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Standardised bail conditions – Criminal QLD

18 December 2018 by By Lawyers

The Queensland Supreme Court has developed and made available standardised bail conditions, through its Streamlining Criminal Justice Committee and Rules Committee.

The document is not a practice direction or court form and has no formal application; it is simply an attempt by the court to provide examples of clearer proposed bail conditions so that clients granted bail can better understand their obligations. The document is a useful aid in the drafting of proposed orders when bail is sought and might assist practitioners and their clients in seeking and obtaining bail before the Magistrates Court.

See the By Lawyers Criminal Magistrates Court matter plan for a copy of the Standardised Bail Conditions – and helpful commentary on bail applications generally.

Filed Under: Criminal Law, Publication Updates, Queensland Tagged With: bail conditions, drafting bail orders, Queensland Supreme Court, standardised bail

Matter type changes

18 December 2018 by By Lawyers

There has been a technical change to the structure of our Defamation & Protecting Reputation and Neighbourhood Disputes publications. They have been changed from federal matter types to state-based matter types.

Subscribers may notice that the title of the Defamation publication now includes a state name. This is nominative only. The content of the Defamation publication is unchanged and remains the same across all states.

For state-based guides and precedents to be visible from existing matters, LEAP Desktop users will need to change their matter type from Other areas of law > Miscellaneous > Disputes to Other areas of law > Disputes.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Defamation and Protecting Reputation, Federal, Neighbourhood Disputes, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: defamation, LEAP matter types, Neighbourhood disputes, reputation

Keeping up to date – Podcast

15 November 2018 by By Lawyers

The law never stands still! Keeping up to date with changes in the law and practice is an ever present challenge faced by law firms.

Legislation and regulations change all the time, new cases are decided which impact the law, new practice directions are released by courts and changes in document lodgement processes are made by various authorities. All these and more need to be continually noted and understood, as they can affect the way a law firm conducts client matters and does business.

Just keeping the firm’s precedents current with changes in the law is a major task – which is not billable! Using precedents which are out of date exposes the firm to risk.

Using By Lawyers commentaries and precedents eases the burden upon firms and reduces their risk.

By Lawyers have a team dedicated to tracking changes in the law in each Australian jurisdiction and ensuring that all of our content is updated as those changes happen. Firms using the By Lawyers guides can be confident that they are using commentaries and precedents which are up to date with current legislation.

In our latest podcast our Managing Director Brad Watts and LEAP’s National Marketing Manager Claire James discuss the issues around keeping up to date with the law and how By Lawyers can help firms to stay on top of changes.

 

Filed Under: Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: changes in the law, Keeping up to date, legislation, podcast, updates

Electronic filing in the Magistrates Court – QLD

12 November 2018 by By Lawyers

The By Lawyers Magistrates Court QLD commentaries have been updated to reflect the recent changes which introduce electronic filing in the Magistrates Court, as a result of amendments to the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 1999 by the Uniform Civil Procedure and Other Legislation Amendment and Repeal Regulation (No. 1) 2018 and the subsequent repeal of 49 Practice Directions by Practice Direction No. 4 of 2018.

New Division 4, Part 1, Chapter 22 of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 1999 now sets out the rules for electronic filing. For court users to access eLodgement, it is necessary to contact CITEC Confirm to obtain a login.

The following documents are approved by the Principal Register for electronic filing in the Magistrates Court where the proceedings were commenced by a claim that was electronically filed:

  • Claim (Form 2)
  • Application (Form 9)
  • Statement of Claim (Form 16)
  • Request for default judgement (Form 25)
  • Default judgement (Form 26)
  • Affidavit (Form 46)
  • Enforcement Hearing Summons (Form 70)

By Lawyers Guides provide practitioners and support staff with up to date information to help make the practice of law easier.

Filed Under: Litigation, Miscellaneous, Publication Updates, Queensland Tagged With: By Lawyers, eFiling, electronic filing, practice direction, UCPR 1999

By Lawyers is going global!

8 October 2018 by By Lawyers

BY LAWYERS IS GOING GLOBAL

By Lawyers is excited to announce that in February 2019 we will be launching our online guides and precedents in the United Kingdom. Our UK team is already on the ground working on content with our UK authors – practising lawyers in the various UK jurisdictions.

In the UK, we will duplicate the successful Australian By Lawyers system to give UK lawyers the same real time access to law, matter plans and precedents that are an integral part of practice for their Australian colleagues.

We also wish to assure our Australian clients that it will be very much business as usual at home for our Australian editorial and publishing teams. We have appointed a new management team for By Lawyers Australia to ensure that our Australian publications continue to expand and improve – and remain always up to date, of course.

We have pleasure introducing Brad Watts as the new Managing Director of By Lawyers Australia.

Many of you know Brad already a contributing author and more recently our senior consultant. Brad will take the reigns of By Lawyers Australia from today, reporting to our Chief Executive Officer, Bobbi Young, Chief Operating Officer Danni Larney and the Global Editor in Chief Guy Dawson. Brad will be ably assisted by our new General Manager Paul Maher, previously Legal Editor, and the rest of our wonderful in-house team – plus the 45 practising lawyers across Australia who are our external authors and who help us keep our content relevant, practical and up to date.

We sincerely thank our Australian subscribers for their support over the last decade and we look forward to continuing to assist them to enjoy practice more.

By Lawyers is very proud to be taking our great Australian product to the world.

Filed Under: Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: By Lawyers, global

Combustible cladding – Conveyancing – QLD

28 September 2018 by By Lawyers

New regulations for combustible cladding

From 1 October 2018, amendments by the Building and Other Legislation (Cladding) Amendment Regulation 2018 (QLD) (the Regulation) to the Building Regulation 2006 (QLD) require owners of private buildings to undertake a three-stage process, managed through an online system, to identify whether a building is affected by combustible cladding.

Buildings covered by the Regulation are class 2-9 buildings of Type A or Type B construction for which building approval was given after 1 January 1994 and before 1 October 2018.

The Queensland Building and Construction Commission (QBCC) is the regulator responsible for the online checklist and register.

For further information on the three-stage rollout, see the QBCC website.

Duties of an owner on sale of affected property

A change of building ownership attracts statutory duties for building owners. If one or more of the relevant stages has been completed, an owner must give the new owner:

  • notice, in the approved form, about the extent to which the original owner has complied with Part 4A; and
  • copies of each document given by the original owner to the QBCC under Part 4A.

They must also give the QBCC a copy of the notice given to the new owner. Failure to do so may attract a maximum penalty of up to 20 penalty units.

The By Lawyers Conveyancing (QLD) publication has been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Publication Updates, Queensland Tagged With: By Lawyers, Combustible cladding, Duties of an owner on sale, Queensland Building and Construction Commission, sale

Supervised legal practice – A new podcast from By Lawyers and LEAP

26 September 2018 by By Lawyers

Many small firms have lawyers on the team who are still in their first two years of practice and therefore subject to a condition on their practising certificate that they may only engage in supervised legal practice.

Join our Senior Consultant and Editor Brad Watts and LEAP National Marketing Manager Claire James for a discussion on the ways in which proper supervision is important for both the firm and for junior lawyers and how it can be an essential element of running a successful small law firm, as a means to ensure delivery of high quality client outcomes and a vital risk management tool.

The President of the NSW Law Society recently highlighted the importance of senior practitioners meeting their supervisory obligations to junior practitioners who are subject to the restriction of supervised legal practice in their first 2 years. This podcast discusses the factors which impact – and sometimes impede – proper supervision in small legal practices and how the By Lawyers guides and precedents can help firms comply with their supervision requirements.

The podcast covers the general supervision requirements and also looks at some specific By Lawyers precedents which can assist firms with their supervision obligations, such as Retainer Instructions and To Do lists.

Oh, and with some help from John Grisham, we also learn why Australian lawyers are better than American lawyers!

 

Filed Under: Articles, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Practice Management, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Tips & Tricks, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: law firms, practice management, supervised legal practice, supervised legal training

QLD – QCAT – Online forms

3 September 2018 by By Lawyers

Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal will be progressively introducing an online forms facility, whereby parties are able to complete forms and documents online and submit them to the registry electronically. Available online forms can be accessed on the QCAT website.

The submitting party will receive an electronic sealed copy of the document filed and a confirmation letter with the filing date and application number to their nominated email address. Service copies can be printed from this electronic copy.

Parties must have the original of any documents filed electronically with them at any Tribunal proceeding.

See QCAT Practice Direction No 1 of 2016 for further information on the procedures for the completion and submission of forms online. Schedule A to this Practice Direction lists the applications, referrals or documents that may be filed electronically.

The By Lawyers QCAT Commentary has been updated to reflect this procedural change. As a reminder, the QCAT Guide is located within the Magistrates Court Publication.

Filed Under: Litigation, Miscellaneous, Queensland Tagged With: electronic filing, Online Form Facility, QCAT

Providing feedback to By Lawyers

29 August 2018 by By Lawyers

At By Lawyers we love to receive feedback from our subscribers. We are available via email: askus@bylawyers.com.au.

We always respond promptly to issues or suggestions about our guides and precedents.

For LEAP users there are two additional ways to provide feedback:

  • When in a LEAP matter, in the top right hand corner of the screen there is a blue Question Mark icon. Clicking on it reveals a drop-down box for the LEAP Community pages – one of these is ‘Help, support and feedback’.
  • When using any precedent in LEAP, there is  always a ‘Provide Feedback’ button in the ribbon at the top of the document, next to ‘Save to matter as PDF’. This opens to a feedback form where any issues or suggestions regarding the precedent can be provided. Where such feedback relates to a By Lawyers precedent, LEAP send it on to us and we will always address it promptly, directly with the user.

By Lawyers have often introduced new precedents or enhanced our commentaries as a result of subscriber suggestions. Whenever we see a need for the proposed additions or amendments we are happy to oblige, so as to benefit not only the firm that made the request but all of our other users as well. Sometimes our subscribers will not only identify an issue, such as a new precedent that might be needed, but they will also provide us with the resolution – a precedent they have developed themselves and are happy for us to publish for the assistance of others. The law is, after all, a noble profession and helping each other in a collegiate way is one of the hallmarks of being a lawyer.

Our goal at By Lawyers is to help our subscribers enjoy practice more. Responding to feedback is one of the ways we do it.

Filed Under: General User, LEAP User, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Tips & Tricks, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: feedback, precedents, suggestions, updates

Wills – Avoiding family provision claims

22 August 2018 by By Lawyers

Clients often require advice on avoiding family provision claims, when considering their estate planning.  New commentary has been added to the By Lawyers Wills Guides concerning the issues that should be considered when drafting a will in circumstances where a family provision claim against the estate of the testator appears possible.

This new commentary considers two common issues raised by testators when giving instructions for wills:

  1. How to leave their estate to their partner and prevent children or step children from making a claim on the estate; and
  2. How to leave the estate to their partner, whilst ensuring their children by a prior relationship are benefited on the death of that partner.

The commentary discusses some general principles from the cases and provides a range of likely outcomes for a number of classes of claimants under family provision legislation, which will assist practitioners when they are advising clients who are deciding how to distribute their estates to best avoid a potential claim.

In essence, while there is no absolute way of avoiding a family provision claim by an eligible person against a testator’s estate, appropriate consideration when preparing a client’s will can minimise the prospects or quantum of any claim, or at least ensure the testator has a clear understanding of the issues.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia, Wills and Estates Tagged With: Avoiding a family provision claim, By lawyers Guides, commentary, notional estate, testators family maintenance, Wills

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