees may be entitled if the employer is bankrupt or in liquidation and the  only reason the exemption applies is that the trustee in bankruptcy or liquidator has reduced the number of employees to less than 15.

Labour Hire

New provisions in Part 2-7A of the Fair Work Act restrict labour hire arrangements and allow employees or unions to apply to the Fair Work Commission for regulated labour hire arrangement orders prescribing the rates of pay that employees under a labour hire arrangement must receive. However, any such orders made by the Commission have no effect until at least 1 November 2024. The new provisions also introduce strict anti-avoidance provisions and civil penalties. There are some exceptions to the Commission’s ability to make orders, including for small business employers.

Unlawful dismissal

Prohibited grounds for dismissal are extended to include the fact that an employee is subject to domestic or family violence.

Right of entry

The amending Act removes the requirement for state or territory work health and safety representatives to hold an entry permit before entering a workplace. However that innovation is a subject to review after 9 months.

Further amendments

The Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023 includes additional provisions criminalising the intentional underpayment of wages by employers. Those provisions do not commence until 1 January 2025.

Publication updates

The By Lawyers Employment Law commentary has been updated accordingly. The amending Act’s further provisions will be the subject of additional publication updates in due course, as required.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Employment Law, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: employees, employers, Employment law, Fair Work Act, fair work commission

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