{"id":"qld:act-1990-098","name":"Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990","slug":"corporations-queensland-act-1990","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"qld","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"98 of 1990","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":104879,"registerId":"qld-act-1990-098-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-03","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"pt.1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"# Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"sec.1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title and purposes","content":"### sec.1 Short title and purposes\n\nThis Act may be cited as the Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990 .\nThe purposes of this Act are—\nto apply certain provisions of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 1989 (Cwlth) and of regulations under those Acts as laws of Queensland; and\nto apply certain other laws of the Commonwealth as laws of Queensland for the purpose of the administration and enforcement of the law relating to corporations, the securities industry, the futures industry and some other matters.\ns&#160;1 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.1-ssec.1) This Act may be cited as the Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990 .\n(sec.1-ssec.2) The purposes of this Act are— to apply certain provisions of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 1989 (Cwlth) and of regulations under those Acts as laws of Queensland; and to apply certain other laws of the Commonwealth as laws of Queensland for the purpose of the administration and enforcement of the law relating to corporations, the securities industry, the futures industry and some other matters.\n- (a) to apply certain provisions of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 1989 (Cwlth) and of regulations under those Acts as laws of Queensland; and\n- (b) to apply certain other laws of the Commonwealth as laws of Queensland for the purpose of the administration and enforcement of the law relating to corporations, the securities industry, the futures industry and some other matters.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"sec.2","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.2\n\ns&#160;2 om 28 November 1995 RA s&#160;37","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"sec.3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"### sec.3 Definitions\n\nIn this Act—\napplicable provision , in relation to a jurisdiction, means a provision of—\nthe Corporations Law, or Corporations Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or\nthe ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or\nin the case of the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, of its own force or because of another Commonwealth law, in relation to—\nan offence against; or\nan act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\na provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of the Capital Territory or any other jurisdiction; or\nin the case of a jurisdiction other than the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, because of a law of that jurisdiction, in relation to—\nan offence against; or\nan act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\na provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of that or any other jurisdiction.\ns&#160;3 def applicable provision amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASC Act ...\ns&#160;3 def ASC Act om 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASIC Act means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 1989 (Cwlth) .\ns&#160;3 def ASIC Act ins 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASIC Law has the meaning given by part&#160;11 .\ns&#160;3 def ASIC Law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASIC Law of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;58 .\ns&#160;3 def ASIC Law of Queensland amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASIC Regulations has the meaning given by part&#160;11 .\ns&#160;3 def ASIC Regulations amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nASIC Regulations of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;59 .\ns&#160;3 def ASIC Regulations of Queensland amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nauthority , in relation to the Commonwealth, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act , part&#160;8 .\nCapital Territory means the Australian Capital Territory and the Jervis Bay Territory.\ncommission means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;7 .\ns&#160;3 def commission sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nCommonwealth administrative laws means the following—\nthe Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 (Cwlth) , excluding part&#160;7 ;\nthe Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cwlth) ;\nthe Ombudsman Act 1976 (Cwlth) ;\nthe Privacy Act 1988 (Cwlth) ;\nand the provisions of the regulations in force for the time being under those Acts.\ns&#160;3 def Commonwealth administrative laws amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (1) ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (3) – (4) ; 2024 No.&#160;47 s&#160;78 sch&#160;2\nCommonwealth authority means an authority or body (whether incorporated or not) that is established or continued in existence by or under an Act of the Commonwealth.\ns&#160;3 def Commonwealth authority ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (2)\nCommonwealth law means any of the written or unwritten laws of the Commonwealth, including laws about the exercise of prerogative powers, rights and privileges, other than the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory, the ASIC Law of the Capital Territory or provisions prescribed, for the purposes of the definition of “Commonwealth law” in the Corporations Act , section&#160;4 , by regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;73 .\ns&#160;3 def Commonwealth Law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nCommonwealth Minister has the meaning given to “the Minister” by the Corporations Law, section&#160;80A (2) .\ncooperative scheme law has the meaning given by section&#160;84 .\nCorporations Act means the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth) .\nCorporations Law has the meaning given by part&#160;3 .\nCorporations Law of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;7 .\nCorporations Regulations has the meaning given by part&#160;3 .\nCorporations Regulations of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;8 .\ncorresponding law means—\nan Act of a jurisdiction (other than Queensland) that corresponds to this Act; or\nregulations made under such an Act; or\nthe Corporations Law, Corporations Regulations, ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, or any other applicable provision, of such a jurisdiction; or\nrules of court made because of such an Act.\ns&#160;3 def corresponding law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nFamily Court ...\ns&#160;3 def Family Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2)\nom 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (1)\nFederal Court means the Federal Court of Australia.\ns&#160;3 def Federal Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2)\nFull Court , in relation to a Supreme Court of a State or Territory, includes any court of the State or Territory to which appeals lie from a single judge of that Supreme Court.\njurisdiction means a State or the Capital Territory.\nlaw , in relation to the Capital Territory, means a law of or in force in the Capital Territory.\nMinister for this jurisdiction means the Minister for the time being charged with the administration of this Act and includes a Minister who, for the time being, is performing the duties of the Minister.\nmodifications includes additions, omissions and substitutions.\nnational scheme law has the meaning given by section&#160;60 .\nnational scheme law of this jurisdiction means—\nthis Act; or\nthe Corporations Law of Queensland; or\nthe ASIC Law of Queensland.\ns&#160;3 def national scheme law of this jurisdiction amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nNCSC means the National Companies and Securities Commission.\nofficer , in relation to the Commonwealth, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act , part&#160;8 .\nofficer of the Commonwealth has the same meaning as in section&#160;75 (v) of the Constitution of the Commonwealth.\ns&#160;3 def officer of the Commonwealth ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (2)\nState includes the Northern Territory.\nState Family Court , in relation to a State, means a court of that State to which the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , section&#160;41 applies because of a proclamation made under section&#160;41 (2) of that Act.\ns&#160;3 def State Family Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2)\nTerritory does not include the Northern Territory.\nthis jurisdiction means Queensland.\nIn this Act, a reference to a Commonwealth Act includes a reference to—\nthat Commonwealth Act as amended and in force for the time being; and\nan Act passed in substitution for that Act.\n(sec.3-ssec.1) In this Act— applicable provision , in relation to a jurisdiction, means a provision of— the Corporations Law, or Corporations Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or the ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or in the case of the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, of its own force or because of another Commonwealth law, in relation to— an offence against; or an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of; a provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of the Capital Territory or any other jurisdiction; or in the case of a jurisdiction other than the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, because of a law of that jurisdiction, in relation to— an offence against; or an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of; a provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of that or any other jurisdiction. s&#160;3 def applicable provision amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASC Act ... s&#160;3 def ASC Act om 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASIC Act means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 1989 (Cwlth) . s&#160;3 def ASIC Act ins 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASIC Law has the meaning given by part&#160;11 . s&#160;3 def ASIC Law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASIC Law of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;58 . s&#160;3 def ASIC Law of Queensland amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASIC Regulations has the meaning given by part&#160;11 . s&#160;3 def ASIC Regulations amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ASIC Regulations of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;59 . s&#160;3 def ASIC Regulations of Queensland amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch authority , in relation to the Commonwealth, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act , part&#160;8 . Capital Territory means the Australian Capital Territory and the Jervis Bay Territory. commission means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;7 . s&#160;3 def commission sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch Commonwealth administrative laws means the following— the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 (Cwlth) , excluding part&#160;7 ; the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cwlth) ; the Ombudsman Act 1976 (Cwlth) ; the Privacy Act 1988 (Cwlth) ; and the provisions of the regulations in force for the time being under those Acts. s&#160;3 def Commonwealth administrative laws amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (1) ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (3) – (4) ; 2024 No.&#160;47 s&#160;78 sch&#160;2 Commonwealth authority means an authority or body (whether incorporated or not) that is established or continued in existence by or under an Act of the Commonwealth. s&#160;3 def Commonwealth authority ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (2) Commonwealth law means any of the written or unwritten laws of the Commonwealth, including laws about the exercise of prerogative powers, rights and privileges, other than the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory, the ASIC Law of the Capital Territory or provisions prescribed, for the purposes of the definition of “Commonwealth law” in the Corporations Act , section&#160;4 , by regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;73 . s&#160;3 def Commonwealth Law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch Commonwealth Minister has the meaning given to “the Minister” by the Corporations Law, section&#160;80A (2) . cooperative scheme law has the meaning given by section&#160;84 . Corporations Act means the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth) . Corporations Law has the meaning given by part&#160;3 . Corporations Law of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;7 . Corporations Regulations has the meaning given by part&#160;3 . Corporations Regulations of Queensland means the provisions applying by reason of section&#160;8 . corresponding law means— an Act of a jurisdiction (other than Queensland) that corresponds to this Act; or regulations made under such an Act; or the Corporations Law, Corporations Regulations, ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, or any other applicable provision, of such a jurisdiction; or rules of court made because of such an Act. s&#160;3 def corresponding law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch Family Court ... s&#160;3 def Family Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2) om 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (1) Federal Court means the Federal Court of Australia. s&#160;3 def Federal Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2) Full Court , in relation to a Supreme Court of a State or Territory, includes any court of the State or Territory to which appeals lie from a single judge of that Supreme Court. jurisdiction means a State or the Capital Territory. law , in relation to the Capital Territory, means a law of or in force in the Capital Territory. Minister for this jurisdiction means the Minister for the time being charged with the administration of this Act and includes a Minister who, for the time being, is performing the duties of the Minister. modifications includes additions, omissions and substitutions. national scheme law has the meaning given by section&#160;60 . national scheme law of this jurisdiction means— this Act; or the Corporations Law of Queensland; or the ASIC Law of Queensland. s&#160;3 def national scheme law of this jurisdiction amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch NCSC means the National Companies and Securities Commission. officer , in relation to the Commonwealth, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act , part&#160;8 . officer of the Commonwealth has the same meaning as in section&#160;75 (v) of the Constitution of the Commonwealth. s&#160;3 def officer of the Commonwealth ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;13 (2) State includes the Northern Territory. State Family Court , in relation to a State, means a court of that State to which the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , section&#160;41 applies because of a proclamation made under section&#160;41 (2) of that Act. s&#160;3 def State Family Court ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;4 (2) Territory does not include the Northern Territory. this jurisdiction means Queensland.\n(sec.3-ssec.2) In this Act, a reference to a Commonwealth Act includes a reference to— that Commonwealth Act as amended and in force for the time being; and an Act passed in substitution for that Act.\n- (a) the Corporations Law, or Corporations Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or\n- (b) the ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, of that jurisdiction; or\n- (c) in the case of the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, of its own force or because of another Commonwealth law, in relation to— (i) an offence against; or (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- (i) an offence against; or\n- (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- a provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of the Capital Territory or any other jurisdiction; or\n- (d) in the case of a jurisdiction other than the Capital Territory—a Commonwealth law as applying, because of a law of that jurisdiction, in relation to— (i) an offence against; or (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- (i) an offence against; or\n- (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- a provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision of that or any other jurisdiction.\n- (i) an offence against; or\n- (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- (i) an offence against; or\n- (ii) an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of;\n- (a) the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 (Cwlth) , excluding part&#160;7 ;\n- (b) the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cwlth) ;\n- (c) the Ombudsman Act 1976 (Cwlth) ;\n- (d) the Privacy Act 1988 (Cwlth) ;\n- (a) an Act of a jurisdiction (other than Queensland) that corresponds to this Act; or\n- (b) regulations made under such an Act; or\n- (c) the Corporations Law, Corporations Regulations, ASIC Law, or ASIC Regulations, or any other applicable provision, of such a jurisdiction; or\n- (d) rules of court made because of such an Act.\n- (a) this Act; or\n- (b) the Corporations Law of Queensland; or\n- (c) the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n- (a) that Commonwealth Act as amended and in force for the time being; and\n- (b) an Act passed in substitution for that Act.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"sec.4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Australian Capital Territory","content":"### sec.4 Australian Capital Territory\n\nFor the purposes of the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction, the Jervis Bay Territory is taken to be part of the Australian Capital Territory.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"sec.5","sectionType":"section","heading":"This Act and applicable provisions of Queensland not to be affected by later State laws","content":"### sec.5 This Act and applicable provisions of Queensland not to be affected by later State laws\n\nAn Act enacted, or an instrument made under an Act, after the commencement of this section is not to be interpreted as amending or repealing, or otherwise altering the effect or operation of, this Act or the applicable provisions of Queensland.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not affect the interpretation of an Act, or of an instrument made under an Act, so far as that Act provides expressly for that Act or instrument, as the case may be, to have effect despite a specified provision, or despite any provision, of this Act or the applicable provisions of Queensland.\n(sec.5-ssec.1) An Act enacted, or an instrument made under an Act, after the commencement of this section is not to be interpreted as amending or repealing, or otherwise altering the effect or operation of, this Act or the applicable provisions of Queensland.\n(sec.5-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not affect the interpretation of an Act, or of an instrument made under an Act, so far as that Act provides expressly for that Act or instrument, as the case may be, to have effect despite a specified provision, or despite any provision, of this Act or the applicable provisions of Queensland.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"sec.6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Operation of other Queensland laws","content":"### sec.6 Operation of other Queensland laws\n\nExcept as otherwise provided in this Act, nothing in this Act or the applicable provisions of Queensland affects the operation after the commencement of this section of an Act enacted before that commencement or of an instrument made under such an Act.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"pt.2","sectionType":"part","heading":"The Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland","content":"# The Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"sec.7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application in Queensland of the Corporations Law","content":"### sec.7 Application in Queensland of the Corporations Law\n\nThe Corporations Law set out in the Corporations Act , section&#160;82 as in force immediately before the repeal of that section—\napplies as a law of Queensland; and\nas so applying, may be referred to as the Corporations Law of Queensland.\ns&#160;7 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n- (a) applies as a law of Queensland; and\n- (b) as so applying, may be referred to as the Corporations Law of Queensland.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"sec.8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of regulations","content":"### sec.8 Application of regulations\n\nThe regulations in force, immediately before the repeal of the Corporations Act , under section&#160;22 of that Act—\napply as regulations in force for the purposes of the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\nas so applying, may be referred to as the Corporations Regulations of Queensland.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(3) of this section, where regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;22 take effect from a specified day that is earlier than the day when they are notified in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette under the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) , section&#160;48 (1) , subsection&#160;(1) of this section has effect, and is taken always to have had effect, as if those regulations had taken effect under the Corporations Act from the specified day.\nTo the extent that a provision of the Corporations Regulations of Queensland is taken because of a particular application of subsection&#160;(2) to have effect, or to have had effect, before the day of notification of the regulations referred to in that subsection, the provision does not operate so as to—\naffect a private person’s rights as at that day so as to disadvantage that person; or\nimpose a liability on a private person in respect of anything done or omitted to be done before that day.\nIn subsection&#160;(3) —\nprivate person means a person other than—\nthe Commonwealth, a State or the Capital Territory; or\nan authority of the Commonwealth, of a State or of the Capital Territory.\nSubsection&#160;(3) does not affect any other operation that the provision has because of subsection&#160;(2) or otherwise.\ns&#160;8 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.8-ssec.1) The regulations in force, immediately before the repeal of the Corporations Act , under section&#160;22 of that Act— apply as regulations in force for the purposes of the Corporations Law of Queensland; and as so applying, may be referred to as the Corporations Regulations of Queensland.\n(sec.8-ssec.2) Subject to subsection&#160;(3) of this section, where regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;22 take effect from a specified day that is earlier than the day when they are notified in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette under the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) , section&#160;48 (1) , subsection&#160;(1) of this section has effect, and is taken always to have had effect, as if those regulations had taken effect under the Corporations Act from the specified day.\n(sec.8-ssec.3) To the extent that a provision of the Corporations Regulations of Queensland is taken because of a particular application of subsection&#160;(2) to have effect, or to have had effect, before the day of notification of the regulations referred to in that subsection, the provision does not operate so as to— affect a private person’s rights as at that day so as to disadvantage that person; or impose a liability on a private person in respect of anything done or omitted to be done before that day.\n(sec.8-ssec.4) In subsection&#160;(3) — private person means a person other than— the Commonwealth, a State or the Capital Territory; or an authority of the Commonwealth, of a State or of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.8-ssec.5) Subsection&#160;(3) does not affect any other operation that the provision has because of subsection&#160;(2) or otherwise.\n- (a) apply as regulations in force for the purposes of the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\n- (b) as so applying, may be referred to as the Corporations Regulations of Queensland.\n- (a) affect a private person’s rights as at that day so as to disadvantage that person; or\n- (b) impose a liability on a private person in respect of anything done or omitted to be done before that day.\n- (a) the Commonwealth, a State or the Capital Territory; or\n- (b) an authority of the Commonwealth, of a State or of the Capital Territory.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"sec.9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation of some expressions in the Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland","content":"### sec.9 Interpretation of some expressions in the Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland\n\nIn the Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland—\nthe Minister for this jurisdiction means the Minister for the time being charged with the administration of this Act and includes a Minister who, for the time being, is performing the duties of the Minister.\nthis jurisdiction means Queensland.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"sec.10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation law","content":"### sec.10 Interpretation law\n\nSubject to the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;1.2 , the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) as in force at the commencement of the Corporations Act , section&#160;8 , applies as a law of Queensland in relation to the Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland and any instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations (other than application orders under section&#160;111A of that Law) and so applies as if that Law were an Act of the Commonwealth and those regulations or instruments were regulations or instruments made under such an Act.\nThe Acts Interpretation Act 1954 does not apply in relation to the Corporations Law, or the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland or an application order or any other instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations.\n(sec.10-ssec.1) Subject to the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;1.2 , the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) as in force at the commencement of the Corporations Act , section&#160;8 , applies as a law of Queensland in relation to the Corporations Law, and the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland and any instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations (other than application orders under section&#160;111A of that Law) and so applies as if that Law were an Act of the Commonwealth and those regulations or instruments were regulations or instruments made under such an Act.\n(sec.10-ssec.2) The Acts Interpretation Act 1954 does not apply in relation to the Corporations Law, or the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland or an application order or any other instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Citing the Corporations Law and the Corporations Regulations","content":"# Citing the Corporations Law and the Corporations Regulations","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"sec.11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simpler citation of Corporations Law, and Corporations Regulations, of Queensland","content":"### sec.11 Simpler citation of Corporations Law, and Corporations Regulations, of Queensland\n\nThe Corporations Law of Queensland may be referred to simply as the Corporations Law.\nThe Corporations Regulations of Queensland may be referred to simply as the Corporations Regulations.\nThis section has effect subject to section&#160;13 .\n(sec.11-ssec.1) The Corporations Law of Queensland may be referred to simply as the Corporations Law.\n(sec.11-ssec.2) The Corporations Regulations of Queensland may be referred to simply as the Corporations Regulations.\n(sec.11-ssec.3) This section has effect subject to section&#160;13 .","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"sec.12","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to Corporations Law, and Corporations Regulations, of other jurisdictions","content":"### sec.12 References to Corporations Law, and Corporations Regulations, of other jurisdictions\n\nThis section has effect for the purposes of an Act, a law of Queensland or an instrument made under an Act or under such a law.\nWhere a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland that corresponds to section&#160;7 of this Act provides that the Corporations Law set out in the Corporations Act , section&#160;82 applies as law of that jurisdiction, the Corporations Law of that jurisdiction is the Corporations Law so set out, applying as law of that jurisdiction.\nWhere a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland that corresponds to section&#160;8 of this Act provides that the regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;22 apply for the purposes of the Corporations Law of that jurisdiction, the Corporations Regulations of that jurisdiction are those regulations as so applying.\ns&#160;12 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.12-ssec.1) This section has effect for the purposes of an Act, a law of Queensland or an instrument made under an Act or under such a law.\n(sec.12-ssec.2) Where a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland that corresponds to section&#160;7 of this Act provides that the Corporations Law set out in the Corporations Act , section&#160;82 applies as law of that jurisdiction, the Corporations Law of that jurisdiction is the Corporations Law so set out, applying as law of that jurisdiction.\n(sec.12-ssec.3) Where a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland that corresponds to section&#160;8 of this Act provides that the regulations under the Corporations Act , section&#160;22 apply for the purposes of the Corporations Law of that jurisdiction, the Corporations Regulations of that jurisdiction are those regulations as so applying.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"sec.13","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to Corporations Law and Corporations Regulations","content":"### sec.13 References to Corporations Law and Corporations Regulations\n\nThe object of this section is to help ensure that the Corporations Law of Queensland operates, so far as possible, as if that Law, together with the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, constituted a single national Corporations Law applying of its own force throughout Australia.\nSubject to this section, a reference in an instrument to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, is to be taken, for the purposes of the laws of Queensland—\nto be a reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland; and\nto include a separate reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect except so far as the contrary intention appears in the instrument, or the context of the reference otherwise requires.\nWithout limiting subsection&#160;(3) , subsection&#160;(2) does not apply in relation to a reference expressed as a reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of a jurisdiction.\nIn this section—\ninstrument means—\nan Act or an instrument made under an Act; or\na law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or\nan award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or\nany other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\na notice, certificate or licence; or\nan agreement; or\nan application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or\nan indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or\nany other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or\nany other document whatever.\n(sec.13-ssec.1) The object of this section is to help ensure that the Corporations Law of Queensland operates, so far as possible, as if that Law, together with the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, constituted a single national Corporations Law applying of its own force throughout Australia.\n(sec.13-ssec.2) Subject to this section, a reference in an instrument to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, is to be taken, for the purposes of the laws of Queensland— to be a reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland; and to include a separate reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\n(sec.13-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect except so far as the contrary intention appears in the instrument, or the context of the reference otherwise requires.\n(sec.13-ssec.4) Without limiting subsection&#160;(3) , subsection&#160;(2) does not apply in relation to a reference expressed as a reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of a jurisdiction.\n(sec.13-ssec.5) In this section— instrument means— an Act or an instrument made under an Act; or a law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or an award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or a notice, certificate or licence; or an agreement; or an application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or an indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or any other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or any other document whatever.\n- (a) to be a reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of Queensland; and\n- (b) to include a separate reference to the Corporations Law, or to the Corporations Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\n- (a) an Act or an instrument made under an Act; or\n- (b) a law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or\n- (c) an award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or\n- (d) any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\n- (e) a notice, certificate or licence; or\n- (f) an agreement; or\n- (g) an application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or\n- (h) an indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or\n- (i) any other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or\n- (j) any other document whatever.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Application of the Corporations Law to the Crown","content":"# Application of the Corporations Law to the Crown","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"sec.14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation","content":"### sec.14 Interpretation\n\nTo avoid doubt, a reference in this part to the Crown in a particular right includes a reference to an instrumentality or agency (whether a body corporate or not) of the Crown in that right.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"sec.15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Corporations Law of Queensland","content":"### sec.15 Corporations Law of Queensland\n\nChapter&#160;5 (except part&#160;5.8 ) of the Corporations Law of Queensland binds the Crown not only in right of the State of Queensland but also, so far as the legislative power of the Parliament permits, the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, of each of the other States, of the Capital Territory, of the Northern Territory and of Norfolk Island.\nTo avoid doubt, the Corporations Law of Queensland, chapter&#160;7 does not bind the Crown in right of the State of Queensland, of the Commonwealth, of any other State, of the Capital Territory, of the Northern Territory or of Norfolk Island.\nThe Corporations Law of Queensland, chapters 6 to 6D —\nbind the Commonwealth as far as the legislative power of the Parliament permits; and\ndo not bind the State, the other States or Norfolk Island.\ns&#160;15 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;4\n(sec.15-ssec.1) Chapter&#160;5 (except part&#160;5.8 ) of the Corporations Law of Queensland binds the Crown not only in right of the State of Queensland but also, so far as the legislative power of the Parliament permits, the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, of each of the other States, of the Capital Territory, of the Northern Territory and of Norfolk Island.\n(sec.15-ssec.2) To avoid doubt, the Corporations Law of Queensland, chapter&#160;7 does not bind the Crown in right of the State of Queensland, of the Commonwealth, of any other State, of the Capital Territory, of the Northern Territory or of Norfolk Island.\n(sec.15-ssec.3) The Corporations Law of Queensland, chapters 6 to 6D — bind the Commonwealth as far as the legislative power of the Parliament permits; and do not bind the State, the other States or Norfolk Island.\n- (a) bind the Commonwealth as far as the legislative power of the Parliament permits; and\n- (b) do not bind the State, the other States or Norfolk Island.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"sec.16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Corporations Law of other jurisdictions","content":"### sec.16 Corporations Law of other jurisdictions\n\nChapter&#160;5 (except part&#160;5.8 ) of the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland binds the Crown in right of the State of Queensland.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"sec.17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Crown not liable to prosecution","content":"### sec.17 Crown not liable to prosecution\n\nNothing in this part, or in the Corporations Law, renders the Crown in any right liable to be prosecuted for an offence.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"sec.18","sectionType":"section","heading":"This part overrides the prerogative","content":"### sec.18 This part overrides the prerogative\n\nWhere, because of this part, a provision of a law of another jurisdiction binds the Crown in right of the State of Queensland, the Crown in that right is subject to that provision despite any prerogative right or privilege.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Application orders","content":"# Application orders","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"sec.19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commonwealth Minister to obtain consent of State Minister","content":"### sec.19 Commonwealth Minister to obtain consent of State Minister\n\nDespite part&#160;1.3 of the Corporations Law of Queensland and section&#160;20 of this Act, the Commonwealth Minister may only make an order under section&#160;111A of that Law, or that section as applying because of section&#160;20 of this Act, with the consent of the Minister for this jurisdiction.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"sec.20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application orders for ASIC Law","content":"### sec.20 Application orders for ASIC Law\n\nPart&#160;1.3 of the Corporations Law of Queensland applies for the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland as if the provisions of the ASIC Law of Queensland were provisions of the Corporations Law of Queensland.\ns&#160;20 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"pt.6","sectionType":"part","heading":null,"content":"","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"sec.21","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.21\n\ns&#160;21 om 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;5","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"pt.7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Imposition of fees and taxes","content":"# Imposition of fees and taxes","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"sec.22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Fees (including taxes) for chargeable matters","content":"### sec.22 Fees (including taxes) for chargeable matters\n\nThis section imposes the fees (including fees that are taxes) that the Corporations Regulations of Queensland prescribe.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"sec.23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contributions and levies for fidelity funds of securities exchanges","content":"### sec.23 Contributions and levies for fidelity funds of securities exchanges\n\nThis section imposes—\nthe contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;902 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a securities exchange, or to a partnership in a member firm recognised by a securities exchange; and\nthe annual contribution payable under section&#160;902 (2) of that Law by a member of a securities exchange; and\nany levy payable under section&#160;904 of that Law by a member of a securities exchange.\nAn expression has in subsection&#160;(1) the meaning it would have if this section were in the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;7.9 .\n(sec.23-ssec.1) This section imposes— the contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;902 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a securities exchange, or to a partnership in a member firm recognised by a securities exchange; and the annual contribution payable under section&#160;902 (2) of that Law by a member of a securities exchange; and any levy payable under section&#160;904 of that Law by a member of a securities exchange.\n(sec.23-ssec.2) An expression has in subsection&#160;(1) the meaning it would have if this section were in the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;7.9 .\n- (a) the contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;902 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a securities exchange, or to a partnership in a member firm recognised by a securities exchange; and\n- (b) the annual contribution payable under section&#160;902 (2) of that Law by a member of a securities exchange; and\n- (c) any levy payable under section&#160;904 of that Law by a member of a securities exchange.","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"sec.24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Levies for national guarantee fund","content":"### sec.24 Levies for national guarantee fund\n\nThis section imposes any levy that is payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;938 , 940 or 941 .","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"sec.25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contributions and levies for fidelity funds of futures organisations","content":"### sec.25 Contributions and levies for fidelity funds of futures organisations\n\nThis section imposes—\nthe contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;1234 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a futures organisation; and\nthe annual contribution payable under section&#160;1234 (2) of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation; and\nany levy payable under section&#160;1235 of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation.\nAn expression has in subsection&#160;(1) the meaning it would have if this section were in the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;8.6 .\n(sec.25-ssec.1) This section imposes— the contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;1234 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a futures organisation; and the annual contribution payable under section&#160;1234 (2) of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation; and any levy payable under section&#160;1235 of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation.\n(sec.25-ssec.2) An expression has in subsection&#160;(1) the meaning it would have if this section were in the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;8.6 .\n- (a) the contribution payable under the Corporations Law of Queensland, section&#160;1234 (1) by a person who wishes to be admitted to membership of a futures organisation; and\n- (b) the annual contribution payable under section&#160;1234 (2) of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation; and\n- (c) any levy payable under section&#160;1235 of that Law by a contributing member of a futures organisation.","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"pt.8","sectionType":"part","heading":"National administration and enforcement of the Corporations Law","content":"# National administration and enforcement of the Corporations Law","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"pt.8-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Preliminary","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"sec.26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Object","content":"### sec.26 Object\n\nThe object of this part is to help ensure that—\nthe Corporations Law of Queensland, and the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, are administered and enforced on a national basis, in the same way as if those Laws constituted a single law of the Commonwealth; and\nthe ASIC Law of Queensland, and the ASIC Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, are administered and enforced on a national basis, in the same way as if those Laws constituted a single law of the Commonwealth.\ns&#160;26 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n- (a) the Corporations Law of Queensland, and the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, are administered and enforced on a national basis, in the same way as if those Laws constituted a single law of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) the ASIC Law of Queensland, and the ASIC Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, are administered and enforced on a national basis, in the same way as if those Laws constituted a single law of the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"sec.27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of part","content":"### sec.27 Effect of part\n\nThis part has effect subject to this Act (in particular part&#160;9 ), the Corporations Law of Queensland and the ASIC Law of Queensland.\nNothing in this part limits the generality of anything else in it.\ns&#160;27 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.27-ssec.1) This part has effect subject to this Act (in particular part&#160;9 ), the Corporations Law of Queensland and the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n(sec.27-ssec.2) Nothing in this part limits the generality of anything else in it.","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"pt.8-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Offences against applicable provisions","content":"## Offences against applicable provisions","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"sec.28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Object","content":"### sec.28 Object\n\nThe object of this division is to further the object of this part by providing—\nfor an offence against an applicable provision of Queensland to be treated as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth; and\nfor an offence against an applicable provision of another jurisdiction to be treated in Queensland as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth.\nThe purposes for which an offence is to be treated as mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) include, for example (but without limitation)—\nthe investigation and prosecution of offences; and\nthe arrest, custody, bail, trial and conviction of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\nproceedings relating to a matter referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) or (b) ; and\nappeals and review relating to criminal proceedings and to proceedings of the kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(c) ; and\nthe sentencing, punishment and release of persons convicted of offences; and\nfines, penalties and forfeitures; and\nliability to make reparation in connection with offences; and\nproceeds of crime; and\nspent convictions.\n(sec.28-ssec.1) The object of this division is to further the object of this part by providing— for an offence against an applicable provision of Queensland to be treated as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth; and for an offence against an applicable provision of another jurisdiction to be treated in Queensland as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth.\n(sec.28-ssec.2) The purposes for which an offence is to be treated as mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) include, for example (but without limitation)— the investigation and prosecution of offences; and the arrest, custody, bail, trial and conviction of offenders or persons charged with offences; and proceedings relating to a matter referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) or (b) ; and appeals and review relating to criminal proceedings and to proceedings of the kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(c) ; and the sentencing, punishment and release of persons convicted of offences; and fines, penalties and forfeitures; and liability to make reparation in connection with offences; and proceeds of crime; and spent convictions.\n- (a) for an offence against an applicable provision of Queensland to be treated as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) for an offence against an applicable provision of another jurisdiction to be treated in Queensland as if it were an offence against a law of the Commonwealth.\n- (a) the investigation and prosecution of offences; and\n- (b) the arrest, custody, bail, trial and conviction of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\n- (c) proceedings relating to a matter referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) or (b) ; and\n- (d) appeals and review relating to criminal proceedings and to proceedings of the kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(c) ; and\n- (e) the sentencing, punishment and release of persons convicted of offences; and\n- (f) fines, penalties and forfeitures; and\n- (g) liability to make reparation in connection with offences; and\n- (h) proceeds of crime; and\n- (i) spent convictions.","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"sec.29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth laws in relation to offences against applicable provisions","content":"### sec.29 Application of Commonwealth laws in relation to offences against applicable provisions\n\nThe Commonwealth laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of Queensland as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of Queensland.\nFor the purposes of a law of Queensland, an offence against the applicable provisions of Queensland—\nis taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\nis taken not to be an offence against the laws of Queensland.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n(sec.29-ssec.1) The Commonwealth laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of Queensland as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of Queensland.\n(sec.29-ssec.2) For the purposes of a law of Queensland, an offence against the applicable provisions of Queensland— is taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and is taken not to be an offence against the laws of Queensland.\n(sec.29-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n- (a) is taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) is taken not to be an offence against the laws of Queensland.","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"sec.30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth laws in relation to offences against applicable provisions of other jurisdictions","content":"### sec.30 Application of Commonwealth laws in relation to offences against applicable provisions of other jurisdictions\n\nThe Commonwealth laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of that other jurisdiction.\nFor the purposes of a law of Queensland, an offence against the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction—\nis taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\nis taken not to be an offence against the laws of that jurisdiction.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\nThis section does not require, prohibit, empower, authorise or otherwise provide for, the doing of an act outside Queensland.\ns&#160;30 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;5\n(sec.30-ssec.1) The Commonwealth laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of that other jurisdiction.\n(sec.30-ssec.2) For the purposes of a law of Queensland, an offence against the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction— is taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and is taken not to be an offence against the laws of that jurisdiction.\n(sec.30-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n(sec.30-ssec.4) This section does not require, prohibit, empower, authorise or otherwise provide for, the doing of an act outside Queensland.\n- (a) is taken to be an offence against the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) is taken not to be an offence against the laws of that jurisdiction.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"sec.31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions and powers conferred on Commonwealth authorities","content":"### sec.31 Functions and powers conferred on Commonwealth authorities\n\nA Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;29 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of Queensland.\nA Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;30 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an offence against an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of another jurisdiction.\nThe function or power referred to in subsection&#160;(2) may only be performed or exercised in Queensland.\nIn performing a function or exercising a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) , an officer or authority of the Commonwealth must act as nearly as practicable as the officer or authority would act in performing or exercising the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of the Capital Territory.\nA Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;29 or 30 applies as if it did not contain any provision empowering a Minister of State for the Commonwealth to give any directions in relation to the performance of a function or the exercise of a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) .\ns&#160;31 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.31-ssec.1) A Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;29 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an offence against the applicable provisions of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of Queensland.\n(sec.31-ssec.2) A Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;30 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an offence against an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of another jurisdiction.\n(sec.31-ssec.3) The function or power referred to in subsection&#160;(2) may only be performed or exercised in Queensland.\n(sec.31-ssec.4) In performing a function or exercising a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) , an officer or authority of the Commonwealth must act as nearly as practicable as the officer or authority would act in performing or exercising the same function or power in relation to an offence against the corresponding applicable provision of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.31-ssec.5) A Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;29 or 30 applies as if it did not contain any provision empowering a Minister of State for the Commonwealth to give any directions in relation to the performance of a function or the exercise of a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) .","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"sec.32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reference in Commonwealth law to a provision of another law","content":"### sec.32 Reference in Commonwealth law to a provision of another law\n\nA reference in a Commonwealth law to a provision of that or another Commonwealth law is taken, for the purposes of section&#160;29 or 30 , to be a reference to that provision as applying because of that section.","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"sec.33","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.33\n\ns&#160;33 om 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"pt.8-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Administrative law","content":"## Administrative law","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"sec.34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Object","content":"### sec.34 Object\n\nThe object of this division is to further the object of this part by providing that the Commonwealth administrative laws—\napply to the applicable provisions of Queensland; and\napply, in Queensland, to the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction;\nas if the applicable provisions were those of the Capital Territory.\n- (a) apply to the applicable provisions of Queensland; and\n- (b) apply, in Queensland, to the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction;","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"sec.35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth administrative laws in relation to applicable provisions","content":"### sec.35 Application of Commonwealth administrative laws in relation to applicable provisions\n\nThe Commonwealth administrative laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to any act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of Queensland as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of Queensland.\nFor the purposes of a law of Queensland, an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of Queensland—\nis taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\nis taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of Queensland.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n(sec.35-ssec.1) The Commonwealth administrative laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to any act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of Queensland as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of Queensland.\n(sec.35-ssec.2) For the purposes of a law of Queensland, an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of Queensland— is taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and is taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of Queensland.\n(sec.35-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n- (a) is taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) is taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of Queensland.","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"sec.36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth administrative laws in relation to applicable provisions of other jurisdictions","content":"### sec.36 Application of Commonwealth administrative laws in relation to applicable provisions of other jurisdictions\n\nThe Commonwealth administrative laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to any act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of that jurisdiction.\nFor the purposes of a law of Queensland, an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction—\nis taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\nis taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of that jurisdiction.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\nThis section does not require, prohibit, empower, authorise or otherwise provide for the doing of an act outside Queensland.\n(sec.36-ssec.1) The Commonwealth administrative laws apply as laws of Queensland in relation to any act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth and were not laws of that jurisdiction.\n(sec.36-ssec.2) For the purposes of a law of Queensland, an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the applicable provisions of another jurisdiction— is taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and is taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of that jurisdiction.\n(sec.36-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect for the purposes of a law of Queensland except as prescribed by regulations under section&#160;80 .\n(sec.36-ssec.4) This section does not require, prohibit, empower, authorise or otherwise provide for the doing of an act outside Queensland.\n- (a) is taken to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of the Commonwealth, in the same way as if those provisions were laws of the Commonwealth; and\n- (b) is taken not to be an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the laws of that jurisdiction.","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"sec.36A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Construction of references to part&#160;7 of Commonwealth Administrative Review Tribunal Act","content":"### sec.36A Construction of references to part&#160;7 of Commonwealth Administrative Review Tribunal Act\n\nFor sections&#160;35 and 36 , a reference in a provision of the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 (Cwlth) , as that provision applies as a law of Queensland, to the whole or part of part&#160;7 of that Act is taken to be a reference to the whole or part of that part as it has effect as a law of the Commonwealth.\ns&#160;36A ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;14\nsub 2024 No.&#160;47 s&#160;78 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"sec.37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions and powers conferred on Commonwealth authorities","content":"### sec.37 Functions and powers conferred on Commonwealth authorities\n\nA Commonwealth administrative law applying because of section&#160;35 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of Queensland.\nA Commonwealth administrative law applying because of section&#160;36 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of another jurisdiction.\nThe function or power referred to in subsection&#160;(2) may only be performed or exercised in Queensland.\nIn performing a function or exercising a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) , an officer or authority of the Commonwealth must act as nearly as practicable as the officer or authority would act in performing or exercising the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of the Capital Territory.\nA Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;35 or 36 applies as if it did not contain any provision empowering a Minister of State for the Commonwealth to give any directions in relation to the performance of a function or the exercise of a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) .\ns&#160;37 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.37-ssec.1) A Commonwealth administrative law applying because of section&#160;35 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of Queensland.\n(sec.37-ssec.2) A Commonwealth administrative law applying because of section&#160;36 that confers on an officer or authority of the Commonwealth a function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of an applicable provision of the Capital Territory also confers on the officer or authority the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of another jurisdiction.\n(sec.37-ssec.3) The function or power referred to in subsection&#160;(2) may only be performed or exercised in Queensland.\n(sec.37-ssec.4) In performing a function or exercising a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) , an officer or authority of the Commonwealth must act as nearly as practicable as the officer or authority would act in performing or exercising the same function or power in relation to an act, matter or thing arising under or in respect of the corresponding applicable provision of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.37-ssec.5) A Commonwealth law applying because of section&#160;35 or 36 applies as if it did not contain any provision empowering a Minister of State for the Commonwealth to give any directions in relation to the performance of a function or the exercise of a power conferred by subsection&#160;(1) or (2) .","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"sec.38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reference in Commonwealth administrative law to a provision of another law","content":"### sec.38 Reference in Commonwealth administrative law to a provision of another law\n\nA reference in a Commonwealth administrative law to a provision of that or another Commonwealth administrative law is taken for the purposes of section&#160;35 or 36 , to be a reference to that provision as applying because of that section.","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"sec.39","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.39\n\ns&#160;39 om 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9","sectionType":"part","heading":"Jurisdiction and procedure of courts","content":"# Jurisdiction and procedure of courts","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Vesting and cross-vesting of civil jurisdiction","content":"## Vesting and cross-vesting of civil jurisdiction","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"sec.40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Operation of division","content":"### sec.40 Operation of division\n\nThis division provides in relation to—\nthe jurisdiction of courts in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\nthe jurisdiction of the courts of Queensland in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; and\nthe jurisdiction of courts in respect of matters arising under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) involving or related to decisions made under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory by Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth; and\nthe jurisdiction of courts in civil matters in respect of decisions made by officers of the Commonwealth to prosecute persons for offences against the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory and related criminal justice process decisions;\nand so provides to the exclusion of the Jurisdiction of Courts (Cross-vesting) Act 1987 .\nNothing in this division affects any other jurisdiction of any court.\ns&#160;40 amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;4 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;15\n(sec.40-ssec.1) This division provides in relation to— the jurisdiction of courts in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; and the jurisdiction of the courts of Queensland in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; and the jurisdiction of courts in respect of matters arising under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) involving or related to decisions made under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory by Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth; and the jurisdiction of courts in civil matters in respect of decisions made by officers of the Commonwealth to prosecute persons for offences against the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory and related criminal justice process decisions; and so provides to the exclusion of the Jurisdiction of Courts (Cross-vesting) Act 1987 .\n(sec.40-ssec.2) Nothing in this division affects any other jurisdiction of any court.\n- (a) the jurisdiction of courts in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\n- (b) the jurisdiction of the courts of Queensland in respect of civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; and\n- (c) the jurisdiction of courts in respect of matters arising under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) involving or related to decisions made under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory by Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth; and\n- (d) the jurisdiction of courts in civil matters in respect of decisions made by officers of the Commonwealth to prosecute persons for offences against the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory and related criminal justice process decisions;","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"sec.41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation","content":"### sec.41 Interpretation\n\nIn this division—\ncivil matter means a matter other than a criminal matter.\ns&#160;41 def civil matter ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\nCorporations Law has the extended meaning given by subsection&#160;(2) .\ns&#160;41 def Corporations Law ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\njudgment means a judgment, decree or order, whether final or interlocutory.\nlower court means a court of a State or Territory that is not a superior court.\ns&#160;41 def lower court ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\nsuperior court means the Supreme Court of a State or Territory or a State Family Court.\ns&#160;41 def superior court ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\nsub 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;16 (1) – (2)\nsuperior court matter means a civil matter the Corporations Law clearly intends (for example, by use of the Court ) to be dealt with only by a superior court.\ns&#160;41 def superior court matter ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\nIn this division—\na reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to—\nthe Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\nthe ASIC Law of Queensland; and\nthe ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\nany other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\nthis Act; and\nregulations made under this Act; and\nrules of court made by the Supreme Court of Queensland because of a provision of this Act; and\nrules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, or a State Family Court of another State, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\na reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\ns&#160;41 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;6 (1) ; 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;16 (3) – (4)\n(sec.41-ssec.1) In this division— civil matter means a matter other than a criminal matter. s&#160;41 def civil matter ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5 Corporations Law has the extended meaning given by subsection&#160;(2) . s&#160;41 def Corporations Law ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5 judgment means a judgment, decree or order, whether final or interlocutory. lower court means a court of a State or Territory that is not a superior court. s&#160;41 def lower court ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5 superior court means the Supreme Court of a State or Territory or a State Family Court. s&#160;41 def superior court ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5 sub 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;16 (1) – (2) superior court matter means a civil matter the Corporations Law clearly intends (for example, by use of the Court ) to be dealt with only by a superior court. s&#160;41 def superior court matter ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;5\n(sec.41-ssec.2) In this division— a reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to— the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and the ASIC Law of Queensland; and the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and this Act; and regulations made under this Act; and rules of court made by the Supreme Court of Queensland because of a provision of this Act; and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, or a State Family Court of another State, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and a reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\n- (a) a reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to— (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and (v) this Act; and (vi) regulations made under this Act; and (vii) rules of court made by the Supreme Court of Queensland because of a provision of this Act; and (viii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, or a State Family Court of another State, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\n- (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\n- (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\n- (v) this Act; and\n- (vi) regulations made under this Act; and\n- (vii) rules of court made by the Supreme Court of Queensland because of a provision of this Act; and\n- (viii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, or a State Family Court of another State, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\n- (b) a reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\n- (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\n- (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\n- (v) this Act; and\n- (vi) regulations made under this Act; and\n- (vii) rules of court made by the Supreme Court of Queensland because of a provision of this Act; and\n- (viii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, or a State Family Court of another State, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"sec.42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of State and Territory Supreme Courts","content":"### sec.42 Jurisdiction of State and Territory Supreme Courts\n\nSubject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\nDespite section&#160;9 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to matters arising under that Act involving or related to decisions made, or proposed to be made, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory by a Commonwealth authority or an officer of the Commonwealth.\nSubsection&#160;(1A) applies to a decision made, or proposed or required to be made—\nwhether or not in the exercise of a discretion; and\nwhether before or after the commencement of this subsection.\nThe jurisdiction conferred on a Supreme Court by subsection&#160;(1) or (1A) is not limited by any limits to which any other jurisdiction of that Supreme Court may be subject.\nThis section has effect subject to section&#160;42AA .\ns&#160;42 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;6 (2) ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;17\n(sec.42-ssec.1) Subject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\n(sec.42-ssec.1A) Despite section&#160;9 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to matters arising under that Act involving or related to decisions made, or proposed to be made, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory by a Commonwealth authority or an officer of the Commonwealth.\n(sec.42-ssec.1B) Subsection&#160;(1A) applies to a decision made, or proposed or required to be made— whether or not in the exercise of a discretion; and whether before or after the commencement of this subsection.\n(sec.42-ssec.2) The jurisdiction conferred on a Supreme Court by subsection&#160;(1) or (1A) is not limited by any limits to which any other jurisdiction of that Supreme Court may be subject.\n(sec.42-ssec.3) This section has effect subject to section&#160;42AA .\n- (a) whether or not in the exercise of a discretion; and\n- (b) whether before or after the commencement of this subsection.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"sec.42A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of State Family Courts","content":"### sec.42A Jurisdiction of State Family Courts\n\nSubject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on each State Family Court with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\nThe jurisdiction conferred on a State Family Court by subsection&#160;(2) is not limited by any limits to which any other jurisdiction of the State Family Court may be subject.\nThis section has effect subject to section&#160;42AA .\ns&#160;42A ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;7\namd 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;18\n(sec.42A-ssec.2) Subject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on each State Family Court with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\n(sec.42A-ssec.3) The jurisdiction conferred on a State Family Court by subsection&#160;(2) is not limited by any limits to which any other jurisdiction of the State Family Court may be subject.\n(sec.42A-ssec.4) This section has effect subject to section&#160;42AA .","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"sec.42AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of Supreme Court in relation to certain decisions made by Commonwealth officers","content":"### sec.42AA Jurisdiction of Supreme Court in relation to certain decisions made by Commonwealth officers\n\nIf a decision to prosecute a person for an offence against the Corporations Law of Queensland has been made by an officer or officers of the Commonwealth and the prosecution is proposed to be commenced in a court of Queensland, jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court with respect to any matter in which a person seeks a prerogative order or an injunction against the officer or officers in relation to that decision.\nAt any time when—\na prosecution for an offence against the Corporations Law of Queensland is before a court of Queensland; or\nan appeal arising out of such a prosecution is before a court of Queensland;\njurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court with respect to any matter in which the person who is or was the defendant in the prosecution seeks a prerogative order or an injunction against an officer or officers of the Commonwealth in relation to a related criminal justice process decision.\nSubsections&#160;(1) and (2) have effect despite anything in this Act or in any other law.\nIn this section—\nappeal includes an application for a new trial and a proceeding to review or call in question the proceedings, decision or jurisdiction of a court or judge.\nprerogative order means an order the relief or remedy under which is in the nature of, and to the same effect as, a writ of mandamus or prohibition.\nrelated criminal justice process decision , in relation to an offence, means a decision, other than a decision to prosecute, made in the criminal justice process in relation to the offence, including—\na decision in connection with the investigation, committal for trial or prosecution of the defendant; and\na decision in connection with the appointment of investigators or inspectors for the purposes of such an investigation; and\na decision in connection with the issue of a warrant, including a search warrant or a seizure warrant; and\na decision requiring the production of documents, the giving of information or the summoning of persons as witnesses; and\na decision in connection with an appeal arising out of the prosecution.\ns&#160;42AA ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;19\n(sec.42AA-ssec.1) If a decision to prosecute a person for an offence against the Corporations Law of Queensland has been made by an officer or officers of the Commonwealth and the prosecution is proposed to be commenced in a court of Queensland, jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court with respect to any matter in which a person seeks a prerogative order or an injunction against the officer or officers in relation to that decision.\n(sec.42AA-ssec.2) At any time when— a prosecution for an offence against the Corporations Law of Queensland is before a court of Queensland; or an appeal arising out of such a prosecution is before a court of Queensland; jurisdiction is conferred on the Supreme Court with respect to any matter in which the person who is or was the defendant in the prosecution seeks a prerogative order or an injunction against an officer or officers of the Commonwealth in relation to a related criminal justice process decision.\n(sec.42AA-ssec.3) Subsections&#160;(1) and (2) have effect despite anything in this Act or in any other law.\n(sec.42AA-ssec.4) In this section— appeal includes an application for a new trial and a proceeding to review or call in question the proceedings, decision or jurisdiction of a court or judge. prerogative order means an order the relief or remedy under which is in the nature of, and to the same effect as, a writ of mandamus or prohibition. related criminal justice process decision , in relation to an offence, means a decision, other than a decision to prosecute, made in the criminal justice process in relation to the offence, including— a decision in connection with the investigation, committal for trial or prosecution of the defendant; and a decision in connection with the appointment of investigators or inspectors for the purposes of such an investigation; and a decision in connection with the issue of a warrant, including a search warrant or a seizure warrant; and a decision requiring the production of documents, the giving of information or the summoning of persons as witnesses; and a decision in connection with an appeal arising out of the prosecution.\n- (a) a prosecution for an offence against the Corporations Law of Queensland is before a court of Queensland; or\n- (b) an appeal arising out of such a prosecution is before a court of Queensland;\n- (a) a decision in connection with the investigation, committal for trial or prosecution of the defendant; and\n- (b) a decision in connection with the appointment of investigators or inspectors for the purposes of such an investigation; and\n- (c) a decision in connection with the issue of a warrant, including a search warrant or a seizure warrant; and\n- (d) a decision requiring the production of documents, the giving of information or the summoning of persons as witnesses; and\n- (e) a decision in connection with an appeal arising out of the prosecution.","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"sec.42B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of lower courts","content":"### sec.42B Jurisdiction of lower courts\n\nSubject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on the lower courts of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters, other than superior court matters, arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\nThe jurisdiction conferred on a lower court by subsection&#160;(1) —\nis subject to the court’s general jurisdictional limits, so far as they relate to the amounts, or the value of property, with which the court may deal; but\nis not subject to the court’s other jurisdictional limits.\ns&#160;42B ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;6\namd 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;20\n(sec.42B-ssec.1) Subject to the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cwlth) , section&#160;9 , jurisdiction is conferred on the lower courts of Queensland and of each other State and the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters, other than superior court matters, arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland.\n(sec.42B-ssec.2) The jurisdiction conferred on a lower court by subsection&#160;(1) — is subject to the court’s general jurisdictional limits, so far as they relate to the amounts, or the value of property, with which the court may deal; but is not subject to the court’s other jurisdictional limits.\n- (a) is subject to the court’s general jurisdictional limits, so far as they relate to the amounts, or the value of property, with which the court may deal; but\n- (b) is not subject to the court’s other jurisdictional limits.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"sec.43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appeals","content":"### sec.43 Appeals\n\nAn appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court of Queensland to a court of another State or of the Capital Territory.\nAn appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court (not being a State Family Court) of another State to a State Family Court of that State or to a court of a different State or of the Capital Territory.\nAn appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court of the Capital Territory to a court of a State.\nAn appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a State Family Court of a State to a court of the Capital Territory or of another State, or (except in accordance with the law of the State under which the State Family Court is constituted) to the Supreme Court of that State.\ns&#160;43 sub 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;8\namd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;7 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;21\n(sec.43-ssec.1) An appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court of Queensland to a court of another State or of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.43-ssec.4) An appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court (not being a State Family Court) of another State to a State Family Court of that State or to a court of a different State or of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.43-ssec.5) An appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a court of the Capital Territory to a court of a State.\n(sec.43-ssec.6) An appeal may not be instituted from a decision of a State Family Court of a State to a court of the Capital Territory or of another State, or (except in accordance with the law of the State under which the State Family Court is constituted) to the Supreme Court of that State.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of proceedings","content":"### sec.44 Transfer of proceedings\n\nThis section applies to the following—\na proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland that is in a court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42 (1) or (2) ;\na proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) that is in a court having jurisdiction under that subsection or in the Federal Court.\nSubject to subsections&#160;(3) , (4) and (5) , if it appears to the court that, having regard to the interests of justice, it is more appropriate for the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to be determined by another court having jurisdiction in the matters for determination in the proceeding or application, the firstmentioned court may transfer the proceeding or application to that other court.\nIf a proceeding with respect to matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) is pending in the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory (the relevant jurisdiction ), the court must transfer the proceeding to the Federal Court unless the matter for determination in it arises out of, or relates to, another proceeding pending in any court of the relevant jurisdiction—\nthat arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and\nthat is not with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;\nregardless of which proceeding was commenced first.\nEven if the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory is not required by subsection&#160;(3) to transfer a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) to the Federal Court, it may nevertheless do so if it considers that to be appropriate, having regard to the interests of justice, including the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction.\nIf a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) is pending in the Federal Court, the Federal Court may only transfer the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory (the relevant jurisdiction ) if—\nthe matter arises out of, or relates to, another proceeding pending in any court of the relevant jurisdiction—\nthat arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and\nthat is not a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;\nregardless of which proceeding was commenced first; and\nthe Federal Court considers the transfer to be appropriate, having regard to the interests of justice, including the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction.\nNothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\nThe fact that some references in this section to the interests of justice include the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction does not of itself mean that other references to the interests of justice, in this section or elsewhere in this Act, do not include that matter.\ns&#160;44 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;9 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;22\n(sec.44-ssec.1) This section applies to the following— a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland that is in a court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42 (1) or (2) ; a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) that is in a court having jurisdiction under that subsection or in the Federal Court.\n(sec.44-ssec.2) Subject to subsections&#160;(3) , (4) and (5) , if it appears to the court that, having regard to the interests of justice, it is more appropriate for the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to be determined by another court having jurisdiction in the matters for determination in the proceeding or application, the firstmentioned court may transfer the proceeding or application to that other court.\n(sec.44-ssec.3) If a proceeding with respect to matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) is pending in the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory (the relevant jurisdiction ), the court must transfer the proceeding to the Federal Court unless the matter for determination in it arises out of, or relates to, another proceeding pending in any court of the relevant jurisdiction— that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and that is not with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ; regardless of which proceeding was commenced first.\n(sec.44-ssec.4) Even if the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory is not required by subsection&#160;(3) to transfer a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) to the Federal Court, it may nevertheless do so if it considers that to be appropriate, having regard to the interests of justice, including the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction.\n(sec.44-ssec.5) If a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) is pending in the Federal Court, the Federal Court may only transfer the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to the Supreme Court of a State or the Capital Territory (the relevant jurisdiction ) if— the matter arises out of, or relates to, another proceeding pending in any court of the relevant jurisdiction— that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and that is not a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ; regardless of which proceeding was commenced first; and the Federal Court considers the transfer to be appropriate, having regard to the interests of justice, including the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction.\n(sec.44-ssec.6) Nothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\n(sec.44-ssec.7) The fact that some references in this section to the interests of justice include the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction does not of itself mean that other references to the interests of justice, in this section or elsewhere in this Act, do not include that matter.\n- (a) a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland that is in a court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42 (1) or (2) ;\n- (b) a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) that is in a court having jurisdiction under that subsection or in the Federal Court.\n- (a) that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and\n- (b) that is not with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;\n- (a) the matter arises out of, or relates to, another proceeding pending in any court of the relevant jurisdiction— (i) that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and (ii) that is not a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;\n- (i) that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and\n- (ii) that is not a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;\n- regardless of which proceeding was commenced first; and\n- (b) the Federal Court considers the transfer to be appropriate, having regard to the interests of justice, including the desirability of related proceedings being heard in the same jurisdiction.\n- (i) that arises, or a substantial part of which arises, under the Corporations Law of a State or the Capital Territory; and\n- (ii) that is not a proceeding with respect to a matter referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) ;","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of proceedings by State Family Courts","content":"### sec.44A Transfer of proceedings by State Family Courts\n\nThis section applies to a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland in a State Family Court (the first court ) having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A .\nIf it appears to the first court that—\nthe proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, and that the court in which the other proceeding is pending is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or\nhaving regard to—\nwhether, in the first court’s opinion, apart from this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the proceeding, or a substantial part of it, would have been incapable of being instituted in the first court; and\nthe extent to which, in the first court’s opinion, the matters for determination in the proceeding are matters not within the first court’s jurisdiction apart from this division or such a law; and\nthe interests of justice;\nanother court of a State or of the Capital Territory, is the most appropriate court to determine the proceeding; or\nit is otherwise in the interests of justice that another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, determine the proceeding;\nthe first court must transfer the proceeding to the other court.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(2) , if it appears to the first court that—\nthe proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the firstmentioned proceeding, and that the other court is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or\nit is otherwise in the interests of justice that the proceeding be determined by another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the proceeding;\nthe first court must transfer the proceeding to the other court.\nIf—\nthe first court transfers the proceeding to another court; and\nit appears to the first court that—\nthere is another proceeding pending in the first court that arises out of, or is related to, the firstmentioned proceeding; and\nit is in the interests of justice that the other court also determine the other proceeding;\nthe first court must also transfer the other proceeding to the other court.\nNothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\ns&#160;44A ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;10\namd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;8 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;23\n(sec.44A-ssec.1) This section applies to a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland in a State Family Court (the first court ) having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A .\n(sec.44A-ssec.2) If it appears to the first court that— the proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, and that the court in which the other proceeding is pending is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or having regard to— whether, in the first court’s opinion, apart from this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the proceeding, or a substantial part of it, would have been incapable of being instituted in the first court; and the extent to which, in the first court’s opinion, the matters for determination in the proceeding are matters not within the first court’s jurisdiction apart from this division or such a law; and the interests of justice; another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, is the most appropriate court to determine the proceeding; or it is otherwise in the interests of justice that another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, determine the proceeding; the first court must transfer the proceeding to the other court.\n(sec.44A-ssec.3) Subject to subsection&#160;(2) , if it appears to the first court that— the proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the firstmentioned proceeding, and that the other court is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or it is otherwise in the interests of justice that the proceeding be determined by another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the proceeding; the first court must transfer the proceeding to the other court.\n(sec.44A-ssec.4) If— the first court transfers the proceeding to another court; and it appears to the first court that— there is another proceeding pending in the first court that arises out of, or is related to, the firstmentioned proceeding; and it is in the interests of justice that the other court also determine the other proceeding; the first court must also transfer the other proceeding to the other court.\n(sec.44A-ssec.5) Nothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\n- (a) the proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, and that the court in which the other proceeding is pending is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or\n- (b) having regard to— (i) whether, in the first court’s opinion, apart from this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the proceeding, or a substantial part of it, would have been incapable of being instituted in the first court; and (ii) the extent to which, in the first court’s opinion, the matters for determination in the proceeding are matters not within the first court’s jurisdiction apart from this division or such a law; and (iii) the interests of justice;\n- (i) whether, in the first court’s opinion, apart from this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the proceeding, or a substantial part of it, would have been incapable of being instituted in the first court; and\n- (ii) the extent to which, in the first court’s opinion, the matters for determination in the proceeding are matters not within the first court’s jurisdiction apart from this division or such a law; and\n- (iii) the interests of justice;\n- another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, is the most appropriate court to determine the proceeding; or\n- (c) it is otherwise in the interests of justice that another court of a State or of the Capital Territory, determine the proceeding;\n- (i) whether, in the first court’s opinion, apart from this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the proceeding, or a substantial part of it, would have been incapable of being instituted in the first court; and\n- (ii) the extent to which, in the first court’s opinion, the matters for determination in the proceeding are matters not within the first court’s jurisdiction apart from this division or such a law; and\n- (iii) the interests of justice;\n- (a) the proceeding arises out of, or is related to, another proceeding pending in another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the firstmentioned proceeding, and that the other court is the most appropriate court to determine the firstmentioned proceeding; or\n- (b) it is otherwise in the interests of justice that the proceeding be determined by another State Family Court having jurisdiction under section&#160;42A in the matters for determination in the proceeding;\n- (a) the first court transfers the proceeding to another court; and\n- (b) it appears to the first court that— (i) there is another proceeding pending in the first court that arises out of, or is related to, the firstmentioned proceeding; and (ii) it is in the interests of justice that the other court also determine the other proceeding;\n- (i) there is another proceeding pending in the first court that arises out of, or is related to, the firstmentioned proceeding; and\n- (ii) it is in the interests of justice that the other court also determine the other proceeding;\n- (i) there is another proceeding pending in the first court that arises out of, or is related to, the firstmentioned proceeding; and\n- (ii) it is in the interests of justice that the other court also determine the other proceeding;","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of proceedings in lower courts","content":"### sec.44AA Transfer of proceedings in lower courts\n\nThis section applies to a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland in a lower court (the first court ) having jurisdiction under section&#160;42B .\nIf it appears to the first court that, having regard to the interests of justice, it is more appropriate for the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to be determined by another court (the second court ) having jurisdiction in the matters for determination in the proceeding or application, the first court may take action under whichever of subsections&#160;(3) and (4) applies.\nIf the second court is also a lower court, the first court may transfer the proceeding or application to the second court.\nIf the second court is a superior court, the first court may transfer the proceeding or application to the relevant Supreme Court and recommend that the proceeding or application be transferred by the Supreme Court to the second court.\nThe relevant Supreme Court is not bound to comply with a recommendation under subsection&#160;(4) and it may instead decide—\nto deal with the proceeding or application itself; or\nto transfer the proceeding or application to another court (which could be the first court).\nNothing in this section allows the relevant Supreme Court to transfer the proceeding or application to another court otherwise than under section&#160;44 and the other requirements of this division.\nNothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\nIn this section—\nrelevant Supreme Court means the Supreme Court of the State or Territory of which the first court is a court.\ns&#160;44AA ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;9\namd 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;24\n(sec.44AA-ssec.1) This section applies to a proceeding with respect to a civil matter arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland in a lower court (the first court ) having jurisdiction under section&#160;42B .\n(sec.44AA-ssec.2) If it appears to the first court that, having regard to the interests of justice, it is more appropriate for the proceeding, or an application in the proceeding, to be determined by another court (the second court ) having jurisdiction in the matters for determination in the proceeding or application, the first court may take action under whichever of subsections&#160;(3) and (4) applies.\n(sec.44AA-ssec.3) If the second court is also a lower court, the first court may transfer the proceeding or application to the second court.\n(sec.44AA-ssec.4) If the second court is a superior court, the first court may transfer the proceeding or application to the relevant Supreme Court and recommend that the proceeding or application be transferred by the Supreme Court to the second court.\n(sec.44AA-ssec.5) The relevant Supreme Court is not bound to comply with a recommendation under subsection&#160;(4) and it may instead decide— to deal with the proceeding or application itself; or to transfer the proceeding or application to another court (which could be the first court).\n(sec.44AA-ssec.6) Nothing in this section allows the relevant Supreme Court to transfer the proceeding or application to another court otherwise than under section&#160;44 and the other requirements of this division.\n(sec.44AA-ssec.6A) Nothing in this section confers on a court jurisdiction that the court would not otherwise have.\n(sec.44AA-ssec.7) In this section— relevant Supreme Court means the Supreme Court of the State or Territory of which the first court is a court.\n- (a) to deal with the proceeding or application itself; or\n- (b) to transfer the proceeding or application to another court (which could be the first court).","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Further matters for a court to consider when deciding whether to transfer a proceeding","content":"### sec.44B Further matters for a court to consider when deciding whether to transfer a proceeding\n\nIn deciding whether to transfer under section&#160;44 , 44A or 44AA a proceeding or application, a court must have regard to—\nthe principal place of business of any body corporate concerned in the proceeding or application; and\nthe place or places where the events that are the subject of the proceeding or application took place; and\nthe other courts that have jurisdiction to deal with the proceeding or application.\ns&#160;44B ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;10\namd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;10\n- (a) the principal place of business of any body corporate concerned in the proceeding or application; and\n- (b) the place or places where the events that are the subject of the proceeding or application took place; and\n- (c) the other courts that have jurisdiction to deal with the proceeding or application.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer may be made at any stage","content":"### sec.44C Transfer may be made at any stage\n\nA court may transfer under section&#160;44 , 44A or 44AA a proceeding or application—\non the application of a party made at any stage; or\nof the court’s own motion.\ns&#160;44C ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;10\namd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;11\n- (a) on the application of a party made at any stage; or\n- (b) of the court’s own motion.","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of documents","content":"### sec.44D Transfer of documents\n\nWhere, under section&#160;44 , 44A or 44AA , a court transfers a proceeding, or an application in a proceeding, to another court—\nthe registrar or other proper officer of the firstmentioned court must transmit to the registrar or other proper officer of the other court all documents filed in the firstmentioned court in respect of the proceeding or application, as the case may be; and\nthe other court must proceed as if—\nthe proceeding had been originally instituted in the other court; and\nthe same proceedings had been taken in the other court as were taken in the firstmentioned court; and\nin a case where an application is transferred—the application had been made in the other court.\ns&#160;44D ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;10\namd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;12\n- (a) the registrar or other proper officer of the firstmentioned court must transmit to the registrar or other proper officer of the other court all documents filed in the firstmentioned court in respect of the proceeding or application, as the case may be; and\n- (b) the other court must proceed as if— (i) the proceeding had been originally instituted in the other court; and (ii) the same proceedings had been taken in the other court as were taken in the firstmentioned court; and (iii) in a case where an application is transferred—the application had been made in the other court.\n- (i) the proceeding had been originally instituted in the other court; and\n- (ii) the same proceedings had been taken in the other court as were taken in the firstmentioned court; and\n- (iii) in a case where an application is transferred—the application had been made in the other court.\n- (i) the proceeding had been originally instituted in the other court; and\n- (ii) the same proceedings had been taken in the other court as were taken in the firstmentioned court; and\n- (iii) in a case where an application is transferred—the application had been made in the other court.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"sec.45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conduct of proceedings","content":"### sec.45 Conduct of proceedings\n\nSubject to sections&#160;51 and 52A , where it appears to a court that, in determining a matter for determination in a proceeding, the court will, or will be likely to, be exercising relevant jurisdiction the rules of evidence and procedure to be applied in dealing with the matter are to be such as the court considers appropriate in the circumstances, being rules that are applied in a superior court in Australia or in an external Territory.\nWhere a proceeding is transferred or removed to a court (the transferee court ) from another court (the transferor court ), the transferee court must deal with the proceeding as if, subject to any order of the transferee court, the steps that had been taken for the purposes of the proceeding in the transferor court (including the making of an order), or similar steps, had been taken in the transferee court.\nIn this section—\nrelevant jurisdiction means—\njurisdiction conferred on a court of Queensland with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; or\njurisdiction conferred on a court of another State or the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; or\njurisdiction conferred on a court of a State or the Capital Territory with respect to matters referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) .\ns&#160;45 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;11 ; 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;13 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;25\n(sec.45-ssec.1) Subject to sections&#160;51 and 52A , where it appears to a court that, in determining a matter for determination in a proceeding, the court will, or will be likely to, be exercising relevant jurisdiction the rules of evidence and procedure to be applied in dealing with the matter are to be such as the court considers appropriate in the circumstances, being rules that are applied in a superior court in Australia or in an external Territory.\n(sec.45-ssec.2) Where a proceeding is transferred or removed to a court (the transferee court ) from another court (the transferor court ), the transferee court must deal with the proceeding as if, subject to any order of the transferee court, the steps that had been taken for the purposes of the proceeding in the transferor court (including the making of an order), or similar steps, had been taken in the transferee court.\n(sec.45-ssec.3) In this section— relevant jurisdiction means— jurisdiction conferred on a court of Queensland with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; or jurisdiction conferred on a court of another State or the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; or jurisdiction conferred on a court of a State or the Capital Territory with respect to matters referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) .\n- (a) jurisdiction conferred on a court of Queensland with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory; or\n- (b) jurisdiction conferred on a court of another State or the Capital Territory with respect to civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; or\n- (c) jurisdiction conferred on a court of a State or the Capital Territory with respect to matters referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) .","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"sec.46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Courts to act in aid of each other","content":"### sec.46 Courts to act in aid of each other\n\nAll courts having jurisdiction in civil matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, or in matters referred to in section&#160;42 (1A) , and the officers of, or under the control of, those courts must severally act in aid of, and be auxiliary to, each other in all such matters.\ns&#160;46 amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;14 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;26","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"sec.47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exercise of jurisdiction pursuant to cross-vesting provisions","content":"### sec.47 Exercise of jurisdiction pursuant to cross-vesting provisions\n\nA court of Queensland may—\nexercise jurisdiction (whether original or appellate) conferred on it by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of that State or Territory; and\nhear and determine a proceeding transferred to it under such a provision.\ns&#160;47 amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;15\n- (a) exercise jurisdiction (whether original or appellate) conferred on it by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of that State or Territory; and\n- (b) hear and determine a proceeding transferred to it under such a provision.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"sec.48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rights of appearance","content":"### sec.48 Rights of appearance\n\nA person who is entitled to practise as a barrister or a solicitor, or as both a barrister and a solicitor, in a court has, if a proceeding (the transferred proceeding ) in that court is transferred to another court under this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory that corresponds to this division, the same entitlements to practise in relation to—\nthe transferred proceeding; and\nany other proceeding out of which the transferred proceeding arises or to which the transferred proceeding is related, being another proceeding that is to be determined together with the transferred proceeding;\nin the other court that the person would have if the other court were a federal court exercising federal jurisdiction.\n- (a) the transferred proceeding; and\n- (b) any other proceeding out of which the transferred proceeding arises or to which the transferred proceeding is related, being another proceeding that is to be determined together with the transferred proceeding;","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"sec.49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Limitation on appeals","content":"### sec.49 Limitation on appeals\n\nAn appeal does not lie from a decision of a court—\nin relation to the transfer of a proceeding under this division; or\nas to which rules of evidence and procedure are to be applied pursuant to section&#160;45 (1) .\n- (a) in relation to the transfer of a proceeding under this division; or\n- (b) as to which rules of evidence and procedure are to be applied pursuant to section&#160;45 (1) .","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"sec.50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Enforcement of judgments etc.","content":"### sec.50 Enforcement of judgments etc.\n\nA judgment of a court of Queensland that is entirely or partly given in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred by this division, or by a law of another State that corresponds to this division, is enforceable in Queensland as if the judgment had been given by that court entirely in the exercise of the jurisdiction of that court apart from this division or any such law.\nWhere—\na provision of a law of Queensland (not being a law in relation to the enforcement of judgments) refers to a thing done by the Supreme Court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory, a State Family Court or a particular lower court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory; and\nthat thing is done by another court in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred by this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division;\nthe reference in that provision to the Supreme Court of Queensland or of the other State or Territory, that State Family Court or that lower court, as the case may be, is taken as a reference to that other court.\ns&#160;50 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;12 ; 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;16 ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;27\n(sec.50-ssec.1) A judgment of a court of Queensland that is entirely or partly given in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred by this division, or by a law of another State that corresponds to this division, is enforceable in Queensland as if the judgment had been given by that court entirely in the exercise of the jurisdiction of that court apart from this division or any such law.\n(sec.50-ssec.2) Where— a provision of a law of Queensland (not being a law in relation to the enforcement of judgments) refers to a thing done by the Supreme Court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory, a State Family Court or a particular lower court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory; and that thing is done by another court in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred by this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division; the reference in that provision to the Supreme Court of Queensland or of the other State or Territory, that State Family Court or that lower court, as the case may be, is taken as a reference to that other court.\n- (a) a provision of a law of Queensland (not being a law in relation to the enforcement of judgments) refers to a thing done by the Supreme Court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory, a State Family Court or a particular lower court of Queensland or of another State or of the Capital Territory; and\n- (b) that thing is done by another court in the exercise of jurisdiction conferred by this division or a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division;","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"sec.51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules of court","content":"### sec.51 Rules of court\n\nWhen a lower court of Queensland is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court, with all necessary changes.\nWhen a court of Queensland is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory, and the jurisdiction is conferred by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court, with all necessary changes.\nWhen a court of another State or the Capital Territory is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, and the jurisdiction is conferred by this division, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court of the State or Territory, with all necessary changes.\nIn this section—\nCorporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory does not include rules of court.\nCorporations Law of Queensland does not include rules of court.\ns&#160;51 amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;17\nsub 1995 No.&#160;58 s&#160;4 sch&#160;1\n(sec.51-ssec.1) When a lower court of Queensland is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court, with all necessary changes.\n(sec.51-ssec.2) When a court of Queensland is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory, and the jurisdiction is conferred by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court, with all necessary changes.\n(sec.51-ssec.3) When a court of another State or the Capital Territory is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, and the jurisdiction is conferred by this division, the court must apply the relevant rules of court of the Supreme Court of the State or Territory, with all necessary changes.\n(sec.51-ssec.4) In this section— Corporations Law of another State or the Capital Territory does not include rules of court. Corporations Law of Queensland does not include rules of court.","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"sec.52","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.52\n\ns&#160;52 om 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;28","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"sec.52A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules of a State Family Court","content":"### sec.52A Rules of a State Family Court\n\nWhen a State Family Court of another State is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, being jurisdiction conferred by this division, that court must apply the rules of court made under the Law of the State corresponding to the Corporations Act , section&#160;61A (1) , with such alterations as are necessary.\nIn this section—\nCorporations Law of Queensland does not include rules of court.\ns&#160;52A ins 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;13\namd 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;29\n(sec.52A-ssec.1) When a State Family Court of another State is exercising jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland, being jurisdiction conferred by this division, that court must apply the rules of court made under the Law of the State corresponding to the Corporations Act , section&#160;61A (1) , with such alterations as are necessary.\n(sec.52A-ssec.2) In this section— Corporations Law of Queensland does not include rules of court.","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Vesting and cross-vesting of criminal jurisdiction","content":"## Vesting and cross-vesting of criminal jurisdiction","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"sec.53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Operation of division","content":"### sec.53 Operation of division\n\nThis division provides in relation to—\nthe jurisdiction of courts in respect of criminal matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\nthe jurisdiction of the courts of Queensland in respect of criminal matters arising under the Corporations Law of any jurisdiction.\n- (a) the jurisdiction of courts in respect of criminal matters arising under the Corporations Law of Queensland; and\n- (b) the jurisdiction of the courts of Queensland in respect of criminal matters arising under the Corporations Law of any jurisdiction.","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"sec.54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation","content":"### sec.54 Interpretation\n\nIn this division—\nmagistrate means a magistrate who is remunerated by salary or otherwise.\nIn this division—\na reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to—\nthe Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\nthe ASIC Law of Queensland; and\nthe ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\nany other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\nthis Act; and\nregulations made under this Act; and\nrules of court applied by the Supreme Court of Queensland and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\na reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\ns&#160;54 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;30\n(sec.54-ssec.1) In this division— magistrate means a magistrate who is remunerated by salary or otherwise.\n(sec.54-ssec.2) In this division— a reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to— the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and the ASIC Law of Queensland; and the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and this Act; and regulations made under this Act; and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of Queensland and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and a reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\n- (a) a reference to the Corporations Law of Queensland includes a reference to— (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and (v) this Act; and (vi) regulations made under this Act; and (vii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of Queensland and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\n- (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\n- (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\n- (v) this Act; and\n- (vi) regulations made under this Act; and\n- (vii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of Queensland and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and\n- (b) a reference to the Corporations Law of another State or of the Capital Territory is a reference to the Corporations Law of that other State or of the Capital Territory within the meaning of the law of that other State or the Capital Territory corresponding to this division.\n- (i) the Corporations Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\n- (iii) the ASIC Regulations of Queensland; and\n- (iv) any other applicable provisions (as defined in section&#160;3 ) of Queensland; and\n- (v) this Act; and\n- (vi) regulations made under this Act; and\n- (vii) rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of Queensland and rules of court applied by the Supreme Court of another State, or of the Capital Territory, when exercising jurisdiction conferred by this division (including jurisdiction conferred by virtue of any previous application or applications of this subparagraph); and","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"sec.55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of courts","content":"### sec.55 Jurisdiction of courts\n\nSubject to this section, the several courts of each State and the Capital Territory exercising jurisdiction—\nwith respect to—\nthe summary conviction; or\nthe examination and commitment for trial on indictment; or\nthe trial and conviction on indictment;\nof offenders or persons charged with offences against the laws of the State or Capital Territory, and with respect to—\ntheir sentencing, punishment and release; or\ntheir liability to make reparation in connection with their offences; or\nthe forfeiture of property in connection with their offences; or\nthe proceeds of their crimes; and\nwith respect to the hearing and determination of—\nproceedings connected with; or\nappeals arising out of; or\nappeals arising out of proceedings connected with;\nany such trial or conviction or any matter of a kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) (iv) , (v) , (vi) or (vii) ;\nhave the equivalent jurisdiction with respect to offenders or persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland.\nWhere a provision of a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to subsection&#160;(1) is expressed to confer jurisdiction with respect to offenders or persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of that State or the Capital Territory upon a court of Queensland, the court may exercise that jurisdiction.\nThe jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) is not to be exercised with respect to the summary conviction, or examination and commitment for trial, of any person except by a magistrate.\nThe jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) includes jurisdiction in accordance with provisions of a relevant law of another State or the Capital Territory, and—\nthe reference in subsection&#160;(1) (b) to any such trial or conviction includes a reference to any conviction or sentencing in accordance with the provisions of a relevant law; and\nunless the contrary intention appears, a reference to jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) includes a reference to such included jurisdiction.\nA person may be dealt with in accordance with a relevant law even if, apart from this section, the offence concerned—\nwould be required to be prosecuted on indictment; or\nwould be required to be prosecuted either summarily or on indictment.\nFor the purposes of the application of a relevant law as provided by subsection&#160;(4) —\na reference in that law to an indictable offence is taken to include a reference to an offence that may be prosecuted on indictment; and\nin order to determine the sentence that may be imposed on a person by a court pursuant to the relevant law, the person is taken to have been prosecuted and convicted on indictment in that court.\nSubject to subsections&#160;(9) and (10) , the jurisdiction conferred on a court of a State or the Capital Territory by subsection&#160;(1) is conferred despite any limits as to locality of the jurisdiction of that court under the law of that State or of the Capital Territory.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(9) , the jurisdiction conferred on a court of Queensland by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to subsection&#160;(1) may be exercised despite any limits as to locality of the jurisdiction of that court under the law of Queensland.\nWhere—\njurisdiction is conferred on a court of Queensland in relation to the summary conviction of persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of this or another jurisdiction by subsection&#160;(1) or a corresponding provision of a law of another State or of the Capital Territory; and\nthe court is satisfied that it is appropriate to do so, having regard to all the circumstances including the public interest;\nthe court may decline to exercise that jurisdiction in relation to an offence committed in another State or the Capital Territory.\nThe jurisdiction conferred on a court of another State or the Capital Territory by subsection&#160;(1) in relation to—\nthe examination and commitment for trial on indictment; and\nthe trial and conviction on indictment;\nof offenders or persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland is conferred only in relation to—\noffences committed outside Australia; and\noffences committed, begun or completed within the State or Territory concerned.\nIn this section—\nAustralia does not include the coastal sea.\nrelevant law means a law providing that where, in proceedings before a court, a person pleads guilty to a charge for which he or she could be prosecuted on indictment, the person may be committed, to a court having jurisdiction to try offences on indictment, to be sentenced or otherwise dealt with without being tried in that lastmentioned court.\n(sec.55-ssec.1) Subject to this section, the several courts of each State and the Capital Territory exercising jurisdiction— with respect to— the summary conviction; or the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; or the trial and conviction on indictment; of offenders or persons charged with offences against the laws of the State or Capital Territory, and with respect to— their sentencing, punishment and release; or their liability to make reparation in connection with their offences; or the forfeiture of property in connection with their offences; or the proceeds of their crimes; and with respect to the hearing and determination of— proceedings connected with; or appeals arising out of; or appeals arising out of proceedings connected with; any such trial or conviction or any matter of a kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) (iv) , (v) , (vi) or (vii) ; have the equivalent jurisdiction with respect to offenders or persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland.\n(sec.55-ssec.2) Where a provision of a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to subsection&#160;(1) is expressed to confer jurisdiction with respect to offenders or persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of that State or the Capital Territory upon a court of Queensland, the court may exercise that jurisdiction.\n(sec.55-ssec.3) The jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) is not to be exercised with respect to the summary conviction, or examination and commitment for trial, of any person except by a magistrate.\n(sec.55-ssec.4) The jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) includes jurisdiction in accordance with provisions of a relevant law of another State or the Capital Territory, and— the reference in subsection&#160;(1) (b) to any such trial or conviction includes a reference to any conviction or sentencing in accordance with the provisions of a relevant law; and unless the contrary intention appears, a reference to jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) includes a reference to such included jurisdiction.\n(sec.55-ssec.5) A person may be dealt with in accordance with a relevant law even if, apart from this section, the offence concerned— would be required to be prosecuted on indictment; or would be required to be prosecuted either summarily or on indictment.\n(sec.55-ssec.6) For the purposes of the application of a relevant law as provided by subsection&#160;(4) — a reference in that law to an indictable offence is taken to include a reference to an offence that may be prosecuted on indictment; and in order to determine the sentence that may be imposed on a person by a court pursuant to the relevant law, the person is taken to have been prosecuted and convicted on indictment in that court.\n(sec.55-ssec.7) Subject to subsections&#160;(9) and (10) , the jurisdiction conferred on a court of a State or the Capital Territory by subsection&#160;(1) is conferred despite any limits as to locality of the jurisdiction of that court under the law of that State or of the Capital Territory.\n(sec.55-ssec.8) Subject to subsection&#160;(9) , the jurisdiction conferred on a court of Queensland by a law of another State or the Capital Territory corresponding to subsection&#160;(1) may be exercised despite any limits as to locality of the jurisdiction of that court under the law of Queensland.\n(sec.55-ssec.9) Where— jurisdiction is conferred on a court of Queensland in relation to the summary conviction of persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of this or another jurisdiction by subsection&#160;(1) or a corresponding provision of a law of another State or of the Capital Territory; and the court is satisfied that it is appropriate to do so, having regard to all the circumstances including the public interest; the court may decline to exercise that jurisdiction in relation to an offence committed in another State or the Capital Territory.\n(sec.55-ssec.10) The jurisdiction conferred on a court of another State or the Capital Territory by subsection&#160;(1) in relation to— the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; and the trial and conviction on indictment; of offenders or persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland is conferred only in relation to— offences committed outside Australia; and offences committed, begun or completed within the State or Territory concerned.\n(sec.55-ssec.11) In this section— Australia does not include the coastal sea. relevant law means a law providing that where, in proceedings before a court, a person pleads guilty to a charge for which he or she could be prosecuted on indictment, the person may be committed, to a court having jurisdiction to try offences on indictment, to be sentenced or otherwise dealt with without being tried in that lastmentioned court.\n- (a) with respect to— (i) the summary conviction; or (ii) the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; or (iii) the trial and conviction on indictment;\n- (i) the summary conviction; or\n- (ii) the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; or\n- (iii) the trial and conviction on indictment;\n- of offenders or persons charged with offences against the laws of the State or Capital Territory, and with respect to— (iv) their sentencing, punishment and release; or (v) their liability to make reparation in connection with their offences; or (vi) the forfeiture of property in connection with their offences; or (vii) the proceeds of their crimes; and\n- (iv) their sentencing, punishment and release; or\n- (v) their liability to make reparation in connection with their offences; or\n- (vi) the forfeiture of property in connection with their offences; or\n- (vii) the proceeds of their crimes; and\n- (b) with respect to the hearing and determination of— (i) proceedings connected with; or (ii) appeals arising out of; or (iii) appeals arising out of proceedings connected with; any such trial or conviction or any matter of a kind referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) (iv) , (v) , (vi) or (vii) ;\n- (i) proceedings connected with; or\n- (ii) appeals arising out of; or\n- (iii) appeals arising out of proceedings connected with;\n- (i) the summary conviction; or\n- (ii) the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; or\n- (iii) the trial and conviction on indictment;\n- (iv) their sentencing, punishment and release; or\n- (v) their liability to make reparation in connection with their offences; or\n- (vi) the forfeiture of property in connection with their offences; or\n- (vii) the proceeds of their crimes; and\n- (i) proceedings connected with; or\n- (ii) appeals arising out of; or\n- (iii) appeals arising out of proceedings connected with;\n- (a) the reference in subsection&#160;(1) (b) to any such trial or conviction includes a reference to any conviction or sentencing in accordance with the provisions of a relevant law; and\n- (b) unless the contrary intention appears, a reference to jurisdiction conferred by subsection&#160;(1) includes a reference to such included jurisdiction.\n- (a) would be required to be prosecuted on indictment; or\n- (b) would be required to be prosecuted either summarily or on indictment.\n- (a) a reference in that law to an indictable offence is taken to include a reference to an offence that may be prosecuted on indictment; and\n- (b) in order to determine the sentence that may be imposed on a person by a court pursuant to the relevant law, the person is taken to have been prosecuted and convicted on indictment in that court.\n- (a) jurisdiction is conferred on a court of Queensland in relation to the summary conviction of persons charged with offences against the Corporations Law of this or another jurisdiction by subsection&#160;(1) or a corresponding provision of a law of another State or of the Capital Territory; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that it is appropriate to do so, having regard to all the circumstances including the public interest;\n- (a) the examination and commitment for trial on indictment; and\n- (b) the trial and conviction on indictment;\n- (c) offences committed outside Australia; and\n- (d) offences committed, begun or completed within the State or Territory concerned.","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"sec.56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Laws to be applied","content":"### sec.56 Laws to be applied\n\nSubject to this division, the laws of Queensland respecting—\nthe arrest and custody in Queensland of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\ncriminal procedure in Queensland in relation to such persons;\napply in Queensland, so far as they are applicable, to persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland or of another State or the Capital Territory in respect of whom jurisdiction is conferred on a court of Queensland by this division or a corresponding law of another State or the Capital Territory.\nSubject to this division, the laws of each other State and the Capital Territory respecting—\nthe arrest and custody in that State or Territory of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\ncriminal procedure in that State or Territory in relation to such persons;\napply in that State or Territory, so far as they are applicable, to persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland in respect of whom jurisdiction is conferred on a court of that State or Territory by this division.\nThe application of laws by subsections&#160;(1) and (2) is in addition to, and not in derogation from, the application of laws effected by part&#160;8 or the corresponding law of another State or the Capital Territory.\nIn this section—\ncriminal procedure means the procedure for—\nthe summary conviction; and\nthe examination and commitment for trial and indictment; and\nthe trial and conviction on indictment; and\nthe hearing and determination of appeals arising out of any such trial or conviction or out of any related proceedings;\nof offenders or persons charged with offences, and includes the procedure for holding accused persons to bail.\nlaws of each other State and the Capital Territory means the laws that apply in relation to offenders, or persons charged with offences, against the Corporations Law of the State or Territory concerned.\n(sec.56-ssec.1) Subject to this division, the laws of Queensland respecting— the arrest and custody in Queensland of offenders or persons charged with offences; and criminal procedure in Queensland in relation to such persons; apply in Queensland, so far as they are applicable, to persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland or of another State or the Capital Territory in respect of whom jurisdiction is conferred on a court of Queensland by this division or a corresponding law of another State or the Capital Territory.\n(sec.56-ssec.2) Subject to this division, the laws of each other State and the Capital Territory respecting— the arrest and custody in that State or Territory of offenders or persons charged with offences; and criminal procedure in that State or Territory in relation to such persons; apply in that State or Territory, so far as they are applicable, to persons who are charged with offences against the Corporations Law of Queensland in respect of whom jurisdiction is conferred on a court of that State or Territory by this division.\n(sec.56-ssec.3) The application of laws by subsections&#160;(1) and (2) is in addition to, and not in derogation from, the application of laws effected by part&#160;8 or the corresponding law of another State or the Capital Territory.\n(sec.56-ssec.4) In this section— criminal procedure means the procedure for— the summary conviction; and the examination and commitment for trial and indictment; and the trial and conviction on indictment; and the hearing and determination of appeals arising out of any such trial or conviction or out of any related proceedings; of offenders or persons charged with offences, and includes the procedure for holding accused persons to bail. laws of each other State and the Capital Territory means the laws that apply in relation to offenders, or persons charged with offences, against the Corporations Law of the State or Territory concerned.\n- (a) the arrest and custody in Queensland of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\n- (b) criminal procedure in Queensland in relation to such persons;\n- (a) the arrest and custody in that State or Territory of offenders or persons charged with offences; and\n- (b) criminal procedure in that State or Territory in relation to such persons;\n- (a) the summary conviction; and\n- (b) the examination and commitment for trial and indictment; and\n- (c) the trial and conviction on indictment; and\n- (d) the hearing and determination of appeals arising out of any such trial or conviction or out of any related proceedings;","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"pt.10","sectionType":"part","heading":"Companies liquidation account","content":"# Companies liquidation account","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"sec.57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Companies liquidation account","content":"### sec.57 Companies liquidation account\n\nIn this section—\nrelevant money means—\nmoney that, immediately before the commencement of this section, stood to the credit of the companies liquidation account established by the Companies (Queensland) Code , section&#160;428 ; and\nmoney that, after the commencement of this section, is paid into the companies liquidation account under provisions of the Companies (Queensland) Code that are taken to continue in force after the commencement of the Corporations Law, chapter&#160;5 for the purposes of windings up started before the commencement of that chapter.\nRelevant money is to be dealt with in accordance with the Companies (Queensland) Code , section&#160;427 .\n(sec.57-ssec.1) In this section— relevant money means— money that, immediately before the commencement of this section, stood to the credit of the companies liquidation account established by the Companies (Queensland) Code , section&#160;428 ; and money that, after the commencement of this section, is paid into the companies liquidation account under provisions of the Companies (Queensland) Code that are taken to continue in force after the commencement of the Corporations Law, chapter&#160;5 for the purposes of windings up started before the commencement of that chapter.\n(sec.57-ssec.2) Relevant money is to be dealt with in accordance with the Companies (Queensland) Code , section&#160;427 .\n- (a) money that, immediately before the commencement of this section, stood to the credit of the companies liquidation account established by the Companies (Queensland) Code , section&#160;428 ; and\n- (b) money that, after the commencement of this section, is paid into the companies liquidation account under provisions of the Companies (Queensland) Code that are taken to continue in force after the commencement of the Corporations Law, chapter&#160;5 for the purposes of windings up started before the commencement of that chapter.","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11","sectionType":"part","heading":"The ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland","content":"# The ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Application of ASIC Act and ASIC Regulations","content":"## Application of ASIC Act and ASIC Regulations","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"sec.58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application in Queensland of the ASIC Act","content":"### sec.58 Application in Queensland of the ASIC Act\n\nThe ASIC Act as in force immediately before its repeal, other than the excluded provisions—\napplies as a law of Queensland; and\nas so applying, may be referred to as the ASIC Law of Queensland.\nThe excluded provisions of the ASIC Act are—\npart&#160;1 , except section&#160;6A\npart&#160;2\nsection&#160;88\ndivisions&#160;1 and 4 of part&#160;4\npart&#160;5\npart&#160;6\ndivision&#160;1 of part&#160;7\npart&#160;8\npart&#160;9\ndivision&#160;1 of part&#160;10\ndivision&#160;1 of part&#160;11\npart&#160;12\npart&#160;14\nsections&#160;251 and 252 .\ns&#160;58 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.58-ssec.1) The ASIC Act as in force immediately before its repeal, other than the excluded provisions— applies as a law of Queensland; and as so applying, may be referred to as the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n(sec.58-ssec.2) The excluded provisions of the ASIC Act are— part&#160;1 , except section&#160;6A part&#160;2 section&#160;88 divisions&#160;1 and 4 of part&#160;4 part&#160;5 part&#160;6 division&#160;1 of part&#160;7 part&#160;8 part&#160;9 division&#160;1 of part&#160;10 division&#160;1 of part&#160;11 part&#160;12 part&#160;14 sections&#160;251 and 252 .\n- (a) applies as a law of Queensland; and\n- (b) as so applying, may be referred to as the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n- • part&#160;1 , except section&#160;6A\n- • part&#160;2\n- • section&#160;88\n- • divisions&#160;1 and 4 of part&#160;4\n- • part&#160;5\n- • part&#160;6\n- • division&#160;1 of part&#160;7\n- • part&#160;8\n- • part&#160;9\n- • division&#160;1 of part&#160;10\n- • division&#160;1 of part&#160;11\n- • part&#160;12\n- • part&#160;14\n- • sections&#160;251 and 252 .","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"sec.59","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of regulations","content":"### sec.59 Application of regulations\n\nThe regulations in force, immediately before the repeal of the ASIC Act , under section&#160;251 of that Act—\napply as regulations in force for the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\nas so applying, may be referred to as the ASIC Regulations of Queensland.\ns&#160;59 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n- (a) apply as regulations in force for the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland; and\n- (b) as so applying, may be referred to as the ASIC Regulations of Queensland.","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"sec.60","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation of some expressions in the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland","content":"### sec.60 Interpretation of some expressions in the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland\n\nIn this part, and in the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland—\nadvisory committee means the Companies and Securities Advisory Committee established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;145 .\ns&#160;60 def advisory committee amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\naffairs , in relation to a body corporate, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Law, section&#160;246AA .\ns&#160;60 def affairs amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (3)\nassist , in relation to a commission delegate, means—\nto perform functions—\nas a member, officer or employee of the commission delegate; and\nin connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 ; or\nto perform services for the commission delegate in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 .\ns&#160;60 def assist amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nAustralia includes any external Territory to which the ASIC Act extends.\ns&#160;60 def Australia amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nbooks includes—\na register; and\nfinancial reports or financial records, however compiled, recorded or stored; and\na document; and\nbanker’s books; and\nany other record of information.\ns&#160;60 def books amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (4)\nchairperson means—\nexcept in the ASIC Law, part&#160;11 or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the commission; and\nin part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the disciplinary board.\ns&#160;60 def chairperson amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\ncommission means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;7 .\ns&#160;60 def commission sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (1) – (2)\ncommission delegate means a person to whom, or a body to which, a function or power is delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 .\ns&#160;60 def commission delegate amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\ncontravention , in relation to a law, includes an ancillary offence relating to an offence against that law.\ncourt , except in the ASIC Law, section&#160;248 , includes a tribunal having power to require the production of documents or the answering of questions.\ns&#160;60 def court amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\ndeputy chairperson means the deputy chairperson of the commission.\ndisciplinary board means the Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;202 .\ns&#160;60 def disciplinary board amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\neligible person , in relation to a person, means a person who—\nif the firstmentioned person is a body corporate—is or has been an officer of the body within the meaning of a national scheme law or a corresponding previous law; or\nin any case—\nis or has been an employee, agent, banker, solicitor or auditor of; or\nis acting, or has acted, in any other capacity on behalf of;\nthe firstmentioned person.\nexamination means—\nin this section and part&#160;3 (other than section&#160;27 (2) and division&#160;9 ) of the ASIC Law—an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under section&#160;19 of that Law; or\nin section&#160;27 (2) and the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , division&#160;9 —an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under the ASIC Law, section&#160;19 or a corresponding provision of the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction.\ns&#160;60 def examination amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nexpenses , in relation to an investigation under the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , division&#160;1 , includes costs and expenses incurred in relation to a proceeding begun under the ASIC Law, section&#160;50 as a result of the investigation.\ns&#160;60 def expenses amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nfail means refuse or fail.\nforeign country means—\nan external Territory to which the ASIC Act does not extend; or\na country outside Australia and the external Territories; or\na part of such a country.\ns&#160;60 def foreign country amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\ngive has—\nin relation to a document—a meaning affected by the ASIC Law, section&#160;86 ; and\nin relation to information—a meaning affected by section&#160;61 of this Act.\ns&#160;60 def give amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nhearing , in this section and part&#160;3 of the ASIC Law, means a hearing before the commission and, in sections&#160;52 , 54 , 55 and 56 of that Law, includes a part of such a hearing.\ns&#160;60 def hearing amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\ninformation has a meaning affected by section&#160;61 of this Act.\ninvestigate , in relation to the commission, means investigate in the course of performing or exercising any of the commission’s functions and powers.\nmeeting means—\nin the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , a meeting of the commission; and\nin part&#160;11 of that Law—a meeting of the disciplinary board.\ns&#160;60 def meeting amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nmember means—\nexcept in the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , division&#160;2 or in part&#160;10 , 11 , or 14 , or in relation to a division of the commission, or in relation to the panel or the disciplinary board—a member of the commission; or\nin part&#160;10 of that Law or in relation to the panel—a member of the panel; or\nin part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson or any other member of the disciplinary board.\ns&#160;60 def member amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nnational scheme law means—\nthe following—\nthe Corporations Law of this jurisdiction;\nthe ASIC Law of this jurisdiction;\nthis Act; or\nthe following—\nthe Corporations Act ;\nthe Corporations Law of the Capital Territory;\nthe ASIC Act ; or\na law of a jurisdiction (other than this jurisdiction or the Capital Territory) that corresponds to an Act or Law referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) .\ns&#160;60 def national scheme law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nnational scheme law of this jurisdiction means—\nthis Act; or\nthe Corporations Law of Queensland; or\nthe ASIC Law of Queensland.\ns&#160;60 def national scheme law of this jurisdiction amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nofficer , in relation to a body corporate, includes—\na director, secretary, executive officer or employee of the body; and\na receiver, or a receiver and manager, of property of the body; and\nan administrator of the body or an administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed by the body; and\na liquidator, or a provisional liquidator, of the body; and\na trustee or other person administering a compromise or arrangement made between the body and any other person or persons.\ns&#160;60 def officer amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;18\npanel means the Corporations and Securities Panel established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;171 .\ns&#160;60 def panel amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\npanel proceeding means a proceeding before the panel on—\nan application made to the panel under the Corporations Law; or\na reference of a decision to the panel for review under the Corporations Law.\ns&#160;60 def panel proceeding ins 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (2)\npower includes an authority.\nprescribed means prescribed by the ASIC Law or the regulations.\ns&#160;60 def prescribed amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\npresident means the president of the panel.\nproceeding means—\na proceeding in a court; or\na proceeding or hearing before, or an examination by or before, a tribunal;\nwhether the proceeding, hearing or examination is of a civil, administrative, criminal, disciplinary or other nature.\nproduce , except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , includes permit access to.\ns&#160;60 def produce amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nproperty means any legal or equitable estate or interest (whether present or future and whether vested or contingent) in real or personal property of any description and includes a thing in action and money.\nrecord , in relation to an examination, means the whole or a part of a record made under the ASIC Law, section&#160;24 of statements made at the examination.\ns&#160;60 def record amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nregulations means the ASIC Regulations of this jurisdiction.\ns&#160;60 def regulations amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nreport includes an interim report.\nstaff member means—\na member of the staff referred to in the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (1) or a person employed under section&#160;120 (3) of that Act; or\na person engaged under section&#160;121 (1) of that Act; or\nany of the officers, employees and persons who under section&#160;122 of that Act are to assist the commission.\ns&#160;60 def staff member amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nstatement , in relation to an examination, includes a question asked, an answer given, and any other comment or remark made, at the examination.\nTerritory means—\nthe Capital Territory; or\nan external Territory to which the ASIC Act extends.\ns&#160;60 def Territory amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nthis Act , except in this part, means the ASIC Law, and includes the regulations.\ns&#160;60 def this Act amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\nthis jurisdiction means Queensland.\nthis Law includes the regulations.\ntribunal means—\na tribunal in Australia; or\nany other body, authority or person in Australia having power, by law or by consent of parties, to hear, receive or examine evidence.\nwitness means—\nfor a hearing before the commission, a person appearing at the hearing to give evidence; or\nfor a panel proceeding, a person appearing in the proceeding to give evidence.\ns&#160;60 def witness sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (1) – (2)\nwritten record , in relation to an examination, means—\na record of the examination—\nthat is made in writing; or\nas reduced to writing; or\na part of such a record.\nSubject to the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction, an expression has the same meaning in that Law and in the ASIC Regulations of this jurisdiction as in the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction.\ns&#160;60 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.60-ssec.1) In this part, and in the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland— advisory committee means the Companies and Securities Advisory Committee established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;145 . s&#160;60 def advisory committee amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch affairs , in relation to a body corporate, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Law, section&#160;246AA . s&#160;60 def affairs amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (3) assist , in relation to a commission delegate, means— to perform functions— as a member, officer or employee of the commission delegate; and in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 ; or to perform services for the commission delegate in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 . s&#160;60 def assist amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch Australia includes any external Territory to which the ASIC Act extends. s&#160;60 def Australia amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch books includes— a register; and financial reports or financial records, however compiled, recorded or stored; and a document; and banker’s books; and any other record of information. s&#160;60 def books amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (4) chairperson means— except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;11 or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the commission; and in part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the disciplinary board. s&#160;60 def chairperson amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch commission means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;7 . s&#160;60 def commission sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (1) – (2) commission delegate means a person to whom, or a body to which, a function or power is delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 . s&#160;60 def commission delegate amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch contravention , in relation to a law, includes an ancillary offence relating to an offence against that law. court , except in the ASIC Law, section&#160;248 , includes a tribunal having power to require the production of documents or the answering of questions. s&#160;60 def court amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch deputy chairperson means the deputy chairperson of the commission. disciplinary board means the Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;202 . s&#160;60 def disciplinary board amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch eligible person , in relation to a person, means a person who— if the firstmentioned person is a body corporate—is or has been an officer of the body within the meaning of a national scheme law or a corresponding previous law; or in any case— is or has been an employee, agent, banker, solicitor or auditor of; or is acting, or has acted, in any other capacity on behalf of; the firstmentioned person. examination means— in this section and part&#160;3 (other than section&#160;27 (2) and division&#160;9 ) of the ASIC Law—an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under section&#160;19 of that Law; or in section&#160;27 (2) and the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , division&#160;9 —an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under the ASIC Law, section&#160;19 or a corresponding provision of the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction. s&#160;60 def examination amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch expenses , in relation to an investigation under the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , division&#160;1 , includes costs and expenses incurred in relation to a proceeding begun under the ASIC Law, section&#160;50 as a result of the investigation. s&#160;60 def expenses amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch fail means refuse or fail. foreign country means— an external Territory to which the ASIC Act does not extend; or a country outside Australia and the external Territories; or a part of such a country. s&#160;60 def foreign country amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch give has— in relation to a document—a meaning affected by the ASIC Law, section&#160;86 ; and in relation to information—a meaning affected by section&#160;61 of this Act. s&#160;60 def give amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch hearing , in this section and part&#160;3 of the ASIC Law, means a hearing before the commission and, in sections&#160;52 , 54 , 55 and 56 of that Law, includes a part of such a hearing. s&#160;60 def hearing amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch information has a meaning affected by section&#160;61 of this Act. investigate , in relation to the commission, means investigate in the course of performing or exercising any of the commission’s functions and powers. meeting means— in the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , a meeting of the commission; and in part&#160;11 of that Law—a meeting of the disciplinary board. s&#160;60 def meeting amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch member means— except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , division&#160;2 or in part&#160;10 , 11 , or 14 , or in relation to a division of the commission, or in relation to the panel or the disciplinary board—a member of the commission; or in part&#160;10 of that Law or in relation to the panel—a member of the panel; or in part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson or any other member of the disciplinary board. s&#160;60 def member amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch national scheme law means— the following— the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction; the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction; this Act; or the following— the Corporations Act ; the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory; the ASIC Act ; or a law of a jurisdiction (other than this jurisdiction or the Capital Territory) that corresponds to an Act or Law referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) . s&#160;60 def national scheme law amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch national scheme law of this jurisdiction means— this Act; or the Corporations Law of Queensland; or the ASIC Law of Queensland. s&#160;60 def national scheme law of this jurisdiction amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch officer , in relation to a body corporate, includes— a director, secretary, executive officer or employee of the body; and a receiver, or a receiver and manager, of property of the body; and an administrator of the body or an administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed by the body; and a liquidator, or a provisional liquidator, of the body; and a trustee or other person administering a compromise or arrangement made between the body and any other person or persons. s&#160;60 def officer amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;18 panel means the Corporations and Securities Panel established by the ASIC Act , section&#160;171 . s&#160;60 def panel amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch panel proceeding means a proceeding before the panel on— an application made to the panel under the Corporations Law; or a reference of a decision to the panel for review under the Corporations Law. s&#160;60 def panel proceeding ins 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (2) power includes an authority. prescribed means prescribed by the ASIC Law or the regulations. s&#160;60 def prescribed amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch president means the president of the panel. proceeding means— a proceeding in a court; or a proceeding or hearing before, or an examination by or before, a tribunal; whether the proceeding, hearing or examination is of a civil, administrative, criminal, disciplinary or other nature. produce , except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , includes permit access to. s&#160;60 def produce amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch property means any legal or equitable estate or interest (whether present or future and whether vested or contingent) in real or personal property of any description and includes a thing in action and money. record , in relation to an examination, means the whole or a part of a record made under the ASIC Law, section&#160;24 of statements made at the examination. s&#160;60 def record amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch regulations means the ASIC Regulations of this jurisdiction. s&#160;60 def regulations amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch report includes an interim report. staff member means— a member of the staff referred to in the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (1) or a person employed under section&#160;120 (3) of that Act; or a person engaged under section&#160;121 (1) of that Act; or any of the officers, employees and persons who under section&#160;122 of that Act are to assist the commission. s&#160;60 def staff member amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch statement , in relation to an examination, includes a question asked, an answer given, and any other comment or remark made, at the examination. Territory means— the Capital Territory; or an external Territory to which the ASIC Act extends. s&#160;60 def Territory amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch this Act , except in this part, means the ASIC Law, and includes the regulations. s&#160;60 def this Act amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch this jurisdiction means Queensland. this Law includes the regulations. tribunal means— a tribunal in Australia; or any other body, authority or person in Australia having power, by law or by consent of parties, to hear, receive or examine evidence. witness means— for a hearing before the commission, a person appearing at the hearing to give evidence; or for a panel proceeding, a person appearing in the proceeding to give evidence. s&#160;60 def witness sub 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;6 (1) – (2) written record , in relation to an examination, means— a record of the examination— that is made in writing; or as reduced to writing; or a part of such a record.\n(sec.60-ssec.2) Subject to the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction, an expression has the same meaning in that Law and in the ASIC Regulations of this jurisdiction as in the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction.\n- (a) to perform functions— (i) as a member, officer or employee of the commission delegate; and (ii) in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 ; or\n- (i) as a member, officer or employee of the commission delegate; and\n- (ii) in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 ; or\n- (b) to perform services for the commission delegate in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 .\n- (i) as a member, officer or employee of the commission delegate; and\n- (ii) in connection with the commission delegate’s performance or exercise of a function or power delegated under the ASIC Law, section&#160;102 ; or\n- (a) a register; and\n- (b) financial reports or financial records, however compiled, recorded or stored; and\n- (c) a document; and\n- (d) banker’s books; and\n- (e) any other record of information.\n- (a) except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;11 or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the commission; and\n- (b) in part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson of the disciplinary board.\n- (a) if the firstmentioned person is a body corporate—is or has been an officer of the body within the meaning of a national scheme law or a corresponding previous law; or\n- (b) in any case— (i) is or has been an employee, agent, banker, solicitor or auditor of; or (ii) is acting, or has acted, in any other capacity on behalf of; the firstmentioned person.\n- (i) is or has been an employee, agent, banker, solicitor or auditor of; or\n- (ii) is acting, or has acted, in any other capacity on behalf of;\n- (i) is or has been an employee, agent, banker, solicitor or auditor of; or\n- (ii) is acting, or has acted, in any other capacity on behalf of;\n- (a) in this section and part&#160;3 (other than section&#160;27 (2) and division&#160;9 ) of the ASIC Law—an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under section&#160;19 of that Law; or\n- (b) in section&#160;27 (2) and the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 , division&#160;9 —an examination of a person pursuant to a requirement made under the ASIC Law, section&#160;19 or a corresponding provision of the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction.\n- (a) an external Territory to which the ASIC Act does not extend; or\n- (b) a country outside Australia and the external Territories; or\n- (c) a part of such a country.\n- (a) in relation to a document—a meaning affected by the ASIC Law, section&#160;86 ; and\n- (b) in relation to information—a meaning affected by section&#160;61 of this Act.\n- (a) in the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , a meeting of the commission; and\n- (b) in part&#160;11 of that Law—a meeting of the disciplinary board.\n- (a) except in the ASIC Law, part&#160;4 , division&#160;2 or in part&#160;10 , 11 , or 14 , or in relation to a division of the commission, or in relation to the panel or the disciplinary board—a member of the commission; or\n- (b) in part&#160;10 of that Law or in relation to the panel—a member of the panel; or\n- (c) in part&#160;11 of that Law or in relation to the disciplinary board—the chairperson or any other member of the disciplinary board.\n- (a) the following— (i) the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction; (ii) the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction; (iii) this Act; or\n- (i) the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction;\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction;\n- (iii) this Act; or\n- (b) the following— (i) the Corporations Act ; (ii) the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory; (iii) the ASIC Act ; or\n- (i) the Corporations Act ;\n- (ii) the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory;\n- (iii) the ASIC Act ; or\n- (c) a law of a jurisdiction (other than this jurisdiction or the Capital Territory) that corresponds to an Act or Law referred to in paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) the Corporations Law of this jurisdiction;\n- (ii) the ASIC Law of this jurisdiction;\n- (iii) this Act; or\n- (i) the Corporations Act ;\n- (ii) the Corporations Law of the Capital Territory;\n- (iii) the ASIC Act ; or\n- (a) this Act; or\n- (b) the Corporations Law of Queensland; or\n- (c) the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n- (a) a director, secretary, executive officer or employee of the body; and\n- (b) a receiver, or a receiver and manager, of property of the body; and\n- (c) an administrator of the body or an administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed by the body; and\n- (d) a liquidator, or a provisional liquidator, of the body; and\n- (e) a trustee or other person administering a compromise or arrangement made between the body and any other person or persons.\n- (a) an application made to the panel under the Corporations Law; or\n- (b) a reference of a decision to the panel for review under the Corporations Law.\n- (a) a proceeding in a court; or\n- (b) a proceeding or hearing before, or an examination by or before, a tribunal;\n- (a) a member of the staff referred to in the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (1) or a person employed under section&#160;120 (3) of that Act; or\n- (b) a person engaged under section&#160;121 (1) of that Act; or\n- (c) any of the officers, employees and persons who under section&#160;122 of that Act are to assist the commission.\n- (a) the Capital Territory; or\n- (b) an external Territory to which the ASIC Act extends.\n- (a) a tribunal in Australia; or\n- (b) any other body, authority or person in Australia having power, by law or by consent of parties, to hear, receive or examine evidence.\n- (a) for a hearing before the commission, a person appearing at the hearing to give evidence; or\n- (b) for a panel proceeding, a person appearing in the proceeding to give evidence.\n- (a) a record of the examination— (i) that is made in writing; or (ii) as reduced to writing; or\n- (i) that is made in writing; or\n- (ii) as reduced to writing; or\n- (b) a part of such a record.\n- (i) that is made in writing; or\n- (ii) as reduced to writing; or","sortOrder":86},{"sectionNumber":"sec.61","sectionType":"section","heading":"Giving information","content":"### sec.61 Giving information\n\nA reference in the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland to giving information includes a reference to—\nexplaining or stating a matter; or\nidentifying a person, matter or thing; or\ndisclosing information; or\nanswering a question.\ns&#160;61 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n- (a) explaining or stating a matter; or\n- (b) identifying a person, matter or thing; or\n- (c) disclosing information; or\n- (d) answering a question.","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"sec.62","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation law","content":"### sec.62 Interpretation law\n\nExcept so far as the contrary intention appears in the ASIC Law of Queensland—\nthe Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;1.2 (except section&#160;8 ) applies; and\nsubject to paragraph&#160;(a) , the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) as in force at the commencement of the ASIC Act , section&#160;5 (5) applies as law of Queensland;\nin relation to the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland and any instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations (other than application orders made for the purposes of that Law under the Corporations Law, section&#160;111A of this jurisdiction) and so apply as if that Law were an Act of the Commonwealth and those regulations or instruments were regulations or instruments made under such an Act.\nThe Acts Interpretation Act 1954 does not apply in relation to the ASIC Law, or the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland or an application order or any other instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations.\ns&#160;62 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.62-ssec.1) Except so far as the contrary intention appears in the ASIC Law of Queensland— the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;1.2 (except section&#160;8 ) applies; and subject to paragraph&#160;(a) , the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) as in force at the commencement of the ASIC Act , section&#160;5 (5) applies as law of Queensland; in relation to the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland and any instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations (other than application orders made for the purposes of that Law under the Corporations Law, section&#160;111A of this jurisdiction) and so apply as if that Law were an Act of the Commonwealth and those regulations or instruments were regulations or instruments made under such an Act.\n(sec.62-ssec.2) The Acts Interpretation Act 1954 does not apply in relation to the ASIC Law, or the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland or an application order or any other instrument made, granted or issued under that Law or those regulations.\n- (a) the Corporations Law of Queensland, part&#160;1.2 (except section&#160;8 ) applies; and\n- (b) subject to paragraph&#160;(a) , the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cwlth) as in force at the commencement of the ASIC Act , section&#160;5 (5) applies as law of Queensland;","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Citing the ASIC Law and the ASIC Regulations","content":"## Citing the ASIC Law and the ASIC Regulations","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"sec.63","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alternative citations of the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland","content":"### sec.63 Alternative citations of the ASIC Law, and the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland\n\nThe ASIC Law of Queensland may be referred to simply as the ASIC Law.\nThe ASIC Regulations of Queensland may be referred to simply as the ASIC Regulations.\nThis section has effect subject to section&#160;65 .\ns&#160;63 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.63-ssec.1) The ASIC Law of Queensland may be referred to simply as the ASIC Law.\n(sec.63-ssec.2) The ASIC Regulations of Queensland may be referred to simply as the ASIC Regulations.\n(sec.63-ssec.3) This section has effect subject to section&#160;65 .","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"sec.64","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to ASIC Law, and ASIC Regulations, of another jurisdiction","content":"### sec.64 References to ASIC Law, and ASIC Regulations, of another jurisdiction\n\nThis section has effect for the purposes of an Act, a law of Queensland or an instrument made under an Act or under such a law.\nWhere a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland contains provisions corresponding of the Corporations Act , sections&#160;5 and 6 and also provides for provisions of the ASIC Act to apply as law of that jurisdiction, those provisions of the ASIC Act , as so applying, are the ASIC Law of that jurisdiction.\nWhere a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland provides for the regulations of the ASIC Act , section&#160;251 to apply for the purposes of the ASIC Law of that jurisdiction, those regulations as so applying are the ASIC Regulations of that jurisdiction.\ns&#160;64 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.64-ssec.1) This section has effect for the purposes of an Act, a law of Queensland or an instrument made under an Act or under such a law.\n(sec.64-ssec.2) Where a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland contains provisions corresponding of the Corporations Act , sections&#160;5 and 6 and also provides for provisions of the ASIC Act to apply as law of that jurisdiction, those provisions of the ASIC Act , as so applying, are the ASIC Law of that jurisdiction.\n(sec.64-ssec.3) Where a law of a jurisdiction other than Queensland provides for the regulations of the ASIC Act , section&#160;251 to apply for the purposes of the ASIC Law of that jurisdiction, those regulations as so applying are the ASIC Regulations of that jurisdiction.","sortOrder":91},{"sectionNumber":"sec.65","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to ASIC Law and ASIC Regulations","content":"### sec.65 References to ASIC Law and ASIC Regulations\n\nThe object of this section is to help ensure that, so far as possible—\nthe bodies established by the ASIC Act and the staff of those bodies, can perform functions and exercise powers; and\npersons can have dealings with those bodies;\nas if the ASIC Act , the ASIC Law of Queensland and the ASIC Law of each other State, constituted a single national ASIC Law applying of its own force throughout Australia.\nSubject to this section, a reference in an instrument to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, is to be taken, for the purposes of the laws of Queensland—\nto be a reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland; and\nto include a separate reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\nSubsection&#160;(2) has effect except so far as the contrary intention appears in the instrument, or the context of the reference otherwise requires.\nWithout limiting subsection&#160;(3) , subsection&#160;(2) does not apply in relation to a reference expressed as a reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of a jurisdiction.\nIn this section—\ninstrument means—\nan Act or an instrument made under an Act; or\na law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or\nan award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or\nany other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\na notice, certificate or licence; or\nan agreement; or\nan application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or\nan indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or\nany other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or\nany other document whatever.\ns&#160;65 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.65-ssec.1) The object of this section is to help ensure that, so far as possible— the bodies established by the ASIC Act and the staff of those bodies, can perform functions and exercise powers; and persons can have dealings with those bodies; as if the ASIC Act , the ASIC Law of Queensland and the ASIC Law of each other State, constituted a single national ASIC Law applying of its own force throughout Australia.\n(sec.65-ssec.2) Subject to this section, a reference in an instrument to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, is to be taken, for the purposes of the laws of Queensland— to be a reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland; and to include a separate reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\n(sec.65-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(2) has effect except so far as the contrary intention appears in the instrument, or the context of the reference otherwise requires.\n(sec.65-ssec.4) Without limiting subsection&#160;(3) , subsection&#160;(2) does not apply in relation to a reference expressed as a reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of a jurisdiction.\n(sec.65-ssec.5) In this section— instrument means— an Act or an instrument made under an Act; or a law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or an award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or a notice, certificate or licence; or an agreement; or an application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or an indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or any other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or any other document whatever.\n- (a) the bodies established by the ASIC Act and the staff of those bodies, can perform functions and exercise powers; and\n- (b) persons can have dealings with those bodies;\n- (a) to be a reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of Queensland; and\n- (b) to include a separate reference to the ASIC Law, or to the ASIC Regulations, of each jurisdiction other than Queensland.\n- (a) an Act or an instrument made under an Act; or\n- (b) a law of Queensland or an instrument made under such a law; or\n- (c) an award or other industrial determination or order, or an industrial agreement; or\n- (d) any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\n- (e) a notice, certificate or licence; or\n- (f) an agreement; or\n- (g) an application made, information laid, affidavit sworn, or warrant issued, for any purpose; or\n- (h) an indictment, presentment, summons or writ; or\n- (i) any other pleading in, or process issued in connection with, a legal or other proceeding; or\n- (j) any other document whatever.","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"The commission","content":"## The commission","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"sec.66","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of functions and powers on commission","content":"### sec.66 Conferral of functions and powers on commission\n\nThe commission has the functions and powers conferred or expressed to be conferred on it under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nThe commission also has the functions and powers conferred or expressed to be conferred upon the NCSC by or under a Code that is a relevant Code for the purposes of the Companies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Queensland) Code .\n(sec.66-ssec.1) The commission has the functions and powers conferred or expressed to be conferred on it under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.66-ssec.2) The commission also has the functions and powers conferred or expressed to be conferred upon the NCSC by or under a Code that is a relevant Code for the purposes of the Companies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Queensland) Code .","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"sec.67","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.67\n\ns&#160;67 om 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":95},{"sectionNumber":"sec.68","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of other functions and powers for purposes of law in Queensland","content":"### sec.68 Conferral of other functions and powers for purposes of law in Queensland\n\nThe commission has power to do acts in Queensland in the performance or exercise of any function or power expressed to be conferred on the commission by a national scheme law of another jurisdiction.\ns&#160;68 sub 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":96},{"sectionNumber":"sec.69","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.69\n\ns&#160;69 om 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2","sortOrder":97},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"The panel","content":"## The panel","sortOrder":98},{"sectionNumber":"sec.70","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of functions and powers on the panel","content":"### sec.70 Conferral of functions and powers on the panel\n\nThe panel has the functions and powers conferred on it by or under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nThe panel has power to do acts in Queensland in the performance or exercise of any function or power expressed to be conferred on the panel by a national scheme law of another jurisdiction.\n(sec.70-ssec.1) The panel has the functions and powers conferred on it by or under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.70-ssec.2) The panel has power to do acts in Queensland in the performance or exercise of any function or power expressed to be conferred on the panel by a national scheme law of another jurisdiction.","sortOrder":99},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.5","sectionType":"division","heading":"The disciplinary board","content":"## The disciplinary board","sortOrder":100},{"sectionNumber":"sec.71","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of functions and powers on the disciplinary board","content":"### sec.71 Conferral of functions and powers on the disciplinary board\n\nThe disciplinary board has the functions and powers conferred on it by or under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nThe disciplinary board has power to do acts in Queensland in the performance or exercise of any function or power expressed to be conferred on it by a national scheme law of another jurisdiction.\n(sec.71-ssec.1) The disciplinary board has the functions and powers conferred on it by or under a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.71-ssec.2) The disciplinary board has power to do acts in Queensland in the performance or exercise of any function or power expressed to be conferred on it by a national scheme law of another jurisdiction.","sortOrder":101},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Miscellaneous","content":"## Miscellaneous","sortOrder":102},{"sectionNumber":"sec.72","sectionType":"section","heading":"Acting appointments","content":"### sec.72 Acting appointments\n\nWhere a person is appointed under the ASIC Act to act in a particular office, the law of this jurisdiction applies in relation to that person while acting in that office as if the person were the holder of the office.\ns&#160;72 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch","sortOrder":103},{"sectionNumber":"sec.73","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alteration of names and constitutions","content":"### sec.73 Alteration of names and constitutions\n\nWhere—\nthe name of a body established by the ASIC Act is changed by law (whether or not the body is incorporated); or\nthe name of an office established by that Act is changed by law;\nthen, unless the contrary intention appears, a reference in—\nany Act of this jurisdiction; or\nany instrument under such an Act; or\nany award or other industrial determination or order or any industrial agreement; or\nany other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\nany contract; or\nany pleading in, or process issued in connection with, any legal or other proceeding; or\nany other instrument;\nto the body or the office under the former name, except in relation to matters that occurred before that change took place, is taken as a reference to the body or the office under the new name.\nWhere the constitution of a body established by the ASIC Act is changed by law (whether or not the body is incorporated), then, unless the contrary intention appears, the alteration does not affect any functions or powers conferred or expressed to be conferred on that body by a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\ns&#160;73 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.73-ssec.1) Where— the name of a body established by the ASIC Act is changed by law (whether or not the body is incorporated); or the name of an office established by that Act is changed by law; then, unless the contrary intention appears, a reference in— any Act of this jurisdiction; or any instrument under such an Act; or any award or other industrial determination or order or any industrial agreement; or any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or any contract; or any pleading in, or process issued in connection with, any legal or other proceeding; or any other instrument; to the body or the office under the former name, except in relation to matters that occurred before that change took place, is taken as a reference to the body or the office under the new name.\n(sec.73-ssec.2) Where the constitution of a body established by the ASIC Act is changed by law (whether or not the body is incorporated), then, unless the contrary intention appears, the alteration does not affect any functions or powers conferred or expressed to be conferred on that body by a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n- (a) the name of a body established by the ASIC Act is changed by law (whether or not the body is incorporated); or\n- (b) the name of an office established by that Act is changed by law;\n- (c) any Act of this jurisdiction; or\n- (d) any instrument under such an Act; or\n- (e) any award or other industrial determination or order or any industrial agreement; or\n- (f) any other order (whether executive, judicial or otherwise); or\n- (g) any contract; or\n- (h) any pleading in, or process issued in connection with, any legal or other proceeding; or\n- (i) any other instrument;","sortOrder":104},{"sectionNumber":"sec.74","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth Crimes Act","content":"### sec.74 Application of Commonwealth Crimes Act\n\nFor the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 , the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 applies as a law of Queensland.\nFor the purposes of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying because of subsection&#160;(1) , an examination or a hearing is a judicial proceeding.\nFor the purposes of a national scheme law of Queensland—\nan offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying because of subsection&#160;(1) in relation to an examination or hearing, is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 ; and\nan offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying, in relation to an examination or hearing held under the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction, as a law of that jurisdiction is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 of that jurisdiction.\ns&#160;74 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;14 ; 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch ; 2002 No.&#160;34 s&#160;74 sch&#160;6 (retro)\n(sec.74-ssec.1) For the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 , the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 applies as a law of Queensland.\n(sec.74-ssec.2) For the purposes of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying because of subsection&#160;(1) , an examination or a hearing is a judicial proceeding.\n(sec.74-ssec.3) For the purposes of a national scheme law of Queensland— an offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying because of subsection&#160;(1) in relation to an examination or hearing, is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 ; and an offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying, in relation to an examination or hearing held under the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction, as a law of that jurisdiction is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 of that jurisdiction.\n- (a) an offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying because of subsection&#160;(1) in relation to an examination or hearing, is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 ; and\n- (b) an offence under the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) , part&#160;3 as applying, in relation to an examination or hearing held under the ASIC Law of another jurisdiction, as a law of that jurisdiction is taken to be an offence against the ASIC Law, part&#160;3 of that jurisdiction.","sortOrder":105},{"sectionNumber":"sec.75","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Commonwealth Evidence Act","content":"### sec.75 Application of Commonwealth Evidence Act\n\nFor the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 the following provisions of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cwlth) apply as a law of Queensland—\npart&#160;2.2 (Documents)\nsection&#160;69 (Exception: business records)\nsection&#160;70 (Exception: contents of tags, labels and writing)\nsection&#160;71 (Exception: telecommunications)\nsection&#160;147 (Documents produced by processes, machines and other devices in the course of business)\npart&#160;4.6 , division&#160;2 .\nThose provisions of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cwlth) apply to an examination in the same way as they apply to a proceeding to which that Act applies under section&#160;4 of that Act.\ns&#160;75 sub 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;19\namd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.75-ssec.1) For the purposes of the ASIC Law of Queensland, part&#160;3 the following provisions of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cwlth) apply as a law of Queensland— part&#160;2.2 (Documents) section&#160;69 (Exception: business records) section&#160;70 (Exception: contents of tags, labels and writing) section&#160;71 (Exception: telecommunications) section&#160;147 (Documents produced by processes, machines and other devices in the course of business) part&#160;4.6 , division&#160;2 .\n(sec.75-ssec.2) Those provisions of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cwlth) apply to an examination in the same way as they apply to a proceeding to which that Act applies under section&#160;4 of that Act.\n- • part&#160;2.2 (Documents)\n- • section&#160;69 (Exception: business records)\n- • section&#160;70 (Exception: contents of tags, labels and writing)\n- • section&#160;71 (Exception: telecommunications)\n- • section&#160;147 (Documents produced by processes, machines and other devices in the course of business)\n- • part&#160;4.6 , division&#160;2 .","sortOrder":106},{"sectionNumber":"pt.12","sectionType":"part","heading":"General","content":"# General","sortOrder":107},{"sectionNumber":"pt.12-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Arrangements","content":"## Arrangements","sortOrder":108},{"sectionNumber":"sec.76","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definition","content":"### sec.76 Definition\n\nIn this division—\nrelevant State law means—\na law of the State concerning the management or affairs of a body corporate; or\na law of the State concerning fraud or dishonesty; or\nany other law of the State;\nother than a cooperative scheme law.\n- (a) a law of the State concerning the management or affairs of a body corporate; or\n- (b) a law of the State concerning fraud or dishonesty; or\n- (c) any other law of the State;","sortOrder":109},{"sectionNumber":"sec.77","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangements relating to applicable provisions","content":"### sec.77 Arrangements relating to applicable provisions\n\nWhere an arrangement between the Minister for this jurisdiction and the Commonwealth Minister provides—\nthat an authority or officer of the Commonwealth has certain functions or powers under a relevant State law; or\nthat, despite section&#160;33 or 39 , an authority or officer of the State has certain functions or powers under an applicable provision of this jurisdiction;\nthose functions or powers are conferred on that authority or officer.\nFunctions and powers conferred under an arrangement under subsection&#160;(1) are to be performed and exercised in accordance with the arrangement but are to be taken to have been validly performed or exercised despite any failure to comply with any condition or restriction under the arrangement.\n(sec.77-ssec.1) Where an arrangement between the Minister for this jurisdiction and the Commonwealth Minister provides— that an authority or officer of the Commonwealth has certain functions or powers under a relevant State law; or that, despite section&#160;33 or 39 , an authority or officer of the State has certain functions or powers under an applicable provision of this jurisdiction; those functions or powers are conferred on that authority or officer.\n(sec.77-ssec.2) Functions and powers conferred under an arrangement under subsection&#160;(1) are to be performed and exercised in accordance with the arrangement but are to be taken to have been validly performed or exercised despite any failure to comply with any condition or restriction under the arrangement.\n- (a) that an authority or officer of the Commonwealth has certain functions or powers under a relevant State law; or\n- (b) that, despite section&#160;33 or 39 , an authority or officer of the State has certain functions or powers under an applicable provision of this jurisdiction;","sortOrder":110},{"sectionNumber":"sec.78","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notice of arrangement","content":"### sec.78 Notice of arrangement\n\nNotice of each arrangement under section&#160;77 must be published in the government gazette and in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette within 21 days after it is made.","sortOrder":111},{"sectionNumber":"pt.12-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Penalties and fines","content":"## Penalties and fines","sortOrder":112},{"sectionNumber":"sec.79","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of penalties and fines","content":"### sec.79 Application of penalties and fines\n\nAll fines, penalties and other money (other than fees and taxes) which, under and by virtue of the applicable provisions of Queensland, are authorised or directed to be imposed on any person must be paid to the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":113},{"sectionNumber":"pt.12-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Regulations","content":"## Regulations","sortOrder":114},{"sectionNumber":"sec.80","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulation-making power","content":"### sec.80 Regulation-making power\n\nThe Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act.\ns&#160;80 sub 1995 No.&#160;58 s&#160;4 sch&#160;1","sortOrder":115},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13","sectionType":"part","heading":"Transitional","content":"# Transitional","sortOrder":116},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Staff","content":"## Staff","sortOrder":117},{"sectionNumber":"sec.81","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information previously acquired","content":"### sec.81 Information previously acquired\n\nA staff member who, before the commencement of this section, was an officer or employee of the public service of Queensland engaged in the administration of a cooperative scheme law may disclose to the commission information acquired while so engaged.","sortOrder":118},{"sectionNumber":"sec.82","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.82\n\ns&#160;82 om 31 July 1992 RA s&#160;38","sortOrder":119},{"sectionNumber":"sec.83","sectionType":"section","heading":"Superannuation","content":"### sec.83 Superannuation\n\nThis section applies in respect of a member of the commission’s staff who—\nis appointed as such under the Public Service Act 1922 (Cwlth), section&#160;81B ; and\nimmediately before the commencement of this section and before that appointment was a State superannuation officer employed in the office of the commissioner for corporate affairs;\nwhilst that member continues to be a member of the commission’s staff.\nThis section also applies in respect of a member of the commission’s staff who—\nis employed on the commencement of this section by the commission under the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (3) as regional commissioner of the commission for Queensland; and\nimmediately before the commencement of the employment referred to in paragraph&#160;(a), was a State superannuation officer employed in the Department of Justice and Corrective Services.\nA commission officer continues to be an officer within the meaning of the State Superannuation Act but ceases to be such an officer if he or she before 1 January 1992 becomes a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme or elects to be a member of the State (public sector) scheme.\nA commission officer who at any time before 1 January 1992 becomes a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme is taken, for the purpose of the application of the State Superannuation Act , to have made an election at that time under section&#160;35 (2) of that Act.\nA commission officer referred to in subsection&#160;(2A) may by notice in writing to the board within 3 months of becoming a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme but in any case before 1 January 1992 elect to transfer the entitlements in the fund to the administrators of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme, whereupon the amount that would have been credited to the fund had the State Superannuation Act , section&#160;35 applied is to be paid in lieu by the board from the fund to the administrators of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme and the commission officer has no further entitlements under the State Superannuation Act .\nAt any time after officers of the public service of Queensland become eligible to transfer membership from the State Service Superannuation scheme to the State (public sector) scheme, a commission officer who is not a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme may elect, at any time before 1 January 1992, to be a member of the State (public sector) scheme.\nFor the purposes of the State (public sector) scheme—\nthe commission officer referred to in subsection&#160;(3) is taken to be an employee of a unit of the State public sector; and\ncontributions payable by the employer in respect of that employee and paid by the commission are to be taken to be paid by the unit of the public sector employing that commission officer.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(5), for so long as a person who is a commission officer is a member of the State (public sector) scheme and makes the contributions prescribed under that scheme—\nthe commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been an employee of a unit of the State public sector during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and\nfor the purpose of the application of the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by a unit of the public sector but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contribution in respect of that employment.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(5), for so long as a person who is a commission officer continues to be a State superannuation officer and to make the contributions to the fund as prescribed under the State Superannuation Act —\nthe commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been a State superannuation officer during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and\nfor the purpose of the application of the State Superannuation Act , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by the Crown but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contributions for the period the person is a commission officer.\nIf the commission fails to pay in full—\nin respect of a commission officer who is a State superannuation officer, the contributions prescribed under the State Superannuation Act to be paid by the Crown in respect of such an officer; or\nin respect of a commission officer who is a member of the State (public sector) scheme, the contributions prescribed under the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 to be paid by a unit of the State public sector in respect of such an officer;\nthe method of calculation of the benefits of that commission officer may be varied by order in council made on the recommendation of an actuary appointed for the purposes of the State Superannuation Act or, as the case may be, the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 to reflect the reduction in the amount of the contributions by the commission but not so as to reduce the benefits accrued by the commission officer prior to the failure to pay.\nIn this section—\nboard means the State Service Superannuation Board.\ncommission officer means a member of the commission’s staff referred to in subsection&#160;(1) or (1A).\nCommonwealth superannuation scheme means the superannuation scheme established under the Superannuation Act 1990 (Cwlth).\nfund means the State service superannuation fund.\nState (public sector) scheme means a scheme within the meaning of the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 .\nState Superannuation Act means the State Service Superannuation Act 1972 .\nState superannuation officer means an officer within the meaning of the State Superannuation Act .\ns&#160;83 amd 1991 No.&#160;42 s&#160;3 sch ; 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.83-ssec.1) This section applies in respect of a member of the commission’s staff who— is appointed as such under the Public Service Act 1922 (Cwlth), section&#160;81B ; and immediately before the commencement of this section and before that appointment was a State superannuation officer employed in the office of the commissioner for corporate affairs; whilst that member continues to be a member of the commission’s staff.\n(sec.83-ssec.1A) This section also applies in respect of a member of the commission’s staff who— is employed on the commencement of this section by the commission under the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (3) as regional commissioner of the commission for Queensland; and immediately before the commencement of the employment referred to in paragraph&#160;(a), was a State superannuation officer employed in the Department of Justice and Corrective Services.\n(sec.83-ssec.2) A commission officer continues to be an officer within the meaning of the State Superannuation Act but ceases to be such an officer if he or she before 1 January 1992 becomes a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme or elects to be a member of the State (public sector) scheme.\n(sec.83-ssec.2A) A commission officer who at any time before 1 January 1992 becomes a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme is taken, for the purpose of the application of the State Superannuation Act , to have made an election at that time under section&#160;35 (2) of that Act.\n(sec.83-ssec.2B) A commission officer referred to in subsection&#160;(2A) may by notice in writing to the board within 3 months of becoming a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme but in any case before 1 January 1992 elect to transfer the entitlements in the fund to the administrators of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme, whereupon the amount that would have been credited to the fund had the State Superannuation Act , section&#160;35 applied is to be paid in lieu by the board from the fund to the administrators of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme and the commission officer has no further entitlements under the State Superannuation Act .\n(sec.83-ssec.3) At any time after officers of the public service of Queensland become eligible to transfer membership from the State Service Superannuation scheme to the State (public sector) scheme, a commission officer who is not a member of the Commonwealth superannuation scheme may elect, at any time before 1 January 1992, to be a member of the State (public sector) scheme.\n(sec.83-ssec.3A) For the purposes of the State (public sector) scheme— the commission officer referred to in subsection&#160;(3) is taken to be an employee of a unit of the State public sector; and contributions payable by the employer in respect of that employee and paid by the commission are to be taken to be paid by the unit of the public sector employing that commission officer.\n(sec.83-ssec.3B) Subject to subsection&#160;(5), for so long as a person who is a commission officer is a member of the State (public sector) scheme and makes the contributions prescribed under that scheme— the commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been an employee of a unit of the State public sector during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and for the purpose of the application of the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by a unit of the public sector but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contribution in respect of that employment.\n(sec.83-ssec.4) Subject to subsection&#160;(5), for so long as a person who is a commission officer continues to be a State superannuation officer and to make the contributions to the fund as prescribed under the State Superannuation Act — the commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been a State superannuation officer during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and for the purpose of the application of the State Superannuation Act , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by the Crown but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contributions for the period the person is a commission officer.\n(sec.83-ssec.5) If the commission fails to pay in full— in respect of a commission officer who is a State superannuation officer, the contributions prescribed under the State Superannuation Act to be paid by the Crown in respect of such an officer; or in respect of a commission officer who is a member of the State (public sector) scheme, the contributions prescribed under the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 to be paid by a unit of the State public sector in respect of such an officer; the method of calculation of the benefits of that commission officer may be varied by order in council made on the recommendation of an actuary appointed for the purposes of the State Superannuation Act or, as the case may be, the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 to reflect the reduction in the amount of the contributions by the commission but not so as to reduce the benefits accrued by the commission officer prior to the failure to pay.\n(sec.83-ssec.6) In this section— board means the State Service Superannuation Board. commission officer means a member of the commission’s staff referred to in subsection&#160;(1) or (1A). Commonwealth superannuation scheme means the superannuation scheme established under the Superannuation Act 1990 (Cwlth). fund means the State service superannuation fund. State (public sector) scheme means a scheme within the meaning of the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 . State Superannuation Act means the State Service Superannuation Act 1972 . State superannuation officer means an officer within the meaning of the State Superannuation Act .\n- (a) is appointed as such under the Public Service Act 1922 (Cwlth), section&#160;81B ; and\n- (b) immediately before the commencement of this section and before that appointment was a State superannuation officer employed in the office of the commissioner for corporate affairs;\n- (a) is employed on the commencement of this section by the commission under the ASIC Act , section&#160;120 (3) as regional commissioner of the commission for Queensland; and\n- (b) immediately before the commencement of the employment referred to in paragraph&#160;(a), was a State superannuation officer employed in the Department of Justice and Corrective Services.\n- (a) the commission officer referred to in subsection&#160;(3) is taken to be an employee of a unit of the State public sector; and\n- (b) contributions payable by the employer in respect of that employee and paid by the commission are to be taken to be paid by the unit of the public sector employing that commission officer.\n- (a) the commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been an employee of a unit of the State public sector during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and\n- (b) for the purpose of the application of the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by a unit of the public sector but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contribution in respect of that employment.\n- (a) the commission officer has the same rights as the person would have if he or she had been a State superannuation officer during the whole of the period during which the person so contributes; and\n- (b) for the purpose of the application of the State Superannuation Act , employment by the commission is to be taken to be employment by the Crown but the Crown in right of the State is not liable to make any contributions for the period the person is a commission officer.\n- (a) in respect of a commission officer who is a State superannuation officer, the contributions prescribed under the State Superannuation Act to be paid by the Crown in respect of such an officer; or\n- (b) in respect of a commission officer who is a member of the State (public sector) scheme, the contributions prescribed under the Superannuation (State Public Sector) Act 1990 to be paid by a unit of the State public sector in respect of such an officer;","sortOrder":120},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Cooperative scheme laws","content":"## Cooperative scheme laws","sortOrder":121},{"sectionNumber":"sec.84","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cooperative scheme laws","content":"### sec.84 Cooperative scheme laws\n\nFor the purposes of this Act, the following are the cooperative scheme laws—\nCompanies (Application of Laws) Act 1981\nCompanies (Queensland) Code\nCompanies (Acquisition of Shares) (Application of Laws) Act 1981\nCompanies (Acquisition of Shares) (Queensland) Code\nCompanies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Application of Laws) Act 1981\nCompanies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Queensland) Code\nSecurities Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1981\nSecurities Industry (Queensland) Code\nFutures Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1986\nFutures Industry (Queensland) Code .\n- • Companies (Application of Laws) Act 1981\n- • Companies (Queensland) Code\n- • Companies (Acquisition of Shares) (Application of Laws) Act 1981\n- • Companies (Acquisition of Shares) (Queensland) Code\n- • Companies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Application of Laws) Act 1981\n- • Companies and Securities (Interpretation and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Queensland) Code\n- • Securities Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1981\n- • Securities Industry (Queensland) Code\n- • Futures Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1986\n- • Futures Industry (Queensland) Code .","sortOrder":122},{"sectionNumber":"sec.85","sectionType":"section","heading":"National scheme laws prevail over cooperative scheme laws","content":"### sec.85 National scheme laws prevail over cooperative scheme laws\n\nThis section provides for the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction to supersede the cooperative scheme laws, which are to continue to operate of their own force only in relation to—\nmatters arising before the commencement of this section; and\nmatters arising, directly or indirectly, out of such matters;\nin so far as the national scheme laws or the Corporations legislation do not deal with those matters.\nWhere a cooperative scheme law is inconsistent with a national scheme law of this jurisdiction, the national scheme law prevails and, to the extent of the inconsistency, the cooperative scheme law does not operate.\nFor the purposes of subsection&#160;(2), a cooperative scheme law is inconsistent with a national scheme law if it would be inconsistent within the meaning of section&#160;109 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia if the national scheme law were an Act of the Commonwealth.\nIn this section—\nCorporations legislation means the Corporations legislation to which the Corporations Act 2001 (Cwlth), part&#160;1.1A applies.\ns&#160;85 amd 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\n(sec.85-ssec.1) This section provides for the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction to supersede the cooperative scheme laws, which are to continue to operate of their own force only in relation to— matters arising before the commencement of this section; and matters arising, directly or indirectly, out of such matters; in so far as the national scheme laws or the Corporations legislation do not deal with those matters.\n(sec.85-ssec.2) Where a cooperative scheme law is inconsistent with a national scheme law of this jurisdiction, the national scheme law prevails and, to the extent of the inconsistency, the cooperative scheme law does not operate.\n(sec.85-ssec.3) For the purposes of subsection&#160;(2), a cooperative scheme law is inconsistent with a national scheme law if it would be inconsistent within the meaning of section&#160;109 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia if the national scheme law were an Act of the Commonwealth.\n(sec.85-ssec.4) In this section— Corporations legislation means the Corporations legislation to which the Corporations Act 2001 (Cwlth), part&#160;1.1A applies.\n- (a) matters arising before the commencement of this section; and\n- (b) matters arising, directly or indirectly, out of such matters;","sortOrder":123},{"sectionNumber":"sec.86","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations may exclude residual operation of cooperative scheme laws","content":"### sec.86 Regulations may exclude residual operation of cooperative scheme laws\n\nRegulations under section&#160;80 may provide that prescribed provisions of cooperative scheme laws do not operate, either generally or as otherwise prescribed by the regulations.\nRegulations in force because of subsection&#160;(1) have effect accordingly.\n(sec.86-ssec.1) Regulations under section&#160;80 may provide that prescribed provisions of cooperative scheme laws do not operate, either generally or as otherwise prescribed by the regulations.\n(sec.86-ssec.2) Regulations in force because of subsection&#160;(1) have effect accordingly.","sortOrder":124},{"sectionNumber":"sec.87","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of ss&#160;85–86","content":"### sec.87 Effect of ss&#160;85–86\n\nTo the extent that a cooperative scheme law ceases to operate because of section&#160;85 or 86, the law is taken for the purposes of the Acts Interpretation Act 1954 to have been repealed by this Act.\nNothing in this Act revives, or otherwise affects the exclusion of, the provisions referred to in the Companies (Application of Laws) Act 1981 , section&#160;18(1) or the Securities Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1981 , section&#160;16(1) .\n(sec.87-ssec.1) To the extent that a cooperative scheme law ceases to operate because of section&#160;85 or 86, the law is taken for the purposes of the Acts Interpretation Act 1954 to have been repealed by this Act.\n(sec.87-ssec.2) Nothing in this Act revives, or otherwise affects the exclusion of, the provisions referred to in the Companies (Application of Laws) Act 1981 , section&#160;18(1) or the Securities Industry (Application of Laws) Act 1981 , section&#160;16(1) .","sortOrder":125},{"sectionNumber":"sec.88","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations may modify cooperative scheme laws","content":"### sec.88 Regulations may modify cooperative scheme laws\n\nRegulations under section&#160;80 may provide that a specified cooperative scheme law, or specified provisions of a cooperative scheme law, has or have effect with such modifications as the regulations prescribe.\nRegulations in force because of subsection&#160;(1) have effect accordingly, even if, because of section&#160;85 or 86, the specified law does not operate of its own force, or the specified provisions do not operate of their own force, as the case requires.\nHowever, a reference in section&#160;85(2) to a cooperative scheme law includes a reference to such a law as it has effect, or to provisions of such a law as they have effect, because of this section.\n(sec.88-ssec.1) Regulations under section&#160;80 may provide that a specified cooperative scheme law, or specified provisions of a cooperative scheme law, has or have effect with such modifications as the regulations prescribe.\n(sec.88-ssec.2) Regulations in force because of subsection&#160;(1) have effect accordingly, even if, because of section&#160;85 or 86, the specified law does not operate of its own force, or the specified provisions do not operate of their own force, as the case requires.\n(sec.88-ssec.3) However, a reference in section&#160;85(2) to a cooperative scheme law includes a reference to such a law as it has effect, or to provisions of such a law as they have effect, because of this section.","sortOrder":126},{"sectionNumber":"sec.89","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cooperative scheme laws not affected by certain Commonwealth regulations","content":"### sec.89 Cooperative scheme laws not affected by certain Commonwealth regulations\n\nThe operation or effect of a cooperative scheme law is not modified or otherwise affected because regulations of a kind referred to in the Corporations Act , section&#160;77 or 79 modify or otherwise affect the operation of a Cooperative Scheme Act within the meaning of the Corporations Act , part&#160;12 .","sortOrder":127},{"sectionNumber":"sec.90","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to cooperative scheme laws and regulations","content":"### sec.90 References to cooperative scheme laws and regulations\n\nIn this section—\nCode regulations means provisions applying as regulations made under a Code by reason of a provision of an Act that is a cooperative scheme law.\ninstrument has the same meaning as in section&#160;13, but does not include—\na cooperative scheme law; or\nregulations under an Act that is such a law, or under this Act; or\nCode regulations; or\na national scheme law of this jurisdiction, or the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(4) and to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to a cooperative scheme law is to be taken to include a reference to such provisions of the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction as correspond to provisions of the cooperative scheme law.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(4) and to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to Code regulations is to be taken to include a reference to such provisions of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland as correspond to provisions of the Code regulations.\nSubject to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to a provision of a cooperative scheme law or of Code regulations is to be taken to include a reference to the corresponding provision of a national scheme law of this jurisdiction or of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland, as the case may be.\nSubject to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to the NCSC is to be taken to include a reference to the commission.\nRegulations under section&#160;80 may declare that, for the purposes of this section—\nprescribed provisions of national scheme laws of this jurisdiction correspond to prescribed provisions of cooperative scheme laws; and\nprescribed provisions of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, correspond to prescribed provisions of Code regulations.\nRegulations under section&#160;80—\nmay declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section does not apply in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments; or\nmay declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section has effect in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments as if, in the subsection, the words ‘be taken to be’ were substituted for the words ‘be taken to include’.\nRegulations in force because of subsection&#160;(6) or (7) have effect accordingly.\ns&#160;90 amd 1991 No.&#160;62 s&#160;15 ; 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;3 sch\n(sec.90-ssec.1) In this section— Code regulations means provisions applying as regulations made under a Code by reason of a provision of an Act that is a cooperative scheme law. instrument has the same meaning as in section&#160;13, but does not include— a cooperative scheme law; or regulations under an Act that is such a law, or under this Act; or Code regulations; or a national scheme law of this jurisdiction, or the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland.\n(sec.90-ssec.2) Subject to subsection&#160;(4) and to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to a cooperative scheme law is to be taken to include a reference to such provisions of the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction as correspond to provisions of the cooperative scheme law.\n(sec.90-ssec.3) Subject to subsection&#160;(4) and to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to Code regulations is to be taken to include a reference to such provisions of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland as correspond to provisions of the Code regulations.\n(sec.90-ssec.4) Subject to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to a provision of a cooperative scheme law or of Code regulations is to be taken to include a reference to the corresponding provision of a national scheme law of this jurisdiction or of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland, as the case may be.\n(sec.90-ssec.5) Subject to any regulations in force under subsection&#160;(7), a reference in an instrument to the NCSC is to be taken to include a reference to the commission.\n(sec.90-ssec.6) Regulations under section&#160;80 may declare that, for the purposes of this section— prescribed provisions of national scheme laws of this jurisdiction correspond to prescribed provisions of cooperative scheme laws; and prescribed provisions of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, correspond to prescribed provisions of Code regulations.\n(sec.90-ssec.7) Regulations under section&#160;80— may declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section does not apply in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments; or may declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section has effect in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments as if, in the subsection, the words ‘be taken to be’ were substituted for the words ‘be taken to include’.\n(sec.90-ssec.8) Regulations in force because of subsection&#160;(6) or (7) have effect accordingly.\n- (a) a cooperative scheme law; or\n- (b) regulations under an Act that is such a law, or under this Act; or\n- (c) Code regulations; or\n- (d) a national scheme law of this jurisdiction, or the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, of Queensland.\n- (a) prescribed provisions of national scheme laws of this jurisdiction correspond to prescribed provisions of cooperative scheme laws; and\n- (b) prescribed provisions of the Corporations Regulations, or ASIC Regulations, correspond to prescribed provisions of Code regulations.\n- (a) may declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section does not apply in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments; or\n- (b) may declare that subsection&#160;(2), (3), (4) or (5) of this section has effect in relation to prescribed references in prescribed instruments as if, in the subsection, the words ‘be taken to be’ were substituted for the words ‘be taken to include’.","sortOrder":128},{"sectionNumber":"sec.91","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of functions and powers in relation to cooperative scheme laws","content":"### sec.91 Conferral of functions and powers in relation to cooperative scheme laws\n\nThe Commonwealth director of public prosecutions—\nhas the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the director of prosecutions of Queensland; and\nmay, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the director of public prosecutions by the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1983 (Cwlth) in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nThe Australian Federal Police—\nhave the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the Police Service of Queensland; and\nmay, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the Australian Federal Police in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nThe Commonwealth Minister has, in respect of the prosecution of offences against the cooperative scheme laws, the same functions and powers as he or she has in respect of the prosecution of offences against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nFor the purposes of the exercise of enforcement powers, and other functions and powers conferred by this section, including the obtaining of warrants to arrest, an offence against a cooperative scheme law is taken to be an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nIn this section—\nenforcement power means a function or power relating to—\nthe investigation of an offence; or\nthe arrest and custody of persons charged with an offence; or\nthe institution and carrying on of a prosecution of an offence; or\nmatters relating to such an investigation, arrest, custody or prosecution.\ns&#160;91 amd 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;20\n(sec.91-ssec.1) The Commonwealth director of public prosecutions— has the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the director of prosecutions of Queensland; and may, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the director of public prosecutions by the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1983 (Cwlth) in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.91-ssec.2) The Australian Federal Police— have the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the Police Service of Queensland; and may, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the Australian Federal Police in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.91-ssec.3) The Commonwealth Minister has, in respect of the prosecution of offences against the cooperative scheme laws, the same functions and powers as he or she has in respect of the prosecution of offences against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.91-ssec.4) For the purposes of the exercise of enforcement powers, and other functions and powers conferred by this section, including the obtaining of warrants to arrest, an offence against a cooperative scheme law is taken to be an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.91-ssec.5) In this section— enforcement power means a function or power relating to— the investigation of an offence; or the arrest and custody of persons charged with an offence; or the institution and carrying on of a prosecution of an offence; or matters relating to such an investigation, arrest, custody or prosecution.\n- (a) has the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the director of prosecutions of Queensland; and\n- (b) may, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the director of public prosecutions by the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1983 (Cwlth) in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n- (a) have the same enforcement powers in relation to the cooperative scheme laws as has the Police Service of Queensland; and\n- (b) may, in relation to an offence against a cooperative scheme law, perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on the Australian Federal Police in relation to offences against the laws of the Commonwealth as if the offence against the cooperative scheme law were an offence against a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n- (a) the investigation of an offence; or\n- (b) the arrest and custody of persons charged with an offence; or\n- (c) the institution and carrying on of a prosecution of an offence; or\n- (d) matters relating to such an investigation, arrest, custody or prosecution.","sortOrder":129},{"sectionNumber":"sec.92","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangements affecting exercise of investigation powers by State authorities and officers","content":"### sec.92 Arrangements affecting exercise of investigation powers by State authorities and officers\n\nWhere an arrangement between the Minister for this jurisdiction and the Commonwealth Minister makes provision in relation to the exercise by a State authority or officer of enforcement powers within the meaning of section&#160;91 in relation to the cooperative scheme laws—\nthe State authority or officer is authorised to act in accordance with that arrangement; and\nthe State authority or officer must not exercise an enforcement power except in accordance with that arrangement; and\nthe exercise of, or failure to exercise, an enforcement power by a State authority or officer is to be taken to have been validly performed or withheld, despite any failure to comply with any conditions in the arrangement.\nNotice of each arrangement under subsection&#160;(1) must be published in the government gazette and in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette within 21 days after it is made.\n(sec.92-ssec.1) Where an arrangement between the Minister for this jurisdiction and the Commonwealth Minister makes provision in relation to the exercise by a State authority or officer of enforcement powers within the meaning of section&#160;91 in relation to the cooperative scheme laws— the State authority or officer is authorised to act in accordance with that arrangement; and the State authority or officer must not exercise an enforcement power except in accordance with that arrangement; and the exercise of, or failure to exercise, an enforcement power by a State authority or officer is to be taken to have been validly performed or withheld, despite any failure to comply with any conditions in the arrangement.\n(sec.92-ssec.2) Notice of each arrangement under subsection&#160;(1) must be published in the government gazette and in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette within 21 days after it is made.\n- (a) the State authority or officer is authorised to act in accordance with that arrangement; and\n- (b) the State authority or officer must not exercise an enforcement power except in accordance with that arrangement; and\n- (c) the exercise of, or failure to exercise, an enforcement power by a State authority or officer is to be taken to have been validly performed or withheld, despite any failure to comply with any conditions in the arrangement.","sortOrder":130},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Exemptions","content":"## Exemptions","sortOrder":131},{"sectionNumber":"sec.93","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exempt bodies","content":"### sec.93 Exempt bodies\n\nEach of the following is an exempt body in relation to Queensland for the purposes of the Corporations Law of Queensland—\na co-operative under the Co-operatives National Law (Queensland) ;\na society within the meaning of the Cooperative Housing Societies Act 1958 ;\nan association, society, institution or body incorporated under the Associations Incorporation Act 1981 .\ns&#160;93 sub 1991 No.&#160;42 s&#160;3 sch\namd 1997 No.&#160;39 s&#160;472 sch&#160;7 ; 1999 No.&#160;27 s&#160;76 sch&#160;1 ; 2020 No.&#160;18 s&#160;65 s ch&#160;1 pt&#160;2\n- (a) a co-operative under the Co-operatives National Law (Queensland) ;\n- (b) a society within the meaning of the Cooperative Housing Societies Act 1958 ;\n- (c) an association, society, institution or body incorporated under the Associations Incorporation Act 1981 .","sortOrder":132},{"sectionNumber":"sec.94","sectionType":"section","heading":null,"content":"### Section sec.94\n\ns&#160;94 om 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;7","sortOrder":133},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Australian Stock Exchange Limited","content":"## Australian Stock Exchange Limited","sortOrder":134},{"sectionNumber":"sec.95","sectionType":"section","heading":"Saving of provisions about Australian Stock Exchange Limited","content":"### sec.95 Saving of provisions about Australian Stock Exchange Limited\n\nSection&#160;85 does not apply in relation to the Securities Industry (Queensland) Code , part&#160;2A .\nPart&#160;2A has effect, as provided in this section, despite the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction.\nA reference in part&#160;2A to a relevant Code, except in relation to a time before the commencement of this section, is taken to be a reference to a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nSubject to subsection&#160;(5), a reference in part&#160;2A to a particular cooperative scheme law, except in relation to a time before that commencement, is taken to be a reference to such provisions of the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction as correspond to provisions of that law.\nA reference in part&#160;2A to a provision of a cooperative scheme law (other than a provision of part&#160;2A itself), except in relation to a time before that commencement, is taken to be a reference to the corresponding provision of a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\nRegulations in force because of section&#160;90(6) also have effect for the purposes of this section.\n(sec.95-ssec.1) Section&#160;85 does not apply in relation to the Securities Industry (Queensland) Code , part&#160;2A .\n(sec.95-ssec.2) Part&#160;2A has effect, as provided in this section, despite the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.95-ssec.3) A reference in part&#160;2A to a relevant Code, except in relation to a time before the commencement of this section, is taken to be a reference to a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.95-ssec.4) Subject to subsection&#160;(5), a reference in part&#160;2A to a particular cooperative scheme law, except in relation to a time before that commencement, is taken to be a reference to such provisions of the national scheme laws of this jurisdiction as correspond to provisions of that law.\n(sec.95-ssec.5) A reference in part&#160;2A to a provision of a cooperative scheme law (other than a provision of part&#160;2A itself), except in relation to a time before that commencement, is taken to be a reference to the corresponding provision of a national scheme law of this jurisdiction.\n(sec.95-ssec.6) Regulations in force because of section&#160;90(6) also have effect for the purposes of this section.","sortOrder":135},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board","content":"## Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board","sortOrder":136},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96","sectionType":"section","heading":"Board to continue in existence for certain purposes","content":"### sec.96 Board to continue in existence for certain purposes\n\nThe Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board established under the Companies (Administration) Act 1981 , part&#160;3 may perform the functions and exercise the powers conferred on it under the Companies (Queensland) Code , part&#160;2 , division&#160;2 in respect of applications made to it under subdivision B of that division before the commencement of this section.","sortOrder":137},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Application and saving provisions relating to amendments to this Act","content":"## Application and saving provisions relating to amendments to this Act","sortOrder":138},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation","content":"### sec.96A Interpretation\n\nIn this division—\nCourt means the Federal Court or the Supreme Court of a State or Territory.\njurisdiction amendments means the amendments made by the Corporations (Queensland) Amendment Act 1995 , sections&#160;4 to 17 .\njurisdiction commencement means the commencement of the jurisdiction amendments.\ns&#160;96A ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;21","sortOrder":139},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of jurisdiction amendments—general","content":"### sec.96B Application of jurisdiction amendments—general\n\nThe jurisdiction amendments apply to proceedings commenced, or recommenced, after the jurisdiction commencement, whether the cause of action arose before or after that commencement.\ns&#160;96B ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;21","sortOrder":140},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of decision that court did not have jurisdiction","content":"### sec.96C Effect of decision that court did not have jurisdiction\n\nThis section applies if—\nbefore the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and\nthe first court, or another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, decided before the jurisdiction commencement that the first court did not have jurisdiction in respect of the matter; and\nthe decision that the first court did not have jurisdiction still stands at the jurisdiction commencement; and\nthe first court would have had jurisdiction in respect of the matter if the jurisdiction amendments had commenced before the cause of action arose.\nThe validity of the decision that the first court did not have jurisdiction is not affected by the jurisdiction amendments.\nThe decision does not affect a recommencement of the proceedings after the jurisdiction commencement.\ns&#160;96C ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;21\n(sec.96C-ssec.1) This section applies if— before the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and the first court, or another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, decided before the jurisdiction commencement that the first court did not have jurisdiction in respect of the matter; and the decision that the first court did not have jurisdiction still stands at the jurisdiction commencement; and the first court would have had jurisdiction in respect of the matter if the jurisdiction amendments had commenced before the cause of action arose.\n(sec.96C-ssec.2) The validity of the decision that the first court did not have jurisdiction is not affected by the jurisdiction amendments.\n(sec.96C-ssec.3) The decision does not affect a recommencement of the proceedings after the jurisdiction commencement.\n- (a) before the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and\n- (b) the first court, or another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, decided before the jurisdiction commencement that the first court did not have jurisdiction in respect of the matter; and\n- (c) the decision that the first court did not have jurisdiction still stands at the jurisdiction commencement; and\n- (d) the first court would have had jurisdiction in respect of the matter if the jurisdiction amendments had commenced before the cause of action arose.","sortOrder":141},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of absence of decision that court did not have jurisdiction","content":"### sec.96D Effect of absence of decision that court did not have jurisdiction\n\nThis section applies if—\nbefore the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and\neither—\nno court expressly decided, before the jurisdiction commencement, whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter; or\na decision of the first court, or of another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, that the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter still stands at the jurisdiction commencement.\nFor the purposes of consideration by a court, after the jurisdiction commencement, of whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter, the first court is taken to have had jurisdiction in respect of the matter if it would have had that jurisdiction if the jurisdiction amendments had commenced before the cause of action arose.\ns&#160;96D ins 1995 No.&#160;26 s&#160;21\n(sec.96D-ssec.1) This section applies if— before the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and either— no court expressly decided, before the jurisdiction commencement, whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter; or a decision of the first court, or of another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, that the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter still stands at the jurisdiction commencement.\n(sec.96D-ssec.2) For the purposes of consideration by a court, after the jurisdiction commencement, of whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter, the first court is taken to have had jurisdiction in respect of the matter if it would have had that jurisdiction if the jurisdiction amendments had commenced before the cause of action arose.\n- (a) before the jurisdiction commencement, proceedings in respect of a civil matter under the Corporations Law of Queensland were commenced in a court (the first court ) other than the Court; and\n- (b) either— (i) no court expressly decided, before the jurisdiction commencement, whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter; or (ii) a decision of the first court, or of another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, that the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter still stands at the jurisdiction commencement.\n- (i) no court expressly decided, before the jurisdiction commencement, whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter; or\n- (ii) a decision of the first court, or of another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, that the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter still stands at the jurisdiction commencement.\n- (i) no court expressly decided, before the jurisdiction commencement, whether the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter; or\n- (ii) a decision of the first court, or of another court on appeal from a decision of the first court, that the first court had jurisdiction in respect of the matter still stands at the jurisdiction commencement.","sortOrder":142},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of section&#160;42AA","content":"### sec.96E Application of section&#160;42AA\n\nIn this section—\ncommencement means the commencement of section&#160;42AA.\nrelated criminal justice process decision , in relation to an offence, has the same meaning as in section&#160;42AA.\nSection&#160;42AA applies in relation to—\na decision made on or after the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before that commencement; or\na related criminal justice process decision made on or after the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply—\nthe conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before the commencement;\nthe prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of the prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\nSection&#160;42AA also applies in relation to—\na decision made before the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if that decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement; or\na related criminal process decision made before the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply—\nthe decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement;\nthe prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of that prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\ns&#160;96E ins 2001 No.&#160;27 s&#160;31\n(sec.96E-ssec.1) In this section— commencement means the commencement of section&#160;42AA. related criminal justice process decision , in relation to an offence, has the same meaning as in section&#160;42AA.\n(sec.96E-ssec.2) Section&#160;42AA applies in relation to— a decision made on or after the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before that commencement; or a related criminal justice process decision made on or after the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply— the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before the commencement; the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of the prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n(sec.96E-ssec.3) Section&#160;42AA also applies in relation to— a decision made before the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if that decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement; or a related criminal process decision made before the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply— the decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement; the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of that prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (a) a decision made on or after the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before that commencement; or\n- (b) a related criminal justice process decision made on or after the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply— (i) the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before the commencement; (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of the prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (i) the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before the commencement;\n- (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of the prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (i) the conduct alleged to give rise to the offence occurred before the commencement;\n- (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of the prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (a) a decision made before the commencement to prosecute a person for an offence, even if that decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement; or\n- (b) a related criminal process decision made before the commencement in relation to an offence, even if either or both of the following apply— (i) the decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement; (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of that prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (i) the decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement;\n- (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of that prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.\n- (i) the decision is the subject of an application that is before a court at the commencement;\n- (ii) the prosecution of the offence, or an appeal arising out of that prosecution, was commenced before the commencement.","sortOrder":143},{"sectionNumber":"pt.13-div.7","sectionType":"division","heading":"Functions of Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth","content":"## Functions of Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth","sortOrder":144},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96E-oc.2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"### sec.96E-oc.2 Definitions\n\nIn this division—\nfunction includes a power.\nold corporations legislation has the same meaning as in the Corporations (Ancillary Provisions) Act 2001 .\nperform includes exercise.\ns&#160;96E ins 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\nrenum 2002 No.&#160;34 s&#160;74 sch&#160;6 (retro) (amdt could not be given effect)","sortOrder":145},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96F","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions of Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth","content":"### sec.96F Functions of Commonwealth authorities and officers of the Commonwealth\n\nIf a Commonwealth authority or an officer of the Commonwealth has a function expressed to be conferred on the authority or officer by or under the old corporations legislation, the authority or officer is not under a duty to perform that function.\ns&#160;96F ins 2001 No.&#160;45 s&#160;29 sch&#160;2\nrenum 2002 No.&#160;34 s&#160;74 sch&#160;6 (retro) (amdt could not be given effect)","sortOrder":146},{"sectionNumber":"pt.14","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provisions affecting Corporations Law","content":"# Provisions affecting Corporations Law","sortOrder":147},{"sectionNumber":"sec.97","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain transfers by companies not to constitute reduction of share capital","content":"### sec.97 Certain transfers by companies not to constitute reduction of share capital\n\nWhere land under the provisions of the Real Property Act 1861 is comprised in—\na building units plan registered under the Building Units Titles Act 1965 ; or\na group titles plan registered under the Group Titles Act 1973 ; or\na building units plan or a group titles plan registered under the Building Units and Group Titles Act 1980 ;\nand at the time of registration of the plan the registered proprietor of that land was a company, the transfer by the company of any lot in the building units plan or group titles plan in exchange for or in satisfaction of a right of a kind referred to in the Corporations Law, section&#160;195 (13) does not of itself constitute, and is to be taken never to have constituted, a reduction of the share capital of the company.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not apply to a transfer made on or after the commencement of this subsection.\ns&#160;97 amd 2000 No.&#160;12 s&#160;8\n(sec.97-ssec.1) Where land under the provisions of the Real Property Act 1861 is comprised in— a building units plan registered under the Building Units Titles Act 1965 ; or a group titles plan registered under the Group Titles Act 1973 ; or a building units plan or a group titles plan registered under the Building Units and Group Titles Act 1980 ; and at the time of registration of the plan the registered proprietor of that land was a company, the transfer by the company of any lot in the building units plan or group titles plan in exchange for or in satisfaction of a right of a kind referred to in the Corporations Law, section&#160;195 (13) does not of itself constitute, and is to be taken never to have constituted, a reduction of the share capital of the company.\n(sec.97-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not apply to a transfer made on or after the commencement of this subsection.\n- (a) a building units plan registered under the Building Units Titles Act 1965 ; or\n- (b) a group titles plan registered under the Group Titles Act 1973 ; or\n- (c) a building units plan or a group titles plan registered under the Building Units and Group Titles Act 1980 ;","sortOrder":148}],"analysis":{"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"circular_definition","section":"sec.3 - definition of 'applicable provision'","severity":"high","reasoning":"Both paragraphs (c) and (d) of the definition explicitly incorporate the defined term itself as a condition of the definition. While the drafters may have intended a layered or iterative application, the definition provides no non-self-referential base case for Capital Territory or non-Capital Territory jurisdictions beyond (a) and (b), creating a logical loop when trying to determine whether a novel provision qualifies.","confidence":0.82,"description":"The definition of 'applicable provision' is self-referentially circular. It defines 'applicable provision' by reference to 'a provision that, because of any other application or applications of this definition, is an applicable provision'. The definition bootstraps itself into existence through recursive self-reference, requiring a provision to already be an 'applicable provision' in order to determine whether it is an 'applicable provision'."},{"type":"other","section":"sec.3 - definitions of 'State' and 'Territory'","severity":"medium","reasoning":"While this is a deliberate drafting technique common to cooperative scheme legislation (to bring the NT within State-based provisions), the logical result is that the NT is a 'State' but not a 'Territory', which is absurd on its face given the NT's actual constitutional status. The definition of 'jurisdiction' ('a State or the Capital Territory') then excludes the NT from 'jurisdiction' unless 'State' is read to include the NT, which the definition requires — creating an incoherent taxonomy.","confidence":0.78,"description":"The definitions of 'State' and 'Territory' produce a logical absurdity: 'State includes the Northern Territory' while 'Territory does not include the Northern Territory'. The Northern Territory is therefore simultaneously a 'State' for the purposes of this Act and excluded from the category of 'Territory'. This means the Northern Territory occupies a unique legal classification that is neither a true State nor a Territory under this Act, which contradicts ordinary constitutional and legislative understanding and could produce unpredictable results when provisions refer to 'States and Territories' collectively."},{"type":"other","section":"sec.3 - definition of 'jurisdiction'","severity":"low","reasoning":"The definitions, while practically workable, produce a nomenclature that is logically inconsistent with constitutional reality. Norfolk Island is referenced in sec.15 but appears nowhere in the definition of 'jurisdiction', meaning obligations imposed in relation to Norfolk Island (e.g. sec.15(1) binding the Crown in right of Norfolk Island) have no definitional foundation within the Act's own framework.","confidence":0.72,"description":"The definition of 'jurisdiction' means 'a State or the Capital Territory'. Given that 'State' is defined to include the Northern Territory, the Northern Territory is a 'jurisdiction'. However, the Capital Territory is separately listed, meaning it is not a 'State' for this purpose. The NT is a 'State' but not a 'Territory', the ACT is a 'Territory' but listed separately from 'States'. This creates an internally inconsistent taxonomy of Australian polities under the Act."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"sec.7 and sec.8","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The object in sec.13(1) and sec.26 is to ensure the Corporations Law of Queensland 'operates, so far as possible, as if that Law, together with the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, constituted a single national Corporations Law'. However, since the Queensland law is frozen at the point of the Commonwealth repeal, it cannot evolve with the national scheme, making the stated objective practically unachievable from the moment any jurisdiction amends its equivalent law.","confidence":0.75,"description":"Both sec.7 and sec.8 apply law 'as in force immediately before the repeal' of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cwlth). This creates a permanently frozen body of law. The Corporations Law of Queensland and the Corporations Regulations of Queensland are perpetually fixed at the moment of repeal, yet later provisions of this Act (e.g. sec.13, sec.26) speak of these provisions operating as a living 'national scheme'. The Act purports to participate in a dynamic national scheme while its substantive content is constitutionally static."},{"type":"other","section":"sec.42A","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The section as reproduced begins at subsection (2), which suggests subsection (1) was omitted or repealed without renumbering. This creates interpretive uncertainty: the jurisdiction-conferring provision (subsection 2) references no preceding grant of authority, and a court asked to apply sec.42A(2) might question whether it was ever validly enacted without its foundational subsection.","confidence":0.85,"description":"Section 42A contains a numbering anomaly. The section purports to confer jurisdiction in subsection (2) and then limits it in subsection (3), but the section text jumps from no subsection (1) to subsection (2) — subsection (1) appears to be missing entirely. The provision refers to 'subsection (2)' in sec.42A(3) and (4) when conferring and limiting jurisdiction, but there is no operative subsection (1) establishing the overall framework for the section."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"sec.29(1) and sec.29(2)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The deeming provisions are intentional legal fictions designed to achieve national uniformity, but they produce an absurdity: Queensland law (this Act) declares that offences under Queensland law (the Corporations Law of Queensland) are not offences under Queensland law. The provision that creates this fiction is itself Queensland law, so it simultaneously is and is not Queensland law in its operation.","confidence":0.7,"description":"Section 29 creates an ontological paradox. Subsection (1) applies Commonwealth laws 'as laws of Queensland' in relation to offences against applicable provisions of Queensland, treating those provisions 'as if... not laws of Queensland'. Subsection (2) then deems those offences to be offences against laws of the Commonwealth and 'not... offences against the laws of Queensland'. The Act thus applies as a Queensland law to things it simultaneously declares not to be Queensland law, creating a legal fiction that is self-undermining — Queensland law is being used to negate the character of Queensland law."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"sec.5(1)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Under Westminster constitutional tradition applicable in Queensland, the Parliament cannot bind itself or its successors. Section 5(1) attempts to do exactly this by requiring that subsequent Acts not be interpreted as altering this Act, without the express override mechanism in s5(2). The provision has effect only as an interpretive presumption, not as true entrenchment — so its practical effect is far weaker than its text suggests.","confidence":0.8,"description":"Section 5(1) purports to entrench this Act against amendment or repeal by subsequent Queensland legislation, providing that later Acts 'are not to be interpreted' as amending or repealing it. However, a Queensland Act cannot bind the Queensland Parliament's future legislative power (the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty). The provision is therefore constitutionally ineffective as an entrenchment device, yet it purports to operate as one — creating an absurdity where the Act claims a legal effect it cannot legally possess."},{"type":"other","section":"sec.3 - definition of 'Commonwealth law'","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Defining 'Commonwealth law' to include unwritten laws and prerogative rights means the scope of what is applied as Queensland law under this Act is inherently indeterminate. It is impossible to compile, publish, or definitively state what all 'Commonwealth laws' applied by this Act are at any given time, making compliance and enforcement unpredictable.","confidence":0.65,"description":"The definition of 'Commonwealth law' includes 'unwritten laws of the Commonwealth' and 'laws about the exercise of prerogative powers'. However, prerogative powers are by definition uncodified and their scope is uncertain and contested. Incorporating an undefined and evolving category of unwritten prerogative law into a definition that is then used to apply provisions 'as laws of Queensland' creates profound uncertainty about what is actually being applied."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"sec.8(2) and sec.8(3)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The protection in sec.8(3) is rendered partially hollow by sec.8(5). If a regulation has retrospective effect that disadvantages a private person, sec.8(3) prevents that specific operation, but sec.8(5) preserves 'any other operation' of the same retrospective provision. In practice this means the same regulation can simultaneously not apply to disadvantage a person (per s8(3)) yet still apply against them through its 'other operations' (per s8(5)), which is logically incoherent.","confidence":0.68,"description":"Section 8(2) allows regulations to take retrospective effect ('is taken always to have had effect') from a date earlier than gazette notification. Section 8(3) then limits this by protecting private persons from retrospective disadvantage. However, sec.8(5) provides that sec.8(3) 'does not affect any other operation that the provision has because of subsection (2)'. This means the retrospective operation continues to have effect against persons even where it disadvantages them, through pathways not caught by subsection (3) — effectively allowing the protection in (3) to be circumvented."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"medium","section_a":"sec.3 - definition of 'State' ('State includes the Northern Territory')","section_b":"sec.3 - definition of 'Territory' ('Territory does not include the Northern Territory')","confidence":0.82,"description":"The Northern Territory is simultaneously classified as a 'State' under this Act (by express inclusion) and excluded from the definition of 'Territory'. This is internally contradictory because the Northern Territory is constitutionally a Territory, not a State, yet this Act creates a legislative fiction that it is a State while simultaneously and redundantly confirming it is not a Territory. The two definitions in combination produce an anomalous category for the NT that has no constitutional grounding."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"sec.5(1) - Act not to be affected by later State laws","section_b":"sec.6 - Operation of other Queensland laws","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 5(1) provides that later Acts are not to be interpreted as amending or repealing this Act. Section 6 provides that 'nothing in this Act... affects the operation... of an Act enacted before that commencement'. Together these create a one-way ratchet: earlier Queensland laws are preserved from interference by this Act (s6), and later Queensland laws cannot interfere with this Act (s5). This leaves no clear mechanism for the Queensland Parliament to legislate in the space occupied by this Act, potentially creating a zone of legislative paralysis."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"sec.13(1) - object of national uniform Corporations Law","section_b":"sec.7 - Corporations Law frozen at repeal of Corporations Act","confidence":0.75,"description":"Section 13(1) states the object is to ensure Queensland's Corporations Law 'operates, so far as possible, as if that Law, together with the Corporations Law of each jurisdiction other than Queensland, constituted a single national Corporations Law'. Section 7 freezes the content of that Law at the moment of repeal of the Corporations Act 1989. These provisions are in tension: the goal of a living uniform national law is structurally incompatible with content fixed at a historical moment."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"sec.15(1) - Chapter 5 binds Crown in right of Queensland and other jurisdictions","section_b":"sec.15(3)(b) - Chapters 6 to 6D do not bind the State or other States","confidence":0.6,"description":"Section 15(1) binds the Crown in right of Queensland under Chapter 5. Section 15(3)(b) provides that Chapters 6 to 6D do not bind 'the State, the other States or Norfolk Island'. Read together with s15(2) (which expressly excludes Chapter 7 from binding the Crown), the Act creates a patchwork where different chapters have different Crown-binding effects with no stated rationale for the differential treatment. The omission of any Crown-binding provision for Chapters 1-4 and 8 onwards creates a gap that is not addressed and may be unintentional."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"sec.29(1) - Commonwealth laws apply as laws of Queensland treating applicable provisions as Commonwealth laws","section_b":"sec.29(2)(b) - offences taken not to be offences against laws of Queensland","confidence":0.76,"description":"Section 29(1) applies Commonwealth laws 'as laws of Queensland'. Section 29(2)(b) simultaneously deems offences under those same provisions to 'not be an offence against the laws of Queensland'. The Act therefore simultaneously enacts something as Queensland law (s29(1)) while declaring it is not Queensland law (s29(2)(b)), creating a direct self-contradiction in the legal character of the same provisions."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"sec.42(1) - jurisdiction conferred on Supreme Courts 'subject to' ADJR Act s9","section_b":"sec.42(1A) - jurisdiction conferred 'despite' ADJR Act s9","confidence":0.78,"description":"Section 42(1) confers jurisdiction on Supreme Courts 'subject to' the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977, s9 (which limits the jurisdiction of non-Federal courts in relation to Commonwealth decisions). Section 42(1A) then confers jurisdiction on the same courts 'despite' s9 of the same Act. The same courts therefore simultaneously have their jurisdiction limited by s9 (under s42(1)) and have that limitation overridden (under s42(1A)) in respect of overlapping subject matter — decisions made under the Corporations Law. The line between s42(1) and s42(1A) matters is unclear, creating potential jurisdictional uncertainty."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"sec.3 - definition of 'Commonwealth administrative laws' including Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024","section_b":"sec.40(1)(c) - jurisdiction provisions referencing Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977","confidence":0.8,"description":"The definition of 'Commonwealth administrative laws' in sec.3 has been updated (per the 2024 amendment) to reference the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024, replacing the former AAT Act. However, sec.40(1)(c) and sec.42 continue to reference the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 as the operative framework for judicial review jurisdiction. These provisions have not been correspondingly updated, creating a potential mismatch between the administrative review framework applied via sec.35-36 (which uses the 2024 Act) and the jurisdiction-conferral framework in sec.40-42 (which uses the 1977 Act)."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"sec.3 - definition of 'national scheme law of this jurisdiction' (includes 'this Act')","section_b":"sec.5(1) - this Act not affected by later State laws","confidence":0.58,"description":"The 'national scheme law of this jurisdiction' includes 'this Act' itself. Section 5(1) protects 'this Act' from being altered by later Queensland legislation. However, sec.3 also defines 'applicable provisions of Queensland' by reference to the Corporations Law, ASIC Law and related regulations — not this Act itself. This means the Act is simultaneously part of the 'national scheme law' yet sits outside the definition of 'applicable provisions', creating inconsistency in how the Act applies its own protective mechanisms to itself."}]},"summary":{"name":"Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990","slug":"corporations-queensland-act-1990","title_id":"qld:act-1990-098","version_id":104879,"analysis_type":"summary","content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":4,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Complete in-force Queensland Act. Primarily a framework statute with most substantive corporations law now contained in the Commonwealth Corporations Act 2001. The source contains significant repetition of provisions (each section appears twice in the stored text)."},"complexity_factors":["Intricate constitutional and cooperative-scheme architecture applying Commonwealth law as State law","Heavy reliance on cross-references to Commonwealth Acts that have been repealed and replaced","Transitional provisions spanning the shift from the cooperative scheme to direct Commonwealth legislation in 2001","Jurisdictional cross-vesting provisions linking Queensland and Commonwealth courts","Highly technical definitions that operate by reference to corresponding laws in multiple jurisdictions"],"plain_english_summary":"The Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990 is a Queensland statute that applies the Commonwealth Corporations Law and the ASIC Law as laws of Queensland. It is a foundational piece of the cooperative national corporations scheme that operated from 1990 until the Commonwealth took over direct constitutional responsibility for corporations law under the referral of powers and the Corporations Act 2001.\n\nThe Act's core function is to receive the Commonwealth Corporations Law (originally set out in s 82 of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cth)) and apply it as a law of Queensland, and to receive the ASIC Act and apply its operative provisions as a law of Queensland. Section 7 applies the Corporations Law of Queensland; section 58 applies the ASIC Law of Queensland.\n\nThe Act provides the infrastructure to make the national scheme function as if it were a single Commonwealth law. Part 8 (national administration and enforcement) ensures that offences against Queensland corporations law are treated as offences against Commonwealth law for purposes of investigation, prosecution, arrest, and sentencing. Parts 9 and 10 deal with cross-vesting of civil and criminal jurisdiction between Queensland and other courts, and with the Companies Liquidation Account. Part 12 provides for ministerial arrangements with the Commonwealth, the application of penalties and fines, and the power to make regulations.\n\nAs a result of the Corporations Act 2001 and the referral of State powers to the Commonwealth, the substantive corporations law is now entirely Commonwealth law. The Corporations (Queensland) Act 1990 retains in-force status and continues to have operative effect in specific respects, including preserving the application of historical Corporations Law provisions and maintaining the framework for cross-jurisdictional enforcement coordination. It is principally of interest in historical and transitional contexts, such as proceedings arising from conduct under the old scheme, historical share registers, and the interpretation of transitional provisions."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The original Act in 1990 applied the 1989 Commonwealth Corporations Act and ASIC Act. Over time, amendments have significantly expanded its scope: it now also applies regulations, adopts later versions of Commonwealth Acts, adds new court jurisdiction provisions (e.g., lower courts, State Family Courts, criminal cross-vesting), and includes transitional provisions for cooperative scheme laws and superannuation. The Act has grown from a simple adoption statute into a complex framework governing enforcement, administration, and inter-jurisdictional cooperation."},"complexity_factors":["Over 40 defined terms in section 3, many cross-referenced to Commonwealth Acts","Multiple parts with nested divisions and subdivisions (e.g., Part 8 has 3 divisions)","Extensive cross-referencing to Commonwealth Acts and regulations (e.g., Corporations Act, ASIC Act, Crimes Act)","Long and conditional sections (e.g., section 44 on transfer of proceedings spans multiple subclauses)","Transitional provisions (Part 13) with multiple divisions and numerous transitional scenarios","Exemptions and savings clauses (e.g., sections 93–95) that carve out specific bodies and old laws","Interplay between state and Commonwealth interpretation acts (sections 10, 62)","Complex jurisdiction and transfer provisions (sections 40–56) with rules for both civil and criminal matters"],"plain_english_summary":"This Queensland Act is a machinery law that makes the Commonwealth's corporations and securities laws (the Corporations Act 1989 and the ASIC Act 1989) operate as Queensland law. It does not create new rules for companies but instead 'picks up' the Commonwealth rules and gives them force in Queensland. The Act also sets up how these laws are enforced, which courts can hear cases, and how fees and penalties are collected. It affects anyone dealing with companies, securities, or futures in Queensland, including directors, investors, and regulators. The Act is part of a national cooperative scheme to ensure uniform company regulation across Australia. It also includes transitional rules for moving from older state-based codes to the national system."},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":606},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has expanded significantly from its original 1990 purpose of simply applying Commonwealth corporations law to Queensland. It now encompasses: ASIC regulatory functions (added 2000), national guarantee fund levies, complex cross-border court jurisdiction arrangements (substantially expanded 1995, 2001), administrative law review mechanisms (updated 2024 for the Administrative Review Tribunal), and extensive transitional provisions managing the shift from state-based cooperative scheme laws. The scope now covers not just corporations but securities, futures, and financial services regulation with intricate federal-state interface mechanisms."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-referencing between Commonwealth and Queensland legislation (the 'applicable provision' definition alone spans multiple nested conditions)","Recursive definitions where terms refer to other defined terms that themselves reference back (e.g., 'national scheme law' definitions)","Multiple overlapping jurisdictional schemes: Corporations Law, ASIC Law, cooperative scheme laws, and transitional arrangements","Conditional application of Commonwealth administrative laws with exceptions and carve-outs (e.g., Administrative Review Tribunal Act exclusions)","Complex court jurisdiction provisions with transfer mechanisms between state, federal, and family courts","Nested transitional provisions dealing with superseded legislation (cooperative scheme laws) and their residual operation","Definitions section with 30+ defined terms, many with multiple sub-definitions and amendment histories","Mechanisms for treating offences as Commonwealth offences for enforcement purposes while remaining state law"],"plain_english_summary":"This Act is Queensland's piece of the national corporations law puzzle. It **adopts Commonwealth corporations and securities laws as Queensland law**, creating a seamless national system for regulating companies, the stock market, and financial services.\n\n**What it does:**\n- **Imports federal law**: Brings the Corporations Act and ASIC Act (the national regulator's enabling legislation) into Queensland law, with modifications\n- **Creates Queensland-specific versions**: Establishes the \"Corporations Law of Queensland\" and \"ASIC Law of Queensland\" as local applications of national schemes\n- **Enables national enforcement**: Allows ASIC (the national corporate watchdog) and federal prosecutors to operate in Queensland as if they were state authorities\n- **Sets up court jurisdiction**: Gives Queensland courts power to hear corporate cases from other states, and vice versa\n- **Manages the transition**: Deals with old state-based company laws being replaced by the national scheme\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- Companies registered in Queensland\n- Directors, officers, and shareholders\n- Stockbrokers and financial advisors\n- Anyone dealing with corporate insolvency or securities fraud\n- ASIC staff working in Queensland\n\n**Why it matters:**\nBefore this, each state had its own company law. This Act (and similar ones in other states) created a **single national corporations law** administered by ASIC, making it easier to do business across Australia and ensuring consistent regulation of markets and corporate behaviour."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990","history":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990/history","analysis":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/corporations-queensland-act-1990/documents"}}