ByLawyers News and Updates
  • Publication updates
    • Federal
    • New South Wales
    • Victoria
    • Queensland
    • South Australia
    • Western Australia
    • Northern Territory
    • Tasmania
    • Australian Capital Territory
  • By area of law
    • Bankruptcy and Liquidation
    • Business and Franchise
    • Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation
    • Conveyancing and Property
    • Criminal Law
    • Defamation and Protecting Reputation
    • Employment Law
    • Family Law
    • Immigration
    • Litigation
    • Neighbourhood Disputes
    • Personal injury
    • Personal Property Securities
    • Practice Management
    • Security of Payments
    • Trade Marks
    • Wills and Estates
  • Legal alerts
  • Articles
  • By Lawyers

Drink driving – Criminal NSW

20 May 2019 by By Lawyers

In a small but significant change to drink driving laws, from 20 May 2019 offenders charged with first time, low range prescribed concentration of alcohol offences in NSW will be fined and have their licence suspended immediately for three months, rather than receive a Court Attendance Notice.

This results in such offenders needing to make a court election if they wish to ask the court to dismiss the charge and not record a conviction under s 10 Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999.

It will also be available to such offenders to make a licence appeal to the Local Court, if they seek to avoid or reduce the period of suspension. A licence appeal can only be made after conviction. The offender has a conviction recorded either by paying the fine in the first instance, or by the court imposing a conviction where a court election is made and no section 10 dismissal is granted.

This means that from now on lawyers are unlikely to see some first time, low range PCA offenders at all, or at least not until after they have paid their fine and are seeking to appeal their licence suspension. As a licence appeal is a slightly different advocacy exercise to a drink driving plea, these changes will involve a re-calibration of the approach to advising and appearing for clients in first time, low range drink driving cases.

For more information, including the full details of penalties for drink driving offences which appear in the Appendix at the end of the commentary, see the By Lawyers Traffic Offences guide.

Filed Under: Criminal Law, Miscellaneous, New South Wales, Traffic Offences Tagged With: Drink driving, driver licence, low range PCA, nsw traffic, Traffic offence

NSW – Traffic offences – Application to remove driver licence disqualification added

23 November 2017 by By Lawyers

Application to remove driver licence disqualification precedent has been added to the Traffic Offences matter plan as a result of the recent commencement of the Road Transport Amendment (Driver Licence Disqualification) Act 2017 which commenced on 28 October 2017.

Filed Under: Criminal Law, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Publication Updates Tagged With: application, disqualification, driver licence, traffic offences

NSW – Driver licence disqualifications – major changes

30 October 2017 by By Lawyers

ALERT: The Road Transport Amendment (Driver Licence Disqualification) Act 2017 commenced on 28 October 2017. It reduces some penalties for various driver licencing offence (notably it removes the automatic disqualification for driving unlicensed), it repeals the Habitual Traffic Offender declaration provisions entirely, it removes/amends mandatory minimum disqualifications and it creates an application to the Local Court to remove licence disqualifications after certain offence-free periods.

It is suggested that the last of these will likely create new/increased  work for lawyers in the Local Court.

Filed Under: Criminal Law, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Personal injury, Publication Updates Tagged With: disqualification, driver licence, habitual, mandatory minimum, offender, traffic

Subscribe to our mailing list

* indicates required
Preferred State

Connect with us

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 · Privacy Policy
Created and hosted by LEAP · Log in