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Succession Act – SA

17 December 2024 by By Lawyers

The Succession Act 2023 (SA) extensively reframes South Australian succession law.

The Act commences on 1 January 2025.

It consolidates and amends existing laws relating to:

  • wills;
  • probate and administration;
  • administration of deceased estates;
  • intestacy; and
  • family provision claims.

The Succession Act contains all legislative provisions, including new provisions, relating to those areas. The new Act repeals three existing Acts:

  • Administration and Probate Act 1919 (SA);
  • Inheritance (Family Provision) Act 1972 (SA);
  • Wills Act 1936 (SA).

Revised court rules and practice directions for probate, administration, contested wills, and family provision matters will follow the commencement of the new Act.

Key provisions of the new legislation include:

  • the right of certain classes of person to inspect a will of a deceased person;
  • the power of the Supreme Court to pass over applicants for a grant of probate or administration and appoint another person it considers appropriate;
  • the removal of the need for a grant to administer smaller estates;
  • additional court powers to hold executors and administrators to account;
  • codification of the application of assets to payment of debts and liabilities in solvent estates;
  • the increase to the preferential legacy for a surviving spouse of an intestate;
  • the addition of the children of first cousins of an intestate to the distribution on intestacy;
  • no entitlement of a spouse or domestic partner of an intestate to any part of an intestate’s estate if they are a party to:
    • a binding financial agreement; or
    • orders for distribution of property under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth);
  • primary consideration of the deceased’s wishes by the court when determining whether to make a family provision order;
  • narrowing eligibility for family provision claims to:
    • exclude former partners and spouses when financial matters have already been settled;
    • require adult stepchildren to demonstrate they:
      • are disabled and vulnerable;
      • were genuinely dependent on the deceased;
      • cared for or maintained the deceased; or
      • contributed to the estate, or their parent substantially contributed to the estate;
    • require grandchildren to satisfy the court that:
      • their parents died before the deceased; or
      • they were wholly or partly maintained by the deceased.

The By Lawyers Wills (SA), Probate (SA), Letters of Administration (SA), and Family Provision Claims (SA) publications have been updated accordingly. Further updates will follow when the new court rules are available.

Filed Under: Legal Alerts, Publication Updates, South Australia, Wills and Estates Tagged With: estates, family provision claims, letters of administration, succession law, Wills, wills and estates

Family violence visas – FED

17 December 2024 by By Lawyers

New eligibility criteria for visas under family violence provisions of the Migration Act commenced on 17 December 2024.

The provisions are intended to prevent secondary visa applicants from feeling compelled to remain in a violent relationship with the primary applicant for fear of an adverse visa outcome.

Violent behaviour can include physical abuse, sexual abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, social abuse, and financial abuse.

Eligibility for family violence visas

A secondary applicant must satisfy the primary criteria of being a member of a family unit at the time of being granted a visa.

A member of a family unit is a spouse or de facto partner, or a child or step-child of the primary visa applicant. A person over the age of 18 is deemed to be a child if they have not turned 23, and are dependent on the family head or the spouse or de facto partner of the family head. If they are over 23, they are still a member of the family unit if they are dependent due to a disability. A dependent grandchild or step-grandchild of the primary applicant is also a member of a family unit. 

Without the family violence provisions, a secondary visa applicant whose relationship with the primary visa applicant has broken down would no longer be a member of a family unit and would not satisfy the primary criteria to be granted a visa.

However, a secondary visa applicant who ceases to be a member of a family unit as a result of family violence perpetrated against them by the primary visa applicant can still apply for a visa under the family violence provisions. 

See the Types of domestic and family violence page of the Department of Home Affairs for further details. 

Evidence

A secondary visa applicant who claims family violence must provide evidence to the Department of Home Affairs about the primary applicant’s violent conduct towards them, and their prior relationship status. Evidence of family violence can include medical reports, police statements, court orders, convictions and a statutory declaration for a family violence claim.  See the Family violence provisions – Secondary applicants page of the Department of Home Affairs for further information. 

The family violence provisions have been expanded to include several new visa subclasses previously not covered:

  • Parent (Subclass 103);
  • Remaining Relative (Subclass 115);
  • Carer (Subclass 116);
  • Business Talent (Subclass 132);
  • Contributory Parent (Subclass 143);
  • Pacific Engagement (Subclass 192);
  • Aged Parent (Subclass 804);
  • Remaining Relative (Subclass 835);
  • Carer (Subclass 836);
  • Contributory Aged Parent (Subclass 864); and
  • Business Innovation and Investment (Subclass 888).

Publication updates

The By Lawyers Immigration publication has been updated to include the new visa types. 

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: By Lawyers Immigration publication, Immigration, visa application

Bail and sentencing – WA

17 December 2024 by By Lawyers

Bail and sentencing options have changed with commencement of the final tranche of amendments under the Family Violence Legislation Reform Act 2024.

From 18 December 2024 Bail authorities can impose electronic monitoring as part of bail and sentencing conditions for certain family violence offenders. In some cases,  an electronic monitoring condition must be applied.

Bail

Schedule 1 of the Bail Act 1982 creates a rebuttable presumption against bail being granted for certain offences. For offences in these categories, the presumption can be rebutted if there are exceptional reasons why the accused should not be kept in custody and the bail authority is satisfied that bail may properly be granted.

The amendments create new circumstances where the presumption applies, namely to family violence offences as defined in clause 3F(1A) and offenders who have been declared a serial family violence offender as defined in s 3 of the Act. In these cases, bail can only be granted by a judicial officer and must include an electronic monitoring condition.

Clause 3G creates a rebuttable presumption against bail for a person charged with a family violence offence (category A) as defined in the clause who is bound by a family violence restraining order that protects a victim of the current offence. In these cases, bail can only be granted by a judicial officer and must include an electronic monitoring condition. See Schedule 1 Part D and Part E.

Sentencing

When the court is sentencing:

  • for a family violence offence and the offender has been declared a serial family violence offender, if making a CSI the court must impose an electronic monitoring requirement unless satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances;
  • an offender who has been declared a serial family violence offender, if making a PSO the court must consider and may impose an electronic monitoring requirement for the term of the PSO, and must do so if the offence is a family violence offence;
  • an offender for a family violence offence or who has been declared a serial family violence offender, if when making a CBO or an ISO the court must impose an electronic monitoring requirement unless satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances.

Publication updates

The By Lawyers Magistrates Court – Criminal (WA) guide has been updated accordingly. See Bail and Sentencing.

For information on legislative amendments and publication updates arising from the previously commenced parts of the amending Act, see the By Lawyers Restraining Order (WA) guide, and our previous News & Updates post

Filed Under: Criminal Law, Legal Alerts, Publication Updates, Restraining orders, Western Australia Tagged With: Bail amendments, criminal, criminal procedure WA, Restraining orders, sentencing, sentencing amendments

Costs Court – VIC

17 December 2024 by By Lawyers

Changes to the way costs are calculated in the Costs Court have effect from 1 January 2025 following amendments to Order 63 of the Supreme Court Rules, and the Appendix that deals with costs.

The new scale of costs is based principally on time costing, whereas the previous scale was based principally on items of legal work or particular services.

If a client has been charged on the basis of hourly rates for work done, Section 1 of the scale applies and provides that the costs payable to the entitled party are to be allowed on the basis of reasonable hourly rates, up to the maximum hourly rate set out in the scale. There are three tiers of maximum rates according to a practitioner’s years of post-admission experience. There are no minimum rates.

The scale also sets out maximum hourly rates for work done by employees of a law practice who are not legal practitioners. The maximum rates for those employees depend on whether their work required legal skill or knowledge.

The maximum hourly rates are not an endorsement by the Court that those rates are reasonable in every case, or even in most cases, nor an invitation for practitioners to charge clients the maximum hourly rate and then claim that rate as between the parties.

All claims in the Costs Court must be reasonable. In setting rates to be charged to clients, and in making costs claims, practitioners must bear in mind their overarching obligation to ensure that costs are reasonable and proportionate: s 24 of the Civil Procedure Act 2010.

In assessing costs, the Costs Court will determine whether the amount claimed relative to the work performed is reasonable on an item-by-item basis. This means that the same hourly rate will not necessarily be allowed for all time spent or work done by the same individual.  The hourly rate allowed for a lawyer drafting a letter requiring legal skill may be higher than the rate for the same lawyer collating court books.

An application can be made for the Court to allow an increase to the maximum rates if there are special grounds arising out of the nature and importance, difficulty, or urgency of the case. If the matter runs to trial, then the trial judge will usually be best placed to determine such an application.

The time-based model does not mean that a law practice must charge their clients on an hourly basis. The scale provides for the assessment of costs where the entitled party has not been charged on the basis of hourly rates. In such a case, the Costs Court will allow a reasonable amount for the work.

The scale sets out what the court can consider in determining reasonableness for both time-based costing and alternative costing. These include the actual hourly rates charged to the client, the complexity of the matter, the time required, and the difficulty or novelty of the questions involved.

The By Lawyers Supreme Court – Acting for the Plaintiff (VIC) and Supreme Court – Acting for the Defendant publications have been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Legal Alerts, Litigation, Publication Updates, Victoria Tagged With: Costs Court, Legal costs, litigation, Litigation | Victoria, scale of costs

Foreign resident capital gains withholding – FED

16 December 2024 by By Lawyers

The foreign resident capital gains withholding tax regime is changing.

With effect from 1 January 2025:

  • the withholding rate increases from 12.5% to 15%; and
  • the $750,000 threshold is removed.

The foreign resident capital gains withholding regime applies to sales of taxable Australian property, including vacant land, residential property, and commercial property.

Until 1 January 2025, the regime applied only to properties valued at $750,000 or more. From 1 January it applies to all properties.

Buyers must withhold a percentage of the purchase price and pay it to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) instead of to the seller unless the seller is an Australian resident and provides evidence of that fact by way of a clearance certificate from the ATO. Sellers who are foreign residents can apply to the ATO for a variation notice and potentially reduce the amount required to be withheld.

Without a clearance certificate or a variation notice, all buyers must withhold the required percentage of the purchase price, even if the seller is an Australian resident.

For sales of taxable real property before 1 January 2025, the foreign resident capital gains withholding amount was 12.5%. From 1 January 2025 it is 15%.

The effect of these amendments is that ALL sellers of real property in all states and territories, whether Australian residents or foreign residents, need to apply for a clearance certificate from the ATO and provide it to the buyer before the completion of the sale. If they do not, then the buyer must pay 15% of the purchase price to the Australian Taxation Office on settlement. For those jurisdictions with electronic conveyancing, this may be able to be done via the settlement platform.

All By Lawyers publications that cover foreign resident capital gains withholding have been updated to reflect this change. This includes the Conveyancing and Property and Estates guides in each state and territory, Retirement Villages (NSW), and 1001 Conveyancing Answers (VIC), (NSW), and (QLD).

Filed Under: Conveyancing and Property, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia, Wills and Estates Tagged With: 1001 Conveyancing Answers, Capital gains tax, conveyancing, estates, Foreign resident CGT withholding, Purchase of Real Property, Sale of Real property

Family Law Act – FED

16 December 2024 by By Lawyers

The Family Law Amendment Act 2024 received assent on 10 December 2024. It makes significant changes to the Family Law Act, some of which have already commenced.

Amendments that commenced on 11 December 2024

The following amendments have commenced.

Commonwealth Information Orders

If a child’s whereabouts are unknown the court can issue an order requiring any person or a government department to provide the court with information about the child’s location. Such orders are known as location orders, as defined in s 67J. They include Commonwealth information orders (CIOs) which are directed to government departments or Commonwealth authorities.

A person with rights under a parenting order or otherwise concerned with the child’s care, welfare, and development is entitled to apply to the court for a location order : s 67K of the Family Law Act.

The requirements for, and content of, CIOs have been changed by the amending Act.

A CIO can require one-off or periodic searches for information for a period of up to 12 months.

In addition to location information, orders can require production of information about any violence to children and persons related to or having a connection with a child.

A new s 67NA defines persons related to a child for the purpose of a CIO to include anyone biologically related, and anyone involved with the child under a fostering arrangement.

CIOs override any provision of a Commonwealth or state law that prohibits the communication, disclosure, or publication of information or documents.

As with all orders, the child’s best interests are the court’s paramount consideration: s 67L.

Separation declaration requirements

Section 90XP of the Family Law Act has been amended in relation to the wording that must be included in a separation declaration under that section. These declarations are required to be made by at least one party to a marriage or de facto relationship, where the parties have entered into a superannuation agreement on separation.

There is no longer a requirement for these statements to mention that the parties have lived separately and apart for a continuous period of at least 12 months, and that there is no reasonable likelihood of cohabitation being resumed. The declaration under this section is now only required to state that the parties are married, or have lived in a de facto relationship, but are separated at the time of the declaration. Or, if a spouse is deceased, that they were separated at the date of death.

The sections of the Act referencing the low-rate cap for superannuation balances have been repealed.

Publication updates 

The full commentaries in the By Lawyers Family Law Children and Financial Agreements publications have been updated.

The Children matter plan now includes the following precedents:

  • Commonwealth Information Order – One-off location search;
  • Commonwealth Information Order – One-off location search plus violence information;
  • Commonwealth Information Order – Periodic location search;
  • Commonwealth Information Order – Periodic location search plus violence information.

The following precedents have been amended in the Financial Agreements matter plan:

  • Separation declaration pursuant to s90XP (superannuation split);
  • Superannuation agreement SMSF – After separation; and
  • Superannuation agreement – After separation.

Amendments that commence on 10 June 2025

Most of the changes under the amending Act concern the framework for property orders, the principles for conducting property and other proceedings, and the parties’ duty of disclosure. Those amendments commence 6 months after assent, being 10 June 2025. See Looking to the Future in the Reference Materials folder of all By Lawyers matter plans for more information about those changes.

By Lawyers Family Law publications will be updated when the further amendments commence.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: commonwealth information orders, family law, family law act, financial agreements, separation declaration requirements

AI Use Policy – All states

9 December 2024 by By Lawyers

An AI Use policy has been added to the By Lawyers 101 Staff Handbook.

The policy provides for the responsible use of artificial intelligence within a firm to enhance efficiency and productivity while safeguarding confidentiality, legal integrity, and professional standards.

The AI use policy requires adherence to strict quality assurance measures.

The 101 Staff Handbook is found in the Practice Management guide. This helpful publication provides policies for all aspects of managing a legal practice that firms can either adopt or amend as required.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Practice Management, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: AI Use policy, practice management

Trusts – FED

29 November 2024 by By Lawyers

Update to the definition of foreign person in discretionary trust deeds

The By Lawyers discretionary trust deeds and associated precedents have been updated to clarify the definition of foreign person.

The definition operates in the clauses that prohibit a foreign person from being a beneficiary, to avoid the imposition of surcharge duty and land tax.

See the discretionary trust deeds in the By Lawyers Trusts guide.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: discretionary trusts, Foreign beneficiaries, trusts

Estate applications – QLD

26 November 2024 by By Lawyers

A new system for lodging estate applications online in the Supreme Court has commenced.

New e-lodgment portal

The Queensland Courts and Tribunals Online Services Portal allows legal practitioners to electronically lodge estate applications such as for grants of probate, letters of administration, caveats, renunciations, reseals, and revocations of grants of probate.

The court’s Guide to e-lodgment for legal practitioners assists practitioners in navigating the new e-lodgment portal. A log-in using a digital identity is required.

Law firms using the portal need to create an organisation profile, which allows individual users to be added and managed. To add a new user to the portal as part of a firm, an Organisation Request Code has to be created and entered.

Staff of a law firm who log into the portal have to identify themselves as a legal practitioner, paralegal, legal assistant, or administrative officer.

The home page of the new e-lodgment portal offers three services:

  • Probate search;
  • Wills and Estates;
  • Document verification.

Probate search

Searches for applications or grants and to locate wills and estate records can be conducted through the portal.

Wills and Estates

The wills and estates service enables the user to prepare and submit estate applications which can be saved in draft.

When the application is ready, it can be submitted choosing which location the application should be filed in: Brisbane, Cairns, Townsville, or Rockhampton.

Supporting documents must be uploaded in pdf format, with a size limit of 20MB per document, before an application can be submitted.

Once the application is submitted, a reference number will issue.

The original will must be provided to the Registry together with a covering letter and the reference number.

The portal does not currently accept payments. An invoice will be sent out with a link to pay online.

When the registry has filed the application, a court file number will be allocated to the matter. This is a different number to the reference number.

The registry will confirm by email when the application has been lodged and filed, and the grant has been issued. A link to download the court sealed documents will also be provided.

Document verification

The document verification service is for financial institutions to verify the authenticity of court-issued documents provided to them by administrators or customers.

Publication updates

The By Lawyers Probate (QLD) and Letters of Administration (QLD) publications have been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Publication Updates, Queensland, Wills and Estates Tagged With: estates, letters of administration, probate, QLD Probate, Wills, wills and estates

500-page limit – PIC – NSW

25 November 2024 by By Lawyers

A 500-page limit applies for documents lodged with most applications or replies in the Personal Injury Commission (PIC) from 25 November 2024.

The Personal Injury Commission deals with disputes about injuries sustained in motor accidents and workplaces in New South Wales.

Intent of the rule

The new rule is intended to assist the Personal Injury Commission in conducting its proceedings justly, quickly, cost effectively and with as little formality as possible.

It will focus the parties’ attention on the real issues in dispute and will ensure that the process is efficient which will reduce process trauma for claimants.

The rule will also reduce the amount of highly personal information that is filed with the Commission which in turn will assist the Commission with its approach to cyber security.

Exclusions

The 500-page limit does not apply:

For motor vehicle accident claims, in certain:

  • medical review panel proceedings;
  • merit review panel proceedings;
  • merit review proceedings; and
  • settlement approvals;

For workers compensation claims, in certain:

  • expedited assessment proceedings;
  • medical appeal panel proceedings;
  • presidential proceedings; and
  • work injury damages and related proceedings.

Additional documents

If additional documents are relevant to the real issues in dispute in a matter before the PIC, they may be able to be lodged either by consent if the proceedings relate to medical assessments, or otherwise with leave on application.

Application to lodge additional documents

Applications to lodge additional documents must be made no later than 14 days before a medical assessment, or no later than 3 working days before any conference or hearing for any other dispute type. Only one application is permissible in proceedings unless leave is granted.

Transition period

There is no transition period. The new rule applies from 25 November.

The By Lawyers Workers Compensation (NSW) and Motor Vehicle Accidents (NSW) – Accidents from 1 December 2017 publications have been updated to reflect the new rule.

Filed Under: Litigation, Motor Vehicle Accidents, New South Wales, Personal injury, Publication Updates, Workers Compensation Tagged With: Motor vehicle accident, motor vehicle accident claims, NSW Workers Compensation, personal injury commission, workers compensation

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