{"id":"nsw:act-2010-024","name":"Court Information Act 2010","slug":"court-information-act-2010","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"nsw","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"24 of 2010","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":32969,"registerId":"nsw-act-2010-024-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-01","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"# Part 1 Preliminary\n\nPart 1 Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Name of Act","content":"#### 1 Name of Act\n\n1 Name of Act\n\n> This Act is the [Court Information Act 2010](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2010-024).","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n2 Commencement\n\n> This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by proclamation.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Objects","content":"#### 3 Objects\n\n3 Objects\n\n> The objects of this Act are as follows—\n> \n> > (a) to promote consistency in the provision of access to court information across NSW courts,\n> \n> > (b) to provide for open access to the public to certain court information to promote transparency and a greater understanding of the justice system,\n> \n> > (c) to provide for additional access to the media to certain court information to facilitate fair and accurate reporting of court proceedings,\n> \n> > (d) to ensure that access to court information does not compromise the fair conduct of court proceedings, the administration of justice, or the privacy or safety of participants in court proceedings, by restricting access to certain court information.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 4 Definitions\n\n4 Definitions\n\n> > (1) In this Act—\n> > \n> > civil proceedings means any proceedings other than criminal proceedings.\n> > \n> > conclusion of proceedings—see section 7.\n> > \n> > court means each of the Supreme Court, Land and Environment Court, Industrial Court, District Court, Local Court and Children’s Court.\n> > \n> > court information means information contained in a court record.\n> > \n> > court officer includes any person employed in the Government Service to exercise functions in a court registry or other court office.\n> > \n> > court record means any of the following records that a court has in its possession or custody (or that a court has in the possession or custody of some other person) in connection with the court’s judicial functions—\n> > \n> > > (a) a record filed or tendered in the court by a party to proceedings before the court (including originating process to commence any such proceedings) or a record of or comprising written submissions made by a party to proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (b) a record of any proceedings before the court (including a record of the dates on which proceedings are heard or to be heard and a record of the name of the judicial officer who heard or is officially listed to hear proceedings),\n> > \n> > > (c) a record of judgment given and any directions given or orders made in proceedings before the court, including in connection with case management and listing of proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (d) a record admitted into evidence by the court in connection with proceedings before the court.\n> > \n> > criminal proceedings means proceedings against a person for an offence (whether summary or indictable), and includes the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) committal proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings relating to bail,\n> > \n> > > (c) proceedings relating to sentence,\n> > \n> > > (d) proceedings on an appeal against conviction or sentence.\n> > \n> > criminal record of a person means a record of the offences for which the person has been convicted or of the offences in respect of which—\n> > \n> > > (a) the person has paid a penalty notice, or\n> > \n> > > (b) an order has been made against the person under section 10 (Dismissal of charges and conditional discharge of offender) of the [Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1999-092).\n> > \n> > open access information—see section 5.\n> > \n> > personal identification information means any of the following information concerning a person—\n> > \n> > > (a) tax file number,\n> > \n> > > (b) social security number,\n> > \n> > > (c) medicare number,\n> > \n> > > (d) financial account numbers,\n> > \n> > > (e) passport number,\n> > \n> > > (f) personal telephone number,\n> > \n> > > (g) date of birth (other than year of birth),\n> > \n> > > (h) home address (other than suburb, city and State or Territory),\n> > \n> > > (i) other information that can be used to establish a person’s identity and that is prescribed by the regulations as personal identification information for the purposes of this Act.\n> > \n> > proceedings means civil or criminal proceedings.\n> > \n> > record means any document or other source of information compiled, recorded or stored in written form, or by electronic process, or in any other manner or by any other means.\n> > \n> > restricted access information—see section 6.\n> > \n> > Note—\n> > \n> > The [Interpretation Act 1987](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1987-015) contains definitions and other provisions that affect the interpretation and application of this Act.\n> \n> > (2) Notes included in this Act do not form part of this Act.\n> \n> **s 4:** Am 2016 No 48, Sch 2.10; 2023 No 41, Sch 2.10.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Open access information","content":"#### 5 Open access information\n\n5 Open access information\n\n> Note—\n> \n> An entitlement to access to open access information under this Act is subject to other laws or court orders that prohibit or restrict the publication or disclosure of court information. See section 13.\n> \n> > (1) Criminal proceedings Information contained in the following court records relating to criminal proceedings is open access information—\n> > \n> > > (a) an indictment, court attendance notice or other document commencing proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (b) written submissions made by a party to proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (c) a police fact sheet, statement of facts or any similar document summarising the prosecution’s case, but not if the proceedings have been set down for trial by jury and have not concluded,\n> > > \n> > > Note—\n> > > \n> > > This information is restricted access information after proceedings have been set down for jury trial and during the trial. See section 6 (2) (d).\n> > \n> > > (d) a transcript of proceedings in open court,\n> > \n> > > (e) statements and affidavits admitted into evidence in proceedings, including expert reports,\n> > \n> > > (f) a record of any judgment given and any direction given or order made in proceedings, including in connection with case management and court listing of proceedings and including a record of a conviction in criminal proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (g) a record of the dates on which proceedings are heard or to be heard and a record of the name of the judicial officer who heard or is officially listed to hear proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (h) such other records as may be prescribed by the regulations.\n> \n> > (2) Civil proceedings Information contained in the following court records relating to civil proceedings is open access information—\n> > \n> > > (a) originating process and pleadings in proceedings, but only after the stage in proceedings when the court first has an opportunity to consider any objection by the parties to the inclusion of any information in the originating process or pleadings (including in any cross-claim) or the proceedings have concluded, whichever happens first,\n> > \n> > > (b) any notice filed by a party to proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (c) written submissions made by a party to proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (d) a transcript of proceedings in open court,\n> > \n> > > (e) statements and affidavits admitted into evidence in proceedings, including expert reports,\n> > \n> > > (f) a record of any judgment given and any direction given or order made in proceedings, including in connection with case management and court listing of proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (g) a record of the dates on which proceedings are heard or to be heard and a record of the name of the judicial officer who heard or is officially listed to hear proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (h) such other records as may be prescribed by the regulations.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Restricted access information","content":"#### 6 Restricted access information\n\n6 Restricted access information\n\n> > (1) Any court information that is not open access information is restricted access information.\n> \n> > (2) In addition, the following information that would otherwise be open access information is restricted access information—\n> > \n> > > (a) personal identification information,\n> > \n> > > (b) information contained in an affidavit, pleading or statement that has been rejected, struck out or otherwise not admitted,\n> > \n> > > (c) information contained in a transcript of, and statements and affidavits admitted into evidence (including expert reports) in, proceedings on a voire dire,\n> > \n> > > (d) a police fact sheet, statement of facts or any similar document summarising the prosecution’s case in proceedings set down for trial by jury, but only after the proceedings have been set down for trial by jury and until the proceedings are concluded,\n> > > \n> > > Note—\n> > > \n> > > This information is open access information before the proceedings are set down for trial by jury and after the proceedings are concluded.\n> > \n> > > (e) information contained in a statement that comprises a medical, psychiatric, psychological or pre-sentence report, except information contained or summarised in a judgment given or orders made in proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (f) information contained in a statement of a person’s criminal record, except information contained or summarised in a judgment given or orders made in proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (g) information contained in a transcript of, and statements and evidence admitted into evidence in, proceedings on an application to a court for an order to prohibit or restrict the publication or disclosure of information, but only while proceedings on the application are pending,\n> > > \n> > > Note—\n> > > \n> > > If the proceedings result in the making of an order prohibiting or restricting the publication or disclosure of information, section 13 may prevent access to the information.\n> > \n> > > (h) information contained in a victim impact statement, other than information contained in a transcript of proceedings in open court or in a record of any judgment given or order made in proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (i) information contained in a letter of comfort provided by or on behalf of the prosecution in connection with criminal proceedings, other than information contained in a transcript of proceedings in open court or in a record of any judgment given or order made in proceedings.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conclusion of proceedings","content":"#### 7 Conclusion of proceedings\n\n7 Conclusion of proceedings\n\n> > (1) Civil proceedings are concluded when judgment is given or entered in the substantive proceedings or the substantive proceedings are withdrawn, dismissed or discontinued.\n> \n> > (2) Criminal proceedings are concluded when the accused person is discharged or acquitted or the court makes a finding (or accepts a plea) that the accused person is guilty. If an accused person convicted of an offence is to be sentenced, the proceedings are not concluded until sentence has been imposed.\n> \n> > (3) The committal of an accused person for trial or sentence at the conclusion of committal proceedings is not the conclusion of the criminal proceedings of which the committal proceedings form part.\n> \n> > (4) Proceedings in respect of bail are concluded when they are finally disposed of, including by being withdrawn, dismissed or discontinued.\n> \n> > (5) An appeal against a decision in proceedings does not prevent the proceedings being regarded as concluded. Proceedings on the appeal are to be regarded as separate proceedings and a pending appeal does not prevent the decision appealed against constituting the conclusion of the earlier proceedings.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Entitlement to access to court information","content":"# Part 2 Entitlement to access to court information\n\nPart 2 Entitlement to access to court information\n\nNote—\n\nAn entitlement to access to court information under this Act is subject to other laws or court orders that prohibit or restrict the publication or disclosure of court information. See section 13.  \nThis Act applies only to the providing of access to court information by courts. It does not prevent prosecuting authorities or a party to proceedings from giving access to documentary or physical exhibits returned at the conclusion of proceedings.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Access to open access information","content":"#### 8 Access to open access information\n\n8 Access to open access information\n\n> > (1) Any person is entitled to access to court information that is open access information unless the court otherwise orders in a particular case.\n> \n> > (2) The court may in a particular case impose conditions on the way in which access to court information is to be provided under this section or that restrict the disclosure or use of court information to which access is provided under this section.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Access to restricted access information","content":"#### 9 Access to restricted access information\n\n9 Access to restricted access information\n\n> > (1) A person is entitled to access to court information that is restricted access information if access is permitted—\n> > \n> > > (a) by leave of the court, or\n> > \n> > > (b) by the regulations.\n> \n> > (2) In deciding whether to grant leave for access to information under this section, a court may take the following matters into account to the extent to which it considers them relevant—\n> > \n> > > (a) the public interest in access to the information being provided,\n> > \n> > > (b) the extent to which the principle of open justice will be adversely affected if access is not provided to the information,\n> > \n> > > (c) the extent to which an individual’s privacy or safety will be compromised by providing access to the information,\n> > \n> > > (d) the extent to which providing access to the information will adversely affect the administration of justice,\n> > \n> > > (e) the extent of the person’s interest or involvement in the proceedings or other matter to which the information relates,\n> > \n> > > (f) the reasons for which access is sought,\n> > \n> > > (g) such other matters as the court considers relevant in the particular circumstances of the case.\n> \n> > (3) A court can impose conditions on access granted by leave of the court under this section.\n> \n> > (4) The regulations can impose conditions on access conferred by the regulations under this section.\n> \n> > (5) Conditions imposed under this section by the court or the regulations can only relate to the way in which access is to be provided or restrict the disclosure or use of information to which access is provided.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"News media access to restricted access information","content":"#### 10 News media access to restricted access information\n\n10 News media access to restricted access information\n\n> > (1) A news media organisation is entitled to access to any of the following court information that is restricted access information unless the court otherwise orders in a particular case—\n> > \n> > > (a) information contained in a transcript of proceedings in closed court,\n> > \n> > > (b) information contained in a transcript of, and statements and affidavits admitted into evidence in, proceedings on a voire dire, but only after the conclusion of the proceedings in the course of which the voire dire proceedings are held,\n> > \n> > > (c) information contained in a transcript of, and statements and evidence admitted into evidence in, proceedings on an application to a court for an order to prohibit or restrict the publication or disclosure of information,\n> > > \n> > > Note—\n> > > \n> > > Information in a court record referred to in paragraph (c) is restricted access information only during the proceedings. After the proceedings are concluded, the information will be open access information but entitlement to access will be subject to any order restricting or prohibiting publication or disclosure that results from the proceedings.\n> > \n> > > (d) information contained in a court record if the only restricted access information the record contains is personal identification information,\n> > \n> > > (e) information contained in the brief of evidence in criminal proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (f) information contained in a record admitted into evidence that is a document in written form or that can readily be reproduced as a document in written form.\n> \n> > (2) The court may in a particular case impose conditions on the way in which access to court information is to be provided under this section or that restrict the disclosure or use of court information to which access is provided under this section.\n> \n> > (3) A news media organisation must not publish any personal identification information to which it obtains access under this section except with the permission of the court or of the person to whom the personal identification information relates.\n> > \n> > Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.\n> \n> > (4) The entitlement to access under this section is in addition to the entitlement to access to open access information.\n> \n> > (5) In this section—\n> > \n> > news media organisation means a commercial enterprise that engages in the business of broadcasting or publishing news or a public broadcasting service that engages in the dissemination of news through a public news medium.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Access to court information by party to proceedings","content":"#### 11 Access to court information by party to proceedings\n\n11 Access to court information by party to proceedings\n\n> > (1) A party to proceedings and the party’s legal representative are entitled to access to any court information that relates to the proceedings unless the court otherwise orders in a particular case.\n> \n> > (2) The court may in a particular case impose conditions on the way in which access to court information is to be provided under this section or that restrict the disclosure or use of court information to which access is provided under this section.\n> \n> > (3) The entitlement to access under this section is in addition to the entitlement to access to open access information.\n> \n> > (4) This section extends to proceedings that have been concluded.\n> > \n> > Note—\n> > \n> > See section 7 for the meaning of concluded.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Access under other laws","content":"#### 12 Access under other laws\n\n12 Access under other laws\n\n> This Act is not intended to prevent or otherwise interfere with the giving of access to court information as permitted or required by or under any other Act or law that entitles a person to access to court information.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Restrictions on access—court orders and other laws","content":"#### 13 Restrictions on access—court orders and other laws\n\n13 Restrictions on access—court orders and other laws\n\n> There is no entitlement to access to court information under this Act if providing that access would contravene—\n> \n> > (a) any order of a court that prohibits or restricts the publication or disclosure of information, or\n> \n> > (b) any provision made by or under any other Act or law that prohibits or restricts the publication or disclosure of information.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"How access to court information is provided","content":"# Part 3 How access to court information is provided\n\nPart 3 How access to court information is provided","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Methods of providing access","content":"#### 14 Methods of providing access\n\n14 Methods of providing access\n\n> > (1) A person who is entitled under this Act to access to court information can be provided with that access in any of the following ways—\n> > \n> > > (a) by being given a reasonable opportunity to inspect a court record (or a copy of a court record) that contains the information,\n> > \n> > > (b) by being provided with a copy of a court record that contains the information,\n> > \n> > > (c) by any means provided for by the rules,\n> > \n> > > (d) by any other means that the court considers to be appropriate in a particular case.\n> \n> > (2) In deciding how access to court information is to be provided to a person, the court is to consider any preference that the person expresses as to how access is to be provided.\n> \n> > (3) The court can impose reasonable conditions on the provision of access for the purpose of ensuring the safe custody and proper preservation of court records.\n> \n> > (4) The court may refuse to provide access to court information in a particular case if—\n> > \n> > > (a) providing access would require an unreasonable diversion of the court’s resources, or\n> > \n> > > (b) it is necessary to refuse access to ensure the safe custody and proper preservation of court records (but only if this cannot be ensured by the imposition of reasonable conditions on the provision of access).","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Charging of fees for access","content":"#### 15 Charging of fees for access\n\n15 Charging of fees for access\n\n> > (1) A fee can be charged for providing access to court information under this Act.\n> \n> > (2) Regulations under this Act or the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) may make provision for or with respect to the charging of fees for the provision of access to court information under this Act, including provision for or with respect to—\n> > \n> > > (a) the maximum fees that may be charged for providing access, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the waiver, reduction or refund of any fee payable or paid for providing access.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Privacy protection","content":"# Part 4 Privacy protection\n\nPart 4 Privacy protection","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of privacy laws","content":"#### 16 Application of privacy laws\n\n16 Application of privacy laws\n\n> The [Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1998-133) and the [Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2002-071) do not apply to the providing of access to court information pursuant to an entitlement arising under this Act.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Courts to publicise privacy protection measures","content":"#### 17 Courts to publicise privacy protection measures\n\n17 Courts to publicise privacy protection measures\n\n> Each court is to publish on its website, or by other appropriate means, general information that promotes awareness of the potential for information provided by a party to proceedings to be accessed by other persons pursuant to an entitlement under this Act and the court’s practices and procedures for preventing or limiting access to personal information.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Personal identification information","content":"#### 18 Personal identification information\n\n18 Personal identification information\n\n> > (1) For the purpose of facilitating access to court records, a court must ensure to the maximum extent reasonably practicable that court records that contain open access information do not contain personal identification information.\n> \n> > (2) For that purpose, the rules may make provision for or with respect to—\n> > \n> > > (a) the providing of access to open access information contained in a court record by providing access to a copy of the record from which personal identification information has been deleted or removed, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the filing or tendering of court records that have had personal identification information deleted or removed from the record or contained in a separate record.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Protection of court information","content":"# Part 5 Protection of court information\n\nPart 5 Protection of court information","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Security of court information","content":"#### 19 Security of court information\n\n19 Security of court information\n\n> A court must take such security safeguards as are reasonable in the circumstances to ensure that the court information contained in court records is protected against misuse and unauthorised access, use or disclosure.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Unauthorised disclosure and use of court information","content":"#### 20 Unauthorised disclosure and use of court information\n\n20 Unauthorised disclosure and use of court information\n\n> > (1) A person must not disclose or use court information obtained in the exercise of the person’s functions as a court officer or in the execution or administration of this Act except—\n> > \n> > > (a) with the consent of the person from whom the information was obtained, or\n> > \n> > > (b) in the exercise of those functions or in the execution or administration of this Act, or\n> > \n> > > (c) as authorised by the regulations, or\n> > \n> > > (d) as otherwise authorised or required by law.\n> \n> > (2) A person must not induce or attempt to induce another person to disclose or use court information in contravention of subsection (1).\n> \n> > (3) If a court officer discloses court information by providing access to the information and believes in good faith when providing access to the information that this Act permits or requires that access to be provided, the officer is deemed to have disclosed the information in the execution of this Act.\n> \n> Maximum penalty—100 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or both.","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions of access to court information","content":"#### 21 Conditions of access to court information\n\n21 Conditions of access to court information\n\n> > (1) A person who is provided with access to court information pursuant to an entitlement under this Act must not disclose or use the information for a purpose or in a manner that the person knows is contrary to any condition of access.\n> \n> > (2) A condition of access is a condition imposed by the court or by the regulations that restricts the disclosure or use of court information to which access is provided pursuant to an entitlement under this Act.\n> \n> Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"Part 6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Miscellaneous","content":"# Part 6 Miscellaneous\n\nPart 6 Miscellaneous","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exercise of functions by court officers","content":"#### 22 Exercise of functions by court officers\n\n22 Exercise of functions by court officers\n\n> > (1) The senior judicial officer of a court may, by instrument in writing—\n> > \n> > > (a) direct that any function of the court under this Act may be exercised by such registrars or other officers of the court, and in such circumstances and subject to such conditions, as are specified in the instrument, and\n> > \n> > > (b) vary or revoke any such instrument.\n> \n> > (2) Without limiting any other functions he or she may exercise, a registrar or other officer of a court may exercise any function conferred on such an officer by the rules.\n> \n> > (3) This section does not limit any provision of the Act by which a court is constituted with respect to the exercise of the court’s functions.","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Protection in respect of disclosure of court information","content":"#### 23 Protection in respect of disclosure of court information\n\n23 Protection in respect of disclosure of court information\n\n> > (1) If court information is disclosed pursuant to an entitlement under this Act—\n> > \n> > > (a) no action for defamation or breach of confidence lies against the Crown, a court or a court officer by reason of the disclosure of the information, and\n> > \n> > > (b) no action for defamation or breach of confidence in respect of any publication involved in, or resulting from, the disclosure of the information lies against the author of a record containing the information or any other person by reason of the author or other person having supplied the record to a court, and\n> > \n> > > (c) neither the person by whom the disclosure is made nor any other person concerned in disclosing the information is guilty of an offence merely because of the disclosing of the information.\n> \n> > (2) The giving of access to court information pursuant to an entitlement under this Act does not constitute, for the purposes of the law relating to defamation or breach of confidence, an authorisation or approval of the publication of a record containing the information or its contents by the person to whom access to the information is given.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Personal liability","content":"#### 24 Personal liability\n\n24 Personal liability\n\n> No matter or thing done by a court officer, or by any person acting under the direction of a court officer, if the matter or thing was done in good faith for the purposes of executing this Act, subjects the court officer or person so acting, personally to any action, liability, claim or demand.","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules of court","content":"#### 25 Rules of court\n\n25 Rules of court\n\n> > (1) The Uniform Rules Committee under the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) may make rules, not inconsistent with this Act, for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to be prescribed by rules or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed by rules for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n> \n> > (2) In particular, the rules may make provision for or with respect to the following matters—\n> > \n> > > (a) the practice and procedure to be followed in respect of proceedings under this Act and any matters incidental to or relating to that practice and procedure,\n> > \n> > > (b) the procedure for applying for access to court information under this Act,\n> > \n> > > (c) the means by which access can be provided to court information under this Act,\n> > \n> > > (d) the duties of registrars and other officers of a court in relation to or for the purpose of the operation of this Act,\n> > \n> > > (e) the forms to be used in connection with the operation of this Act.\n> \n> > (3) Rules made by the Uniform Rules Committee for the purposes of this Act are to form part of the rules made by that Committee under the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028).","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"#### 26 Regulations\n\n26 Regulations\n\n> The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to be prescribed by regulation or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed by regulation for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Nature of proceedings for offences","content":"#### 27 Nature of proceedings for offences\n\n27 Nature of proceedings for offences\n\n> Proceedings for an offence under this Act may be dealt with summarily before the Local Court.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review of Act","content":"#### 28 Review of Act\n\n28 Review of Act\n\n> > (1) The Minister is to review this Act to determine whether the policy objectives of the Act remain valid and whether the terms of the Act remain appropriate for securing those objectives.\n> \n> > (2) The review is to be undertaken as soon as possible after the period of 2 years from the date of assent to this Act.\n> \n> > (3) A report on the outcome of the review is to be tabled in each House of Parliament within 12 months after the end of the period of 2 years.","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 1","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Savings, transitional and other provisions","content":"# Schedule 1 Savings, transitional and other provisions\n\nSchedule 1 Savings, transitional and other provisions","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 2","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Amendments","content":"# Schedule 2 Amendments\n\nSchedule 2 Amendments\n\n2.1 [Criminal Procedure Act 1986 No 209](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209)\n\n2.2 [Local Court Rules 2009](/view/html/inforce/current/sl-2009-0589)\n\n2.3 [Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/sl-2005-0418)","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"sch.2-sec","sectionType":"section","heading":"Section 314 Media access to court documents","content":"#### sch.2-sec Section 314 Media access to court documents\n\nSection 314 Media access to court documents\n\n> Omit the section.","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"sch.2-sec-oc.2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rule 8.10 Copies of court records","content":"#### sch.2-sec-oc.2 Rule 8.10 Copies of court records\n\nRule 8.10 Copies of court records\n\n> Omit the rule.","sortOrder":41}],"analysis":{"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"Provisions in force","severity":"high","reasoning":"A version of legislation cannot simultaneously be 'in force' and have none of its provisions commenced. If no provisions have commenced, the Act has no legal effect whatsoever, rendering its designation as the current operative version meaningless. This creates a legal nullity: an Act that is 'in force' but does nothing and binds no one.","confidence":0.95,"description":"The Status Information states 'None of the provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have commenced,' yet the version is described as the current 'In force version' effective from 1 July 2024."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"Authorisation / Provisions in force","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Certifying as authoritative a version of legislation that has no operative provisions raises a logical absurdity: the certification lends legal weight and official status to an instrument that, by its own admission, has no legal effect. The certification process presupposes operative content to certify.","confidence":0.82,"description":"The Parliamentary Counsel's Office certifies this version as the correct and authoritative form of the legislation under s45C of the Interpretation Act 1987, yet the version itself declares that none of its provisions have commenced."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"Currency of version / Provisions in force","severity":"high","reasoning":"The Court Information Act 2010 was enacted in 2010. It is now presented in a version current to 2026 with no provisions ever having commenced. If this is accurate and not a website rendering error, it means an Act of Parliament has sat entirely dormant and legally inoperative for over 15 years while being maintained, updated, and certified as current — an extraordinary and practically absurd state of affairs for a court administration statute.","confidence":0.88,"description":"The legislation is described as 'current' and accessed as at 2 April 2026 — over 15 years after the Act was passed in 2010 — yet none of its provisions have commenced."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"high","section_a":"Status Information — 'In force version' (current from 01/07/2024)","section_b":"Provisions in force — 'None of the provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have commenced'","confidence":0.95,"description":"The version is classified as the operative 'In force version' from 1 July 2024, directly contradicting the statement that none of its provisions have commenced."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"Currency of version — 'Current version for 1 July 2024 to date (accessed 2 April 2026 at 0:00)'","section_b":"Provisions in force — 'None of the provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have commenced'","confidence":0.9,"description":"Describing legislation as 'current' implies it is the operative law as of the access date. This is irreconcilable with a declaration that none of the displayed provisions have commenced, as uncommenced provisions cannot constitute 'current' law."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Authorisation — certified as correct under s45C Interpretation Act 1987","section_b":"Provisions in force — 'None of the provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have commenced'","confidence":0.75,"description":"Section 45C of the Interpretation Act 1987 concerns the certification of the correct text of legislation in force. Certifying under that provision a version in which no provisions have commenced creates a contradiction, as s45C is directed at operative legislation, not uncommenced instruments."}]},"summary":{"complexity_score":3,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"It is not possible to make a reliable scope assessment from the provided text. The document contains only metadata, status information, and navigation elements — no substantive provisions are displayed. The stated reason is that 'none of the provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have commenced.' Therefore, whether the scope changed from original intent cannot be determined from the available information."},"complexity_factors":["The legislation itself is not substantively available in the provided text — only metadata and status information is shown, limiting full analysis","The unusual legal situation of an Act that has been in force for 15+ years but with no provisions having commenced adds a layer of interpretive complexity","Understanding the distinction between an Act being 'passed' and its provisions 'commencing' (coming into effect) requires some legal knowledge","Multiple historical versions exist (2010, 2016, 2024), suggesting amendments have been made even though no provisions have commenced, which is procedurally confusing","The interaction with the Interpretation Act 1987 regarding automatic repeal of amending provisions adds technical background complexity"],"plain_english_summary":"## Court Information Act 2010 (NSW)\n\n**What is this?**\n\nThis is a NSW law called the Court Information Act 2010. However, there is a critical and unusual situation with this legislation: **none of its provisions have actually commenced** (come into force), even though the Act was passed in 2010 and has been on the books for over 15 years.\n\n**What does that mean for you?**\n\nIn practical terms, this Act currently does nothing. It exists on paper but has never been activated. Laws in Australia can be passed by Parliament but then held in reserve until a government decides to 'turn them on' via a commencement order or proclamation. That has never happened here.\n\n**What was it supposed to do?**\n\nBased on its title and the fact it is administered by the Attorney General, this Act was likely intended to govern how information from courts (such as court records, transcripts, or case information) can be accessed, shared, or managed. However, without the actual substantive provisions being available or in force, we cannot confirm the full detail of what it would have done.\n\n**Who is responsible for it?**\n\nThe NSW Attorney General is the responsible minister, meaning it falls under the Department of Justice.\n\n**Bottom line:** This law exists but is effectively a legal placeholder — it has had no practical effect on anyone since it was passed. If you were hoping to rely on it, or were concerned it affected your rights, it currently does not."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":5,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act requires courts to ensure, so far as reasonably practicable, that open access court records do not include personal identification information (s 18(1)) and permits rules about providing redacted copies (s 18(2)). However, Schedule 1, Part 2, cl 2 provides that that redaction requirement (s 18) does not apply to court records created before the commencement of s 18. That transitional provision narrows the retrospective scope of the redaction obligation and means older records are not subject to the same redaction duty as records created after commencement."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple defined categories (open access vs restricted access) with detailed lists (s 4, s 5, s 6)","Numerous cross-references to other provisions and external Acts (s 4 note; s 15, s 25, s 26)","Judicial discretion and balancing tests for restricted access applications (s 9(2))","Delegation to rules and regulations for practical procedure and fee structures (s 15, s 18(2), s 25, s 26)","Overlap and override with other laws and court orders (s 13) creating interpretive complexity","Operational requirements (redaction, security) that depend on reasonableness judgments (s 18(1), s 19)","Criminal and civil penalties with different maxima and targets (s 10(3), s 20, s 21)","Transitional carve-out affecting retrospective application of redaction duty (Schedule 1, Part 2, cl 2)"],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and how it works\n\nThis Act sets rules for when and how courts in New South Wales must give people access to information contained in court records, and it creates duties and limits on how that information can be used or published.\n\nHow the law works (mechanics first)\n\n- It divides court information into two buckets: \"open access information\" (items the public can generally access) and \"restricted access information\" (everything else and certain specifically listed types). The categories and examples are in the definitions and access parts (see s 4, s 5 and s 6).\n- Anyone can obtain open access information unless a court orders otherwise (s 8). Examples of open access items include indictments, transcripts of open court proceedings, judgments and lists of hearing dates (s 5).\n- Restricted access information can only be accessed if the court gives leave or the regulations permit it (s 9). The court may consider public interest, privacy, administration of justice and the applicant’s involvement when deciding (s 9(2)).\n- News media organisations have a specific entitlement to access some restricted materials (for example, transcripts of closed-court proceedings, briefs of evidence and certain written exhibits) unless the court orders otherwise, but media must not publish personal identification information without permission (s 10).\n- Parties to proceedings (and their lawyers) have a broad entitlement to material relating to their case, including after a matter has concluded, unless the court orders otherwise (s 11 and s 7 for when proceedings are \"concluded\").\n- Courts provide access by inspection, copies, methods in the rules, or any method the court considers appropriate (s 14). Courts may impose conditions on access (e.g. limits on use or disclosure) (s 8(2), s 9(3), s 10(2), s 14(3)).\n- A fee may be charged for providing access; regulations can set maximum fees and waiver arrangements (s 15).\n- The Act requires courts to take reasonable security measures to protect court records (s 19), and to avoid including personal identification information in open access records to the maximum extent reasonably practicable (s 18(1)); the rules may provide practical steps for redaction or filing redacted versions (s 18(2)).\n- Privacy statutes named in the Act (the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 and the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002) do not apply to access provided under this Act (s 16). Instead, the Act imposes its own privacy-related restrictions (e.g. s 6, s 10(3), s 18).\n- There are criminal and civil protections and penalties. Court officers and others are forbidden to disclose or use court information obtained through their functions except in specified circumstances (s 20) — breach carries a maximum penalty (100 penalty units or 2 years’ imprisonment, or both). Publishing personal identification information obtained under the media entitlement without permission attracts a higher maximum penalty (250 penalty units) (s 10(3)). Conditions of access breached by a recipient can attract penalties (s 21).\n- The Act protects the Crown, courts and court officers from defamation or breach-of-confidence actions when they disclose information in accordance with the Act (s 23). It also shields court officers acting in good faith from personal liability for actions done to execute the Act (s 24).\n- The courts can make more detailed procedure and form rules through the Uniform Rules Committee and the Governor can make regulations (s 25 and s 26). The Minister must review the Act about two years after assent and table a report (s 28).\n\nStated purpose and how the mechanics support it\n\n- The Act states its objects as promoting consistent access across NSW courts, enabling public access to support transparency, giving the media additional access to facilitate reporting, and protecting fair trials, administration of justice and participants’ privacy or safety by restricting access where appropriate (s 3).\n- Mechanically, the Act pursues those objects by (a) specifying what is open vs restricted (s 5, s 6), (b) setting presumptive access for the public, parties and designated media (s 8, s 10, s 11), and (c) giving courts discretion to refuse access or impose conditions where access would harm privacy, safety or the administration of justice (s 9(2), s 13).\n\nWho pays, who decides, and what changes behaviour\n\n- Who pays: Individuals may be charged a fee for copies or other provision of access (s 15). Courts bear the operational cost of implementing security and redaction requirements (s 18(1), s 19).\n- Who decides: Courts control most decisions about access (s 8(2), s 9 and s 14); a senior judicial officer can delegate functions to registrars or other officers (s 22). Regulations and rules can broaden, limit or set procedure for access (s 15, s 18(2), s 25, s 26).\n- Behavioural effects: Parties and the public can request or inspect more court information than under an absence of such a statute (s 5–s 11). Courts and court staff must build processes for redaction, security and condition-imposition, and may refuse access if doing so would be an unreasonable diversion of resources (s 14(4)). Media organisations gain specified entitlements to restricted materials but face publication limits for personal identification information (s 10).\n\nCosts, incentives, trade-offs and implementation risks\n\n- Administrative burden and resource trade-off: Redacting personal identification information to the \"maximum extent reasonably practicable\" (s 18(1)) and implementing security safeguards (s 19) create ongoing operational costs for courts. The Act explicitly allows refusal of access where providing it would be an unreasonable diversion of court resources (s 14(4)(a)), creating a practical check but also a potential barrier to access.\n- Concentrated benefits, diffuse costs: News organisations receive a distinct statutory entitlement to some restricted materials (s 10). The benefits to media are concentrated; the costs of compliance (redaction, security) and managing access fall primarily on courts (s 18, s 19, s 14(4)).\n- Compliance risk for court officers: Strict limits on disclosure and significant penalties for unlawful use or disclosure (s 20) create strong incentives for conservative handling of material and careful procedural compliance by staff.\n- Legal overlap and override rules: Other laws or court orders that prohibit publication or disclosure take precedence over entitlements under this Act (s 13). The Act also excludes the named privacy laws from applying to access under this Act (s 16), so the Act itself and any regulations govern privacy protections described here.\n- Discretion and case-by-case balancing: The court’s power to impose conditions and to weigh competing considerations (public interest, privacy, administration of justice) when granting access to restricted information (s 9(2)) concentrates decision-making discretion in judicial officers and delegates.\n- Retrospective carve-out: The requirement to remove personal identification information does not apply to records created before the commencement of that requirement (Schedule 1, Part 2, cl 2), so older records are handled differently, which affects uniformity of protection across historical records.\n\nSummary of key risks and trade-offs to watch in practice\n\n- Resource capacity in courts to perform redaction and to manage secure access (s 14(4), s 18, s 19).\n- Tension between transparency and privacy/safety that courts must resolve case by case (s 3, s 9(2), s 13).\n- Potential for rules and regulations to significantly affect how entitlements operate in practice (s 15, s 18(2), s 25, s 26).\n\nKey sections cited: definitions and categories (s 4, s 5, s 6), public and party access (s 8, s 11), restricted access and judicial balancing (s 9), media entitlements and limits (s 10), methods and refusal grounds (s 14), fees (s 15), privacy carve-out and redaction duty (s 16, s 18), security (s 19), unauthorised disclosure and penalties (s 20, s 21), protections for disclosers and officers (s 23, s 24), delegation (s 22), rules and regulations (s 25, s 26), non‑entitlement where other laws/orders prohibit disclosure (s 13), and the retrospective exception for redaction (Schedule 1, Part 2, cl 2)."},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":4,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The legislation appears consistent with its original intent as stated in section 3: promoting consistency in access to court information, balancing open access with privacy and fair trial protections, and providing enhanced media access. The amendments noted (2016 and 2023) appear to be minor technical updates rather than scope expansion."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple defined terms (14 explicit definitions in section 4, plus incorporated definitions from the Interpretation Act 1987)","Nested conditional logic: access rights depend on type of information (open vs restricted), type of proceedings (civil vs criminal), stage of proceedings (pre-trial, during trial, concluded), and identity of requester (public, media, party)","Cross-references between sections (e.g., 'conclusion of proceedings' defined in section 7 but used throughout; section 13 overriding entire Act)","Temporal conditions: some information changes status based on procedural milestones (e.g., police fact sheets become restricted once jury trial is set down, then open again after conclusion)","Exception layering: section 6 creates exceptions to the open access rule, and section 13 creates a blanket override for other laws and court orders","Delegated legislation dependencies: significant operational detail left to regulations and court rules (sections 15, 18, 25, 26)"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this law does:**\n\nThe *Court Information Act 2010* (NSW) sets the rules for who can access court documents and records, and under what conditions. It creates a two-tier system for accessing information held by NSW courts.\n\n**The two types of court information:**\n\n*   **Open access information** — Anyone can access these records. This includes things like court transcripts, judgments, indictments, pleadings (in civil cases), and documents admitted into evidence. Think of this as the \"public gallery\" of court documents.\n\n*   **Restricted access information** — These records require special permission to access. This includes sensitive material like personal identification details (tax file numbers, home addresses, dates of birth), victim impact statements, medical reports, and police briefs during jury trials. News media organisations get broader access to restricted information than the general public, but they cannot publish personal identification information without permission.\n\n**Who can access what:**\n\n*   **General public:** Can access open access information unless a court orders otherwise.\n*   **News media:** Can access additional restricted information (like closed court transcripts and police briefs) to help them report accurately, subject to conditions.\n*   **Parties to proceedings:** Can access any information relating to their own case.\n*   **Others:** Can apply to the court for leave (permission) to access restricted information, with the court weighing factors like public interest, privacy, and safety.\n\n**Key protections:**\n\n*   Courts must remove personal identification information from records where possible.\n*   Access can be refused if it would compromise a fair trial, someone's safety, or privacy.\n*   Other laws and court orders (like suppression orders) still override this Act.\n*   Court officers who disclose information in good faith are protected from personal liability.\n\n**Why it matters:**\n\nThis law tries to balance **open justice** (the public's right to know what happens in courts) with **privacy and fair trial rights**. It standardises access across all NSW courts and gives journalists special access to ensure accurate reporting, while protecting vulnerable people from having their personal details exposed."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010","history":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010/history","analysis":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/court-information-act-2010/documents"}}