Chapter 3 - Key Issues
3.1
This chapter outlines the key issues raised in
submissions and evidence. This includes the support and concern that was
expressed about the various parts of the Bill.
Support
for the Bill
3.2
Support was
offered for the following Parts of the Bill (no
opposition was provided in submissions or evidence to these Parts):
-
Part 3 suspensions of sentences of
imprisonment;[4]
-
Part 4 Enforcement (removal of information
procedure);[5]
-
Part 5 Private arbitration;[6]
-
Part 6 changes of venue;[7]
-
Part 9 transfer of matters from State courts
of summary jurisdiction to the Federal Magistrates Court;[9]
-
Part 12 power to dismiss appeal;[10]
-
Part 13 appeals to High Court;[11]
-
Part 15 frivolous or vexatious proceedings;[12]
-
Part 18 powers of judicial registrars;[13]
Concerns and suggested amendments
3.3
There was both concern and opposition expressed in
submissions to some parts of the Bill. The
following parts of the Bill attracted either
opposition or suggested amendments:
-
Part 1 Parenting orders;[14]
-
Part 7 definition of disposition;[15]
-
Part 14 recovery of amounts paid under
maintenance orders;[16]
-
Part 16 rules as to costs;[17]
-
Part 17 Civil penalties for contravention of
Rules;[18]
-
Part 19 interaction of family law and
bankruptcy law;[19]
Part 1 Parenting orders
3.4
Part 1 of the Bill would
allow the court to vary parenting orders, in proceedings alleging the contravention
of a parenting order, if the court is satisfied that the contravention did not
occur, or if it did occur, the party had a reasonable excuse.
3.5
This part of the Bill
was supported by the Law Society of New South Wales, which argued that it was a
"sound reform".[20]
3.6
This was countered by the NSW Commission for Children
and Young People which expressed concern in its submission:
While such a power will ensure that the Family Court is not
burdened by contravention proceedings resulting from what the Court considers
poorly designed parenting orders, I am concerned that the proposal allows the
Court to unduly interfere in arrangements both parties have consented to.[21]
3.7
Both the National Council of Single Mothers and their
Children (NCSMC) and the National Abuse Free Contact Campaign made the
following recommendation regarding Part 1 of the Bill:
[the Bill should be amended to] provide that in hearings for
contravention orders in relation to children, where issues of violence or abuse
have been raised, that the court have the power to commission intensive expert
assessment of the safety of all parties and to vary orders to ensure that the
safety of a child and her/his family is the threshold determinant of a child's
best interests and that all decisions regarding the child privilege the safety
of all parties.[22]
3.8
The NCSMC argued that such amendment is needed as:
[T]he failure to privilege safety as the threshold determinant
of a child's best interests results in many inappropriate orders which expose
children and other family members to terror, stalking, sexual assault, physical
assault and homicide.[23]
3.9
The National Network of Women's Legal Services (NNWLS)
expressed their concern as to how the provisions could be used:
In situations where a
mother has been able to prove reasonable excuse as a result of violence and the
Court uses the proposed section to restrict the father's contact to a safer
arrangement, NNWLS would support the amendment.
However, we are concerned that there is wide range of factual situations
in which these powers could arise.
NNWLS suggests that
consideration be given to including in the proposed clause 70NEB clauses
similar to 70NG(1)(c) and (1A) so that parties have the opportunity to properly
prepare and present their cases. We make
the point that the mentioned subsections were introduced partly in response to
submissions by NNWLS at the time but the final drafting did not fully reflect
our ideas.[24]
3.10 NNWLS suggested that proposed section 70NEB
be amended to include factors to be considered when varying the order, similar
to those in section 70NG(1)(c) and (1A):
[I]deas similar to
those contained in 70NG(1)(c) and (1A) should be added to the proposed section
70NEB but the wording should be altered slightly to clarify the intent behind
the sections. The factors which should
be relevant to the court's decision as to whether or not to vary the original
order are as follows:
(i) whether there are any allegations of a
history of family violence;
(ii) whether there are any allegations of child
abuse;
(iii) the circumstances surrounding the making of
the original order (eg. whether it was made by consent at a mediation or legal
aid conference or whether the parties were legally represented at a court
hearing);
(iv) whether there has been a change in
circumstances which make complying with the original order impracticable;
(v) any other circumstance that results in the
original order no longer being in the best interests of the child.[25]
3.11 The Committee asked the Attorney-General's
Department for a response to these recommendations. In relation to NNWLS's
first recommendation, the Department provided the following response:
The purpose of the
proposed section 70NEB is to respond to the concerns expressed by many
stakeholders that contravention applications often arise because the original
parenting order is effectively unworkable. Often parenting orders are made by
consent and it appears that in many cases parties do not give sufficient
consideration to the obligations that arise under those orders. This may not
become apparent until the parties attempt to operate in accordance with those
orders. In such cases, a range of judicial officers from both the Family Court
and the Federal Magistrates Court have suggested that there should be a power
for the courts to vary the original order, rather than require parties to make
a separate application for variation and be subjected to further court
proceedings.
This is a different
situation from that covered by the current section 70NG. That section only
applies where a court has been provided with sufficient evidence to make a
finding that an order has been breached. Issues relating to family violence
should be considered in making this determination. Such issues clearly go to
the question of whether or not the person had a "reasonable excuse"
for the breach of an order. In these circumstances it is appropriate that there
be restrictions on the courts' power to allow an adjournment for a party to
seek a variation of the original order. The current provisions essentially
relate to a persons ability to understand the original order or the length of
time that has elapsed since it was made. There is no such finding in relation
to a matter that is to be dealt with under the proposed section 70NEB. In cases
under section 70NEB a varied order is of course still an order that would
require the court to consider the best interests of the child as the paramount
consideration and that requires the court to take account of the matters set
out in subsection 68F(2) of the Act.
There is a very broad
range of factors that the court must consider. In particular paragraph
68F(2)(g) specifically provides that the court must consider the need to
protect the child from physical or psychological harm caused, or that may be
caused, by being subject or exposed to abuse, ill treatment, violence or other
behaviour; or being directly or indirectly exposed to abuse ill treatment,
violence or other behaviour that is directed to or may affect another person.
Paragraphs 68(2)(i) and (j) also provide that the court must consider any
family violence involving the child, or a member of the child's family and any
family violence order that applies to the child or a member of the child's
family.[26]
3.12 In relation to the second recommendation by
NNWLS the Department provided the following response:
In relation to
recommendation 2 of the NNWLS, submission section 70NG currently sets out the
courts' powers in those cases where there has been a contravention of a
parenting order made out and where there has not been a reasonable excuse
established. Paragraph 70NG(1)(c) currently provides for the option of
adjournment of the proceedings so that a variation to the original parenting
order can be sought.
In section 70NG cases,
the applicant has satisfied the onus on them and demonstrated that a breach of
court orders has occurred. In that circumstance it is appropriate that when the
court is considering the response to that breach that there are fairly limited
factors that the court must take into account when it is considering the option
of further adjourning the proceedings rather than dealing with them. Generally
the adjournment of the proceedings at that stage would not be the appropriate
course and the limited circumstances that the court must consider in relation
to this option are appropriate given that a breach without reasonable excuse
has been established.[27]
The Committee's view
3.13 In relation to the recommendation that
proposed section 70NEB require the court to consider factors such as history of
violence or abuse when varying an order, the Committee notes the response of
the Attorney-General's Department that the court is already required to consider
such factors by subsection 68F(2).
3.14 In relation to the recommendation that
section 70NG be amended in a similar way, the Committee notes the response of
the Attorney-General's Department that the fairly limited circumstances that
the court is to consider is appropriate given that a breach without reasonable
excuse has been established.
Part 7 definition of disposition
3.15
Part 7 of the Bill
incorporates one of the recommendations in the Joint Taskforce Report on the
Use of Bankruptcy and Family Law Schemes to Avoid Payment of Tax.[28] Item 20
amends subsection 106B(5) to replace the current definition of 'disposition'
(which is currently defined to include 'a sale and a gift') with a more
expansive definition which includes reference to the 'issue, grant, creation,
transfer or cancellation of an interest in a company or a trust'.
3.16
The Law Society of NSW Family Law Committee expressed
concern in its submission that the definition in proposed paragraph 106B(5)(a)
may be problematic:
The question of "and" at the end of s106B(5)(a) could
be construed as limiting the definition rather than expanding it. Is the
draftsman confident of the construction of the "and" in this context?
The same comment applies in relation to sub paragraph (b). The
Family Law Committee would support the use of the word "includes" so
as not to limit the definition but would give scope for broader interpretation.[29]
The Committee's view
3.17
The Committee notes that the Law Society of New South
Wales has asked that attention be directed to the definition in proposed
paragraphs 106(5)(a) and (b), specifically the use of the word 'includes'
instead of 'and'.
Part 14 recovery of amounts paid under maintenance orders
3.18
Proposed section 66X provides that where a court has
made an order that a person pay maintenance and the person has paid that
maintenance, but the court later determines that the person is not a parent or
step-parent of the child, the amount paid may be recovered in a court having
jurisdiction under Part VII of the Act. There is a similar provision for the
recovery of child support in the Child
Support (Assessment) Act 1989.[30]
3.19
This part of the Bill
was supported by the Law Society of NSW Family Law Committee in its submission.[31]
3.20
The NSW Commission for Children and Young People
expressed concern in its submission that this provision may allow the recovery
of such money from the custodial parent:
I am concerned that the Bill and
explanatory material is silent on where this money would be recovered from. I
am particularly concerned that the money might sought to be recovered from the
custodial parent of the child to whom the order related. This may place a
significant financial burden on that parent and family. There is no indication
in the Bill or explanatory material of any
measures that might be imposed to make sure that the best interests of the
child is safeguarded following any action to recover this money. I suggest that
such safeguards should be incorporated into the Bill.[32]
3.21
This part of the Bill
was opposed by the NNWLS, who argued that there was no need for the provision:
NNWLS is concerned that
this amendment will cover a tiny number of cases and we wonder why it is really
required. In most cases where a man has
been paying maintenance in accordance with a court order he would have a strong
'step' parent relationship with the child and would be caught under s66M in any
event.
It could place a small
number of women who mistakenly identified the wrong father in very difficult
financial circumstances which will also impact on the children who reside with
her. Further, it seems unfair to bring
in this provision when women cannot claim back payments of retrospective child
support. Therefore, while a woman could
be made to pay back a wrongly identified man who is not the biological father
she cannot then make a retrospective claim against the real father.[33]
3.22
The NCSMC also opposed this part, and suggested that it
should be removed from the Bill. It also
suggested possible limits on the provision if it were to proceed:
Recommendation 1: NCSMC
recommends that this provision should be rejected on the grounds that it (a)
will encourage men to seek to reject their children (b) functions against the
.best interests of the child. (c) could unreasonably impoverish affected
families (d) will only apply to a very tiny minority of cases but could damage
many families wrongly subjected to men's attempts to deny their children.
Recommendation 2: NCSMC
recommends that this provision should only apply where it can be established,
on the balance of probabilities, that the misidentification of the paying
parent has knowingly and without duress involved a deliberate course of
deception for the purpose of claiming child support.
Recommendation 3: NCSMC
recommends that the child support agency should advise separating parents
subject to child support claims that the child support claim implies their
legal acceptance of their parental status and if they wish to dispute this they
should forthwith provide DNA and fund a test to establish parentage. Failure to
do so would void any subsequent options to claim they were not the parent.[34]
3.23
The Law Council of Australia, Family Law Section, did
not object to the principle behind proposed section 66X, but suggested there is
some ambiguity in the proposed section, and suggested that it be amended such
that immediately after proposed paragraph 66X(c) the words be deleted and the
following words be inserted:
a court having jurisdiction under this Part may make any of the
orders specified in subsection (2) hereof:
(2) The orders that a court may make are as follows:
(a) that the accumulated total amount
of any periodic payments paid under the purported order be repaid;
(b) that any lump sum or a part of a
lump sum paid under the purported order be repaid;
(c) that any property settled under
the purported order by way of maintenance of a child or the value thereof be
returned to the person who settled the property;
(d) any consequential order necessary
to give effect to the provisions of this section.[35]
3.24
At the hearing Mr Michael Foster of the Law Council of
Australia, Family Law Section, explained that the intention of these suggested
amendments would be to ensure the provisions would apply even where there has
been partial compliance.[36]
The Committee's view
3.25
The Committee notes the concern expressed in
submissions about the proposed provisions of part 14.
3.26
The Committee also notes the suggested amendments
proposed by the Law Council of Australia to ensure that the intention of the
proposed provisions would be effective in cases where part payment has been
made. The Committee agrees that as currently drafted the provisions are
ambiguous in cases where a party has made part payment and would be better
drafted to account for such circumstances.
Part 16 rules as to costs
3.27
Part 16 of the Bill
would provide that the Rules may provide that a party to proceedings under the
Act must bear the costs of another party to those proceedings unless the court
otherwise orders. This would depart from the general rule that each party bears
their own costs in proceedings under the Act.
3.28
The NNWLS expressed concern over this part of the Bill,
and noted that this could be a 'doubled edged sword':
On the one hand many
are disadvantaged by tactics employed by their former partner to slow or
obstruct the proper progress of court proceedings. On the other hand, those who are
unrepresented struggle to understand and comply with procedural orders made and
we are concerned that this provision may have punitive consequences.
It may be useful to add
to s117(2A) a provision which states that the Court should also take into
account whether a party is unrepresented and, if so, the circumstances giving
rise to that situation. Litigants who
choose to self-represent to avoid the mitigating influence of a lawyer should
not benefit, however, those who self-represent because they are unable to
afford a lawyer and unable to obtain legal aid should have their lack of legal
counsel taken into account.[37]
3.29 The Law Society of New South Wales opposed
this part of the Bill, arguing that the principle that a party
bears their own costs is a fundamental principle underlying the Act:
One of the significant
philosophical principles, which underlines the Family Law Act 1975, is
that each party bears their own costs.
This was put into place in 1975 as a response to the former practice of
determining .fault.. At that time costs
were routinely ordered against a party who was held to be the one causing the
divorce. Costs were a significant issue
and sometimes became the primary issue.
They could become the focus of the dispute between the parties and were
often seen as a block to consensual resolution.
The Act provides for this as a principle in s117 (A). The amendment completely undermines that
principle and for no apparent reason.
The present Act
provides for people who behave unreasonably, or fail to accept offers, or who
have significant resources against another with limited resources, to be
ordered to pay costs. The existing
provision works well.
The effect of this
amendment is that costs may be used as a method of defeating a less powerful
partner in the marriage. It may mean
that the threat of a costs order may prevent access to justice. The integrity of the fundamental principle
needs to be retained.[38]
3.30 Both the National Council of Single Mothers
and their Children and the National Abuse Free Contact Campaign argued in
submissions that parents who are non-compliant with orders of the court due to
unresolved issues of violence or abuse due to physical or mental incapacity
should not be subjected to paying the costs of the other party.[39]
3.31 The Law Council of Australia, Family Law
Section, provided strong opposition to this part of the Bill. It provided two reasons to support this
opposition:
The fundamental
principles which guide the exercise of discretion in relation to costs should
be determined by Parliament and not by the Judges whose job it is to apply
those principles.
The Family Court of
Australia says that its intention in seeking this amendment is to give it power
to restrict judicial discretion on costs and to impose automatic costs
consequences upon the happening of certain events. In a family law context
automatic costs provisions will favour some categories of litigants over
others, produce inequities and reduce access to justice.[40]
3.32
At the hearing the Law Council, Family Law Section,
expanded on these concerns:
In particular the court
has two things in mind, both of which relate to automatic costs consequences.
One idea it has is that litigants will be able to put offers and there will be
an automatic costs consequence if the offer ultimately is as good as the
courts award. The other idea that the court has is that, in relation to
procedural breaches, there will be automatic cost consequences, so that if you
do not do something such as file a document then there will be an automatic
costs penalty. They are major changes.[41]
3.33
A representative of the Attorney-General's Department
explained the background to the proposed provisions at the hearing:
The amendments have
been included as a result of a request from the Family Court to support
provisions in the context of their rules of court that commenced in March this
year. The provisions of those rules do not include any automatic cost
consequences, as the Law Society of New South Wales and the family law section
representatives mentioned. The court has advised the department that the
request should be viewed in light of the conclusion drawn by the Australian Law
Reform Commission in its Managing justice report that there is a culture
of noncompliance in the Family Court. The Law Reform Commissions recommendation
in that report was that the court and its committees should identify clearly
the various causes, circumstances, processes and registries in which there is
significant noncompliance and should distinguish between inadvertent and
deliberate noncompliance and the range of solutions and responses that might be
required. I refer there to recommendation 110 of the Australian Law Reform
Commission report Managing justice in 2000. The departments view
is that the provision is necessary because of that culture of noncompliance
within the court.[42]
3.34
In a supplementary submission to the Committee, the Law
Council of Australia, Family Law Section, argued that the proposed provisions
are the antithesis of the ALRC recommendation that there should be distinction
between inadvertent and deliberate non-compliance:
The proposed automatic
costs provisions are the antithesis of this concept because they do not
discriminate between inadvertent and deliberate non-compliance. The cost burden falls automatically on the
non-complier and that liability remains in place unless the non-complier
applies to the Court for relief and succeeds in that application.[43]
3.35 At the hearing the Attorney-General's
Department were asked to justify why the procedures for awarding costs should
be dealt with in the rules and not directly by amendments to the Act. A
representative of the Department explained:
There is a recognition
that the Family Court is in a special position in relation to its rules on the
costing proceedings. It is not the same rule that applies to other proceedings
in other courts. For instance, in the Federal Court the power to make costs is
within the discretion of the court. Under section 43(2) of the Federal Court of
Australia Act, the Federal Court itself has discretion to make an award for
costs.
We have a situation in
the Family Law Act where there are specific provisions in relation to the
principles which guide the court in making cost orders. There is an initial
position that both parties bear their own costs. One consideration is that the
particular circumstances that may be identified by the rules are going to
relate to procedural matters before the court. If there is the desire to use
the costs power to secure compliance with procedural mechanisms within the
court, then the fairly general guiding rule in section 117 of the act is not
one that is going to be particularly useful to ensure compliance with
particular procedural processes within the court. The Family Court was
proposing to deal with that issue by rules of court and sought to have a limit
to the act that would support that, leaving the decision with the court as to
the circumstances in which those consequences would apply, bearing in mind that
the rules that they might make would be disallowable in parliament and that
there would be parliamentary scrutiny at that level, as opposed to having the
detail of the circumstances spelt out in the terms of section 117.[44]
3.36
The Law
Council of Australia, Family Law Section, responded to these points in its
supplementary submission to the Committee. It argued that although rules are
disallowable, this would not provide an adequate mechanism for broad public
consultation on changes to the law which would otherwise have required
legislative amendment.[45] It
also responded to the Department's position that the Family Court is in a
'special position' regarding costs:
With respect, this is
not correct. The Family Law Act costs
provisions must be applied by all courts which have jurisdiction under the
Family Law Act. These costs provisions
are therefore used by the Federal Magistrates Court, state courts exercising
jurisdiction under the Family Law Act, and the Family Court of Australia. The Family Court is not in any special
position or at any special disadvantage.
FLS points out that if
the Family Court of Australia makes automatic costs provisions under an
expanded rule-making power this will generate confusion and ambiguity because
those provisions will be in direct conflict with the provisions of Section 117
of the Family Law Act. Section 117
establishes clear principles, none of which include costs as an automatic
consequence of an event nor the obligation to make an application in order to
seek the removal of an automatic costs consequence. This conflict will no doubt have to be the
subject of judicial interpretation which may well be settled in favour of the
primacy of the provisions of Section 117 over any costs rules which are
inconsistent with it, notwithstanding that the costs rules were made under an
expanded rule-making power.
3.37 The Attorney-General's Department were asked
whether the provisions were an attempt to shift work from the Family Court to
the Federal Magistrates Court. In a subsequent submission to the Committee the
Department responded:
The purpose of the
proposal in relation to costs is to address a perceived culture of
non-compliance with procedural mechanisms in the Family Court. It does not
involve any attempt to shift the work to the Federal Magistrates Court.[46]
3.38 The Law Council of Australia, Family Law
Section, disagreed:
It is the submission of
FLS that these provisions will create a perception that the Family Court of
Australia is a difficult and dangerous court for some litigants, particularly
those with limited financial resources and those who find the litigious process
intimidating. This may cause certain
categories of litigants to use other courts.[47]
3.39 The Law Council of Australia also argued
that the costs provisions of section 117 were adequate, and are used currently:
Experience demonstrates
that costs orders for procedural non-compliance are frequently made under the
present legislation whenever the non-complier is clearly at fault.
The intention of the
Family Court of Australia, as evidenced by the draft Rules which it released in
2003, is to apply automatic costs provisions to offers as well as procedural
matters. As FLS has explained in its
submission to the Inquiry, this has far-reaching consequences including
implications for equity and access to justice.
FLS notes that the
Federal Magistrates Court does not require automatic costs provisions to enable
it to deal with procedural non-compliance.[48]
The Committee's View
3.40 The Committee notes the strong opposition in
submissions to part 16 of the Bill.
The Committee is concerned that if enacted, the provisions would allow the
Court to impose automatic cost consequences on parties. The Committee believes
that automatic cost consequences would not accord with the recommendations of
the ALRC report Managing Justice,
that there should be a distinction between inadvertent and deliberate
non-compliance.
3.41 The Committee believes this part of the Bill should not proceed or should be amended to
take account of whether a party has deliberately or inadvertently failed to
comply with procedures.
Part 17 Civil penalties for contravention of Rules
3.42
Part 17 of the Bill
would provide that judges may make Rules "providing for civil penalties
for failures to comply with the standard Rules of Court".
3.43
This part was opposed by the Law Society of New South
Wales:
The proposed amendment
will mean that point-scoring, using the complex and sometimes confusing Family
Court Rules, rather than identifying and resolving
the underlying issues may become the order of the day. It offends the principle set out in s97 (3)
Family Law Act 1975 which provides:
.In proceedings under this Act, the court
shall proceed without undue formality and shall endeavour to ensure that the
proceedings are not protracted..[49]
3.44 The Law Council of Australia, Family Law
Committee stated strong opposition to this part of the Bill, and providing two arguments against the
part:
The
"criminalizing" of conduct by the imposition of substantial civil
penalties (proposed to be in excess of $27,000) should be a matter for the
legislature, not for the Judges of the Court. It is the role of the legislature
to make the law and it is the role of the Judges to apply it.
The Family Court has
disclosed that its purpose in seeking this amendment is to enable it to impose
substantial financial penalties for non-compliance with Court procedures. The
Court already has ample means by which it can enforce compliance with
procedures.[50]
3.45
The Law Council argued that the courts have extensive
power to enforce procedures by making costs orders against litigants and also
against lawyers. It further argued that lawyers are already subject to sanction
by their own regulatory bodies for breach of professional or ethical
obligations in relation to procedural matters and representation generally.[51]
3.46
At the hearing, a representative of the
Attorney-General's Department noted that amendments to the Bill
would limit the possible penalty to 50 penalty units ($5,500). This was the first time the Committee had been
notified of the changes to the legislation as it was referred to the Committee.
3.47
In a supplementary submission to the Committee, the Law
Council of Australia, Family Law Section, responded to the proposed amendment
to the Bill:
FLS notes the
Government's proposed amendment in relation to civil penalties (item 140) but
strongly maintains its position that the imposition of substantial
quasi-criminal penalties for procedural matters is unnecessary, inappropriate,
is not seen as necessary by other courts, contributes to the trend towards
non-uniformity in family law court procedures and raises important issues of
equity and access to justice that cannot be addressed through the court's
traditional consultation processes or the disallowance procedure.[52]
The Committee's view
3.48
As with part 16 of the Bill,
part 17 attracted strong opposition, and the Committee has similar concerns
about both sections.
3.49
In relation to part 17 the Committee is concerned that
whilst the amendment to the Bill would limit any
penalty to 50 penalty units, this is still a substantial penalty ($5,500), and
the circumstances under which it is applied will not be set by Parliament, but
rather will merely be disallowable. Furthermore, the Committee was not
convinced by evidence or submissions that there is the need for the Court to
have such powers.
3.50
The Committee heard evidence that the proposed
provision may be used to impose penalties of up to $27,000. The Committee notes
that the Bill has been amended to limit the
possible penalty to $5,500, and heard no evidence as to why limiting the
penalty to $5,500 would make it more appropriate.
3.51
How such penalties are to be applied may have a
significant impact on the perception of the Family Court as an accessible forum
for seeking justice. The circumstances in which such penalties should be applied
should be determined by Parliament and not delegated.
3.52
The Committee recommends that part 17 not proceed in
its current form.
Part 19 interaction of family law and bankruptcy law
3.53
Part 19 entitles a third party creditor to become a
party to proceedings 'if the creditor may not be able to recover his or her
debt' if the order for property settlement were made. It also entitles any
other person 'whose interests would be affected by the making of the order' to
become a party to proceedings for an order for property settlement.[53]
3.54
The Law Society of New South Wales and the Credit Union
Services Corporation both supported this part of the Bill.[54]
3.55
The Law Council of Australia,
Family Law Section offered in-principle support for the part, but suggested
that the provisions should be amended for purposes of clarity. It suggested
that proposed section 79F be amended to read as follows (suggested amendments
are underlined):
The applicable Rules of Court may make provision for the
circumstances in which a person who:
(a) applies for an order under this
Part; or
(b) is a party to proceedings for an
order under this Part; is to give notice of the application to a person
who is not a party to the proceedings.[55]
3.56
It argued that these amendments would make it clear to
the Court the rules made under this section should allow for some
discrimination otherwise an applicant would need to notify every creditor.[56]
3.57
The NNWLS expressed concern over this part of the Bill,
arguing that the current drafting makes it unclear how the needs of the mother
and children are to be taken into account as against a third party creditor. It
noted that the provisions may make it harder for a custodial parent to retain
the family home for the benefit of their children.[57]
3.58 In supporting the provisions of Part 19, Mr Benjamin of the Law Society of New South Wales noted that the practice of
notifying creditors when assets are to be transferred already occurs:
Under the present law,
if the court know they are going to make an order which could impact upon a
creditor, we are obliged to let the creditor know anyway.
All this is doing is
putting in place a practical solution to something which we have been dealing
with in any event. It adds to the existing law. It does not tie in necessarily
with the bankruptcy provisions adversely in any way.[58]
The Committee's view
3.59 The Committee notes the suggestion of the
Law Council that proposed section 79F be amended to ensure the Court is able to
discriminate as to who must be notified (as opposed to being restricted to
requiring all parties to be notified). The Committee agrees with this
suggestion and believes proposed section 79F be amended to ensure the Court is
able to determine the circumstances regarding who is to be notified in such
proceedings.
Recommendations
Recommendation 1
3.60 The Committee recommends that Part 14 of the
Bill be amended to clarify that the recovery of
payments is possible where part payment of an order has been made.
Recommendation 2
3.61 The Committee recommends that either Part 16
of the Bill not proceed, or be amended to take account
of whether a party has inadvertently or deliberately failed to comply with
procedures.
Recommendation 3
3.62 The Committee Recommends that Part 17 not
proceed.
Recommendation 4
3.63 The Committee recommends that Part 19 be
amended to ensure that the Court is able to determine the circumstances in
which creditors are to be notified.
Recommendation 5
3.64 Subject to recommendations 1, 2, 3, and 4,
the Committee recommends that the Bill
proceed.
Senator Marise Payne
Chair