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Family Law regulations – FED

28 March 2025 by By Lawyers

The following changes to various regulations under the Family Law Act apply from 1 April 2025:

  • The Family Law Regulations 2024 replace the 1984 Regulations,
  • The Family Law (Superannuation) Regulations 2025 replace the 2001 Regulations, and
  • The Family Law (Family Dispute Resolution Practitioner) Regulations 2025 replace the 2008 regulations.

The new provisions are substantially the same as the old ones, but they are renumbered and have minor drafting changes to modernise them and support the operation of the Family Law Act after some recent amendments.

Regulation 53 of the 2024 Regulations now contains the prescribed Information Sharing Agencies for the purpose of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia being able to issue Information Sharing Orders.

The superannuation regulations support Parts VIIIB and VIIIC of the Family Law Act 1975 by prescribing:

  • the methods and factors for valuing superannuation interests;
  • the way in which superannuation payment flags and splits are put into effect; and
  • the information that trustees must provide to parties to property proceedings, and to couples negotiating a superannuation agreement.

The Family Dispute Resolution Practitioners Regulations provide for the accreditation, certification, and administration of such practitioners.

By Lawyers Divorce, Children, Financial Agreements and Property Settlement guides have been updated to reflect the new regulations as required.

The following FCFCOA forms have changed to update references to the regulations:

  • Consent order kit;
  • Application for consent orders;
  • Superannuation information kit;
  • s 60I Certificate of Dispute Resolution;
  • Application in arbitration;
  • Form 1 (previously Form 1A) – Request for service abroad of judicial documents and certificate;
  • Form 2 – (previously Form 2A) – Summary of the documents to be served;
  • Form 6 – Application for arbitration;
  • Form 7 – Application relating to relevant property or financial arbitration;
  • Form 8 – Application to register arbitration award;
  • Form 9 – Application to register decree affecting registered arbitration award;
  • Response to an application in an arbitration;
  • Subpoena in arbitration.

The new version of the s 60I certificate must be used after 1 April 2025 but certificates in the old form issued within 12 months will still be accepted.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: family law, Family Law regulations, FCFCOA

Subpoenas – FED

21 January 2025 by By Lawyers

A new Practice Direction concerning electronic inspection of material produced under subpoenas has come into force in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia.

It applies to family law proceedings filed in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 1) and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2) and replaces the Court’s Special Measures Information Notice – COVID-19 Electronic Subpoena Inspection.

The new practice direction is to be read together with the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Family Law) Rules 2021.

When seeking to inspect subpoenaed material, parties and legal practitioners must provide the following information in their request:

  • file number;
  • date and type of court hearing, conference or expert report;
  • specific material that access is being requested to, and whether it is ‘inspection only’ material (see below, as defined in rule 6.37(2)(b) of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Family Law) Rules 2021);
  • confirmation that a Notice of Request to Inspect has been filed;
  • whether electronic access to the material is sought;
  • a copy of photo identification or confirmation that they are a lawyer acting on behalf of a party, and the law firm at which they work.

Requests can be made by email. Each registry has a subpoena email address, as listed in the practice direction.

If the material to which access is sought is not inspection only material, and photocopy access is permitted, the registry will provide the material electronically if possible directly to the party or practitioner requesting the material, usually by email.

Inspection only material is:

  • child welfare records, criminal records, medical records and police records, as defined in the Rules; and
  • any other material excluded from photocopy access by order of the court.

Electronic access to inspection only material will not be permitted unless there are exceptional circumstances. Instead, the material needs to be inspected in person at a registry.

The practice direction also makes provision for the tendering of subpoenaed material at a hearing.

The By Lawyers Family Law Property Settlement and Children publications have been updated accordingly, along with the information about subpoenas in family law matters in the 101 Subpoena Answers reference materials.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: 101 Subpoena Answers, family law, family law rules, FCFCOA, inspection of documents, Subpoena, Subpoena to produce

Defaulters List – FED/NSW

4 November 2024 by By Lawyers

Family Law Defaulters List – Sydney Registry pilot

The Sydney Registry of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (FCFCOA) is operating a Defaulters’ List, as a pilot project, from October 2024.

The purpose of the list is to ensure compliance with the relevant Family Law Rules, and with any case management orders and directions made by the court in family law or child support proceedings.

The list is governed by the FCFCOA’s Family Law Practice Direction: Defaulters’ List, which:

  • sets out when a party is deemed to be in default;
  • provides that the onus is on the defaulting party to show cause why a sanction or penalty should not be applied; and
  • notes the powers of the court to sanction and penalise parties, including as to costs.

In considering a show cause application the court can consider:

  • the interests of the parties in the proceedings and the administration of justice by the court more generally;
  • whether the application for relief has been made promptly;
  • whether the failure to comply was intentional;
  • whether there is a good explanation for the failure;
  • the extent to which the party in default has complied with other rules, practice directions, court orders and any relevant pre-action protocol;
  • whether the failure to comply was caused by the party or their legal representative;
  • whether the trial date or the likely trial date can still be met if relief is granted;
  • the effect which the failure to comply had on each party; and the effect which the granting of relief would have on each party;
  • whether all parties consent to the step being taken after the specified time;
  • any other matter that the court consider relevant.

See the By Lawyers Family Law – Children and Family Law – Property Settlement commentaries for more information about dealing with breaches of orders.

Filed Under: Family Law, Federal, New South Wales, Publication Updates Tagged With: child support, children orders, defaulters list, family law, FCFCOA, parenting orders, property orders

Lighthouse project expands – FED

21 November 2022 by By Lawyers

From 28 November the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia’s Lighthouse Project expands to include all major registries. This follows additional funding provided in the recent federal budget.

The Lighthouse Project is a family-violence and risk-screening initiative for parenting and parenting/financial matters. The legislative framework was provided by the Family Law Amendment (Risk Screening Protections) Act 2020.

The project was initially available in the Adelaide, Brisbane, and Parramatta registries. It now expands to include Cairns, Canberra, Dandenong, Darwin, Hobart, Launceston, Melbourne, Newcastle, Rockhampton, Sydney, Townsville, and Wollongong registries.

The Lighthouse Project’s key points are:

  • early risk screening through a secure online platform;
  • early identification and management of safety concerns; and
  • assessment and triage of cases by a specialised team, who will provide resources and safe and suitable case management.

All cases identified as high-risk following the screening process are referred to a dedicated list in the court, known as the Evatt List. This is a judge-managed list that focuses on early information gathering and intervention through a dedicated support team in appropriate cases.

When commencing or responding to proceedings in the applicable registries, parties will be asked to provide an email and mobile number to enable risk screening. Parties will then receive an email with a secure link and login details to complete the risk screening process.

See the FCFCOA’s Lighthouse expansion – General fact sheet for more information.

The By Lawyers Family Law Children guide has information on The Lighthouse Project under Pre-action procedures in the commentary.

Practitioners are also reminded of the related information on family violence and cross-examination of parties in the Going to court folders, and the separate By Lawyers guides covering apprehended violence, intervention, and restraining orders for family and personal violence under various state laws.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Domestic Violence Orders, Family Law, Federal, Legal Alerts, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, Restraining orders, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: family law, FCFCOA, Lighthouse Project

Central Practice Direction – FED

8 November 2022 by By Lawyers

The Central Practice Direction: Family Law Case Management outlines the core principles applicable to family law proceedings and establishes a consistent national case management system in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia.

The practice direction requires that before filing an Initiating Application or a Response to an Initiating Application, lawyers give their clients a copy of the practice direction. There is a brochure on the matter plans in the By Lawyers family law publications, being a convenient PDF version of the practice direction, for this purpose.

A new precedent letter to the client has been added to the matter plans, enclosing the brochure and summarising its key points. This assists the practitioner to both comply with their obligations and explain the importance of the practice direction to their clients.

The Central Practice Direction incorporates the overarching purpose, enshrined in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia Act 2021 under which the court was created, to facilitate the just resolution of disputes as quickly, inexpensively, and efficiently as possible.

The ten core principles by which the overarching purpose is to be achieved are in summary:

  1. assessment of risk to vulnerable parties;
  2. rapid and inexpensive agreements;
  3. efficient use of the court’s resources;
  4. effective case management;
  5. active dispute resolution;
  6. adverse consequences for non-compliance;
  7. costs obligations;
  8. full disclosure between parties of all relevant information and focus on the real issues;
  9. hearing preparation; and
  10. resolution or determination of all cases promptly.

Following the principles, the Central Practice Direction makes it clear that the court expects parties and their lawyers to always:

  • minimise costs;
  • promptly give full and frank disclosure of information;
  • communicate productively; and
  • identify and seek to resolve the issues genuinely in dispute.

The Practice Direction prohibits aggressive and unnecessarily adversarial conduct. The safety of parties and children is a priority. Parties are not required to put themselves or their children at risk or compromise if they feel unsafe or believe abuse or violence affects their ability to negotiate fair or reasonable outcomes. The interests of children are always the court’s paramount concern.

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Family Law, Federal, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: Central Practice Direction - Family Law Case Management, family law, FCFCOA, practice direction

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