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Family Law Rules – changes as of 1 March 2018

6 March 2018 by By Lawyers

As of 1 March 2018, changes came into effect in relation to consent orders in the Family Court.

The relevant By Lawyers publications, Children and Property Settlement, have been updated. The new forms have been linked to the matter plans and the commentary additions consist of the following:

Children changes

What was previously the annexure to consent parenting orders is now incorporated into the Application for Consent Orders form. A separate annexure is no longer required.

Three new forms were added for use in the Family Court.

The Notice of Child Abuse, Family Violence or Risk of Family Violence (Application for Consent Orders) must be filed with the Application for consent orders if parenting orders are sought and a party has said at item 25 of the Application there has been, or is a risk of child abuse, neglect or family violence.

The second form is the Notice of Child Abuse, Family Violence or Risk of Family Violence (Current Case). This form is now only for where cases are on foot: not for consent orders.

A third new form is the Submitting Notice. This form may be filed in Family Court proceedings if a party has been served with an Initiating Application, Response to Initiating Application, Reply or a Notice of Appeal, and does not want to contest the relief sought: Family Law Rules r 8.07.

Property Settlement changes

Previously, if the consent orders contained a provision for a superannuation splitting order, you had to ensure that a superannuation information form had been completed by the Trustee of the relevant super fund or a valuation had been obtained to the superannuation interest. However, as of 1 March 2018, a superannuation kit is no longer required. Proof of value of the interest is required to be filed with the Application.

Filed Under: Family Law, Federal, Publication Updates Tagged With: consent orders, family, family court, family law, family violence, notice

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