An Act relating to fines and their enforcement, and to other
matters.
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Act
This Act is the Fines Act
1996.
2 Commencement
(1) This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by
proclamation, subject to subsection (2).
(2) The day appointed for the commencement of clause 2 of Schedule 3
is to be a day that is at least 3 months before the day appointed for the
commencement of clause 3 of that Schedule.Note. Clause 2 of Schedule 3 provides for an amnesty period, before the
application of the Act to existing fine defaulters under clause 3 of that
Schedule, during which action to commit existing fine defaulters to prison is
suspended.
3 Definitions
(1) In this Act:Act includes a
Code or other statutory provision of another jurisdiction that applies as a
law of this State.
appropriate
officer for a penalty notice—see section 22.
approved
form means a form approved by the State Debt Recovery Office for the
purposes of the provision in which the term is used.
compensation
levy means a compensation levy payable under Part 5 of the Victims Support and Rehabilitation Act
1996.
court means the
Supreme Court, the Industrial Relations Commission, the Land and Environment
Court, the District Court, the Local Court, the Children’s Court or any
other court.
court
fine enforcement order—see section 12.
driver
licence means a driver licence under the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1998.
exercise of
a function includes the performance of a duty.
fine—see
section 4.
fine
defaulter means a person liable to pay a fine under a fine
enforcement order.
fine
enforcement order means a court fine enforcement order or a penalty
notice enforcement order.
function
includes a power, authority or duty.
Hardship
Review Board means the Hardship Review Board constituted under
section 101A.
issuing
agency, in relation to a penalty notice or official caution, means
the agency in or by which the appropriate officer who issued the penalty
notice or gave the caution is employed or engaged.
law
enforcement officer means a person exercising law enforcement
functions in the official capacity of any of the following:
(a) the Director of Public Prosecutions, a Deputy Director of Public
Prosecutions or a Solicitor for Public Prosecutions,
(b) a Crown Prosecutor,
(c) a police officer,
(d) a public servant,
(e) an officer or employee of a statutory body representing the
Crown,
(f) a member or an employee of a local council,
(g) an officer or employee of a livestock health and pest
authority,
(h) an officer within the meaning of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act
1979,
(i) an officer or employee of a kind prescribed by the
regulations.
pay a fine or
amount means to pay the fine or amount in full by its due date and, if payment
by instalments is permitted under this Act, includes to pay each instalment in
full by its due date.
penalty
notice—see section 20.
penalty notice
enforcement order—see section 40.
penalty
notice offence—see section 19A.
person in
receipt of a Government benefit means:
(a) a person in receipt of a pension or other benefit paid by the
Commonwealth being a pension or benefit of a kind approved by the State Debt
Recovery Office, or
(b) a person belonging to a class of persons prescribed by the
regulations.
registered, in relation to a
vehicle, means registered under the Road
Transport (Vehicle Registration) Act 1997.
registered
operator has the same meaning as in the Road Transport (General) Act
2005.
responsible
person for a vehicle has the same meaning as in the Road Transport (General) Act
2005.
reviewing
agency, in relation to a penalty notice, means the State Debt
Recovery Office or the issuing agency.
State
Debt Recovery Office means the State Debt Recovery Office
established under Part 8.
work
and development order—see section
99A.
(2) Notes in the text of this Act do not form part of this
Act.
4 Meaning of “fine”
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a fine is:(a) any monetary penalty imposed by a court for an offence,
or
(b) any amount payable under a penalty notice enforcement order,
or
(c) any court fees or charges payable by a person under an order made
by a court in proceedings for an offence, or
(d) any compensation levy, or
(e) any witnesses’ expenses payable by a person under an order
made by a court in proceedings for an offence that were brought by a law
enforcement officer, or
(f) any costs (including expenses or disbursements) payable by a
person under an order made by a court in proceedings for an offence that were
brought by a law enforcement officer, or
(g) any other amount of a kind prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) However, a fine
does not include any amount of a kind excluded by the
regulations.
(2A) For the purposes of this Act, a compensation levy is taken to be a
fine imposed by the court by which the person liable to pay the levy was
convicted.
(3) In this section, proceedings for an
offence includes:(a) proceedings for an apprehended violence order,
and
(b) proceedings on appeal in respect of proceedings for an
offence.
Part 2 Fines imposed by courts
Division 1 General
5 Summary of procedure for payment of court fines
(1) The following is a summary of the procedure under this Part for
the payment of fines imposed by any court:(a) Payment details
A fine imposed by a court is payable within 28 days after it is
imposed.
(b) Notification of fine
The person on whom the fine is imposed is to be notified of the
fine, the arrangements for payment and the action that may be taken under this
Act to enforce the fine.
(c) Time to pay
A court registrar may allow further time to pay the fine on the
application of the person.
(d) Enforcement order
If payment of the fine is not made by the due date, a court fine
enforcement order may be made against the person. If the person does not pay
the amount (including enforcement costs) within 28 days, enforcement action
authorised by this Act may be taken (see Part 4).
(e) Withdrawal of enforcement order
A court fine enforcement order may be withdrawn if an error has
been made.
(2) This section does not affect the provisions of this Part that it
summarises.
6 Consideration of accused’s means to pay
(cf Crimes Act
1900 sec 440AB and Justices
Act 1902 sec 80A)
In the exercise by a court of a discretion to fix the amount of
any fine, the court is required to consider:(a) such information regarding the means of the accused as is
reasonably and practicably available to the court for consideration,
and
(b) such other matters as, in the opinion of the court, are relevant
to the fixing of that amount.
Division 2 Payment of fines
7 When fine payable
(1) A fine imposed by any court is payable within 28 days after it is
imposed.
(2) Arrangements for the payment of the fine after that time may be
made under this Part.
(3) The court, when imposing a fine:(a) may direct that the fine is payable before that time for the
special reasons stated by the court, and
(b) may not allow time for payment of the fine after that
time.
8 To whom fine payable
(1) A fine imposed by any court is payable to the registrar of the
court unless the court or the registrar of the court otherwise
directs.
(2) The payment may be lodged with the registrar or other officer of
any court.
9 Fine notification
(1) Written notice of a fine imposed on a person by a court is to be
served on the person by the registrar or other officer of the court as soon as
practicable after the fine is imposed.
(2) The notice may be served personally or by post, by means of
document exchange, by facsimile transmission or by any other means authorised
by the regulations.
(3) The notice is to be served personally during or at the completion
of the proceedings concerned if the person is present at those proceedings and
available to be served.
(4) The notice is to specify the amount payable, the time for payment
and the person to whom it is to be paid. The notice is to inform the
person:(a) of the arrangements that may be made for further time to pay the
amount, and
(b) of enforcement action that may be taken under this Act if the
amount is not paid by the due date, and
(c) of additional enforcement costs that become payable under this Act
if enforcement action is taken.
(5) The regulations may make provisions for or with respect to the
form and service of the notice.
10 Application to registrar for further time to pay
fine
(1) A person liable to pay a fine imposed by a court may apply for
further time to pay the fine to:(a) the registrar of that court, or
(b) in the case of a fine imposed by the Local Court—a registrar
of the Local Court, or
(c) any other registrar of a court specified in the notice of the fine
served on the person under this Part as a registrar who may deal with the
application.
(2) The registrar may, by order, allow further time to pay the fine if
it appears expedient to do so.
(3) The registrar may, by such an order:(a) extend the time for payment of the whole fine,
or
(b) allow the fine to be paid by instalments in such amounts, and at
such times, as the registrar specifies.
(4) If an instalment of a fine is not paid by the due date, the
remaining instalments then become payable.
(5) An order allowing further time to pay a fine may be amended or
revoked by a further order made on the application of the person liable to pay
the fine or on the registrar’s own
initiative.
11 Provisions relating to application for further time to pay
fine
(1) This section applies to an application for further time to pay a
fine.
(2) More than one application may be made in respect of a fine
(whether or not the earlier applications were
granted).
(3) The registrar may, for the purposes of dealing with an
application, require the applicant to provide information or documents in
support of the application (including documents relating to the financial
means and identity of the applicant). The registrar may refuse to deal with
the application if the information or documents are not
provided.
(4) The registrar, when dealing with an application, is to comply with
such requirements as are prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this section. The registrar is also to have due regard to any relevant
guidelines under section 120.
(5) The decision of the registrar on an application is final, and may
not be appealed against, reviewed, quashed, or called into question by any
court or tribunal.
(6) The registrar may not grant an application after a court fine
enforcement order is made in respect of the fine.Note. After the making of the enforcement order, an application for
further time to pay may be made to the State Debt Recovery Office (see section
100).
(7) The registrar of a court may authorise any officer of the court to
deal with an application and to make, amend or revoke an order allowing
further time to pay a fine.
Division 3 Court fine enforcement orders
12 What is a court fine enforcement order?
(1) A court fine enforcement order is an order made by the State Debt
Recovery Office for the enforcement of a fine imposed by a
court.
(2) A single order may be made for the enforcement of 2 or more fines
payable by a person.
Note. Part 4 provides for the fine defaulter to be notified by the State
Debt Recovery Office of the enforcement order and of the enforcement action
that may be taken if the outstanding balance of the fine (and enforcement
costs) is not paid within 28 days.
13 Referral for a court fine enforcement order
(1) The registrar of the court that imposed a fine (or, if the fine is
payable to the registrar of some other court, the registrar of the court to
whom the fine is payable) is to refer the matter to the State Debt Recovery
Office for the making of a court fine enforcement order if:(a) the fine has not been paid by the due date, or
(b) the person is in receipt of a Government benefit and is seeking an
order under section 100 (Time to pay) in relation to the fine,
or
(c) the person is seeking a work and development order in relation to
the fine.
(2) A matter may be referred to the State Debt Recovery Office for the
making of a court fine enforcement order:(a) by post, or
(b) by means of a document exchange, or
(c) by facsimile transmission or other electronic
transmission.
14 When an order may be made
(1) A court fine enforcement order may be made only if there has been
a default in payment of the fine by the due date.
(1A) Despite subsection (1), a court fine enforcement order may also be
made if a court has imposed a fine on a person and:(a) the person is in receipt of a Government benefit and is seeking an
order under section 100 (Time to pay) in relation to the fine,
or
(b) the person is seeking a work and development order in relation to
the fine.
(1B) The State Debt Recovery Office must not make a court fine
enforcement order under subsection (1A) unless it determines to make the order
under section 100, or the work and development order, sought by the
person.
(1C) If the State Debt Recovery Office does not make a court fine
enforcement order in respect of a matter referred to it by a registrar under
section 13 (1) (b) or (c), it is to refer the matter back to the
registrar.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office is not required to inquire into
whether this section authorises the making of an order in a matter referred to
it by the registrar of a court.
(3) A court fine enforcement order may be made in the absence of, and
without notice to, the person liable to pay the
fine.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office may, but is not required to, make a
court fine enforcement order if a fine to which it is to apply has previously
been the subject of a court fine enforcement order in respect of which any
enforcement action has been taken.
15 Form of court fine enforcement order
(1) A court fine enforcement order must specify the following
matters:(a) the fine defaulter’s name, address and date of birth (if
known),
(b) a description of the offence in respect of which each fine to
which the order applies was imposed,
(c) the date on which the fine was imposed,
(d) the amount required to be paid, being the amount of the fine that
remains to be paid, together with specified enforcement
costs.
(2) Any amount recovered in consequence of the making of a court fine
enforcement order (other than for enforcement costs) is to be dealt with in
the same way as if the amount had been paid on the imposition of the
fine.
16 Enforcement costs under order
(1) The regulations may prescribe the enforcement costs payable under
a court fine enforcement order and an amount is not payable for enforcement
costs unless it is so prescribed, or is payable under section 76A
(Sheriff’s additional costs of taking enforcement action under this
Division).
(2) The following applies to any such enforcement costs:(a) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable to
the State Debt Recovery Office on the making of the order,
(b) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable to
Roads and Maritime Services if any enforcement action is taken by Roads and
Maritime Services under Division 3 of Part 4 before payment is made under the
order,
(c) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable into
the Consolidated Fund if any enforcement action is taken by the Sheriff or
other official under Division 4 of Part 4 before payment is made under the
order.
(3) Any amount recovered in consequence of the making of a court fine
enforcement order is to be applied firstly towards enforcement costs payable
under this section or section 76A and the balance towards the amount payable
under the fine.
17 Withdrawal of order
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may, on application or its own
initiative, withdraw a court fine enforcement order if satisfied that:(a) a fine to which it applies has previously been the subject of a
court fine enforcement order in respect of which any enforcement action has
been taken, or
(b) the person named in the court fine enforcement order is not the
same person as the person in respect of whom a fine to which it applies was
imposed, or
(c) the order was otherwise made in error.
(2) A court fine enforcement order must be withdrawn if application
for its withdrawal is made by the registrar who referred the matter to the
State Debt Recovery Office.
(3) A court fine enforcement order may be withdrawn completely or only
to the extent of some of the fines to which it
applies.
(4) If a court fine enforcement order is withdrawn completely:(a) the order then ceases to have effect, and
(b) any enforcement action already taken is to be reversed, unless the
same enforcement action is authorised under another court fine enforcement
order or penalty notice enforcement order, and
(c) enforcement costs are not payable in respect of the issue of the
order and, if paid, are repayable.
(4A) If a court fine enforcement order is withdrawn only to the extent
of some of the fines to which it applies:(a) the order continues to have effect in respect of the remaining
fines to which it applies, and
(b) any amount that has been paid under the order is to be applied to
payment of the remaining fines to which it applies and any enforcement costs
in respect of that order.
(5) The withdrawal of a court fine enforcement order does not prevent
the making of a further order in respect of the
fine.
(6) Despite subsections (4) and (4A), if a court fine enforcement
order is withdrawn (whether completely or only to the extent of some of the
fines to which it applies), any amount paid under the order that would
otherwise be repayable to a person may instead be allocated by the State Debt
Recovery Office towards the payment of amounts payable under any other fine
enforcement order that is in force in relation to the
person.
(7) The State Debt Recovery Office must notify the person concerned of
any allocation made under subsection (6), but a failure to notify the person
does not affect that allocation.
18 Special provision relating to certain compensation
levies
(1) This section applies to a compensation levy if the person liable
to pay the levy (the
offender) has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment by way of
full-time detention in respect of the conviction that gave rise to the
imposition of the levy (whether or not the sentence is consecutive with
another sentence or concurrent with another sentence or partly consecutive and
partly concurrent).
(2) However, this section does not apply if the relevant sentence has
been suspended.
(3) Despite the other provisions of this Division, a compensation levy
to which this section applies that is not paid by the due date may be enforced
by deducting the amount due from the offender’s prison
earnings.
(4) The appropriate deduction is to be made by the Commissioner of
Corrective Services or the governor of the correctional centre in which the
offender is imprisoned.
(5) Money may be deducted from prison earnings in accordance with this
section despite the provisions of any other Act or
law.
(6) Any amount of a compensation levy to which this section applies
that remains unpaid when the offender is discharged from the correctional
centre, or released on parole, is taken to have been
satisfied.
(7) Subsection (6) applies even if the offender’s parole is
subsequently revoked.
(8) In this section, a reference to an offender’s prison earnings is a
reference to the payments (if any) to be made to the offender under section 7
of the Crimes (Administration of Sentences)
Act 1999.
Part 3 Penalty notices
Division 1 Summary of penalty notice procedure
19 Summary of penalty notice procedure
(1) The following is a summary of the penalty notice procedure under
this Part:(a) Breach of statutory provision
A person is alleged to have committed an offence under a statutory
provision for which a penalty notice may be issued (see Division 2 and
Schedule 1).
(a1) Determine whether to give official caution rather than
penalty notice
The appropriate officer determines whether to issue a penalty
notice or whether an official caution would be more appropriate (see Division
1A).
(b) Issue of penalty notice
If it is determined that it is not appropriate to give an official
caution, a penalty notice is issued under the relevant statutory provision.
The notice requires payment of a specified monetary penalty, unless the person
alleged to have committed the offence elects to have the matter dealt with by
a court (see Division 2 and Schedule 1).
(b1) Internal review
A reviewing agency may conduct a review of the decision to issue
the penalty notice. If a review is conducted, the agency may withdraw the
penalty notice or confirm the decision and issue a penalty reminder notice
(see Division 2A).
(c) Penalty reminder notice
If the penalty is not paid, a penalty reminder notice is issued.
The person who is alleged to have committed the offence may elect to have the
matter dealt with by a court (see Division 3).
(d) Enforcement order
If payment of the specified monetary penalty is not made and the
person does not elect to have the matter dealt with by a court, a penalty
notice enforcement order may be made against the person (see Division 4). If
the person does not pay the amount (including enforcement costs) within 28
days, enforcement action authorised by this Act may be taken in the same way
as action may be taken for the enforcement of a fine imposed on a person after
a court hearing for the offence (see Part 4).
(e) Withdrawal of enforcement order
A penalty notice enforcement order may be withdrawn if an error
has been made (see Division 4).
(f) Annulment of enforcement order
A penalty notice enforcement order may, on application, be
annulled by the State Debt Recovery Office or, if the Office refuses the
application, by the Local Court. If the order is annulled, the alleged offence
is to be heard and determined by the Local Court (see Division
5).
(2) This section does not affect the provisions of this Part that it
summarises.
Division 1A Official cautions
19A Appropriate officer may give official caution
(1) An appropriate officer may give a person an official caution
instead of issuing a penalty notice if the appropriate officer
believes:(a) on reasonable grounds that the person has committed an offence
under a statutory provision for which a penalty notice may be issued (a
penalty
notice offence), and
(b) that it is appropriate to give an official caution in the
circumstances.
(2) In making a decision under subsection (1), an appropriate officer
(other than a police officer) must have regard to the applicable guidelines
relating to the giving of official cautions in respect of penalty notice
offences.
(3) In this section:guidelines means
guidelines:
(a) issued by the Attorney General that are published in the Gazette
and made available on the internet site of the State Debt Recovery Office,
or
(b) issued by the relevant issuing agency that are consistent with the
guidelines issued by the Attorney General.
19B Official caution does not affect other powers
An official caution in relation to a penalty notice offence does
not affect the power of an appropriate officer or issuing agency to:(a) commence proceedings against the person to whom the official
caution was given, or
(b) issue a penalty notice in relation to the offence,
or
(c) take no further action, or
(d) take any other specified action permitted under this Act or the
Act that establishes the penalty notice offence.
Division 2 Penalty notices
20 What is a penalty notice?
(1) A penalty notice is a notice referred to in subsection (2) to the
effect that the person to whom it is directed has committed a specified
offence and that, if the person does not wish to have the matter dealt with by
a court, the person may pay the specified amount for the offence to a
specified person within a specified time.
(2) A penalty notice for the purposes of this Act is:(a) a notice issued under any of the statutory provisions set out in
Schedule 1, or
(b) any similar notice issued under any statutory provision specified
by the regulations for the purposes of this section, or
(c) a notice issued under a statutory provision that declares the
notice to be a penalty notice for the purposes of this Act,
or
(d) a notice that, at the time it was issued, was issued under a
statutory provision referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or
(c).
(3) A notice is not a penalty notice for the purposes of this Act
unless it is of a kind referred to in subsection
(2).
21 When penalty notices may be issued
A penalty notice may be issued in the circumstances specified in
the statutory provision providing for the issue of the
notice.
22 Persons who may issue and deal with penalty notices
(appropriate officers)
(1) A penalty notice may be issued by a person authorised by the
statutory provision providing for the issue of the
notice.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, the following are appropriate
officers for a penalty notice:(a) a person so authorised to issue that kind of penalty
notice,
(b) a person who is:(i) employed in the Office of State Revenue in the Department of
Finance and Services, or whose services are made use of by that Office
(whether by way of temporary hire arrangement, secondment or otherwise),
and
(ii) authorised by, and subject to the control and direction of, the
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue for the purposes of this
Part,
(c) a person, or a member of a specified class of persons, specified
in the regulations for that kind of penalty notice or for all penalty
notices.
23 Payment of amount required by penalty notice
(1) For the purposes of this Part, the amount payable under a penalty
notice is the amount specified in the notice, as fixed by or in accordance
with law.
(1A) A person may pay the amount by part payments. However, the full
amount payable under a penalty notice is to be paid within the time required
by the notice.
(2) Payment of the full amount under a penalty notice results in there
being no further liability for further proceedings for the offence to which
the notice relates.
Note. The statutory provisions under which mechanisms for the issue of
penalty notices are provided also provide for the effect of payment in
accordance with the notice. The effect of payment in accordance with a penalty
notice generally is that no further proceedings will be taken for the alleged
offence. Payment generally does not have the effect of an admission of any
liability in relation to the events out of which the offence
arose.
23A Person may elect to have matter dealt with by
court
(1) A person alleged to have committed or to be guilty of the offence
to which a penalty notice relates:(a) has the right to elect to have the matter dealt with by a court
instead of under the statutory provision providing for the issue of the
penalty notice, and
(b) may make that election:(i) in the manner specified in that statutory provision,
or
(ii) if no manner is specified in that statutory provision—in the
manner specified in the penalty notice, or
(iii) if no manner is specified in that statutory provision or in the
penalty notice—in the manner specified by the
regulations.
(2) A person may make such an election even if the whole or part of
the amount payable under the penalty notice has been paid, but such an
election may not be made later than 90 days after the penalty notice was
served.
(3) If a person elects under this section to have a matter dealt with
by a court after any amount payable under the penalty notice has been
paid:(a) section 23 (2) and the corresponding provision of the statutory
provision under which the penalty notice was issued (being the provision that
provides that if an amount is paid under the penalty notice, no person is
liable to any further proceedings for the alleged offence concerned) then
cease to have effect, and
(b) any action taken to record demerit points against the person in
the demerit points register kept under the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1998 because of that payment is to be reversed by Roads and
Maritime Services, and
(c) the amount that has been paid under the penalty notice is
repayable to the person to whom the penalty notice was
directed.
24 Failure to pay amount required by penalty
notice
Divisions 3–5 set out the procedure that applies when a
person who has been served with a penalty notice fails to pay the full amount
payable under the notice within the time required by the
notice.
Division 2A Internal review
24A Application for review of penalty notice
(1) An application may be made by or on behalf of any person for a
review of the decision to issue a penalty notice in respect of the
person.
(2) An application for a review:(a) is to be made in writing to the issuing agency for the penalty
notice or to the State Debt Recovery Office (if the fine under the penalty
notice is payable to the State Debt Recovery Office), and
(b) is to include the mailing address of the applicant and the grounds
on which the review is sought (including supporting
evidence).
(3) An application for a review may be made at any time up until the
due date specified in the penalty reminder notice for payment in relation to
the offence concerned even if the whole or part of the amount payable under
the penalty notice has been paid.
(4) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
applications under this section.
24B Circumstances when agency is not required to conduct a
review
(1) An agency that receives an application for a review of a decision
to issue a penalty notice is not required to conduct a review of the decision
under this Division in any of the following circumstances:(a) the agency notifies the applicant in writing, within 10 days after
receiving the application, that it has decided not to conduct a review under
this Division and gives reasons for its decision,
(b) a review of the decision has already been conducted under this
Division,
(c) such other circumstances as may be prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) An agency that decides not to conduct a review may take such other
action as it sees fit, including withdrawing the penalty notice to which an
application relates.
24C Review by reviewing agency
(1) Except as provided by section 24B, an agency that receives an
application for review under this Division must conduct a review in accordance
with this Division.
(2) The reviewing agency is to ensure that a review under this
Division is conducted by a person who was not involved in making the decision
that is the subject of the review.
24D Request for additional information
(1) When conducting a review under this Division, a reviewing agency
may request, in writing, additional information from the
applicant.
(2) The additional information must be provided by the applicant to
the reviewing agency within 14 days of the request.
(3) If the information is not provided within the time specified, the
review may be conducted without that information.
24E Outcome of review
(1) After reviewing a decision under this Division, a reviewing agency
may confirm the decision to issue a penalty notice or may withdraw the penalty
notice.
(2) A reviewing agency must withdraw a penalty notice if it finds any
of the following grounds to be made out:(a) the penalty notice was issued contrary to law,
(b) the issue of the penalty notice involved a mistake of
identity,
(c) the penalty notice should not have been issued, having regard to
the exceptional circumstances relating to the offence,
(d) the person to whom the penalty notice was issued is unable,
because the person has an intellectual disability, a mental illness, a
cognitive impairment or is homeless:(i) to understand that the person’s conduct constituted an
offence, or
(ii) to control such conduct,
(e) an official caution should have been given instead of a penalty
notice, having regard to the relevant guidelines under section
19A,
(f) any other ground prescribed by the
regulations.
(3) A reviewing agency may, at its discretion, also decide to withdraw
a penalty notice on a ground other than those specified in subsection
(2).
(4) A reviewing agency is to notify the applicant in writing of the
outcome of the review within 42 days of receipt of the application, or within
56 days if additional information has been requested under this
Division.
24F Action to be taken if decision to issue penalty notice is
confirmed
(1) If, after a review under this Division, a reviewing agency
confirms a decision to issue a penalty notice in respect of an offence by a
person, it must, in accordance with Division 3, serve a penalty reminder
notice in respect of the offence on the person.
(2) A penalty reminder notice served under subsection (1) replaces any
previous penalty reminder notice in respect of the
offence.
(3) If a penalty reminder notice served under subsection (1) replaces
a previous penalty reminder notice, the time for serving the statement under
section 36 (2) (a) continues to be the time specified in the penalty reminder
notice that has been replaced.
24G Effect of withdrawal of penalty notice
(1) If a reviewing agency withdraws a penalty notice, following a
review under this Division or otherwise, it may, if it considers it
appropriate to do so, give an official caution to the person in accordance
with Division 1A as if it were an appropriate
officer.
(2) If a penalty notice is withdrawn:(a) any penalty reminder notice, in respect of the offence to which
the penalty notice relates, is also taken to be withdrawn,
and
(b) if all or part of the amount under the penalty notice or penalty
reminder notice has been paid:(i) any action taken to record demerit points against a person in the
demerit points register kept under the Road
Transport (Driver Licensing) Act 1998 because of that payment
is to be reversed by Roads and Maritime Services, and
(ii) the amount that has been paid is repayable to the person to whom
the penalty notice was directed.
24H Agency may review a decision on its own motion
(1) Nothing in this Division limits the power of a reviewing agency to
review a decision to issue a penalty notice, or withdraw a penalty notice, on
its own motion.
(2) If a reviewing agency withdraws a penalty notice on its own motion
after the amount under the penalty notice (or a penalty reminder notice in
respect of the offence to which the penalty notice relates) has been paid, no
person is liable to any further proceedings for the alleged
offence.
24I Review terminated if matter dealt with by
court
If a person elects to have a matter dealt with by a court under
this Part while a review under this Division is in progress, the review is
terminated on the person making that election.
24J Reviewing agencies may enter into arrangements with
respect to functions under Division
A reviewing agency may enter into arrangements with another person
or body under which the functions of the agency under this Division are
exercised by that person or body on behalf of the
agency.
Division 3 Penalty reminder notices
25 What is a penalty reminder notice?
A penalty reminder notice is a notice (and any matter annexed to,
or enclosed with, a notice) served on a person on whom a penalty notice (and
any matter annexed to, or enclosed with, a notice) has been served and
containing the matters required by this Division.
26 When a penalty reminder notice may be sent
An appropriate officer may serve a penalty reminder notice on a
person on whom a penalty notice was served if it appears to the officer that
the full amount payable under the penalty notice has not been paid within the
time required by the notice.
27 What a penalty reminder notice must say
(1) A penalty reminder notice must inform the person on whom it is
served:(a) that the person has until the due date specified in the notice to
pay the full amount (or, if one or more part payments of that full amount have
been paid, the remaining amount) for the offence specified in the notice,
and
(a1) of the steps to be taken for seeking a review of the decision to
issue the penalty notice, and
(b) of enforcement action that may be taken under this Act if the full
amount is not paid by the due date, and
(c) of additional enforcement costs that become payable under this Act
if enforcement action is taken.
(2) If there is an approved form for a penalty reminder notice, a
penalty reminder notice must be in that form.
(3) The inclusion in a penalty reminder notice of additional
information and directions for the assistance or guidance of the person on
whom it is served does not affect the validity of the penalty reminder
notice.
28 Service of penalty reminder notices
(1) A penalty reminder notice may be served on a person:(a) personally, or
(b) by post, or
(c) by means of a document exchange, or
(d) by facsimile transmission or other electronic transmission,
or
(e) by any other manner prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The address for service of any such penalty reminder notice
includes:(a) the address of the person shown on the relevant penalty notice or
supplied by the person in connection with the service of the relevant penalty
notice, or
(b) if the relevant penalty notice was served on the person in his or
her capacity as owner or responsible person for a vehicle or owner of a vessel
or was served by being left on a vehicle or vessel—the address shown in
the records of Roads and Maritime Services or other public agency as the
address of the owner or responsible person at the time the relevant penalty
notice was served, or
(c) if the relevant penalty notice was served on the person in his or
her capacity as the person driving or in charge of a vehicle or
vessel—the address specified in a notice given under section 38 (1) (a)
as the address of the person in charge of the vehicle or vessel at the time of
the alleged offence.
29 Time for service of penalty reminder notices by
post
Despite any other provision of this Act, it is presumed that a
penalty reminder notice sent to a person by post is served on the person 7
days after it is posted, unless the person establishes that it was not served
within that 7-day period.
30 Due date for payment in penalty reminder
notices
(1) The due date for payment in a penalty reminder notice must be at
least 21 days after it is served on the person.
(2) Accordingly, a penalty reminder notice that is posted may specify
a date that is at least 28 days after the penalty reminder notice is posted as
the due date for making the payment concerned.
31 Extension of due date if notice takes more than 7
days
(1) If a penalty reminder notice is served on a person more than 7
days after it was posted, the notice is not invalid merely because it
specifies as the due date a date that is less than 21 days after it was served
on the person.
(2) In such a case however, the due date is extended to a date that is
21 days after the penalty reminder notice was served and the penalty reminder
notice is taken to specify that date as the due
date.
32 Effect of penalty reminder notice on payment time in
penalty notice
If a penalty reminder notice is served on a person, the time for
payment of the amount payable under the penalty notice for the offence
concerned is extended to the due date specified in the penalty reminder notice
for payment.
33 Payment under penalty reminder notice
(1) Payment of the amount payable under the penalty notice to which a
penalty reminder notice relates may be made in accordance with the penalty
notice and the relevant provisions of the statutory provision under which the
notice was served.
(2) A person may pay the amount by part payments. However, the full
amount payable under a penalty notice is to be paid within the time required
by the penalty reminder notice.
34 Effect of payment under penalty reminder notice
Payment of the full amount payable under the penalty notice to
which a penalty reminder notice relates has the same effect as payment in
accordance with the penalty notice.
35 Alleged offender’s right to elect to have matter
dealt with by court
A person alleged to have committed or to be guilty of the offence
to which a penalty reminder notice relates has the right to elect to have the
matter dealt with by a court instead of under this
Part.
36 How person may elect to have matter dealt with by
court
(1) A person may elect to have a matter dealt with by a court by
serving on the appropriate officer or other person or body specified in the
penalty reminder notice a written statement that the person so
elects.
(1A) Subject to subsection (2), a person may make such an election even
if the whole or part of the amount payable under the penalty notice has been
paid.
(2) The statement must be served within the following time
periods:(a) if no part of the amount payable under the penalty notice has been
paid, on or before the due date specified in the penalty reminder notice for
payment in relation to the offence concerned,
(b) if the whole or any part of that amount has been paid, not later
than 90 days after the penalty notice was served.
(3) The statement may be served on a person personally or by post, by
means of document exchange, by facsimile or other electronic transmission or
in any other manner prescribed by the regulations.
(4) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the form
of written statements under this section.
(5) If a person elects under this section to have a matter dealt with
by a court after any amount payable under the penalty notice has been
paid:(a) section 23 (2) and the corresponding provision of the statutory
provision under which the penalty notice was issued (being the provision that
provides that if an amount is paid under the penalty notice, no person is
liable to any further proceedings for the alleged offence concerned) then
cease to have effect, and
(b) any action taken to record demerit points against the person in
the demerit points register kept under the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1998 because of that payment is to be reversed by Roads and
Maritime Services, and
(c) the amount that has been paid under the penalty notice is
repayable to the person to whom the penalty notice was
directed.
37 Matter to proceed
If a person duly elects to have the matter dealt with by a court,
proceedings against the person in respect of the offence may be taken as if a
penalty notice or penalty reminder notice had not been
issued.
37A Extension of time limit for taking proceedings if person
has elected to have penalty notice matter dealt with by court
(1) This section applies to proceedings for a summary offence that has
an applicable limitation period (apart from this section) of less than 12
months if:(a) a penalty notice in relation to the offence has been issued to a
person within that applicable limitation period, and
(b) the person has duly elected, in accordance with this Part, to have
the matter dealt with by a court.
(2) Proceedings relating to that offence may, despite the applicable
limitation period, be commenced not later than 12 months from when the offence
was alleged to have been committed.Note. An election to have a penalty notice matter dealt with by a court
must be made in accordance with section 36.
(3) Subsection (2) does not affect the operation of section 179 of the
Criminal Procedure Act
1986 in relation to the commencement in any other
circumstances of proceedings for an offence.
38 Circumstances in which person issued with penalty reminder
notice for vehicle or vessel offence is not liable to pay penalty
(1) A person on whom a penalty reminder notice is served in relation
to a vehicle or vessel offence is not liable to make any payment under the
penalty notice if the person:(a) on or before the due date specified in the penalty reminder
notice, gives notice in accordance with subsection (1A) of the name and
address of some other person who was in charge of the vehicle or vessel
concerned at all relevant times relating to the offence,
or
(b) satisfies the appropriate officer for the penalty notice to which
the penalty reminder notice relates (or other person or body specified in the
penalty reminder notice) that the person did not know and could not with
reasonable diligence have ascertained that name and
address.
(1A) A notice for the purposes of subsection (1) (a) must:(a) in the case of a penalty reminder notice served on a person other
than a corporation—be verified by a statutory declaration,
and
(a1) in the case of a penalty reminder notice served on a
corporation:(i) be verified by a statutory declaration, or
(ii) be a notice of a kind approved for the purposes of subsection
(1B), and
(b) be given to the appropriate officer for the penalty notice to
which the penalty reminder notice relates (or other person or body specified
in the penalty reminder notice).
(1B) The State Debt Recovery Office may approve one or more kinds of
notices (approved
notices) for use by corporations when giving notice for the purposes
of subsection (1) (a).
(1C) Without limiting subsection (1B), the State Debt Recovery Office
may approve notices under that subsection:(a) to be provided in printed or electronic form (or both),
and
(b) to be used in relation to more than one offence involving one or
more vehicles or vessels.
(1D) If a corporation gives an approved notice for the purposes of
subsection (1) (a) instead of a notice verified by statutory declaration, an
appropriate officer for the penalty notice to which the penalty reminder
notice relates may, by written notice served on the corporation (a verification
notice), require the corporation to supply a statutory declaration
for use in court proceedings verifying such of the information contained in
the approved notice as is specified in the verification
notice.
(1E) A corporation served with a verification notice must supply the
required statutory declaration within the period specified in the notice
(being a period of not less than 7 days after the date of
service).Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
(2) A notice under subsection (1) (a) that is verified by statutory
declaration if produced in any proceedings against the person named in it and
in respect of the vehicle or vessel offence concerned is prima facie evidence
that the person was in charge of the vehicle or vessel at all relevant times
relating to the offence.
(3) A statutory declaration that relates to more than one vehicle or
vessel offence is not a statutory declaration under, or for the purposes of,
subsection (1A) or (1D).
(3A) A person must not, in a notice given under subsection (1) (a),
make a statement or provide information knowing that it is false or misleading
in a material particular.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty
units.
(3B) If the same facts establish an offence under this section and an
offence under the Oaths Act
1900, the person is not liable to be convicted of both
offences.
(4) In this section:vehicle or vessel
offence means any of the following offences:
(a) an offence of standing or parking a vehicle or of causing or
permitting a vehicle to stand, wait or be parked in contravention of any
law,
(b) an offence relating to a vehicle or vessel (such as exceeding the
speed limit) that is detected by an approved average speed detection device,
approved camera detection device or an approved speed measuring device within
the meaning of the Road Transport (Safety
and Traffic Management) Act 1999 and in respect of which the
penalty notice is served subsequently on the owner or responsible person for
the vehicle or the owner of the vessel,
(c) an offence under section 23 of the Centennial Park and Moore Park Trust Act
1983,
(d) an offence under section 161 of the Crown Lands Act
1989,
(e) an offence under section 38C of the Forestry Act
1916,
(f) an offence under section 32A of the Impounding Act
1993,
(g) an offence under section 651 of the Local Government Act
1993,
(h) an offence under section 30C of the Maritime Services Act
1935,
(i) an offence under section 159 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974,
(j) an offence under section 29 of the Parramatta Park Trust Act
2001,
(k) an offence under section 179 of the Road Transport (General) Act
2005,
(l) an offence under section 244 of the Roads Act 1993,
(m) an offence under section 22A of the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust Act
1980,
(n) an offence under section 20A of the State Sports Centre Trust Act
1984,
(o) an offence under section 78 of the Sydney Olympic Park Authority Act
2001,
(p) an offence under section 116 of the Transport Administration Act
1988,
(q) an offence relating to a vehicle or vessel that is of a kind
prescribed by the regulations.
39 Withdrawal of penalty reminder notices
(1) An appropriate officer may withdraw a penalty reminder notice
before the due date for payment under the notice.
(2) The following provisions have effect in relation to an alleged
offence, if a penalty reminder notice for the alleged offence is withdrawn in
accordance with this section:(a) the amount that was payable under the notice ceases to be
payable,
(b) any amount that has been paid under the notice is repayable to the
person by whom it was paid,
(c) further proceedings in respect of the alleged offence may be taken
against any person (including the person on whom the notice was served) as if
the notice had not been issued.
Division 4 Penalty notice enforcement orders
40 What is a penalty notice enforcement order?
(1) A penalty notice enforcement order is an order made by the State
Debt Recovery Office for the enforcement of the amount payable under a penalty
notice.
(2) A single order may be made for the enforcement of the amounts
payable under 2 or more penalty notices.
Note. Part 4 provides for the fine defaulter to be notified by the State
Debt Recovery Office of the enforcement order and of the enforcement action
that may be taken if the outstanding balance of the amount payable under the
penalty notice (and enforcement costs) is not paid within 28
days.
41 How are penalty notice enforcement orders made?
The State Debt Recovery Office may, on application by an
appropriate officer for a penalty notice or its own initiative, make a penalty
notice enforcement order.
42 When a penalty notice enforcement order may be
made
(1) A penalty notice enforcement order may be made only if:(a) a penalty notice has been served on a person in relation to a
particular offence referred to in the order, and
(a1) any review to be conducted under Division 2A has been completed
and the applicant has been notified of the outcome of the review,
and
(b) a penalty reminder notice has been served on the person:(i) after the end of the time specified in the penalty notice as the
time within which the amount payable under the notice may be paid,
or
(ii) if a review has been conducted under Division 2A, after that
review, and
(c) the due date specified in the penalty reminder notice has passed,
and
(d) the full amount payable under the penalty notice had not been paid
before the order is made, and
(e) the person has not, in accordance with this Part, declined to be
dealt with under this Part, and
(f) a court attendance notice in relation to the offence has not been
issued, and
(g) (Repealed)
(h) the facts as alleged in or referred to in the order constitute the
offence.
(1AA) Despite subsection (1), the State Debt Recovery Office may also
make a penalty notice enforcement order if it receives, in respect of an
amount owed by a person under a penalty notice, an application by the
person:(a) for an order under section 100 (Time to pay) in relation to the
amount and the person is in receipt of a Government benefit,
or
(b) for a work and development order in relation to the
amount.
(1BB) The State Debt Recovery Office is not to make a penalty notice
enforcement order under subsection (1AA) unless it determines to make the
order under section 100, or the work and development order, sought by the
person.
(1CC) On the making of an order under subsection (1AA):(a) the person who has been served with the penalty notice to which
the order relates can no longer elect to have the matter dealt with by a court
in accordance with section 23A, and
(b) the decision to issue the penalty notice can no longer be reviewed
under Division 2A.
(1A) A penalty notice enforcement order may not be made later
than:(a) if the applicable limitation period in relation to the offence is
less than 12 months—12 months from when the offence was committed or is
alleged to have been committed, or
(b) if the applicable limitation period in relation to the offence is
12 months or greater—the expiry of that limitation period,
or
(c) if a review has been conducted under Division 2A and a penalty
reminder notice has been served under section 24F (1)—42 days after
service of that notice.
(1B) If more than one date is applicable under subsection (1A), the
later of those dates is the relevant date for the purposes of that
subsection.
(2) An application for a penalty notice enforcement order made by an
appropriate officer must certify:(a) that the matters specified in subsection (1) (other than
subsection (1) (d)), or the relevant matters in subsection (1AA), are
satisfied, and
(b) that the full amount payable under the penalty notice has not been
paid, and
(c) that the period for making the order (as referred to in subsection
(1A)) has not expired.
(2A) The State Debt Recovery Office may rely on the certificate for the
purpose of making the order.
(3) A penalty notice enforcement order may be made in the absence of,
and without notice to, the person concerned.
43 Form of penalty notice enforcement order
(1) A penalty notice enforcement order must specify the following
matters:(a) the fine defaulter’s name, address and date of birth (if
known),
(b) a description of the offence in respect of which each fine to
which the order applies was imposed,
(c) the date on which the fine was imposed,
(d) the amount required to be paid, being the amount that remains to
be paid under the penalty notice, together with specified enforcement
costs.
(2) Any amount recovered in consequence of the making of a penalty
notice enforcement order (other than for enforcement costs) is to be dealt
with in the same way as if the amount had been paid on the issue of the
penalty notice.
44 Enforcement costs under penalty notice enforcement
order
(1) The regulations may prescribe the enforcement costs payable under
a penalty notice enforcement order and an amount is not payable for
enforcement costs unless it is so prescribed or is payable under section 76A
(Sheriff’s additional costs of taking enforcement action under this
Division).
(2) The following applies to any such enforcement costs:(a) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable to
the State Debt Recovery Office on the making of the order,
(b) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable to
Roads and Maritime Services if any enforcement action is taken by Roads and
Maritime Services under Division 3 of Part 4 before payment is made under the
order,
(c) an amount may be prescribed as the enforcement costs payable into
the Consolidated Fund if any enforcement action is taken by the Sheriff or
other official under Division 4 of Part 4 before payment is made under the
order.
(3) Any amount recovered in consequence of the making of a penalty
notice enforcement order is to be applied firstly towards enforcement costs
payable under this section or section 76A and the balance towards the amount
payable under the penalty notice.
45 Effect of making, or of payment under, penalty notice
enforcement order
(1) If a penalty notice enforcement order is made in relation to an
offence alleged to have been committed by a person:(a) the person is not as a result taken to have been convicted of the
offence, and
(b) the making of the order does not in any way affect or prejudice
any civil claim, action or proceeding arising out of the same
occurrence.
(2) If the full amount payable under a penalty notice enforcement
order is paid or recovered, no person is liable for any further proceedings
for the alleged offence concerned. This subsection ceases to apply if the
order is duly withdrawn under this Part and the amount paid under the order is
repaid.
(3) The payment of any amount payable under a penalty notice
enforcement order is not 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.
(4) Nothing in this section affects the operation of any provisions of
Division 5 relating to the annulment of a penalty notice enforcement order or
any provisions of Part 4 relating to the enforcement of a penalty notice
enforcement order.
46 Withdrawal of order
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may, on application or its own
initiative, withdraw a penalty notice enforcement order if satisfied
that:(a) a fine to which it applies has previously been the subject of a
penalty notice enforcement order in respect of which any enforcement action
has been taken, or
(b) the person named in the penalty notice enforcement order is not
the same person as the person in respect of whom a fine to which the order
applies was imposed, or
(c) the order relates to the owner of a vehicle or vessel, being a
vehicle or vessel involved in an offence the subject of the fine at a time
when the owner was not the owner of the vehicle or vessel concerned,
or
(d) the order was otherwise made in error.
(2) A penalty notice enforcement order must be withdrawn if
application for its withdrawal is made by the appropriate officer who applied
for the order.Note. Section 49A (5) also requires a penalty notice enforcement order
to be withdrawn if an issuing agency determines that a penalty notice should
be withdrawn following a review under section 49A.
(3) A penalty notice enforcement order may be withdrawn completely or
only to the extent of some of the penalty notices to which it
applies.
(4) If a penalty notice enforcement order is withdrawn
completely:(a) the order then ceases to have effect, and
(b) any enforcement action already taken is to be reversed, unless the
same enforcement action is authorised under another penalty notice enforcement
order or a court fine enforcement order, and
(c) enforcement costs are not payable in respect of the issue of the
order and, if paid, are repayable, and
(d) any amount that has been paid under the order is repayable to the
person by whom it was paid.
(5) If a penalty notice enforcement order is withdrawn only to the
extent of some of the penalty notices to which it applies:(a) the order continues to have effect in respect of the remaining
penalty notices to which it applies, and
(b) any amount that has been paid under the order is to be applied to
payment of the remaining penalty notices to which it applies and any
enforcement costs in respect of that order.
(6) The withdrawal of a penalty notice enforcement order does not
prevent the making of a further order in respect of the penalty
notice.
(7) Despite subsections (4) and (5), if a penalty notice enforcement
order is withdrawn (whether completely or only to the extent of some of the
penalty notices to which it applies), any amount paid under the order that
would otherwise be repayable to a person may instead be allocated by the State
Debt Recovery Office towards the payment of amounts payable under any other
fine enforcement order that is in force in relation to the
person.
(8) The State Debt Recovery Office must notify the person concerned of
any allocation made under subsection (7), but a failure to notify the person
does not affect that allocation.
47 Regulations relating to orders
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
making or withdrawal of penalty notice enforcement orders, including the
following:(a), (b) (Repealed)
(c) the form of any such order,
(d) the manner of making any such order.
Division 5 Annulment of penalty notice enforcement
orders
48 Applications for annulment of orders
(1) An application may be made by or on behalf of any person for the
annulment of a penalty notice enforcement order made against the person under
Division 4.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) An application for annulment is to be made in writing to the State
Debt Recovery Office.
(4) (Repealed)
(5) A person may not, except with the leave of the State Debt Recovery
Office, make more than one application in relation to the same
matter.
(6) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
applications under this section (including application
fees).
49 Determination of applications by State Debt Recovery
Office
(1) When dealing with an application for annulment, the State Debt
Recovery Office:(a) must annul the penalty notice enforcement order if it is satisfied
that:(i) the person was not aware that a penalty notice had been issued
until the enforcement order was served, but only if the application was made
within a reasonable time after that service, or
(ii) the person was otherwise hindered by accident, illness,
misadventure or other cause from taking action in relation to the penalty
notice, but only if the application was made within a reasonable time after
the person ceased being so hindered, or
(iii) the penalty reminder notice was, or both the penalty notice and
the penalty reminder notice, in relation to a particular offence were,
returned as being undelivered to its sender after being sent to the person at
the person’s recently reported address (within the meaning of section
126A) and notice of the enforcement order was served on the person at a
different address, and
(b) may annul the penalty notice enforcement order if:(i) it is satisfied that a question or doubt has arisen as to the
person’s liability for the penalty or other amount concerned, but only
if the person had no previous opportunity to obtain a review of that
liability, or
(ii) having regard to the circumstances of the case, it is satisfied
that there is other just cause why the application should be
granted.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office must not annul a penalty notice
enforcement order under subsection (1) (b) (ii) if doing so is not permitted
under, or would circumvent the restrictions in, subsection (1) (a) or (b)
(i).
(3) If the State Debt Recovery Office annuls a penalty notice
enforcement order under subsection (1) (a), it must refer the matter to the
Local Court unless:(a) the person concerned does not dispute the person’s liability
to pay the amount payable under the penalty notice, and
(b) that amount was paid to the State Debt Recovery Office at the time
of making the application for the annulment of the
order.
(3A) For the avoidance of doubt, payment of the full amount under a
penalty notice under subsection (3) results in there being no further
liability for further proceedings for the offence to which the notice
relates.
(3B) If the State Debt Recovery Office annuls a penalty notice
enforcement order under subsection (1) (b), it must refer the matter to the
Local Court.Note. Section 51 provides that the Local Court is to hear and determine
the alleged offence as if no penalty notice enforcement order had been
made.
(4) Applications for annulment are to be dealt with by the State Debt
Recovery Office in the absence of the parties, unless that Office otherwise
determines.
(5) The State Debt Recovery Office must give notice of the
determination of an application for annulment to all parties interested or
concerned.
(6) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
practice and procedure of the State Debt Recovery Office when dealing with
applications for annulment.
(7) The State Debt Recovery Office may, but is not required to, refund
any application fee for an application for an annulment that is
successful.
(8) For the avoidance of doubt, the State Debt Recovery Office may
grant an application for annulment (and annul the penalty notice enforcement
order) on the ground that the person was not aware that a penalty notice had
been issued until the enforcement order was served even if section 126A (1)
permitted the issue and service of a penalty reminder notice in relation to a
particular offence referred to in the enforcement order or section 126A (2)
permitted the making of the penalty notice enforcement order (or
both).
49A Review of penalty notice before annulment
(1) Before it annuls a penalty notice enforcement order, the State
Debt Recovery Office is to seek a review of the decision to issue each penalty
notice to which the penalty notice enforcement order applies if:(a) it has reason to suspect that the penalty notice should be
withdrawn having regard to any of the matters set out in section 24E (2),
and
(b) a review of the decision to issue the penalty notice has not been
conducted under this section or Division 2A.
(2) A review is to be conducted by the relevant issuing
agency.
(3) A review is to be dealt with in the absence of the parties, unless
the issuing agency otherwise determines.
(4) The issuing agency must notify the applicant for the annulment and
the State Debt Recovery Office of its determination on the review of the
decision to issue the penalty notice.
(5) If the issuing agency determines that a penalty notice should be
withdrawn (in whole or in part), the State Debt Recovery Office must withdraw
the penalty notice enforcement order (in whole or in part) under section
46.
(6) The State Debt Recovery Office must, if a penalty notice is not
withdrawn on review or there is no decision on a review within 42 days after
referral for review, grant the application for annulment and annul the penalty
notice enforcement order under section 49.
(7) An issuing agency may enter into arrangements with another person
or body (including the State Debt Recovery Office) under which the functions
of the issuing agency under this section are exercised by that person or body
on behalf of the issuing agency.
50 Appeal against refusal of application by State Debt
Recovery Office
(1) If the State Debt Recovery Office refuses an application for
annulment, the applicant may, not later than 28 days after notice is given of
the refusal, lodge an application in writing with a registrar of the Local
Court to have the original application determined by the Local
Court.
(2) The relevant registrar of the Local Court must, as soon as
possible, give written notification to the applicant and the parties of the
date, time and place on or at which the application is to be
determined.
(3) An application under this section may be determined by the Local
Court in accordance with this Division and the Local Court may make any
decision about the application that the State Debt Recovery Office may have
made.
(4) The Local Court may proceed to determine an application despite
any omission or error in the notice referred to in subsection (2) or its
non-service if:(a) the Local Court is satisfied that the applicant and the parties
interested and concerned had knowledge of the date, time and place on or at
which the application was to be determined and were not prejudiced by the
omission, error or non-service, or
(b) the Local Court is satisfied that the applicant is avoiding
service of the notice or cannot, after reasonable search and inquiry, be
found.
(5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
applications under this section (including application
fees).
51 Proceedings for alleged offence if penalty notice
enforcement order annulled
(1) If a penalty notice enforcement order is annulled by the Local
Court (or is annulled by the State Debt Recovery Office and referred to the
Local Court), the Local Court is to hear and determine the matter as if no
penalty notice enforcement order had been previously
made.
(2) If the Local Court annuls the penalty notice enforcement order,
the Local Court may proceed either immediately or at a later sitting of the
Court to hear and determine the matter.
(3) (Repealed)
(4) For the purposes of hearing and determining the matter, a court
attendance notice in relation to each alleged offence to which the annulment
of the penalty notice enforcement order relates is taken:(a) to have been filed when the penalty notice enforcement order was
made, and
(b) to have been filed by the appropriate officer for the penalty
notice.
52 Provisions relating to annulment of enforcement
orders
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office or the Local Court, if dealing with
an application for annulment, may stay enforcement action under the penalty
notice enforcement order subject to such terms and conditions as that Office
or Court thinks fit.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) An application may be made for the annulment of a penalty notice
enforcement order completely or only to the extent of some of the penalty
notices to which it applies.
(4) If a penalty notice enforcement order is annulled
completely:(a) the order then ceases to have effect, and
(b) any enforcement action already taken is to be reversed, unless the
same enforcement action is authorised under another penalty notice enforcement
order or a court fine enforcement order, and
(c) enforcement costs are not payable in respect of the issue of the
order and, if paid, are repayable, and
(d) any amount that has been paid under the order is repayable to the
person by whom it was paid, unless the amount was paid to the State Debt
Recovery Office at the time of making an application for the annulment of the
order under section 49 (1) (a).
(5) If a penalty notice enforcement order is annulled only to the
extent of some of the penalty notices to which it applies:(a) the order continues to have effect in respect of the remaining
penalty notices to which it applies, and
(b) any amount that has been paid under the order is to be applied to
payment of the remaining penalty notices to which it applies and any
enforcement costs in respect of that order.
(6) Despite subsections (4) and (5), any amount paid under a partially
or completely annulled penalty notice enforcement order that would otherwise
be repayable to a person may instead be allocated by the State Debt Recovery
Office towards the payment of amounts payable under any other fine enforcement
order that is in force in relation to the person.
(6A) The State Debt Recovery Office must notify the person concerned of
any allocation made under subsection (6), but a failure to notify the person
does not affect that allocation.
(7) If a penalty notice enforcement order is annulled, the period
within which proceedings for an offence may be instituted in respect of the
matter under section 179 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 1986 or any other Act commences on the date the
order is annulled.
Division 6 Application of Part
53 Application of penalty notice procedure to
children
(1) This Part applies to a person of any
age.
(2) However, this Part does not apply to a person who is younger than
10 years or who, although 10 years or older, was younger than 10 years when
the person is alleged to have committed the offence to which the relevant
penalty notice relates.
(3) This Part applies despite anything in the Children (Criminal Proceedings) Act
1987, except that the provisions of this Part relating to the
hearing or determination of an alleged offence on the annulment of a penalty
notice enforcement order is subject to that Act.
54 Part not to apply to certain forestry penalty
notices
This Part does not apply to or in relation to a penalty notice
under section 46A (2) of the Forestry Act
1916 if the amount payable under the notice includes any
royalty as defined in section 46A of that Act.
55 Regulations may exclude penalty notices from operation of
Part
The regulations may provide that this Part does not apply to or in
relation to any specified class or description of penalty
notices.
56 Other provisions not affected
The provisions of this Part are supplemental to, and do not
derogate from, the provisions of any Act that relate to proceedings that may
be taken in respect of offences that are or may be the subject of penalty
notice enforcement orders.
Part 4 Fine enforcement action
Division 1 Preliminary
57 Application and interpretation
(1) This Part applies to the enforcement of:(a) a fine imposed by a court following the making of a court fine
enforcement order, and
(b) the amount payable under a penalty notice following the making of
a penalty notice enforcement order.
(2) A court fine enforcement order or a penalty notice enforcement
order is referred to in this Act as a fine enforcement
order.
(3) The person liable to pay the fine under a fine enforcement order
is referred to in this Act as the fine
defaulter.
(4) In this Part, a reference to a fine includes a reference to
any enforcement costs payable under the fine enforcement order and any other
amount of a kind prescribed by the regulations.
58 Summary of enforcement procedure
(1) The following is a summary of the enforcement procedure under this
Part following the making of a fine enforcement order:(a) Service of fine enforcement order
Notice of the fine enforcement order is served on the fine
defaulter and the fine defaulter is notified that if payment is not made
enforcement action will be taken (see Division 2).
(b) Driver licence or vehicle registration suspension or
cancellation
If the fine is not paid within the period specified, Roads and
Maritime Services suspends any driver licence, and may cancel any vehicle
registration, of the fine defaulter. If the driver licence of the fine
defaulter is suspended and the fine remains unpaid for 6 months, Roads and
Maritime Services cancels that driver licence (see Division
3).
(c) Civil enforcement
If the fine defaulter does not have a driver licence or a
registered vehicle or the fine remains unpaid after 6 months, civil action is
taken to enforce the fine, namely, a property seizure order, a garnishee order
or the registration of a charge on land owned by the fine defaulter (see
Division 4).
(d) Community service order
If civil enforcement action is not successful, a community service
order is served on the fine defaulter (see Division 5).
(e) Imprisonment if failure to comply with community service
order
If the fine defaulter does not comply with the community service
order, a warrant of commitment is issued to a police officer for the
imprisonment of the fine defaulter (except in the case of
children).
(f) Fines payable by corporations
The procedures for fine enforcement (other than community service
orders and imprisonment) apply to fines payable by corporations (see Division
7).
(g) Fine mitigation
A fine defaulter may seek further time to pay and the State Debt
Recovery Office may write off unpaid fines or make a work and development
order in respect of the fine defaulter for the purposes of satisfying all or
part of the fine. Applications for review may be made to the Hardship Review
Board (see Division 8).
(2) This section does not affect the provisions of this Part that it
summarises.
Division 2 Service of fine enforcement order
59 Service on fine defaulter of notice of order
As soon as practicable after a fine enforcement order is made, the
State Debt Recovery Office is to serve notice of the order on the fine
defaulter.
60 What notice must say
(1) The notice of a fine enforcement order must inform the fine
defaulter that:(a) the order has been made, and
(b) the defaulter has until the final date specified in the notice to
pay the fine and enforcement costs specified in the notice,
and
(c) if the payment is not made by that final date, further enforcement
action will be taken against the defaulter to enforce the fine in accordance
with this Part and, in particular, that the defaulter will be liable without
further notice to have any driver licence or vehicle registration suspended or
cancelled or property seized and sold, and
(d) if the payment is not made by that final date, further enforcement
costs will be payable (indicating, except as provided in subsection (1A), each
amount of those costs and circumstances in which it is payable),
and
(e) review options are available relating to the fine enforcement
order, including withdrawal, annulment, time to pay and the writing off of
fines.
(1A) The notice of a fine enforcement order may (but need not) contain
information relating to the enforcement costs payable under section 76A when
the Sheriff is required to take enforcement action.
(2) If there is an approved form for such a notice, the notice must be
in that form.
(3) The inclusion in the notice of additional information and
directions for the assistance or guidance of the person on whom it is served
does not affect the validity of the notice.
61 Service of notice
(1) Notice of a fine enforcement order may be served on a
person:(a) personally, or
(b) by post, or
(c) by means of a document exchange, or
(d) by facsimile transmission or other electronic transmission,
or
(e) by any other manner prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The address for service of any such notice of a court fine
enforcement order includes the address for service of the person in connection
with the proceedings in which the fine was imposed.
(3) The address for service of any such notice of a penalty notice
enforcement order includes:(a) the address of the person shown on the relevant penalty notice or
supplied by the person in connection with the service of the relevant penalty
notice, or
(b) if the relevant penalty notice was served on the person in his or
her capacity as owner or responsible person for a vehicle or owner of a vessel
or was served by being left on a vehicle or vessel—the address shown in
the records of Roads and Maritime Services or other public agency as the
address of the owner or responsible person at the time the relevant penalty
notice was served, or
(c) if the relevant penalty notice was served on the person in his or
her capacity as the person driving or in charge of a vehicle or
vessel—the address specified in a notice given under section 38 (1) (a)
as the address of the person in charge of the vehicle or vessel at the time of
the alleged offence, or
(d) the address provided for the person under section 117, if the
State Debt Recovery Office is satisfied that it is the most recent address
available for the person.
62 Time for service of notices by post
Despite any other provision of this Act, it is presumed that a
notice of a fine enforcement order sent to a person by post is served on the
person 7 days after it is posted, unless the person establishes that it was
not served within that 7-day period.
63 Final date for payment in notices
(1) The final date for payment in a notice of a fine enforcement order
must be at least 21 days after it is served on the
person.
(2) Accordingly, a notice that is posted may specify a date that is at
least 28 days after the penalty reminder notice is posted as the final date
for making the payment concerned.
64 Extension of final date if notice takes more than 7
days
(1) If a notice is served on a person more than 7 days after it was
posted, the notice is not invalid merely because it specifies as the final
date a date that is less than 21 days after it was served on the
person.
(2) In such a case however, the final date is extended to a date that
is 21 days after the notice was served and the notice is taken to specify that
date as the final date.
Division 3 Driver licence or vehicle registration suspension
or cancellation
65 When enforcement action taken under this
Division
(1) Enforcement action is to be taken against a fine defaulter under
this Division if:(a) the fine defaulter has not paid a fine as required by the notice
of the fine enforcement order served on the fine defaulter,
or
(b) the State Debt Recovery Office has extended the time for payment
of a fine, and the fine defaulter has not paid the fine by the extended due
date, or
(c) the State Debt Recovery Office has allowed the payment of a fine
by instalments, and the fine defaulter has not paid every such instalment at
the time specified by the Office.
(2) Roads and Maritime Services is to take that enforcement action
when it is directed by the State Debt Recovery Office to do
so.
(3) Despite subsections (1) and (2), enforcement action with respect
to a fine defaulter’s driver licence is not to be taken under this
Division if:(a) the offence:(i) in respect of which the fine concerned was imposed on the fine
defaulter by a court, or
(ii) in respect of which the penalty notice from which the fine
concerned arises was served on the fine defaulter,
occurred while the fine defaulter was under the age of 18 years,
and
(b) the offence is not a traffic offence.
(4) Roads and Maritime Services is to cease enforcement action when
directed to do so by the State Debt Recovery
Office.
(4A) If Roads and Maritime Services has taken fine enforcement action
against a fine defaulter who is granted a first extension of time under this
Act for payment of the fine, and the fine defaulter pays 6 instalments in
accordance with the extension of time:(a) the State Debt Recovery Office must direct Roads and Maritime
Services to cease the enforcement action, and
(b) Roads and Maritime Services is to cease the enforcement
action.
(4B) The State Debt Recovery Office may direct Roads and Maritime
Services to recommence enforcement action in respect of a fine defaulter
referred to in subsection (4A) if the fine defaulter fails to pay any further
instalment in accordance with the extension of time to
pay.
(5) The State Debt Recovery Office may direct Roads and Maritime
Services to cease enforcement action under this Division even if a fine
defaulter has not paid all outstanding fines under any fine enforcement
order.
(6) In this section:traffic
offence means:
(a) an offence arising under a provision of the following Acts in
respect of the use, standing or parking of a motor vehicle:(i) the road transport legislation within the meaning of the Road Transport (General) Act
2005,
(ii) the Roads Act
1993,
(iii) the Motor Vehicles (Third Party
Insurance) Act 1942,
(iv) the Recreation Vehicles Act
1983, or
(b) an offence arising under a provision of any other law in respect
of the standing or parking of a motor vehicle.
Note. If the fine defaulter does not hold a driver licence or is not the
registered operator of a vehicle, enforcement action can be taken instead
under Division 4 (Civil enforcement).
66 Suspension or cancellation of driver licence
(1) Roads and Maritime Services must, without further notice, suspend
any driver licence of a fine defaulter against whom it is required to take
enforcement action for the balance of the period of the
licence.
(1A) Roads and Maritime Services must suspend the driver licence of a
fine defaulter even if the State Debt Recovery Office has:(a) granted an extension of time for the payment of the fine,
or
(b) allowed the fine defaulter to pay the fine by
instalments,
after requiring Roads and Maritime Services to take enforcement
action.
(2) If the driver licence is suspended and:(a) where the State Debt Recovery Office has granted the fine
defaulter an extension of time for payment of the fine, the fine remains
unpaid for at least 6 months after the extended due date,
or
(b) where the State Debt Recovery Office has allowed the payment of a
fine by instalments, an instalment remains unpaid for at least 6 months,
or
(c) in any other case, the fine concerned remains unpaid for at least
6 months,
Roads and Maritime Services must, if the State Debt Recovery Office so
directs, cancel the licence.
(3) Roads and Maritime Services is to remove the suspension of a
driver licence if the State Debt Recovery Office so
directs.
(3A) The obligation to suspend the driver licence of a fine defaulter
under subsection (1) extends to any licence that is already suspended when
enforcement action is required to be taken under this Division. Accordingly,
if the period of suspension comes to an end before the expiry of the licence,
Roads and Maritime Services is then to take action under subsection (1) to
further suspend the licence if the State Debt Recovery Office so
directs.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office (or Roads and Maritime Services on
its behalf) may notify the fine defaulter of the enforcement action taken
under this section, but a failure to notify the fine defaulter does not affect
that action.
(5) Despite the suspension or cancellation of a driver licence under
this section, a court or Roads and Maritime Services may exercise a function
under another Act to suspend or cancel the licence.
67 Cancellation of vehicle registration
(1) Roads and Maritime Services may, without further notice, cancel
the registration of all or any motor vehicles of which a fine defaulter is the
registered operator (or one of the registered operators) if:(a) it is required to take enforcement action against the fine
defaulter but the fine defaulter does not hold a driver licence that is in
force, and
(b) the cancellation of the registration of those motor vehicles is in
accordance with any guidelines issued under section
120.
(2) Roads and Maritime Services must cancel the registration of a
vehicle in accordance with this section if the State Debt Recovery Office so
directs.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office (or Roads and Maritime Services on
its behalf) may notify the fine defaulter of the enforcement action taken
under this section, but a failure to notify the fine defaulter does not affect
that action.
68 Suspension of dealings with Roads and Maritime
Services
(1) This section applies to a fine defaulter if:(a) the driver licence or vehicle registration of the fine defaulter
is suspended or cancelled under this Division, or
(b) Roads and Maritime Services is required to take enforcement action
against the fine defaulter under this Division, but any such action to suspend
or cancel the driver licence or vehicle registration of the fine defaulter is
not available.
(2) Roads and Maritime Services must, unless the State Debt Recovery
Office otherwise directs, refuse to exercise any of the following functions if
this section applies to a fine defaulter:(a) the issue of a driver licence to the fine defaulter or the renewal
of the driver licence of the fine defaulter,
(b) the registration of a vehicle in the name of the fine defaulter or
the renewal of the registration of a vehicle of which the fine defaulter is
the registered operator (or one of the registered
operators),
(c) the transfer to another person of the registration of a vehicle of
which the fine defaulter is the registered operator (or one of the registered
operators),
(d) the issue of a number plate to the fine
defaulter,
(e) the testing of the fine defaulter for the purpose of the issue of
a driver licence,
(f) the issue of an unregistered vehicle permit to the fine
defaulter,
(g) the registration of a motor vehicle in the name of the fine
defaulter, or the renewal of registration of a motor vehicle in the name of
the fine defaulter, under the Recreation
Vehicles Act 1983,
(h) the issue of trader’s plates to the fine
defaulter,
(i) the processing of a number plate exchange for the fine
defaulter,
(j) the reservation of a particular number plate for the fine
defaulter,
(k) the ordering of a particular number plate, or a particular design
of number plate, for the fine defaulter,
(l) the testing of the fine defaulter to ascertain the fine
defaulter’s eligibility for a driver’s
licence,
(m) the booking of a driving test for the fine
defaulter,
(n) the exercise of any other function of Roads and Maritime Services
requested by the fine defaulter, being a function of a kind prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this section.
(3) If Roads and Maritime Services refuses to exercise any such
function, it must, as soon as practicable, notify the fine defaulter that it
has refused to do so because the person is a fine
defaulter.
(3A) Roads and Maritime Services is not obliged to notify the fine
defaulter of a refusal under subsection (3) if it has previously notified the
fine defaulter of an earlier refusal under that
subsection.
(4) This section ceases to apply to a fine defaulter if the State Debt
Recovery Office so directs Roads and Maritime
Services.
(5) This section applies despite any obligation of Roads and Maritime
Services to exercise a function that is imposed by or under any other
Act.
69 Interim restoration or reinstatement of licence or
registration pending appeal etc
(1) A person may apply to Roads and Maritime Services for restoration
or reinstatement of a driver licence suspended or cancelled, or vehicle
registration cancelled, under this Division if:(a) in the case of a penalty notice enforcement order—the person
has lodged an application under Division 5 of Part 3 to have an application to
annul the fine enforcement order concerned determined by the Local Court,
or
(b) in the case of a court fine enforcement order—the person has
lodged an appeal against the conviction or sentence in respect of which the
fine concerned was imposed or the person has lodged an application under Part
2 of the Crimes (Local Courts Appeal and
Review) Act 2001 to annul that conviction or
sentence,
and those proceedings have not been
determined.
(2) Roads and Maritime Services must issue the person with a driver
licence or certificate of vehicle registration, as the case requires, by way
of restoration or reinstatement of the driver licence or vehicle registration
suspended or cancelled under this Division.
(3) A driver licence or vehicle registration so restored or reinstated
has effect, subject to this Act, the Road
Transport (Vehicle Registration) Act 1997 and the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1998, until the date on which:(a) the licence would have expired if the licence had not been
suspended or cancelled, or
(b) the registration would have expired if the registration had not
been cancelled.
(4) Any such restored or reinstated licence or registration may be
suspended or cancelled under this Act following the determination of the
proceedings referred to in subsection (1) or in connection with a different
fine payable by the person.
(5) A licence or registration cannot be restored or reinstated under
this section if the licence or registration was also suspended or cancelled
for reasons that do not give rise to a right of restoration or reinstatement
under this section.
70 Effect of enforcement action on vehicle
insurance
(1) A vehicle insurance policy is not terminated by the cancellation
of the registration of the vehicle under this Division or the suspension or
cancellation of the driver licence of the driver of the vehicle under this
Division.
(2) A claim under a vehicle insurance policy cannot be refused merely
because the vehicle’s registration is cancelled under this Division or
the driver licence of the driver of the vehicle is suspended or cancelled
under this Division.
(3) This section has effect despite anything to the contrary in a
vehicle insurance policy or any other agreement.
(4) In this section, a vehicle insurance
policy is a policy of insurance in respect of damage or loss caused
by or arising out of the use or operation of a vehicle (other than a
third-party policy within the meaning of the Motor Accidents Compensation Act
1999).
Note. Section 14 of the Motor
Accidents Compensation Act 1999 provides that a third-party
policy under that Act relating to personal injury is not cancelled by the
cancellation of the registration of a motor vehicle under this
Division.
Division 4 Civil enforcement
71 When enforcement action taken under this
Division
(1) Enforcement action is to be taken against a fine defaulter under
this Division if the fine defaulter has not paid the fine as required by the
notice of the fine enforcement order served on the fine defaulter and:(a) enforcement action is not available under Division 3 to suspend or
cancel the driver licence or vehicle registration of the fine defaulter,
or
(b) the fine remains unpaid even though any available enforcement
action was taken under Division 3.
(2) Enforcement action may be taken under this Division by means of a
property seizure order, a garnishee order or a charge on land, or by all or
any combination of those means.
Note. If enforcement action under this Division has not been or is
unlikely to be successful in satisfying the fine, enforcement action can be
taken against the fine defaulter under Division 5 (Community service
orders).
72 Order to seize property of fine defaulter
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may make an order for the seizure
of the property of a fine defaulter for the purpose of levying the fine
payable by the fine defaulter on that property. The order is called a property seizure
order.Note. The Interpretation Act
1987 defines property to include land as well as personal
property.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office may make a property seizure order
only if satisfied that enforcement action is authorised against the fine
defaulter under this Division.
(3) The order may be made in the absence of, and without notice to,
the fine defaulter.
(4) The order is to be directed to the Sheriff, and provided to the
Sheriff by the State Debt Recovery Office for
execution.
(5) (Repealed)
(6) A property seizure order operates as a writ for the levy of
property issued by the Local Court under Part 8 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 and, for
that purpose, the State Debt Recovery Office is taken to be the judgment
creditor.
(7) If the Sheriff is required to execute a property seizure order and
a writ of execution issued by a court or to execute more than one property
seizure order, the priority to be accorded to their execution is as
follows:(a) a property seizure order is to be executed before a writ of
execution (even if the writ was issued before the order),
(b) property seizure orders are to be executed in the order in which
they were received by the Sheriff (unless the Sheriff is directed by the State
Debt Recovery Office to execute them in a different
order).
(8) The Sheriff is to return a property seizure order to the State
Debt Recovery Office if the order has not been executed within 12 months after
it was made. The Office is to cancel an order so returned, but nothing in this
subsection prevents the issue of a further order in the
matter.
(9) The Sheriff or other person executing a property seizure order is
to cease executing the order if the order is cancelled under section
77.
73 Order to garnishee debts, wages or salary of fine
defaulter
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may make an order that all debts
due and accruing to a fine defaulter from any person specified in the order
are attached for the purposes of satisfying the fine payable by the fine
defaulter (including an order expressed to be for the continuous attachment of
the wage or salary of the fine defaulter). The order is called a garnishee
order.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office may make a garnishee order only if
satisfied that enforcement action is authorised against the fine defaulter
under this Division.
(3) The order may be made in the absence of, and without notice to,
the fine defaulter.
(4) The order operates as a garnishee order made by the Local Court
under Part 8 of the Civil Procedure Act
2005 and, for that purpose:(a) the State Debt Recovery Office is taken to be the judgment
creditor, and
(b) an instalment order under section 107 of that Act includes an
order under this Act by the State Debt Recovery Office for the payment of a
fine by instalments, and
(c) such other modifications as are prescribed by the regulations have
effect.
74 Registration of fine enforcement order as charge on
land
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may apply to the Registrar-General
for registration of a fine enforcement order in relation to any land owned by
the fine defaulter (including any land owned jointly with another
person).
(2) An application may not be made under this section unless the
amount payable under the order (or the total amount payable under the orders)
to which the application relates exceeds $1,000 or such other amount as is
prescribed by the regulations.
(3) An application under this section must define the land to which it
relates.
(4) The Registrar-General must, on application under this section and
lodgment of a copy of the fine enforcement order, register the order in
relation to the land in such manner as the Registrar-General thinks
fit.
(5) There is created by force of this section, on the registration of
the order, a charge on the land in relation to which the order is registered
to secure the payment to the State Debt Recovery Office of the amount payable
under the order.
(6) Such a charge ceases to have effect in relation to the
land:(a) on registration of the cancellation of the charge under section
77, or
(b) on the sale or other disposition of the property with the consent
of the State Debt Recovery Office, or
(c) on the sale of the land to a purchaser in good faith for value
who, at the time of the sale, has no notice of the
charge,
whichever first occurs.
(7) Such a charge is subject to every charge or encumbrance to which
the land was subject immediately before the order was registered and, in the
case of land under the provisions of the Real Property Act 1900, is subject
to every prior mortgage, lease or other interest recorded in the Register kept
under that Act.
(8) Such a charge is not affected by any change of ownership of the
land, except as provided by subsection (6).
(9) If:(a) such a charge is created on land of a particular kind and the
provisions of any law of the State provide for the registration of title to,
or charges over, land of that kind, and
(b) the charge is so registered,
a person who purchases or otherwise acquires the land after the
registration of the charge is, for the purposes of subsection (6), taken to
have notice of the charge.
(10) If such a charge relates to land under the provisions of the
Real Property Act 1900, the
charge has no effect until it is registered under that
Act.
75 Examination of fine defaulter
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may issue an examination summons
under this section for the purpose of enabling enforcement action to be taken
under this Division.
(2) An examination summons may be directed to:(a) if the fine defaulter is a natural person—the fine
defaulter, or
(b) if the fine defaulter is a corporation—an officer or former
officer of the corporation.
(3) An examination summons:(a) is to summon the person to whom it is directed to attend before
the Director or other specified officer of the State Debt Recovery Office, or
before a specified officer of a court, at the place specified in the summons,
and
(b) is to summon the person to so attend on a day and at a time
specified in the summons and thereafter as required by the Director or officer
to be orally examined as to the fine defaulter’s property and other
means of satisfying the fine and generally as to the fine defaulter’s
financial circumstances, and
(c) may require the person to produce to the Director or officer, at
any such examination, any document or other thing in the person’s
possession or control that tends to show the fine defaulter’s true
financial circumstances.
(4) An examination summons is to be served personally on the person to
whom it is directed.
(5) A person is not bound to produce any document or other thing that
is not specified or sufficiently described in the examination summons or that
the person would not be bound to produce on a subpoena for production in the
Supreme Court.
(6) An examination summons may not be issued to a person if that
person has previously attended an examination within the previous 3 months
pursuant to an examination summons under this
section.
(7) If a person who is issued with an examination summons under this
section fails to attend in accordance with the summons, the State Debt
Recovery Office may issue a warrant for the apprehension of the person and for
the person to be brought before the Director or other specified officer of the
State Debt Recovery Office, or before a specified officer of a court, for
examination in accordance with this section.
(8) Any such warrant of apprehension:(a) may not be issued unless the State Debt Recovery Office is
satisfied that the examination summons was duly served on the person,
and
(b) may not be issued until at least 14 days after the person was
notified (in the manner required for the service of a fine enforcement order)
that a warrant will issue if the person does not attend for examination in
accordance with this section, and
(c) is to be directed to the Sheriff and may be executed by the
Sheriff or by the Sheriff’s officers or by any court bailiffs authorised
by the Sheriff, and
(d) may be executed with the assistance of any police
officer.
(9) If a person who is issued with an examination summons under this
section:(a) fails to attend in accordance with the summons,
or
(b) without reasonable excuse, refuses to give evidence on oath after
attending for examination, or
(c) gives false information at an examination, or
(d) without reasonable excuse, fails to produce any document or thing
that the person is required by the summons to
produce,
the State Debt Recovery Office may report the matter to the Supreme Court
or District Court for determination. The court may deal with the matter as if
it were a contempt of that court.
(10) An examination under this section may be adjourned:(a) by the State Debt Recovery Office, in the case where a person is
summoned to attend before the Director or other specified officer of the State
Debt Recovery Office, or
(b) by a specified officer of a court, in the case where a person is
summoned to attend before the specified officer,
and the State Debt Recovery Office or the specified officer,
respectively, must notify the person concerned of the time and place for the
adjourned examination.
(11) The State Debt Recovery Office may, instead of issuing an
examination summons under this section, request the fine defaulter by notice
to supply the relevant information for the purpose of enabling enforcement
action to be taken under this Division. An examination summons may be issued
if the notice is not complied with.
76 Power of entry to execute property seizure
order
(1) The person executing a property seizure order may, at any
reasonable time of the day or night, enter any premises for the purposes of
executing the order.
(2) Subsection (1) does not authorise any such person to enter any
part of premises used only for residential purposes without the permission of
the occupier of the premises or the authority of a search warrant under this
section.
(3) Any such person may apply to an authorised officer for the issue
of a search warrant if the person believes on reasonable grounds that there
may be property liable to seizure under the property seizure order in any
premises.
(4) An authorised officer to whom any such application is made may, if
satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for doing so, issue a search
warrant authorising any person who is executing the property seizure order to
enter the premises and seize property in the premises in accordance with that
or any other property seizure order.
(5) Division 4 of Part 5 of the Law
Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 applies to
a search warrant issued under this section.
(6) Without affecting the generality of section 71 of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act
2002, a police officer:(a) may accompany a person executing a search warrant,
and
(b) may take all reasonable steps to assist the person in the exercise
of the person’s functions under this section.
(7) This section does not authorise a person to seize property under
any warrant of execution or order (other than a property seizure order) while
the person is in premises in pursuance only of the authority conferred by this
section.
(8) In this section:authorised
officer has the same meaning as it has in the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act
2002.
premises includes any
structure, building, aircraft, vehicle, vessel or place (whether built upon or
not).
76A Sheriff’s additional costs of taking enforcement
action under this Division
(1) The costs and expenses reasonably incurred by the Sheriff in
taking enforcement action under this Division and approved by the State Debt
Recovery Office are enforcement costs payable by the fine defaulter under the
fine enforcement order.
(2) The amount of those costs and expenses is to be determined in
accordance with the scale applicable to the enforcement of judgment debts
under the Civil Procedure Act
2005, but is to be reduced by any amount prescribed under
section 16 (2) (c) or 44 (2) (c) as payable to the Consolidated
Fund.
(3) For the purposes of this section, the State Debt Recovery Office
has the functions of the registrar of the relevant court with respect to the
approval of those costs and expenses.
(4) Enforcement costs recoverable under this section are payable to
the Sheriff and not to the Consolidated Fund.
(5) The power of the Local Court to review a decision of a registrar
of the court in respect of any such enforcement costs applies to a decision of
the State Debt Recovery Office under this section.
Note. Enforcement costs payable under a fine enforcement order form part
of the fine—see section 57 (4).
77 Cancellation of property seizure, garnishee order or
charge on land
(1) A property seizure order, garnishee order or charge on land under
this Division is cancelled on the service of a community service order on the
fine defaulter under Division 5 for the enforcement of the fine
concerned.
(2) A property seizure order, garnishee order or charge on land under
this Division is cancelled on the payment of the fine
concerned.Note. The writing off of the fine or the remission of the fine also
operates as payment for the purpose of cancelling enforcement action—see
sections 101 and 123.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office may cancel a property seizure
order, garnishee order or charge on land at any time for any good
reason.
(4) The cancellation of a charge on land does not take effect until
the Registrar-General registers the cancellation of the
charge.
Division 5 Community service orders
78 When orders may be made
Enforcement action may be taken against a fine defaulter under
this Division if:(a) the fine defaulter has not paid the fine as required by the notice
of the fine enforcement order served on the fine defaulter,
and
(b) enforcement action under Division 4 has not been or is unlikely to
be successful in satisfying the fine.
79 Making of community service order against fine
defaulter
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may make a community service order
requiring a fine defaulter to perform community service work in order to work
off the amount of the fine that remains unpaid.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office may make the order only if
satisfied that enforcement action is authorised against the fine defaulter
under this Division.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office is not to make an order if
satisfied that the person is not capable of performing work under an order or
is otherwise not suitable to be engaged in such
work.
(4) The order may be made in the absence of, and without notice to,
the fine defaulter.
(5) The order may be made before the execution of a warrant under
Division 4 and in anticipation that enforcement action may not be successful
under that Division in satisfying the fine. The order is not to be served if
that enforcement action is successful.
(6) Subject to this Division:(a) Divisions 1 and 4 of Part 7 (other than sections 92 and 93) of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999, and
(b) Part 5 of the Crimes
(Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 and any regulations
made for the purposes of that Part,
apply to a community service order under this section in the same way as
they apply to a community service order under section 8 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999.
(7) In the application of the provisions referred to in subsection (6)
to a community service order under this section, a reference in those
provisions to a court is taken to be a reference to the State Debt Recovery
Office.
(8) A community service order is to be in the approved
form.
80 Service and notice of order
(1) As soon as practicable after making a community service order
under this Division, the State Debt Recovery Office must cause a copy of the
order and written notice of the order to be served on the fine
defaulter.
(2) The notice must be in the approved form and must include the
following information:(a) the place at which, or person to whom, the fine defaulter must
present himself or herself, in person, for the purpose of enabling the
administration of the order to be commenced,
(b) the period within which the fine defaulter must present himself or
herself.
(3) Three copies of the notice must be served on the fine
defaulter.
(4) The fine defaulter must sign 3 copies of the notice in the
presence of the person by whom it was served. Of the copies:(a) one is to be kept by the fine defaulter, and
(b) one is to be served by the person who served the notice on the
fine defaulter on the Commissioner of Corrective Services or the
Director-General of the Department of Juvenile Justice, whichever is
appropriate, and is to be kept by the Commissioner or Director-General, as
appropriate, and
(c) one is to be served by that person on, and kept by, the State Debt
Recovery Office.
(5) A community service order is not invalidated by a failure to
comply with this section or section 80A.
80A Provisions relating to service of orders and
notice
(1) The community service order and notice may be served on the fine
defaulter only in accordance with the directions of the State Debt Recovery
Office.
(2) The order and 3 copies of the notice are to be served personally
on the fine defaulter by the Sheriff or the Sheriff’s officers or by a
court bailiff authorised by the Sheriff.
(3) The person who serves a community service order under this
Division is required to explain the order to the fine defaulter on whom it is
served.
(4) The explanation is to be given in a language likely to be
understood by the fine defaulter and is to include information as to the
following matters:(a) the requirements to be complied with by the fine defaulter under
the order,
(b) the consequences that may follow if the fine defaulter fails to
comply with those requirements,
(c) the fact that the order may be satisfied by payment of such part
of the fine as has not been satisfied by the performance of community service
work under the order.
81 Number of hours of community service work
(1) The number of hours of community service work, specified in a
community service order made under this Division, to be served by the fine
defaulter is to be calculated at the rate of 1 hour for each $15 of the amount
of the fine that remains unpaid.
(2) The number of hours specified in any one order must not exceed 300
hours (in the case of an adult) or 100 hours (in the case of a child). The
fine defaulter may be subject to more than one order under this Division at
any one time.
(3) The number of hours specified in any one order is additional to
any number of hours of community service work required to be performed by any
other order under this Division or otherwise than under this Division.
Accordingly, the total number of hours that a person may be required to
perform at any one time under another Act does not apply to any hours required
to be worked by an order under this Division.
(3A) In the case of a person who is a child at the time a community
service order is made under this Division, community service work may be
performed concurrently for the purposes of that order and for the purposes of
any other community service order made under this Division or otherwise than
under this Division.
(4) The regulations may increase the amount of $15 mentioned in this
section and section 83. If the regulations do so, the reference to the amount
of $15 in those sections is to be construed as a reference to that increased
amount.
(5) In this section:adult
means a person who is of or above the age of 18 years.
child
means a person who is under the age of 18 years.
82 Satisfaction of orders by payment
If a fine defaulter who is subject to a community service order
under this Division duly pays the fine (or the unsatisfied balance of the fine
having regard to the number of hours of community service work already
performed) the order is taken to be satisfied.Note. The writing off of the fine or the remission of the fine also
operates as payment for the purpose of cancelling enforcement action—see
sections 101 and 123. The amount of the fine includes enforcement
costs—see section 57 (4).
83 Satisfaction of fine by community service
(1) When a fine defaulter who is subject to a community service order
under this Division duly complies with the order, the fine concerned is taken
to be satisfied.
(2) When a fine defaulter who is subject to a community service order
under this Division duly serves part of the number of hours of community
service work to be served under the order, the fine concerned is taken to be
satisfied by the amount calculated at the rate of $15 for each hour of
community service work actually served.
84 Suspension of orders during imprisonment or
detention
(1) If a fine defaulter who is subject to a community service order
under this Division is imprisoned while the order is in force, the order is
suspended during that period of imprisonment. The period that the order is to
be in force is extended, and not reduced, by the period that the order is
suspended.
(2) A fine defaulter is imprisoned for the purposes of this section if
the fine defaulter is:(a) in a correctional centre on remand or pursuant to a sentence of
imprisonment, or
(b) in a detention centre (within the meaning of the Children (Detention Centres) Act
1987) on remand or pursuant to a detention
order.
85 Provisions relating to orders
(1) An appeal does not lie in respect of the making of a community
service order under this Division or the failure to make such an
order.
(2), (3) (Repealed)
Note. Provisions of the Children
(Community Service Orders) Act 1987 apply to the order if the
fine defaulter is a person to whom that Act applies. In any other case,
provisions of Part 5 of the Crimes
(Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 apply to the
order.
86 Revocation of community service order
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may revoke a community service
order made under this Division if it is satisfied that the fine defaulter who
is subject to the order has failed, without reasonable excuse, to comply with
the order or the requirements imposed with respect to the order by or under
the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act
1999 or the Children
(Community Service Orders) Act 1987 as the case
requires.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office is not to revoke an order under
subsection (1) unless the relevant assigned officer (within the meaning of
that Act) has reported the breach to the Office. The Office may decide not to
revoke an order following the report of a breach of the order to the
Office.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office may revoke a community service
order made under this Division if it is satisfied, following a report by the
assigned officer, that the fine defaulter is not capable of performing work
under the order or is otherwise not suitable to be engaged in such
work.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office may, when revoking an order, also
revoke other community service orders that have been made against the fine
defaulter.
(5) Notice of the revocation is to be served on the fine defaulter.
The notice may be served in the same way as notice of a fine enforcement order
may be served.
(6) The fine defaulter may, within the time specified in the notice,
apply in writing to the State Debt Recovery Office for a review of the
revocation. The Office may, if satisfied that the order was not breached or
that the breach should be excused, reverse its decision to revoke the
community service order.
(7) The revocation of a community service order does not take
effect:(a) until the expiry of the period during which an application for
review of the revocation may be made, or
(b) if an application for review is duly made—unless and until
the application is refused.
(8) The revocation of an order (or the review of any such revocation)
may be made or held in the absence of, and without notice to, the fine
defaulter.
(9) A decision of the State Debt Recovery Office under this section is
(subject to this section) final and is not subject to
appeal.
Division 6 Imprisonment
87 Imprisonment following breach of community service
order
(1) After a community service order is revoked under section 86 (1),
the State Debt Recovery Office may by warrant commit the fine defaulter to a
correctional centre to be kept there according to the terms of the warrant for
the period of imprisonment calculated in accordance with this Division, unless
the fine defaulter sooner pays the relevant outstanding
fine.
(2) A single warrant may commit the fine defaulter for 2 or more
periods of imprisonment if 2 or more community service orders made against the
fine defaulter have been revoked.
(2A) A warrant:(a) must be in the approved form, and
(b) is sufficient authority for any police officer to convey the fine
defaulter to the correctional centre identified in the warrant,
and
(c) is sufficient authority for the governor of the correctional
centre to keep the fine defaulter in his or her custody for the period of
imprisonment calculated in accordance with this
Division.
(3) This section is subject to the other provisions of this
Division.
88 The “relevant outstanding fine”
(1) For the purposes of this Division, the relevant outstanding
fine at any time is the amount of the fine under the relevant fine
enforcement order that remains unpaid at that time.Note. The amount of the fine includes enforcement costs—see
section 57 (4).
(2) In calculating the amount remaining unpaid, account is to be taken
of any satisfaction of the fine by service under a community service order
under Division 5 or by service of any part of the period of imprisonment under
this Division.
Note. The writing off of the fine or the remission of the fine also
operates as payment for the purpose of cancelling enforcement action—see
sections 101 and 123.
89 Intensive correction order
(1) A fine defaulter who is committed to a correctional centre by
warrant under this Division may apply to the Commissioner of Corrective
Services for an order that the fine defaulter’s period of imprisonment
be served under an intensive correction order. An application may be made in
anticipation of the issue of a warrant.
(2) The Commissioner of Corrective Services may, on an application
under this section, order that the fine defaulter serve the period of
imprisonment under a warrant under this Division as imprisonment under an
intensive correction order.
(3) A fine defaulter is not eligible to serve a period of imprisonment
under an intensive correction order:(a) if the period of imprisonment is less than the minimum period
determined in the guidelines under section 120 as appropriate to be served
under an intensive correction order, or
(b) if the fine defaulter is remanded to or imprisoned in a
correctional centre (including as a periodic detainee), or
(c) if the fine payable by the fine defaulter is for an offence
committed while serving a period of imprisonment under an intensive correction
order, or
(d) if an earlier intensive correction order (whether under this Act
or the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999) has been revoked because the fine defaulter has failed
to serve a sentence of imprisonment in accordance with the requirements of the
order, or
(e) in any other circumstances prescribed by the
regulations.
(4) On making an order under this section, the warrant committing the
fine defaulter to a correctional centre is subject to the terms of the
order.
(5) The decision whether or not to grant an application under this
section is at the discretion of the Commissioner of Corrective Services, and
no appeal lies against a decision not to grant an application in a particular
case.
(6) The Commissioner of Corrective Services is to serve notice on the
State Debt Recovery Office of the making or revocation of an order under this
section.
(7) The State Debt Recovery Office may replace the original warrant in
respect of which the order was made with a fresh warrant in connection with
the outstanding fine at the time.
(8) Subject to this section:(a) Division 1 of Part 5, section 67 and Divisions 3 and 4 (other than
sections 72 and 73) of Part 5 of the Crimes
(Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999, and
(b) Parts 3 and 7 of the Crimes
(Administration of Sentences) Act 1999, and regulations made
under those Parts,
apply to an intensive correction order under this Division in the same
way as they apply to an intensive correction order under section 7 of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999.
(9) In the application of those provisions to an intensive correction
order under this section, a reference in those provisions to a court is taken
to be a reference to the Commissioner of Corrective
Services.
(10) The functions of the State Parole Authority under Part 7 of the
Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act
1999 with respect to the revocation of intensive correction
orders are, in relation to an intensive correction order under this Division,
to be exercised by the Commissioner of Corrective
Services.
89A Service and notice of intensive correction
order
(1) As soon as practicable after making an intensive correction order
under this Division, the Commissioner of Corrective Services must cause a copy
of the order and written notice of the order to be served on the fine
defaulter and the State Debt Recovery Office.
(2) The notice must be in the approved form and must include the
following information:(a) the office of Corrective Services NSW to which the fine defaulter
must report,
(b) the date on which, and the time at which, the fine defaulter is
first to report to that office of Corrective Services
NSW.
(3) Two copies of the notice must be served on the fine
defaulter.
(4) The fine defaulter must sign 2 copies of the notice in the
presence of the person by whom it was served. Of the copies:(a) one is to be kept by the fine defaulter, and
(b) one is to be served by that person on, and kept by, the
Commissioner of Corrective Services.
(5) An order under section 89 is not invalidated by a failure to
comply with this section or section 89B.
89B Provisions relating to service
(1) The intensive correction order and notice may be served on the
fine defaulter only in accordance with the directions of the Commissioner of
Corrective Services.
(2) The order and 2 copies of the notice are to be served personally
on the fine defaulter by the Sheriff or the Sheriff’s officers or by a
court bailiff authorised by the Sheriff.
(3) The person who serves an intensive correction order under this
Division is required to explain the order to the fine defaulter on whom it is
served.
(4) The explanation is to be given in a language likely to be
understood by the fine defaulter and is to include information as to the
following matters:(a) the requirements to be complied with by the fine defaulter under
the order,
(b) the consequences that may follow if the fine defaulter fails to
comply with those requirements,
(c) the fact that the order may be satisfied by payment of such part
of the fine as has not been satisfied by the period of imprisonment served
under the order.
90 Calculation of period of imprisonment under
warrant
(1) The period of imprisonment for the purposes of a warrant under
this Division is to be calculated on the basis of the amount of the relevant
outstanding fine, as follows:(a) the period is to be 1 day for each $120 (or part of $120) of the
relevant outstanding fine,
(b) the period is not to be less than 1 day,
(c) the period is not to exceed 3 months.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) The regulations may increase the amount of $120 mentioned in this
section and section 91. If the regulations do so, the references to the amount
of $120 in this section and section 91 are to be construed as references to
that increased amount.
91 Satisfaction of fine by imprisonment
(1) When a fine defaulter duly serves the total period of imprisonment
under a warrant under this Division, the fine concerned is taken to be
satisfied.
(2) When a fine defaulter duly serves part of the period of
imprisonment under a warrant under this Division, the fine concerned is then
taken to be satisfied by the amount calculated at the rate of $120 for each
day actually served.
92 Special provision relating to children
(1) A fine defaulter cannot be committed to a correctional centre or a
detention centre by a warrant under this Division if the person:(a) was under 18 years of age when the offence concerned was
committed, and
(b) was under 21 years of age at the time the person was charged with
the offence or issued with a penalty notice (as the case
requires).
(2) If a further fine enforcement order is made against the fine
defaulter and the person was 18 years of age or older at the time the offence
concerned was committed, the fine defaulter may be committed to a correctional
centre in respect of the earlier fine enforcement order despite subsection (1)
if the fine defaulter is committed to a correctional centre in respect of that
further fine enforcement order.
93 Terms under warrants to be served consecutively
(1) If a fine defaulter is committed to 2 or more terms of
imprisonment by one or more warrants of commitment under this Division, the
terms are to be served consecutively, not
concurrently.
(2) (Repealed)
94 Terms under warrants to be served concurrently with other
non-fine default imprisonment
(1) A term of imprisonment (or consecutive terms) for which a fine
defaulter has been committed by a warrant under this Division may be served
concurrently with any imprisonment of the fine defaulter arising otherwise
than by any such warrant.
(2) (Repealed)
95 Execution of warrant
(1) If the fine defaulter who is committed to a correctional centre by
a warrant under this Division is already in a correctional centre, the warrant
may be executed by the officer in charge of the correctional centre or a
person authorised by that officer. The warrant is executed by serving a copy
of the warrant on the fine defaulter.
(2) Notice is not required to be given to a fine defaulter of the
proposed execution of a warrant under this
Division.
(3) However, a police officer executing a warrant under this Division
may, in accordance with guidelines issued under section 120 or (subject to any
such guidelines) issued by the Commissioner of Police, delay the execution of
the warrant to enable the fine defaulter to pay the relevant outstanding fine
or seek the cancellation of the warrant.
(4) A police officer is to cease executing a warrant under this
Division if the fine defaulter pays the relevant outstanding fine (whether to
the police officer or in any other manner authorised by this
Act).
(5) The State Debt Recovery Office may cancel a warrant issued under
this Division if it considers that it is appropriate to do
so.
96 Discharge from custody
A fine defaulter is to be discharged from the correctional centre
to which the fine defaulter has been committed by a warrant under this
Division if the fine defaulter duly pays the relevant outstanding fine, unless
in the correctional centre in respect of another matter.Note. The relevant outstanding fine is progressively reduced by service
of part of the period of imprisonment—see section
88.
97 Regulations as to warrants
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to warrants
under this Division, including:(a) the form of any such warrants, or
(b) the execution of any such warrants.
Division 7 Bodies corporate
98 Application of civil and other enforcement
procedures
Enforcement action under this Part extends to a fine enforcement
order in respect of a fine defaulter that is a body corporate, other than
enforcement action under Division 5 (Community service orders) and Division 6
(Imprisonment).
99 Modification of enforcement procedures
If the fine defaulter is a body corporate, enforcement action may
be taken under Division 4 (Civil enforcement) before or without taking
enforcement action under Division 3 (Driver licence or vehicle registration
suspension or cancellation).
Division 8 Fine mitigation
Subdivision 1 Work and development orders
99A Definitions
In this Subdivision:approved
organisation means a person or body approved by the Director-General
of the Attorney General’s Department.
approved person,
in relation to a work and development order, means:
(a) an approved organisation, or
(b) if the work and development order involves medical or mental
health treatment, a health practitioner qualified to provide that
treatment.
health
practitioner means:
(a) a registered medical practitioner, or
(b) a registered psychologist, or
(c) a nurse.
work and
development order means an order made under this Subdivision
requiring a person to do any one or more of the following in order to satisfy
all or part of a fine:
(a) undertake unpaid work for, or on behalf of, an approved
organisation (but only with the agreement of that
organisation),
(b) undergo medical or mental health treatment in accordance with a
health practitioner’s treatment plan,
(c) undertake an educational, vocational or life skills
course,
(d) undergo financial or other counselling,
(e) undergo drug or alcohol treatment,
(f) if the person is under 25 years of age, undertake a mentoring
program.
99B Making an order
(1) A work and development order may be made by the State Debt
Recovery Office with respect to a person in relation to all or part of an
unpaid fine if:(a) a fine enforcement order has been made with respect to the person
in relation to the fine, and
(b) the person has an intellectual disability, a mental illness or a
cognitive impairment, is homeless or is experiencing acute economic hardship,
and
(c) a community service order is not in force against the fine
defaulter in respect of the fine, and
(d) an application is made in accordance with this
Subdivision.
(2) An application for an order is to:(a) be made to the State Debt Recovery Office by or on behalf of the
person, and
(b) be supported by each approved person who is to supervise the
person in complying with the order, and
(c) set out the grounds for making the order (including supporting
evidence), the activities that are proposed to be carried out under the order
and a proposed time for the completion of those
activities.
(3) An application may be made in anticipation of a fine enforcement
order being made with respect to the person in relation to the
fine.
(4) If the regulations prescribe a maximum number of work and
development orders that may be made in any particular period, the State Debt
Recovery Office is not to make an order during that period if satisfied that
the number of such orders will exceed the number prescribed (even if directed
to do so by the Hardship Review Board under section 101B
(6)).
(5) If the State Debt Recovery Office determines to make an order, it
is to make it in such terms as are agreed between it, the applicant and each
approved person.
(6) An order is to specify:(a) the value of the activities that are to be undertaken under the
order for the purposes of satisfying the fine to which the order relates,
and
(b) the nature of any unpaid work that may be required under the
order.
(7) No enforcement action is to be taken against a person under this
Part in respect of a fine to which a work and development order relates while
the order is in force.
99C Variation or revocation of order
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may vary or revoke a work and
development order:(a) if requested to do so by or on behalf of the person subject to the
order, or
(b) if it is satisfied that the person subject to the order has
failed, without reasonable excuse, to comply with the
order.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office is not to take action under
subsection (1) (b) unless it has taken reasonable steps to consult with the
person subject to the order and each approved person in relation to the
order.
(3) An order ceases to be in force when it is
revoked.
99D No appeal except to Hardship Review Board
Except as provided by section 101B, an appeal does not lie in
respect of the making of, the failure to make or the varying or revocation of,
a work and development order.
99E Satisfaction of order
(1) If a person subject to a work and development order:(a) complies with the order, the fine, or the part of the fine, to
which the order relates is taken to be satisfied, or
(b) pays the fine (or the unsatisfied balance of the fine having
regard to the activities already undertaken under the order), the order is
taken to be satisfied.
(2) If a person subject to a work and development order complies with
some but not all of the activities required by the order, the fine, or the
part of the fine, to which the order relates is taken to be satisfied by the
value of the activities that have been undertaken at the rate or rates set out
in the order.
99F Civil liability
(1) In this section:person
involved, in relation to unpaid work under a work and development
order, includes any person (including a corporation):
(a) for whose benefit that work is performed, or
(b) who directs or supervises that work, specifies its terms or
conditions or controls it, or
(c) who owns or occupies the premises or land on which that work is
performed,
but does not include the person by whom the work is
performed.
(2) No act or omission of a person by whom unpaid work under a work
and development order is performed gives rise to civil liability on the part
of any person involved in that work if the act or omission occurs in the
course of that work.
(3) No act or omission of a person involved in unpaid work under a
work and development order gives rise to civil liability to the person by whom
the work is performed on the part of the person so involved if the act or
omission occurs in the course of that work.
(4) A civil action that would, but for subsection (2) or (3), lie
against a person involved in unpaid work lies instead against the
Crown.
(5) Subsections (2) and (4) do not apply to an act or omission if it
was, or was a necessary part of, an act or omission that was expressly
required by the person involved in that work but was not necessary to carry
out the work specified in the work and development
order.
(6) Subsections (3) and (4) do not apply to an act or omission
if:(a) the work concerned was not work specified in the work and
development order, or
(b) the act or omission concerned was, or was a necessary part of, an
act or omission intended to cause injury, loss or
damage.
(7) It is a term of a work and development order that the person
subject to the order must disclose as soon as possible to the State Debt
Recovery Office and to each approved person:(a) any medical, physical or mental condition of which the person is
aware (being a condition of a kind that the person is aware substantially
increases the risk to the person of injury in performing work of any kind),
and
(b) any substantial change in that
condition.
(8) The State Debt Recovery Office may, on behalf of the Crown, settle
any action that lies against the Crown because of this section, and may do so
on such terms as it thinks fit.
99G Persons performing work under orders not
workers
A person who undertakes unpaid work under a work and development
order is not to be taken to be employed by, or in a contract of services with,
the Crown or any other person and is not:(a) a worker for the purposes of the Workers Compensation Act 1987, the
Workplace Injury Management and Workers
Compensation Act 1998, the Annual Holidays Act 1944 or the
Long Service Leave Act 1955,
or
(b) an employee (however described) for the purposes of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 or any
other Act or law.
99H Delegation by approved persons
An approved person (other than an individual) may delegate any of
the approved person’s functions under this Subdivision with respect to a
work and development order to an officer or employee, other than this power of
delegation.
99I Guidelines
The Attorney General, in consultation with the Treasurer, is to
issue guidelines with respect to work and development orders and the State
Debt Recovery Office is to have regard to those guidelines in the exercise of
any of its functions under this Subdivision.
99J Regulations
(1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to work and
development orders.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the regulations may prescribe a
date after which applications for work and development orders can no longer be
made.
Subdivision 2 Time to pay and writing off fines
100 Time to pay
(1) After a fine enforcement order is made and before a community
service order is issued in the matter, an application for time to pay the fine
may be made to the State Debt Recovery Office by the fine
defaulter.
(1A) Despite subsection (1), an application for time to pay a fine may
be made by a person in receipt of a Government benefit in respect of a fine
before a fine enforcement order is made in the
matter.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office may, by order, allow further time
to pay the fine if satisfied the application is genuine and it appears
expedient to do so.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office may:(a) extend the time for payment of the whole fine,
or
(b) allow the fine to be paid by instalments of such amounts, and at
such times, as the Office specifies.
(3A) In particular, the State Debt Recovery Office may allow a person
in receipt of a Government benefit to pay the fine in instalments, as a
regular direct debit from that benefit, if:(a) it is satisfied that adequate arrangements are in place for such a
regular payment to be made, and
(b) it agrees to the fine being paid in this
manner.
(4) If an instalment of a fine is not paid by the due date, the
remaining instalments then become due and payable unless the State Debt
Recovery Office otherwise orders.
(4A) An order allowing further time to pay a fine may be amended or
revoked by a further order made on the application of the person liable to pay
the fine or on the State Debt Recovery Office’s own
initiative.
(5) Further enforcement action under this Part is suspended if an
application for time to pay is granted and payment of the fine is made in
accordance with the order of the State Debt Recovery
Office.
(6) However, the Sheriff is not required to return any property seized
under a property seizure order under Division 4, and a charge on land created
under that Division need not be cancelled, until the fine is
paid.
101 Unpaid fines may be written off
(1) After a fine enforcement order is made and before a community
service order is issued in the matter, an application to have the fine written
off may be made to the State Debt Recovery Office by the fine
defaulter.
(1A) The State Debt Recovery Office may, on the application of a fine
defaulter or at its own discretion, write off, in whole or in part, an unpaid
fine:(a) if it is satisfied that, due to any or all of the financial,
medical or personal circumstances of the fine defaulter:(i) the fine defaulter does not have sufficient means to pay the fine
and is not likely to have sufficient means to pay the fine,
and
(ii) enforcement action under Division 4 has not been or is unlikely to
be successful in satisfying the fine, and
(iii) the fine defaulter is not suitable to be subject to a community
service order under Division 5, or
(b) in accordance with guidelines issued under section
120.
(1B) The State Debt Recovery Office must write off, in whole or in
part, an unpaid fine if it is directed to do so by the Hardship Review
Board.
(2) Guidelines issued under section 120 are to extend to fine
defaulters who do not have the means to pay the fine or sufficient property
for civil enforcement and who are not suitable to undertake work under a
community service order.
(3) Any part of an unpaid fine that is written off is taken to have
been paid for the purpose of cancelling enforcement action under this
Act.
(4) Despite subsection (3), any part of an unpaid fine that is written
off under this section may be reinstated and enforcement action may be
recommenced by the State Debt Recovery Office in respect of the fine defaulter
at any time within 5 years after it is written off if:(a) a further fine enforcement order is made against the fine
defaulter, or
(b) the State Debt Recovery Office is satisfied that the fine
defaulter has sufficient means to pay the fine, that enforcement action is
likely to be successful in satisfying the fine or that the fine defaulter is
suitable to be subject to a community service
order.
Subdivision 3 Hardship Review Board
101A Hardship Review Board
(1) There is to be a Hardship Review Board consisting of:(a) the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue, and
(b) the Secretary of the Treasury, and
(c) the Director-General of the Attorney General’s
Department.
(2) A member of the Hardship Review Board may appoint a person to act
in the place of the member at meetings of the
Board.
(3) An acting member, while so acting, has the functions of, and is
taken to be, a member of the Hardship Review Board.
101B Reviews by Hardship Review Board
(1) The Hardship Review Board may, on an application by or on behalf
of a fine defaulter, review a decision by the State Debt Recovery Office with
respect to the following:(a) the making of, the failure to make or the varying or revocation
of, a work and development order,
(b) the making of, or the failure to make, an order under section
100,
(c) the writing off or the failure to write off, the whole or part of,
an unpaid fine.
(2) A fine defaulter may not make more than one application under this
section in relation to the same fine.
(3) The Hardship Review Board may determine the procedure for a review
and may conduct a review in the absence of the
parties.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office may suspend enforcement action
against a fine defaulter who makes an application under this section but is
not required to do so unless given a direction under this
section.
(5) The Hardship Review Board may direct that enforcement action under
this Part against a fine defaulter be suspended pending its review, if it
thinks it appropriate in the circumstances.
(6) On a review, the Hardship Review Board may direct the State Debt
Recovery Office to do any one or more of the following in respect of the fine
defaulter on such terms as the Board may direct:(a) make, revoke or vary a work and development
order,
(b) make, revoke or vary an order under section
100,
(c) write off, in whole or in part, an unpaid
fine.
(7) The Hardship Review Board may give a direction under this section
if it thinks it is appropriate to do so having regard to the circumstances of
the fine defaulter and the matters set out in section 99B, 100 or 101 (1A) (a)
and the guidelines issued under section 120, as the case
requires.
101C Disclosure of information by Hardship Review
Board
The Hardship Review Board, a member of the Board, or a person
otherwise engaged in the administration of this section or section 101A or
101B, may disclose to the Director or a member of staff of the State Debt
Recovery Office information obtained in the administration of this section or
section 101A or 101B.
Division 9 Miscellaneous
102 Disposition of money paid by or recovered from fine
defaulters
(1) Any fine paid by a fine defaulter after the making of a fine
enforcement order is payable to the State Debt Recovery
Office.
(2) However, with the approval of that Office, any fine paid to
another person or body may be directly credited to the Consolidated Fund or
other account, or retained, in accordance with this or any other Act or
law.
Note. Fines include enforcement costs—see section 57
(4).
102A Liability of minors for enforcement costs
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office must waive the payment by a fine
defaulter of any enforcement costs in respect of a fine enforcement order,
other than the fee for the issue of a fine enforcement order, if the
offence:(a) in respect of which the fine concerned was imposed on the fine
defaulter by a court, or
(b) in respect of which the penalty notice from which the fine
concerned arises was served on the defendant,
occurred while the fine defaulter was under the age of 18
years.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply in respect of a fine enforcement
order if one or more subsequent fine enforcement orders are made against the
fine defaulter in respect of an offence that occurred when the fine defaulter
was of or above the age of 18 years.
103 Electronic transmission of documents
(1) The following directions, orders and warrants under this Part may
be transmitted electronically to the persons to whom they are given or
directed:(a) a direction of the State Debt Recovery Office to Roads and
Maritime Services under Division 3,
(b) a property seizure order or warrant of apprehension directed to
the Sheriff under Division 4,
(b1) a garnishee order or examination summons under Division 4, or a
summons requiring a garnishee under such a garnishee order to show cause,
given to the Sheriff for service,
(c) a community service order given to the Sheriff for service under
Division 5,
(d) a warrant of commitment to a correctional centre directed to a
police officer or other officer under Division 6.
(2) For the purpose of executing any such order or warrant, the
Sheriff or other officer to whom the order or warrant is so transmitted is to
cause a copy of the order or warrant to be converted into written form and to
be endorsed with the following words:This document has been transmitted electronically by the State
Debt Recovery Office in accordance with section 103 of the Fines Act
1996.
104 Power of person executing order or warrant to demand name
and address
(1) The Sheriff or other person executing an order or warrant under
this Part may require a person whom the Sheriff or other person suspects on
reasonable grounds to be the fine defaulter to state his or her full name and
residential address and to produce evidence of his or her
identity.
(2) A person is not required to comply with such a requirement unless
the person was warned on that occasion that a failure to comply is an
offence.
(3) A person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with such
a requirement is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
Part 5 Reciprocal enforcement of fines against bodies
corporate
105 Definitions
In this Part:conviction
means a conviction or order entered or made (before or after the commencement
of this Part) in proceedings for an offence, including a penalty notice
enforcement order or similar order.
fine
includes:
(a) a pecuniary penalty, pecuniary forfeiture and pecuniary
compensation, and
(b) fees, charges and costs payable by a body corporate under an order
made in proceedings in which the conviction was entered in respect of the body
corporate.
New South Wales
fine means a fine payable under a conviction of a New South Wales
court (including a fine payable under a penalty notice enforcement order under
this Act).
reciprocating
court means a court, or a court included in a class of court,
declared under section 106 to be a reciprocating court or a class of
reciprocating courts.
relevant
officer of a reciprocating court means the registrar or other
corresponding officer of the court.
State includes a
Territory.
106 Declaration of reciprocating court
Where another State has laws providing for enforcement in that
State of a New South Wales fine against a body corporate, the regulations
may:(a) declare a court that exercises criminal jurisdiction in that State
to be a reciprocating court, or
(b) declare a class of courts that exercise criminal jurisdiction in
that State to be a class of reciprocating courts.
107 Enforcement of fine imposed by reciprocating
court
(1) Where, under a conviction of a reciprocating court, a fine is
payable by a body corporate having or appearing to have property in New South
Wales and the State Debt Recovery Office receives a request in writing from
the relevant officer of the reciprocating court for the enforcement of the
fine, accompanied by:(a) a copy, certified by the relevant officer to be correct, of the
conviction, and
(b) a certificate under the hand of the relevant officer specifying
the amount of the fine that remains unpaid,
the Office is required:(c) to register the certified copy of the conviction,
and
(d) to note, on the certified copy, the date of
registration.
(2) On registration of a conviction:(a) the conviction is, for the purposes of this Part, taken to be a
conviction of a New South Wales court, and
(b) the State Debt Recovery Office is required to make a fine
enforcement order under this Act for the purpose of recovering the amount
specified as unpaid in the certificate relating to
conviction.
(3) Where a request is made under this section in respect of a fine
payable under a conviction of a reciprocating court and the State Debt
Recovery Office, after the request, receives a notification from the relevant
officer of the reciprocating court of payment of an amount in satisfaction in
whole or in part of the amount of the fine:(a) the Office must record particulars of the payment,
and
(b) the payment is, for the purposes of enforcement action under this
Act, taken to be payment in pursuance of the fine enforcement order made under
this section.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office is required to remit to the
relevant officer of the reciprocating court concerned the amount of any fine
recovered in pursuance of a fine enforcement order made under this
section.
(5) For the purposes of this section, a document that purports to have
been signed by the relevant officer of a reciprocating court is taken to have
been so signed unless the contrary is proved.
108 Enforcement of New South Wales fine by reciprocating
court
(1) Where another State has laws providing for enforcement in that
State of a New South Wales fine against a body corporate, the State Debt
Recovery Office may (on its own behalf or on behalf of the registrar of a New
South Wales court) send a request in writing to the relevant officer of the
reciprocating court for the enforcement of the New South Wales
fine.
(2) Any amount received from a reciprocating court by the State Debt
Recovery Office or the registrar of a court in satisfaction of the whole or
part of a New South Wales fine is to be applied as if the amount had been paid
to the Office or registrar by the body corporate by which the fine was payable
in satisfaction of the whole or part of the fine.
(3) If:(a) a request has been made under subsection (1),
and
(b) an amount is received by the State Debt Recovery Office (otherwise
than from the relevant officer of the reciprocating court to whom the request
was made) in satisfaction of the whole or part of the
fine,
the Office is required, as soon as practicable, to notify that relevant
officer of the amount of the payment.
Part 6 Civil enforcement—costs and other
payments
109 Application
(1) This Part applies to the enforcement of payment of the following
(referred to in this Part as ancillary money
orders):(a) any witnesses’ expenses payable by a person under an order
made by a court in proceedings for an offence that were brought otherwise than
by a law enforcement officer,
(b) any costs (including expenses or disbursements) payable by a
person under an order made by a court in proceedings for an offence that were
brought otherwise than by a law enforcement officer,
(c) any monetary forfeiture or monetary compensation made or awarded
by a court in proceedings for an offence,
(d) any other amounts payable under an order of a court of a kind
prescribed by the regulations,
but does not apply to the enforcement of payment of any amount that is a
fine within the meaning of section 4.
(2) In this section, proceedings for an
offence includes:(a) proceedings for an apprehended violence order,
and
(b) proceedings on appeal in respect of proceedings for an
offence.
109A Payment of ancillary money orders
Division 2 of Part 2 applies to the payment of ancillary money
orders in the same way as it applies to the payment of
fines.
110 Enforcement as civil judgments
(1) Subject to section 109A, an ancillary money order is enforceable
as if it were a judgment for the payment of that amount under the Civil Procedure Act
2005.
(2) The order may be entered in the records of the Local Court as a
judgment given in the Local Court for a debt due to the person to whom the
payment is required to be made by that order.
(3) The order may be so entered even though the order was made by a
court that is not the Local Court or the amount ordered to be paid exceeds the
jurisdictional limit of the Local Court.
(4) The method of enforcement provided by this section does not affect
any other remedy for enforcement provided by any other Act or
law.
Part 7 Enforcement of bail agreements
111 Definitions
In this Part:forfeited bail
money means unpaid bail money the subject of a forfeiture order
under Part 7A of the Bail Act
1978.
forfeited
bail security means bail security given in relation to bail money
the subject of a forfeiture order under Part 7A of the Bail Act
1978.
112 Enforcement of forfeited bail money
(1) Part 4 (Fine enforcement action) applies to forfeited bail money
as if the amount payable were a fine imposed by a court for an
offence.
(2) The application of that Part is subject to the following:(a) the State Debt Recovery Office is to make a court fine enforcement
order for the purposes of taking enforcement action (being a form of order
that is appropriate to the circumstances of the case),
(b) enforcement costs are not payable on the making of the
order,
(b1) if the State Debt Recovery Office is served with a copy of an
application or appeal duly made under section 53K or 53N of the Bail Act 1978 in relation to
forfeited bail money, action under Part 4 may not be commenced or continued
until proceedings on the application or appeal are finally
determined,
(c) all other necessary or prescribed modifications to the application
of that Part apply.
112A Enforcement of forfeited bail security
(1) Section 72 applies to a forfeited bail security as if the bail
money in relation to which it is given were a fine imposed by a court for an
offence.
(2) The application of that section is subject to the
following:(a) if the State Debt Recovery Office is served with a copy of an
application or appeal duly made under section 53K or 53N of the Bail Act 1978 in relation to the
bail money for which the forfeited bail security is given, action under
section 72 may not be commenced or continued until proceedings on the
application or appeal are finally determined,
(b) all other necessary or prescribed modifications to the application
of that section apply.
Part 8 State Debt Recovery Office
113 Establishment of State Debt Recovery Office
(1) There is established by this Act a body corporate with the
corporate name of the State Debt Recovery Office.
(2) The Office is a statutory body representing the
Crown.
(3) The Office is, for the purposes of the Public Finance and Audit Act 1983,
the Annual Reports (Departments) Act
1985 or any other prescribed Act, taken to be part of the
Treasury.
114 Functions of Office
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office has the functions conferred or
imposed on it by or under this or any other Act.
(1A) The Office:(a) may enter into arrangements with persons who issue penalty
notices, or on whose behalf penalty notices are issued, for or with respect to
such penalty notices, including but not limited to:(i) amending such penalty notices to correct minor errors,
and
(ii) reviewing or withdrawing such penalty notices,
and
(iii) refunding amounts paid under such penalty notices,
and
(iv) the receipt, recovery and collection of amounts payable under such
penalty notices, and
(b) may receive, recover and collect, and may otherwise deal with,
those amounts in accordance with those arrangements, and
(c) may do all such things as may be necessary or convenient for the
exercise of the functions referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b),
including:(i) the issuing of court attendance notices, and
(ii) the demanding and recovering of fees and charges with respect to
the provision of its services.
(2) The Office has the function of administering the following:(a) the making of fine enforcement orders,
(b) the taking of enforcement action against fine defaulters under
this Act,
(c) the write-off policy for outstanding fines,
(d) the receipt and collection of fines.
(3) The Office may act for the State for the purpose of recovering
debts or other amounts due to the State. In this subsection, State includes the Crown or any
authority of the State.
115 Director and other staff of Office
A Director and other staff of the State Debt Recovery Office are
to be employed under Part 2 of the Public
Sector Management Act 1988.
116 Management of Office
(1) The affairs of the State Debt Recovery Office are to be managed
and controlled by the Director of the Office in accordance with this Act and
the regulations and the guidelines in force under section 120. Any act, matter
or thing done in the name of, or on behalf of, the Office by the Director is
taken to have been done by the Office.
(2) The functions of the Office of making or issuing orders or
warrants under this Act are to be exercised by the Director of the Office or
other staff of the Office who are authorised by the Director for the purposes
of this section. Any such functions exercised by other staff may be exercised
in their own names or in the name of the Director.
(3) The Director and other staff have, in connection with the making
or issue of an order or warrant under this Act, the same immunities and
protections as officers of a court.
116A Delegation
The State Debt Recovery Office may delegate the exercise of any
function of the Office that is imposed by or under this Act to any member of
staff of the Office (except the Director of the Office), other than the
following functions:(a) this power of delegation,
(b) any function of the Office of making or issuing orders or warrants
under this Act.
117 Access to information by Office
(1) Police officers or other members of the NSW Police Force and
government agencies are authorised and required to provide the State Debt
Recovery Office, on request, with available information about the criminal
record, address or assets of a fine defaulter for the purposes of the Office
taking action against the person to enforce payment of a
fine.
(2) In this section, government agency
includes:(a) Roads and Maritime Services, and
(b) a State owned corporation.
117AA Access to information held by employers
The State Debt Recovery Office is authorised to obtain information
about the address and employment details of a fine defaulter from an employer
or past employer of the fine defaulter for the purposes of the enforcement of
a garnishee order (within the meaning of section 73).
117A Disclosure of information by State Debt Recovery
Office
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office, the Director of the Office, a
member of the staff of the Office or any other person engaged in the
administration of this Act, may disclose personal information obtained in
relation to a person in the administration or execution of this Act:(a) in connection with the administration or execution of this Act
(including for the purpose of the imposition, administration or enforcement of
a fine), or
(a1) to a tax officer (within the meaning of the Taxation Administration Act 1996)
for the purposes of the administration or execution of a taxation law (within
the meaning of that Act), including for the purpose of any legal proceedings
arising out of a taxation law or a report of any such proceedings,
or
(a2) to a person engaged in the administration or execution of the
following laws for the purposes of the administration or execution of those
laws (including for the purpose of any legal proceedings arising out of any of
those laws or a report of any such proceedings):(i) the First Home Owner Grant Act
2000 or a corresponding law of another State or a
Territory,
(ii) the Unclaimed Money Act
1995, or
(b) with the consent of the person to whom the information relates or
at the request of a person acting on behalf of the person to whom the
information relates, or
(c) in the case of information obtained in relation to a fine
defaulter:(i) to a government agency that is a prosecuting authority in relation
to the offence concerned or on whose behalf the offence was prosecuted,
or
(ii) to a government agency on whose behalf the penalty notice for the
offence concerned was issued, or
(iii) to the Hardship Review Board, or
(d) as authorised or required by or under any other
Act.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1) (a), personal information may be
disclosed to an employer or past employer of a fine defaulter for the purposes
of the administration, enforcement or execution of a garnishee order (within
the meaning of section 73).
(3) Information may be disclosed to an agency referred to in
subsection (1) (c) (i) or (ii) only if the disclosure is reasonably necessary
to monitor the status of outstanding fines.
(3A) A tax officer who has obtained personal information under
subsection (1) (a1) may disclose that information, in accordance with section
82 of the Taxation Administration Act
1996, as if that information had been obtained under or in
relation to the administration of a taxation law.
(4) In this section:personal
information has the same meaning as in the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act
1998.
117B Confidentiality
(1) A person engaged in the administration of this Act must not
disclose any personal information obtained in relation to any person in the
administration or execution of this Act except as authorised or required by
this Act or any other Act or law.Maximum penalty: 100 penalty
units.
(2) In this section:personal
information has the same meaning as in the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act
1998.
118 Registration of fine enforcement orders
The State Debt Recovery Office is to register each fine
enforcement order made by it, and to record details of payment of the fine and
the taking of enforcement action.
Part 9 Miscellaneous
119 Act binds Crown
This Act binds the Crown in right of New South Wales and, in so
far as the legislative power of Parliament permits, the Crown in all its other
capacities.
120 Guidelines on exercise of functions under this
Act
(1) The Minister may issue guidelines (not inconsistent with this Act
or the regulations) with respect to the following:(a) the exercise by the State Debt Recovery Office of its functions
under this Act (including writing off unpaid fines, the issue of fine
enforcement orders or community service orders and the taking of other
enforcement action under this Act),
(b) the exercise by registrars of courts of their functions under this
Act (including the determination of time for payment of fines imposed by
courts),
(c) the exercise by Roads and Maritime Services, the Sheriff and other
persons of their functions under this Act in connection with the taking of
enforcement action,
(d) the exercise by the Commissioner of Corrective Services of the
function under this Act of making an order that a fine defaulter serve a
period of imprisonment under an intensive correction
order.
(2) The Minister is required to make the guidelines public. However,
the Minister is not required to make public the guidelines on writing off
unpaid fines.
(3) The guidelines are required to be complied with. However, a
failure to comply with a guideline does not affect the validity of any
proceedings, decision, order or warrant.
(4) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
issue and publication of the guidelines.
121 Fines payable into Consolidated Fund
(cf Fines and Penalties Act 1901 sec 5
(1))
(1) A fine or other penalty imposed or authorised to be imposed by or
under any Act is, when recovered, payable into the Consolidated
Fund.
(2) This section is subject to the provisions of any other Act
(whether enacted before or after this Act).
Note. Penalty is
defined in the Interpretation Act
1987 to include forfeiture or
punishment.
122 Payment of share of fine to prosecutor
(cf Fines and Penalties Act 1901 sec 5
(3))
(1) This section applies where:(a) the Act imposing or authorising the imposition of a fine or other
penalty does not make any provisions for its application when recovered,
and
(b) the prosecutor is not a police officer.
(2) The court before which proceedings are taken to recover any such
fine or other penalty may direct that such portion of it (not exceeding
one-half) is to be paid to the prosecutor.
(3) For the purposes of this section, fine does not include an amount of
the kind referred to in section 4 (1) (e) or (f).
122A Payment of law enforcement officers’ costs and
expenses
(1) This section applies in respect of proceedings for an offence that
are brought by a law enforcement officer.
(2) The court before which such proceedings are brought may, when
making an order of the kind referred to in section 4 (1) (e) or (f), direct
the amount to which the order relates be paid to the law enforcement officer
(or to the law enforcement agency on whose behalf the proceedings were
brought) in full or in such portion as may be determined by the
court.
(3) This section has effect despite section
121.
122B Payment of penalty notice amounts received on behalf of
others
(1) Despite section 121 and subject to subsection (2), any amount
payable under a penalty notice received, recovered or collected by the State
Debt Recovery Office under arrangements entered into with a person under
section 114 (1A) may be paid by the Office to the person concerned in
accordance with those arrangements.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office may, in accordance with the
arrangements concerned, deduct or retain from any amount paid or to be paid to
a person under subsection (1) the Office’s fee or payment in relation to
the penalty notices and amounts concerned.
123 Remission of fines or other penalties
(1) The Governor may remit, in whole or in part, any fine or other
penalty imposed on a convicted offender under any
Act.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the Royal prerogative of mercy
may be extended to a person imprisoned for the non-payment of a pecuniary fine
or other penalty even though it was payable in whole or in part to a person
other than the Crown.
(3) A fine that is remitted is taken to have been paid for the purpose
of cancelling enforcement action under this Act.
(4) This section extends to all fines and other penalties (including
an order for the payment of compensation by a person found guilty of an
offence).
Note. Penalty is
defined in the Interpretation Act
1987 to include forfeiture and punishment and accordingly is
not limited to the payment of money.
124 Royal prerogative preserved
Nothing in this Act limits or affects in any manner the Royal
prerogative of mercy or any entitlement of a prisoner to be discharged or
released from prison under any other Act.
125 Abolition of imprisonment as primary enforcement action
for fine default
(1) A person is not liable to be committed to a correctional centre
for a failure to pay a fine or other penalty by the due
date.
(2) However, a fine defaulter is liable to be committed to a
correctional centre in accordance with this Act for a failure to comply with a
community service order served on the fine defaulter under this
Act.
126 Abolition of recovery by distress
(cf Justices Act
1902 sec 82)
(1) A fine, or any other order for the payment of money made by a
Magistrate, is not to be levied by distress.
(2) This section does not affect civil enforcement action authorised
by this Act or any other Act.
126A Penalty notices and penalty reminder notices sent to
recently reported address and returned to sender
(1) Despite sections 25 and 26, a penalty reminder notice may be
issued to and served on a person even if the penalty notice to which it
relates was returned as being undelivered to its sender after being sent to
the person at the person’s recently reported address, unless the
appropriate officer concerned has received some other evidence that the
penalty notice was not served on the person.
(2) Despite section 42 (1), a penalty notice enforcement order may be
made in relation to an offence even if the penalty notice or a penalty
reminder notice (or both) in relation to the offence was returned as being
undelivered to its sender after being sent to the person at the person’s
recently reported address, unless the State Debt Recovery Office has received
some other evidence that the penalty notice was not served on the
person.
(3) In this section, recently reported
address, in relation to a penalty notice or penalty reminder notice
sent to a person, means:(a) if, at the time the offence concerned is alleged to have been
committed:(i) an address was duly supplied by the person to an appropriate
officer in response to a request for that address, and
(ii) the person had a legal obligation to supply the address to that
officer,
unless paragraph (b) applies—the address so supplied,
or
(b) if, after an address was supplied to an appropriate officer in
accordance with paragraph (a), the records of Roads and Maritime Services in
relation to a current driver licence or vehicle registration were altered to
show a different address for the person—that address,
or
(c) in any other case—an address shown in the records of Roads
and Maritime Services in relation to a current driver licence or vehicle
registration as the address of the person.
Note. Before any enforcement action can be taken in relation to a
penalty notice, notice of the relevant penalty notice enforcement order must
be served on the person concerned: see sections 59, 65 and 71. The State Debt
Recovery Office must annul a penalty notice enforcement order if it is
satisfied that the person concerned was not aware that a penalty notice had
been issued until the enforcement order was served on the person: see section
49.
127 Proceedings for offences
Proceedings for an offence against this Act or the regulations are
to be disposed of summarily before the Local Court.
128 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) The regulations may create offences punishable by a penalty not
exceeding 50 penalty units.
(3) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
waiver, postponement or refund of any costs or fees payable under this
Act.
129 Repeals
The following Acts are repealed:Fines and Penalties Act 1901 No
16
Community Service Orders (Fine Default) Amendment
Act 1987 No 264
130 (Repealed)
131 Savings, transitional and other provisions
Schedule 3 has effect.
132 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 Statutory provisions under which penalty notices
issued
(Section 20)
Animal Diseases
(Emergency Outbreaks) Act 1991, section 71A
Apiaries Act
1985, section 42A
Assisted Reproductive
Technology Act 2007, section 64
Associations Incorporation
Act 2009, section 93
Barangaroo Delivery
Authority Act 2009, section 45
Biofuels Act
2007, section 29
Building Professionals
Act 2005, section 92
Business Names Act
2002, section 32
Casino Control Act
1992, section 168A
Casino, Liquor and Gaming
Control Authority Act 2007, section 46
Centennial Park and
Moore Park Trust Act 1983, section 24
Classification
(Publications, Films and Computer Games) Enforcement Act 1995,
section 61A
Commercial Agents and
Private Inquiry Agents Act 2004, section 28
Companion Animals Act
1998, section 92
Contaminated Land
Management Act 1997, section 92A
Conveyancers Licensing Act
2003, section 158
Court Security Act
2005, section 29
Crimes (Administration of
Sentences) Act 1999, section 97
Criminal Procedure Act
1986, section 333
Crown Lands Act
1989, section 162
Dangerous Goods (Road and
Rail Transport) Act 2008, section 48
Deer Act
2006, section 33
Electricity (Consumer
Safety) Act 2004, section 47
Electricity Supply Act
1995, section 103A
Energy and Utilities
Administration Act 1987, section 46A
Environmental Planning
and Assessment Act 1979, section 127A
Exhibited Animals
Protection Act 1986, section 46A
Explosives Act
2003, section 34
Fair Trading Act
1987, section 67
Firearms Act
1996, section 85A
Fisheries Management Act
1994, section 276
Fitness Services
(Pre-paid Fees) Act 2000, section 16
Food Act
2003, section 120
Forestry Act
1916, section 46A
Futures Industry (New South Wales)
Code, section 149
Game and Feral Animal
Control Act 2002, section 57
Gaming Machines Act
2001, section 203
Gene Technology (GM Crop
Moratorium) Act 2003, section 35
Graffiti Control Act
2008, section 16
Hemp Industry Act
2008, section 45
Home Building Act
1989, section 138A
Hunter Water Act
1991, section 31A
Impounding Act
1993, section 36
Inclosed Lands Protection
Act 1901, section 10
Industrial Relations Act
1996, section 396 (including as applied to and for the
purposes of Part 2 of the
Industrial
Relations (Child Employment) Act 2006 by section 16 of that
Act)
Jury Act
1977, section 64
Jury Act
1977, section 66
Law Enforcement (Powers
and Responsibilities) Act 2002, section 235
Liquor Act
2007, section 150
Local Government Act
1993, section 314 or 679
Lord Howe Island Act
1953, section 37B
Marine Parks Act
1997, section 38
Marine Safety Act
1998, section 126
Maritime Services Act
1935, section 30D
Meat Industry Act
1978, section 76A
Mining Act
1992, section 378K
Motor Dealers Act
1974, section 53E
Motor Vehicle Repairs Act
1980, section 87A
National Parks and
Wildlife Act 1974, section 160
Native Vegetation Act
2003, section 43
Non-Indigenous Animals
Act 1987, section 27A
Noxious Weeds Act
1993, section 63
Parliamentary Electorates
and Elections Act 1912, section 120C
Parramatta Park Trust Act
2001, section 30
Passenger Transport Act
1990, section 59
Pawnbrokers and
Second-hand Dealers Act 1996, section 26
Pesticides Act
1999, section 76
Petroleum (Onshore) Act
1991, section 137A
Photo Card Act
2005, section 34
Plant Diseases Act
1924, section 19
Plantations and
Reafforestation Act 1999, section 62
Ports and Maritime
Administration Act 1995, section 100
Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals Act 1979, section 33E
Property, Stock and
Business Agents Act 2002, section 216
Protection of the
Environment Operations Act 1997, section 224
Public Health (Tobacco)
Act 2008, section 50
Radiation Control Act
1990, section 25A
Rail Safety Act
2008, section 139
Registered Clubs Act
1976, section 66
Registration of Interests
in Goods Act 1986, section 19A
Residential Parks Act
1998, section 149
Retail Leases Act
1994, section 16P
Retirement Villages Act
1999, section 184
Road Transport (General)
Act 2005, Part 5.3
Roads Act
1993, section 243
Royal Botanic Gardens and
Domain Trust Act 1980, section 22B
Rural Fires Act
1997, section 131
Rural Lands Protection
Act 1998, section 206
Security Industry Act
1997, section 45A
Smoke-free Environment
Act 2000, section 20A
Sporting Venues
Authorities Act 2008, section 38
Sporting Venues
(Invasions) Act 2003, section 12
State Sports Centre Trust
Act 1984, section 20B
Stock (Chemical Residues)
Act 1975, section 15A
Stock Diseases Act
1923, section 20O
Stock Foods Act
1940, section 32A
Stock Medicines Act
1989, section 60A
Summary Offences Act
1988, section 29, 29A or 29B
Swimming Pools Act
1992, section 35
Sydney Cricket and Sports
Ground Act 1978, section 30A
Sydney Harbour Foreshore
Authority Act 1998, section 43A
Sydney Olympic Park
Authority Act 2001, section 79
Sydney Water Act
1994, section 50
Sydney Water Catchment
Management Act 1998, section 65
Tow Truck Industry Act
1998, section 89
Transport Administration
Act 1988, section 117
Unlawful Gambling Act
1998, section 52
Valuers Act
2003, section 42
Veterinary Practice Act
2003, section 101
Water Industry
Competition Act 2006, section 82
Water Management Act
2000, section 365
Weapons Prohibition Act
1998, section 42
Western Sydney Parklands
Act 2006, section 48
Workplace Injury
Management and Workers Compensation Act 1998, section
246
World Youth Day Act
2006, section 55
Schedule 2 (Repealed)
Schedule 3 Savings, transitional and other
provisions
(Section 131)
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Regulations
(1) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:this Act
Fines Amendment Act
1997
Fines Amendment Act
1998
State Revenue Legislation
Further Amendment Act 2003 (to the extent that it amends this
Act)
Fines Amendment Act
2004
State Revenue Legislation
Amendment Act 2005
Fines Amendment (Payment of
Victims Compensation Levies) Act 2006
Fines Amendment Act
2008
Fines Further Amendment Act
2008
Road Transport Legislation
Amendment (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009 (to the extent
that it amends this Act)
Crimes (Sentencing Legislation)
Amendment (Intensive Correction Orders) Act 2010 (to the
extent that it amends this Act)
(2) Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect
from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later
day.
(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 enactment of this
Act
2 Amnesty period for existing fine defaulters
(1) During the amnesty period:(a) a warrant of commitment may not be issued under the Justices Act 1902 for non-payment of
an amount of money, and
(b) any such warrant that has been issued but not executed before the
commencement of the amnesty period is not to be
executed.
(1A) This clause does not apply to the issue or execution of any such
warrant of commitment in relation to a person who, at the time the warrant is
issued or executed, is a convicted inmate within the meaning of the Correctional Centres Act 1952 or a
person subject to control within the meaning of the Children (Detention Centres) Act
1987.
(2) This clause does not prevent the making of a community service
order in respect of any such warrant of commitment.
(3) Nothing in this clause prevents arrangements being made by the
registrar of a court or the State Debt Recovery Office in accordance with this
Act for time to pay an existing fine. Any such arrangements made do not affect
any suspension or cancellation of a driver licence or vehicle
registration.
(4) This clause has effect despite anything to the contrary in the
Justices Act 1902 or any
other Act.
(5) In this clause:amnesty
period means the period after the commencement of this clause and
before the commencement of clause 3.
Note. See section 2 of this Act for provisions relating to the
commencement of this clause and clause 3.
3 Act applies to existing fines
(1) This Act extends, subject to this Schedule, to a fine imposed by a
court before the commencement of this clause or an amount payable under a
penalty notice issued before the commencement of this
clause.
(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, any such fine or amount is
called an existing
fine.
4 Court fine provisions
(1) The time for payment of an existing fine imposed by a court is not
affected by section 7 and a notice of such an existing fine need not be given
under section 9.
(2) However, sections 10 and 11 apply to any such existing fine. The
registrar of a court may allow further time to pay such a fine under those
sections even though the time for payment of the fine has been fixed by the
court.
(3) A court fine enforcement order may be made by the State Debt
Recovery Office for an existing fine, whether or not an application is made
under this Act for the order.
5 Penalty notice provisions
(1) A penalty notice for the purposes of this Act includes a penalty
notice within the meaning of Part 4B of the Justices Act 1902 immediately before
its repeal by this Act.
(2) A courtesy letter issued under the Justices Act 1902 in respect of an
existing fine is taken to be a penalty reminder notice issued under this
Act.
(3) An enforcement order issued under section 100L of the Justices Act 1902 in respect of an
existing fine and in force immediately before the commencement of this clause
is taken to be a penalty notice enforcement order under this
Act.
(4) For the purpose only of enabling a penalty notice enforcement
order to be made under Division 4 of Part 3 in relation to an existing fine,
the offence referred to in section 42 (1) (g) is taken to have been committed,
or alleged to have been committed, when that Division
commenced.
(5) A penalty notice served on a person in accordance with section 18B
of the Traffic Act 1909,
being a penalty notice in respect of which, as at the commencement of this
clause:(a) the amount payable under the notice has not been paid,
and
(b) a courtesy letter has been sent to the person in accordance with
section 100J of the Justices Act
1902 and the person has not, as referred to in that section,
declined to be dealt with under Division 2 of Part 4B of that Act,
and
(c) no notice has been served under section 18C of the Traffic Act
1909,
is taken to be a penalty notice enforcement order under this Act and may,
subject to Division 5 of Part 3 of this Act, be enforced
accordingly.
5A (Repealed)
6 Existing warrants of commitment
(1) The State Debt Recovery Office may cancel a warrant of commitment
issued under the Justices Act
1902 for non-payment of an amount of money (being a warrant
that was not executed immediately before the commencement of this clause) and
may make a fine enforcement order under this Act in respect of the fine
concerned.
(2) The State Debt Recovery Office is not required to serve a copy of
any such fine enforcement order on the fine defaulter or to give the fine
defaulter any further time to pay the fine before enforcement action is taken
under Part 4 of this Act.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office may take enforcement action under
Part 4 of this Act in respect of such a fine enforcement order at any time
after the order is made.
(4) A person who is, on the commencement of this clause, serving a
period of imprisonment under a warrant of commitment issued under the Justices Act 1902 for non-payment of
an amount of money is taken to be serving that period of imprisonment under a
warrant issued under this Act.
7 Existing suspension or cancellation of driver licences or
vehicle registration
Any driver licence or vehicle registration that has been suspended
or cancelled under section 18C of the Traffic
Act 1909 before the repeal of that section by this Act is
taken to be a driver licence or vehicle registration suspended or cancelled
under Division 3 of Part 4 of this Act.
8 Existing community service orders and orders for periodic
detention
(1) A community service order made on application under section 89C of
the Justices Act 1902 and in
force immediately before the commencement of this clause is taken to be a
community service order made under section 79 of this
Act.
(2) An order for periodic detention made on application under section
89D of the Justices Act
1902 and in force immediately before the commencement of this
clause is taken to be an order for periodic detention made under section 89 of
this Act.
(3) If any such community service order or order for periodic
detention is revoked, the State Debt Recovery Office may make a fine
enforcement order under this Act in respect of the fine
concerned.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office is not required to serve a copy of
any such fine enforcement order on the fine defaulter or to give the fine
defaulter any further time to pay the fine before enforcement action is taken
under Part 4 of this Act.
(5) The State Debt Recovery Office may take enforcement action under
Part 4 of this Act in respect of such a fine enforcement order at any time
after the order is made.
9 Existing forfeited recognizances and bail
(1) The Sheriff is to transmit to the State Debt Recovery Office
particulars of all forfeited recognizances and bail that are entered on a copy
of an Estreat Roll on the commencement of this clause and that have not been
recovered before that commencement.
(2) Part 7 of this Act applies to those forfeited recognizances and
bail as if they had been transmitted to the State Debt Recovery Office under
the Forfeited Recognizances and Bail Act
1954.
(3) The State Debt Recovery Office is not required to serve a copy of
any fine enforcement order made in respect any such forfeited recognizance or
bail on the fine defaulter or to give the fine defaulter any further time to
pay the amount due before enforcement action is taken under Part 4 of this
Act.
(4) The State Debt Recovery Office may take enforcement action under
Part 4 of this Act in respect of such a fine enforcement order at any time
after the order is made.
10 Reciprocal enforcement of fines against bodies
corporate
(1) A conviction registered, a notification received or a writ of
execution issued, under Part 8 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1986, before
the commencement of this clause is taken to be registered, received or issued
under Part 5 of this Act.
(2) Until regulations are made under section 106 of this Act, courts
or classes of courts declared by order in the Gazette under section 26 of the
Criminal Procedure Act
1986 immediately before the repeal of that section by this Act
are taken to be declared by the regulations under section 106 of this
Act.
Part 3 Provisions consequent on enactment of State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act
2003
11 Service level deeds
The Treasurer and the Director of the State Debt Recovery Office
are taken to be parties to each service level deed in force as at 1 October
2003 and entered into by the Commissioner of Police, or otherwise by or on
behalf of the Infringement Processing Bureau within NSW Police, for or with
respect to the processing of penalty notices.
12 Construction of references to the Infringement Processing
Bureau
A reference in any instrument made before the commencement of this
clause to the Manager, Infringement Processing Services of the Police Service,
the Infringement Processing Bureau within the Police Service or a person
employed in the Infringement Processing Bureau is taken to be a reference
to:(a) if the reference is made in relation to the issuing or processing
of a penalty notice, a person employed in the Office of State Revenue in the
Treasury and authorised by the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue for the
purposes of Part 3 of this Act, or
(b) if the reference is made otherwise than in relation to the issuing
of a penalty notice, the State Debt Recovery
Office,
subject to the regulations.
Part 4 Provisions consequent on enactment of Fines Amendment Act 2004
13 Definition
In this Part:amending
Act means the Fines Amendment Act
2004.
14 Application of section 37A
Section 37A, as inserted by the amending Act, does not apply in
relation to an offence that was committed or is alleged to have been committed
before the commencement of that section.
15 Application of amendment to section 42
Section 42, as in force before its amendment by the amending Act,
continues to apply to a penalty notice enforcement order that is proposed to
be made in relation to an offence that was committed or is alleged to have
been committed before the commencement of the amendment as if that section had
not been so amended.
16 Application of amending Act to fine enforcement
orders
(1) Except as provided by clause 15, this Act, as amended by the
amending Act, applies to enforcement orders made after the commencement of
this clause, whether or not the offence concerned occurred before, on or after
that commencement.
(2) Except as provided by subclause (3) and clause 17, the amendments
made by the amending Act to this Act do not apply to or in respect of fine
enforcement orders made before the commencement of this
clause.
(3) This Act, as amended by the amending Act, applies to applications
made after the commencement of this clause for the withdrawal or annulment of
fine enforcement orders, whether or not the enforcement orders were made
before, on or after that commencement.
17 Reviews by Hardship Review Board
Section 101B, as inserted by the amending Act, extends to
decisions of the State Debt Recovery Office made before the commencement of
this clause to refuse an application by a fine defaulter for time to pay or to
have a fine written off.
Part 5 Provisions consequent on enactment of Fines Amendment (Payment of Victims Compensation
Levies) Act 2006
18 Validation of enforcement of certain fines
A compensation levy enforced, before the amendment of this Act by
the Fines Amendment (Payment of Victims
Compensation Levies) Act 2006, by means of an action that
would have been authorised by this Act if this Act as so amended had been in
force when the levy was enforced, is taken to have been validly
enforced.
Part 6 Provisions consequent on enactment of Fines Further Amendment Act
2008
19 Definition
In this Part:amending
Act means the Fines Further
Amendment Act 2008.
20 Internal review
A person may apply for a review under Division 2A of Part 3 of a
decision to issue a penalty notice in respect of a penalty notice issued
before the commencement of that Division, if the application for review is
made after that commencement and before the date for payment under any penalty
reminder notice served on the person in respect of the offence to which the
penalty notice relates.
21 Work and development orders
A person may apply for a work and development order under
Subdivision 1 of Division 8 of Part 4 in respect of an amount owing before the
commencement of that Subdivision.
22 Write off of fines
Sections 101 and 101B, as amended by the amending Act, extend to a
fine imposed before the commencement of those
amendments.
Part 7 Provisions consequent on enactment of Crimes (Sentencing Legislation) Amendment (Intensive
Correction Orders) Act 2010
23 Savings for periodic detention orders
(1) This Act (and the regulations under this Act) as in force
immediately before the enactment of the Crimes (Sentencing Legislation) Amendment (Intensive
Correction Orders) Act 2010 continue to apply to and in
respect of:(a) a periodic detention order made under Division 6 of Part 4 and in
force immediately before the substitution of section 89 by that
Act,
(b) a periodic detention order made under Division 6 of Part 4 after
the substitution of section 89 by that Act and pursuant to subclause
(2).
(2) An application by a fine defaulter under section 89 that is
pending immediately before the substitution of that section by the Crimes (Sentencing Legislation) Amendment (Intensive
Correction Orders) Act 2010 is to be dealt with and determined
as if that Act had not been enacted.
(3) A reference in a section of this Act to any provision of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999 or the Crimes
(Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 is, for the purposes of
the continued application of that section under subclause (1), to be read as a
reference to the provision as in force immediately before the commencement of
any amendment of the provision by the Crimes
(Sentencing Legislation) Amendment (Intensive Correction Orders) Act
2010.
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
Fines Act 1996 No
99. Assented to 26.11.1996. Date of commencement, cll 2 and 9 of Sch
3 excepted, 27.1.1998, sec 2 (1) and GG No 1 of 2.1.1998, p 4; date of
commencement of cl 2 of Sch 3, 1.10.1997, sec 2 and GG No 104 of 26.9.1997, p
8180; date of commencement of cl 9 of Sch 3, 1.9.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 105
of 19.8.2005, p 4569. This Act has been amended as follows:
1997 | No 62 | Sydney Market Authority
(Dissolution) Act 1997. Assented to 2.7.1997. Date of commencement, 31.10.1997, sec 2 and GG No 117 of 31.10.1997, p
8802.
|
| | No 113 | Road and Rail Transport
(Dangerous Goods) Act 1997. Assented to 9.12.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 1.2, 20.4.1998, sec 2 and GG No 67 of
9.4.1998, p 2491.
|
| | No 119 | Road Transport (Vehicle
Registration) Act 1997. Assented to 9.12.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 2.7, 29.6.1998, sec 2 and GG No 97 of
26.6.1998, p 4429.
|
| | No 121 | Fines Amendment Act 1997. Assented
to 9.12.1997. Date of commencement, 27.1.1998, sec 2 and GG No 1 of 2.1.1998, p
5.
|
| | No 147 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1997. Assented to 17.12.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 1.10, 27.1.1998, Sch 1.10 and GG No 1 of
2.1.1998, p 4.
|
| | No 156 | Protection of the Environment
Operations Act 1997. Assented to 19.12.1997. Date of commencement, 1.7.1999, sec 2 and GG No 178 of 24.12.1998, p
9952.
|
1998 | No 26 | Road Transport (Vehicle Registration) Amendment Act
1998. Assented to 3.6.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2.3, 29.6.1998, sec 2 and GG No 97 of
26.6.1998, p 4428.
|
| | No 35 | Fines Amendment Act 1998. Assented
to 15.6.1998. Date of commencement, 13.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 105 of 10.7.1998, p
5326.
|
| | No 38 | Crimes Legislation Amendment (Police and Public
Safety) Act 1998. Assented to 18.6.1998. Date of commencement, 1.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 97 of 26.6.1998, p
4422.
|
| | No 57 | Landlord and Tenant (Rental Bonds) Amendment
(Penalty Notices) Act 1998. Assented to 30.6.1998. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 59 | Property, Stock and Business Agents Amendment
(Penalty Notices) Act 1998. Assented to 30.6.1998. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 85 | Workers Compensation Legislation Amendment Act
1998. Assented to 14.7.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.8.1998, sec 2 and GG No 115 of
31.7.1998, p 5747.
|
| | No 87 | Companion Animals Act
1998. Assented to 14.7.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 4.1 [1], 1.7.1999, sec 2 and GG No 72 of
25.6.1999, p 4073; date of commencement of Sch 4.1 [2], 1.9.1998, sec 2 and GG
No 126 of 28.8.1998, p 6528.
|
| | No 99 | Road Transport (Driver
Licensing) Act 1998. Assented to 26.10.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 1.3.1999, sec 2 and GG No 25 of 26.2.1999,
p 979.
|
| | No 107 | Criminal Procedure Legislation
Amendment (Bail Agreements) Act 1998. Assented to
9.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3.5, 1.10.2000, sec 2 and GG No 127 of
29.9.2000, p 10810.
|
| | No 111 | Tow Truck Industry Act
1998. Assented to 9.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3.2, 8.10.1999, sec 2 and GG No 116 of
8.10.1999, p 9712.
|
| | No 113 | Unlawful Gambling Act
1998. Assented to 9.11.1998. Date of commencement, 1.3.1999, sec 2 (1) and GG No 25 of 26.2.1999, p
979.
|
| | No 120 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 121 | Marine Safety Act
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3.4, 10.10.2003, sec 2 and GG No 163 of
10.10.2003, p 10010.
|
| | No 127 | Weapons Prohibition Act
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement, 8.2.1999, sec 2 and GG No 15 of 5.2.1999, p
392.
|
| | No 128 | Food Production (Safety) Act
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 4.1, 18.12.1998, sec 2 and GG No 176 of
18.12.1998, p 9720.
|
| | No 142 | Residential Parks Act
1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3.2, 1.3.1999, sec 2 (1) and GG No 25 of
26.2.1999, p 976.
|
| | No 143 | Rural Lands Protection Act
1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 28.9.2001, sec 2 and GG No 146 of
28.9.2001, p 8183.
|
| | No 172 | Courts Legislation Further Amendment Act
1998. Assented to 14.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.2.1999, sec 2 and GG No 178 of
24.12.1998, p 9951.
|
1999 | No 19 | Road Transport Legislation Amendment Act
1999. Assented to 1.7.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.12.1999, sec 2 (1) and GG No 133 of
26.11.1999, p 10863.
|
| | No 26 | Home Building Amendment Act 1999.
Assented to 7.7.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 30.7.1999, sec 2 and GG No 86 of
30.7.1999, p 5225.
|
| | No 31 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1999. Assented to 7.7.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 2.15, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 41 | Motor Accidents Compensation Act
1999. Assented to 8.7.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 4.5, 5.10.1999, sec 2 and GG No 104 of
10.9.1999, p 8699.
|
| | No 77 | Homebush Bay Operations Act 1999.
Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement, 31.12.1999, sec 2 and GG No 144 of 24.12.1999, p
12186.
|
| | No 80 | Pesticides Act
1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 3.3, 1.7.2000, sec 2 and GG No 144 of
24.12.1999, p 12189.
|
| | No 81 | Retirement Villages Act
1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 3.2, 1.7.2000, sec 2 (1) and GG No 62 of
26.5.2000, p 4246.
|
| | No 85 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Schs 1.13 and 2.21, assent, sec 2 (2); date of
commencement of Sch 4, assent, sec 2 (1).
|
| | No 94 | Crimes Legislation Amendment (Sentencing) Act
1999. Assented to 8.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 4.23, 3.4.2000, sec 2 (1) and GG No 42 of
31.3.2000, p 2487.
|
| | No 97 | Plantations and Reafforestation
Act 1999. Assented to 8.12.1999. Date of commencement, 14.12.2001, sec 2 and GG No 190 of 14.12.2001, p
9834.
|
2000 | No 31 | Courts Legislation Amendment Act
2000. Assented to 14.6.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 25.9.2000, sec 2 (1) and GG No 125 of
22.9.2000, p 10678.
|
| | No 40 | Occupational Health and Safety
Act 2000. Assented to 26.6.2000. Date of commencement, 1.9.2001, sec 2 and GG No 129 of 24.8.2001, p
6186.
|
| | No 95 | Fitness Services (Pre-paid Fees)
Act 2000. Assented to 13.12.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.3.2001, sec 2 and GG No 41 of 23.2.2001,
p 779.
|
2001 | No 17 | Parramatta Park Trust Act
2001. Assented to 30.4.2001. Date of commencement, 1.7.2001, sec 2 and GG No 100 of 22.6.2001, p
4246.
|
| | No 57 | Sydney Olympic Park Authority
Act 2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement, 1.7.2001, sec 2.
|
| | No 86 | Motor Trade Legislation
Amendment Act 2001. Assented to 28.11.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 1.7.2002, sec 2 and GG No 106 of
28.6.2002, p 4677.
|
| | No 93 | Local Government and
Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment (Transfer of Functions) Act
2001. Assented to 6.12.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 3.3, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 95 | Classification (Publications,
Films and Computer Games) Enforcement Amendment Act 2001.
Assented to 11.12.2001. Date of commencement of sec 4, 22.3.2002, sec 2 and GG No 65 of
22.3.2002, p 1717.
|
| | No 112 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2001. Assented to 14.12.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 1.11, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 121 | Justices Legislation Repeal and
Amendment Act 2001. Assented to 19.12.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 7.7.2003, sec 2 and GG No 104 of
27.6.2003, p 5978.
|
2002 | No 14 | Environment Protection
Legislation Amendment Act 2002. Assented to 15.5.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 5.3, 1.7.2002, sec 2 and GG No 102 of
21.6.2002, p 4467.
|
| | No 18 | Gaming Machines Amendment Act
2002. Assented to 16.5.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.6.2002, sec 2 and GG No 92 of 31.5.2002,
p 3320.
|
| | No 33 | Pastoral and Agricultural Crimes
Legislation Amendment Act 2002. Assented to 24.6.2002. Date of commencement, 27.9.2002, sec 2 and GG No 154 of 27.9.2002, p
8371.
|
| | No 46 | Crimes Legislation Amendment
(Penalty Notice Offences) Act 2002. Assented to
4.7.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 1.9.2002, sec 2 (1) and GG No 135 of
30.8.2002, p 6537.
|
| | No 64 | Game and Feral Animal Control
Act 2002. Assented to 10.7.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 3.1, 6.8.2004, sec 2 and GG No 131 of
6.8.2004, p 6300.
|
| | No 66 | Property, Stock and Business
Agents Act 2002. Assented to 10.7.2002. Date of commencement, 1.9.2003, sec 2 and GG No 116 of 25.7.2003, p
7445.
|
| | No 86 | Fair Trading Amendment
(Employment Placement Services) Act 2002. Assented to
7.11.2002. Date of commencement, 17.2.2003, sec 2 and GG No 39 of 7.2.2003, p
761.
|
| | No 96 | Rail Safety Act
2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement, 8.2.2003, sec 2 and GG No 39 of 7.2.2003, p
766.
|
| | No 97 | Business Names Act
2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 1.2, 5.10.2004, sec 2 (1) 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 107 | Security Industry Amendment Act
2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 31.1.2003, sec 2 and GG No 33 of
31.1.2003, p 599.
|
| | No 122 | Electricity Supply Amendment
(Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction) Act 2002. Assented to
16.12.2002. Date of commencement, 1.1.2003, sec 2 and GG No 263 of 20.12.2002, p
10744.
|
2003 | No 3 | Conveyancers Licensing Act
2003. Assented to 28.5.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.4, 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 1.5, 31.3.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 37 of
29.3.2005, p 929.
|
| | No 12 | Gene Technology (GM Crop
Moratorium) Act 2003. Assented to 25.6.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.2, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 38 | Occupational Health and Safety
Amendment (Dangerous Goods) Act 2003. Assented to
22.7.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.6, 1.9.2005, sec 2 and GG No 110 of
1.9.2005, p 6395.
|
| | No 40 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2003. Assented to 22.7.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.13, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 44 | Sporting Venues (Pitch
Invasions) Act 2003. Assented to 30.9.2003. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 80 | State Revenue Legislation
Further Amendment Act 2003. Assented to 27.11.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.10.2003, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 82 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2003. Assented to 27.11.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 2.11 [1], assent, sec 2 (2); date of
commencement of Sch 2.11 [2], 27.9.2002, Sch
2.11.
|
| | No 87 | Veterinary Practice Act
2003. Assented to 5.12.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 3.10, 1.9.2006, sec 2 (1) and GG No 111 of
1.9.2006, p 7064.
|
| | No 103 | Native Vegetation Act
2003. Assented to 11.12.2003. Date of commencement, 1.12.2005, sec 2 and GG No 140 of 18.11.2005, p
9404.
|
2004 | No 4 | Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act
2004. Assented to 17.3.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 4.8, 3.2.2006, sec 2 (1) and GG No 16 of
3.2.2006, p 532.
|
| | No 12 | Lord Howe Island Amendment Act
2004. Assented to 24.3.2004. Date of commencement, 2.4.2004, sec 2 and GG No 69 of 2.4.2004, p
1796.
|
| | No 16 | Food Legislation Amendment Act
2004. Assented to 24.3.2004. Date of commencement, 5.4.2004, sec 2 and GG No 69 of 2.4.2004, p
1795.
|
| | No 43 | Fines Amendment Act
2004. Assented to 6.7.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 1, Sch 1 [30]–[32] [46] and [50]
excepted, 1.9.2004, sec 2 and GG No 135 of 20.8.2004, p 6592; date of
commencement of Sch 1 [30]–[32] [46] and [50], 1.1.2005, sec 2 and GG No
135 of 20.8.2004, p 6592.
|
| | No 55 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2004. Assented to 6.7.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 3, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 70 | Commercial Agents and Private
Inquiry Agents Act 2004. Assented to 28.9.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 3.2, 1.5.2006, sec 2 (1) and GG No 58 of
28.4.2006, p 2365.
|
| | No 89 | Stock Medicines Amendment Act
2004. Assented to 30.11.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 1.9.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 107 of
26.8.2005, p 4901.
|
| | No 91 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2004. Assented to 10.12.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 1.14, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 94 | Crimes (Administration of
Sentences) Amendment (Parole) Act 2004. Assented to
15.12.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 2.4, 10.10.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 122 of
7.10.2005, p 8167.
|
| | No 107 | Redfern–Waterloo
Authority Act 2004. Assented to 15.12.2004. Date of commencement, 17.1.2005, sec 2 and GG No 204 of 24.12.2004, p
9666.
|
2005 | No 1 | Court Security Act
2005. Assented to 10.3.2005. Date of commencement, 9.1.2006, sec 2 and GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p
10875.
|
| | No 11 | Road Transport (General) Act
2005. Assented to 14.4.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 3.13, 30.9.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 120 of
30.9.2005, p 7674.
|
| | No 18 | Energy Administration Amendment
(Water and Energy Savings) Act 2005. Assented to
18.5.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 2.6, 3.2.2006, sec 2 and GG No 16 of
3.2.2006, p 533.
|
| | No 20 | Photo Card Act
2005. Assented to 18.5.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 14.12.2005, sec 2 and GG No 154 of
9.12.2005, p 10027.
|
| | No 28 | Civil Procedure Act
2005. Assented to 1.6.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 5.19, 15.8.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 100 of
10.8.2005, p 4205.
|
| | No 50 | Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Amendment Act 2005. Assented to 27.6.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 25.11.2005, sec 2 (2) and GG No 142 of
25.11.2005, p 9654.
|
| | No 51 | State Revenue Legislation
Amendment Act 2005. Assented to 27.6.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 2 [1] [4] and [5], assent, sec 2 (1); date of
commencement of Sch 2 [2] and [3], 1.7.2005, sec 2 (2)
(b).
|
| | No 64 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2005. Assented to 1.7.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 1.11, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 90 | Retail Leases Amendment Act
2005. Assented to 17.11.2005. Date of commencement, 1.1.2006, sec 2 and GG No 142 of 25.11.2005, p
9656.
|
| | No 98 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2005. Assented to 24.11.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 1, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 100 | Vocational Education and
Training Act 2005. Assented to 28.11.2005. Date of commencement, 24.4.2006, sec 2 and GG No 55 of 21.4.2006, p
2337.
|
| | No 115 | Building Professionals Act
2005. Assented to 7.12.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 3.4, 1.3.2007, sec 2 (1) and GG No 16 of
25.1.2007, p 305.
|
2006 | No 9 | Fines Amendment (Payment of
Victims Compensation Levies) Act 2006. Assented to
3.4.2006. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 84 | Ports Corporatisation and
Waterways Management Amendment Act 2006. Assented to
30.10.2006. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 92 | Western Sydney Parklands Act
2006. Assented to 21.11.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 1.1.2008, sec 2 and GG No 185 of
21.12.2007, p 9819. Amended by Statute Law
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2007 No 27. Assented to
4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 104 | Water Industry Competition Act
2006. Assented to 27.11.2006. Date of commencement, 8.8.2008, sec 2 and GG No 95 of 8.8.2008, p
7438.
|
| | No 106 | World Youth Day Act
2006. Assented to 27.11.2006. Date of commencement, 4.12.2006, sec 2 and GG No 168 of 1.12.2006, p
10089.
|
| | No 113 | Deer Act 2006.
Assented to 4.12.2006. Date of commencement, 17.10.2008, sec 2 and GG No 128 of 3.10.2008, p
9656.
|
2007 | No 23 | Biofuel (Ethanol Content) Act
2007. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement, 1.10.2007, sec 2 and GG No 132 of 28.9.2007, p
7323.
|
| | No 27 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2007. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 1.16, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 69 | Assisted Reproductive Technology
Act 2007. Assented to 7.12.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.1.2010, sec 2 and 2009 (321), LW
10.7.2009.
|
| | No 82 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2007. Assented to 7.12.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 1, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 89 | Health Legislation Amendment Act
2007. Assented to 13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 2.3, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 92 | Miscellaneous Acts (Casino,
Liquor and Gaming) Amendment Act 2007. Assented to
13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.7.2008, sec 2 and GG No 76 of 27.6.2008,
p 5867.
|
| | No 94 | Miscellaneous Acts (Local Court)
Amendment Act 2007. Assented to 13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Schs 1.44 and 2, 6.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (314)
LW 3.7.2009.
|
2008 | No 5 | Food Amendment (Public
Information on Offences) Act 2008. Assented to
14.4.2008. Date of commencement, 3.5.2008, sec 2 and GG No 48 of 2.5.2008, p
2963.
|
| | No 19 | Mining Amendment Act
2008. Assented to 20.5.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.4, 15.11.2010, sec 2 and 2010 (617) LW
5.11.2010.
|
| | No 33 | Exotic Diseases of Animals
Amendment Act 2008. Assented to 25.6.2008. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 40 | Fines Amendment Act
2008. Assented to 25.6.2008. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 58 | Hemp Industry Act
2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.2, 31.10.2008, sec 2 (1) and GG No 138 of
31.10.2008, p 10471.
|
| | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 1.7, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 65 | Sporting Venues Authorities Act
2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement, 11.7.2008, sec 2 and GG No 87 of 11.7.2008, p
6882.
|
| | No 94 | Public Health (Tobacco) Act
2008. Assented to 20.11.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 1.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (292) LW
26.6.2009.
|
| | No 95 | Dangerous Goods (Road and Rail
Transport) Act 2008. Assented to 3.12.2008. Date of commencement, 1.5.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (122) LW
17.4.2009.
|
| | No 97 | Rail Safety Act
2008. Assented to 3.12.2008. Date of commencement, 1.1.2009, sec 2 and GG No 158 of 19.12.2008, p
12308.
|
| | No 100 | Graffiti Control Act
2008. Assented to 3.12.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 2.2, 20.2.2009, sec 2 and GG No 38 of
20.2.2009, p 1035.
|
| | No 101 | Liquor Legislation Amendment
Act 2008. Assented to 3.12.2008. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 110 | Fines Further Amendment Act
2008. Assented to 8.12.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 1 [1] (except to the extent that it inserts
the definition of work
and development order) [3] [4] [17] and [23], 19.1.2010, sec 2 (1)
and 2010 (1) LW 15.1.2010; date of commencement of Sch 1 [1] (to the extent
that it inserts the definition of work and development
order) [14] (except to the extent that it inserts sec 42 (1CC) (b))
[21] [22] [29] [30] (to the extent that it inserts sec 101B (1) (a)) [31] (to
the extent that it inserts sec 101B (6) (a)) [32] and [33], 10.7.2009, sec 2
(1) and 2009 (322) LW 10.7.2009; date of commencement of Sch 1 [2] [9] [20]
[24]–[28] [30] (except to the extent that it inserts sec 101B (1) (a))
[31] (except to the extent that it inserts sec 101B (6) (a)) and
[34]–[36], assent, sec 2 (2); date of commencement of Sch 1
[5]–[8] [10]–[13] [14] (to the extent that it inserts sec 42 (1CC)
(b)) [15] [16] [18] and [19], 31.3.2010, sec 2 (1) and 2010 (100) LW
26.3.2010.
|
| | No 112 | Rural Lands Protection
Amendment Act 2008. Assented to 10.12.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 6.8, 1.1.2009, sec 2
(1).
|
2009 | No 2 | Barangaroo Delivery Authority Act
2009. Assented to 30.3.2009. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 7 | Associations Incorporation Act
2009. Assented to 7.4.2009. Date of commencement, 1.7.2010, sec 2 and 2010 (237) LW
11.6.2010.
|
| | No 11 | Biofuel (Ethanol Content)
Amendment Act 2009. Assented to 7.4.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 1.10.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (334) LW
17.7.2009.
|
| | No 21 | Racing Legislation Amendment Act
2009. Assented to 15.5.2009. Date of commencement, 1.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (293) LW
26.6.2009.
|
| | No 50 | Road Transport Legislation
Amendment (Traffic Offence Detection) Act 2009. Assented to
26.6.2009. Date of commencement, 11.9.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (454) LW
4.9.2009.
|
| | No 51 | State Revenue Legislation
Further Amendment Act 2009. Assented to 26.6.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 104 | Road Transport Legislation
Amendment (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009. Assented to
14.12.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 19.4.2010, sec 2 (2) and 2010 (119) LW
9.4.2010.
|
| | No 106 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2009. Assented to 14.12.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 8.1.2010, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 108 | Trade Measurement (Repeal) Act
2009. Assented to 14.12.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 1.2, 1.7.2010, sec 2 (1) and 2010 (325) LW
1.7.2010.
|
2010 | No 34 | Health Practitioner Regulation
Amendment Act 2010. Assented to 15.6.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.7.2010, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 42 | Residential Tenancies Act
2010. Assented to 17.6.2010. Date of commencement, 31.1.2011, sec 2 and 2010 (658) LW
3.12.2010.
|
| | No 48 | Crimes (Sentencing Legislation)
Amendment (Intensive Correction Orders) Act 2010. Assented to
28.6.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 1.10.2010, sec 2 and 2010 (532) LW
17.9.2010.
|
| | No 59 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2010. Assented to 28.6.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 1.12, 9.7.2010, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 119 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2010. Assented to 29.11.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 1.13, 7.1.2011, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 131 | Vocational Education and
Training (Commonwealth Powers) Act 2010. Assented to
7.12.2010. Date of commencement, 30.6.2011, sec 2 and 2011 (297) LW
24.6.2011.
|
2011 | No 10 | Work Health and Safety Act
2011. Assented to 7.6.2011. Date of commencement, 1.1.2012, sec 2.
|
| | No 41 | Transport Legislation Amendment
Act 2011. Assented to 13.9.2011. Date of commencement of Sch 5.6, 1.11.2011, sec 2 and 2011 (559) LW
28.10.2011.
|
| | No 61 | Redfern–Waterloo Authority
Repeal Act 2011. Assented to 16.11.2011. Date of commencement, 1.1.2012, sec 2 and 2011 (675) LW
16.12.2011.
|
| | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2011. Assented to 16.11.2011. Date of commencement of Schs 2.13 and 3, 6.1.2012, sec 2
(1).
|
Table of amendments
Sec 3 | Am 1997 No 119, Sch 2.7; 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [1];
1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [1]; 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115 [1]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [1];
2006 No 9, Sch 1 [1]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [1]; 2008 No 112,
Sch 6.8; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [1]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [1]. |
Sec 4 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [2]–[5]; 1998 No 120,
Sch 2.16; 2006 No 9, Sch 1 [2] [3]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 8 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 9 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [6] [7]. |
Sec 10 | Am 2007 No 94, Schs 1.44 [1],
2. |
Sec 13 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [2]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [2];
2008 No 110, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 14 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [3]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 15 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [4]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1
[1]. |
Sec 16 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [8] [9]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1] [2]. |
Sec 17 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [10]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [5];
2009 No 51, Sch 2 [2]. |
Sec 18 | Rep 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [6]. Ins 2006 No 9, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 19 | Am 2007 No 94, Sch 2; 2008 No 110, Sch 1
[5]–[7]. |
Part 3, Div 1A (secs 19A, 19B) | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [8]. |
Sec 20 | Am 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [9]. |
Sec 22 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [11]; 1999 No 85, Sch 2.21;
2003 No 80, Sch 2 [1]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [2]; 2011 No 62, Sch 2.13
[1]. |
Sec 23 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [2] [3]. |
Sec 23A | Ins 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [4]. Am 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 24 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [5]. |
Part 3, Div 2A | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [10]. |
Secs 24A–24F | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [10]. |
Sec 24G | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [10]. Am 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Secs 24H–24J | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [10]. |
Sec 25 | Am 1998 No 172, Sch 2 [1]. |
Sec 26 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [5]. |
Sec 27 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [12]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [5]
[6]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [11]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [3]. |
Sec 28 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [7]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [3];
2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Sec 33 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [8]. |
Sec 34 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [5]. |
Sec 35 | Am 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [9]. |
Sec 36 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [13]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [10]
[11]; 2008 No 62, Sch 1.7; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Sec 37A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [7]. |
Sec 38 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [8] [9]; 2005 No 11, Sch 3.13
[1]; 2005 No 51, Sch 2 [1]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [12]–[17]; 2009 No 50, Sch
2.2; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [4]; 2009 No 104, Sch 2
[1]–[3]. |
Sec 41 | Subst 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [18]. |
Sec 42 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [10]–[13]; 2008 No 40,
Sch 1 [5] [19]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [12]–[17]. |
Sec 43 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [14]. |
Sec 44 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [14] [15]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1] [2]. |
Sec 46 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [16]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [15];
2008 No 110, Sch 1 [18]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [5]. |
Sec 47 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [16]. |
Sec 48 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 49 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [18]–[21]; 2007 No 94,
Sch 2; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [20]–[22]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [6]; 2009 No 106,
Sch 4.16. |
Sec 49A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [22]. Subst 2008 No 110 Sch 1
[19]. |
Sec 50 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [23] [24]; 2007 No 94, Sch
1.44 [2]–[4]. |
Sec 51 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [25] [26]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2;
2008 No 40, Sch 1 [23] [24]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [7]. |
Sec 52 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [17]; 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115
[2]; 2003 No 40, Sch 2.13 [1]; 2007 No 94, Sch 1.44 [5]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1
[25]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [8] [9]. |
Sec 57 | Am 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [20]. |
Sec 58 | Am 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [2] [3]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1
[27]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [21]; 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [1]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 60 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [18] [19]; 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4
[4]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [28]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [3]. |
Sec 61 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [29]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [7];
2009 No 51, Sch 2 [3]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Part 4, Div 3, heading | Am 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [5]. |
Sec 65 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [3]; 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [20];
1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [6] [7]; 1998 No 172, Sch 2 [2] [3]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1
[30]–[32]; 2005 No 11, Sch 3.13 [2]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [10]; 2011 No 41,
Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Sec 66 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [4]; 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [21]
[22]; 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [8]; 1998 No 172, Sch 2 [4] [5]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 67 | Am 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [9]; 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [11];
2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Sec 68 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [5]–[8]; 1998 No 35,
Sch 1 [23]; 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [10]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [33]; 2009 No 51, Sch
2 [11]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1] [3]. |
Sec 69 | Am 1998 No 26, Sch 2.3; 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [11]
[12]; 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115 [3]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 70 | Am 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [13]; 1999 No 41, Sch 4.5
[1]. |
Sec 70, note | Am 1999 No 41, Sch 4.5 [2]. |
Sec 71 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [9]; 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [24]
[25]; 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [14]. |
Sec 72 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [26]; 2005 No 28, Sch 5.19 [1]
[2]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2. |
Sec 73 | Am 2005 No 28, Sch 5.19 [3] [4]; 2007 No 94, Sch
2. |
Sec 75 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [27]. |
Sec 76 | Am 2002 No 103, Sch 4.34
[1]–[4]. |
Sec 76A | Ins 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [28]. Am 2005 No 28, Sch 5.19
[5]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2. |
Sec 79 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [1]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1
[34]–[36]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [4]. |
Sec 80 | Subst 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2010 No 59, Sch
1.12 [4]. |
Sec 80A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [37]. |
Sec 81 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1
[10]–[12]. |
Sec 84 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [29] [30]; 1999 No 94, Sch
4.23 [2]; 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [2]. |
Sec 85 | Am 1999 No 31, Sch 2.15 [1]; 2003 No 40, Sch 2.13
[2]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [38]. |
Sec 86 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [3]. |
Sec 87 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [4] [5]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1
[39] [40]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [5]. |
Sec 89 | Am 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [31]; 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23
[6]–[8]; 2003 No 40, Sch 2.13 [3]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [41]–[44];
2004 No 94, Sch 2.4; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [6]. Subst 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10
[3]. |
Sec 89A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [45]. Am 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12
[4]. Subst 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [3]. Am 2010 No 119, Sch
1.13. |
Sec 89B | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [45]. Subst 2010 No 48, Sch
5.10 [3]. |
Sec 90 | Am 2003 No 82, Sch 2.11 [1]; 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10
[4]. |
Sec 91 | Am 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [5]. |
Sec 92 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [9]. |
Sec 93 | Am 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [6]. |
Sec 94 | Am 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [7]. |
Sec 95 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [10]
[11]. |
Sec 96 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [12]
[13]. |
Sec 99 | Am 1998 No 99, Sch 1.4 [15]. |
Part 4, Div 8, heading | Subst 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [22]. |
Part 4, Div 8, Subdiv 1 | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [22]. |
Sec 99A | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [22]. Am 2010 No 54, Sch
2.17. |
Secs 99B–99J | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [22]. |
Part 4, Div 8, Subdiv 2, heading | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [22]. |
Sec 100 | Am 1998 No 172, Sch 2 [6]; 1999 No 31, Sch 2.15
[2]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [26]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [23]
[24]. |
Sec 100, note | Rep 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [46]. |
Sec 101 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [47] [48]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1
[25]–[28]. |
Part 4, Div 8, Subdiv 3, heading | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [29]. |
Sec 101A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [49]. |
Sec 101B | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [49]. Am 2008 No 110, Sch 1
[30]–[32]. |
Sec 101C | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [49]. |
Part 4, Div 9, heading | Ins 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [33]. |
Sec 102A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [50]. |
Sec 103 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [14]; 2004 No 43, Sch 1
[51] [52]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]. |
Sec 109 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [13]. Subst 1998 No 35, Sch 1
[32]. |
Sec 109A | Ins 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [14]. |
Sec 110 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [15]; 2005 No 28, Sch 5.19
[6]; 2007 No 94, Schs 1.44 [6], 2. |
Part 7, heading | Am 1998 No 107, Sch 3.5 [1]. |
Sec 111 | Subst 1998 No 107, Sch 3.5
[2]. |
Sec 112 | Am 1998 No 107, Sch 3.5 [3]
[4]. |
Sec 112A | Ins 1998 No 107, Sch 3.5 [5]. |
Sec 113 | Am 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [53]. |
Sec 114 | Am 2003 No 80, Sch 2 [2]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1
[27]. |
Sec 116 | Am 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115 [4]. |
Sec 116A | Ins 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [28]. |
Sec 117 | Am 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6 [1]; 2011 No 62, Sch
3.10. |
Sec 117AA | Ins 2005 No 51, Sch 2 [2]. |
Sec 117A | Ins 2004 No 43, Sch 1 [54]. Subst 2005 No 51, Sch 2
[3]. Am 2008 No 5, Sch 2; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [29] [30]. |
Sec 117B | Ins 2005 No 51, Sch 2 [3]. |
Sec 120 | Am 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [8]; 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 122 | Am 2000 No 31, Sch 5 [1]. |
Sec 122A | Ins 2000 No 31, Sch 5 [2]. |
Sec 122B | Ins 2009 No 51, Sch 2 [12]. |
Sec 125 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [15]. |
Sec 126 | Am 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115 [5]. |
Sec 126A | Ins 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [31]. Am 2011 No 41, Sch 5.6
[1]. |
Sec 127 | Am 2001 No 121, Sch 2.115 [6]; 2007 No 94, Sch
2. |
Sec 128 | Am 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [34]. |
Sec 130 | Rep 1999 No 85, Sch 4. |
Sch 1 | Am 1997 No 62, Sch 1.1; 1997 No 113, Sch 1.2; 1997
No 147, Sch 1.10; 1997 No 156, Sch 4.5 [1] [2]; 1998 No 35, Sch 1 [33]; 1998
No 38, Sch 3; 1998 No 57, Sch 2; 1998 No 59, Sch 2; 1998 No 85, Sch 2.5; 1998
No 87, Sch 4.1 [1] [2]; 1998 No 111, Sch 3.2; 1998 No 113, Sch 2.6; 1998 No
121, Sch 3.4; 1998 No 127, Sch 3.4; 1998 No 128, Sch 4.1; 1998 No 142, Sch
3.2; 1998 No 143, Sch 6.6; 1999 No 19, Sch 2.13; 1999 No 26, Sch 2; 1999 No
77, Sch 4.1; 1999 No 80, Sch 3.3; 1999 No 81, Sch 3.2; 1999 No 85, Sch 1.13;
1999 No 94, Sch 4.23 [16]; 1999 No 97, Sch 2.1; 2000 No 40, Sch 2.5 [1] [2];
2000 No 95, Sch 2.2; 2001 No 17, Sch 5.1; 2001 No 57, Sch 7.1; 2001 No 86, Sch
3.1; 2001 No 93, Sch 3.3; 2001 No 95, sec 4; 2001 No 112, Sch 1.11; 2002 No
14, Sch 5.3; 2002 No 18, Sch 2.2; 2002 No 33, Sch 1; 2002 No 46, Sch 3.3; 2002
No 64, Sch 3.1; 2002 No 66, Sch 2.4; 2002 No 86, Sch 2.1; 2002 No 96, Sch 7.1;
2002 No 97, Sch 1.2; 2002 No 103, Sch 4.34 [5]; 2002 No 107, Sch 2.1; 2002 No
122, Sch 2.1; 2003 No 3, Sch 2.4; 2003 No 4, Sch 1.5; 2003 No 12, Sch 2.2;
2003 No 38, Sch 2.6 [1] [2]; 2003 No 40, Sch 2.13 [4] [5]; 2003 No 44, Sch 2;
2003 No 82, Sch 2.11 [2]; 2003 No 87, Sch 3.10; 2003 No 103, Sch 2.1; 2004 No
4, Sch 4.8; 2004 No 12, sec 5; 2004 No 16, Sch 2.3; 2004 No 70, Sch 3.2; 2004
No 89, Sch 2.1; 2004 No 91, Sch 1.14; 2004 No 107, Sch 3.1; 2005 No 1, sec 32;
2005 No 11, Sch 3.13 [3]; 2005 No 18, Sch 2.6; 2005 No 20, Sch 2.1; 2005 No
50, Sch 2.1; 2005 No 51, Sch 2 [4]; 2005 No 64, Sch 1.11; 2005 No 90, Sch 2;
2005 No 98, Sch 1.9 [1]–[3]; 2005 No 100, Sch 3.6; 2005 No 115, Sch 3.4;
2006 No 84, Sch 2.2; 2006 No 92, Sch 5.1; 2006 No 104, Sch 3.2; 2006 No 106,
Sch 2.1; 2006 No 113, Sch 2.1; 2007 No 23, sec 27; 2007 No 27, Sch 1.16; 2007
No 69, Sch 2.1; 2007 No 82, Sch 1.8; 2007 No 89, Sch 2.3; 2007 No 92, Sch 4.7
[1] [2]; 2008 No 19, Sch 2.4; 2008 No 33, Sch 2.4; 2008 No 58, Sch 2.2; 2008
No 65, Sch 6.1; 2008 No 94, Sch 2.1; 2008 No 95, Sch 2.2; 2008 No 97, Sch 4.2;
2008 No 100, Sch 2.2; 2008 No 101, Sch 3.1; 2009 No 2, Sch 4.1; 2009 No 7, Sch
3.5; 2009 No 11, Sch 2.1; 2009 No 21, Sch 3.3; 2009 No 108, Sch 1.2; 2010 No
42, Sch 3.4; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.12 [7] [8]; 2010 No 131, Sch 2.4; 2011 No 10,
Sch 5.1; 2011 No 61, Sch 2.1; 2011 No 62, Sch 2.13 [2]. |
Sch 2 | Rep 1999 No 85, Sch 4. |
Sch 3 | Am 1997 No 121, Sch 1 [16]–[19]; 1998 No 35,
Sch 1 [34]; 1999 No 31, Sch 2.15 [3]; 2003 No 80, Sch 2 [3] [4]; 2004 No 43,
Sch 1 [55] [56]; 2004 No 55, Sch 3; 2005 No 51, Sch 2 [5]; 2006 No 9, Sch 1
[5] [6]; 2008 No 40, Sch 1 [32]; 2008 No 110, Sch 1 [35] [36]; 2009 No 104,
Sch 2 [4]; 2010 No 48, Sch 5.10 [9] [10]. |