Property, Stock and Business Agents Act 2002 No 66
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have all commenced. See Historical notes Responsible Minister
Minister for Commerce jointly with the Minister for Fair Trading
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An Act to provide for the regulation of property, stock and
business agents; to repeal the Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act 1941; and for other
purposes. Part 1 Preliminary 1 Name of Act This Act is the Property, Stock
and Business Agents Act 2002. 2 Commencement This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by
proclamation. 3 Definitions (1) In this Act:agency
agreement means an agreement pursuant to which a licensee performs
or agrees to perform services in the capacity of a licensee. agent
means: (a) a real estate agent, or
(b) a stock and station agent, or
(c) a business agent, or
(d) a strata managing agent, or
(e) a community managing agent, or
(f) an on-site residential property
manager.
auction means
the sale of property by any means (including the Internet) whereby: (a) the highest, the lowest, or any bidder is the purchaser, or the
first person who claims the property submitted for sale at a certain price
named by the person acting as auctioneer is the purchaser,
or
(b) there is a competition for the purchase of the property in any way
commonly known and understood to be by auction.
auctioneer means any
person: (a) who, in the course of trade or business and at an auction (or a
proposed auction), acts as an auctioneer or sells for reward (whether monetary
or otherwise) any land or any livestock, or
(b) who sells or offers for sale, or who attempts to sell, any land or
any livestock by way of auction, or
(c) who engages in any other activity that is prescribed for the
purposes of this definition.
authorised
officer has the meaning given in Part 13
(Enforcement). business
agent means any person (whether or not the person carries on any
other business) who for reward (whether monetary or otherwise) carries on
business as an agent for exercising any of the following functions: (a) selling, buying or exchanging or otherwise dealing with or
disposing of businesses or professional practices or any share or interest in
or concerning or the goodwill of or any stocks connected with businesses or
professional practices,
(b) negotiating for the sale, purchase or exchange or any other
dealing with or disposition of businesses or professional practices or any
share or interest in or concerning or the goodwill of or any stocks connected
with businesses or professional practices,
(c) any other function that is prescribed by the regulations for the
purposes of this definition.
business
day means a day other than a Saturday, Sunday, public holiday or
bank holiday in New South Wales. business
salesperson means a person (other than the holder of a business
agent’s licence) who, as an employee of a business agent or a
corporation that employs a business agent: (a) exercises any function of a business agent, or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
certificate of
registration means a certificate of registration under this
Act. community managing
agent means a person who is engaged or appointed, for monetary or
other reward, to exercise functions of an association constituted for a scheme
under the Community Land Development Act
1989, or any other function that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition, but does not include: (a) the proprietor of a lot within the scheme, or
(b) the secretary or treasurer of the association,
or
(c) a person authorised by the management statement for the scheme to
exercise the functions of the secretary or treasurer of the association,
or
(d) a person who maintains or repairs any property that the
association is required to maintain and keep in
repair.
Compensation
Fund or Fund means
the Property Services Compensation Fund established and maintained under this
Act. Corporations
Act means the Corporations Act
2001 of the Commonwealth. de facto
partner, in relation to a person, means the other party to a de
facto relationship (within the meaning of the Property (Relationships) Act 1984)
with the person. Department means the Department
of Fair Trading. Director-General means the
Director-General of the Department. disqualified
person has the meaning given by section 16. employee
includes any person employed whether on salary, wages, bonus, commission,
fees, allowance or other remuneration and includes a director or member of the
governing body of a corporation. former
licensee means a person who has been but has ceased to be a
licensee. individual means a natural
person and does not include a corporation. land
includes: (a) a lot within the meaning of the Strata Schemes (Freehold Development) Act
1973 or the Community Land
Development Act 1989 and a leasehold interest in a lot within
the meaning of the Strata Schemes
(Leasehold Development) Act 1986, and
(b) shares that, under a company title scheme, entitle their holder to
the possession of premises.
licence means
a licence under this Act. licensee
means the holder of a licence under this Act. licensee’s records
has the meaning given in Part 8 (Records). livestock
includes horses, cattle, asses, mules, sheep, swine, camels, goats, alpacas,
ostriches, emus and such other animals as may be prescribed by the
regulations. livestock
transaction means the purchase, sale or other disposal of livestock,
whether or not an auction is involved. money includes
an instrument for the payment of money in any case where the instrument may be
paid into a bank or other authorised deposit-taking
institution. money received
for or on behalf of any person includes money held for or on behalf
of any person, whether originally received for or on the person’s behalf
or not. on-site residential
property manager means a person (whether or not the person carries
on any other business) who, for reward (whether monetary or otherwise): (a) carries on business as an agent for giving possession of
residential premises under a lease, licence or other contract,
or
(b) carries on business as an agent for collecting bonds, deposits,
rents, fees or other charges in connection with any such lease, licence or
other contract, or
(c) carries on any other business that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
Note. It is a condition of an on-site residential property
manager’s licence that the licensee may act as an on-site residential
property manager only in respect of premises at which the licensee’s
principal place of residence is situated and only if the licensee owns or has
a prescribed interest in that principal place of
residence. principal place of
business means, in relation to a licensee carrying on business at
more than one place, the place of business specified in the application for
the licence as the licensee’s principal place of
business. real estate
agent means a person (whether or not the person carries on any other
business) who, for reward (whether monetary or otherwise), carries on business
as an auctioneer of land or as an agent: (a) for a real estate transaction, or
(b) for inducing or attempting to induce or negotiating with a view to
inducing any person to enter into, or to make or accept an offer to enter
into, a real estate transaction or a contract for a real estate transaction,
or
(c) for the introduction, or arranging for the introduction, of a
prospective purchaser, lessee or licensee of land to another licensed agent or
to the owner, or the agent of the owner, of land, or
(d) collecting rents payable in respect of any lease of land and
otherwise providing property management services in respect of the leasing of
any land, or
(e) for any other activity in connection with land that is prescribed
by the regulations for the purposes of this
definition.
but does not include a person who carries on business as an auctioneer or
agent in respect of any parcel of rural land unless the regulations otherwise
provide.Note. This definition is not limited to the selling of land and extends
to an agent acting on behalf of the buyer of land (a buyer’s
agent).As noted in section 168 of the Retirement Villages Act 1999, a
selling agent acting on the sale of residential premises in a retirement
village must be licensed as a real estate agent under this
Act. real
estate salesperson means a person (other than the holder of a real
estate agent’s licence) who, as an employee of a real estate agent or a
corporation that carries on the business of a real estate agent: (a) exercises any of the functions of a real estate agent,
or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
real
estate transaction means the purchase, sale, exchange, lease,
assignment or other disposal of land, whether or not an auction is
involved. records
includes books, accounts and other documents. registered community
manager means a person (other than a community managing agent
holding a strata managing agent’s licence) who, as an employee of a
community managing agent or a corporation that carries on the business of a
community managing agent: (a) exercises any of the functions of a community managing agent,
or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
registered
manager means a registered strata manager, registered community
manager or registered on-site residential property manager. registered
on-site residential property manager means a person (other than the
holder of an on-site residential property manager’s licence or the
holder of a real estate agent’s licence) who, as an employee of an
on-site residential property manager or a corporation that carries on the
business of an on-site residential property manager: (a) exercises any of the functions of an on-site residential property
manager, or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
registered
person means the holder of a certificate of registration under this
Act. registered strata
manager means a person (other than the holder of a strata managing
agent’s licence) who, as an employee of a strata managing agent or a
corporation that carries on the business of a strata managing agent: (a) exercises any of the functions of a strata managing agent,
or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
residential
property has the same meaning as in Division 8 of Part 4 of the
Conveyancing Act
1919. rural land
means land that is used or apparently intended to be used for gain or profit
for grazing of livestock, dairying, poultry farming, viticulture, orcharding,
beekeeping, horticulture, the growing of crops of any kind, vegetable growing
or any other purpose declared by the regulations to be a rural
purpose. Statutory Interest
Account means the Property Services Statutory Interest Account
referred to in Part 11. stock and
station agent means a person (whether or not the person carries on
any other business) who, for reward (whether monetary or otherwise), carries
on business as an auctioneer of rural land or livestock or as an agent
for: (a) doing (where the land concerned consists of rural land) any one or
more of the things referred to in paragraphs (a)–(d) of the definition
of real
estate agent, or
(b) a livestock transaction, or
(c) inducing or attempting to induce or negotiating with a view to
inducing any person to enter into, or to make or accept an offer to enter
into, a livestock transaction or a contract for a livestock transaction,
or
(d) providing agistment for livestock or collecting of fees for the
agistment of livestock, or
(e) any other activity that is prescribed by the regulations for the
purposes of this definition.
stock and station
salesperson means a person (other than the holder of a stock and
station agent’s licence) who, as an employee of a stock and station
agent or a corporation that carries on the business of a stock and station
agent: (a) exercises any of the functions of a stock and station agent,
or
(b) engages in any other activity that is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
strata
managing agent means a person (whether or not such person carries on
any other business) who, for reward (whether monetary or otherwise), exercises
any function of an owners corporation within the meaning of the Strata Schemes Management Act 1996
or any other function that is prescribed by the regulations for the purposes
of this definition, not being: (a) a person who:(i) is the owner of a lot to which the strata scheme for which the
owners corporation is constituted relates, or
(ii) is the lessee of a lot to which the leasehold strata scheme for
which the owners corporation is constituted relates, or
(iii) is the secretary or treasurer of the executive committee of the
owners corporation,
and who exercises or performs only functions of the owners corporation
required, by the by-laws in force in respect of the strata scheme or leasehold
strata scheme for which the owners corporation is constituted, to be exercised
or performed by the secretary or treasurer of that executive committee or of
the owners corporation, or
(b) a person who maintains or repairs any property for the maintenance
or repair of which the owners corporation is
responsible.
trust
account means a trust account required to be kept under this
Act. (2) Where a person carries on business as a business agent and also
carries on business as an agent for the collection of instalments of principal
or interest payable under bills of sale given in respect of businesses or
professional practices or under contracts for the sale on terms of businesses
or professional practices, a reference in this Act to any such person acting
as, or carrying on the business of, a business agent includes a reference to
that person carrying on business as an agent for the collection of those
instalments. (3) Where a person carries on business as a real estate agent and also
carries on:(a) business as an agent for the collection of instalments of
principal or interest payable under mortgages of land or under contracts for
the sale on terms of land, or
(b) business as an agent for the collection of amounts payable in
relation to any premises to a company by a person who is the holder of shares
in the company and who, by reason of the person’s holding those shares,
is entitled to possession of those premises, or
(c) the business of arranging for the erection of buildings for or on
behalf of other persons,
a reference in this Act to any such person acting as, or carrying on the
business of, a real estate agent includes a reference to that person carrying
on business as an agent for the collection of those instalments or amounts or
to that person carrying on the business of so arranging for the erection of
buildings. (4) Where a person carries on business as a stock and station agent
and also carries on business as an agent for the collection of instalments of
principal or interest payable under mortgages of rural land or under contracts
for the sale on terms of any such land, a reference in this Act to any such
person acting as, or carrying on the business of, a stock and station agent
includes a reference to that person carrying on business as an agent for the
collection of those instalments.
4 Regulations may exempt persons and activities from
Act (1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
exempting a specified person, or a person who is a member of a specified class
of persons, from the operation of all or specified provisions of this Act in
respect of any act or omission by the person in the person’s capacity as
agent:(a) for a specified class of persons, or
(b) in respect of a specified class of activities,
or
(c) in respect of activities involving a specified class of
property.
(2) The regulations may make provision that is necessary or convenient
in connection with an exemption under subsection (1), including provisions for
or with respect to any of the following:(a) imposing liabilities on a person (not necessarily the agent
concerned) in respect of pecuniary loss suffered by a person because of a
failure by the agent to account for money or other valuable property entrusted
to the agent or an employee of the agent in the course of activities to which
an exemption under this section applies,
(b) requiring the disclosure of information to the Director-General in
connection with the activities of a person pursuant to an exemption under this
section,
(c) requiring the obtaining of insurance, including professional
indemnity insurance and fidelity guarantee insurance, in connection with the
activities of a person pursuant to an exemption under this
section,
(d) requirements as to the holding of money on behalf of a party to a
transaction in connection with which a person acts as agent pursuant to an
exemption under this section,
(e) disclosures to be made by a person acting pursuant to an exemption
under this section,
(f) regulating the payment of commission and other remuneration in
connection with the activities of a person pursuant to an exemption under this
section,
(g) the placing of limitations on the authority of a person to act as
agent pursuant to an exemption under this section,
(h) the auditing of compliance with conditions and requirements
imposed by the regulations under this section,
(i) modifying the operation of any provision of this Act in its
application to the activities of a person pursuant to an exemption under this
section,
(j) the payment of fees to the Director-General in connection with an
exemption under this section.
(3) The regulations under this section may also create offences
punishable by a penalty not exceeding 100 penalty units for any contravention
of the regulations under this section or conditions or requirements imposed by
those regulations. (4) Nothing in this section affects the generality of section 230 (2)
(g).
5 Exemptions from Act (1) This Act does not require a licence to be held by, and does not
require a certificate of registration to be held by any person in their
capacity as employee of, any of the following:(a) a Minister of the Crown whether a Minister of the State of New
South Wales or of the Commonwealth,
(b) any Government Department of the State of New South Wales or the
Commonwealth (including any statutory corporation representing the
Crown),
(c) a council within the meaning of the Local Government Act
1993,
(d) any public authority prescribed by the
regulations,
(e) any officer or employee of the Crown or of any such Minister,
department, corporation, council or authority in the exercise of his or her
functions as such officer or employee,
(f) the Public Trustee, the Protective Commissioner or any executor,
administrator, trustee, liquidator, official receiver, trustee in bankruptcy
of a bankrupt’s estate, trustee under a composition or scheme of
arrangement or under a deed of arrangement or under a deed of assignment, or
manager of an estate appointed under the Protected Estates Act 1983, in the
exercise of functions as such,
(g) any person for the purposes of any sale made of Crown lands or
other Crown property or for the purposes of any sale of any property made by
virtue of any writ or process issued out of any Court or made in obedience to
any process issued by any Court or judge or justice for the recovery of any
fine, penalty or award, or under any rule, order or decree of any competent
Court or made pursuant to the Impounding Act
1993,
(h) a receiver appointed under this Act, in the exercise of the
receiver’s functions under this Act,
(i) the New South Wales Land and Housing
Corporation,
(j) the New South Wales Department of Housing,
(k) the Office of Community Housing of the Department of
Housing,
(l) the Aboriginal Housing Office,
(m) a registered community housing provider within the meaning of the
Housing Act 2001, or an
organisation for the time being registered under Part 5 of the Aboriginal Housing Act
1998,
(n) a person or organisation, or a person or organisation of a class,
prescribed by the regulations as not requiring a
licence.
(2) This Act does not prevent any person for the time being entitled
to practise as an Australian legal practitioner from exercising any function
that, had this Act not been enacted, the person might lawfully have exercised
as an Australian legal practitioner. (3) An exemption under subsection (1) (f) that allows a person to
carry on a business lawfully without a licence expires 3 months after the
management of the business vests in the person. (4) This Act does not apply to a sale by auction made for the purposes
of or in the course of a fundraising appeal within the meaning of the Charitable Fundraising Act 1991 if
the appeal is made, and the proceeds of the sale are applied, in accordance
with that Act. (5) This Act does not require a business agent or a business
salesperson to hold a business agent’s licence or a certificate of
registration under this Act if:(a) the person holds an Australian financial services licence under
the Corporations Act, or
(b) the person is an authorised representative of a financial services
licensee within the meaning of Chapter 7 of the Corporations
Act.
(6) This Act does not require a corporation to hold a corporation
licence in order to act as or carry on the business of (or advertise, notify
or state that the corporation acts as or carries on the business of or is
willing to act as or carry on the business of) a business agent if:(a) the corporation holds an Australian financial services licence
under the Corporations Act, or
(b) the corporation is an authorised representative of a financial
services licensee within the meaning of Chapter 7 of the Corporations
Act.
6 Notes Notes included in this Act do not form part of this
Act. Part 2 Licences and certificates of registration Division 1 Requirement for licence or certificate of
registration 7 (Repealed) 8 Agents required to be licensed (1) A natural person must not act as or carry on the business of (or
advertise, notify or state that the person acts as or carries on the business
of or is willing to act as or carry on the business of):(a) a real estate agent, unless the person is the holder of a real
estate agent’s licence, or
(b) a stock and station agent, unless the person is the holder of a
stock and station agent’s licence, or
(c) a business agent, unless the person is the holder of a business
agent’s licence, or
(d) a strata managing agent or community managing agent, unless the
person is the holder of a strata managing agent’s licence,
or
(e) an on-site residential property manager, unless the person is the
holder of an on-site residential property manager’s licence or a real
estate agent’s licence.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) A natural person is not entitled to bring any proceeding in any
court or tribunal to recover any commission, fee, gain or reward for any
service performed by the person:(a) as a real estate agent, unless the person was the holder of a real
estate agent’s licence, or employed the holder of such a licence, at the
time of performing the service, or
(b) as a stock and station agent, unless the person was the holder of
a stock and station agent’s licence, or employed the holder of such a
licence, at the time of performing the service, or
(c) as a business agent, unless the person was the holder of a
business agent’s licence, or employed the holder of such a licence, at
the time of performing the service, or
(d) as a strata managing agent or as a community managing agent,
unless the person was the holder of a strata managing agent’s licence,
or employed the holder of such a licence, at the time of performing the
service, or
(e) as an on-site residential property manager, unless the person was
the holder of an on-site residential property manager’s licence or a
real estate agent’s licence, or employed the holder of such a licence,
at the time of performing the service.
(3) This section applies to a natural person whether or not the person
is a member of a partnership. (4) The fact that a particular activity is an activity for which more
than one class of licence may be appropriate does not require the holding of
more than one type of licence so long as at least one of the licences that is
appropriate to the activity is held. (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is not considered to
carry on a business merely because the person is a member of a partnership
that carries on that business.Note. Subsection (5) makes it clear that “silent” partners
are not required to be licensed.
9 Corporations require corporation licence (1) A corporation must not act as or carry on the business of (or
advertise, notify or state that the corporation acts as or carries on the
business of or is willing to act as or carry on the business of) an agent
unless the corporation holds a corporation licence.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) A corporation is not entitled to bring any proceeding in any court
to recover any commission, fee, gain or reward for any service performed by
the corporation as an agent unless the corporation was the holder of a
corporation licence at the time of performing the
service.
10 Salespersons and managers require certificate of
registration (1) A person must not do any of the following things unless the person
is the holder of a certificate of registration:(a) be or remain as a real estate salesperson, stock and station
salesperson, business salesperson or registered manager in the employment of a
person licensed (or required to be licensed) under this
Act,
(b) represent, whether expressly or impliedly, that the person is a
real estate salesperson, stock and station salesperson, business salesperson
or registered manager in the employment of a person licensed (or required to
be licensed) under this Act,
(c) act as or exercise any of the functions of a real estate
salesperson, stock and station salesperson, business salesperson or registered
manager.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) An employed licensee is not required to hold both a certificate of
registration and a licence to allow the licensee lawfully to do anything that,
in the absence of this section, the licensee could lawfully do as the holder
of the licence.
11 Registered salespersons and managers required to be
employed and supervised by licensee (1) The holder of a certificate of registration must not act as or
exercise any of the functions of a real estate salesperson, stock and station
salesperson, business salesperson or registered manager unless the person does
so as an employee of the holder of a licence under this
Act. (2) The holder of a certificate of registration must not exercise any
of the functions of a real estate salesperson, stock and station salesperson,
business salesperson or registered manager unless he or she does so under the
supervision of a person who:(a) is the licensee in charge of the place of business at which the
employee is employed, and
(b) is the holder of a licence that allows the licensee to exercise
that function without contravening this Act.
(3) The holder of a certificate of registration must not act as an
auctioneer. (4) Despite subsection (3), the holder of a certificate of
registration as a stock and station salesperson may auction livestock if the
holder conducts the auction as an employee, and under the immediate and direct
supervision, of the holder of the appropriate licence (as referred to in
subsections (1) and (2)). Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
12 Production of licence or certificate of
registration A licensee or registered person must on request at the premises on
which the licensee carries on business or exercises functions as a licensee or
registered person produce his or her licence or certificate of registration to
an authorised officer and permit the authorised officer to inspect the licence
or certificate of registration.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units. 13 Lending of licence or certificate of registration
prohibited (1) The holder of a licence or certificate of registration must not
let out, hire or lend the licence or certificate of registration to any other
person or permit any other person to use the licence or certificate of
registration.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) A court that convicts a person for an offence under this section
is to order the cancellation of the licence or certificate of registration
concerned. The licence or certificate of registration is cancelled on the
making of the order.
Division 2 Eligibility, qualifications and
disqualification 14 Eligibility for licence or certificate of
registration (1) A natural person is eligible to hold a licence only if the
Director-General is satisfied that the person:(a) is at least 18 years of age, and
(b) is a fit and proper person to hold a licence and each person with
whom the person is in partnership in connection with the business concerned is
a fit and proper person to hold a licence, and
(c) has the qualifications required for the issue of the licence,
and
(d) is not a disqualified person, and
(e) has paid such part of any contribution or levy payable under Part
10 (Compensation Fund) as is due and payable on the granting of the
licence.
(2) A corporation is eligible to hold a corporation licence only if
the Director-General is satisfied that:(a) the corporation is a fit and proper person to hold a licence,
and
(b) each director of the corporation is a fit and proper person to
hold a licence, and
(c) the corporation, and each officer (within the meaning of the
Corporations Act) of the corporation, is not a disqualified person,
and
(d) at least one of the directors of the corporation holds a licence
that a natural person is required to hold to carry on the business that the
corporation carries on or proposes to carry on, and
(e) the corporation has paid such part of any contribution or levy
payable under Part 10 (Compensation Fund) as is due and payable on the
granting of the licence.
(3) A person is eligible to hold a certificate of registration only if
the Director-General is satisfied that the person:(a) is an individual who is at least 16 years of age,
and
(b) is a fit and proper person to hold a certificate of registration,
and
(c) has the qualifications required for the issue of a certificate of
registration of the type concerned, and
(d) is not a disqualified person.
Note. The grounds of disqualification in section 16 (1A) do not
disqualify a person from eligibility to hold a certificate of
registration. (4) The requirement that at least one of the directors of a
corporation holds a licence that a natural person is required to hold to carry
on the business that the corporation carries on or proposes to carry on does
not require a director to be accredited as an auctioneer under section 21
merely because the corporation carries on or proposes to carry on the business
of an auctioneer.
15 Qualifications for licence or certificate of
registration (1) The qualifications required for the issue of a licence or
certificate of registration are such qualifications as the Minister may
approve from time to time by order published in the
Gazette. (2) Without limiting the Minister’s power to approve
qualifications, the Minister may approve qualifications by reference to any
one or more of the following:(a) the completion of a course of study,
(b) the completion of a period of training in a particular
activity,
(c) the attainment of a standard of competency in a particular
activity,
(d) satisfaction of professional development
requirements.
(3) Qualifications may be approved for a limited range of activities
specified in the approval, so as to enable a person who has those
qualifications to be granted a licence or certificate of registration subject
to conditions that limit the person to exercising the functions of licensee or
certificate of registration holder in relation to that limited range of
activities only. (4) A person does not have the qualifications required for the reissue
or restoration of a licence or certificate of registration (as provided by
section 26) if the person failed to comply with any condition of the licence
or certificate of registration that required the holder to undertake
professional development, continuing education or a course of study, unless
the Director-General otherwise determines in a particular
case.
16 Disqualified persons (1) A person is a disqualified person for the purposes of this Act if
the person:(a) has a conviction in New South Wales or elsewhere for an offence
involving dishonesty that was recorded in the last 10 years, unless the
Director-General has determined under subsection (2) that the offence should
be ignored, or
(b) has a conviction that was recorded in the last 5 years for an
offence under section 13 (Lending of licence or certificate of registration
prohibited) of this Act or section 41 (Licensee not to lend licence) of the
Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941, unless the Director-General has determined under
subsection (2) that the offence should be ignored, or
(c)–(e) (Repealed)
(f) is a mentally incapacitated person, or
(g) is disqualified from holding a licence, certificate of
registration or other authority under a corresponding law or is the holder of
such a licence, certificate of registration or other authority that is
suspended, or
(h) is the holder of a licence, permit or other authority that is
suspended under legislation administered by the Minister or is disqualified
from holding a licence, permit or other authority under legislation
administered by the Minister, or
(i) is in partnership with a person who is a disqualified person,
or
(j) is for the time being declared to be a disqualified person under
Part 12 (Complaints and disciplinary action), or
(k) is a corporation that is the subject of a winding up order or for
which a controller or administrator has been appointed, or
(l) has failed to pay a contribution or levy payable by the person
under Part 10 (Compensation Fund) and the failure continues,
or
(m) has failed to pay an amount due as a debt to the Crown by way of
recovery of an amount paid out of the Compensation Fund and the failure
continues, or
(n) has failed to pay any monetary penalty payable by the person under
Part 12 (Complaints and disciplinary action) or has failed to comply with a
direction given by the Director-General under that Part, and the failure
continues, or
(o) has failed to provide the Director-General with an auditor’s
report that the person is required to provide under this Act on the audit of
the records and documents relating to any money held in a trust account kept
by the person under this Act, or has failed to lodge a statutory declaration
as required by section 113, unless the Director-General determines that in the
circumstances that failure should not disqualify the person,
or
(p) is in breach of any provision of this Act or the regulations that
is prescribed by the regulations as a disqualifying
breach.
(1A) A person is also a disqualified person for the purposes of this
Act (except for the purposes of eligibility to hold a certificate of
registration) if the person:(a) is an undischarged bankrupt, or
(b) at any time in the last 3 years was an undischarged bankrupt,
applied to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent
debtors, compounded with his or her creditors or made an assignment of his or
her remuneration for their benefit, or
(c) is, or was at any time in the last 3 years, concerned in the
management of, or a director of, an externally-administered body corporate
(within the meaning of the Corporations Act) except in a case of the voluntary
winding up of the body corporate, or
(d) is a person:(i) who was, at any time in the last 3 years, concerned in the
management of, or a director of, a body corporate that, within 12 months after
the person ceasing to be such a person or director, became an
externally-administered body corporate (within the meaning of the Corporations
Act) except in the case of a voluntary winding up of the body corporate,
and
(ii) who failed (while concerned in the management of, or a director
of, that body corporate) to take all reasonable steps to avoid the body
corporate becoming an externally-administered body
corporate.
(2) The Director-General may determine that an offence committed by a
person should be ignored for the purposes of this section because of the time
that has passed since the offence was committed or because of the triviality
of the acts or omissions giving rise to the
offence. (2A) The Director-General may, in any case that the Director-General
thinks it appropriate to do so, determine that a suspension or
disqualification from holding a licence, permit or other authority under
legislation administered by the Minister (as referred to in subsection (1)
(h)) is to be ignored for the purposes of this
section. (2B) The Director-General may exempt a person from the operation of
subsection (1A) (a), (b) or (c) by:(a) certifying, in the case of exemption from subsection (1A) (a),
that the Director-General is satisfied that the person took all reasonable
steps to avoid the bankruptcy concerned, or
(b) certifying, in the case of exemption from subsection (1A) (b),
that the Director-General is satisfied that the person took all reasonable
steps to avoid the bankruptcy or other financial difficulties concerned,
or
(c) certifying, in the case of exemption from subsection (1A) (c),
that the Director-General is satisfied that the person took all reasonable
steps (while concerned in the management of, or a director of, the body
corporate) to avoid the body corporate becoming an externally-administered
body corporate.
(2C) Subsection (1A) (d) does not operate to make a person a
disqualified person unless the Director-General has served a notice on the
person giving the person the opportunity to make oral or written submissions
to the Director-General within a period (not being less than 14 days)
specified in the notice with respect to the grounds on which the person
believes he or she took all reasonable steps to avoid the body corporate
becoming an externally-administered body corporate and the Director-General is
satisfied that the person failed to take all such
steps. (2D) In determining for the purposes of subsection (2B) or (2C) what
reasonable steps could have been taken by a person to avoid a particular
outcome, the Director-General is to have regard to the steps that could have
been taken by the person from the time that the financial difficulties that
gave rise to the outcome first arose. (3) In this section:corresponding law
means a law of another Australian jurisdiction that is declared by the
Minister from time to time by order published in the Gazette to be a law that
corresponds to this Act. Editorial
note. For orders under this subsection, see Gazette No 74 of 16.4.2004,
p 2127.
Division 3 Application and issue procedure 17 Application to licences of Licensing and Registration (Uniform Procedures) Act
2002 (1) The Director-General may grant the following licences and
certificates of registration for the purposes of this Act:(a) real estate agents’ licences,
(b) stock and station agents’ licences,
(c) business agents’ licences,
(d) strata managing agents’ licences,
(e) on-site residential property managers’
licences,
(f) corporation licences,
(g) certificates of registration as a real estate
salesperson,
(h) certificates of registration as a stock and station
salesperson,
(i) certificates of registration as a business
salesperson,
(j) certificates of registration as a registered
manager.
(2) Part 2 of the Licensing and
Registration (Uniform Procedures) Act 2002 (the applied Act)
applies to and in respect of a licence or certificate of registration, subject
to the modifications and limitations prescribed by or under this
Act. (3) For the purpose of applying Part 2 of the applied Act to a licence
or certificate of registration:(a) the Director-General is taken to be the licensing authority,
and
(b) the licence or certificate of registration may be amended under
section 7 of that Act, and
(c) the licence or certificate of registration may not be transferred
under section 8 of that Act, and
(d) the references to 2 weeks, 4 weeks and 8 weeks in section 9 (1)
(a), (b) and (c) of that Act are each to be read as references to 6 weeks,
and
(e) an application for restoration of a licence or certificate of
registration under section 10 of that Act may not be made more than 3 months
after the date on which the licence expires, and
(f) an application is not required to be advertised under section 15
of that Act, and
(g) section 21 (4) of that Act does not have effect,
and
(h) the reference to 14 days in section 24 (1) of that Act (as to the
period within which changed particulars must be notified) is to be read as a
reference to 7 days.
(4) Subject to this section, the regulations may make provision for or
with respect to such matters concerning a licence or certificate of
registration as are relevant to the operation of Part 2 of the applied
Act.
17A Application fees and Compensation Fund
contributions (1) An applicant for a licence or certificate of registration must
make provision for the payment of an application fee of an amount prescribed
by the regulations. (2) An applicant for a licence must also make provision for the
payment of the contribution to the Compensation Fund required in relation to
the application.
18 (Repealed) 19 Certain applications to be refused An application must not be granted unless the applicant is
eligible to be granted the licence or certificate of registration concerned
(as provided by section 14). 20 Conditions—general A licence or certificate of registration may be granted subject to
conditions, including (but not limited to) conditions of the following
kind:(a) a condition prohibiting the holder from exercising functions under
the licence or certificate of registration otherwise than as an employee of a
licensee whose licence does not contain such a condition,
(b) a condition requiring the holder to undertake or complete a
specified course of studies within a specified period of
time,
(c) a condition requiring a licensee or holder of a certificate of
registration to undertake by way of professional development specified further
education or training during the term of the licence or certificate of
registration,
(d) a condition prohibiting the holder from exercising functions under
the authority of the licence or certificate of registration in relation to
specified activities, or prohibiting the holder from exercising functions
under the authority of the licence or certificate of registration except in
relation to specified activities.
Note. An example of a condition under paragraph (d) is a condition that
the holder of a real estate agent’s licence act only as a buyer’s
agent. 21 Special condition requiring auctioneers to be
accredited (1) Every real estate agent’s licence and stock and station
agent’s licence is subject to the condition that the holder of the
licence must not act as an auctioneer unless the licensee is accredited as an
auctioneer under this section. (2) The Director-General may accredit the holder of a real estate
agent’s licence or stock and station agent’s licence as an
auctioneer if the Director-General is satisfied that the holder has such
qualifications in connection with the conduct of auctions and the functions of
auctioneers as the Director-General may approve from time to time by order
published in the Gazette. (3) Without limiting the Director-General’s power to approve
qualifications, the Director-General may approve qualifications by reference
to any one or more of the following:(a) the completion of a course of study,
(b) the completion of a period of training in a particular
activity,
(c) the attainment of a standard of competency in a particular
activity.
22 Special condition requiring professional indemnity
insurance (1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
requiring the holder of a licence to be insured under a policy of professional
indemnity insurance in force with respect to the licensee or his or her
employer. It is a condition of a licence that the holder of the licence be
insured as required by any such regulations. (2) In particular, the regulations may require that the policy of
insurance be a policy, or a policy of a kind, that is approved by the Minister
for the time being by order published in the
Gazette. (3) An order may provide that a policy is an approved policy if the
policy complies with either or both of the following:(a) the policy complies with the conditions set out in the
order,
(b) the policy is described in the order by reference to the insurer
and the number of the policy or is identified in the order by other specified
particulars.
23 Special conditions for on-site residential property
managers and registered managers (1) An on-site residential property manager’s licence is subject
to the condition that the licensee must not carry on business as an on-site
residential property manager in respect of premises unless:(a) the licensee’s principal place of residence is situated at
those premises, and
(b) the person owns, or has an interest prescribed by the regulations
in, that principal place of residence.
Note. This condition prevents a person from being an on-site residential
property manager for more than one residential complex. To do that, a person
must hold a real estate agent’s licence. (2) The certificate of registration of a registered on-site
residential property manager is subject to a condition that the person must
not act as or exercise any of the functions of a registered on-site
residential property manager except in respect of premises in which is
situated the principal place of residence of the licensee who employs the
person.
24 (Repealed) 25 Duration (1) A licence or certificate of registration takes effect on the date
on which it is granted or on such later date as may be specified in it and
(unless it is sooner suspended or cancelled) remains in force for 1
year. (2), (3) (Repealed)
26 Effect of applying for restoration of expired
licence (1)–(5) (Repealed) (6) If an application for the restoration of an expired licence or
certificate of registration is duly made:(a) anything done by the holder of the expired licence or certificate
of registration between its expiry and the determination of the application
for restoration (whether the application is granted or refused) is taken to
have been done as the holder of a licence or certificate of registration,
except for the purposes of sections 8 (1), 9 (1) and 10,
and
(b) if the application is granted, the restored licence or certificate
of registration is taken to have had effect from the expiry of the expired
licence or certificate of registration (and is to be expressed to take effect
accordingly).
27 Review by ADT A person may apply to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal for a
review of any of the following decisions of the Director-General:(a) a decision refusing to grant a licence or certificate of
registration to the person (including such a decision pursuant to an
application for the reissue or restoration of a licence or certificate of
registration),
(b) a decision to impose a condition on a licence or certificate of
registration of the person.
Part 3 General conduct of licensees and registered
persons Division 1 Place and name of business 28 Registered office and address (1) A licensee must have a registered office within New South
Wales. (2) A licensee who carries on the business of an agent pursuant to a
licence or other authorisation under the laws of another State at an office
(the interstate
office) that is within 50 kilometres of New South Wales may have the
licensee’s registered office at the interstate office (even though it is
not in New South Wales). The powers of an authorised officer under this Act
may be exercised at the interstate office. (3) The address specified in an application for a licence as the
address at which the applicant proposes to carry on business (or, in the case
of a licensee carrying on business at more than one place, the address
specified in the application as the licensee’s principal place of
business) is taken to be the registered office of the
licensee. (4) Notice of any change in the location of the registered office must
be lodged by the licensee with the Director-General within the time prescribed
by the regulations. Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
29 Display of name at registered office (1) A licensee must display legibly and conspicuously outside the
licensee’s registered office and any other place at which the
licensee’s business as a licensee is carried on:(a) the licensee’s name and description as a licensee,
and
(b) a description of the kind of licence or licences held by the
licensee.
(2) In addition, a licensee that is a corporation must display legibly
and conspicuously:(a) outside the corporation’s registered office, the name of the
person in charge of the corporation’s registered office,
and
(b) outside any other place at which the business of the corporation
is carried on, the name of the person in charge at that
place.
(3) A person must not display or exhibit outside or near the
person’s office, house or place of business any sign or other matter
that indicates or implies that the office, house or place of business is that
of a person licensed as a kind of agent under this Act unless the person is
licensed as an agent of that kind. Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
30 Business names (1) A licensee must not, either alone or together with other persons,
carry on business as a licensee under a name or advertise or hold out that the
licensee carries on business as a licensee under a name unless:(a) the name consists of the name of the licensee and the name of each
other person, if any, with whom the licensee is carrying on, or advertising or
holding out that the licensee is carrying on, business as a licensee,
or
(b) the name is a business name registered under the Business Names Act 2002 in relation
to the licensee and each other person, if any, with whom the licensee is
carrying on, or advertising or holding out that the licensee is carrying on,
business as a licensee.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (2) The name of a licensee (other than a corporation) consists of the
licensee’s full name, or the licensee’s surname (or family name)
together with:(a) the licensee’s other name or names, or
(b) the initial or initials of the licensee’s other name or
names, or
(c) a combination of one or more of the licensee’s other name or
names and the initial or initials of the licensee’s remaining other name
or names, or
(d) the other name or names by which the licensee is commonly known or
the initial or initials by which the licensee is commonly known or any
combination of one or more of those names or
initials.
(3) The name of a licensee that is a corporation consists of the
corporate name of the corporation. (4) The Director-General may, by notice in writing to a licensee,
direct that the licensee must not carry on business under a specified business
name, being a name that:(a) is the same as, or is a name closely resembling, the name under
which a person who is a disqualified person or whose licence has been
cancelled under or in pursuance of this Act was carrying on business
immediately before the person became a disqualified person or the
person’s licence was cancelled, or
(b) implies or is capable of being construed as implying that the
licensee is the successor in the business, or in any way interested or
concerned in continuing the business as a licensee, of a person who is a
disqualified person or whose licence has been cancelled under or in pursuance
of this Act, or
(c) is, in the opinion of the Director-General and in the
circumstances of any particular case, undesirable as being contrary to the
public interest.
(5) A licensee must not contravene a direction under subsection
(4).Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (6) This section does not affect the Business Names Act
2002.
Division 2 Business practices and supervision 31 Each place of business to be in charge of
licensee (1) An individual who carries on business under a licence at more than
one place of business must employ at each of those places of business (except
the place at which the licensee is personally in charge) as the person in
charge of business at that place a person who is the holder of a licence that
an individual is required to hold to carry on that
business. (2) A corporation that holds a corporation licence must employ as the
person in charge at each place of business at which the corporation carries on
business under the licence a person who is the holder of a licence that an
individual is required to hold to carry on that
business. (3) A licensee must not employ a person to be the person in charge of
business at a place of business of the licensee if the person is also employed
to be the person in charge of business at another place of business of the
licensee or at a place of business of another
licensee. (4) A person employed as the person in charge of business at a place
of business of a licensee must not exercise functions or provide services on
behalf of 2 or more licensees at that place (whether corporations or
individuals) unless those licensees are in
partnership. (5) The Director-General may grant a person an exemption from a
provision of this section. The exemption may be granted unconditionally or
subject to conditions. The Director-General may at any time by notice in
writing to a person granted an exemption revoke the exemption or vary the
conditions of the exemption. (6) The regulations may specify the matters to be taken into account
by the Director-General in considering whether to grant a person an exemption
from a provision of this section. (7) A requirement of this section that the person employed as the
person in charge of business at a place of business must be the holder of a
licence that an individual is required to hold to carry on that business does
not require the person to be accredited as an auctioneer under section 21
merely because the business includes the business of an
auctioneer. Maximum penalty: (a) 200 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 100 penalty units in any other case.
32 Duty of licensee and person in charge to properly
supervise business (1) A licensee must properly supervise the business carried on by the
licensee. (2) A licensee employed by another licensee (the principal
licensee) as the person in charge of business at a place of business
of the principal licensee must properly supervise the business of the
principal licensee carried on at that place. (3) The requirement to properly supervise the conduct of business
includes the following requirements:(a) a requirement to properly supervise employees engaged in the
business,
(b) a requirement to establish procedures designed to ensure that the
provisions of this Act and any other laws relevant to the conduct of that
business are complied with,
(c) a requirement to monitor the conduct of business in a manner that
will ensure as far as practicable that those procedures are complied
with.
(4) The Director-General may from time to time issue and notify to
licensees guidelines as to what constitutes the proper supervision of the
business of a licensee. A failure to comply with the requirements of any such
guidelines in connection with the supervision of a business constitutes a
failure to properly supervise the business. Maximum penalty: (a) 200 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 100 penalty units in any other case.
33 Licensee not to share commission with certain
persons (1) A licensee must not enter into an arrangement with or act in
conjunction with a person that the licensee knows to be an unlicensed person
(other than an employee in the licensee’s business as a licensee)
whereby the unlicensed person is entitled to a share of the commission, fee,
gain or reward payable to the licensee in respect of any transaction by or
with him or her as a licensee or generally.Maximum penalty: (a) 100 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 50 penalty units in any other case.
(2) In this section:corresponding Act
means an Act of another State or a Territory that is declared by the
regulations to be a corresponding Act for the purposes of this
section. unlicensed person
means a person who is not licensed under this Act or a corresponding
Act.
34 Non-commercial subagency agreements to be in
writing (1) An agreement between licensees to share any commission, fee, gain
or reward paid or payable to a licensee in respect of any services performed
by him or her as a licensee is unenforceable unless the agreement is in
writing, is signed by the licensees and contains such terms (if any) as may be
prescribed by the regulations. (2) Any provision in, or applying to, such an agreement and purporting
to exclude, modify or restrict the operation of the terms (if any) required by
this section to be contained in the agreement has no force or
effect. (3) A licensee who enters into an agreement a provision of which is
unenforceable because of this section is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (4) This section does not apply to:(a) an agreement between licensees who are in partnership with one
another or in the relationship of employer and employee with one another,
or
(b) an agreement, transaction, circumstance or person prescribed by
the regulations as exempt from this section or an agreement, transaction,
circumstance or person of a class or description prescribed by the regulations
as exempt from this section, or
(c) an agreement in respect of services relating to commercial land,
being land used or intended to be used solely or principally for commercial,
business or industrial purposes, but not including land used or intended to be
used solely or principally for agricultural or pastoral
purposes.
35 Franchising agreements (1) A licensee who enters into a franchising agreement in connection
with the conduct of the licensee’s business as licensee must give notice
of the agreement to the Director-General. The notice must be in the form
approved by the Director-General and must be given within 30 days after the
agreement is entered into.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) The franchisor under a franchising agreement must notify the
Director-General in writing within 7 days after becoming aware of any failure
to account by a licensee who is a party to the franchising
agreement.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (3) In this section:failure
to account has the same meaning as in Part 9 (Management and
receivership). franchising
agreement means an agreement whereby a licensee is authorised to
carry on business under any name in consideration of any other person entitled
to carry on business under that name receiving any consideration whether by
way of a share in the profits of the licensee’s business or
otherwise.
36 Review of commission and fees (1) An action or other proceedings cannot be commenced by a licensee
for the recovery of remuneration or any sum as reimbursement for expenses
until the expiration of 28 days after a statement of claim has been served
personally or by post on the person to be charged with the remuneration or
expenses. (2) The statement of claim must be in writing, set out the amount
claimed and contain details of the services performed by the licensee in
respect of which the remuneration or expenses are
claimed. (3) If money has been paid to or is or has been retained by a licensee
(out of money received by or paid to the licensee) in respect of any
transaction by or with the licensee as a licensee and has been so paid or
retained as remuneration or as reimbursement for expenses in connection with
the transaction, the person paying the money or the person who would be
entitled to the money had the money not been retained, may require the
licensee to furnish the person with an itemised account of the transaction in
accordance with the regulations. (4) A person who is served with a statement of claim under this
section or is provided with an itemised account of a transaction as provided
by this section may apply to the Tribunal for the determination of a consumer
claim within the meaning of Consumer Claims
Act 1998 in relation to:(a) the entitlement of the licensee to the whole or any part of the
amount specified in the statement of claim or the itemised account,
or
(b) whether the whole or any part of the amount is
reasonable,
or both. (5) For the purpose of the application of the Consumer Claims Act 1998 to that
person, a reference in that Act to a consumer is taken to
include a reference to that person. (6) The Tribunal has jurisdiction to hear and determine any such
consumer claim despite:(a) the terms or conditions of any agreement or contract entered into
between the licensee and the applicant, and
(b) the amount being more or less than the maximum amount (if any) of
remuneration to which a licensee is entitled under this
Act.
(7) This section does not limit the Consumer Claims Act
1998. (8) In this section:expenses means expenses or
charges incurred in connection with services performed by a licensee in his or
her capacity as a licensee. remuneration means
remuneration by way of commission, fee, gain or reward for services performed
by a licensee in his or her capacity as a licensee. Tribunal means the
Tribunal under the Consumer Claims Act
1998.
37 Rules of conduct for licensee’s business (1) The regulations may prescribe rules of conduct to be observed in
the course of the carrying on of business or the exercise of functions under a
licence or certificate of registration. (2) A licensee or registered person who without reasonable excuse
contravenes a rule of conduct prescribed for the purposes of this section is
guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: (a) 100 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 50 penalty units in any other case.
38 Undertakings by licensees and registered
persons The Director-General may accept a written undertaking from the
holder of a licence or certificate of registration as to the manner in which
the holder will exercise functions under the licence or certificate of
registration.Note. Part 12 provides that a breach of such an undertaking is grounds
for taking disciplinary action against a person. 39 Duty of licensee to notify defalcation (1) A licensee must notify the Director-General as soon as practicable
after becoming aware of any failure to account by the licensee.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (2) In this section:failure
to account has the same meaning as in Part 9 (Management and
receivership).
40 Industry association to report defalcation A body engaged in the provision of services to agents as an
industry association or similar undertaking must notify the Director-General
in writing within 7 days after becoming aware of any failure to account by a
licensee.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. Division 3 Employees 41 Liability of licensee for acts of employees A licensee who employs a person at any place of business of the
licensee is responsible, in tort and in contract, for anything done or not
done by the person:(a) within the scope of the employee’s authority,
or
(b) for the benefit, or the purported or intended benefit, of the
licensee or the licensee’s business.
42 Licensee to keep records of certain employees (1) A licensee must make and keep a record of the name and residential
address of each employee that the licensee employs as a real estate
salesperson, stock and station salesperson, business salesperson or registered
manager. (2) The licensee must keep the record for at least 3 years after the
person ceases to be an employee. (3) The licensee must keep the record in the form of a register of
employees and that register must be kept at the place of business of the
licensee at which the employee is employed or at such other place as the
Director-General may approve. Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
43 Duty of licensee not to employ certain persons (1) A licensee must not employ a person in any capacity in connection
with the carrying on of the business conducted by the licensee if the
person:(a) is a disqualified person (other than a person whose
disqualification is on a ground that does not disqualify the person from
eligibility to hold a certificate of registration), or
(b) has had his or her licence or certificate of registration
suspended or cancelled under this Act (unless a licence or certificate of
registration has subsequently been granted to the person and is not suspended
or cancelled), or
(c) has had an application for a licence or certificate of
registration refused on the ground that the person was not a fit and proper
person to hold a licence or certificate of registration (unless a licence or
certificate of registration has subsequently been granted to the person and is
not suspended or cancelled).
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (2) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence under this section
if the licensee establishes that the licensee did not know, and could not
reasonably be expected to have known after diligent inquiry, that the person
was a person whose employment by the licensee was prohibited by this
section.
44 Duty of licensee to notify disqualification of
employee A licensee must notify the Director-General in writing within 7
days after becoming aware that a person employed by the licensee has become a
disqualified person (other than a person whose disqualification is on a ground
that does not disqualify the person from eligibility to hold a certificate of
registration).Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. 45 Employees required to notify disqualification A person employed by a licensee must notify the licensee within 7
days after the person becomes a disqualified person (other than a person whose
disqualification is on a ground that does not disqualify the person from
eligibility to hold a certificate of registration).Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. Division 4 Conflicts of interest 46 Financial and investment advice by real estate
agents (1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
requiring a real estate agent who provides financial or investment advice to a
person in connection with the sale or purchase of land to provide to the
person specified information or warnings. (2) A real estate agent who fails to comply with a requirement of the
regulations under this section is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units.
47 Duty of disclosure to client and prospective buyer of
land (1) A buyer’s or seller’s agent acting on the sale or
purchase of land must disclose the following to the person for whom the agent
is acting (the
client) and (in addition, in the case of the seller’s agent)
any prospective buyer of the land:(a) any relationship, and the nature of the relationship (whether
personal or commercial), the agent has with anyone to whom the agent refers
the client or a prospective buyer for professional services associated with
the sale or purchase,
(b) whether the agent derives or expects to derive any consideration,
whether monetary or otherwise, from a person to whom the agent has referred
the client or a prospective buyer and, if so, the amount or value of the
consideration,
(c) the amount, value or nature of any benefit of which the agent is
aware that a person to whom the agent has referred the client or a prospective
buyer has received, receives, or expects to receive in connection with the
sale, or for promoting the sale, or for providing a service in connection with
the sale, of the land.
Note. The following are examples of relationships for the purposes of
subsection (1) (a):(a) a family relationship,
(b) a business relationship, other than a casual business
relationship,
(c) a fiduciary relationship,
(d) a relationship in which 1 person is accustomed, or obliged, to act
in accordance with the directions, instructions, or wishes of the
other.
The following are examples for the purposes of subsection (1) (c)
of persons who may receive a benefit: (a) seller,
(b) finance broker,
(c) financial adviser,
(d) financier,
(e) property valuer,
(f) Australian legal practitioner,
(g) real estate agent.
Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) Disclosure to a person is effective for the purposes of subsection
(1) only if:(a) it is given to the person in a form approved by the
Director-General, and
(b) it is acknowledged by the person in writing on the form,
and
(c) it is given and acknowledged at the time the agent refers the
client or prospective buyer to a person for professional services associated
with the sale or purchase of land and before a contract for the sale of the
residential property is entered into.
(3) In this section:benefit means monetary or
other benefit. buyer’s agent
means: (a) a real estate agent acting for a buyer of land,
or
(b) a real estate salesperson acting for that real estate
agent.
prospective buyer
means a person who there are reasonable grounds to believe is a potential or
likely buyer of land (whether or not the person has made an offer to buy the
land). seller’s agent
means: (a) a real estate agent acting for the vendor of land,
or
(b) a real estate salesperson acting for that real estate
agent.
48 Duty not to act for both buyer and seller of
land (1) A licensee must not act in his or her capacity as licensee on
behalf of both the buyer and the seller of land at the same
time. (2) A licensee must not enter into agency agreements in respect of the
purchase or sale of land if the performance of services by the licensee under
the agreements will or can result in the licensee acting in his or her
capacity as licensee on behalf of both the buyer and the seller of the land at
the same time. Maximum penalty: (a) 200 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 100 penalty units in any other case.
49 Restrictions on licensee obtaining beneficial interest in
property (1) A real estate agent who is retained by a person (the client) as an agent
for the sale of property must not obtain or be in any way concerned in
obtaining a beneficial interest in the property.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or
both. (2) A real estate salesperson employed by the real estate agent must
not obtain or be in any way concerned in obtaining a beneficial interest in
the property.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or
both. (3) A person does not contravene this section by obtaining a
beneficial interest in property if:(a) before the person obtains the interest, the client consents in
writing in a form approved by the Director-General to the person obtaining the
interest, and
(b) the person acts fairly and reasonably in relation to the obtaining
of the interest, and
(c) no commission or other reward is payable to the person in relation
to the transaction by which the interest is obtained, unless the client
consents in writing in a form approved by the Director-General to the
commission or other reward being paid.
(4) Without limiting this section, a person is considered to obtain a
beneficial interest in property if:(a) the person or a close relative of the person obtains a beneficial
interest in the property, or
(b) a corporation having not less than 100 members and of which the
person or a close relative of the person is a member, or a subsidiary of such
a corporation, obtains a beneficial interest in the property,
or
(c) a corporation of which the person or a close relative of the
person is an executive officer obtains a beneficial interest in the property,
or
(d) the trustee of a discretionary trust of which the person or a
close relative of the person is a beneficiary obtains a beneficial interest in
the property, or
(e) a member of a firm or partnership of which the person or a close
relative of the person is also a member obtains a beneficial interest in the
property, or
(f) the person or a close relative of the person has, directly or
indirectly, a right to participate in the income or profits of a business
carried on for profit or gain and another person carrying on that business
obtains a beneficial interest in the property.
(5) Without limiting this section, each of the following is considered
to constitute the obtaining of a beneficial interest in property:(a) purchasing property,
(b) obtaining an option to purchase property,
(c) being granted a general power of appointment in respect of
property.
(6) In this section:close
relative of a person means: (a) a spouse of the person, or
(b) an existing or former de facto partner, or
(c) a child, grandchild, sibling, parent or grandparent of the person,
whether derived through paragraph (a) or (b) or otherwise,
or
(d) any other person who has a relationship with the person that is
prescribed by the regulations as constituting the relationship of close
relative for the purposes of this section.
property includes an
interest in property.
Division 5 Advertisements and representations 50 Advertisements to include information about
licensee (1) A licensee must not publish (in a newspaper or otherwise) an
advertisement relating to or in connection with the licensee’s business
unless the advertisement includes the following:(a) if the licensee is an individual carrying on business in the
licensee’s own name and is not a member of a partnership—the
licensee’s name,
(b) if the licensee is an individual carrying on business under a
business name registered under any Act relating to the registration of
business names—either the licensee’s name or that business
name,
(c) if the licensee carries on business as a member of a
partnership—either the licensee’s name or the name of the
partnership, or the name under which the partnership is registered under any
Act relating to the registration of business names,
(d) if the licensee is a corporation and the corporation is carrying
on business in its own name—the name of the
corporation,
(e) if the licensee is a corporation and the corporation is carrying
on business under a business name registered under any Act relating to the
registration of business names—either its own name or that business
name.
(2) A licensee who has a relevant interest in the sale of real or
personal property must not in the course of carrying on business as an agent
on the sale publish or cause to be published an advertisement relating to or
in connection with the proposed sale of the property unless the relevant
interest is disclosed in the advertisement. (3) A licensee has a relevant interest
in the sale of real or personal property if:(a) the licensee has an interest in the property as an owner of the
property, or
(b) the licensee is a corporation and a director of the corporation is
an owner of the property, or
(c) the licensee is a director of a corporation and the corporation is
an owner of the property.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
51 Publishing false or misleading advertisements (1) A licensee must not publish or cause to be published in the course
of carrying on business as a licensee any statement that:(a) is intended or apparently intended by the licensee to promote the
sale or lease of any property, and
(b) is materially false, misleading or deceptive (whether to the
licensee’s knowledge or not).
Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), a statement is
taken to be false or misleading for the purposes of this section if it is of
such a nature that it would reasonably tend to lead to a belief in the
existence of a state of affairs that does not in fact exist, whether or not
the statement indicates that the state of affairs does
exist. (3) A statement is published if it
is:(a) inserted in any newspaper, periodical publication or other
publication, or
(b) publicly exhibited in, on, over or under any building, vehicle or
place (whether or not a public place and whether on land or water), or in the
air in view of persons being or passing in or on any street or public place,
or
(c) contained in any document gratuitously sent or delivered to any
person or thrown or left upon premises in the occupation of any person,
or
(d) broadcast by radio or television, or
(e) disseminated by means of an Internet website or electronic
mail.
(4) It is a defence to a prosecution against a person for an offence
under this section if the person proves that:(a) the person took all reasonable precautions against committing the
offence, and
(b) the person believed on reasonable grounds that the statement was
true or (in the case of a statement that would reasonably tend to lead to a
belief in the existence of a state of affairs that does not in fact exist) the
person believed on reasonable grounds that the state of affairs existed,
and
(c) the person had no reason to suspect that the statement was false
or misleading.
(5) Despite any proceedings against a person for an offence under this
section (whether resulting in a conviction or otherwise) the person remains
liable to all civil proceedings as if the proceedings for an offence had not
been taken. (6) This section is to be read as being in addition to and not in
derogation from any enactment or law relating to false or misleading
advertisements or other statements.
52 Misrepresentation by licensee or registered
person (1) A person who, while exercising or performing any function as a
licensee or registered person, by any statement, representation or promise
that is false, misleading or deceptive (whether to the knowledge of the person
or not) or by any concealment of a material fact (whether intended or not),
induces any other person to enter into any contract or arrangement is guilty
of an offence against this Act.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), a statement,
representation or promise is taken to be false, misleading or deceptive if it
is of such a nature that it would reasonably tend to lead to a belief in the
existence of a state of affairs that does not in fact exist, whether or not
the statement, representation or promise indicates that the state of affairs
does exist. (3) It is a sufficient defence to a prosecution for an offence under
this section if the defendant proves that the defendant did not know, and had
no reasonable cause to suspect, that the statement, representation or promise
was false, misleading or deceptive.
53 Damages for misrepresentation or concealment No term or provision of any agreement (whether entered into before
or after the commencement of this section) for the sale and purchase of land
or any interest in land operates to prevent the purchaser from claiming or
being awarded damages or any other relief in respect of any misrepresentation
or concealment in connection with the sale and purchase of the land or
interest. Division 6 Unjust conduct by licensees 53A Interpretation (1) For the purposes of this Division, conduct of a licensee is unjust
if it is conduct:(a) that is dishonest or unfair, or
(b) that consists of anything done, or omitted to be done, in breach
of contract, whether or not proceedings in respect of the breach have been
brought, or
(c) that consists of the contravention of this Act or the regulations
or any other enactment administered by the Minister, or
(d) that consists of the failure to comply with a condition or
restriction to which the licence is subject or an order of the Tribunal
applicable to the holder.
(2) In this Division:Tribunal means the
Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal established by the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal Act
2001.
53B Undertakings by licensee (1) Where it appears to the Director-General that a licensee has, in
the course of carrying on business as a licensee, repeatedly engaged in unjust
conduct, the Director-General may, with the consent of the Minister:(a) request the licensee to execute a deed in terms approved by the
Director-General whereby the licensee gives undertakings as to:(i) the discontinuance of the unjust conduct, and
(ii) the licensee’s future conduct, and
(iii) the action the licensee will take to rectify the consequences of
the licensee’s unjust conduct, or
(b) apply to the Tribunal for an order under section
53D.
(2) Where the Director-General makes a request or application under
subsection (1), it is to be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, that the
Director-General does so with the consent of the
Minister. (3) Where a licensee executes a deed under this Division and observes
the undertakings given in the deed, the Director-General may not apply for an
order under section 53D by reason of any conduct to which the undertakings
relate.
53C Register of Undertakings (1) When a licensee executes a deed under this Division, the
Director-General must:(a) lodge a copy of the deed with the Registrar of the Tribunal,
and
(b) give a copy of the deed to the licensee who executed
it.
(2) The Director-General must retain all deeds and register the deeds
in a Register of Undertakings kept by the Director-General and containing the
prescribed particulars. (3) The Register of Undertakings may, at any reasonable time, be
inspected by any person free of charge. (4) A licensee must observe undertakings given by the licensee in a
deed executed under this Division.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (5) A prosecution for an offence under subsection (4) may not be
instituted except by the Director-General with the leave of the Tribunal given
when making an order in accordance with section
53D.
53D Restraint of unjust conduct (1) Where, on the application of the Director-General, the Tribunal is
satisfied after inquiry that a licensee has repeatedly engaged in unjust
conduct, the Tribunal may order the licensee to refrain from engaging in
unjust conduct in the course of carrying on business as a licensee and the
licensee must comply with the order. (2) Where, on the application of the Director-General, the Tribunal is
satisfied that a licensee has failed to observe an undertaking given by the
licensee in a deed executed under this Division, the Tribunal may:(a) make an order under subsection (1) against the licensee,
and
(b) in addition, in the case of an undertaking to take action to
rectify the consequences of the licensee’s unjust conduct, make an order
to observe that undertaking within a time specified by the Tribunal when
making the order.
(3) If the licensee is a body corporate and the Tribunal is satisfied
that the unjust conduct or breach of undertaking concerned was engaged in with
the consent or connivance of a person who, at the time of the conduct or
breach, was a director of, or a person concerned in the management of, the
body corporate, the Tribunal may, in addition to any other order it may make
under this section, make an order prohibiting the person from consenting to,
or conniving at, engagement in unjust conduct, or a breach of an undertaking
under this Division, by the body corporate or any other body corporate of
which the person is a director or in the management of which the person is
concerned. (4) The person to whom an order under subsection (3) relates must
comply with the order.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (5) An order under this section may be made subject to such conditions
(whether as to the duration of the order or otherwise) as the Tribunal thinks
fit, including conditions as to the future conduct of the licensee and
conditions specifying the action to be taken by the licensee to rectify the
consequences of the licensee’s unjust
conduct.
53E Variation etc of restraining order The Tribunal may, on the application of the Director-General, vary
or discharge an order made under this Division. Part 4 Agency agreements Division 1 Requirements for agency agreements 54 Definitions In this Division:commission means remuneration
by way of commission, fee, gain or reward for services performed by a licensee
in the capacity of licensee. expenses
means any sum or reimbursement for expenses or charges incurred in connection
with services performed by a licensee in the capacity of
licensee. 55 No entitlement to commission or expenses without agency
agreement (1) A licensee is not entitled to any commission or expenses from a
person for or in connection with services performed by the licensee in the
capacity of licensee for or on behalf of the person unless:(a) the services were performed pursuant to an agreement in writing
(an agency
agreement) signed by or on behalf of:(i) the person, and
(ii) the licensee, and
(b) the agency agreement complies with any applicable requirements of
the regulations, and
(c) a copy of the agency agreement signed by or on behalf of the
licensee was served by the licensee on that person within 48 hours after the
agreement was signed by or on behalf of the person.
(2) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
regulating the form of agency agreements and the terms, conditions and other
provisions that an agency agreement must or must not contain. Without limiting
this subsection, the regulations may prescribe one or more standard forms of
agency agreement. (3) Without limiting the means by which a copy of the agency agreement
may be served on a person, it may be served by means of facsimile transmission
or by such other means as the regulations may
allow. (4) A court or tribunal before which proceedings are taken by a
licensee for the recovery of commission or expenses from a person, or before
which a licensee is a respondent to a consumer claim relating to commission or
expenses (as referred to in section 36), may order that the commission or
expenses concerned are wholly or partly recoverable despite a failure by the
licensee to serve a copy of the relevant agency agreement on the person within
48 hours after it was signed by or on behalf of the
person. (5) A court or tribunal is not to make such an order unless satisfied
that:(a) the failure to serve a copy of the agreement within the required
time was occasioned by inadvertence or other cause beyond the control of the
licensee, and
(b) the commission or expenses that will be recoverable if the order
is made are in all the circumstances fair and reasonable,
and
(c) failure to make the order would be
unjust.
56 Approved guide to be provided before agency agreement for
residential property signed (1) A real estate agent must not enter into an agency agreement with a
person for the sale of residential property unless the agent has provided the
person with a copy of the approved guide not more than 1 month before the
agreement is signed by or on behalf of the person.Maximum penalty: 40 penalty
units. (2) In this section:approved
guide means a guide with respect to the sale of residential property
approved by the Director-General from time to time for the purposes of this
section. (3) A contravention of this section does not affect the validity of
the agency agreement.
57 Agency agreement must disclose rebates, discounts and
commissions (1) A licensee is not entitled to any expenses from a person for or in
connection with services performed by the licensee in the capacity of licensee
for or on behalf of the person in connection with a real estate transaction
unless the agency agreement pursuant to which the licensee performs those
services contains a statement:(a) identifying the source of all rebates, discounts or commissions
that the licensee will or may receive in respect of those expenses,
and
(b) specifying the estimated amount of those rebates, discounts or
commissions (to the extent that the amount can reasonably be
estimated).
(2) This section does not apply in respect of a real estate
transaction relating to commercial land, being land used or intended to be
used solely or principally for commercial, business or industrial purposes,
but not including land used or intended to be used solely or principally for
agricultural or pastoral purposes.
58 Prohibition against listing residential or rural land
subject to sole or exclusive agency (1) A licensee must not enter into an agency agreement with a person
in respect of the sale or purchase of residential property or rural land by
the person if:(a) the agreement provides for an entitlement to commission in respect
of services to be provided at a time when the property or land is or is to be
the subject of a sole agency agreement or exclusive agency agreement with
another licensee for the provision of those services, and
(b) the licensee knows or has reasonable cause to suspect that the
person has entered into that sole agency agreement or exclusive agency
agreement.
(2) A licensee must not solicit or encourage a person to enter into an
agency agreement with the licensee if the licensee is prohibited from entering
into the agreement by this section.Maximum penalty: (a) 200 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 100 penalty units in any other case.
(3) A licensee is not entitled to any commission or expenses from a
person for or in connection with services performed by the licensee pursuant
to an agency agreement entered into by the licensee in contravention of this
section. (4) In this section:commission includes fee,
gain and reward. exclusive agency
agreement means an agency agreement under which an agent agrees to
act for the seller or buyer (the client) on the sale
or purchase of property and that provides for the agent to be entitled to
commission on the happening of an event whether or not the agent is the
effective cause of the happening of the event and whether or not the client is
the effective cause of the happening of the event. sole
agency agreement means an agency agreement under which an agent
agrees to act for the seller or buyer (the client) on the
sale or purchase of property and that provides for the agent to be entitled to
commission on the happening of an event (whether or not the agent is the
effective cause of the happening of the event) unless the client is the
effective cause of the happening of the event.
Division 2 Cooling-off period for residential or rural agency
agreements 59 Cooling-off period for residential or rural agency
agreements (1) There is to be a cooling-off period for every agency agreement in
respect of the sale of residential property or rural
land. (2) The cooling-off period commences when the agency agreement is
signed and ends at 5 pm on the next day that is a business day or a
Saturday. (3) An agency agreement is signed when it is signed by
or on behalf of the person (the client) for whom
services are to be performed under the agreement. If there is more than one
client, the agreement is signed when the last client to sign signs the
agreement. (4) The cooling-off period may be extended by a provision of the
agency agreement, or by the agent in writing before the end of the cooling-off
period. (5) There is no cooling-off period if:(a) at least 1 business day before the client signs the agency
agreement the agent provides the client with a copy of the proposed agency
agreement together with (in the case of an agreement that relates to
residential land) a copy of a consumer guide approved by the Director-General
from time to time for the purposes of this section, and
(b) before the client signs the agency agreement the client signs a
form of waiver of cooling-off period in a form approved by the
Director-General by order published in the Gazette.
60 Agency agreement can be rescinded during cooling-off
period (1) The client can rescind an agency agreement by serving a notice of
rescission on the agent under the agreement during the cooling-off period for
the agreement. (2) To be effective, the notice of rescission must:(a) be in writing addressed to the agent and be to the effect that the
client rescinds the agreement, and
(b) be signed by the client or the client’s Australian legal
practitioner or, if there is more than one client, by each client or their
respective Australian legal practitioners, and
(c) be served on the agent in one of the ways provided for by this
section.
(3) A notice of rescission may be served on an agent in any of the
following ways:(a) by being given to the agent personally,
(b) by being delivered to or left at a place of business of the agent
or at any other address specified in the agency agreement as a place where a
notice of rescission may be given,
(c) by facsimile transmission.
61 Effect of rescission (1) On service of a notice of rescission, the agency agreement is
taken to be rescinded from the time it was entered
into. (2) Neither the agent nor the client is liable to pay any sum for
commission, damages, costs or expenses for or in connection with the agency
agreement or its rescission. (3) The agent must refund to the client any money paid to the agent
under a rescinded agency agreement.
62 No contracting out A provision of an agency agreement or any other agreement or
arrangement is void to the extent that it would (but for this section) have
the effect of excluding, modifying or restricting the operation of this
Division. Part 5 Residential property and rural land sales Division 1 Contract for sale of residential
property 63 Proposed contract for sale of residential
property (1) In this section:purchaser includes a
grantee of an option. (2) A real estate agent must not offer residential property for sale
unless the required documents are all available for inspection at the real
estate agent’s registered office by a prospective purchaser or agent for
a prospective purchaser at all times at which an offer to purchase the
property may be made (or at such other place or at such other times as may be
prescribed by the regulations). (3) A real estate agent is considered to offer residential property
for sale when the agent, expressly or by implication:(a) indicates that residential property is for sale or is to be
auctioned at any future time, or
(b) offers to sell residential property, or
(c) invites an offer to purchase residential property,
or
(d) indicates that a person may be willing to grant an option to
purchase residential property.
(4) The required
documents for the purposes of this section are:(a) a copy of the proposed contract for the sale of the property
(excluding particulars of the purchaser and purchase price),
and
(b) the documents required by section 52A of the Conveyancing Act 1919 to be attached
to the contract before signature by the purchaser, and
(c) in the case of an option to purchase residential property—a
copy of the proposed option document (excluding particulars of the purchaser
and consideration for the option).
(5) Without limiting this section, a real estate agent is taken to
indicate that residential property is for sale if the real estate agent does
any of the following or causes or permits any of the following to be
done:(a) advertises or promotes the property in any way that, in the
circumstances, may reasonably be taken to indicate that the property is or may
be for sale,
(b) places a sign on or near the property that, in the circumstances,
may reasonably be taken to indicate that the property is or may be for
sale,
(c) advertises or in any way gives notice that the property is to be
auctioned at any future time,
(d) places on display particulars or a description of, or a
photograph, drawing or other representation of, the property in or on any
premises, vehicle or place where the real estate agent conducts business as a
real estate agent,
(e) shows the property to a prospective purchaser or gives the address
of the property to a prospective purchaser.
(6) This section does not apply to anything done by a real estate
agent when acting on behalf of a prospective purchaser of residential
property. (7) The regulations may create exceptions to this
section. Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
64 Contracts for sale of residential property (1) A real estate agent may do any of the following:(a) fill up a proposed contract for the sale of residential property,
by inserting details of the purchaser’s name, address and description,
the name and address of the Australian legal practitioner acting for the
purchaser, the purchase price and the date,
(b) insert in or delete from a contract for the sale of residential
property any description of any furnishings or chattels to be included in the
sale of the property,
(c) participate in the exchange or making of contracts for the sale of
residential property.
(2) If a prospective party to a proposed contract for the sale of
residential property for whom a real estate agent acts in relation to the
exchange or making of the contract notifies the real estate agent, or it is
apparent from the proposed contract, that an Australian legal practitioner is
or will be acting for the party, the real estate agent may not participate in
the exchange or making of the contract unless expressly authorised to do so by
the party or the Australian legal practitioner. A contract is not invalid
merely because of the failure of a real estate agent to comply with this
subsection. (3) A real estate agent who exercises any function pursuant to this
section on behalf of any person who is a party or a prospective party to any
contract or proposed contract is liable to compensate that person for any
loss, damage or expense suffered or incurred by that person as a result of any
negligent act or omission, or any unauthorised action, of the real estate
agent in the exercise of that function. (4) A real estate agent may not charge a fee for anything authorised
to be done under this section. (5) This section does not affect the existence or nature of any other
functions or responsibilities of licensees that exist or may exist apart from
this section. (6) In this section:Australian legal
practitioner includes a licensee under the Conveyancers Licensing Act
2003.
65 Procedure following rescission (1) If a contract for the sale of residential property or an option
for the purchase of residential property is rescinded under Division 8 or 9 of
Part 4 of the Conveyancing Act
1919, a real estate agent who holds money paid by the
purchaser by way of deposit under or in relation to the contract or the
proposed contract attached to the option is authorised to deal with that money
as provided by this section. (2) The real estate agent is authorised to pay to the vendor so much
of the money as does not exceed the amount (if any) forfeited under section
66V or 66ZE of that Act, and receipt by the real estate agent of the original
or a copy of an effective notice of rescission served by the purchaser under
section 66U or 66ZD of that Act is sufficient authority for the real estate
agent to make the payment to the vendor. (3) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
authorising the real estate agent to pay to the purchaser the balance of the
money. (4) In this section:deposit includes any amount
paid by the purchaser in relation to the contract or the proposed contract
attached to the option or on account of the purchase price of residential
property. purchaser includes a
prospective purchaser and a grantee or prospective grantee of an
option.
Division 2 Bidding at auction of residential property or
rural land 66 Prevention of dummy bidding (1) At a sale by auction of residential property or rural land:(a) the seller must not make a bid, and
(b) a person must not make a bid on behalf of the seller unless the
person is the auctioneer and makes only one bid on behalf of the seller,
and
(c) a person must not procure another person to make a bid on behalf
of the seller in contravention of this section.
Maximum penalty: (a) 500 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 250 penalty units in any other case.
(2) For the purposes of this section, a bid can be found to have been
made on behalf of a seller even though it is not made at the request of, or
with the knowledge of, the seller. (3) Without limiting what constitutes the making of a bid on behalf of
the seller, a bid made with the dominant purpose of benefiting the seller in
making the bid constitutes the making of a bid on behalf of the
seller. (4) An auctioneer must not sell by auction any residential property or
rural land unless notice is given prior to the auction, in such manner and in
such terms as may be prescribed by the regulations, of the material parts of
this section.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units. (5) This section does not apply to the making of a bid by or on behalf
of a seller in either of the following cases so long as the requirements of
subsection (6) for bids by or on behalf of a seller as co-owner or as executor
or administrator are complied with:(a) the seller is a co-owner of the land (whether as a joint tenant or
tenant in common) and the bid was made to enable the seller to purchase the
interest of another co-owner in the land,
(b) the seller is the executor or administrator of the estate of a
deceased owner of the land.
(6) The requirements for bids by or on behalf of a seller as co-owner
or as executor or administrator are as follows:(a) the conditions under which the auction is conducted must permit
the making of bids by or on behalf of a seller to purchase the interest of
another co-owner in the land or to purchase as executor or
administrator,
(b) the auctioneer must have announced at the auction, before the
start of bidding, that bids to purchase the interest of a co-owner in the land
or to purchase as executor or administrator may be made by or on behalf of the
seller.
66A Offences by auctioneers (1) At a sale by auction of residential property or rural land, the
auctioneer:(a) must not acknowledge the making of a bid if the bid was not made,
and
(b) must not accept a bid if the auctioneer knows that the bid was
made by or on behalf of the seller in contravention of section 66,
and
(c) must not make more than one bid on behalf of the
seller.
Maximum penalty: 250 penalty
units. (2) An auctioneer at a sale by auction of residential property or
rural land must not make a bid on behalf of the seller unless:(a) the conditions under which the auction is conducted permit the
making of one bid by the auctioneer on behalf of the seller,
and
(b) the auctioneer announced at the auction, before the start of
bidding, that the auctioneer is permitted to make one bid on behalf of the
seller, and
(c) immediately before, or in the process of, making the bid, the
auctioneer announces that the bid is made on behalf of the seller or announces
“vendor bid”.
Maximum penalty: 250 penalty
units. (3) Merely announcing the name of the person on whose behalf a bid is
made (without stating that the person is the seller) is not sufficient to
constitute announcing that the bid is made on behalf of the
seller.
67 Bids may only be taken from registered bidders (1) The auctioneer at a sale by auction of residential property or
rural land must not take a bid from a person unless:(a) the relevant details of the person have been entered before the
bid is taken in a Bidders Record made in respect of the auction in accordance
with section 68, and the auctioneer is in possession of that record when the
bid is taken, and
(b) the person is identified at the auction by the person displaying
an identifying number allocated to the person for the purposes of the auction
and recorded in the Bidders Record as the identifying number allocated to the
person.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) An auctioneer who refuses to take a bid from a person because of
this section does not incur a liability to any person as a result of that
refusal. (3) The taking of a bid in contravention of this section does not
affect the validity of the bid (or its taking or acceptance) and the bid (and
its taking or acceptance) are as valid for all purposes as if this section had
not been enacted.
68 Bidders Record (1) Before residential property or rural land is offered for sale by
auction, a record (the Bidders Record) must
be made of the persons who will be entitled to bid at the auction and there
must be entered in the Bidders Record in respect of each of those
persons:(a) the relevant details of the person, and
(b) the identifying number allocated to the person for the purposes of
identifying the person at the auction, and
(c) such other information as the regulations may
require.
(2) The relevant details of a person are:(a) the person’s name and address and the number or other
identifier of proof of identity for that person, and
(b) in addition, in the case of a person bidding on behalf of another
person, the name and address of that other person and the number or other
identifier of proof of identity for that other
person.
(3) A real estate agent or stock and station agent engaged to act in
respect of the sale of residential property or rural land by auction must make
the Bidders Record required by this section for the auction unless some other
agent engaged to act in respect of the sale or acting for or on behalf of the
auctioneer has made the Bidders Record for the
auction. (4) An agent is to keep a Bidders Record made by the agent for at
least 3 years and is to keep all the Bidders Records made by the agent
together, in the form of a Register of Bidders
Records. (5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to:(a) conferring an entitlement on a seller of residential property to
inspect the Bidders Record for the sale of the property,
and
(b) the manner and form in which a Bidders Record is to be made and
kept, and
(c) requiring other information to be included in the Bidders
Record.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
69 Details to be established by proof of identity (1) An agent must not enter a person’s name and address in a
Bidders Record unless both the person’s name and their address details
are established by the production to the agent of:(a) one or more proofs of identity for the person,
and
(b) in the case of the details of a person on whose behalf another
person is to bid, a letter of authority to bid on the person’s behalf
specifying the person’s name and address and the number or other
identifier of one or more proofs of identity for that
person.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units. Note. Both name and address must be established by proof of identity but
need not be established by the same proof of identity. For example, an
Australian passport could be used to establish a person’s name and
another proof of identity allowed by subsection (2) used to establish the
person’s address. (2) The only proof of identity that may be used for a person for the
purposes of an entry in a Bidders Record is:(a) a motor vehicle driver’s licence issued in Australia that
displays a photograph of the person, or
(b) an Australian passport, or
(c) such other proof of identity as may be prescribed by the
regulations.
(3) An agent must not enter the relevant details of a person in a
Bidders Record if the agent knows or has reasonable cause to suspect that the
details are false in a material particular.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
70 Confidentiality of Bidders Record (1) An agent who makes a Bidders Record, and any auctioneer to whom
the contents of a Bidders Record are disclosed under this Division, must
not:(a) divulge any information that the Bidders Record contains except as
authorised or required by this Division, and
(b) must not use the Bidders Record or the information that it
contains for any purpose not authorised by this
Division.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) This section does not prevent the divulging of information to an
authorised officer in accordance with a requirement imposed by or under this
Act.
71 Approved consumer education guide for bidders at
auctions (1) The Director-General may from time to time approve a consumer
education guide for prospective bidders at an auction of residential property
or rural land. (2) A real estate agent or stock and station agent engaged to act in
respect of the sale by auction of residential property or rural land must take
all reasonable steps to ensure that a person who bids at the auction has been
provided before the auction with a copy of the consumer education guide
currently approved under this section.Maximum penalty: 40 penalty
units.
Division 3 Representations as to selling price 72 False representation to seller or prospective
seller A real estate agent or employee of a real estate agent must not
make a false representation to a seller or prospective seller of residential
property as to the agent’s or employee’s true estimate of the
selling price of the property.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. 73 False representation to prospective buyer (1) A real estate agent acting pursuant to an agency agreement for the
sale of residential property or the employee of such an agent must not, by a
statement made in the course of marketing the property, falsely understate the
estimated selling price of the property.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) An agent or employee is considered to falsely understate the
estimated selling price of residential property if the agent or employee
states as his or her estimate of that selling price a price that is less than
his or her true estimate of that selling price. (3) A statement is considered to be made in the course of marketing
residential property if the statement is made:(a) in an advertisement in respect of the property that is published
or caused to be published by the agent, or
(b) to a person (orally or in writing) as a prospective purchaser of
the property.
(4) A statement in the agency agreement of the agent’s estimate
of the selling price of residential property is evidence for the purposes of
this section of the agent’s true estimate of that selling
price.
74 Requirement to substantiate selling price
estimates—residential property (1) The Director-General may by notice in writing to a real estate
agent require the agent to provide evidence of the reasonableness of any
estimate of the selling price of residential property made by the agent in a
statement:(a) orally or in writing to a seller or prospective seller of the
property, or
(b) in an advertisement in respect of the property that is published
or caused to be published by the agent, or
(c) orally or in writing to a person as a prospective purchaser of the
property.
(2) A real estate agent who fails to comply with a notice under this
section within the period for compliance specified in the notice is guilty of
an offence.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units.
75 Division extends to estimates of price range This Division extends to estimated price range in the same way as
it applies to estimated price and for that purpose a reference in this
Division to price is taken to include a reference to price
range. 76 Extended meaning of “estimate” In this Division, estimate includes opinion and
belief. 76A Marketing statements about vendor bids when property
passed in (1) When residential property or rural land is passed in at auction
and the last bid accepted at the auction was a vendor bid, a real estate agent
or stock and station agent, or an employee of such an agent, must not, by a
statement made in the course of marketing the residential property or rural
land, indicate the amount of the last bid accepted at the auction unless the
statement also clearly indicates that the bid was a vendor bid.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty
units. (2) A statement is considered to be made by a person in the course of
marketing residential property or rural land if the statement is made:(a) in an advertisement in respect of the property or land that is
published or caused to be published by the person, or
(b) to a person (orally or in writing) as a prospective purchaser of
the property or land.
(3) It is a defence to a prosecution for a contravention of this
section if the defendant satisfies the court that the defendant did not know
and had no reasonable cause to suspect that the bid concerned was a vendor
bid. (4) Residential property or rural land is passed in at auction if
the auction is stopped without the property or land being sold at the
auction. (5) In this section:vendor
bid means a bid made by the auctioneer on behalf of the
seller.
Part 6 Auctions—general 77 Prescribed auction conditions (1) The regulations may prescribe conditions that are to be applicable
to or in respect of the sale by auction of land or
livestock. (2) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
requiring the notification at a sale by auction of land or livestock of any
conditions that are applicable to the sale.
78 Collusive practices at auction sales (1) A person must not, in relation to the sale by auction of any land
or livestock, by a collusive practice induce or attempt to induce any other
person:(a) to abstain from bidding generally, or
(b) to abstain from bidding for any particular lot,
or
(c) to bid to a limited extent only, or
(d) to do any other act or thing that might in any way prevent or tend
to prevent free and open competition.
Maximum penalty: (a) 500 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 250 penalty units in any other case.
(2) A person must not as a result of a collusive practice, at a sale
by auction of any land or livestock:(a) abstain or agree to abstain from bidding generally,
or
(b) abstain or agree to abstain from bidding for any particular lot,
or
(c) bid or agree to bid to a limited extent only,
or
(d) do or agree to do any other act or thing that might in any way
prevent or tend to prevent free and open
competition.
Maximum penalty: (a) 500 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 250 penalty units in any other case.
(3) An auctioneer must not sell by auction any land or livestock
unless notice is given prior to the auction, in such manner and in such terms
as may be prescribed by the regulations, of the material parts of this
section.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units. (4) In this section:collusive
practice means a promise, express or implied, made by a person that
if the person is the successful bidder at auction for land or
livestock: (a) the person will give the person to whom the promise is made the
right to elect to take over as purchaser through the auctioneer all or any of
the land or livestock at the auction price, or
(b) the ownership of all or any of the land or livestock will be
determined by tossing or the drawing of lots or any other
method.
79 False entry in auction record (1) An auctioneer and an employee of an auctioneer must not knowingly
enter in any record kept or required to be kept by the auctioneer as the
purchaser of any land or livestock sold by auction any name other than the
name of the actual successful bidder for the land or livestock.Maximum penalty for a first offence: In the case of a corporation,
50 penalty units or, in the case of an individual, 20 penalty
units. Maximum penalty for a second or subsequent offence: In the case of
a corporation, 100 penalty units or, in the case of an individual, 50 penalty
units. (2) Any auctioneer who employs any person, being a person who enters,
in any record required to be kept by the auctioneer, as the purchaser of any
land or livestock sold by auction any name other than the name of the actual
successful bidder for the land or livestock, is guilty of an offence unless
the auctioneer establishes that the auctioneer did not know that a name other
than the name of the actual successful bidder was entered.Maximum penalty for a first offence: In the case of a corporation,
50 penalty units or, in the case of an individual, 20 penalty
units. Maximum penalty for a second or subsequent offence: In the case of
a corporation, 100 penalty units or, in the case of an individual, 50 penalty
units. (3) If the actual successful bidder at a sale by auction of any land
or livestock, as soon as practicable after the auctioneer conducting the sale
has indicated the actual successful bidder but not in any case later than the
day of the sale, informs the auctioneer that the bidder bid on behalf of
another person and informs the auctioneer of the name of that person, the
auctioneer or employee is not guilty of an offence under this section by
reason of the name of that other person being entered in a record as purchaser
of the land or livestock.
80 Misrepresentation as to quality etc An auctioneer must not knowingly misrepresent, or cause or permit
to be misrepresented, the value, composition, structure, character or quality,
or the origin of manufacture, of any land or livestock put up for sale at a
sale by auction conducted by the auctioneer.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. 81 Restrictions on bidding by or on behalf of seller or
auctioneer of livestock (1) A sale by auction of livestock may be notified in the conditions
of sale to be subject to the right by the seller or by any person on behalf of
the seller or auctioneer to make 1 bid or such other number of bids as may be
prescribed by the regulations. (2) At a sale by auction of livestock:(a) the seller or any person on behalf of the seller or auctioneer
must not bid unless the right to bid has been notified in the conditions of
sale, and
(b) the seller or any person on behalf of the seller or auctioneer
must not make more than the number of bids notified in the conditions of sale,
and
(c) the auctioneer must not take from the seller or any person on
behalf of the seller or auctioneer any bid knowing that the bid is in
contravention of this section.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
82 Contracting out of prescribed terms and conditions of
auction sales (1) Any provision in, or applying to, an agreement for the sale of
property by auction and purporting to exclude, modify or restrict (otherwise
than in accordance with this or any other Act) the operation of any conditions
prescribed as being applicable to or in respect of the sale by auction of that
property or property of that class or description is
void. (2) A person must not notify or cause to be notified in the conditions
of sale by auction of any property any provision purporting to exclude, modify
or restrict any conditions prescribed as applicable to or in respect of the
sale by auction of that property or property of that class or
description.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (3) In this section:property
means land or livestock.
83 Successful bidder at auction to supply
information (1) The actual successful bidder at a sale by auction of any land or
livestock must, as soon as practicable after the auctioneer conducting the
sale has indicated the actual successful bidder but not in any case later than
the day of the sale, supply to the auctioneer or an employee of the
auctioneer:(a) the bidder’s name if the bidder bid on his or her own
behalf, or
(b) the name of the person on whose behalf the bidder bid if the
bidder bid on behalf of another person.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units. (2) An auctioneer must not sell by auction any land or livestock
unless notice is given, in such manner and in such terms as may be prescribed
by the regulations, of the material parts of this section.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units.
84 Livestock auctions—“comeback”
prohibited (1) An auctioneer must not, at an auction for the sale of livestock,
sell by auction any lot for a price lower than any price bid in relation to
the sale of that lot. (2) For the purposes of this section, a price is bid if it is called
by a prospective purchaser or is attributed to a prospective purchaser by the
auctioneer as being the amount of a bid, and is not withdrawn by the
prospective purchaser prior to the sale of that
lot.
Part 7 Trust accounts Division 1 Preliminary 85 Interpretation (1) In this Part:trust
money means money received for or on behalf of any person by a
licensee in connection with the licensee’s business as a
licensee. (2) A reference in this Part to a licensee includes a reference to a
person who has ceased to be a licensee and to the personal representative of a
licensee who has died, and in the application of this Part to:(a) a person who has ceased to be a licensee, a reference to moneys
received for or on behalf of a person by a licensee is to be read as a
reference to moneys received by that person for or on behalf of any other
person in connection with his or her business as a licensee,
and
(b) the personal representative of a licensee who has died, a
reference to moneys received for or on behalf of a person by a licensee is to
be read as a reference to moneys received by that licensee or personal
representative for or on behalf of a person in connection with the business
carried on by that licensee.
Division 2 Payment of trust money into trust
account 86 Trust money to be paid into trust account (1) Money received for or on behalf of any person by a licensee in
connection with the licensee’s business as a licensee:(a) is to be held by the licensee or (if the licensee is employed by a
corporation) by the corporation, exclusively for that person,
and
(b) is to be paid to the person or disbursed as the person directs,
and
(c) until so paid or disbursed is to be paid into and retained in a
trust account (whether general or separate) at an authorised deposit-taking
institution in New South Wales and approved by the Director-General for the
purposes of this Part.
(2) If the licence is held by a corporation, the trust account is to
be in the name of the corporation and in any other case is to be in the name
of the licensee or of the firm of licensees of which the licensee is a
member. (3) The name of a trust account and the description of the trust
account in the books and records of the licensee and also on all cheques drawn
on the trust account:(a) must include the name of the licensee corporation, licensee or
firm of licensees in whose name the trust account is kept,
and
(b) must include the words “Trust Account”,
and
(c) may include, at the end of the account’s name, a name or
other matter to identify the person on whose behalf money in the account is
held.
(4) When opening a trust account at an authorised deposit-taking
institution for the purpose of complying with this section, the licensee
concerned must ensure that the authorised deposit-taking institution is
notified in writing that the account is a trust account required by this
Act. (5) A licensee must, within 14 days after closing a trust account,
notify the Director-General in writing of the
closure. Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
87 Approval of authorised deposit-taking
institutions (1) The Director-General may approve an authorised deposit-taking
institution for the purposes of this Part and may revoke any such approval by
notice in writing to the authorised deposit-taking
institution. (2) The Director-General is not to approve an authorised
deposit-taking institution for the purposes of this Part unless satisfied that
the institution is able to discharge the obligations of an authorised
deposit-taking institution under this Part.
88 Trust money not available to pay licensee’s
debts (1) Trust money is not available for the payment of the debts of the
licensee to any other creditor of the licensee, or liable to be attached or
taken in execution under the order or process of any court at the instance of
any other creditor of the licensee. (2) This section does not take away or affect any just claim or lien
that any licensee may have against or upon trust
money.
89 Licensee to notify trust account becoming
overdrawn A licensee must, within 5 days after becoming aware that a trust
account of the licensee has become overdrawn, notify the Director-General in
writing of:(a) the name and number of the account, and
(b) the amount by which the account is overdrawn,
and
(c) the reason for the account becoming
overdrawn.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 90 Interest earned on trust accounts to be paid to Statutory
Interest Account (1) Each authorised deposit-taking institution must:(a) after the end of each named month, calculate interest on the daily
balances of all money held during the month in trust accounts kept with the
authorised deposit-taking institution (being trust accounts notified to the
institution as trust accounts required by this Act) by applying to those
balances the prescribed percentage of the trust account rate applicable to the
institution for the purposes of this section, and
(b) before the end of the 7th business day of the next named month pay
the amount of that interest to the Director-General for crediting to the
Statutory Interest Account.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) The Minister is required to determine from time to time for the
purposes of this section, after consultation with the Treasurer, a trust
account rate for each authorised deposit-taking institution. The rate may be a
fixed or variable rate and is to be determined by reference to an interest
rate that applies in the short term money market. The same rate may be
determined for some or all authorised deposit-taking
institutions. (3) As soon as practicable after determining a trust account rate for
an authorised deposit-taking institution, the Minister must inform the
authorised deposit-taking institution of the rate by notice in writing and
publish a notice of the rate in the Gazette. (4) The prescribed
percentage for the purposes of this section is 60 per cent or such
other percentage as the Minister may, from time to time, determine after
consultation with the Treasurer and notify by order published in the Gazette.
Different prescribed percentages may be determined in respect of different
classes of trust account. (5) An authorised deposit-taking institution must not deduct
transaction or other charges, other than statutory charges (such as a tax),
from the balances referred to in subsection (1) or from an amount of interest
calculated under that subsection. (6) The Director-General may, by proceedings brought in a court of
competent jurisdiction, recover as a debt an amount due and payable to the
Director-General under this section. (7) This section does not apply to a trust account of a class of trust
accounts prescribed by the regulations as exempt from this
section.
Division 3 Responsibilities of authorised deposit-taking
financial institutions 91 Monthly returns by authorised deposit-taking
institutions (1) Within 14 days after the end of each named month, an authorised
deposit-taking institution must notify the Director-General (in such manner
and form as the Director-General may from time to time direct) of the
following matters with respect to the trust accounts that are opened with the
institution under this Part during the month:(a) the number of those trust accounts that were opened with the
institution during the month,
(b) the names of the licensees who opened those
accounts,
(c) the names and numbers of those accounts and the addresses of the
branches of that institution at which those accounts are
kept.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) Within 14 days after the end of each named month, an authorised
deposit-taking institution must inform the Director-General (in such manner
and form as the Director-General may from time to time direct) of the
following if a trust account kept with it under this Part was closed during
the month:(a) the name and number of the account,
(b) the date on which the account was
closed.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (3) Within 14 days of the end of each named month, an authorised
deposit taking institution must provide a report to the Director-General (in
such manner and form as the Director-General may from time to time direct),
certified as correct by the institution, containing the following information
in relation to trust accounts kept by it under this Part during the
month:(a) the name of the institution and its branch number or its BSB
number,
(b) the period to which the report relates,
(c) the name of each account,
(d) the number of each account,
(e) the end of month balance for each account (including any nil or
overdrawn balances),
(f) the interest earned on each account during the
month,
(g) the interest rate applied to calculate the interest earned on each
account during the month,
(h) the total amount of interest that the institution paid under this
Part to the Director-General during the month in respect of the accounts for
crediting to the Statutory Interest Account.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (4) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
following:(a) requiring authorised deposit-taking institutions to provide the
Director-General with such information relating to all or any trust accounts
as is specified or described in the regulations,
(b) authorising the Director-General to require an authorised
deposit-taking institution to provide the Director-General with such
information relating to trust accounts identified by the Director-General as
is specified or described by the Director-General,
(c) any associated matter, including the manner and form in which, and
the time within which, any such information is to be provided to the
Director-General,
(d) excepting a specified class or classes of trust account from the
operation of this section or specified provisions of this
section.
92 Overdrawn trust accounts When an authorised deposit-taking institution becomes aware that a
trust account kept with it under this Part is overdrawn, the institution must
as soon as practicable (and in any case within 5 business days) after becoming
so aware inform the Director-General of the following by notice in
writing:(a) the name and business address of the licensee
concerned,
(b) the name and number of the account,
(c) the date on which the account became
overdrawn,
(d) the amount by which the account is
overdrawn.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 93 Dishonoured cheques Within 5 business days of an authorised deposit-taking institution
becoming aware that a cheque presented on a trust account kept with it under
this Part has been dishonoured, the institution must, by notice in writing,
inform the Director-General of the following:(a) the name and business address of the licensee
concerned,
(b) the name and number of the account,
(c) the amount of the dishonour,
(d) the date on which the cheque was
dishonoured.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 94 Annual certification by auditor Not later than 31 May in each year, an authorised deposit-taking
institution approved for the purposes of this Part must provide to the
Director-General a certificate given by a registered company auditor (within
the meaning of the Corporations Act) certifying as to the following:(a) that the institution has complied with the requirements of this
Part in relation to trust accounts kept by it under this Part during the 12
month period ending on 30 April immediately preceding that 31
May,
(b) the total amount of interest that the institution paid under this
Part to the Director-General during that 12 month period in respect of those
trust accounts for crediting to the Statutory Interest
Account.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 95 Protection of authorised deposit-taking institutions from
liability (1) An authorised deposit-taking institution:(a) does not incur liability, and is not obliged to make inquiries, in
relation to any transaction concerning an account of a licensee kept with the
institution or with some other financial institution, and
(b) is, in relation to any such transaction, taken not to have any
knowledge of a right of any person to money credited to such an
account,
unless it would incur such a liability, be obliged to make such inquiries
or be taken to have that knowledge in relation to an account kept with it in
respect of a person absolutely entitled to the money held in that
account. (2) This section does not relieve an authorised deposit-taking
institution from any liability or obligation that it would have apart from
this Act. (3) An authorised deposit-taking institution at which a licensee keeps
an account for clients’ money does not, as regards any liability that
the licensee has to the institution (other than a liability relating to that
account), have a right to any of the money held in that account, whether by
way of set-off, counterclaim, charge or otherwise.
Division 4 Unclaimed trust money 96 Unclaimed trust money held by licensee (1) A licensee who in the month of January in a year holds in a trust
account kept by the licensee money that was received by the licensee more than
2 years before that month must furnish to the Director-General in that month a
statement (an unclaimed money
statement) showing particulars of:(a) the money so held, and
(b) each person for whom or on whose behalf the money is held,
and
(c) the address last known to the licensee of each of those
persons.
(2) A statement under this section is to be in the form approved by
the Director-General.
97 Unclaimed trust money held by former licensee or personal
representative (1) A former licensee, or the personal representative of a deceased
licensee, who holds money in a trust account kept under this Act must furnish
to the Director-General a statement giving particulars of:(a) the money held in the trust account as at the date on which the
statement is furnished, and
(b) the names of the persons for whom or on whose behalf the money is
held, and
(c) the address of each of those persons last known to the person
furnishing the statement.
(2) This statement is the first statement that the former licensee or
personal representative is required to furnish and it is to be furnished
within 3 months after the date on which the person ceased to be a licensee or
became the personal representative of the deceased
licensee. (3) The former licensee or personal representative must furnish a
further statement (an unclaimed money
statement) within 14 days after the period of 12 months has elapsed
since the first statement was furnished. (4) The further statement is to give particulars of the same matters
as the first statement and also include particulars of any payments made from
the trust account since the date of the first
statement. (5) A statement under this section is to be in the form approved by
the Director-General. (6) The regulations may exempt money or a class of money from the
operation of this section.
98 Disposal of unclaimed money in trust accounts (1) When the Director-General receives an unclaimed money statement
under this Division, the Director-General is to:(a) send by post to each person for whom or on whose behalf any money
referred to in the statement is held a notice (an individual
notice) in writing addressed to the person at the person’s
address shown in the statement stating the particulars of the moneys held for
or on behalf of that person, and
(b) cause notification to be published in the Gazette (a Gazette
notification) stating the particulars of the money held for or on
behalf of each of those persons.
(2) Each individual notice and the Gazette notification is to state
that, if the money is not paid out of the trust account in which it is held
within 3 months after the date of publication of the Gazette notice, the
person holding the money will be required to pay it to the
Director-General. (3) At any time after the expiration of that 3 months the
Director-General may, by a notice in writing served personally or by post on
the person by whom the money is held, require that person:(a) to pay to the Director-General any moneys referred to in the
Gazette notification that have not been previously paid by that person out of
the trust account in which they are held, and
(b) to furnish to the Director-General, within such period as may be
specified in the notice to the person, a statement showing particulars of any
payments made out of the money referred to in the Gazette notification since
the unclaimed money statement was made.
(4) The Director-General must pay any money received by the
Director-General under this section into the Compensation
Fund. (5) Within 2 months after 31 December in each year, the
Director-General must pay into the Consolidated Fund all money received by the
Director-General and paid into the Compensation Fund under this section during
the period of 12 months ending on that 31 December (less any of that money
that has been paid from the Compensation Fund to the person entitled to the
money). (6) (Repealed) (7) A person who fails to comply with the requirements of any notice
served on the person under this section is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
99 Repayment of unclaimed trust money (1) The Director-General must, on application by a person entitled to
an amount of money paid under this Division into the Compensation Fund or the
Consolidated Fund, pay that amount to the person out of the Compensation
Fund. (2) When an amount is paid out of the Compensation Fund in respect of
an amount that has been paid into the Consolidated Fund, the Treasurer must,
on application by the Director-General, pay that amount to the
Director-General out of the Consolidated Fund (which is appropriated
accordingly) for payment into the Compensation
Fund.
Division 5 Information about trust accounts or
transactions 100 Director-General may require information (1) The Director-General may by notice in writing served on a licensee
require the licensee to furnish to the Director-General in the manner required
by the notice a statement in writing setting out full particulars as to any of
the following:(a) the name of the trust account on which the licensee operates in
accordance with this Act, the name of the authorised deposit-taking
institution at which the account is current, the balance of the money standing
to the credit of the account as at a date specified in the notice, and
particulars of all cheques drawn on the account as at such date and not
presented and duly paid,
(b) any money paid by any person to the licensee or received by the
licensee for or on behalf of any person in connection with the
licensee’s business as a licensee and, if not still held by the
licensee, the manner and time of its disbursement,
(c) any transaction by or with the licensee as a
licensee.
(2) The licensee must comply with a notice under this section within 7
days after it is served on the licensee. (3) A notice under this section cannot relate to any transaction by or
with the licensee more than 3 years before the notice is served on the
licensee.
101 Person concerned in transaction may request itemised
account (1) A person directly concerned in any transaction by or with a
licensee in connection with the licensee’s business as a licensee may
request the licensee in writing to render to the person in the manner
prescribed by the regulations an itemised account of the
transaction. (2) The licensee must comply with the request within 14 days after the
request is served on the licensee. (3) A person may not request an itemised account of a transaction that
took place more than 6 months before the making of the
request.
102 Offence (1) A licensee must not fail without reasonable excuse (proof of which
lies on the licensee) to comply with a requirement under this
Division. (2) A licensee must not, in purported compliance with a requirement
under this Division, furnish information that the licensee knows is false or
misleading in a material particular. Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
Part 8 Records Division 1 Keeping and inspection of records 103 Licensee’s records (1) In this Act:licensee’s
records means: (a) records required to be kept by a licensee by or under this Act
that are in the possession, custody or control of the licensee,
and
(b) records and documents in the possession, custody or control of a
licensee that relate to any account (whether or not a trust account) kept by
the licensee in connection with the licensee’s business as a licensee or
to any transaction by or with the licensee in connection with the
licensee’s business as a licensee.
(2) If records or documents that were licensee’s records are in
the possession, custody or control of a person as a former licensee, as the
personal representative of a deceased licensee, or as a result of the transfer
of the business of the licensee or otherwise, those records or documents are
still licensee’s
records for the purposes of this
Division. (3) An account on which a strata managing agent operates for or on
behalf of an owners corporation, or on which a community managing agent
operates on behalf of an association constituted under the Community Land Development Act
1989 is taken to be an account kept by the agent in connection
with his or her business as a licensee. (4) This Part extends to records in the possession, custody or control
of a person even when the records are located outside the
State.
104 Licensee to make and keep certain records (1) A licensee must make the following records:(a) a record containing full particulars of all transactions by or
with the licensee in connection with his or her business as a
licensee,
(b) such other records relating to the licensee’s business as a
licensee as may be required by the regulations.
(2) A record required by this section must be kept for at least 3
years after it is made. (3) The record must be kept:(a) by the licensee at the licensee’s registered office (while
the licensee remains a licensee), or
(b) if the licensee ceases to be a licensee, by the former licensee in
his or her possession, custody or control unless the former licensee
authorises some other person to have possession, custody or control of the
record, or
(c) by any other person who obtains possession, custody or control of
the record whether as a result of being the personal representative of a
deceased licensee or by transfer of the business of the licensee or
otherwise.
(4) The regulations may make provision for the manner and form in
which a record required by this section is to be
kept. (5) An entry in a record made under this section and kept at the
registered office of a licensee is presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to
have been made by or with the authority of the
licensee. (6) A person who contravenes a provision of this section is guilty of
an offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
105 Inspection of licensee’s records (1) A licensee’s records are at all reasonable times open to
inspection by an authorised officer. (2) An authorised officer may require a person who has possession,
custody or control of a licensee’s records:(a) to produce the licensee’s records for
inspection,
(b) to furnish all authorities and orders to financial institutions as
may be reasonably required of the person.
(3) If a licensee is absent from an office or place of business of the
licensee, any employee or agent of the licensee for the time being having the
apparent control or charge of the office or place of business is taken to have
possession, custody or control of the licensee’s records at that office
or place of business. (4) An authorised officer may take copies of or extracts from, or make
notes from, any licensee’s records produced to the authorised officer
under this section and for that purpose may take temporary possession of those
records.
106 Inspection of records of financial
institutions (1) An authorised officer may serve on an authorised deposit-taking
institution with which a licensee has deposited any money in any account
(whether the licensee’s own account or a general or separate trust
account) a notice, in a form approved by the Director-General and signed by
the authorised officer:(a) certifying as to the reason for serving the notice, as provided by
this section, and
(b) requiring the authorised deposit-taking institution to produce to
the authorised officer for inspection the records of the institution relating
to the account.
(2) Each of the following is a reason for serving a notice under this
section:(a) the licensee cannot be located,
(b) the licensee has left the State,
(c) the licensee or any other person required to do so has failed to
furnish any authority or order on the institution in accordance with a
requirement under this Division,
(d) the licensee has ceased to be a licensee,
(e) the licensee has contravened a provision of Part 7 (Trust
accounts).
(3) An authorised officer may take copies of or extracts from, or make
notes from, any records produced to the authorised officer under this section
and for that purpose may take temporary possession of those
records.
107 Power to require production of licensee’s
records (1) An authorised officer may give a written notice to a licensee or
to another person that the officer reasonably believes has possession, custody
or control of the licensee’s records requiring the licensee or person to
produce the licensee’s records specified in the notice at the time and
place specified in the notice. (2) An authorised officer may inspect any record produced in response
to a notice under this section and may take copies of or extracts from, or
make notes from, any such record. (3) A licensee does not contravene a provision of this Act if the
licensee was unable to comply with the provision because an authorised officer
retained possession of a record or document under this
section.
108 Power to take possession of records to be used as
evidence (1) An authorised officer to whom any record is produced under this
Part may take possession of the record if the authorised officer considers it
necessary to do so for the purpose of obtaining evidence or protecting
evidence from destruction. (2) If an authorised officer takes possession of any record under this
section, the record may be retained by the officer until the completion of any
proceedings (including proceedings on appeal) in which the record may be
evidence. (3) The person from whom the record was taken must be provided, within
a reasonable time after the record is taken, with a copy of the record
certified by an authorised officer as a true copy. (4) A copy of a record provided under this section is, as evidence, of
equal validity to the record of which it is certified to be a
copy.
109 Additional requirements for managing agents (1) A strata managing agent or community managing agent must keep a
copy of the following instruments:(a) an instrument of appointment appointing the agent as strata
managing agent or community managing agent, and
(b) an instrument of delegation delegating to the agent any powers,
authorities, duties or functions of an owners corporation or an
association.
(2) A copy of an instrument of appointment or delegation kept under
this section is a licensee’s record for the purposes of this
Part. (3) In this section:association means a
community association, precinct association or neighbourhood association
constituted under section 25 of the Community Land Development Act
1989. owners
corporation means an owners corporation constituted under the
Strata Schemes Management Act
1996.
110 Offence (1) A person must not:(a) wilfully delay or obstruct an authorised officer in the exercise
of the authorised officer’s functions under this Division,
or
(b) fail to comply with a requirement under this Division to produce a
record or document in the person’s possession, custody, or control,
or
(c) fail to comply with a requirement under this Division to furnish
any authority or order reasonably required of the person under this Division,
or
(d) in purported compliance with a requirement under this Division
produce a document or record knowing it to be false or misleading in a
material particular.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) A court that convicts a person of an offence under this section
may, in addition to any penalty imposed, order the person to produce the
records in respect of which the offence occurred to the Director-General or an
authorised officer within such time as the court specifies in the
order. (3) A person who fails to produce a record in accordance with an order
of a court made under this section is guilty of an offence punishable by a
penalty not exceeding 10 penalty units in respect of each day that the failure
continues.
Division 2 Audit of licensee’s records 111 Requirement for audit (1) A person who is a licensee, a former licensee or the personal
representative of a licensee must, within 3 months after the end of the audit
period applicable to the person:(a) cause the records and documents relating to any money held during
that period in a trust account kept by the person in accordance with this Act
to be audited by a person qualified to act as an auditor for the purposes of
this Division, and
(b) lodge the auditor’s report on the audit with the
Director-General.
(2) The Director-General may in a particular case or class of cases by
order in writing extend the period of 3 months under subsection
(1). (3) The person must retain a copy of the auditor’s report on the
audit for a period of three years after the date on which the report was
made. (4) The auditor’s report is to be in a form approved by the
Director-General and is to be signed by the
auditor. Maximum penalty: (a) 100 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 50 penalty units in any other case.
112 Audit period (1) The audit period applicable to a person is the year ending on 30
June or such other period as the Director-General may fix in respect of the
person under this section. (2) The Director-General may by order in writing served on a person
fix some other period as the audit period applicable to the
person. (3) Such an order may be made on the application of the person or on
the Director-General’s own initiative. (4) Such an order may be made with such limitations as to time or
circumstances, and subject to such conditions, as the Director-General
considers appropriate.
113 Statutory declaration required when no trust money held
or received A licensee who in the course of the audit period applicable to the
licensee neither received nor held any money for or on behalf of any other
person must, within the period of three months after that day, make and lodge
with the Director-General a statutory declaration to that
effect.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 114 Audit obligations of partners If the provisions of this Division are complied with by any one of
the licensees in a partnership of licensees in relation to the audit of the
records and documents of the partnership, each of those partners is taken to
have complied with those provisions. 115 Qualifications of auditors (1) A person is qualified to act as an auditor for the purposes of
this Division if the person:(a) is a registered company auditor within the meaning of the
Corporations Act, or
(b) is a person who has been nominated by the person whose records and
documents are to be audited and who has been approved by the Director-General
by order in writing.
(2) Such a person is not qualified to act as an auditor for the
purposes of this Division if the person:(a) is or has at any time within 2 years before the last day of the
period in respect of which the audit is to be made, been an employee or
partner of the person whose records or documents are to be audited,
or
(b) is a licensee, or a shareholder in a corporation that is a
licensee and that has not more than twenty
shareholders.
116 Duties of auditors (1) If an auditor in the course of making an audit for the purposes of
this Division discovers that any breach of this Act or the regulations has
been committed, that there is any discrepancy relating to the trust account to
which the audit relates or that the records or documents concerned are not
kept in such a manner as to enable them to be properly audited, the auditor
must:(a) fully set out the facts so discovered by the auditor in the report
made by the auditor for the purposes of the audit, and
(b) forward a copy of the report to the
Director-General.
(2) An auditor, or an assistant of an auditor, appointed to make an
audit for the purposes of this Division must not communicate any matter which
may come to the auditor’s knowledge in the course of the audit to any
person except:(a) in the course of the auditor’s duties as an auditor or
assistant of an auditor, or
(b) in accordance with this section, or
(c) in the like circumstances and to the like extent as an officer of
the Department is permitted under this Act to publish that
information.
(3) An auditor’s report under this Division (including under
this section) relating to documents or records of any person, and any
statutory declaration lodged with the Director-General under this Division,
are available in the hands of the Director-General for inspection by an
auditor appointed to carry out for the purposes of this Division any
subsequent audit of the records or documents of that
person.
Division 3 Freezing of accounts 117 Definitions In this Division:account
means: (a) a trust account in a licensee’s name with a financial
institution, or
(b) an account in a licensee’s name or in which a licensee has
an interest with a financial institution, or
(c) another account to which trust money is
deposited.
financial
institution includes an approved deposit-taking
institution. holder of an
account means the licensee or other person authorised to operate on the
account. licensee
includes a former licensee and the personal representative of a deceased
licensee. trust
money means money received for or on behalf of any person by a
licensee (whether or not the money is deposited in a trust account required to
be kept by a licensee). 118 Director-General may freeze licensee’s accounts in
particular cases (1) A direction under this Division may be given when it appears to
the Director-General that any of the following persons has, or may have,
stolen, misappropriated or misapplied trust money:(a) a licensee,
(b) the person in charge of a licensee’s business at a
place,
(c) an employee of a licensee.
(2) The Director-General may by direction in writing direct
that:(a) if a claim has been made against the Fund concerning the trust
money, all or part of the amount to the credit of a specified account be paid
to the Director-General, or
(b) an amount must not be drawn from a specified account other than
with the Director-General’s written approval, or
(c) a specified account may be operated only under specified
conditions.
(3) The direction must be given to each holder of the account and the
financial institution at which the account is kept, and must identify the
account to which it relates. (4) Any amount paid to the Director-General pursuant to such a
direction must be paid into the Fund.
119 Financial institution must comply with
direction (1) A financial institution to which a direction under this Division
is given (whether or not the direction has been given to anyone else) must
not, while the direction is in force:(a) pay a cheque or other instrument drawn on the account concerned
unless the cheque or instrument is also signed by the Director-General or a
person authorised by the Director-General for the purposes of this section,
or
(b) give effect to another transaction on the account that is not
authorised because of the direction.
Maximum penalty: 500 penalty
units. (2) The signature of the Director-General or authorised person on a
cheque or other instrument is sufficient evidence of the
Director-General’s approval to draw an amount from the account to honour
the cheque or other instrument. (3) A manager or principal officer in charge of an office or branch of
the financial institution where an account is kept, or another officer of the
financial institution, must not knowingly permit a contravention of this
section by the financial institution.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both. (4) A person to whom a direction is given does not incur a civil
liability to another person by reason only of complying with the
direction.
120 Account not to be operated unless Director-General
allows After a direction under this Division has been given to the holder
of an account, the holder must not (while the direction remains in force) sign
a cheque or other instrument drawn on the account unless the cheque or other
instrument has first been signed by the Director-General or a person
authorised by the Director-General to sign the cheque or
instrument.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both. 121 Director-General may operate account (1) The Director-General or a person authorised in writing by the
Director-General (an authorised
person) may operate on an account that is the subject of a direction
under this Division if the holder of the account refuses to operate the
account. (2) A statutory declaration made by the Director-General or authorised
person to the effect that the account holder is refusing to operate on the
account is sufficient evidence to the licensee’s financial institution
of that fact.
122 Withdrawal of direction (1) A direction remains in force until it is
withdrawn. (2) The Director-General may withdraw a direction under this Division
at any time. (3) When a direction is withdrawn, the Director-General is to give all
persons who were given the direction a notice that the direction has been
withdrawn. Failure to give notice does not affect the withdrawal of the
direction.
Part 9 Management and receivership Division 1 Preliminary 123 Definitions In this Part:associate, in relation to a
licensee, has the meaning given to it by section 124. expenses,
in relation to management, means: (a) the remuneration payable to the manager, or
(b) the expenses incurred in the course of the management or
receivership, or
(c) the costs of legal proceedings involved in the management or
receivership, or
(d) any reimbursement of the manager or receiver under this
Part.
failure to
account has the meaning given to it by section 125. licensee
includes: (a) a firm of licensees, and
(b) a former licensee, and
(c) in relation to anything done or omitted by a licensee—a
deceased licensee and a deceased former licensee, and
(d) except in relation to anything done or omitted by a
licensee—the personal representative of a deceased licensee or a
deceased former licensee.
Operating
Account means the Department of Fair Trading Operating Account or a
departmental account prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
definition. property,
in relation to a licensee, means: (a) money or other property received by the licensee on behalf of
another person in the conduct of the licensee’s business,
or
(b) interest, dividends, income, profits or other property derived
from or acquired with money or other property referred to in paragraph (a),
or
(c) documents and records of any description relating to anything
referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) or to the licensee’s business,
or
(d) any means by which any records referred to in paragraph (c) that
are not written may be reproduced in writing,
and, in relation to a licensee whose business is under management,
includes any property of the business.receivable
property means property of a licensee or an associate of a licensee
that is the subject of an order appointing a receiver, and includes property
that, but for its having being taken, paid or transferred unlawfully or in
breach of trust, would be receivable property. receiver
means a receiver appointed by the Supreme Court under this
Part. relevant
associate means a licensee’s associate of whose property a
receiver has been appointed under this Part. relevant
licensee means a licensee of whose property a receiver has been
appointed. 124 Associates of a licensee (1) In this Part, a reference to a licensee’s associate is a
reference to:(a) a partner of the licensee, or
(b) an employee or agent of the licensee, or
(c) a corporation, or a member of a corporation, partnership,
syndicate or joint venture, in which the licensee or a person referred to in
paragraph (a), (b) or (d) has a beneficial interest, or
(d) a person who bears a prescribed relationship to the licensee or to
a person referred to in paragraphs (a)–(c), or
(e) a corporation that (if a person referred to in paragraphs
(b)–(d) is a corporation) is a subsidiary of the person within the
meaning of the Corporations Act, or
(f) a person declared by the regulations to be an associate of the
licensee or belonging to a class of persons so
declared.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) (d), a person bears a
prescribed relationship to a licensee or other person if the relationship is
that of:(a) a spouse, or
(b) an existing or former de facto partner, or
(c) a child, grandchild, sibling, parent or grandparent, whether
derived through paragraph (a) or (b) or otherwise, or
(d) a kind prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
section.
125 Failure to account (1) In this Part, failure to
account means a failure by a licensee to account for, pay or deliver
money or other valuable property:(a) that has been received by or entrusted to the licensee, or an
associate of the licensee, in the course of the carrying on of the
licensee’s business, and
(b) that is, in the case of money or other valuable property received
by or entrusted to an associate of the licensee, under the direct or indirect
control of the licensee,
being a failure that arises from an act or omission of the licensee or
associate. (2) The reference in the definition of failure to
account in subsection (1) to money or other valuable property
received by or entrusted to a licensee includes a reference to money or other
valuable property that is received by or entrusted to the licensee as trustee,
agent, bailee or stakeholder, or in any other
capacity.
Division 2 Management 126 Appointment of manager (1) The Director-General may appoint a manager for a licensee’s
business in any of the following cases if the Director-General is of the
opinion that it is necessary to make the appointment in order to protect the
interests of other persons:(a) the licensee has made a request to the Director-General for the
appointment of a manager, or
(b) the licensee’s licence has been cancelled or is under
suspension, or
(c) the Director-General is of the opinion that there has been, or
that there may have been, a failure to account by the licensee,
or
(d) the Director-General is of the opinion that a person is unable to
obtain payment or delivery of property held by the licensee because the
licensee:(i) is mentally or physically infirm, or
(ii) is bankrupt, has applied to take the benefit of any law for the
relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, has compounded with his or her
creditors or has made an assignment of his or her remuneration for their
benefit, or
(iii) is an inmate within the meaning of the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act
1999, or
(iv) has died, or
(v) has abandoned his or her business.
(2) In the case of a business that is conducted by 2 or more licensees
in partnership, a reference in subsection (1) to a licensee is to be read as a
reference to all of the licensees in the
partnership. (3) The terms of appointment of a manager must specify the
remuneration to which the manager is to be entitled in connection with the
management of the business for which the manager is
appointed.
127 Qualifications for appointment as manager A person is not eligible to be appointed as the manager of a
licensee’s business unless the person is a licensee or has such other
qualifications or experience as the Director-General considers appropriate in
a particular case. 128 Powers of manager (1) The manager of a licensee’s business may, subject to the
terms of his or her appointment:(a) carry out work on behalf of the existing clients of the business,
and
(b) accept instructions from, and carry out work on behalf of, new
clients, and
(c) dispose of, and otherwise deal with, any property in relation to
the business, and
(c1) wind up the affairs of the business, and
(d) exercise any right in the nature of a lien over property held by
the manager on behalf of the clients of the business, and
(e) incur such expenses as are reasonably related to the conduct or
winding up of the business, and
(f) do all such things as are ancillary to the exercise of the powers
referred to in paragraphs (a)–(e),
as if he or she were the licensee to whom the business
belongs. (2) The manager of a licensee’s business may not exercise any of
the functions conferred by this section in relation to the affairs of a client
of the business unless the client’s consent has been obtained to the
manager’s exercise of those functions.
129 Management continues under receivership (1) The manager of a licensee’s business may continue to
exercise his or her functions under this Division even if a receiver is
appointed under Division 3 in respect of the licensee’s
property. (2) The manager of a licensee’s business for which a receiver is
appointed must comply with any lawful direction given by the receiver in
connection with the conduct of the business.
130 Acts of manager taken to be acts of licensee (1) An act done by the manager of a licensee’s business is, for
the purposes of any proceedings or transaction that relies on that act, taken
to have been done by the licensee. (2) Nothing in this section subjects a licensee to any personal
liability in relation to any act done by the manager of the licensee’s
business.
131 Manager may be reimbursed for damages (1) The Director-General may reimburse a manager for any damages and
costs recovered against the manager, or an employee or agent of the manager,
for anything done or omitted to be done in good faith in the purported
exercise of a function under this Act. (2) Reimbursement under this section is to be by way of payment from
the Operating Account. (3) Neither the manager of a licensee’s business nor the
Director-General is liable for any loss incurred by the licensee as a
consequence of any act or omission of the manager or the Director-General in
the conduct of the business if the act or omission was done or omitted in good
faith and in the purported exercise of a function under this
Act.
132 Payment of expenses of management (1) So much of the expenses of the management of a licensee’s
business as have not otherwise been paid to the manager out of the receipts of
the business are to be paid to the manager by the Director-General from the
Operating Account. (2) An amount paid under this section is recoverable by the
Director-General as a debt owed by the relevant
licensee.
133 Manager to report to Director-General (1) The manager of a licensee’s business must report to the
Director-General on the management of the business. A report must be made at
such times as the Director-General directs and be in accordance with any
directions given by the Director-General. (2) A report is to include such information as the Director-General
directs. (3) On the conclusion of the management of a licensee’s
business, the manager must, when giving the Director-General his or her final
report, lodge with the Director-General all the manager’s records that
relate to the management.
134 Trust money (1) Part 8 (Records) applies to the accounts kept by a manager in the
same way as it applies to the accounts kept by a
licensee. (2) The trust accounts and controlled money accounts of a business
under management are to be maintained separately from the trust accounts and
controlled money accounts of any other business under
management.
135 Office accounts The regulations may make provision with respect to:(a) the accounts that are to be kept in relation to the income
accrued, and the expenses incurred, by the manager of a licensee’s
business in connection with the conduct of the business,
and
(b) the purposes for which money in any such account may be
expended.
136 Termination of management When a licensee’s business ceases to be under management,
any money held by the manager in connection with the business (after
reimbursement of any money paid out of the Operating Account in connection
with the management of the business and after payment of the expenses of the
management of the business) becomes the property of the
licensee. 137 Obstruction of managers A person must not hinder, obstruct or delay a manager in the
exercise of his or her functions under this Division.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. Division 3 Receivership 138 Supreme Court may appoint receiver (1) The Supreme Court may, on the application of the Director-General,
appoint a receiver of all or any of the property of a licensee and may make
the appointment whether or not the licensee has been notified of the
application or is a party to the proceedings. (2) Such an application may be made by the Director-General only
if:(a) the licensee has made a request to the Director-General for the
appointment of a receiver, or
(b) the licensee’s licence has been suspended or cancelled,
or
(c) the Director-General is of the opinion that there has been, or
that there may have been, a failure to account by the licensee,
or
(d) the Director-General is of the opinion that a person is unable to
obtain payment or delivery of property held by the licensee because the
licensee:(i) is mentally or physically infirm, or
(ii) is bankrupt, has applied to take the benefit of any law for the
relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, has compounded with his or her
creditors or has made an assignment of his or her remuneration for their
benefit, or
(iii) is an inmate within the meaning of the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act
1999, or
(iv) has died, or
(v) has abandoned his or her business,
and the Director-General is of the opinion that it is necessary for the
application to be made in order to protect the interests of other
persons. (3) Nothing in this Division prevents a manager of a licensee’s
business from being appointed as a receiver of the licensee’s
property. (4) The Director-General may publicly notify the appointment of a
receiver of all or any property of a licensee. (5) The Supreme Court is not to require the Director-General or any
other person, as a condition of granting an application under this section, to
give any undertaking as to damages or costs.
139 Receivership may extend to property of licensee’s
associate If, on the application of a receiver, the Supreme Court is
satisfied that all or any of the property of a licensee’s associate
should be declared to be receivable property, the Court may appoint the
receiver to be the receiver of all or any of that
property. 140 Court to be closed (1) Before commencing to hear an application for the appointment of a
receiver, the Supreme Court may order from the precincts of the Court any
person who is not:(a) an officer of the Court, or
(b) a party, a legal representative of a party or a clerk of such a
legal representative, or
(c) a member of the same firm of licensees as the respondent,
or
(d) a person who is in the course of giving evidence,
or
(e) an authorised officer, or
(f) a person permitted by the Court to be present in the interests of
justice.
(2) The Supreme Court may, whether or not at the instance of a party,
prohibit the publication of any report relating to the evidence or other
proceedings or of any order made on the hearing of an application for the
appointment of a receiver.
141 Order to be served (1) On the appointment of a receiver, the Director-General is to cause
a copy of the order of appointment to be served on:(a) the relevant licensee or relevant associate,
and
(b) any other person on whom the Supreme Court directs a copy of the
order to be served.
(2) The Supreme Court may give directions as to the manner of service
and may dispense with service if it thinks fit.
142 Receiver may take possession of property (1) A receiver may take possession of receivable property of the
relevant licensee or relevant associate. (2) A person in possession, or having control, of receivable property
must permit the receiver to take possession of the property if required by the
receiver to do so. (3) If a person fails to comply with such a requirement, the Supreme
Court may, on the application of the receiver, order the person to deliver the
property to the receiver. (4) If, on the application of a receiver, the Supreme Court is
satisfied that such an order has not been complied with, the Court:(a) may order the seizure of any receivable property located on
premises specified in the order, and
(b) may make such further order in the matter as it thinks
fit.
(5) An order under subsection (4) (a) authorises:(a) any police officer, or
(b) the receiver, or a person authorised by the receiver, together
with any police officer, to enter the premises specified in the order and to
search for, seize and remove any property that appears to be receivable
property.
(6) An application by a receiver under subsection (3) may be
made:(a) in the case of property in the possession, or under the control,
of the relevant licensee or relevant associate—in the name of the
receiver, or
(b) in any other case—in the name of the relevant licensee or
relevant associate.
(7) A receiver must, as soon as possible, return property seized under
this section if it transpires that it is not receivable
property.
143 Information about receivable property (1) A person who has information relating to receivable property, or
property that a receiver believes on reasonable grounds to be receivable
property, must give the information to the receiver if required by the
receiver to do so.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. (2) A licensee who has any such information may not refuse to comply
with such a requirement merely because the information was obtained in
confidence from a client or former client of the
licensee. (3) A person who complies with a requirement under this section is
not, merely because of that compliance, subject to any liability, claim or
demand. (4) Information given to a receiver under this section is not
admissible as evidence in any legal proceedings, other than:(a) proceedings taken by a receiver for the recovery of receivable
property, or
(b) proceedings taken under this Part, or
(c) proceedings taken under Part 7 (Trust accounts) against a
licensee:(i) if the information was given to the receiver otherwise than by the
licensee, or
(ii) if the information was given to the receiver by the licensee and
is given in evidence in those proceedings with the licensee’s
consent.
144 Stop order on account (1) A receiver who believes on reasonable grounds that money held in
an account with an authorised deposit-taking institution is receivable
property may serve on the institution concerned an order (in this section
referred to as a stop order) prohibiting operations on the account by any
person other than the receiver or a person authorised by the
receiver. (2) A stop order may be served by leaving it with the manager,
accountant or other person appearing to be in charge at the branch of the
authorised deposit-taking institution at which the account is kept, but has no
effect unless there is annexed to it a copy of the order appointing the
receiver. (3) An authorised deposit-taking institution served with a stop
order:(a) must permit the receiver, or a person authorised by the receiver,
to operate on the account to which the order relates, and
(b) must not permit any withdrawal from the account otherwise than by,
or by the authority of, the receiver.
(4) A receiver may transfer money from an account the subject of a
stop order to another account with the authorised deposit-taking institution
in the name of the receiver to be dealt with as receivable
property. (5) The authorised deposit-taking institution has the same obligations
and protections:(a) in relation to an account the subject of a stop order,
and
(b) in relation to an account to which money in such an account is
transferred,
as if the receiver were the relevant licensee or relevant
associate.
145 Improper dealing with property A person must not, with intent to defeat the purposes of this
Division:(a) operate on an account at an authorised deposit-taking institution,
or
(b) destroy or conceal receivable property or property that is likely
to become receivable property, or
(c) destroy or conceal any document that identifies or indicates the
location of receivable property or property that is likely to become
receivable property, or
(d) move receivable property, or property that is likely to become
receivable property, from one place to another, or
(e) deliver possession of receivable property, or property that is
likely to become receivable property, to another person,
or
(f) deliver control of receivable property, or property that is likely
to become receivable property, to another person.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. 146 Recovery of compensation for disposal of receivable
property (1) If receivable property has at any time been taken by, or paid or
transferred to, a person unlawfully or in breach of trust in circumstances in
which:(a) the person knew or believed at the time that the taking, payment
or transfer was unlawful or in breach of trust, or
(b) there was no consideration for the taking, payment or transfer,
or
(c) there was inadequate consideration for the taking, payment or
transfer, or
(d) the person became indebted or otherwise liable to the relevant
licensee or relevant associate, or to a client of the licensee, as a result of
the taking, payment or transfer,
the receiver may recover from the person, as a debt, the amount taken,
paid or transferred, the amount of the inadequacy, the amount of the debt or
the value of the property taken or transferred, as
appropriate. (2) A person from whom an amount is recovered under subsection (1) is
not liable to any other person in respect of the
amount. (3) If receivable property has at any time been paid or transferred
unlawfully or in breach of trust to, or for the benefit of, a person in
respect of a cause of action the person claims to have against another person,
the receiver:(a) may recover from the person as a debt the amount of the payment or
the value of the property, or
(b) to the extent to which the full amount or value is not recovered
from the person under paragraph (a)—may take such proceedings in
relation to the claimed cause of action as the person could have
taken.
(4) If a receiver takes proceedings under subsection (3) (b) in
relation to a cause of action claimed by a person, the receiver may not later
take proceedings under subsection (3) (a) to recover property paid or
transferred to the person in respect of the same cause of
action. (5) If receivable property is used unlawfully or in breach of trust to
discharge a debt or liability of a person, the receiver may recover from the
person as a debt the amount that was required for the discharge of the debt or
liability, reduced by the value of any consideration provided by the person
for the discharge. (6) Recovery proceedings under this section may be taken in the name
of the receiver or in the name of any other person who, had the receiver not
been appointed, would have been entitled to take the
proceedings.
147 Receiver may give certificate (1) A receiver, or a person authorised by the Director-General, may
give a certificate as to any one or more of the following:(a) the receipt of property by a licensee or a licensee’s
associate, the nature and value of the property received, the date of its
receipt by the licensee or associate and the identity of the person from whom
it was received,
(b) the taking or transfer of property, the nature and value of the
property, the date of its taking or transfer and the identity of the person by
whom it was taken or to whom it was transferred,
(c) the payment of money, the amount of money paid, the date of the
payment and the identity of the person who received the
payment,
(d) the entries made in the records of a licensee or a
licensee’s associate and the truth or falsity of the
entries,
(e) the use of property unlawfully or in breach of
trust.
(2) A certificate under this section is admissible in any proceedings
taken by a receiver under this Division and is evidence of the matters
specified in the certificate.
148 Receiver taken to be beneficially entitled to
property (1) Proceedings taken under this Division in the name of a receiver in
relation to any property may be so taken as if the receiver were beneficially
entitled to the property. (2) If receivable property has been taken by, or paid or transferred
to, a person or otherwise used unlawfully or in breach of trust, a receiver
may take proceedings in the name of the receiver as if the receiver were
beneficially entitled to the property at the time the property was so taken,
paid, transferred or used.
149 Receiver may deal with property (1) A receiver may deal with receivable property in any manner in
which the relevant licensee or relevant associate could, had the receiver not
been appointed, have dealt with it. (2) A receiver must, as soon as possible after receiving receivable
property, vest the property in the person on whose behalf it was held by the
relevant licensee or relevant associate.
150 Other powers of receiver (1) A receiver may:(a) prove, grant, claim or draw a dividend in respect of a debt that
is receivable property, and
(b) take proceedings to recover damages for a tort committed in
relation to receivable property, and
(c) give a receipt for money that is receivable property,
and
(d) employ a person to advise or act in relation to receivable
property, in the name of the receiver or in the name of the relevant licensee
or relevant associate.
(2) A receipt given to a person under subsection (1) (c) discharges
the person from any responsibility to see to the application of the money for
which the receipt was given. (3) A receiver is not, in the exercise of his or her functions as a
receiver, a personal representative of a deceased
licensee.
151 Notice to claim receivable property (1) A receiver may give notice to:(a) the relevant licensee or relevant associate,
or
(b) any other person,
that any claim the licensee, associate or other person has to receivable
property must be submitted to the receiver within 1 month after the giving of
the notice or within such longer period as is stated in the
notice. (2) A claim submitted in response to such a notice must state:(a) full particulars of the property, and
(b) the grounds of the claim.
(3) A receiver may disregard a claim made by a licensee, a
licensee’s associate or any other person who has been given a notice
under this section if the claim is not made in accordance with the
notice. (4) The relevant licensee or relevant associate is not
entitled:(a) to enforce a claim to receivable property, or
(b) except against a client—to the benefit of a lien against a
document that is receivable property, unless all other enforceable claims
against the property have been satisfied and the expenses of the receivership
paid.
152 Lien on receivable property (1) If a licensee claims a lien on receivable property for an amount
in respect of remuneration, the receiver may serve on the licensee a written
notice requiring the licensee to provide to the receiver, within a specified
period of not less than 1 month:(a) particulars sufficient to identify the property,
and
(b) a detailed itemised account relating to the amount in respect of
which each lien is claimed.
(2) If the licensee requests the receiver in writing to allow access
to such records as may be reasonably necessary to enable the preparation of
the itemised account, the time allowed for providing the itemised account does
not begin to run until access to those records is
provided. (3) If a requirement of a notice under this section is not complied
with, the receiver may disregard the claim in dealing with the property
claimed to be subject to a lien. (4) In this section:remuneration means
remuneration by way of commission, fee, gain or reward for services performed
by a licensee in his or her capacity as a licensee and includes any sum as
reimbursement for expenses or charges incurred in connection with services
performed by a licensee in his or her capacity as a
licensee.
153 Examination by receiver (1) The Supreme Court may, on the application of a receiver, make such
order as it thinks fit for the examination by the receiver of a licensee or
other person in relation to receivable property. (2) On an examination under this section:(a) the licensee or other person may be represented by an Australian
legal practitioner, and
(b) the Supreme Court may put, or allow to be put, to the licensee or
other person such questions as it thinks fit.
(3) The licensee or other person may be examined on oath or
affirmation. (4) The licensee or other person is compellable to answer all
questions asked in the course of the examination, including any question to
which an objection is made on the ground that the answer would tend to
incriminate the licensee or other person. (5) An answer given by a licensee or other person to a question to
which such an objection is made is not admissible in any criminal proceedings
other than proceedings relating to the falsity of the
answer.
154 Property not dealt with by receiver (1) If receivable property under the control of the receiver has not
been dealt with in accordance with this Division, the receiver must cause
notice of that fact to be given to the Director-General and:(a) if the Director-General so requires within 1 month after the
notice is given—must transfer and deliver the property to the
Director-General, or
(b) if no such requirement is made—must transfer and deliver the
property to the relevant licensee or relevant
associate.
(2) If property other than money is transferred or delivered to the
Director-General under this section, the Director-General:(a) must deal with it as the Supreme Court directs,
and
(b) if the property is sold—must treat the proceeds as money
paid to the Director-General under this section.
(3) The Director-General must apply money paid to the Director-General
under this section:(a) firstly—towards the satisfaction of wholly or partly
unsatisfied claims against the relevant licensee, and
(b) secondly—in payment of the expenses of the
receivership.
(4) Any money paid to the Director-General under this section that is
surplus to the requirements of this section must be paid to the relevant
licensee or relevant associate.
155 Investment of money by receiver (1) A receiver may invest receivable property in any manner in which
trustees are authorised by the Trustee Act
1925 to invest trust funds. (2) Income received from an investment under this section, and any
profit made on the sale of such an investment, is receivable
property.
156 Receiver may be reimbursed for damages (1) The Director-General may reimburse a receiver for any damages or
costs recovered against the receiver, or an employee or agent of the receiver,
for anything done or omitted to be done in good faith in the purported
exercise of the receiver’s functions. (2) Reimbursement under this section is to be by way of payment from
the Operating Account.
157 Payment of expenses of receivership (1) So much of the expenses of receivership as have not otherwise been
paid to the receiver are to be paid to the receiver by the Director-General
from the Operating Account. (2) An amount paid under this section may be recovered by the
Director-General from the relevant licensee as a
debt. (3) If the Director-General and a receiver fail to agree on the
remuneration to be paid to the receiver, the Supreme Court may, on the
application of the Director-General or the receiver, determine the amount to
be paid. (4) The Supreme Court, on the application of the relevant
licensee:(a) may re-open any agreement between the Director-General and a
receiver for remuneration of the receiver, and
(b) may determine the amount to be paid.
158 Supreme Court may review expenses of
receivership (1) If, on the application of the relevant licensee, the Supreme Court
is satisfied that the expenses of the receivership are excessive, the Supreme
Court may order the taking of accounts between the Director-General and the
receiver. (2) After the taking of accounts, the Supreme Court:(a) may relieve the relevant licensee from payment of any amount in
excess of that determined by the Supreme Court to be fairly payable,
or
(b) if the receiver has been paid, or allowed on account, an amount
that includes such an excess—may order the receiver to repay the
excess.
159 Receivable property not to be attached The receivable property of a relevant licensee or relevant
associate is not liable to be taken in execution of any judgment, order or
other process of any court or tribunal. 160 Applications for directions by receiver, licensee
etc (1) A receiver, a licensee or a licensee’s associate who holds
receivable property, or a person who claims receivable property so held, may
apply to the Supreme Court for directions as to the performance of the
receiver’s functions. (2) On an application under this section, the Supreme Court may give
such directions as it thinks fit.
161 Supreme Court may give general directions to
receiver (1) The Supreme Court:(a) may authorise a receiver to do such things in the exercise of the
receiver’s functions as the Supreme Court considers appropriate,
and
(b) may give directions for the exercise of any such
authority.
(2) A receiver must exercise any authority so conferred in accordance
with any direction so given.
162 Receiver to report to Supreme Court and
Director-General (1) A receiver must, at such times and in respect of such periods as
the Supreme Court directs, submit reports on the receivership to the Supreme
Court and the Director-General. (2) A report is to deal with such matters as the Supreme Court directs
and with such other matters as the receiver considers appropriate to include
in the report. (3) On the conclusion of a receivership, the receiver must lodge with
the Supreme Court all of the receiver’s records that relate to the
receivership. (4) Unless the Supreme Court orders their destruction, records lodged
under this section are to remain in the custody of the
Court.
163 Termination of appointment of receiver (1) The Supreme Court:(a) may terminate the appointment of a receiver,
and
(b) may, if it thinks fit, appoint a new receiver either immediately
or at any time within the next 14 days.
(2) The former receiver must transfer or deliver the receivable
property:(a) if a new receiver is appointed—to the new receiver in
accordance with any directions given by the Supreme Court,
or
(b) if a new receiver is not appointed and if the relevant licensee or
relevant associate so requires by notice in writing served on the
receiver—to the licensee or associate.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units. (3) The receivable property must, in accordance with any directions
given by the Supreme Court, be transferred or delivered as soon as possible
after the former receiver’s appointment is
terminated. (4) A former receiver is not required to comply with the requirements
of this section unless:(a) the expenses of the receivership have been paid to the
Director-General, or
(b) the Director-General otherwise directs in relation to those
expenses.
(5) Subject to any direction given by the Supreme Court, a former
receiver may transfer or deliver receivable property to the relevant licensee
or relevant associate without having been given a notice under subsection (2)
(b).
164 Obstruction of receivers A person must not hinder, obstruct or delay a receiver in the
exercise of his or her functions under this Division.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units. Part 10 Compensation Fund Division 1 Establishment and management 165 Compensation Fund The Director-General is to cause to be established and maintained
in the accounting records of the Department a fund, called the Property
Services Compensation Fund. 166 Money payable to Compensation Fund The Compensation Fund is to consist of:(a) any amounts paid by licensees by way of levy under this Act,
and
(b) any amounts required or permitted to be paid to the credit of the
Compensation Fund, whether by this Act or any other Act,
and
(c) any amounts payable to the Compensation Fund from the Statutory
Interest Account, and
(d) income from the investment of the Compensation
Fund.
167 Application of money in Compensation Fund (1) Money in the Compensation Fund may be applied for any purpose for
which it is required or permitted to be applied by or under this or any other
Act. (2) The Director-General may apply money held in the Compensation Fund
(in such order as the Director-General decides) for all or any of the
following purposes:(a) satisfying claims (including costs) established against the
Compensation Fund in accordance with this or any other
Act,
(b) meeting legal expenses incurred by the Director-General in
connection with claims against the Compensation Fund,
(c) meeting expenses incurred by the Director-General in or in
relation to appearances before a court or tribunal with respect to licences
under this Act or the Conveyancers Licensing
Act 2003,
(d) meeting the costs of administering the Compensation
Fund,
(e) investing in schemes that relate to the provision of residential
accommodation or, subject to such terms and conditions as may be prescribed by
the regulations, in loans to authorised deposit-taking
institutions.
(3) The Treasurer may determine whether any such money is to be
invested in any such scheme or loan and the amount to be invested in a scheme
or loan.
Division 2 Contributions and levies 168 Contributions (1) A contribution to the Compensation Fund is to be paid by an
applicant for a licence at the time the application is
made. (2) The amount of the contribution is the amount prescribed by the
regulations. The regulations may prescribe different amounts of contributions
for different kinds of licences. (3) The regulations may provide for a single contribution to be paid
if a person applies for more than one kind of
licence. (4) Contributions under this section are in addition to any fees and
levies payable under this Act. (5) If a licence is not granted pursuant to an application, any
contribution to the Compensation Fund paid by the applicant is to be
refunded.
169 Levies (1) If the Director-General is at any time of the opinion that the
Compensation Fund is likely to be insufficient to meet the liabilities to
which it is subject, the Director-General may, with the approval of the
Minister, impose a levy on each licensee. (2) A levy is payable to the Director-General at the time, and in the
manner, fixed by the Director-General. (3) The Director-General may, in any special case, allow time for the
payment of the whole or part of any levy. (4) If, after being given the notice prescribed by the regulations, a
licensee fails to pay a levy in accordance with this section, the
Director-General may suspend the licence held by the licensee while the
failure continues.
Division 3 Claims 170 Definitions In this Division:associate of a licensee
means: (a) an employee or agent of the licensee, or
(b) a person who has the apparent control or charge for the time being
of the business of the licensee or of any office at which that business is
carried on.
failure to
account has the meaning given in section 171. pecuniary
loss from a failure to account includes: (a) all costs (including the legal costs and disbursements of making
and proving a claim), charges and expenses that a claimant has suffered or
incurred as a direct consequence of the failure to account,
and
(b) all interest on money or other valuable property that a claimant
would have received but for the failure to account for the money or other
property, with that interest calculated to the date on which the
Director-General determines the claimant’s claim or a judgment is
recovered against the Director-General in relation to the Compensation Fund in
respect of that money or other property.
171 Meaning of “failure to account” (1) In this Division, a reference to a failure to account is a
reference to a failure by a licensee to account for money or other valuable
property entrusted to the licensee or an associate of the licensee in the
course of the carrying on of the licensee’s business as a
licensee. (2) This Division applies only to a failure to account that arises
from an act or omission of the licensee or
associate. (3) For the purposes of this Division, it does not matter that the
failure to account occurred after the licensee ceased to be licensed, if the
money or other valuable property concerned was entrusted to the licensee (or
an associate of the licensee) before the licensee ceased to be
licensed. (4) This Division applies whether the failure to account, or the act
or omission, took place before or after the commencement of this
Division.
172 Division applies when person reasonably believed to be a
licensee (1) This Division extends to a case where a person entrusts money or
other valuable property to another person reasonably believing that the other
person is a licensee or an associate of a licensee and that the money or other
valuable property is entrusted in the course of the carrying on of the other
person’s business as licensee. (2) In such a case, the person believed to be a licensee is taken to
be a licensee for the purposes of the operation of this Division and the money
or other valuable property is taken to have been entrusted in the course of
the carrying on of the licensee’s business as
licensee.
173 Claims against Compensation Fund (1) The Compensation Fund is held, and is to be applied, for the
purpose of compensating persons who suffer pecuniary loss because of a failure
to account. (2) A person who claims to have suffered a pecuniary loss because of a
failure to account may make a claim against the Compensation Fund, but only if
the claim is made in writing to the Director-General within:(a) a period of 12 months after the person has become aware of the
failure to account, or
(b) a period of 2 years after the date of the failure to
account,
whichever period ends first. (3) However, a claim caused by a failure of a licensee (or an employee
or agent of a licensee) to lodge a rental bond with the Rental Bond Board may
also be made at any time within one year after the termination of the tenancy
agreement. (4) A licensee does not have a claim against the Compensation Fund in
respect of a pecuniary loss suffered in connection with the licensee’s
business as a licensee because of a failure to
account. (5) Subject to this section, the Director-General may receive and
allow, in whole or in part, any claim against the Compensation Fund at any
time after the relevant failure to account arose. (6) The Director-General may disallow any claim, in whole or in part,
in appropriate cases. In particular the Director-General may disallow a claim
to the extent that pecuniary loss was suffered as a result of a failure to
mitigate loss or was occasioned by unreasonable delay in making a
claim.
174 Legal proceedings (1) A person cannot, without the leave of the Director-General,
commence any proceedings in relation to the Compensation Fund unless the
person has made a claim and the Director-General has disallowed the
person’s claim. (2) A person cannot recover from the Compensation Fund by way of any
such proceedings an amount greater than the amount of pecuniary loss suffered
by the person, after deducting from the total amount of the pecuniary
loss:(a) the amount or value of all money or other benefits received or
recovered from any source (other than the Compensation Fund) in reduction of
the pecuniary loss, and
(b) any such amount or value that, in the opinion of the
Director-General, might have been received or recovered but for the
person’s neglect or default.
(3) Any proceedings in relation to any claim against the Compensation
Fund are to be as for a debt due by the Crown and are to be brought in a court
of competent jurisdiction. The proceedings do not lie against the
Director-General. (4) In those proceedings:(a) all defences that would have been available to the licensee in
relation to whom the claim arose are available to the Crown,
and
(b) all questions of costs are in the discretion of the court or,
where the proceedings are tried with a jury, the judge presiding at the
trial.
(5) Any order for the payment of costs made by a Local Court operates
as a judgment debt under the Civil Procedure
Act 2005 and is enforceable as such under that
Act. (6) No proceedings can be brought against the Crown in relation to a
claim against the Compensation Fund after the end of:(a) a period of 6 months after the claimant has been notified that the
claim has been disallowed, or
(b) such longer period as the court may permit, on sufficient cause
being shown and on such terms as it thinks fit.
175 Limits on amounts recoverable (1) The amount that a person may recover from the Compensation Fund
cannot, in any case or in any event, exceed $500,000 or, if another amount is
prescribed by the regulations, the prescribed
amount. (2) The aggregate sum that may be applied in compensating all persons
who suffer or incur pecuniary loss because of a failure to account, or of
related failures to account, cannot exceed $2,000,000 or, if another amount is
prescribed by the regulations, the prescribed
amount. (3) The Director-General may disregard subsection (2) in the case of
successive failures to account by a licensee, to the extent that the
Director-General is satisfied that the failures are not
connected. (4) If the total amount of claims or judgments (or both) exceeds the
aggregate sum provided for by this section, the Director-General has an
unfettered discretion to determine the division and allocation of the
available money among the various parties (whether or not to the exclusion of
any one or more of them).
176 Advertisements (1) The Director-General may cause to be published a notice relating
to a defaulting licensee and fixing a date by which claims must be made under
this Part. (2) The notice is to be published in a newspaper circulating in the
district in which the defaulting licensee is or was carrying on business, and
also in a newspaper circulating in Sydney. One newspaper may satisfy both
requirements. (3) Any claim not made in writing on or before the date fixed by the
notice is barred, unless the Director-General otherwise
determines. (4) After that date, the Director-General may distribute compensation
in accordance with this Part, having regard only to judgments obtained and
claims allowed against the Compensation Fund.
177 Subrogation (1) On payment out of the Compensation Fund in settlement in whole or
in part of a claim under this Act, the Crown is subrogated, to the extent of
the payment, to all the rights and remedies of the claimant against the
licensee, or the former licensee, in relation to whom the claim arose, or any
other person. (2) A certificate given by the Director-General certifying that a
specified amount has been paid out of the Compensation Fund in settlement in
whole or in part of a claim under this Act is evidence of the matter
certified. (3) In the enforcement of any rights or remedies to which the
Director-General is subrogated under this section for the purpose of
recovering an amount paid out of the Compensation Fund, the amount is taken to
be a debt due to the Crown and may be recovered
accordingly. (4) The Director-General may exercise the rights and remedies to which
the Director-General is subrogated under this section in the name of the
Director-General or in the name of the claimant
concerned.
178 Recovery of payments from directors (1) This section applies when the payment of an amount out of the
Compensation Fund has been made as a consequence of the act or omission of a
corporation (including the payment of any amount to an administrator of the
affairs and property of the corporation). (2) The Director-General may recover, jointly or severally, from any
person who was a director or persons who were directors of the corporation at
the time of the relevant act or omission, the amount of the payment as a debt
in any court of competent jurisdiction. (3) In any proceedings for the recovery of an amount under this
section, judgment is not to be entered against a defendant who proves that the
act or omission occurred without the defendant’s express or implied
authority or consent. (4) Proceedings may be brought for the recovery of an amount under
this section whether or not the person against whom the proceedings are
brought, or any other person, has been convicted of an offence in respect of
the act or omission as a consequence of which the amount was
paid. (5) When this section renders a person or persons liable to pay an
amount as a consequence of an act or omission of a corporation, the payment by
the person or either or any of those persons of the whole or any part of the
amount does not render the corporation liable to the person concerned in
respect of the amount so paid.
179 Production of documents (1) The Director-General may, at any time and from time to time,
require the production of documents necessary to support any claim under this
Act, or available for that purpose, or for the purpose of exercising functions
in respect of a defaulting licensee. (2) The Director-General may reject a claim if documents are not
produced as required.
180 Satisfaction of claims and judgments (1) A claim or judgment against the Compensation Fund can only be
satisfied to the extent of money in the Compensation Fund (either then or at a
later time). No other money or property (whether of the Crown or otherwise) is
available for that purpose. (2) If a number of claims or judgments (or both) against the
Compensation Fund cannot be satisfied because of an insufficiency of money in
the Compensation Fund, the Director-General has an unfettered discretion to
determine the division and allocation of the available money among the various
parties (whether or not to the exclusion of any one or more of
them).
Division 4 Examination of accounts of licensees and former
licensees 181 Definitions In this Division:accounts
examiner means a person appointed as an accounts examiner under this
Division. associate has the same
meaning as in Division 3. 182 Appointment of accounts examiner to examine
licensee’s accounts (1) For the purpose of safeguarding the Compensation Fund in relation
to the affairs of a licensee, the Director-General may, at any time and from
time to time, appoint an appropriately qualified person as an accounts
examiner to examine the accounts kept by the licensee in connection with the
licensee’s business. (2) A person is appropriately qualified for appointment if the person
has such qualifications or experience as in the opinion of the
Director-General are appropriate for the purpose of exercising functions under
this Division. (3) The appointment of an accounts examiner is to be by instrument in
writing. (4) The Director-General may publicly notify the appointment of an
accounts examiner in relation to the accounts of a
licensee.
183 Accounts examiner to report on accounts (1) An accounts examiner is to furnish to the Director-General a
confidential report about the accounts concerned, indicating whether there is
any irregularity or alleged or suspected irregularity in the accounts or any
other matter that in the person’s opinion should, in the interests of
the Compensation Fund, be further investigated. (2) A copy of the report is required to be sent by post by the
Director-General to the licensee as soon as
practicable.
184 Powers of accounts examiner (1) On production by an accounts examiner of his or her instrument of
appointment, the accounts examiner may require the licensee (or, in the
absence of the licensee, an associate of the licensee) to do any one or more
of the following things:(a) produce to the accounts examiner or any assistant of the accounts
examiner all records relating to the business of the licensee (including all
records made and kept by the licensee under this Act) and (in the case of
records stored electronically) produce any such record in written
form,
(b) give the accounts examiner or any assistant of the accounts
examiner all information relating to the records required to be produced under
this section,
(c) produce to the accounts examiner or any assistant of the accounts
examiner all authorities and orders to financial institutions and other
documents that may be reasonably required.
(2) The licensee or associate is guilty of an offence if the licensee
or associate, without lawful justification or excuse (proof of which lies on
the licensee or associate):(a) refuses or fails to comply with a requirement under this section,
or
(b) otherwise hinders, obstructs or delays an accounts examiner in the
exercise or performance of the accounts examiner’s functions under this
section.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
185 Confidentiality (1) An accounts examiner must not communicate to any person (other
than a partner, employer, employee or assistant of the accounts
examiner):(a) the fact of the accounts examiner’s appointment under this
Division, or
(b) any matter that comes to the accounts examiner’s knowledge
in the course of the examination,
except in the course of preparing and furnishing the report to the
Director-General or in the same circumstances as information obtained in
connection with the administration or execution of this Act can be disclosed
under section 219. (2) A partner, employer, employee or assistant (the colleague) of
the accounts examiner must not communicate to any person (other than the
accounts examiner or a partner, employer, employee or assistant of the
accounts examiner):(a) the fact of the accounts examiner’s appointment under this
Division, or
(b) any matter that comes to the colleague’s knowledge in the
course of the examination,
except in the course of the preparing and furnishing of the report to the
Director-General or in the same circumstances as information obtained in
connection with the administration or execution of this Act can be disclosed
under section 219. (3) A person who contravenes this section is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
186 Former licensees This Division extends, with any necessary adaptations, to a former
licensee, so that a reference in this Division to a licensee includes a
reference to a former licensee and any person who has the possession, custody
or control of a written record relating to a former licensee and preserved in
accordance with this Act. Part 11 Property Services Statutory Interest
Account 187 Statutory Interest Account The Director-General is to cause to be established and maintained
in the accounting records of the Department an account called the Property
Services Statutory Interest Account. 188 Money payable to Statutory Interest Account The Statutory Interest Account is to consist of:(a) any money required or permitted to be paid to the credit of the
Statutory Interest Account, whether by this Act or any other Act,
and
(b) income from the investment of the Statutory Interest
Account.
189 Application of money in Statutory Interest
Account (1) Money in the Statutory Interest Account may be applied for any
purpose for which it is required or permitted to be applied by or under this
or any other Act. (2) The Director-General may, with the consent of the Minister, apply
money held in the Statutory Interest Account for all or any of the following
purposes:(a) supplementing the Compensation Fund by such amount as may be
needed to enable the current liabilities of the fund to be
met,
(b) providing grants or loans for providing or undertaking education
or research programs relating to the property services industry (as defined in
section 25I of the Fair Trading Act
1987) and approved by the Minister,
(c) providing money for the establishment or administration of rental
advisory services,
(d) meeting the costs of administering this Act, the Conveyancers Licensing Act 2003, the
Valuers Act 2003 and any
other Act prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph (or
the prescribed provisions of any other Act),
(e) meeting the costs of the administration of the Property Services
Advisory Council,
(f) meeting the costs of operating a scheme or schemes for resolving
disputes arising between consumers and providers of property
services,
(g) investing in schemes that relate to the provision of residential
accommodation or, subject to such terms and conditions as may be prescribed by
the regulations, in loans to authorised deposit-taking
institutions.
(3) The Treasurer may determine whether any such money is to be
invested in any such scheme or loan and the amount to be invested in a scheme
or loan. (4) In this section:property
services means services provided in the property services industry
as defined in section 25I of the Fair
Trading Act 1987.
190 Application of money for purposes of certain
Acts (1) The following amounts are also payable from the Statutory Interest
Account:(a) such contributions towards the costs, charges and expenses of
administration of the Landlord and Tenant
(Rental Bonds) Act 1977, the Residential Tenancies Act 1987 and
the Residential Parks Act
1998 as may be agreed from time to time by the Minister and
the Ministers administering the Landlord and
Tenant (Rental Bonds) Act 1977, the Residential Tenancies Act 1987 and
the Residential Parks Act
1998,
(b) such contributions towards half the costs and expenses incurred in
the administration of the Consumer, Trader
and Tenancy Tribunal Act 2001 as are agreed annually by the
Minister, the Minister administering the Landlord and Tenant (Rental Bonds) Act
1977 and the Minister administering the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal Act
2001, but only to the extent to which those costs and expenses
relate to the exercise of the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal’s
jurisdiction in relation to matters arising under the following Acts:(i) the Community Land Management
Act 1989,
(ii) the Residential Parks Act
1998,
(iii) the Residential Tenancies Act
1987,
(iv) the Retirement Villages Act
1999,
(v) the Strata Schemes Management
Act 1996.
(c) such contributions towards the costs, charges and expenses of the
administration of the Retirement Villages
Act 1999 as may be authorised by the Director-General with the
consent of the Minister,
(d) such contributions as may be agreed by the Minister and the
Minister administering the Fair Trading Act
1987 towards the costs, charges and expenses of the
administration of that Act,
(e) such contributions as may be agreed by the Minister and the
Minister administering the Strata Schemes
Management Act 1996 and Community Land Management Act 1989
towards the costs, charges and expenses of the administration of those
Acts,
(f) such additional contributions for the purposes set out in
paragraphs (a)–(e) as the Ministers referred to in those paragraphs may
at any time agree.
(2) Contributions referred to in this section are to be paid in the
manner determined by the Treasurer.
Part 12 Complaints and disciplinary action 191 Grounds for disciplinary action Disciplinary action under this Part can be taken against a person
who is or was the holder of a licence or certificate of registration on any
one or more of the following grounds:(a) the person has contravened a provision of this Act or any other
Act administered by the Minister, or the regulations under any such Act,
whether or not the person has been prosecuted or convicted of an offence in
respect of the contravention,
(b) the person has contravened a condition of the licence or
certificate of registration,
(c) the person has, in the course of carrying on business or
exercising functions under the licence or certificate of registration, acted
unlawfully, improperly, unfairly or incompetently,
(d) the person is a disqualified person or is otherwise not eligible
under section 14 to hold a licence or certificate of
registration,
(e) the person is not a fit and proper person to be involved in the
direction, management or conduct of the business of a
licensee,
(f) the person has failed to pay any part of a contribution or levy
that is due and payable under Part 10 (Compensation Fund),
(g) the person has breached an undertaking given by the person to the
Director-General under this Act or the Fair
Trading Act 1987, in respect of the person’s conduct of
business or exercise of functions under the licence or certificate of
registration,
(h) the person has failed to comply with a direction given to the
person by the Director-General pursuant to the taking of disciplinary action
under this Part,
(i) the person has failed to pay a monetary penalty imposed on the
person by the Director-General pursuant to the taking of disciplinary action
under this Part,
(j) the issue of the person’s licence or certificate of
registration was obtained by fraud or mistake,
(k) grounds specified in the regulations as grounds for the taking of
disciplinary action against a person under this
Act.
192 Disciplinary action (1) Each of the following actions is disciplinary action that the
Director-General can take against a person under this Act:(a) caution or reprimand the person,
(b) give a direction to the person requiring the person to give a
specified undertaking to the Director-General as to the manner in which the
person will conduct business or exercise functions under a licence or
certificate of registration held by the person,
(c) give a direction to the person requiring the person to take
specified action within a specified time in connection with the conduct of
business or the exercise of functions under a licence or certificate of
registration,
(d) impose a monetary penalty on the person of an amount not exceeding
100 penalty units in the case of an individual or 200 penalty units in the
case of a corporation,
(e) impose a condition on the person’s licence or certificate of
registration,
(f) suspend the person’s licence or certificate of registration
for a period that does not exceed the unexpired term of the licence or
certificate of registration,
(g) cancel the person’s licence or certificate of
registration,
(h) declare the person to be a disqualified person for the purposes of
this Act, either permanently or for a specified period,
(i) disqualify the person from being involved in the direction,
management or conduct of the business of a
licensee.
(2) A power conferred by this Act to take disciplinary action against
a person is a power to take any one or more of the actions that constitute
disciplinary action. (3) When a licence or certificate of registration is suspended, it is
taken not to be in force except for such provisions of this Act or the
regulations as the regulations may prescribe as provisions that remain
applicable to a suspended licence or certificate of
registration.
193 Decision to take no further action The Director-General may at any stage of a matter that is the
subject of consideration by the Director-General under this Part determine to
take no further action in respect of the matter, whether or not the matter is
the subject of a complaint or a show cause notice and whether or not the
Director-General determines that there are grounds for taking disciplinary
action in connection with the matter. 194 Complaints (1) Any person may make a complaint to the Director-General setting
out matters that are alleged to constitute grounds for taking disciplinary
action against a person under this Act. (2) Action can be taken under this Part whether or not a complaint has
been made.
195 Show cause notice (1) The Director-General may serve a show cause notice on a person if
the Director-General is of the opinion that there is reasonable cause to
believe that there are grounds for taking disciplinary action against the
person. (2) A show cause notice is a notice requiring a person to show cause
why disciplinary action should not be taken against the person under this Act
on the grounds specified in the notice. (3) A show cause notice is to be in writing and is to specify a period
of not less than 14 days after service of the notice as the period that the
person to whom the notice is directed has to show cause as required by the
notice. (4) The person on whom a show cause notice is served may within the
period allowed by the notice make oral or written submissions to the
Director-General in respect of the matters to which the notice relates. In the
case of a corporation, submissions may be made by a director or officer of the
corporation.
196 Power to suspend licence or certificate of registration
when show cause notice served (1) When a show cause notice is served on a person, the
Director-General may by notice in writing to the person suspend the
person’s licence or certificate of registration pending a determination
by the Director-General of whether to take disciplinary action under this Act
against the person. (2) The Director-General may only suspend a licence or certificate of
registration under this section if satisfied that the grounds for disciplinary
action specified in the show cause notice would, if established, justify the
suspension or cancellation of the licence or certificate of
registration. (3) Such a suspension may not be imposed for a period of more than 60
days after the show cause notice is served. (4) The Director-General is not required to afford a person an
opportunity to be heard before taking action against the person under this
section. (5) The Director-General can revoke a suspension under this section at
any time by notice in writing to the suspended
person. (6) This section does not limit or otherwise affect any power to
suspend a licence or certificate of registration under section 64A of the
Fair Trading Act
1987.
197 Inquiries and investigation The Director-General may conduct inquiries and make investigations
in relation to the matters to which a show cause notice relates and the
submissions, if any, made by or on behalf of the person to whom the show cause
notice relates in relation to those matters, as the Director-General thinks
fit. 198 Taking of disciplinary action (1) If the Director-General is satisfied that there are grounds for
taking disciplinary action under this Act against a person on whom a show
cause notice has been served, the Director-General may by order in writing
served on the person take such disciplinary action against the person as the
Director-General thinks is warranted. (2) The order must include a statement of the reasons for the
Director-General’s decision on the matter.
199 Recovery of monetary penalty A monetary penalty imposed on a person by disciplinary action
under this Part may be recovered by the Director-General in a court of
competent jurisdiction as a debt due to the Crown. 200 Review of disciplinary action by ADT A person against whom disciplinary action is taken by the
Director-General may apply to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal under the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997 for a review of the Director-General’s decision on
the disciplinary action or on a review of the disciplinary
action. 201 Warning notices (1) The Director-General may authorise publication of a notice warning
persons of particular risks involved in dealing with a specified holder of a
licence, or a person who does not hold a licence, in connection with the
activities of licensees. (2) For example, a warning may relate to the risks involved in dealing
with a person who has a recent history of unconscionable conduct in the
person’s dealings with consumers. (3) The Director-General may authorise publication of such a notice in
any one or more of the following ways:(a) to any person making inquiries to the Director-General about the
licensee concerned,
(b) by advertisement by the use of any medium,
(c) to any media representatives.
(4) Publication of such a notice may not be authorised unless an
investigation has been conducted by the Director-General, whether or not a
complaint has been made. (5) Before authorising publication of such a notice, the
Director-General must give the person concerned an opportunity for a period of
not less than 48 hours to make representations to the Director-General about
publication of such a notice, unless:(a) the Director-General is not able, after making reasonable efforts
to do so, to contact the person promptly and advise the person of that
opportunity, or
(b) the person refuses to make any
representations.
(6) No opportunity to make representations is required to be given if,
in the opinion of the Director-General, there is an immediate risk to the
public. (7) No liability is incurred by a person for publishing in good
faith:(a) a notice under this section, or
(b) a fair report or summary of such a
notice.
202 Failure to comply with disqualification from involvement
in business A person who is disqualified under this Part from being involved
in the direction, management or conduct of the business of a licensee must not
act contrary to the disqualification.Maximum penalty: (a) 200 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 100 penalty units in any other case.
203 Return of suspended or cancelled licence A person who has possession of a licence or certificate of
registration that has been suspended or cancelled under this Part must give
the licence or certificate of registration to an officer of the Department at
any office of the Department within 7 days after the suspension or
cancellation takes effect.Maximum penalty: (a) 40 penalty units in the case of a corporation,
or
(b) 20 penalty units in any other case.
Part 13 Enforcement 204 Authorised officers (1) In this Act:authorised
officer means: (a) an officer of the Department for the time being appointed under
this Part as an authorised officer, or
(b) an investigator appointed under section 18 of the Fair Trading Act 1987,
or
(c) a police officer.
(2) The Director-General may appoint any officer of the Department as
an authorised officer for the purposes of this Act. (3) An authorised officer who is not a police officer is to be
provided by the Director-General with a certificate of
identification. (4) An authorised officer (other than a police officer) must, when
exercising on any premises any function of the authorised officer under this
Act, produce the officer’s certificate of identification to any person
apparently in charge of the premises who requests its
production.
205 Powers of entry, inspection etc (1) An authorised officer may exercise the powers conferred by this
section for the purpose of:(a) ascertaining whether the provisions of this Act or the regulations
are being complied with or have been contravened, or
(b) investigating a complaint made or intended to be made under this
Act, or
(c) obtaining evidence, records or information in relation to a matter
that constitutes or may constitute a contravention of this Act or the
regulations.
(2) An authorised officer may enter and inspect at any reasonable time
any premises that the officer believes on reasonable grounds are used for the
carrying on of the business of an agent, whether or not the business is being
carried on by the holder of a licence. (3) While on premises entered under this section or under the
authority of a search warrant under this Part, an authorised officer may do
any one or more of the following:(a) require any person on those premises to produce any records in the
possession or under the control of that person relating to the carrying on of
the business of an agent, and (in the case of records stored electronically)
to produce any such record in written form,
(b) inspect, take copies of or extracts from, or make notes from, any
such records, and for that purpose may take temporary possession of any such
records,
(c) take possession of any such records if the authorised officer
considers it necessary to do so for the purpose of obtaining evidence or
protecting evidence from destruction,
(d) take such photographs, films and audio, video and other recordings
as the authorised officer considers necessary,
(e) require any person on those premises to answer questions or
otherwise furnish information in relation to the carrying on of the practice
of the business of an agent or a contravention of a provision of this Act or
the regulations,
(f) require the owner or occupier of those premises to provide the
authorised officer with such assistance and facilities as is or are reasonably
necessary to enable the authorised officer to exercise the functions of an
authorised officer under this section.
(4) An authorised officer is not entitled to enter a part of premises
used for residential purposes, except:(a) with the consent of the occupier of the part,
or
(b) a part of premises on which an auction of residential property is
being conducted, or
(c) under the authority of a search
warrant.
206 Power of authorised officer to obtain information,
records and evidence If an authorised officer believes on reasonable grounds that a
person is capable of giving information, producing records or giving evidence
in relation to a matter that constitutes, or may constitute, an offence
against this Act or the regulations, the authorised officer may, by notice in
writing given to the person, require the person:(a) to provide an authorised officer, by writing signed by the person
(or, in the case of a corporation, by a competent officer of the corporation)
and given to the authorised officer within the time and in the manner
specified in the notice, with any such information, or
(b) to produce to an authorised officer, in accordance with the
notice, any such records, or
(c) to appear before an authorised officer at a time and place
specified in the notice and give any such evidence, either orally or in
writing, and produce any such records.
207 Obstruction etc of authorised officers A person must not:(a) without reasonable excuse, refuse or fail to comply with any
notice given or requirement made, or to answer any question asked, by an
authorised officer under this Part, or
(b) provide information or give evidence in purported compliance with
a requirement made or question asked by an authorised officer under this Part
knowing the information or evidence to be false or misleading in a material
particular, or
(c) wilfully delay, hinder or obstruct an authorised officer in the
exercise of the officer’s functions under this
Part.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months,
or both. 208 Taking possession of records to be used as
evidence (1) If an authorised officer takes possession of any records under
this Part for the purpose of obtaining evidence or protecting evidence from
destruction, they may be retained by the officer until the completion of any
proceedings (including proceedings on appeal) in which they may be
evidence. (2) The person from whom the records are taken must be provided,
within a reasonable time after the records are taken, with a copy of the
records certified by an authorised officer as a true
copy. (3) A copy of records provided under this section is, as evidence, of
equal validity to the records of which it is certified to be a
copy.
209 Search warrants (1) An authorised officer under this Act may apply to an authorised
officer within the meaning of the Law
Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 for the
issue of a search warrant for premises if the officer believes on reasonable
grounds:(a) that a provision of this Act or the regulations is being or has
been contravened on the premises, or
(b) that there is on the premises evidence of a contravention of this
Act or the regulations.
(2) An authorised officer within the meaning of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act
2002 to whom such an application is made may, if satisfied
that there are reasonable grounds for doing so, issue a search warrant
authorising an authorised officer under this Act named in the warrant:(a) to enter and inspect the premises, and
(b) to exercise on the premises any function of an authorised officer
under this Part.
(3) Division 4 of Part 5 of the Law
Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 applies to
a search warrant issued under this section. (4) (Repealed)
210 Injunctions (1) On the application of the Director-General, the Supreme Court may
grant an injunction restraining a threatened or apprehended contravention, or
the continuation of a contravention, of a provision of this Act or the
regulations. (2) An injunction may be granted without the Director-General being
required to show a likelihood of damage. (3) If in the opinion of the Court it is desirable to do so, the Court
may grant an interim injunction pending determination of the
application. (4) When the Director-General makes an application for the grant of an
injunction under this section, the Court is not to require the
Director-General or any other person, as a condition of granting an interim
injunction, to give an undertaking as to damages. (5) This section does not limit any provision of the Fair Trading Act
1987.
Part 14 Offences and proceedings Division 1 Offences 211 Fraudulent conversion and false accounts of money
received by licensee or registered person (1) This section applies to:(a) any money received by a licensee or registered person on behalf of
any person in respect of any transaction in the licensee’s or registered
person’s capacity as a licensee or registered person, or any part of any
such money, and
(b) any money so received that is held by the licensee or registered
person as a stakeholder or in trust pending the completion of any
transaction.
(2) If the licensee or registered person fraudulently converts the
money or any part of that money to his or her own use or to the use of any
other person, the licensee or registered person is guilty of an indictable
offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than 10
years. (3) If the licensee or registered person fraudulently omits to account
for, deliver or pay the money or any part of the money to the person from whom
it was received or to the person or persons entitled to it, the licensee or
registered person is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to
imprisonment for a term of not more than 10 years. (4) If the licensee or registered person fraudulently renders an
account of the money or any part of the money knowing the account to be false
in any material particular, the licensee or registered person is guilty of an
indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than 10
years. (5) On the prosecution of a person for an offence under this section
it is not necessary to prove the fraudulent conversion by the accused of any
specific sum of money if there is proof of a general deficiency on the
examination of the books of account, or entries kept, or made by the accused,
or otherwise, and the jury are satisfied that the accused fraudulently
converted the deficient money or any part of it.
212 Fraudulent accounts for expenses, commission and other
charges If a licensee or registered person fraudulently renders an account
of expenses, commission or other charges incidental to any transaction or
proposed or contemplated transaction as a licensee or registered person
knowing the account to be false in any material particular, the licensee or
registered person is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to
imprisonment for a term of not more than 10 years. 213 Offences by persons other than principal
offenders A person who:(a) aids, abets, counsels or procures a person to contravene,
or
(b) induces, or attempts to induce, a person, whether by threats or
promises or otherwise, to contravene, or
(c) is in any way, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or
party to, the contravention by a person of, or
(d) conspires with others to contravene,
a provision of this Act or the regulations is guilty of an offence
against this Act or the regulations and liable to the same penalty as a person
who contravenes the provision. 214 Operation of Crimes Act not affected Nothing in this Division affects the generality of any provisions
of the Crimes Act
1900. Division 2 Proceedings 215 Proceedings for offences (1) Proceedings for an offence under this Act or the regulations may
be taken and prosecuted only by the Director-General or, in the name of the
Director-General, by a person acting with the authority of the
Director-General. (2) Proceedings for an offence under this Act or the regulations
(other than proceedings for an indictable offence) may be dealt with:(a) summarily before a Local Court constituted by a Magistrate sitting
alone, or
(b) summarily before the Supreme Court in its summary
jurisdiction.
(3) If proceedings are brought in a Local Court, the maximum monetary
penalty that the Local Court may impose for the offence is 100 penalty units
or such other amount as may be prescribed by the regulations, despite any
higher maximum monetary penalty provided in respect of the
offence. (4) Despite any proceedings against a person for an offence against
this Act or the regulations (whether resulting in a conviction or otherwise)
the person remains liable to civil proceedings in the same manner as if the
proceedings for an offence had not been taken.
216 Penalty notices (1) An authorised officer may serve a penalty notice on a person if it
appears to the officer that the person has committed an offence against this
Act or the regulations, being an offence prescribed by the regulations as a
penalty notice offence. (2) A penalty notice is a notice to the effect that, if the person
served does not wish to have the matter determined by a court, the person can
pay, within the time and to the person specified in the notice, the amount of
the penalty prescribed by the regulations for the offence if dealt with under
this section. (3) A penalty notice may be served personally or by
post. (4) If the amount of penalty prescribed for an alleged offence is paid
under this section, no person is liable to any further proceedings for the
alleged offence. (5) Payment under this section is not to be regarded as an admission
of liability for the purpose of, and does not in any way affect or prejudice,
any civil claim, action or proceeding arising out of the same
occurrence. (6) The regulations may:(a) prescribe an offence for the purposes of this section by
specifying the offence or by referring to the provision creating the offence,
and
(b) prescribe the amount of penalty payable for the offence if dealt
with under this section, and
(c) prescribe different amounts of penalties for different offences or
classes of offences.
(7) The amount of a penalty prescribed under this section for an
offence is not to exceed the maximum amount of penalty that could be imposed
for the offence by a court. (8) This section does not limit the operation of any other provision
of, or made under, this or any other Act relating to proceedings that may be
taken in respect of offences. (9) In this section:authorised
officer means a person authorised in writing by the Director-General
as an authorised officer for the purposes of this
section.
217 Time for laying information Proceedings for an offence against this Act (other than
proceedings that are to be dealt with on indictment) or the regulations may be
commenced within 3 years after the date on which the offence is alleged to
have been committed or, with the consent of the Attorney General, at any
time. 218 Offences by corporations (1) If a corporation contravenes, whether by act or omission, any
provision of this Act or the regulations, each director of the corporation,
and each person concerned in the management of the corporation, is taken to
have contravened the same provision unless the director or person satisfies
the court that:(a) he or she was not in a position to influence the conduct of the
corporation in relation to its contravention of the provision,
or
(b) he or she, being in such a position, used all due diligence to
prevent the contravention by the corporation.
(2) A person may be proceeded against and convicted under a provision
pursuant to subsection (1) whether or not the corporation has been proceeded
against or been convicted under that provision. (3) Nothing in subsection (1) prejudices or affects any liability
imposed by a provision of this Act or the regulations on any corporation by
which an offence against the provision is actually
committed.
Part 15 Administration 219 Disclosure of information (1) A person must not disclose any information obtained in connection
with the administration or execution of this Act unless that disclosure is
made:(a) with the consent of the person from whom the information was
obtained, or
(b) in connection with the administration or execution of this Act,
or
(c) for the purposes of any legal proceedings arising out of this Act
or of any report of any such proceedings, or
(d) in accordance with a requirement imposed under the Ombudsman Act 1974, the Freedom of Information Act 1989 or
the Independent Commission Against
Corruption Act 1988, or
(e) to a regulatory officer or law enforcement officer, for the
purposes of assisting the officer in the exercise of the officer’s
functions, or
(f) as otherwise authorised by this section or the regulations,
or
(g) with other lawful excuse.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months, or
both. (2) The Director-General may communicate to any person directly
concerned in any transaction with a licensee in connection with his or her
business as a licensee any information furnished to the Director-General in
connection with the administration or execution of this Act, in so far as it
relates to any such transaction and directly concerns any such
person. (3) The Director-General may request and receive information from a
law enforcement officer or regulatory officer for the purpose of assisting the
Director-General in the exercise of functions under this Act or under any
other Act administered by the Minister. (4) The Director-General may enter into agreements and other
arrangements for the sharing or exchange of information as authorised by this
section. (5) In this section:law
enforcement officer means: (a) a member of the Police Service, the Australian Federal Police or
of the police force of another State or a Territory, or
(b) the Director of Public Prosecutions or the Crown Prosecutor of the
State or the Director of Public Prosecutions or the Crown Prosecutor of the
Commonwealth or of another State or Territory, or
(c) any other person, or officer of an authority, responsible for the
investigation or prosecution of offences under laws of the State, the
Commonwealth, another State or a Territory.
regulatory
officer means an officer or employee of a government agency
(including the government of a jurisdiction outside the State and outside
Australia) exercising functions under an enactment with respect to fair
trading or an enactment that provides for the issue of licences or other
authorities in connection with the undertaking of an activity regulated under
the enactment.
220 Register (1) The Director-General is to maintain a Register for the purposes of
this Act and is to enter and keep in the Register particulars of such of the
following as the regulations may require:(a) the licences and certificates of registration issued under this
Act,
(b) applications for a licence or certificate of registration that are
refused,
(c) prosecutions taken under this Act and the result of those
prosecutions,
(d) warning notices that the Director-General has authorised
publication of under this Act,
(e) disciplinary action taken under this Act,
(f) undertakings given under this Act by the holder of a licence or
certificate of registration,
(g) the appointment of a manager or receiver under this
Act,
(h) such other matters as may be prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) Any person is entitled to inspect any entry in the Register on
payment of such fee as the Director-General may determine for the giving of
access to the Register.
221 Certificate evidence A document purporting to be a certificate signed by the
Director-General and certifying that any person is or is not or was or was not
on any date or during any specified period the holder of a licence of a
specified type or the holder of a certificate of registration is evidence of
the matters certified in all courts and before all persons and bodies
authorised by law to receive evidence. 222 Delegation The Director-General may delegate the exercise of any function of
the Director-General under this Act (other than this power of delegation)
to:(a) any public servant employed in the Department of Fair Trading,
or
(b) any person, or any class of persons, authorised for the purposes
of this section by the regulations.
Part 16 Miscellaneous 223 Fair Trading Act not affected This Act does not limit or otherwise affect the exercise of any
function under the Fair Trading Act
1987. 224 Exclusion of personal liability A matter or thing done or omitted to be done by the
Director-General, an authorised officer or any person acting under the
direction of the Director-General does not, if the matter or thing was done or
omitted in good faith for the purpose of executing this or any other Act,
subject the Director-General, authorised officer or person so acting
personally to any action, liability, claim or demand. 225 Service of notices (1) A notice or direction in writing that is required or permitted to
be given under this Act may be given as provided by this
section. (2) A notice or direction may be given to a person other than a
corporation:(a) by giving it to the person himself or herself,
or
(b) by leaving it at his or her place of residence with someone who
apparently resides there and has apparently reached the age of 16 years,
or
(c) by leaving it at his or her place of employment or business with
someone who is apparently employed there and has apparently reached the age of
16 years, or
(d) by posting it in a letter addressed to him or her at the address
last known to the Director-General of his or her place of residence,
employment or business.
(3) A notice or direction may be given to a corporation:(a) by giving it to the secretary of the corporation, or any other
person concerned in the management of the corporation, personally,
or
(b) by leaving it at the corporation’s only or principal place
of business with someone who is apparently employed there and has apparently
reached the age of 16 years, or
(c) by posting it in a letter addressed to the corporation at the
address last known to the Director-General of its only or principal place of
business.
(4) This section does not limit any provision of the Corporations
Act.
226 Repeals (1) The Property, Stock and Business
Agents Act 1941 is repealed. (2) The Property,
Stock and Business Agents (General) Regulation 1993 is
repealed.
227 Savings and transitional provisions Schedule 1 has effect. 228 Consequential amendments of Acts Schedule 2 has effect. 229 Displacement of Corporations legislation A provision of Part 9 (Management and receivership) is a
Corporations legislation displacement provision for the purposes of section 5G
of the Corporations Act. 230 Regulations (1) The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act,
for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to
be prescribed or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying
out or giving effect to this Act. (2) In particular the Governor may make regulations for or with
respect to:(a) prescribing the procedure to be followed in respect of
applications under this Act,
(b) fixing the maximum amount of remuneration to which a licensee is
entitled, by way of commission, fee, gain or reward, for services performed by
him or her as a licensee,
(c) requiring licensees to display or otherwise publicise or give
notice of particulars of their remuneration and prescribe the consequences of
a failure to comply with any such requirement,
(d) prescribing the accounts and other records to be kept by a
licensee and the manner in which they are to be kept,
(e) prescribing the conditions applicable to and in respect of the
sale by auction of land or livestock,
(f) prescribing the manner in which the conditions of the sale by
auction of land or livestock must be notified,
(g) prescribing a method of service (which may include electronic
transmission) of any notice, statement of claim, order or other document
authorised or required to be served by or under a provision of this Act,
either in addition to or as an alternative to a method of service provided for
by the provision concerned,
(h) prescribing exemptions from the operation of this Act or specified
provisions of this Act.
(3) A regulation may create an offence punishable by a penalty not
exceeding 40 penalty units in the case of a corporation or 20 penalty units in
any other case.
231 Review of Act (1) The Minister is to review this Act to determine whether the policy
objectives of the Act remain valid and whether the terms of the Act remain
appropriate for securing those objectives. (2) The review is to be undertaken as soon as possible after the
period of 5 years from the date of assent to this
Act. (3) A report on the outcome of the review is to be tabled in each
House of Parliament within 12 months after the end of the period of 5
years.
Schedule 1 Savings and transitional provisions (Section 227) Part 1 General 1 Regulations (1) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:this Act
Property, Stock and Business
Agents Amendment Act 2006
(2) Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect
from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later
date. (3) To the extent to which any such provision takes effect from a date
that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the provision
does not operate so as:(a) to affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the
State or an authority of the State), the rights of that person existing before
the date of its publication, or
(b) to impose liabilities on any person (other than the State or an
authority of the State) in respect of anything done or omitted to be done
before the date of its publication.
Part 2 Provisions consequent on the enactment of this
Act 2 Definition In this Part:repealed
Act means the Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941. 3 Licences and certificates of registration under repealed
Act (1) A person who was the holder of a licence or certificate of
registration under a provision of the repealed Act immediately before its
repeal is taken to be the holder of the corresponding licence or certificate
of registration under this Act. (2) The corresponding licence or certificate of registration:(a) is taken to have been issued subject to the same conditions to
which it was subject under the repealed Act, and
(b) remains in force for the remainder of the period for which it was
issued.
(3) Section 8 applies in respect of a service performed by a person
before the commencement of that section as if a reference in that section to a
licence included a reference to the corresponding licence under the repealed
Act. Note. Licences under the repealed Act were issued for 3
years.
4 Pending applications and objections (1) The repealed Act continues to apply as if it had not been repealed
to and in respect of:(a) an application for the issue, renewal or restoration of a licence
or certificate of registration under a provision of the repealed Act that was
pending immediately before its repeal, and
(b) any objection under a provision of the repealed Act in respect of
such an application.
(2) A licence or certificate of registration issued or renewed under a
provision of the repealed Act pursuant to subclause (1) is taken to have been
issued or renewed immediately before the repeal of the
provision.
5 Pending complaints (1) The repealed Act continues to apply as if it had not been repealed
to and in respect of a complaint that was made under section 29, 29A, 60 or
60AA of the repealed Act and was pending immediately before the repeal of
those sections. (2) For the purposes of the operation of this Schedule, any action
taken by a court on such a complaint is to have effect as if it was made
immediately before the repeal of the provision of the repealed Act under which
the complaint was made.
6 Pending appeals (1) Any appeal pending under section 31 or 61 of the repealed Act
immediately before the repeal of the section under which the appeal was made
is to continue and be determined as if the repealed Act had not been
repealed. (2) For the purposes of the operation of this Schedule, the
determination of the appeal is to have effect as if the appeal was made
immediately before the repeal of the provision of the repealed Act under which
it was made.
7 Records Any records kept under or for the purposes of a provision of the
repealed Act are taken to be kept under or for the purposes of the
corresponding provision of this Act. 8 Compensation Fund (1) The Compensation Fund under this Act is a continuation of the
Compensation Fund under the repealed Act. The Compensation Fund under the
repealed Act is a continuation of the Property Services Council Compensation
Fund (the PSCC
Fund) under the repealed Act. (2) Any amount payable to or from the Compensation Fund under the
repealed Act or the PSCC Fund immediately before the commencement of this
clause is payable instead to or from the Compensation Fund under this
Act. (3) Contributions made to the Compensation Fund under the repealed Act
are taken to have been made to the Compensation Fund under this
Act. (4) Any payment under the repealed Act out of either the Compensation
Fund or the PSCC Fund in settlement in whole or in part of a claim under the
repealed Act is, for the purposes of this Act, taken to be a payment made out
of the Compensation Fund under this Act in settlement in whole or in part of
the claim concerned as if it were a claim under this
Act.
9 Statutory Interest Account (1) The Statutory Interest Account under this Act is a continuation of
the Statutory Interest Account under the repealed
Act. (2) Any amount payable to the Statutory Interest Account under the
repealed Act immediately before the commencement of this clause is payable
instead to the Statutory Interest Account under this
Act. (3) Contributions made to the Statutory Interest Account under the
repealed Act are taken to have been made to the Statutory Interest Account
under this Act.
10 Trust account rates A trust account rate determined for an authorised deposit-taking
institution and in force under section 36AA of the repealed Act immediately
before its repeal is taken to have been determined under section 90 of this
Act in respect of that institution until a different rate is determined for
that institution under that section. 11 Approval of business name The Director-General is taken to have approved of a licensee
carrying on, or advertising or holding out that the licensee carries on,
business as a licensee under a name for the purposes of this Act if,
immediately before the commencement of this clause, the licensee carried on
business as a licensee under that name in compliance with section 43A of the
repealed Act. 12 Licences cancelled under repealed Act A reference in this Act to a licence cancelled under this Act
includes a reference to a licence cancelled under the repealed
Act. 13 Receivers The repealed Act continues to apply to and in respect of a
receiver whose appointment under the repealed Act is in force immediately
before the commencement of this clause as if the repealed Act had not been
repealed. 14 Act extends to acts and omissions before
commencement Unless the context otherwise indicates or requires, a provision of
this Act extends to any act or omission occurring before the commencement of
the provision. 15 Continuity of things done before commencement Anything done by the Director-General or a licensee under or for
the purposes of a provision of the repealed Act is, to the extent that the
thing done has effect immediately before the repeal of the provision, taken to
have been done under or for the purposes of the corresponding provision of
this Act. 16 Disclosure of information For the purposes of section 219 (Disclosure of information) of
this Act, information obtained in connection with the administration or
execution of the repealed Act is taken to have been obtained in connection
with the administration or execution of this Act. 17 Franchising agreements (1) Section 35 (1) applies only to the entering into of a franchising
agreement after the commencement of that section. (2) Section 35 (2) extends to a franchising agreement entered into
before the commencement of that section.
18 Agency agreements Section 55 extends to services performed by a licensee under the
repealed Act before the commencement of that section. Part 3 Provisions consequent on enactment of Property, Stock and Business Agents Amendment Act
2006 19 Definition In this Part:2006 amending
Act means the Property, Stock and
Business Agents Amendment Act 2006. 20 Unjust conduct by licensees Division 6 of Part 3 extends to conduct that occurred before the
commencement of the Division. 21 Marketing statements about vendor bids Section 76A extends to auctions conducted before the commencement
of that section (but only in respect of statements made in the course of
marketing the property after that commencement) and applies in respect of such
an auction as if a reference in that section to a vendor bid included a
reference to a bid made by or on behalf of the seller. 22 Collusive practices—increased penalties The amendment of section 78 by the 2006 amending Act does not
apply to a contravention of that section that occurred before the commencement
of the amendment. 23 Naming of trust accounts The amendment of section 86 by the 2006 amending Act extends to a
trust account opened before the commencement of the
amendment. Schedule 2 Consequential amendments (Section 228) 2.1 Community Land
Management Act 1989 No 202 Section 3
Definitions Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from the definition of
managing
agent in section 3 (1).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. 2.2 Conveyancers Licensing
Act 1995 No 57 [1] Section 5 Disqualified persons Omit section 5 (1) (h). Insert instead: (h) is a disqualified person under the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002.
[2] Section 5 (2) (b) Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941”.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [3] Section 19 Multidisciplinary partnerships Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 19
(3).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [4] Section 22 Sharing staff of legal practitioners and real
estate and other agents Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 22
(1).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [5] Section 29 Omit the section. Insert instead: 29 Bankers to pay interest to Statutory Interest
Account (1) Sections 90 and 91 of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002 apply in respect of all money held in a general trust
account under this Division as if:(a) the trust account were a trust account opened and kept under
section 86 of that Act, and
(b) the licensee who opened and keeps the trust account were a
licensee under that Act.
(2) A licensee must, when opening a trust account at an authorised
deposit-taking institution under this Division, ensure that the authorised
deposit-taking institution is notified that the trust account is, for the
purposes of sections 90 and 91 of that Act, to be regarded as a trust account
required by that Act. Such a notification is, for the purposes of those
sections, to be regarded as a notification that the trust account is required
by that Act.
[6] Section 37 Definition Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from the definition of
PSBA
Act.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [7] Section 38 Claims can be made against Compensation
Fund Omit “Part 6 (Compensation Fund) of the PSBA Act” from
section 38 (1).Insert instead “Part 10 of the PSBA
Act”. [8] Section 38 (3) Omit “Section 64E (4) of the PSBA Act”.Insert instead “Section 169 (4) of the PSBA
Act”. [9] Section 39 Contributions by licensees Omit “section 64D or 64E of the PSBA
Act”.Insert instead “section 168 or 169 of the PSBA
Act”. [10] Section 43 Appointment of manager Omit “a determination by the Director-General under Part 6
of the Property, Stock and Business Agents
Act 1941” from section 43 (1) (c).Insert instead “a determination by the Director-General
under Part 10 of the Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 2002”. [11] Section 55 Supreme Court may appoint receiver Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 55 (2)
(c).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. 2.3 Fair Trading Act
1987 No 68 [1] (Repealed) [2] Section 25I Functions Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from paragraph (a) of the
definition of property services
industry in section 25I (2).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. 2.4 Fines Act 1996
No 99 Schedule 1 Statutory provisions
under which penalty notices issued Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941, section 86C” from Schedule
1.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act 2002, section
216”. 2.5 Landlord and Tenant
(Rental Bonds) Act 1977 No 44 [1] Section 8 Deposit of rental bonds with Board Insert after section 8 (2): (2A) If a lessor’s agent receives on behalf of the lessor a
rental bond for a lease or proposed lease, subsection (2) extends to require
the agent to deposit with the Board an amount of money equivalent to the
amount of that rental bond and so extends as if a reference in that subsection
to “that lessor” were a reference to the
agent. [2] Section 20 Rental Bond Interest Account Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 20
(2A).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [3] Section 20 (2AB) Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941”.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [4] Section 20 (2AB) Omit “(in the year ending 30 June next succeeding the year
in which such an agreement is made)”. 2.6 Pawnbrokers and
Second-hand Dealers Act 1996 No 13 Section 4 Restrictions
on operation of this Act Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 4
(1).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. 2.7 Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 2002 [1] Section 7 Omit the section. [2] Section 17 Omit the section. Insert instead: 17 Application to licences of Licensing and Registration (Uniform Procedures) Act
2002 (1) The Director-General may grant the following licences and
certificates of registration for the purposes of this Act:(a) real estate agents’ licences,
(b) stock and station agents’ licences,
(c) business agents’ licences,
(d) strata managing agents’ licences,
(e) on-site residential property managers’
licences,
(f) corporation licences,
(g) certificates of registration as a real estate
salesperson,
(h) certificates of registration as a stock and station
salesperson,
(i) certificates of registration as a business
salesperson,
(j) certificates of registration as a registered
manager.
(2) Part 2 of the Licensing and
Registration (Uniform Procedures) Act 2002 (the
applied Act) applies to and in respect of a licence or certificate
of registration, subject to the modifications and limitations prescribed by or
under this Act. (3) For the purpose of applying Part 2 of the applied Act to a licence
or certificate of registration:(a) the Director-General is taken to be the licensing authority,
and
(b) the licence or certificate of registration may be amended under
section 7 of that Act, and
(c) the licence or certificate of registration may not be transferred
under section 8 of that Act, and
(d) the references to 2 weeks, 4 weeks and 8 weeks in section 9 (1)
(a), (b) and (c) of that Act are each to be read as references to 6 weeks,
and
(e) an application for restoration of a licence or certificate of
registration under section 10 of that Act may not be made more than 3 months
after the date on which the licence expires, and
(f) an application is not required to be advertised under section 15
of that Act, and
(g) section 21 (4) of that Act does not have effect,
and
(h) the reference to 14 days in section 24 (1) of that Act (as to the
period within which changed particulars must be notified) is to be read as a
reference to 7 days.
(4) Subject to this section, the regulations may make provision for or
with respect to such matters concerning a licence or certificate of
registration as are relevant to the operation of Part 2 of the applied
Act.
17A Application fees and Compensation Fund
contributions (1) An applicant for a licence or certificate of registration must
make provision for the payment of an application fee of an amount prescribed
by the regulations. (2) An applicant for a licence must also make provision for the
payment of the contribution to the Compensation Fund required in relation to
the application.
[3] Sections 18, 19 and 24 Omit the sections. Insert instead: 19 Certain applications to be refused An application must not be granted unless the applicant is
eligible to be granted the licence or certificate of registration concerned
(as provided by section 14). [4] Section 25 Duration Omit section 25 (2) and (3). [5] Section 26 Effect of applying for restoration of expired
licence Omit section 26 (1)–(5). 2.8 Licensing and
Registration (Uniform Procedures) Act 2002 [1] Schedule 1 Licences to which Part 2 of Act
applies Omit the matter relating to the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941. [2] Schedule 1 Insert in alphabetical order of Acts and instruments: Property, Stock and Business
Agents Act 2002 section 17 (1) (a), real estate agent’s licence, section 17 (1) (b), stock and station agent’s licence, section 17 (1) (c), business agent’s licence, section 17 (1) (d), strata managing agent’s licence, section 17 (1) (e), on-site residential property manager’s
licence, section 17 (1) (f), corporation licence, section 17 (1) (g), certificate of registration as a real estate
salesperson, section 17 (1) (h), certificate of registration as a stock and station
salesperson, section 17 (1) (i), certificate of registration as a business
salesperson section 17 (1) (j), certificate of registration as a registered
manager [3] Schedule 2 Registration to which Part 3 of Act
applies Omit the matter relating to the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941. 2.9 Retirement Villages Act
1999 No 81 [1] Section 23 Deposits to be kept in trust Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 23 (3)
(b).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [2] Section 168 Sale of premises Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from the note to section 168
(1).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [3] Section 202 Costs of administration Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941, in accordance with section 63E of
that Act” from section 202 (b).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act 2002, in accordance with section
190 of that Act”. 2.10 Strata Schemes
Management Act 1996 No 138 [1] Chapter 2, Part 4 Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from the introductory note
under the heading to Part 4 of Chapter 2.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [2] Section 26 What is a strata managing agent? Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941”.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [3] Section 26, note Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941”.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [4] Section 33 Information may be required relating to strata
managing agent’s trust account Omit “section 36 of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941”.Insert instead “the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [5] Section 38 Who is responsible for providing information
if a strata managing agent ceases to hold a licence or dies? Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941”.Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [6] Section 38 (a) Omit “section 36 (6) of”. [7] Section 38 (b) Omit “section 38 (2) of”. [8] Section 40 Certain provisions of other Acts requiring
agents to provide information not to apply to affairs of owners
corporation Omit “section 38A (3), (4), (5), (6) and (7) of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941” from section 40 and from the note to that section
wherever occurring.Insert instead “section 101 of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [9] Section 105 Owners corporation may require certain
persons to produce records, accounts and property of the owners
corporation Omit “section 38 of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941” from section 105 (4).Insert instead “the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [10] Section 105, note Omit “Section 38 of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
1941”.Insert instead “The Property, Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. [11] Section 162 Order appointing strata managing agent to
exercise certain functions Omit “Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 1941” from section 162 (4)
(a).Insert instead “Property,
Stock and Business Agents Act
2002”. Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments Property, Stock and Business
Agents Act 2002 No 66. Second reading speech made: Legislative
Assembly, 9.5.2002; Legislative Council, 19.6.2002. Assented to 10.7.2002.
Date of commencement, 1.9.2003, sec 2 and GG No 116 of 25.7.2003, p 7445. This
Act has been amended by Sch 2.7 to this Act and as follows:
2002 | No 97 | Business Names Act
2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 1.11, 5.10.2004, sec 2 (4) and GG No 149 of
24.9.2004, p 7607.
| | | No 103 | Law Enforcement (Powers and
Responsibilities) Act 2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.12.2005, sec 2 and GG No 45 of
15.4.2005, p 1356.
| | | No 112 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 1.21, assent, sec 2
(3).
| 2003 | No 3 | Conveyancers Licensing Act
2003. Assented to 28.5.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.8, 15.12.2006, sec 2 (1) and GG No 175 of
8.12.2006, p 10388.
| | | No 4 | Valuers Act 2003.
Assented to 28.5.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1.8, 31.3.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 37 of
29.3.2005, p 929.
| | | No 40 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2003. Assented to 22.7.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1.39, assent, sec 2 (2); date of commencement
of Sch 3, assent, sec 2 (1).
| | | No 82 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2003. Assented to 27.11.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1.25, assent, sec 2
(2).
| 2004 | No 55 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2004. Assented to 6.7.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 1.19, assent, sec 2
(2).
| 2006 | No 4 | Property, Stock and Business
Agents Amendment Act 2006. Assented to 17.3.2006. Date of commencement, 1.3.2007, sec 2 and GG No 5 of 12.1.2007, p
83.
| | | No 120 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2006. Assented to 4.12.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2
(2).
| 2007 | No 27 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2007. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 1.44, assent, sec 2
(2).
| | | No 48 | Housing Amendment (Community
Housing Providers) Act 2007. Assented to 1.11.2007. Date of commencement, 1.5.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (142) LW
1.5.2009.
| 2008 | No 23 | Miscellaneous Acts Amendment
(Same Sex Relationships) Act 2008. Assented to
11.6.2008. Date of commencement, 22.9.2008, sec 2 and GG No 118 of 19.9.2008, p
9283.
| | | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Schs 1.26 and 3, assent, sec 2
(2).
| | | No 114 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2008. Assented to 10.12.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.22, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
Table of amendments
Sec 3 | Am 2008 No 23, Sch 3.38 [1]. | Sec 5 | Am 2007 No 48, Sch 2.1; 2008 No 62, Sch 3.6
[1]. | Sec 7 | Rep 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [1]. | Sec 8 | Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.44 [1]; 2008 No 114, Sch
2.22. | Sec 11 | Am 2003 No 82, Sch 1.25 [1]. | Sec 14 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [1] [2]; 2007 No 27, Sch 1.44
[2]; 2008 No 114, Sch 2.22. | Sec 16 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [3]–[6]; 2007 No 27, Sch
1.44 [3]–[6]. | Sec 17 | Subst 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [2] (am 2002 No 112, Sch
1.21 [2]). | Sec 17A | Ins 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [2]. | Sec 18 | Rep 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [3]. | Sec 19 | Subst 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [3] (am 2002 No 112, Sch
1.21 [3]). | Sec 24 | Rep 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [3]. | Sec 25 | Am 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [4]. | Sec 26 | Am 2002 No 66, Sch 2.7 [5] (am 2002 No 112, Sch
1.21 [4]). | Sec 30 | Am 2002 No 97, Sch 1.11. | Sec 31 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [7]. | Sec 37 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [8] [9]. | Sec 43 | Am 2004 No 55, Sch 1.19 [1]; 2006 No 4, Sch 1
[10]. | Secs 44, 45 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [10]. | Sec 47 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [11]–[13]; 2008 No 62,
Sch 3.6 [2]. | Sec 49 | Am 2008 No 23, Sch 3.38 [2]. | Sec 50 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [14]. | Part 3, Div 6 (secs 53A–53E) | Ins 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [15]. | Sec 55 | Am 2003 No 82, Sch 1.25 [2] [3]; 2004 No 55, Sch
1.19 [2]. | Sec 60 | Am 2008 No 62, Sch 3.6 [3]. | Sec 64 | Am 2003 No 3, Sch 2.8 [1]; 2008 No 62, Sch 3.6
[4]–[6]. | Sec 66 | Subst 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [16]. | Sec 66A | Ins 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [16]. | Sec 68 | Am 2003 No 40, Sch 1.39 [1]; 2006 No 4, Sch 1
[17]. | Sec 69 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [18]. | Sec 71 | Am 2003 No 40, Sch 1.39 [2]. | Part 5, Div 3, heading | Subst 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [19]. | Sec 76A | Ins 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [20]. | Sec 78 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [21]. | Sec 86 | Am 2002 No 112, Sch 1.21 [1]; 2006 No 4, Sch 1
[22]. | Sec 90 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [23]. | Sec 91 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1
[24]–[27]. | Sec 98 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [28] [29]. | Sec 99 | Subst 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [30]. | Sec 124 | Am 2008 No 23, Sch 3.38 [3]. | Sec 128 | Am 2008 No 62, Sch 1.26 [1]
[2]. | Sec 153 | Am 2008 No 62, Sch 3.6 [7]. | Sec 167 | Am 2003 No 3, Sch 2.8 [2]. | Sec 174 | Am 2006 No 120, Sch 2.74. | Sec 189 | Am 2003 No 3, Sch 2.8 [3]; 2003 No 4, Sch
1.8. | Sec 209 | Am 2002 No 103, Sch 4.72
[1]–[4]. | Sec 221 | Am 2008 No 114, Sch 2.22. | Sch 1 | Am 2006 No 4, Sch 1 [31] [32]. | Sch 2 | Am 2002 No 112, Sch 1.21 [2]–[5]; 2003 No 40,
Sch 3. |
|