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Queensland – Conveyancing – Changing trustees

22 August 2018 by By Lawyers

A new section has been added to the By Lawyers Reference Guide 1001 Conveyancing Answers (QLD) dealing with changing trustees on the title of a property. This applies where the ownership of the property does not change, only the name of the trustee who holds the property for the trust.

The helpful addition covers the procedure required by the Titles Registry to change the name of the trustee on title, with reference to all  necessary forms and supporting documentation and a note regarding stamp duty consequences.

This new section has been added following a question sent to our Mentor service by a practitioner seeking clarification of the procedure in such a case. At By Lawyers we are always looking to enhance our publications to better assist our subscribers with the practical situations they encounter and we hope this is one example of that happening.

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Publication Updates, Queensland Tagged With: Appointing a new trustee, Change of trustee on title, Land titles, Queensland, Removing a trustee

Practice management for small law firms

17 August 2018 by By Lawyers

Practice management is both one of the most important and one of the most frequently neglected aspects of being a lawyer. The imperatives of doing the clients’ work too often mean that practice management takes a back seat and the future direction, expansion and profitability of the firm becomes an afterthought.

The 11 Habits of highly successful small law firms is an article by Richard Hugo-Hamman, the Executive Chairman of LEAP Legal Software, who has been helping small law firms to make more money for over 25 years. This very informative and inspirational article was recently published on LinkedIn and Richard has kindly permitted us to reproduce it within the Reference Materials folder in the By Lawyers Practice Management guide.

The article contains numerous valuable insights for anyone running a small law firm or thinking of doing so. Richard draws on his enormous international experience to distil the key habits that define highly successful small law firms.  In summary he concludes that:

  1. They are efficient;
  2. They enjoy practising law;
  3. They employ smart people and treat them really well;
  4. They have selected areas of law they like and focus on them;
  5. They dedicate time to building the firm as a business;
  6. They are early adopters of technology;
  7. They confront the challenges of getting paid and solve them;
  8. They have standard processes and procedures in place for all matters;
  9. They make compliance a natural consequence of running a firm well;
  10. They become experts in customer service;
  11. They understand their finances.

We highly recommend reading Richard’s article, which calls upon you to ACT!

Filed Under: Articles, Australian Capital Territory, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Practice Management, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: customer service, efficiency, finances, habits, law firms, practice management, practising law, procedures, smart, sucess

Leases – New precedent – Deed of amendment – unregistered lease

13 August 2018 by By Lawyers

As a result of some helpful feedback from one of our subscribers in Queensland, By Lawyers has added a new precedent ‘Deed of amendment – Unregistered lease’ to all our Act for Lessor matter plans across the country. This deed can be used to record an agreed amendment to an unregistered lease. It includes the following key provisions:

  • Variation details – to be set out in either the operative provisions or in a schedule to the deed;
  • A clause to extend any guarantor covenants in the original lease to the amendments;
  • A clause confirming the terms of the original lease as amended.

At By Lawyers we value feedback from our subscribers and often enhance our publications as a result.

This new Deed is the latest addition to our library of over 6,500 precedents…and counting!

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, New South Wales, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: Amendment, deed, Extention, Guarantor, leases, Variation

Trusts – New precedent – Deed of termination

9 August 2018 by By Lawyers

Following a subscriber request, we have added a new precedent to our Unit Trusts Guide, being a Deed of termination of trust.

There are many reasons a client may wish to terminate or dissolve a trust prior to the vesting date. There are also several methods of bringing a trust to an early end including:

  • complete distribution of the trust property by the trustee;
  • revocation by the settlor or trustee;
  • the beneficiaries or unit holders consent to end the trust; and
  • a Court ordered termination of trust.

When brining a trust to an end there are many important issues for the trustee to consider including:

  • the procedures prescribed by the original trust deed;
  • all possible creditors; and
  • all possible taxation consequences – particularly CGT arising from the sale of any trust assets or in specie distributions.

The need for a deed confirming the termination of the trust was suggested by one of our subscribers. Having considered the issue, By Lawyers have created a simple new precedent Deed poll, terminating the trust. This will allow practitioners to ensure that when their trustee clients terminate a trust it is evidenced and supported by proper documentation.

At By Lawyers we are always grateful for any feedback on our precedents and will happily accommodate subscriber requests for new documents where appropriate.

 

 

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: deed of termination of trust, deed of vesting, terminating a trust, trusts

SMSFs – New precedents – Retainer instructions

9 August 2018 by By Lawyers

We have published two new Retainer Instructions precedents in our Self Managed Superannuation Funds Guide.

The Retainer Instructions – Self managed superannuation fund is designed to assist practitioners when taking instructions from clients who are establishing a new fund. It covers all of the essential information required for the superannuation trust deed, including trustee and member details.

The Retainer Instructions – Existing self managed superannuation fund is designed to be used when a client wishes to make changes to an existing self managed superannuation fund that has already been established. It can be used to record instructions for a variety of situations including:

  • changing the fund trustee;
  • amending the rules of the fund;
  • making a new death benefit nomination or reversionary pension nomination; and
  • establishing a limited recourse borrowing arrangement.

Retainer instructions, which appear in “Getting the matter underway’ on all By Lawyers matter plans, are not only a useful precedent for file opening and matter management, they are a critical risk-management tool ensuring that all necessary information is obtained from the client and recorded.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: retainer instructions, self managed superannuation funds

Family Law – FCC costs increases

9 August 2018 by By Lawyers

There have been costs increases in the Federal Circuit Court for itemised costs in family law and child support proceedings, pursuant to Schedule 1 of the Federal Circuit Court Rules 2001.

The increases are for initiating applications and other hearing-related costs.

An alert has been added to the By Lawyers Children and Property settlement publications.

Filed Under: Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria Tagged With: children, costs, family law, federal circuit court, property settlement

Qld – PEXA settlements – Transfer duty

7 August 2018 by By Lawyers

New commentary has been added to the By Lawyers Purchase Guide and 1001 Conveyancing Answers Queensland to clarify the specific stamping requirements for PEXA settlements.

Stamping must commence in the PEXA Workspace so that an ELN Transaction Number generates. This allows OSRconnect to directly verify the transfer duty once stamping has been submitted.

If stamping has already occurred in paper then the ELN Transaction Number does not exist and the system is unable to verify transfer duty so settlement in PEXA is not possible. The transaction will then need to revert to a paper settlement.

See the heading ‘Duties and Grants’ in the By Lawyers Purchase Commentary for details on the procedure to be followed.

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Publication Updates, Queensland Tagged With: conveyancing, electronic conveyancing, ELN Transaction Number, PEXA, Queensland, transfer duty

New podcast – Domestic Violence update

7 August 2018 by By Lawyers

An update on the national enforcement scheme and domestic violence leave

The last week of July marked White Ribbon Night, an important date for raising awareness of the issues faced by victims of domestic violence.

Join LEAP’s National Marketing Manager, Claire James and By Lawyers Senior Consultant and Editor Brad Watts for a discussion on domestic violence laws across Australia.

The podcast discusses the National Recognition Scheme for Domestic Violence Orders and the new entitlement to domestic violence leave under Modern Awards.

Recent updates to the By Lawyers Domestic Violence and Employment Law Guides are highlighted.

White Ribbon Australia is an organisation that promotes the prevention of violence against women in Australia by engaging men to make women’s safety a man’s issue too.

 

Filed Under: Domestic Violence Orders, Federal, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: apprehended violence orders, domestic violence leave, Intervention orders, protection orders

Conveyancing – GST withholding – Letter to client

6 August 2018 by By Lawyers

GST withholding obligations for purchasers of new residential properties and some vacant land commenced on 1 July 2018.

The commentaries in all By Lawyers Conveyancing Guides – Sale and Purchase, for each state, have previously been amended to deal with the new GST withholding requirements. See the commentaries for details of when the new provisions apply.

Now included in the precedents for both Sale and Purchase is a new ‘Letter to client regarding GST withholding payment’ which explains to clients the new requirements and outlines for them the procedures involved in complying, whether they are a vendor or a purchaser.

This helpful precedent allows you to quickly and correctly advise the client on this important new development in conveyancing procedure, where applicable.

 

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Conveyancing and Property, Federal, New South Wales, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: conveyancing, conveyancing updates, gst withholding, Letter to client

Formatting of By Lawyers deeds and agreements

2 August 2018 by By Lawyers

Over the next month or so you will notice a minor change to the formatting of the By Lawyers precedent deeds and agreements.

By Lawyers has received and responded to feedback that the line under headings in deeds and agreements can be troublesome when users are customising precedents. The line under headings is currently a ‘top border’ applied to the 1st paragraph of the clause. We are swapping that line to a ‘bottom boarder’ of the heading paragraph, which is a more intuitive – and hopefully a less troublesome – place for the line formatting to be applied.

We all know formatting can be tricky. If you are having trouble please see our Tips and tricks for working with By Lawyers precedents, found in every publication, at the end of folder A. ‘Getting the matter underway’ on the matter plan. If you are still stuck – don’t hesitate to call or email us; our team is here to help you!

 

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Tips & Tricks, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: agreement, deed, formatting, precedents, tips, tricks

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