{"id":"C1918A00043","name":"Defence Service Homes Act 1918","slug":"defence-service-homes-act-1918","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"43 of 1918","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":292,"registerId":"C2025C00096","compilationNumber":"31","startDate":"2025-02-15","status":"InForce","reasons":[{"affect":"Amend","markdown":"Sch 1 (items 1, 2) of the [Defence Service Homes Amendment (Insurance) Act 2025](/C2025A00010)","dateChanged":null,"amendedByTitle":null,"affectedByTitle":{"name":"Defence Service Homes Amendment (Insurance) Act 2025","year":2025,"number":10,"titleId":"C2025A00010","provisions":"Sch 1 (items 1, 2)","seriesType":"Act","optionalSeriesNumber":null}}],"registeredAt":"2025-02-20T12:20:27.476Z"},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part I","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Part I—Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Service Homes Act 1918.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act shall commence on a date to be fixed by Proclamation.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interpretation","content":"#### 4 Interpretation\n\n  (1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> additional advance means a subsidised advance to a purchaser or borrower for a purpose referred to in subsection 18(3).\n\n> advance for essential repairs means a subsidised advance to a person referred to in section 21 for the purpose referred to in that section.\n\n> amending Act means the Defence Service Homes Amendment Act 1988.\n\n> approved means approved by the Minister in writing for the purposes of this Act.\n\n> Approved welfare organization means an organization approved by an appropriate authority of the Defence Force to provide welfare services (including assistance in the care of the sick or wounded) for members of the Defence Force.\n\n> assigned advance means a subsidised advance to an assignee, in accordance with a certificate of assignment issued under section 23A.\n\n> assignee means an assignee referred to in section 23A.\n\n> assignor means an assignor referred to in section 23A.\n\n> Australian Soldier means a person who, during the First World War or the Second World War or during the warlike operations in or in connection with Korea after 26 June 1950 or the warlike operations in or in connection with Malaya after 28 June 1950:\n\n    (a) is or was a member of the Naval, Military or Air Forces of Australia enlisted or appointed for or employed on active service outside Australia or on a ship of war; or\n    (b) is or was a member of any nursing service maintained by the Commonwealth in connexion with the Defence Force of the Commonwealth or any part thereof accepted or appointed for service outside Australia; or\n    (c) served in the Naval, Military or Air Forces of any part of the Sovereign’s dominions, other than the Commonwealth, and who proves to the satisfaction of the Secretary that he had, before his enlistment or appointment for service, resided in Australia or a Territory; or\n    (d) was a member of any nursing service maintained by the Government of any part of the Sovereign’s dominions other than the Commonwealth, in connexion with the Naval, Military or Air Forces of that part, and who proves to the satisfaction of the Secretary that she had, before her appointment to that service, resided in Australia or a Territory;\n  and who, in the case of a person included in paragraph (a) or (b) in relation to service in connection with the Second World War:\n    (e) was so enlisted, accepted, appointed or employed before 3rd September, 1945; or\n    (f) was so enlisted, accepted, appointed or employed on or after that date and before 1 July 1951, and who has been discharged or who has ceased to be engaged on war service as defined in section 4 of the Defence Act 1903‑1945;\n  and includes:\n    (g) a person who, as a member of the Defence Force, rendered continuous full‑time service outside Australia:\n    (i) as a member of a unit of the Defence Force that was allotted for duty, within the meaning of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 as provided in subsection 5B(2) of that Act; or\n    (ii) as a person who was allotted for duty, within the meaning of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 as provided in subsection 5B(2) of that Act;\n  in an operational area described in item 3A, 3B, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 in Schedule 2 to the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 during the period specified in that item:\n    (ga) a person who, as a member of the Defence Force or as a member of a unit of the Defence Force, was allotted for duty within the meaning of subsection 5B(2) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 in the operational area described in item 9 of Schedule 2 to that Act during the period specified in that item;\n    (gb) a person who, as a member of the Defence Force or as a member of a unit of the Defence Force, was allotted for duty within the meaning of subsection 5B(2) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 in an operational area described in item 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 or 15 of Schedule 2 to that Act during the period specified in that item and whose first service in the Defence Force began on or before 14 May 1985;\n    (gc) a member of the Defence Force who is taken, because of section 6D of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986, to have rendered operational service (within the meaning of that Act);\n    (gd) a member of the Defence Force:\n    (i) whose first service in the Defence Force began on or before 14 May 1985; and\n    (ii) who is taken, because of section 6DB or 6E of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986, to have rendered operational service (within the meaning of that Act);\n    (ge) a member of the Defence Force:\n    (i) whose first service in the Defence Force began on or before 14 May 1985; and\n    (ii) who has rendered warlike service;\n    (h) a national serviceman;\n    (i) a regular serviceman; and\n    (j) a person who:\n    (i) was appointed for service outside Australia as a representative of an approved welfare organization with a body, contingent or detachment of the Defence Force;\n    (ii) as such, served outside Australia on or after the third day of September, 1939, with that body, contingent or detachment; and\n    (iii) would, if during that service he had been a member of the Defence Force allotted for duty with that body, contingent or detachment, be, by reason of that service, an Australian soldier as defined by a provision of this definition other than paragraph (h) or (i) or this paragraph.\n\n> balance has the same meaning as in the agreement.\n\n> borrower means a person who is liable to pay the outstanding amount:\n\n    (a) of a subsidised advance in respect of which subsidy is payable; or\n    (b) secured by a specified portfolio asset (other than a contract of sale) which vests in the Bank under section 6B and in respect of which subsidy is payable and includes an assignee in relation to a subsidised advance.\n\n> certificate of assignment means a certificate of assignment issued under section 23A.\n\n> certificate of entitlement means a certificate of entitlement issued under this Act.\n\n> commencing day means the day on which section 10 of the amending Act commences.\n\n> company title, in relation to land, means a right of occupancy of the land, or of a dwelling‑house or part of a dwelling‑house erected on the land, arising from the holding of shares in a corporation that has an interest in the land or dwelling‑house.\n\n> Consumer Credit Codes commencing day means the earliest day on which any of the Consumer Credit Codes of the States or Territories comes into force.\n\n> contract of sale means a contract for the sale of a dwelling‑house and land under Part IV of this Act as in force before the commencing day.\n\n> Corporation means the Defence Service Homes Corporation.\n\n> Corporation advance has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> court means a court of summary jurisdiction.\n\n> credit provider means:\n\n    (a) the Bank; or\n    (b) any other credit provider (within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) that is the party to an agreement (within the meaning of this Act).\n\n> de facto partner of a person has the meaning given by the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n> Defence Department has the meaning given by the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n> dependent parent means a parent of a person mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (g) of the definition of Eligible person if:\n\n    (a) the person so mentioned:\n    (i) is dead; and\n    (ii) at the time of death, was not legally married and did not have a de facto partner; and\n    (b) one of the following subparagraphs applies:\n    (i) the parent is a widow or widower and was dependent on the person before the person became an eligible person;\n    (ii) the parent’s spouse or de facto partner is so incapacitated as to be unable to contribute materially to that parent’s support.\n\n> Dwelling‑house includes:\n\n    (a) a house or building used or to be used by a person, who is included in paragraph (b) or (d) of the definition of Australian Soldier, as a hospital, sanatorium or nursing home; and\n    (b) the appurtenances, outbuildings, fences, and permanent provision for lighting, water supply, drainage and sewerage provided in connexion with a dwelling‑house;\n  but does not include any land.\n\n> Eligible person means a person who:\n\n    (a) is an Australian soldier;\n    (b) is a munition worker;\n    (c) is a war worker;\n    (d) is a member of the Young Men’s Christian Association who, during the First World War, was accepted for service with and served abroad with the Naval or Military Forces of Australia as a representative of that Association;\n    (e) has been awarded, in respect of his employment during the First World War, the Australian Mercantile Marine War Zone Badge, or the British Mercantile Marine Medal; and was during such employment domiciled in Australia or a Territory;\n    (f) after the commencement of the Second World War, and before the commencement of the War Service Homes Act 1946, was employed under agreement as master, officer or seaman, or under indenture as apprentice, in sea‑going service:\n    (i) on a ship engaged in trading between a port of a State or Territory and any other port, whether a port of a State or Territory or not; or\n    (ii) on a ship being a troop transport or hospital ship;\n    and was, during that employment, domiciled in Australia or a Territory; or\n    (g) not being a person to whom the last preceding paragraph applies, was, after the commencement of the Second World War, and before the commencement of the War Service Homes Act 1946, employed, otherwise than as a member of the Defence Force, in sea‑going service on a ship being a ship of war, troop transport or hospital ship, and was, during that employment, domiciled in Australia or a Territory;\n  and includes a widow, widower or dependent parent of a person specified in any of the paragraphs (a) to (g) of this definition.\n\n> eligible recipient means a person who is:\n\n    (a) a member of the Defence Force or a former member of the Defence Force; or\n    (b) a member of a Peacekeeping Force or a former member of a Peacekeeping Force; or\n    (c) a widow or widower of a person covered by paragraph (a) or (b).\n\n> eligible veteran means:\n\n    (a) a person covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of veteran in subsection 5C(1) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (b) a member of the Forces (within the meaning of subsection 68(1) of that Act); or\n    (c) a member of a Peacekeeping Force (within the meaning of subsection 68(1) of that Act); or\n    (d) a widow or widower (within the meaning of subsection 5E(1) of that Act) of a person covered by paragraph (a), (b) or (c) of this definition.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> further advance means a subsidised advance (other than a widow or widower advance, an advance for essential repairs or a home support advance) to a person who:\n\n    (a) has been a purchaser or borrower as defined in this section (as in force before, on or after the commencing day), otherwise than:\n    (i) merely because the person is or was the personal representative of a deceased purchaser or borrower as so defined; or\n    (ii) merely because the person is or was a joint purchaser or borrower as so defined with the person’s spouse or de facto partner and became such a purchaser or borrower on the basis that the person’s spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person; and\n    (b) is not such a purchaser or borrower immediately before the advance is made.\n\n> Government authority means a public authority (including a local governing body) established by or under a law of the Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory.\n\n> granny flat means any form of residence:\n\n    (a) that is the principal home of an eligible person; and\n    (b) that is not owned, wholly or partly, by the eligible person; and\n    (c) that is, or is a part of, a private residence; and\n    (d) in respect of which the eligible person has a right of accommodation for an indefinite period.\n\n> guarantee includes indemnity (other than one arising under a contract of insurance).\n\n> guarantor means a person who has given or gives a guarantee to a credit provider in relation to a subsidised advance.\n\n> Holding, in relation to an applicant or borrower, means:\n\n    (a) land of which he or she is the beneficial owner in fee simple; or\n    (b) land of which he or she is the lessee under a Crown lease in perpetuity from a State; or\n    (c) land of which he or she is the lessee under a lease granted for a term of not less than 99 years from a State or from a local governing body; or\n    (d) land in a Territory of which he or she is the lessee under a lease from Australia or from the Administration of the Territory, being:\n    (i) a lease in perpetuity;\n    (ii) a lease granted for a term of not less than 99 years; or\n    (iii) in the case of Norfolk Island—a lease granted for a term of not less than 28 years; or\n    (e) a suburban holding held by him or her under the Crown Lands Consolidation Act, 1913 of New South Wales or under that Act as amended at any time or under an Act enacted in substitution for that Act, being a suburban holding an application for which has been confirmed in accordance with the law of that State; or\n    (f) a unit defined in a units plan registered in accordance with a law of the Australian Capital Territory relating to unit titles, being a unit of which he or she is the lessee under a lease from Australia; or\n    (g) land which he or she holds by way of a company title; or\n    (h) land of which he or she is the lessee under a lease that a credit provider considers is adequate security for a subsidised advance to be made to him or her.\n\n> Note: An interest in a holding may be a joint interest in accordance with section 4AB.\n\n> Home Loans Assistance Act means the Defence Force (Home Loans Assistance) Act 1990.\n\n> home support advance means a subsidised advance to a person referred to in section 21A for a purpose referred to in that section.\n\n> initial advance means a subsidised advance for a purpose referred to in subsection 18(2) to a person referred to in subsection 18(1) who is not, and has not previously been, a purchaser or borrower as defined in this section (as in force before, on or after the commencing day), otherwise than:\n\n    (a) merely because the person is or was the personal representative of a deceased purchaser or borrower as so defined; or\n    (b) merely because the person is or was a joint purchaser or borrower as so defined with the person’s spouse or de facto partner and became such a purchaser or borrower on the basis that the person’s spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person.\n\n> instalment relief has the same meaning as in the agreement.\n\n> lease, in relation to land held by way of company title, includes an agreement similar to a lease.\n\n> limit has the same meaning as in the agreement.\n\n> member of a Peacekeeping Force has the same meaning as in Part IV of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986.\n\n> mortgage includes a security over an interest in shares that are shares giving rise to a company title.\n\n> mortgage includes:\n\n    (a) any interest in, or power over, property securing obligations of a borrower or guarantor; and\n    (b) a credit provider’s title to land or goods that are subject to a sale by instalments.\n\n> mortgagor means a person who has given or gives a mortgage to a credit provider in relation to a subsidised advance.\n\n> Munition worker means a person who, during the First World War:\n\n    (a) entered into an agreement with the Commonwealth or the Minister of State for Defence to proceed to Great Britain for the purpose of:\n    (i) engaging in the work of producing munitions for the Imperial Government or otherwise; or\n    (ii) serving under the Imperial Government in the Ministry of Munitions; and\n    (b) engaged in the work of producing munitions for the Imperial Government or otherwise or served under the Imperial Government in the Ministry of Munitions, and whose agreement with the Commonwealth or the Minister of State for Defence was not determined by reason of his failure to observe and perform any term or condition contained in the agreement, or by reason of his dismissal from any work in Great Britain during the continuance of the agreement because of any conduct of the worker which, in the opinion of the Minister, was such as to justify the determination of the agreement.\n\n> National serviceman means a person who is a national serviceman in accordance with section 4AAB.\n\n> notice of eligibility means a notice of eligibility issued under this Act.\n\n> other portfolio agreement has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> Owner in relation to land includes every person who has purchased land on credit or deferred payment, and has obtained possession of the land, and, in relation to a dwelling‑house, includes any person who has purchased or contracted to purchase a dwelling‑house together with the land on which it is erected.\n\n> parent: without limiting who is a parent of anyone for the purposes of this Act, a person is the parent of another person if the other person is a child of the person within the meaning of the Family Law Act 1975.\n\n> portfolio asset has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> portfolio contract of sale has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> portfolio mortgage has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> portfolio supplementary agreement has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> purchaser means a person who is liable to pay the outstanding balance of the purchase money in respect of the purchase of land and a dwelling‑house under a contract of sale in respect of which subsidy is payable.\n\n> Regular serviceman means a person who is a regular serviceman in accordance with section 4AAA.\n\n> retirement village means:\n\n    (a) a retirement village registered under an approved law of a State or Territory; or\n    (b) in the case of a State or Territory that has no approved law—a retirement village within the meaning of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (c) a granny flat.\n\n> reviewable decision means a decision of the Secretary:\n\n    (aa) under subsection 4BB(2) (revocation of surrender election);\n    (a) refusing to issue a notice of eligibility, a certificate of entitlement or a certificate of assignment;\n    (b) determining an amount under section 25;\n    (c) cancelling subsidy under section 26;\n    (d) giving the Bank a notice of the intended cancellation of subsidy under section 27;\n    (da) cancelling a subsidy under section 27A;\n    (e) requiring a person to pay an amount under section 29;\n    (f) determining a maximum term under section 36;\n    (g) refusing to extend the period for making an application for review under section 43; or\n    (h) giving, or refusing to give, an approval under section 45A.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> specified portfolio asset has the same meaning as in the Bank agreement.\n\n> subsidised advance means:\n\n    (a) an advance made by a credit provider in accordance with a certificate of entitlement; or\n    (b) an initial advance that the Bank is taken to have made under section 37.\n\n> subsidised advance contract means an agreement for the provision of a subsidised advance whether or not the Commonwealth has terminated the subsidy in respect of the advance.\n\n> subsidised advance loan account means:\n\n    (a) an account established by the Bank for the purpose of administering a specified portfolio asset; or\n    (b) an account established by any credit provider for the purpose of administering a subsidised advance.\n\n> subsidy means a subsidy payable under Part IV by the Commonwealth to a credit provider, being an amount calculated and payable in the manner provided in the agreement.\n\n> supplementary agreement means an agreement between the Commonwealth and the Bank, whether or not set out in a Schedule to this Act, that:\n\n    (a) amends the Bank agreement; and\n    (b) is expressed to be a supplementary agreement to the Bank agreement;\n  as varied and in force from time to time.\n\n> Territory means a Territory in which this Act applies or to which this Act extends.\n\n> the agreement means whichever of the following agreements or arrangements is applicable in the circumstances:\n\n    (a) the Bank agreement;\n    (b) an agreement or arrangement in force between the Commonwealth and a credit provider other than the Bank for the provision by the credit provider of subsidised advances or other benefits under this Act.\n\n> the Bank means Westpac Banking Corporation and, as the context requires and subject to the Bank agreement, any body to which it assigns all or any of its rights or obligations under the Bank agreement, the portfolio assets or subsidised advances or any security for those advances, as provided by the Bank agreement.\n\n> the Bank agreement means the agreement made between the Commonwealth and the Bank on 9 November 1988, a copy of which is set out in Schedule 1, as varied or affected by a supplementary agreement or otherwise, and as in force from time to time.\n\n> transferee means a person to whom a certificate of entitlement has been issued under section 22.\n\n> vesting date, in relation to the portfolio assets in a State or Territory, means the date determined by the Minister under section 6B in relation to those assets.\n\n> warlike service has the same meaning as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986.\n\n> War worker means a person, who, during the First World War, entered into an agreement with the Commonwealth to proceed to Great Britain for the purpose of engaging in work as a labourer, fettler or navvy for the Imperial Government or otherwise and engaged in such work, and whose agreement with the Commonwealth or the Minister of State for Defence was not determined by reason of his failure to observe and perform any term or condition contained in the agreement, or by reason of his dismissal from any work in Great Britain during the continuance of the agreement because of any conduct of the worker which, in the opinion of the Minister, was such as to justify the determination of the agreement.\n\n> widow of a person who has died means a woman who was legally married to, or a de facto partner of, the person immediately before the person died.\n\n> widower of a person who has died means a man who was legally married to, or a de facto partner of, the person immediately before the person died.\n\n> widow or widower advance means a subsidised advance to a person referred to in section 20 for a purpose referred to in that section.\n\n> winding‑up day means the day on which section 15 of the amending Act commences.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of the definition of Australian Soldier in subsection (1), a person shall not be taken to be an Australian soldier in relation to the warlike operations in or in connection with Korea after 26 June 1950, or the warlike operations in or in connection with Malaya after 28 June 1950, unless:\n    (a) that person was allotted for duty in an operational area within the meaning of subsection 5B(2) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 in connection with those operations before 1 September 1957 and, if he was so allotted while in Australia, or in the part of the Sovereign’s dominions other than the Commonwealth, as the case may be, he left the last port of call in Australia or in that other part of the Sovereign’s dominions before that date for the purpose of serving in connection with those operations; or\n    (b) that person, not being a person to whom paragraph (a) applies, served, on or after 1 September 1957 and before 28 May 1963, in an area prescribed to be, or to have been, an operational area for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (2A) Subject to subsection (2AA), for the purposes of paragraph (a) of the definition of Australian Soldier in subsection (1), a person who is or was:\n    (a) a member of the Citizen Military Forces;\n    (b) a member of the Women’s Royal Australian Naval Service, the Australian Women’s Army Service or the Women’s Auxiliary Australian Air Force;\n    (c) a member of the Australian Army Medical Women’s Service but not a member of the Australian Imperial Force; or\n    (d) a member of the Voluntary Aid Detachment;\n  shall not, by reason only of being or having been such a member, be taken to have been enlisted or appointed for active service outside Australia or on a ship of war.\n  (2AA) Subsection (2A) does not apply in relation to a person who, during the Second World War, was:\n    (a) a member of the Women’s Royal Australian Naval Service, the Australian Women’s Army Service or the Women’s Auxiliary Australian Air Force; or\n    (b) a member of the Australian Army Medical Women’s Service, other than a member of the Australian Imperial Force; or\n    (c) a full‑time paid member of the Voluntary Aid Detachment.\n  (2AB) For the purposes of the definitions of further advance and initial advance in subsection 4(1), a person of a kind referred to in subsection (2AA) is not taken to have been a purchaser or borrower, merely because the person previously became a purchaser or borrower on the basis that:\n    (a) the person’s spouse or de facto partner is or was an eligible person, and as a result they were, under subsection 4A(1), treated together as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act; or\n    (b) the person’s spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person, and the person became an eligible person because her spouse or de facto partner died; or\n    (c) the person is an eligible person because she is a dependent parent.\n  (2AC) For the purposes of the definitions of further advance and initial advance in subsection 4(1), a man who:\n    (a) was an eligible person in his own right; and\n    (b) is the widower of a person of a kind referred to in subsection (2AA);\n  is not taken to have been a purchaser or borrower, merely because he previously became a purchaser or borrower on the basis that:\n    (c) he was an eligible person in his own right; or\n    (d) his spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person and they were, under subsection 4A(1), together treated as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act; or\n    (e) his spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person and he became an eligible person because his spouse or de facto partner died; or\n    (f) he was an eligible person because he was a dependent parent.\n  (2B) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of Australian Soldier in subsection (1), a person shall not be taken to have served in the Naval, Military or Air Forces of any part of the Sovereign’s dominions, other than the Commonwealth, unless he served in such Forces:\n    (a) in an operational area outside the country or place of his enlistment or appointment for service; or\n    (b) as a combatant in an active combat unit.\n  (2C) Subject to subsection (2D), an Australian soldier who, by reason of his misconduct or misbehaviour:\n    (a) was discharged from, or otherwise ceased to be a member of, the Naval, Military or Air Forces of Australia; and\n    (b) is included in a class of members specified in the Schedule to the War Gratuity Act 1945;\n  shall not be treated as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act, but this subsection shall not prevent a widow, widower or dependent parent of such an Australian soldier being an eligible person.\n  (2D) Where the relevant misconduct or misbehaviour of an Australian soldier referred to in subsection (2C) consisted only of his absence without leave, the Secretary may treat him as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act if the Secretary, having regard to the quality of his service outside Australia, considers it appropriate to do so.\n  (3) Where, in the case of a person, being a female, who is:\n    (a) a person described in paragraph (g) of the definition of Australian soldier in subsection 4(1); or\n    (b) a regular serviceman;\n  the whole or any part of the service by reason of which she is such a member or such a regular serviceman, as the case may be, was service as a member of a nursing service, she shall, for the purposes of paragraph 18(1)(f), be deemed to be a person included in paragraph (b) of the definition of Australian Soldier in subsection (1) of section 4.\n  (4) Where:\n    (a) an applicant is the lessee of land under a lease for a term of years from the Commonwealth, the Administration of a Territory or a State, being a lease under which he is entitled, on the fulfilment of the terms, conditions and covenants of the lease, to a grant in fee simple of the land; and\n    (b) the applicant satisfies the Secretary that the applicant has a reasonable prospect of carrying out the terms, conditions and covenants of the lease;\n  the land shall be deemed to be a holding for the purposes of this Act in relation to the applicant.\n  (5) Where:\n    (a) an applicant is purchasing land from a State on terms that entitle him, on compliance with specified conditions, to a grant in fee simple of the land; and\n    (b) the applicant satisfies the Secretary that the applicant has a reasonable prospect of complying with those conditions;\n  the land shall be deemed to be a holding for the purposes of this Act in relation to the applicant.\n  (6) For the purposes of this Act a person is taken, subject to subsection (7), to have a right of residence in a retirement village if the person has a right of permanent residence in the retirement village, subject to any contractual conditions governing the person’s residence.\n  (7) For the purposes of this Act a person is not taken to have a right of residence in a retirement village if the person’s right of residence is derived from the person’s interest in a holding of the person.\n  (8) In this Act, a reference to a person’s retirement village accommodation means that part of a retirement village in which the person has, or the person and the person’s spouse or de facto partner have, obtained a right of residence.\n  (9) A reference in this Act to an advance that a person may seek from a credit provider, includes a reference to such an advance that a person may seek from a credit provider on behalf of an assignee, or a proposed assignee, of the person.\n  (10) A reference in this Act to an assignee of a person is a reference to another person in relation to whom the first‑mentioned person is an assignor.\n  (11) For the purposes of the definitions of further advance and initial advance in subsection 4(1), if the subsidised advance in question is an assigned advance in respect of an assignor:\n    (a) a reference in those definitions to the person to whom the advance in question is made is a reference to the assignee; and\n    (b) the assignee is not taken to have previously been a purchaser or borrower merely because the assignee previously became a purchaser or borrower, either as an eligible person in his or her own right or as an assignee in relation to another assignor.\n  (12) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of further advance in subsection 4(1), a person is not taken to have been a purchaser or borrower immediately before an assigned advance is made, merely because the person is a purchaser or borrower, as an assignee, in relation to an assignor other than the one in question.\n  (13) For the purposes of the definitions of further advance and initial advance in subsection 4(1), a person who has been an assignor is taken to have been a borrower unless the person:\n    (a) was an assignor merely because the person is or was the personal representative of a deceased assignor; or\n    (b) was an assignor merely because the person is or was an assignor together with the person’s spouse or de facto partner, and became such an assignor on the basis that the person’s spouse or de facto partner was an eligible person.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4AAA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regular Serviceman","content":"#### 4AAA Regular Serviceman\n\n  (1) Subject to this section, a person is a regular serviceman for the purposes of this Act if:\n    (a) he has served on continuous full‑time service as a member of the Defence Force, not being service that ended before 7 December 1972, and, during that service, has:\n    (i) in the case of service that commenced before 17 August 1977—completed, whether before or after 7 December 1972, 3 years’ effective full‑time service as such a member; or\n    (ii) in the case of service that commenced on or after 17 August 1977—completed a period of 6 years’ effective full‑time service as such a member, being a period at the expiration of which he continued to render full‑time service as such a member otherwise than by reason only of a delay in discharging him or otherwise terminating that service, including a delay for the purpose of the treatment or observation of an illness or injury;\n    (b) he was engaged to serve as a member of the Defence Force for a period of continuous full‑time service of:\n    (i) in the case of a person so engaged before 17 August 1977—not less than 3 years; or\n    (ii) in the case of a person so engaged on or after 17 August 1977—not less than 6 years;\n    but that service ended, on or after 7 December 1972, by reason of his death or his discharge on the ground of invalidity or physical or mental incapacity to perform duties; or\n    (c) he was an officer appointed for continuous full‑time service in the Defence Force (other than an officer appointed before 17 August 1977 whose appointment was for a period of continuous full‑time service of less than 3 years or an officer appointed on or after 17 August 1977 whose appointment was for a period of continuous full‑time service of less than 6 years), but that service ended, on or after 7 December 1972, by reason of his death or the termination of his appointment on the ground of invalidity or physical or mental incapacity to perform duties;\n  but, subject to subsection (5A), not if the person’s first service in the Defence Force began after 14 May 1985.\n  (2) For the purposes of paragraph (a) of subsection (1):\n    (a) the service of a person as an officer of the Naval Forces undergoing the course of training at the Royal Australian Naval College, and his service after completion of that course, shall be disregarded unless the officer is subsequently promoted to the rank of sub‑lieutenant or a higher rank;\n    (b) the service of a person as a member of the Corps of Staff Cadets of the Military Forces shall be disregarded unless the person is subsequently appointed as an officer of those Forces; and\n    (c) the service of a person as an Air Cadet of the Air Force shall be disregarded unless the person is subsequently appointed as an officer of that Force.\n  (2A) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of subsection (1), where a person re‑engages to serve as a member of the Defence Force, other than as an officer, for a period of continuous full‑time service, he shall be taken to have been engaged on his enlistment to serve until the expiration of the period for which he re‑engages.\n  (2B) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of subsection (1), where an officer commences a period of continuous full‑time service immediately after the expiration of a previous period of such service by him, whether as an officer or otherwise, he shall be taken to have been appointed on the commencement of that previous period to serve until the expiration of the later period.\n  (3) Paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (1) do not apply in relation to a discharge or termination of appointment:\n    (a) that occurred before the person concerned had completed twelve months’ effective full‑time service; and\n    (b) the ground for which was invalidity, or physical or mental incapacity to perform duties, caused, or substantially contributed to, by a physical or mental condition that:\n    (i) existed at the time the person concerned commenced full‑time continuous service as a member of the Defence Force; and\n    (ii) was not aggravated, or was not materially aggravated, by that service.\n  (4) Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) does not apply in relation to a period of service referred to in paragraph (b) of subsection (6) that was brought to an end by the death, or the termination of the appointment, of the officer concerned.\n  (5) A member of the Defence Force not on continuous full‑time service who has, whether before or after the commencement of this section, commenced continuous full‑time service in pursuance of a voluntary undertaking given by him and accepted by the appropriate authority of the Defence Force shall:\n    (a) if he was an officer on the day on which he so commenced—be deemed, for the purposes of paragraph (c) of subsection (1), to have been appointed as an officer of the Defence Force on that day for service for the period for which he was bound to serve on continuous full‑time service; or\n    (b) if he was a member other than an officer on the day on which he so commenced—be deemed, for the purposes of paragraph (b) of subsection (1), to have been engaged to serve as a member of the Defence Force on that day for service for the period for which he was bound to serve on continuous full‑time service.\n  First service after 14 May 1985\n  (5A) A person is a regular serviceman for the purposes of this Act if:\n    (a) the person is covered by paragraph (1)(b) or (c); and\n    (b) the person’s first service in the Defence Force began after 14 May 1985; and\n    (c) the person’s death or discharge from the Defence Force occurred before 19 December 1988; and\n    (d) a notice of eligibility or a certificate of entitlement has been issued to the person under this Act or regulations made under this Act.\n  (5B) If a person to whom subsection (5A) applies is dead, the person is taken to have been a regular serviceman immediately before the person’s death.\n\n> Note: this subsection has the effect of making a widow, widower or dependent parent of the person an eligible person (see definition of eligible person in subsection 4(1)).\n\n  (5C) Subsections (5A) and (5B) do not apply to a person who is or has been a subsidised borrower under the Home Loans Assistance Act.\n  (6) In this section, effective full‑time service, in relation to a member of the Defence Force, means any period of continuous full‑time service of the member other than:\n    (a) a period exceeding twenty‑one consecutive days during which the member was:\n    (i) on leave of absence without pay;\n    (ii) absent without leave;\n    (iii) awaiting or undergoing trial on a charge in respect of an offence of which he was later convicted; or\n    (iv) undergoing detention or imprisonment; or\n    (b) in the case of an officer of the Defence Force who, on his appointment, was a student enrolled in a degree or diploma course at a university or other tertiary educational institution and was required by the appropriate authority of the Defence Force to continue his studies after his appointment—the period of his service during which, by reason of the requirement to engage in his studies or in activities connected with his studies, he was not regarded by the appropriate authority of the Defence Force as rendering effective full‑time service.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"4AAB","sectionType":"section","heading":"National Serviceman","content":"#### 4AAB National Serviceman\n\n  Subject to this section, a person is a national serviceman for the purposes of this Act if:\n    (a) he was, immediately before 7 December, 1972, a national serviceman, or a national service officer, for the purposes of the National Service Act 1951‑1971 serving in the Regular Army Supplement; and\n    (b) on or after that date:\n    (i) he completed the period of service in that Force for which he was to be deemed to have been engaged to serve or for which he was appointed, as the case may be; or\n    (ii) that service ended by reason of his death or his discharge, or the termination of his appointment, on the ground of invalidity or physical or mental incapacity to perform duties.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"4AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Extension of Act to Norfolk Island","content":"#### 4AA Extension of Act to Norfolk Island\n\n  This Act extends to Norfolk Island.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"4AB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Joint ownership","content":"#### 4AB Joint ownership\n\n  (1) A reference in this Act to any of the following kinds of property:\n    (a) land;\n    (b) a suburban holding under the Crown Lands Consolidation Act, 1913 of New South Wales, or under that Act as amended at any time, or under an Act enacted in substitution for that Act;\n    (c) a unit defined in a units plan registered in accordance with a law of the Australian Capital Territory relating to unit titles;\n    (d) a right of residence in a retirement village;\n  includes a reference to such property held by a person as a joint tenant or tenant in common.\n  (2) A reference in this Act to a dwelling‑house includes a reference to a dwelling‑house that is built in or on land, such a suburban holding or such a unit, that is held by a person as a joint tenant or tenant in common.\n  (3) A reference in this Act to a purchaser or borrower includes a reference to a person who is a purchaser or borrower as a joint tenant or tenant in common.\n\n> Note: Section 17A deals with the issue of certificates of entitlement in relation to joint tenancies and tenancies in common.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"4A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Eligible person and spouse or de facto partner may be treated together as eligible person","content":"#### 4A Eligible person and spouse or de facto partner may be treated together as eligible person\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, in his or her discretion, treat an eligible person and the spouse or de facto partner of that eligible person together as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act, and any reference in this Act to an eligible person shall be read as including a reference to a spouse or de facto partner of that eligible person who is so treated.\n  (3) The Secretary shall not apply this section in relation to any land, or land and dwelling‑house, if the land, or land and dwelling‑house, is or are owned or proposed to be owned by the eligible person and his or her spouse or de facto partner otherwise than as joint tenants.\n  (6) The application of this section in relation to land or land and a dwelling‑house does not, except as provided by this section, affect the application of the other provisions of this Act in relation to the land or land and dwelling‑house.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"4BA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Election to surrender eligible status","content":"#### 4BA Election to surrender eligible status\n\n  (1) An eligible person who:\n    (a) is a member of the Defence Force:\n    (i) whose first service in the Defence Force began on or before 14 May 1985; or\n    (ii) whose first service in the Defence Force began after that day but who is covered by paragraph (ga) of the definition of Australian Soldier in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) is not, and has not at any time been, a borrower; and\n    (c) does not hold a certificate of entitlement that is in force in relation to subsidy on an initial advance;\n  may elect to surrender his or her status as an eligible person under this Act.\n  (2) An election must be:\n    (a) in writing, signed by the person making it; and\n    (b) given to the Secretary within the prescribed period.\n  (3) Subject to section 4BB, an election is irrevocable and takes effect on the day on which it is given to the Secretary.\n  (4) When an election takes effect, the person making it stops being an eligible person for the purposes of this Act.\n  (5) The Secretary must cause a copy of each election to be given to the Secretary of the Defence Department.\n  (6) In this section:\n\n> prescribed period means the period of 6 months starting on the day on which this section commences.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"4BB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Revocation of election to surrender eligible status","content":"#### 4BB Revocation of election to surrender eligible status\n\n  Revocation of election before 1 July 1992\n  (1) A person who has elected to surrender his or her status as an eligible person under section 4BA may revoke that election (the surrender election) if:\n    (a) the person is not and has not been a subsidised borrower under the Home Loans Assistance Act; and\n    (b) the person gives the Secretary a written notice stating that the person wishes to revoke his or her surrender election; and\n    (c) the notice is given to the Secretary before 1 July 1992.\n  Revocation of election before 1 January 1993\n  (2) A person who has elected to surrender his or her status as an eligible person under section 4BA may revoke that election (the surrender election) if:\n    (a) the person is not and has not been a subsidised borrower under the Home Loans Assistance Act; and\n    (b) the person gives the Secretary a written notice stating that the person wishes to revoke his or her surrender election; and\n    (c) the notice is given to the Secretary on or after 1 July 1992 and before 1 January 1993; and\n    (d) the person satisfies the Secretary that:\n    (i) the person was not aware before 1 July 1992 that the person’s surrender election was revocable; and\n    (ii) the person would not have made the surrender election if the person had been aware of the matters announced in the statement made by the Minister on 22 August 1991 relating to pooling of entitlements under this Act.\n  Date of effect of revocation\n  (3) If a person’s surrender election is revoked by a notice under subsection (1) or (2), the revocation takes effect on the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (4) If a person revokes his or her surrender election the Secretary must cause a copy of the notice that revoked the election to be given to the Secretary of the Defence Department.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"4B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Approval of Bank agreement","content":"#### 4B Approval of Bank agreement\n\n  The Bank agreement, as executed on 9 November 1988, and its execution on behalf of the Commonwealth, are approved.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"4C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Compensation for acquisition of property","content":"#### 4C Compensation for acquisition of property\n\n  (1) If, apart from this section, the operation of this Act would result in the acquisition of property from a person otherwise than on just terms, there is payable to the person by the Commonwealth such reasonable amount of compensation as is agreed between the person and the Commonwealth or, failing agreement, as is determined by the Federal Court.\n  (2) In this section, acquisition of property and just terms have the same respective meanings as in paragraph 51(xxxi) of the Constitution.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"4D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exclusion of Consumer Credit Codes in relation to subsidised advances","content":"#### 4D Exclusion of Consumer Credit Codes in relation to subsidised advances\n\n  (1) Except as provided by Part IIIA and section 35A, this Act does not exclude or limit the concurrent operation of the Consumer Credit Codes of the States and Territories.\n  (2) Nothing in subsection 23AA(2) or section 23H is intended to make matters referred to in that subsection or section subject to the Consumer Credit Codes of the States and Territories.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"4E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of the Criminal Code","content":"#### 4E Application of the Criminal Code\n\n  Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"Part II","sectionType":"part","heading":"Administration","content":"## Part II—Administration","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation by Minister","content":"#### 6 Delegation by Minister\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by writing under his hand, delegate to any person, either generally or otherwise as provided by the instrument of delegation, all or any of his powers or functions under this Act, except this power of delegation.\n  (2) A power or function so delegated may be exercised or performed by the delegate in accordance with the instrument of delegation.\n  (3) A delegation under this section is revocable at will and does not prevent the exercise of a power or the performance of a function by the Minister.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"6A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation by Secretary","content":"#### 6A Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, either generally or as otherwise provided by the instrument of delegation, by writing signed by him, delegate to a person any of his powers under this Act (except this power of delegation) and any powers that the Secretary exercises on behalf of the Commonwealth under Part VI or VIA.\n  (2) A power so delegated, when exercised by the delegate, shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to have been exercised by the Secretary.\n  (3) A delegation under this section does not prevent the exercise of a power by the Secretary.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"6B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of portfolio assets to the Bank","content":"#### 6B Transfer of portfolio assets to the Bank\n\n  (1) Where a date in relation to the portfolio assets in a State or Territory has been notified in writing by the Bank to the Corporation and the Commonwealth in accordance with the Bank agreement, the Minister shall determine the vesting date in relation to the portfolio assets in that State or Territory.\n  (2) The Minister may determine a vesting date in relation to the portfolio assets in a State or Territory that is different from the date notified by the Bank but shall not determine a vesting date that is earlier than 3 days before the date notified by the Bank or later than 3 days after that date.\n  (3) Where the Minister determines a vesting date, the Minister shall forthwith notify the Bank in writing of the determination.\n  (4) A notice to the Bank shall not be taken, for any purpose, to be the making of the determination to which it relates.\n  (5) The Minister may refuse to determine a vesting date, or may revoke any such determination, in accordance with the Bank agreement.\n  (6) Subject to this section, where the Minister determines a vesting date in relation to the portfolio assets in a State or Territory, then, unless that determination is revoked before that date:\n    (a) all rights, title and interest of the Corporation in the portfolio assets in that State or Territory as in force immediately before that date vest, by force of this section but not otherwise, in the Bank on that date;\n    (b) the Bank is on and after that date, by force of this section, liable to pay and discharge all debts, liabilities and obligations of the Corporation that existed immediately before that date under the portfolio assets in that State or Territory;\n    (c) in spite of any other provision of this Act, any contract in force immediately before that date, being a contract comprising a portfolio asset in that State or Territory, has effect on and after that date as if:\n    (i) the Bank were a party to the contract instead of the Corporation; and\n    (ii) any reference in the contract to the Corporation were (except in relation to matters that happened before that date) a reference to the Bank; and\n    (d) the Commonwealth is, by force of this section, substituted for the Corporation as a party to any proceedings pending in any court immediately before that date (being proceedings to which the Corporation was a party and that relate to a portfolio asset in that State or Territory) and has the same rights in the proceedings as the Corporation had.\n  (7) The Bank is not liable to pay or discharge any liability or obligation arising out of proceedings to which the Commonwealth is substituted as a party under paragraph (6)(d).\n  (8) Where a portfolio asset vests in the Bank under this section, the bank is bound by the terms and conditions of that asset and shall abide by and duly perform those terms and conditions and any obligations of the Corporation under that asset.\n  (9) The provisions of this Act and the Defence Service Homes Regulations specified in Schedule 2, as those provisions were in force immediately before the commencing day, shall be taken to be terms and conditions of portfolio assets which vest in the Bank under this section and, for that purpose, those provisions shall be read as if:\n    (a) references to the Corporation (other than in section 30 and subsections 35(2A) and 36A(1) of this Act as then in force) were references to the Bank;\n    (b) expressions used in those provisions that are defined in this Act as then in force had the same respective meanings as provided in those definitions; and\n    (c) they were further modified as specified in Schedule 2.\n  (10) A provision of a portfolio asset requiring or permitting a person to make payments under the asset at any office or to any person, other than the Corporation, shall cease to have effect when the portfolio asset vests in the Bank.\n  (11) An undertaking given by a person in relation to a portfolio asset under paragraph 35(2)(b) of this Act, as in force before the commencing day, shall, to the extent to which it has not been discharged before the day on which that asset vests in the Bank under this section, continue to have effect on and after that day as if it had been given by that person under paragraph 22(2)(b) of this Act.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"6C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dealings relating to vested portfolio assets","content":"#### 6C Dealings relating to vested portfolio assets\n\n  (1) Where the Corporation, or any of its predecessors, is registered in a State or Territory as the owner of an interest in a portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B, the Bank may, subject to the Bank agreement, execute any receipt, discharge or other instrument in relation to that interest in its own name, or in the name of the Corporation or the Corporation’s predecessor, as the case may be, and the Registrar‑General, Registrar of Titles, or other appropriate officer, of that State or Territory may make such entries in his or her registers, and do such other things, as are necessary to give effect to that receipt, discharge or other instrument.\n  (2) The Bank may execute a transfer of land and a dwelling‑house to the purchaser of that land and dwelling‑house under a contract of sale which vests in the Bank under section 6B and any transfer so executed shall be taken to have been made pursuant to and in conformity with the contract of sale.\n  (3) A transfer referred to in subsection (2) is not liable to any ad valorem tax under a State or Territory law if that ad valorem tax has been paid on the relevant contract of sale.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"6D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of certain other assets to Commonwealth","content":"#### 6D Transfer of certain other assets to Commonwealth\n\n  (1) On the winding‑up day:\n    (a) all prescribed rights that, immediately before that day were vested in the Corporation vest on that day, by force of this subsection, in the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) the Commonwealth becomes, by force of this subsection, liable to pay or discharge any prescribed debts of the Corporation that existed immediately before that day.\n  (2) Any prescribed contract to which the Corporation was a party immediately before the winding‑up day has effect on and after that day as if:\n    (a) the Commonwealth were substituted for the Corporation as a party to the contract; and\n    (b) any reference in the contract to the Corporation were (except in relation to things that happened before that day) a reference to the Commonwealth.\n  (3) If, immediately before the winding‑up day, prescribed proceedings to which the Corporation was a party were pending in any court, the Commonwealth is, on that day, by force of this subsection, substituted for the Corporation as a party to the proceedings and has the same rights in the proceedings as the Corporation had.\n  (4) Where any interest in land situated in a State or Territory vests in the Commonwealth under this section, the Secretary may lodge with the Registrar‑General, Registrar of Titles or other appropriate officer of that State or Territory a notice signed by the Secretary, or by a person authorised by the Secretary for the purpose, stating that that interest is vested in the Commonwealth by this section, and the person with whom the notice is so lodged may make such entries in his or her registers, and do such other things, as are necessary to reflect the vesting of that interest in the Commonwealth.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> prescribed contract means a contract other than a contract referred to in section 6B or an insurance contract within the meaning of section 38B.\n\n> prescribed debt means any debt, liability or obligation other than a debt, liability or obligation referred to in section 6B or an insurance debt within the meaning of section 38B.\n\n> prescribed proceedings means proceedings other than proceedings referred to in section 6B or insurance proceedings within the meaning of section 38B.\n\n> prescribed right means any right, property or assets other than a right, title or interest referred to in section 6B or an insurance right within the meaning of section 38B.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"Part III","sectionType":"part","heading":"Notices of eligibility, certificates of entitlement and certificates of assignment","content":"## Part III—Notices of eligibility, certificates of entitlement and certificates of assignment","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Applications for notices and certificates","content":"#### 15 Applications for notices and certificates\n\n  (1) A person may apply to the Secretary for any of the following:\n    (a) a notice of eligibility;\n    (b) a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on a subsidised advance that the person may seek from a credit provider;\n    (c) a certificate of entitlement in relation to consent that the person may seek from a credit provider to a transfer;\n    (d) a certificate of entitlement in relation to instalment relief that the person may seek from a credit provider;\n    (e) a certificate of assignment.\n  (2) An application shall be in writing in accordance with the appropriate form approved by the Secretary for the purposes of this section and shall be made in accordance with the agreement.","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notice of eligibility","content":"#### 16 Notice of eligibility\n\n  (1) Where, on application by a person for a notice of eligibility, the Secretary is satisfied that the applicant is an eligible person or is an eligible veteran, the Secretary shall issue to the applicant a notice of eligibility.\n  (2) A notice of eligibility shall state that the person named in the notice is, on the date of the notice, an eligible person or eligible veteran, as the case may be.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificate of entitlement: advances","content":"#### 17 Certificate of entitlement: advances\n\n  (1) Subject to this Act, the Secretary shall, on application by a person for a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on a subsidised advance that the person may seek from a credit provider, issue to the applicant a certificate of entitlement certifying that subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to the credit provider if, in accordance with the agreement, the credit provider makes that advance to the applicant or the assignee of the applicant.\n  (2) A certificate of entitlement issued under this section remains in force until:\n    (a) it lapses as provided in the agreement; or\n    (b) subsidy in respect of the relevant advance ceases to be payable under this Act;\n  whichever happens first.\n  (3) A certificate of entitlement issued under this section shall:\n    (a) specify the maximum amount in respect of which subsidy is payable, being an amount determined under section 25;\n    (b) specify the maximum term of the advance;\n    (c) if subsection 34(2) applies—specify the rates of interest and proportions of the further advance to which each of those rates of interest apply, as required by that subsection;\n    (d) in any other case—specify the rate of interest payable on the advance; and\n    (da) contain a statement setting out the effect of section 35AA (which, in some situations, reduces the rate of interest payable on a subsidised advance); and\n    (e) contain particulars of such other matters as are specified in the agreement.\n  (4) A certificate of entitlement issued under this section must:\n    (a) if the certificate relates to an initial advance, or a further advance, that is not an assigned advance—specify that the advance is for the purposes referred to in subsection 18(2) (other than paragraph 18(2)(l)); or\n    (b) if the certificate relates to an initial advance, or a further advance, that is an assigned advance—specify that the advance is for the purpose of assisting the assignee of the applicant in obtaining a right of residence in the retirement village in question; or\n    (c) if the certificate relates to an additional advance that is not an assigned advance—specify that the advance is for the purposes referred to in subsection 18(3) (other than paragraph 18(3)(g)); or\n    (d) if the certificate relates to an additional advance that is an assigned advance—specify that the advance is for the purpose of assisting the assignee of the applicant in continuing to hold a right of residence in the retirement village in question; or\n    (e) in any other case—specify the purpose of the advance.","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"17A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: joint ownership","content":"#### 17A Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: joint ownership\n\n  (1) The Secretary must not issue a certificate of entitlement under this Part to an applicant if the applicant’s interest or right is in the form of a joint tenancy, unless the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (a) the application was made by a person and his or her spouse or de facto partner who, under subsection 4A(1), are treated together as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act; or\n    (b) the only other joint tenant is the applicant’s spouse or de facto partner, who is also an eligible person.\n  (2) The Secretary must not issue a certificate of entitlement under this Part to an applicant if the applicant’s interest or right is in the form of a tenancy in common, unless the Secretary is satisfied that the interest or right, at the time when the application was lodged, would have had a value, if it were unencumbered, of not less than the sum of:\n    (a) all advances in relation to the applicant, in respect of which subsidy is payable; and\n    (b) the advance to which the certificate would relate.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> interest or right, in relation to an applicant, means the applicant’s interest or proposed interest concerned in respect of a holding, or the applicant’s right or proposed right of residence concerned in respect of a retirement village (as the case requires).","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: advances other than widow or widower advances, advances for essential repairs and home support advances","content":"#### 18 Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: advances other than widow or widower advances, advances for essential repairs and home support advances\n\n  (1) Subject to this section, the Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on an advance that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that:\n    (a) the person is an eligible person, or the spouse or de facto partner of an eligible person who is temporarily or permanently insane; and\n    (b) the person:\n    (i) is not the owner of a dwelling‑house; and\n    (ii) does not have a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (iii) does not own an interest in shares giving rise to a company title in respect of land on which a dwelling‑house is built;\n    other than the dwelling‑house, right of residence or company title in respect of which the advance is payable; and\n    (c) the person is not liable to repay any amount received by way of assistance under an agreement of the kind known as a War Service Land Settlement Agreement; and\n    (d) the person has not received money from the Commonwealth after 9 December 1987 by way of:\n    (i) a payment of a cash grant instead of an advance under this Act as in force on or before that day; or\n    (ii) a payment instead of such a cash grant; and\n    (e) if the person has a spouse or de facto partner (other than a spouse or de facto partner from whom he or she is permanently separated)—the spouse or de facto partner:\n    (i) is not the owner of a dwelling‑house; and\n    (ii) does not have a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (iii) does not own an interest in shares giving rise to a company title in respect of land on which a dwelling‑house is built;\n    other than the dwelling‑house, right of residence or company title in respect of which the advance is payable; and\n    (f) except in the case of an advance to a person included in paragraph (b) or (d) of the definition of Australian Soldier in section 4 in relation to a house or building used or to be used as a hospital, sanatorium or nursing‑home—the dwelling‑house or retirement village accommodation in respect of which the advance is payable is intended to be used by the person as a home for the person and any dependants of the person; and\n    (g) such advance will be secured by:\n    (i) in the case of an assigned advance—except as provided by the agreement, a first or subsequent mortgage over the assignee’s interest in the retirement village and over any other person’s interest in the retirement village; or\n    (ii) in any other case—except as provided by the agreement, a first mortgage over the person’s interest in the holding and over any other person’s interest in the holding.\n  (2) The Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on an advance, other than an additional advance, that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that the advance is for the purpose of enabling the person:\n    (a) to build a dwelling‑house on a holding of the person; or\n    (b) to purchase a holding and build a dwelling‑house on the holding; or\n    (c) to purchase a dwelling‑house together with the holding on which it is built; or\n    (d) to complete a partially built dwelling‑house on a holding of the person; or\n    (e) to enlarge, modify or repair a dwelling‑house on a holding of the person; or\n    (f) to discharge any mortgage, charge or encumbrance already existing on the person’s interest in a holding; or\n    (g) to obtain a right of residence in a retirement village; or\n    (h) to complete the person’s partially‑built retirement village accommodation; or\n    (j) to enlarge, modify or repair the person’s retirement village accommodation; or\n    (k) to discharge any debt owed by the person in relation to the person’s retirement village accommodation; or\n    (l) in the case of an assigned advance—to be assisted in obtaining a right of residence in the retirement village.\n  (3) The Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on an additional advance that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that the advance is for the purpose of enabling the person:\n    (a) to enlarge, modify or repair:\n    (i) a dwelling‑house on a holding of the person; or\n    (ii) a person’s retirement village accommodation; or\n    (b) to meet the cost of roadmaking if the person is liable to meet that cost but is otherwise unable to do so; or\n    (e) to discharge any mortgage, charge or encumbrance already existing on the person’s interest in a holding; or\n    (f) to discharge any debt owed by the person in relation to the person’s retirement village accommodation; or\n    (g) in the case of an assigned advance—to be assisted in continuing to hold a right of residence in the retirement village.\n  (6) In this section:\n\n> advance means a subsidised advance other than a widow or widower advance, an advance for essential repairs or a home support advance.","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: further advance","content":"#### 19 Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: further advance\n\n  The Secretary must not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on a further advance to a person unless the person is or was a purchaser or borrower in relation to a Corporation advance, a subsidised advance (other than a home support advance) or a contract of sale on or after 9 December 1987.","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: widow or widower advances","content":"#### 20 Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: widow or widower advances\n\n  (1) The Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on a widow or widower advance that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that:\n    (a) the person is:\n    (i) the widow, widower or a widowed parent of an eligible person; or\n    (ii) a spouse or de facto partner of an eligible person who is temporarily or permanently insane; and\n    (b) the person is a purchaser or a borrower in relation to:\n    (i) land; or\n    (ii) land and a dwelling‑house; or\n    (iii) a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (c) the widow or widower advance relates to that land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence.\n\n> Note: Paragraph (a)—see the definitions of widow and widower in subsection 4(1). Widowed parent has a corresponding meaning: see section 18A (parts of speech and grammatical forms) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), the person is taken to be a borrower in relation to a right of residence in a retirement village if the person is, or will be, an assignor in relation to the advance.\n  (2) The Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to a subsidy on a widow or widower advance that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that:\n    (a) the advance is for the purpose of keeping the buildings, fences, fixtures and other improvements on the relevant land or of the person’s retirement village accommodation in good order and repair and it would cause financial hardship to the person if he or she were to bear the cost of keeping them in good order and repair; or\n    (b) the advance is for the purpose of paying rates, taxes, charges or other outgoings in relation to the relevant land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village and it would cause financial hardship to the person if he or she were to pay those rates, taxes, charges or other outgoings.\n  (3) In deciding whether a person is suffering financial hardship for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) or (b), the Secretary is to have regard to any guidelines approved by the Minister under subsection (4).\n  (4) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, approve guidelines setting out matters to be taken into account in deciding whether a person is suffering financial hardship for the purposes of this Act.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: advances made for essential repairs","content":"#### 21 Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: advances made for essential repairs\n\n  (1) The Secretary shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on an advance for essential repairs that a person may seek from a credit provider unless satisfied that:\n    (a) the person is an eligible person who is a purchaser or a borrower in relation to:\n    (i) land; or\n    (ii) land and a dwelling‑house; or\n    (iii) a right of residence in a retirement village;\n    (b) the advance relates to that land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence;\n    (c) the advance is for the purpose of enabling the person to effect repairs essential to keep the buildings, fences, fixtures and other improvements on that land or of that person’s retirement village accommodation in good order and repair; and\n    (d) it would cause serious financial hardship to the person if he or she were to bear the cost of keeping them in good order and repair.\n  (1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a), the person is taken to be a borrower in relation to a right of residence in a retirement village if the person is, or will be, an assignor in relation to the advance.\n  (2) In deciding whether a person is suffering serious financial hardship for the purposes of paragraph (1)(d), the Secretary is to have regard to any guidelines approved by the Minister under subsection (3).\n  (3) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, approve guidelines setting out matters to be taken into account in deciding whether a person is suffering serious financial hardship for the purposes of this Act.","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"21A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: home support advances","content":"#### 21A Criteria for issue of certificate of entitlement: home support advances\n\n  The Secretary must not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to subsidy on a home support advance that a person may seek from a credit provider unless the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (a) the person is an eligible person (disregarding subsection 4(2C)) or is an eligible veteran; and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the person is the owner of a dwelling‑house; or\n    (ii) the person has a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (c) the advance is for a purpose related to the dwelling‑house or the right of residence in the retirement village (other than for a purpose mentioned in paragraph 18(2)(a), (b), (c), (d), (f), (h) or (k)) that will assist the person to remain independently housed; and\n    (d) if a certificate of entitlement has been issued to the person in relation to an initial advance, an additional advance or a further advance—an advance has been made by the credit provider in accordance with the certificate or an advance that would be in accordance with the certificate has been refused by the credit provider; and\n    (e) if the person is liable to pay the outstanding amount of any one or more of the following:\n    (i) an initial advance;\n    (ii) an additional advance;\n    (iii) a further advance;\n    the sum of those outstanding amounts is less than $10,000; and\n    (f) a certificate of entitlement that relates to an initial advance, an additional advance or a further advance could not be issued to the person in respect of the application concerned.","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificate of entitlement: transfer of property subject to specified portfolio asset or advance","content":"#### 22 Certificate of entitlement: transfer of property subject to specified portfolio asset or advance\n\n  (1) Subject to subsection (1AA), if any land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village is subject to:\n    (a) a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B; or\n    (b) a mortgage or other security securing a subsidised advance;\n  a transfer of the estate, interest or right of the purchaser or borrower in that land or land and dwelling‑house, or in relation to that right of residence, being a transfer subject to that specified portfolio asset, mortgage or other security, has no effect unless the Secretary has issued a certificate of entitlement to the proposed transferee in relation to the transfer.\n  (1AA) Subsection (1) does not apply if the subsidised advance referred to in paragraph (1)(b) is an assigned advance.\n  (1A) If:\n    (a) a person has obtained a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (b) the person is a borrower in relation to that right of residence and is liable to pay the outstanding amount of a subsidised advance in respect of which subsidy is payable; and\n    (c) the relevant credit provider has no security for the subsidised advance;\n  a transfer of the person’s right of residence, while the person’s liability under paragraph (b) remains, has no effect unless the Secretary has issued a certificate of entitlement to the proposed transferee in relation to the transfer.\n  (2) The Secretary:\n    (a) shall not issue a certificate of entitlement in relation to consent that the person may seek from a credit provider to a transfer unless satisfied that, in all the circumstances, it is reasonable to do so; and\n    (b) may, before issuing the certificate, require a person to take such action (including the giving of an undertaking by the proposed transferee) as the Secretary considers reasonable in the circumstances.\n  (3) A certificate of entitlement under this section (other than one that relates to a home support advance) may be issued only to a proposed transferee who is an eligible person.\n  (3A) A certificate of entitlement under this section that relates to a home support advance may be issued only to a proposed transferee who is an eligible person or an eligible veteran.\n  (4) A certificate of entitlement under this section remains in force until the subsidy to which it relates ceases to be payable under this Act.\n  (5) A certificate of entitlement under this section shall:\n    (a) contain a statement to the effect that the Secretary consents to the transfer to the proposed transferee and that the Commonwealth will continue to pay subsidy in relation to the specified portfolio asset or subsidised advance if the transfer to the proposed transferee is carried out;\n    (b) specify the maximum amount in respect of which subsidy is payable;\n    (c) specify the maximum term during which subsidy will be paid;\n    (d) specify the relevant rate of interest payable on the specified portfolio asset or subsidised advance; and\n    (e) contain particulars of such other matters (if any) as are specified in the agreement.\n  (6) Subject to this section but in spite of any other provision of this Act, where land, or land and a dwelling‑house, has been transferred to a transferee who is not an eligible person or an eligible veteran, section 45A does not apply to the transferee’s interest in the land, or land and dwelling‑house.\n  (7) This section does not apply to:\n    (a) a transfer of land, land and a dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, to a credit provider as a result of the exercise by the credit provider of its powers under the relevant mortgage or other security; or\n    (b) where the purchaser or owner of land, land and a dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, dies—a transmission of the land, land and a dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, to the executor or administrator of the estate of the purchaser or owner; or\n    (c) a transfer of a person’s right of residence in a retirement village to the owner or owners of the retirement village.\n  (8) A reference in this section to a transfer, in relation to land or land and a dwelling‑house, includes a reference to a transfer of shares giving rise to a company title in respect of the land or land and dwelling‑house.","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificate of entitlement: instalment relief","content":"#### 23 Certificate of entitlement: instalment relief\n\n  (1) Where, on application by a person for a certificate of entitlement in relation to instalment relief that the person may seek from a credit provider, the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (a) the applicant is a purchaser or borrower who is:\n    (i) the widow or widower of an eligible person; or\n    (ii) a widowed parent of an eligible person; or\n    (iii) a spouse or de facto partner of an eligible person who is temporarily or permanently insane; or\n    (b) the applicant is not a person referred to in paragraph (a) but is a purchaser or a borrower who is an eligible person or is an eligible veteran and the amounts of the instalments payable under the relevant contract of sale, mortgage or other security include an amount of interest calculated at a rate of more than 3.75% per year;\n  and that it would cause financial hardship to the applicant if the applicant were to pay in full the amounts of the instalments, the Secretary shall determine the amount by which the amounts of the instalments should be reduced and the period during which that reduction should apply.\n\n> Note: Paragraph (a)—see the definitions of widow and widower in subsection 4(1). Widowed parent has a corresponding meaning: see section 18A (parts of speech and grammatical forms) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (2) Where the Secretary makes a determination, the Secretary shall issue to the applicant a certificate of entitlement specifying:\n    (a) the amount by which the amounts of the instalments should be reduced and the period during which that reduction should apply; and\n    (b) particulars of such other matters (if any) as are required by the agreement.\n  (3) The Secretary shall cause a copy of each certificate of entitlement under this section to be given to the credit provider.\n  (4) On the issue of a certificate of entitlement under this section, the amounts of instalments payable under the contract of sale, mortgage or other security to which the certificate relates are, if the credit provider grants instalment relief to the applicant, reduced by the amount specified in the certificate during the period specified in the certificate.\n  (5) In deciding whether a person is suffering financial hardship for the purposes of subsection (1), the Secretary is to have regard to any guidelines approved by the Minister under subsection (6).\n  (6) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, approve guidelines setting out matters to be taken into account in deciding whether a person is suffering financial hardship for the purposes of this Act.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"23A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificates of assignment","content":"#### 23A Certificates of assignment\n\n  (1) Subject to this Act, the Secretary may, on application by an eligible person (the assignor) for a certificate of assignment, issue the assignor with such a certificate certifying that subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to a credit provider if, in accordance with the certificate, the credit provider makes an advance to another person (the assignee).\n  (2) The Secretary must not issue the assignor with a certificate of assignment unless:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the assignee owns or will own a retirement village that:\n    (i) is primarily for the accommodation of eligible persons or eligible veterans; or\n    (ii) is a granny flat; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the assignee will assist the assignor to obtain and continue to hold a right of residence in the retirement village, if the credit provider makes such an advance to the assignee; and\n    (c) the applicant has already been issued with a certificate of entitlement that is in force that:\n    (i) specifies, under subsection 17(4), a purpose of a kind referred to in paragraph 18(2)(l) or (3)(g) or 21A(c); and\n    (ii) was not issued under section 22; and\n    (d) a subsidised advance has not been made to the assignor in relation to that certificate of entitlement; and\n    (e) the assignor and the assignee have agreed to conditions of a kind specified in a determination made by the Secretary under subsection (3).\n  (3) The Secretary may, by legislative instrument, make determinations specifying the kinds of conditions to which an assignor and assignee must agree before a certificate of assignment can be issued to the assignor.\n  (4) A certificate of assignment issued under this section remains in force until subsidy in respect of the assigned advance concerned ceases to be payable under this Act.\n  (5) A certificate of assignment issued under this section must:\n    (a) specify the maximum amount in respect of which subsidy is payable, being the amount specified under paragraph 17(3)(a) in the certificate of entitlement mentioned in paragraph (2)(c) of this section.\n    (b) specify the maximum term of the advance; and\n    (c) specify the purpose of the advance; and\n    (d) specify the rate of interest payable on the advance; and\n    (e) contain particulars of such other matters as are specified in a determination made by the Secretary under subsection (6).\n  (6) The Secretary may, by legislative instrument, make determinations as to the kind of matters to be included in a certificate of assignment pursuant to paragraph (5)(e).","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"Part IIIA","sectionType":"part","heading":"Unjust transactions","content":"## Part IIIA—Unjust transactions","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"23AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Power to reopen unjust transactions","content":"#### 23AA Power to reopen unjust transactions\n\n  (1) Subject to this Part, if a court is satisfied, on the application of a borrower, mortgagor or guarantor, that, in the circumstances relating to the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee, at the time it was entered into or changed (whether or not by agreement), the contract, mortgage or guarantee or the change was unjust, the court may re‑open the transaction that gave rise to the contract, mortgage, guarantee or change.\n  (2) This section does not apply to, or to a change in:\n    (a) the annual percentage rate or rates of interest under a contract or mortgage or the method of calculating any such rate or rates of interest or of calculating any amount of interest under the contract or mortgage; or\n    (b) an establishment fee or charge, or other fee or charge, in respect of which an application may be made under section 23F.","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"23B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Matters to be considered by court","content":"#### 23B Matters to be considered by court\n\n  (1) In determining whether a term of a particular contract, mortgage or guarantee in relation to a subsidised advance is unjust in the circumstances relating to it at the time it was entered into or changed, a court is, subject to subsection (2), to have regard to the public interest (including the public interest in the continued provision of assistance to eligible persons by means of subsidised advances by a credit provider) and to all the circumstances of the case and may have regard to the following:\n    (a) the consequences of compliance, or non‑compliance, with all or any of the provisions of the contract, mortgage or guarantee;\n    (b) the relative bargaining power of the parties;\n    (c) whether or not, at the time the contract, mortgage or guarantee was entered into or changed, its provisions were the subject of negotiation;\n    (d) whether or not it was reasonably practicable for the applicant to negotiate for the alteration of, or to reject, any of the provisions of the contract, mortgage or guarantee or the change;\n    (e) whether or not any of the provisions of the contract, mortgage or guarantee impose conditions that are unreasonably difficult to comply with, or not reasonably necessary for the protection of the legitimate interests of a party to the contract, mortgage or guarantee;\n    (f) whether or not any mortgagor (other than the borrower) or guarantor, or a person who represented that mortgagor or guarantor, was reasonably able to protect the interests of that mortgagor or guarantor because of his or her age or physical or mental condition;\n    (g) whether or not the mortgagor who was the borrower, or a person who represented that mortgagor, was reasonably able to protect the interests of that mortgagor because of his or her physical or mental condition;\n    (h) the form of the contract, mortgage or guarantee and the intelligibility of the language in which it is expressed;\n    (i) whether or not, and if so when, independent legal or other expert advice was obtained by the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor;\n    (j) the extent to which the provisions of the contract, mortgage or guarantee or change and their legal and practical effect were accurately explained to the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor and whether or not the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor understood those provisions and their effect;\n    (k) whether the credit provider or any other person exerted or used unfair pressure, undue influence or unfair tactics on the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor and, if so, the nature and extent of that unfair pressure, undue influence or unfair tactics;\n    (l) whether the credit provider took measures to ensure that the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor understood the nature and implications of the transaction and, if so, the adequacy of those measures;\n    (m) whether the terms of the transaction or the conduct of the credit provider is justified in the light of the risks undertaken by the credit provider;\n    (n) the terms of other comparable transactions involving persons other than the credit provider who provide credit;\n    (o) any other relevant matter.\n  (2) In determining whether a term of a particular contract, mortgage or guarantee is unjust in the circumstances relating to it at the time it was entered into or changed, a court:\n    (a) is to have regard to:\n    (i) the fact that the relevant credit provider and the Commonwealth have entered into an agreement or arrangement for the provision by the credit provider of subsidised advances or other benefits under this Act; and\n    (ii) the fact that the credit provider is required to provide a subsidised advance if the requirements of this Act and the agreement are satisfied; and\n    (iii) the fact that the interest rates applicable to subsidised advances and loans secured by specified portfolio assets are determined under this Act; and\n    (iv) the fact that, in some circumstances, the credit provider would not provide advances to an eligible person if the making of the advance were assessed on ordinary commercial lending criteria instead of the criteria set out in this Act or the agreement; but\n    (b) is not to have regard to:\n    (i) any inequality in bargaining power between the Corporation or the credit provider, and the borrower, that arose because the borrower was able to obtain a subsidised advance from the Corporation or credit provider and not from another financial institution; or\n    (ii) the borrower’s age.\n  (3) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(f) or (g), a person is taken to have represented a mortgagor or guarantor if the person represented the mortgagor or guarantor, or assisted the mortgagor or guarantor to a significant degree, in the negotiations process before, or at, the time the mortgage or guarantee was entered into or changed.","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"23C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Unforeseen circumstances","content":"#### 23C Unforeseen circumstances\n\n  In determining whether a contract, mortgage or guarantee in relation to a subsidised advance is unjust, a court is not to have regard to any injustice arising from circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable when the contract, mortgage or guarantee was entered into or changed.","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"23D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conduct","content":"#### 23D Conduct\n\n  In determining whether to grant relief in respect of a contract, mortgage or guarantee that it finds to be unjust, a court may have regard to the conduct of the parties to the proceedings in relation to the contract, mortgage or guarantee since it was entered into or changed.","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"23E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Orders on reopening of transactions","content":"#### 23E Orders on reopening of transactions\n\n  If a court reopens a transaction under section 23AA, it may do any one or more of the following, despite any settlement of accounts or any agreement purporting to close previous dealings and create a new obligation:\n    (a) reopen an account already taken between the parties;\n    (b) relieve the borrower and any guarantor from payment of any amount in excess of the amount that the court, having regard to the risk involved and all other circumstances, considers to be reasonably payable;\n    (c) set aside either wholly or in part, or revise or alter, an agreement made or mortgage or guarantee given in connection with the transaction;\n    (d) order that the credit provider take any steps that are necessary to discharge the mortgage;\n    (e) give judgment for, or make an order in favour of, a party of any amount that, having regard to the relief (if any) that the court thinks fit to grant, is justly due to that party under the contract, mortgage or guarantee;\n    (f) give judgment or make an order against a person for delivery of goods to which the contract, mortgage or guarantee relates and which are in the person’s possession;\n    (g) make ancillary or consequential orders.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"23F","sectionType":"section","heading":"A court may review unconscionable fees and charges","content":"#### 23F A court may review unconscionable fees and charges\n\n  (1) Subject to this Part, if a court is satisfied on the application of a borrower, mortgagor or guarantor that:\n    (a) an establishment fee or charge in respect of the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee; or\n    (b) a fee or charge payable on early termination of the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee; or\n    (c) a fee or charge for a prepayment of an amount under the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee;\n  is unconscionable, the court may annul or reduce the fee or charge and may make ancillary or consequential orders.\n  (2) In determining whether an establishment fee or charge is unconscionable, the court is to have regard to whether the amount of the fee or charge is equal to the credit provider’s reasonable costs of determining an application for credit and the initial administrative costs of providing the credit or is equal to the credit provider’s average reasonable costs of those things in respect of that class of contract.\n  (3) For the purposes of this section, a fee or charge payable on early termination of, or a prepayment of an amount under, the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee is unconscionable if, and only if, it appears to the court that it exceeds a reasonable estimate of the credit provider’s loss arising from the early termination or prepayment, including the credit provider’s average reasonable administrative costs in respect of such a termination or prepayment.","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"23G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time limit","content":"#### 23G Time limit\n\n  (1) An application under section 23AA may not be brought more than 2 years after the relevant contract, mortgage or guarantee is rescinded or discharged or the credit provider writes off the relevant debt, whichever occurs first.\n  (2) An application under section 23F may not be brought more than 2 years after the relevant fee or charge is charged under the contract, mortgage or guarantee or the credit provider writes off the relevant debt, whichever occurs first.","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"23H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exceptions","content":"#### 23H Exceptions\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to:\n    (a) a change to a contract, mortgage or guarantee if the change was made by, or as a result of, the enactment of this Part, section 35A, any other Act or an amendment of the agreement; or\n    (b) a contract, mortgage or guarantee under which the borrower, mortgagor or guarantor is not an individual; or\n    (c) a contract under which the borrower is borrowing for a purpose that is not wholly or predominantly a personal, domestic or household purpose; or\n    (d) a mortgage or guarantee that secures or guarantees obligations under a contract:\n    (i) under which the borrower is not an individual; or\n    (ii) under which the borrower is borrowing for a purpose that is not wholly or predominantly a personal, domestic or household purpose; or\n    (e) a contract, mortgage or guarantee that was entered into before the commencement of this paragraph.\n  (2) For the purposes of this section:\n    (a) investment by a borrower is not a personal, domestic or household purpose; and\n    (b) the predominant purpose for which an individual is borrowing is:\n    (i) the purpose for which more than one‑half of the amount borrowed is intended to be used; or\n    (ii) if the amount borrowed is intended to be used to obtain goods, services or rights in relation to, or interests in, real property for use for different purposes—the purpose for which the goods, services, rights or interests are intended to be most used.","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"23J","sectionType":"section","heading":"Legal and financial assistance","content":"#### 23J Legal and financial assistance\n\n  (1) A person who has made, or proposes to make, an application under section 23AA or 23F may apply to the Attorney‑General for a grant of assistance under this section in respect of the application.\n  (2) If such an application for assistance is made, the Attorney‑General, or a person appointed or engaged under the Public Service Act 1999 (the public servant) authorised in writing by the Attorney‑General, may, if he or she is satisfied that it would involve hardship to the applicant to refuse the application for assistance and that, in all the circumstances, it is reasonable that the application for assistance should be granted, authorise the grant by the Commonwealth to the person, either unconditionally or subject to any conditions that the Attorney‑General or public servant determines, of such legal or financial assistance in relation to the application under section 23AA or 23F, as the case may be, as the Attorney‑General or public servant determines.","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"23K","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of courts","content":"#### 23K Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  The courts of summary jurisdiction of the States are invested with federal jurisdiction, and (subject to the Constitution) jurisdiction is conferred on the courts of summary jurisdiction of the Territories, with respect to matters arising under this Part.","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"23L","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definition","content":"#### 23L Definition\n\n  In this Part:\n\n> unjust includes unconscionable, harsh or oppressive.","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"Part IV","sectionType":"part","heading":"Subsidy on advances etc.","content":"## Part IV—Subsidy on advances etc.","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Subsidy payable by Commonwealth","content":"#### 24 Subsidy payable by Commonwealth\n\n  (1) Subject to this Part, subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to a credit provider on a subsidised advance to a person or the assignee of a person.\n  (2) Subject to this Part, subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to the Bank in relation to a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B, or to any credit provider in relation to a subsidised advance, where the land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, to which the specified portfolio asset or advance relates has been transferred to a person to whom a certificate under section 22 has been issued in relation to that transfer.\n  (3) Subject to this Part, subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to the Bank on:\n    (a) all specified portfolio assets which vest in the Bank under section 6B; and\n    (b) all advances that the Bank is taken to have made under section 37.","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"24A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Condition of payment of subsidy—subsidy under one scheme only","content":"#### 24A Condition of payment of subsidy—subsidy under one scheme only\n\n  (1) This section applies if subsidy (2008 Act subsidy) is, or has ever been, payable to a person under the Defence Home Ownership Assistance Scheme Act 2008.\n  (2) Subsidy is not payable by the Commonwealth to a credit provider on a subsidised advance to the person or the assignee of the person on or after the earliest day the 2008 Act subsidy became payable.","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Maximum amounts for which subsidy is payable","content":"#### 25 Maximum amounts for which subsidy is payable\n\n  (1) Subject to this section, the amount that shall be specified under paragraph 17(3)(a) in a certificate of entitlement issued to a person in relation to a subsidised advance that the person may seek from a credit provider is:\n    (a) in the case of an initial advance—such amount as the Secretary determines is necessary to give effect to the purpose for which the advance is made, being an amount that is not more than $25,000; and\n    (b) in the case of an additional advance—such amount as the Secretary determines is necessary to give effect to the purpose for which the advance is made, being an amount that is not more than the amount by which $25,000 exceeds:\n    (i) the case of an assigned advance—the sum of the amounts of the assigned advances made to the assignee in relation to the person; or\n    (ii) in any other case—the sum of the amounts of the contract of sale, Corporation advance, initial advance or further advance and any previous additional advance made to the person; and\n    (c) in the case of a widow or widower advance or an advance for essential repairs—such amount as the Secretary determines is necessary to give effect to the purpose for which the advance is made; and\n    (d) in the case of a further advance—an amount equal to:\n    (i) the limit of the last Corporation advance, subsidised advance or contract of sale in relation to which the person was a borrower or purchaser, or the assignee of the person was a borrower in respect of the person (as the case requires); or\n    (ii) $25,000;\n    whichever is less; or\n    (e) in the case of a home support advance—such amount as the Secretary determines is necessary to give effect to the purpose for which the advance is made, being an amount that is not more than:\n    (i) if no previous home support advances have been made to the person—$10,000; or\n    (ii) if any previous home support advances have been made to the person—$10,000 reduced by the sum of those previous advances.\n  (1A) In working out the limit of a person’s last Corporation advance, subsidised advance or contract of sale under paragraph (1)(d), the amount of the person’s last Corporation advance, subsidised advance or contract of sale is taken to include the amount of any additional advance that has subsequently been made to the person or the assignee of the person (as the case requires).\n  (2) Where an initial advance is made to 2 or more persons jointly (being persons included in paragraph (b) or (d) of the definition of Australian Soldier in section 4) in relation to a house or building used or to be used as a hospital, sanatorium or nursing‑home, the Secretary may determine a maximum amount under paragraph (1)(a) that is more than $25,000 but shall not determine a maximum amount that is more than the sum of the maximum amounts that could have been determined if the advance had been made to each of those persons separately.\n  (3) Where subsidy is payable for a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B, the maximum amount in respect of which subsidy is payable is an amount equal to the amount of the outstanding balance under the specified portfolio asset as at the relevant vesting date.\n  (4) Where the outstanding balance of a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B, or of a subsidised advance, increases as a result of a grant of instalment relief to the purchaser or borrower, the maximum amount in respect of which subsidy is payable for that specified portfolio asset or subsidised advance shall be taken to have been increased by an amount equal to the amount of the increase of that outstanding balance.","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of subsidy","content":"#### 26 Cancellation of subsidy\n\n  (1) Where the Commonwealth is paying subsidy on a subsidised advance to a person, or the assignee of a person, and the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (a) a certificate of entitlement in relation to that advance was issued to the person as a result of a false statement made by the person or the assignee of the person; or\n    (aa) a certificate of assignment in relation to that advance was issued to the person as a result of a false statement made by the person or the assignee of the person; or\n    (b) the person was not, when a certificate of entitlement in relation to the advance was issued to the person, entitled to the certificate; or\n    (ba) the person was not, when a certificate of assignment in relation to the advance was issued to the person, entitled to the certificate; or\n    (c) the person, or the assignee of the person, used the advance for a purpose other than that for which it was made; or\n    (d) where the person is a transferee—the person has, without reasonable excuse, failed to comply with an undertaking given by the person to the Secretary under subsection 22(2);\n  the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to the person, cancel the subsidy on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (2) Where:\n    (a) the Commonwealth is paying subsidy on a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B or a subsidised advance; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the person in respect of whom the subsidy is being paid has agreed or arranged to transfer the relevant land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, by a transfer that is subject to:\n    (i) that specified portfolio asset; or\n    (ii) the mortgage securing that advance; or\n    (iii) in the case of a right of residence in a retirement village—any other security that the credit provider has in relation to that advance;\n    as the case may be, to a person who is not a transferee;\n  the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to the first‑mentioned person, cancel the subsidy on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (2A) If:\n    (a) a person has obtained a right of residence in a retirement village; and\n    (b) the person is a borrower in relation to that right of residence and is liable to pay the outstanding amount of a subsidised advance in respect of which subsidy is payable; and\n    (c) the credit provider has no security for the subsidised advance; and\n    (d) the Secretary is satisfied that the person has agreed or arranged to transfer the right of residence, while the person’s liability under paragraph (b) remains, to a person who is not a transferee;\n  the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to the first‑mentioned person, cancel the subsidy on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (2B) If:\n    (a) the Commonwealth is paying subsidy on an assigned advance; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (i) the assignor has agreed to transfer the right of residence in the retirement village, or has given up the right of residence in the retirement village; or\n    (ii) the assignee has agreed to transfer all or part of his or her interest in the retirement village, or has terminated the assignor’s right of residence in the retirement village;\n  the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to the assignor, cancel the subsidy on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (2C) If the Secretary cancels a subsidy under subsection (2B), the credit provider may, from the date when the cancellation of subsidy takes effect, charge an interest rate in relation to the advance that is an interest rate applicable to similar loans provided by the credit provider to mortgagors generally.\n  (3) Where the Commonwealth is paying subsidy on a specified portfolio asset or a subsidised advance and the credit provider takes action to enforce:\n    (i) the asset; or\n    (ii) the mortgage securing the advance; or\n    (iii) in the case of a right of residence in a retirement village—any other security that the credit provider has in relation to that advance;\n  but does not, within 3 months after starting that action, recover the outstanding balance secured under the asset, or the outstanding balance of the advance, as the case may be, the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to the relevant borrower, purchaser or transferee, cancel the subsidy on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (4) Where the Commonwealth is paying subsidy in respect of 2 persons and one of those persons becomes a spouse or de facto partner of the other person, the Secretary may, by notice of cancellation given to one of those persons, cancel the subsidy in respect of that person on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (5) The Secretary shall cause a copy of a notice of cancellation to be given:\n    (a) to the credit provider; and\n    (b) in the case of an assigned advance—to the assignee.\n  (6) Where the Secretary cancels subsidy under this section, that subsidy ceases to be payable on the date specified in the notice of cancellation.\n  (7) Where:\n    (a) the Commonwealth is paying subsidy on a subsidised advance to a person, or to the assignee of a person, in relation to the person’s retirement village accommodation; and\n    (b) the person’s right of residence in the retirement village is terminated for any reason and the person ceases to reside in the retirement village accommodation;\n  the Secretary may cancel the subsidy by written notice given to the person.\n  (8) The cancellation takes effect on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (9) If:\n    (a) the person’s right of residence is terminated; and\n    (b) the person has a right of review of, or appeal against, the decision to terminate;\n  the termination is taken, for the purposes of subsection (7), not to occur until:\n    (c) the review or appeal has been finally determined and the person has ceased to reside in the retirement village accommodation; or\n    (d) the period within which such an appeal or review could be instituted has ended without an appeal or review having been instituted and the person has ceased to reside in the retirement village accommodation.","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of subsidy where subclause 11.16 of the Bank agreement applies","content":"#### 27 Cancellation of subsidy where subclause 11.16 of the Bank agreement applies\n\n  (1) Where the Commonwealth is paying subsidy in relation to a specified portfolio asset entered into by a person and the Secretary is satisfied that:\n    (a) the person obtained the benefit of any advance or assistance secured by that asset as a result of a false statement made by the person;\n    (b) the person was not, when he or she received that benefit, entitled to do so;\n    (c) the person used the amount secured by the asset for a purpose other than that for which it was made; or\n    (d) the person has, without reasonable excuse, failed to comply with an undertaking given, or taken to have been given, by the person to the Secretary under subsection 22(2);\n  and the Secretary decides that the subsidy should be cancelled, the Secretary shall, under subclause 11.16 of the Bank agreement, give the Bank one month’s notice of the intended cancellation of the subsidy.\n  (2) Where the Secretary gives the Bank a notice under subsection (1), the subsidy to which the notice relates shall be taken to have been cancelled, and ceases to be payable, at the end of any period during which the Commonwealth is required to continue paying subsidy under subclause 11.16 of the Bank agreement.\n  (3) The Secretary shall cause a copy of a notice under subsection (1) to be given to the relevant purchaser, borrower or transferee.\n  (4) Where subsidy ceases to become payable under this section the Secretary shall notify the relevant purchaser, borrower or transferee accordingly.","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"27A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of subsidy if the eligible person dies","content":"#### 27A Cancellation of subsidy if the eligible person dies\n\n  (1) Subject to subsection (3), the Secretary may cancel subsidy on a subsidised advance in respect of a person, or the assignee of a person, if:\n    (a) the person has died; and\n    (b) 3 months has elapsed from the date on which the person died; and\n    (c) the Secretary is satisfied that there is no surviving spouse or de facto partner of the person, to whom a certificate of entitlement could be issued under section 22, in relation to the land or land and dwelling‑house concerned, or in relation to the right of residence in the retirement village concerned (as the case requires); and\n    (d) the Secretary considers it appropriate to cancel the subsidy.\n  (2) Subject to subsection (3), the Secretary may cancel subsidy in relation to a portfolio asset entered into by a person if:\n    (a) the person has died; and\n    (b) 3 months has elapsed from the date on which the person died; and\n    (c) the Secretary is satisfied that there is no surviving spouse or de facto partner of the person, to whom a certificate of entitlement could be issued under section 22, in relation to the land or land and dwelling‑house concerned, or in relation to the right of residence in the retirement village concerned (as the case requires); and\n    (d) the Secretary considers it appropriate to cancel the subsidy.\n  (3) If subsidy is being paid in respect of 2 persons who are spouses or de facto partners of each other who, under subsection 4A(1), are treated together as an eligible person for the purposes of this Act, the Secretary may only cancel subsidy under subsection (1) or (2) if:\n    (a) both spouses or de facto partners have died; and\n    (b) 3 months has elapsed from the death of the spouse or de facto partner who died last.\n  (4) If the Secretary cancels subsidy under subsection (1) or (2), the Secretary must:\n    (a) give a notice of cancellation to the executor or personal representative of the person who has died; and\n    (b) give a copy of the notice of cancellation to the credit provider; and\n    (c) in the case of an assigned advance—give a copy of the notice of cancellation to the assignee.\n  (5) The cancellation takes effect, and the subsidy concerned ceases to be payable, on the date specified in the notice, being a date not earlier than the date of the notice.\n  (6) If the Secretary cancels subsidy under subsection (1) or (2), the credit provider may, from the date when the cancellation of subsidy takes effect, charge an interest rate in relation to the advance that is an interest rate applicable to similar loans provided by the credit provider to mortgagors generally.","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Deferral of subsidy by Minister","content":"#### 28 Deferral of subsidy by Minister\n\n  If an agreement permits the Commonwealth to defer payments of subsidy to the credit provider, the Minister may, by written notice given to the credit provider, defer payments of the subsidy in accordance with the agreement.","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Recovery of subsidy","content":"#### 29 Recovery of subsidy\n\n  (1) Where subsidy in relation to an advance to a person ceases to be payable under section 26, 27 or 27A, for a reason referred to in:\n    (a) paragraph 26(1)(a), (b) or (c); or\n    (b) subsection 26(2), (2B) or (7); or\n    (c) paragraph 27(1)(a), (b) or (c); or\n    (d) subsection 27A(1) or (2);\n  the Secretary may, by notice in writing given to the person, require the person to pay to the Commonwealth the amount specified in the notice in the manner, and within the period, specified in the notice.\n  (2) The Secretary may specify in a notice an amount equal to:\n    (a) where paragraph 26(1)(a) or (b) or paragraph 27(1)(a) or (b) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person; or\n    (b) where paragraph 26(1)(c) or 27(1)(c) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day when the use referred to in that paragraph happened; or\n    (c) where subsection 26(2) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day when the person agreed or arranged to transfer the relevant land, or land and dwelling‑house; or\n    (ca) where subparagraph 26(2B)(b)(i) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day when the assignor agreed to transfer the right of residence in the retirement village, or gave up the right of residence in the retirement village; or\n    (cb) where subparagraph 26(2B)(b)(ii) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day on which the assignee agreed to transfer the interest in the retirement village, or terminated the assignor’s right of residence in the retirement village; or\n    (d) where subsection 26(7) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day on which the person’s right of residence was terminated and the person has ceased to reside in the retirement village accommodation;\n    (e) where subsection 27A(1) or (2) applied—the whole of the amount of subsidy paid in respect of the person since the day on which the cancellation of subsidy took effect;\n  or such part of that amount of subsidy as the Secretary determines to be reasonable.\n  (3) The Secretary shall cause a copy of a notice under this section to be given:\n    (a) to the credit provider; and\n    (b) if subsection 26(2B) applied—to the assignor.\n  (4) Subject to this section, where a person fails to comply with a notice, the amount specified in the notice may be recovered from the person in a court of competent jurisdiction as a debt due to the Commonwealth.\n  (5) Where:\n    (a) a credit provider sells any property of a person by way of enforcing:\n    (i) a specified portfolio asset; or\n    (ii) a mortgage securing a subsidised advance; or\n    (iii) in the case of a right of residence in a retirement village—any other security that the credit provider has in relation to that advance; and\n    (b) the Secretary has given the person a notice under this section;\n  the credit provider shall pay to the Commonwealth an amount equal to:\n    (c) the part of the proceeds of the sale that, but for this subsection, would have been payable by the credit provider to the person; or\n    (d) such part of the amount specified in the notice as remains unpaid;\n  whichever is less.\n  (6) A payment by a credit provider to the Commonwealth under subsection (5) is, to the extent of the payment, a discharge of the liability of the person referred to in that subsection to the Commonwealth and of any liability of the credit provider to the person under the specified portfolio asset, mortgage or other security.","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Waiver etc.","content":"#### 30 Waiver etc.\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, by instrument in writing:\n    (a) write off an amount that a person has been required to pay to the Commonwealth under section 29;\n    (b) waive the right of the Commonwealth to recover from a person the whole or part of an amount that the person has been required to pay to the Commonwealth under that section; or\n    (c) allow a person who has been required to pay an amount to the Commonwealth under section 29 to pay that amount by such instalments as are specified in the instrument.\n  (2) A decision under subsection (1) takes effect:\n    (a) on the day specified in the notice, being the day on which the decision is made or any day before or after that day; or\n    (b) if no day is so specified—on the day on which the decision is made.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"Part V","sectionType":"part","heading":"Rates of interest, maximum terms, and conversions","content":"## Part V—Rates of interest, maximum terms, and conversions","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on initial advances","content":"#### 31 Rate of interest on initial advances\n\n  The rate of interest that shall be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to an initial advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is 6.85% per year.","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on widow or widower advances","content":"#### 32 Rate of interest on widow or widower advances\n\n  The rate of interest that shall be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to a widow or widower advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is 3.75% per year.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on additional advances","content":"#### 33 Rate of interest on additional advances\n\n  The rate of interest that must be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to an additional advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is 6.85% per year.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on further advances","content":"#### 34 Rate of interest on further advances\n\n  (1) Subject to subsection (2), the rate of interest that is to be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to a further advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is the rate of interest per year (disregarding section 35AA) of the last preceding previous advance.\n  (2) If, at the time when subsidy is or was most recently payable in relation to the last preceding previous advance, subsidy is or was payable in respect of the person in relation to one or more other previous advances:\n    (a) the rates of interest that are to be specified under paragraph 17(3)(c) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to a further advance that a person may seek from the credit provider are the rates of interest per year that applied (disregarding section 35AA) to those previous advances; and\n    (b) in relation to each such interest rate—the proportion of the further advance to be so specified in relation to that interest rate is the proportion of the sum of amounts outstanding in respect of all the previous advances that are amounts to which that interest rate applies.\n  (2A) For the purposes of this section, in determining the rate of interest that was payable in relation to a previous advance at any time before 5 January 1998, apply sections 35AB and 35AC as if the application of those sections were not limited to the calculation of interest for 5 January 1998 and later days.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> previous advance, in relation to a further advance in respect of a person, means an advance (whether a Corporation advance, initial advance, additional advance or further advance) in respect of which the person is or was a borrower, or a contract of sale, in respect of which the person is or was a purchaser, preceding the further advance in question.","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on advances for essential repairs","content":"#### 35 Rate of interest on advances for essential repairs\n\n  The rate of interest that shall be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to an advance for essential repairs that a person may seek from a credit provider is 6.85% per year.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"35AAA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of interest on home support advance","content":"#### 35AAA Rate of interest on home support advance\n\n  The rate of interest that must be specified under paragraph 17(3)(d) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to a home support advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is 6.85% per year.","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"35AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interest rates reduced according to reduced Benchmark rate","content":"#### 35AA Interest rates reduced according to reduced Benchmark rate\n\n  (1) If the rate of interest payable for a particular month on a subsidised advance, or on an amount owed to the Bank in relation to a specified portfolio asset, exceeds the reduced Benchmark rate, the rate payable for that month is reduced to the level of the reduced Benchmark rate.\n  (2) The reduced Benchmark rate for the month is the Benchmark rate worked out for the month in accordance with subclause 11.10 of the Bank agreement or the corresponding provision of another agreement (whichever is applicable), rounded up or down to 2 decimal places (rounding 0.005% up), less 1.5 percentage points.\n  (3) This section applies despite anything in any certificate of entitlement or in any subsidised advance contract or portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"35AB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reduction of certain single‑tiered rates of interest","content":"#### 35AB Reduction of certain single‑tiered rates of interest\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is the borrower in respect of a subsidised advance or an amount owed to the Bank in relation to a specified portfolio asset; and\n    (b) apart from this section, a single rate of interest would be payable on the whole of the balance of the advance or amount; and\n    (c) that rate exceeds 6.85% per year;\n  the rate of interest payable on the balance is reduced to 6.85% per year.\n  (2) This section applies despite anything in any certificate of entitlement or in any subsidised advance contract or portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 35AA (which will sometimes reduce the rate of interest payable to less than 6.85% per year).","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"35AC","sectionType":"section","heading":"Replacement of multi‑tiered rates of interest with single rate","content":"#### 35AC Replacement of multi‑tiered rates of interest with single rate\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is the borrower in respect of a subsidised advance or an amount owed to the Bank in relation to a specified portfolio asset; and\n    (b) apart from this section, 2 or more different rates of interest would be payable on different parts of the balance of the advance or amount;\n  the following single rate of interest is instead taken to be payable on the balance:\n    (c) if the blended interest rate (see subsection (2)) for the advance or amount is less than 4.5% per year—3.75% per year;\n    (d) if the blended interest rate is less than 6.85% per year but not less than 4.5% per year—4.5% per year;\n    (e) in any other case—6.85% per year.\n  (2) This is how to work out the blended interest rate for the advance or amount:\n\nMethod statement\n\nStep 1. For each different rate of interest payable, multiply the rate by that part of the limit of the advance, or of the limit of the amount, on which the rate is payable, and total the results.\n\n> Note: However, if that limit is nil, see subsection (4).\n\nStep 2. Divide the total by the limit of the advance or amount.\n\nStep 3. Express the result as a percentage rate per year and round the rate up or down to 2 decimal places (rounding 0.005% up). This is the blended interest rate for the advance or amount (subject to Steps 4 and 5).\n\nStep 4. If:\n\n(a) the result from Step 3 is less than 6.85% per year but not less than 6.67% per year; and\n\n(b) apart from this section, the different rates of interest payable on the different parts of the limit are 3.75% per year, 7.25% per year and 10% per year;\n\nthe blended interest rate is instead 6.85% per year.\n\nStep 5. If:\n\n(a) the result from Step 3 is less than 4.5% per year but not less than 4.45% per year; and\n\n(b) apart from this section, the different rates of interest payable on the different parts of the limit are 3.75% per year and 7.25% per year;\n\nthe blended interest rate is instead 4.5% per year.\n\n> Note: Steps 4 and 5 are needed because the amortisation of the limit of the advance or amount over the term of the loan or contract can cause small temporary deviations from the average of the various rates of interest over the term. Steps 4 and 5 prevent these deviations from affecting the calculation of the blended interest rate.\n\n  (3) This is an example of how to work out the blended interest rate for an advance or amount:\n\n> Note: Example: Assume that the limit of an advance is $4,000. Interest is payable at the rates of 3.75% per year on the first $1,000, 7.25% per year on the next $1,000 and 10% per year on the last $2,000 of that limit.\n\n> Note: The Step 1 calculations are:\n\n> Note: ![Start formula open bracket $1000 times 3.75% close bracket plus open bracket $1000 times 7.25% close bracket plus open bracket $2000 times 10% close bracket equals $37.50 plus $72.50 plus $200 equals $310 end formula](image.002.png)\n\n> Note: Under Step 2, the $310 is divided by the total limit of $4,000, giving a result of 0.0775.\n\n> Note: Under Step 3, that result is expressed as a percentage: 7.75% per year.\n\n> Note: Step 4 does not apply, because the blended interest rate is too high. Step 5 does not apply, because the blended interest rate is too high and in any event because the rates of interest in question are not the ones specified in Step 5. Therefore, the blended interest rate for the advance is 7.75% per year.\n\n  (4) For Steps 1 and 2 of the method statement in subsection (2), if the limit of the advance or amount at the time concerned is nil, then, instead of nil, use the amount of the limit from when the advance was first made, or when the amount first became owing to the Bank.\n  (5) This section applies despite anything in any certificate of entitlement or in any subsidised advance contract or portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement.\n  (6) This section is subject to section 35AA (which will sometimes further reduce the rate of interest payable).\n  (7) If this section would increase the total amount of interest payable on the balance of an advance or amount over the term of the advance or amount, then this section does not apply to that balance.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"35AD","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rates not altered for certain portfolio contracts of sale","content":"#### 35AD Rates not altered for certain portfolio contracts of sale\n\n  Sections 35AA, 35AB and 35AC do not apply in relation to a portfolio contract of sale made as a result of the exercise of a power under section 36 of this Act as in force before the commencing day if, when the contract was made, the purchaser was not an eligible person within the meaning of this Act as then in force.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"35A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Modifications of Bank agreement and other instruments","content":"#### 35A Modifications of Bank agreement and other instruments\n\n  (1) Despite clause 8.1 of the Bank agreement and anything contained in any subsidised advance contract or in any portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement:\n    (a) a subsidised advance or an amount owed to the Bank under a loan secured by a specified portfolio asset is repayable in equal monthly instalments comprising principal and interest; and\n    (b) interest on each subsidised advance and each amount owed under a loan secured by a specified portfolio asset is to be:\n    (i) charged in arrears; and\n    (ii) calculated by applying the applicable annual percentage rate divided by 365 to the outstanding daily balance of the subsidised advance loan account; and\n    (c) if the Commonwealth terminates the interest subsidy in respect of a subsidised advance contract:\n    (i) the Bank may terminate the contract and any associated portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement; and\n    (ii) if the Bank does so, it is entitled to demand repayment of, and recover by action in any court or under the mortgage, the principal and interest and any other money owing under the contract, mortgage or agreement.\n  (2) Clause 1.1 of the Bank agreement has effect as if the definition of “Rest Day” were omitted and the following definition were substituted:\n\n> Rest Day: means, in respect of a Specified Portfolio Asset or a Subsidised Advance, the fifth day of each month on which principal and accrued interest will be due and payable in respect of the relevant Subsidised Advance Loan Account.\n\n  (3) Any reference to a rest day in any mortgage relating to a subsidised advance, or in any portfolio mortgage, portfolio contract of sale, portfolio supplementary agreement or other portfolio agreement, is taken to be a reference to a rest day as defined by subsection (2).\n  (4) The Bank agreement has effect as if Part B of Schedule D were omitted.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Maximum terms of advances","content":"#### 36 Maximum terms of advances\n\n  (1) Subject to section 37, the maximum term to be specified under paragraph 17(3)(b) in a certificate of entitlement in relation to a subsidised advance that a person may seek from a credit provider is:\n    (a) in the case of an initial advance or of a home support advance—25 years;\n    (b) in the case of an additional advance, a widow or widower advance or an advance for essential repairs:\n    (i) a term equal to the unexpired part of the term of the borrower’s initial advance, further advance or Corporation advance, or of the purchaser’s contract of sale, as the case may be; or\n    (ii) if the Secretary determines that a longer maximum term would be appropriate, having regard to the circumstances of the case—such longer term as the Secretary determines;\n    (d) in the case of a further advance:\n    (i) if the person has ceased to be a purchaser or borrower in relation to the last preceding previous advance—a term equal to the unexpired part of the last preceding previous advance at the time immediately before the person ceased to be such a purchaser or borrower; or\n    (ii) in any other case—a term equal to the unexpired part of the last preceding previous advance; and\n    (e) in the case of an advance or a specified portfolio asset transferred to a transferee—a term equal to the unexpired part of the advance or asset so transferred.\n  (2) Subject to section 37, the maximum term of a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B is a term equal to the remainder of the term of that specified portfolio asset as at the relevant vesting date.\n  (3) Where the term of a specified portfolio asset which vests in the Bank under section 6B, or of a subsidised advance increases as a result of a grant of instalment relief to the purchaser or borrower, the maximum term of that specified portfolio asset or advance shall be taken to have been increased by a period equal to the period by which the term of that asset or advance was so increased.\n  (4) In this section:\n\n> previous advance, in relation to a further advance in respect of a person, means an advance (whether a Corporation advance, initial advance, additional advance or further advance) in respect of which the person is or was a borrower, or a contract of sale, in respect of which the person is or was a purchaser, preceding the further advance in question.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conversion of contract of sale into mortgage","content":"#### 37 Conversion of contract of sale into mortgage\n\n  Where a purchaser executes a mortgage in favour of the Bank for the balance of the purchase money and interest, and all other money, payable under a contract of sale, the Bank shall be taken to have made, on the date of the mortgage, an initial advance to the purchaser under the agreement of an amount equal to the sum of the balance of the purchase money and all other money (including interest) payable under the contract as at that date, being an advance that is subject to the prescribed conditions and on which subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"Part VI","sectionType":"part","heading":"Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme","content":"## Part VI—Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme","content":"#### 38 Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme\n\n  For the purposes of this Act, there shall be a Commonwealth insurance scheme, to be known as the Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme, for the insurance of dwelling‑houses, rights of residence in retirement villages, land, building materials and improvements of the kind referred to in section 38C.","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"38A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Powers of Commonwealth to be exercised by the Secretary","content":"#### 38A Powers of Commonwealth to be exercised by the Secretary\n\n  (1) The powers and functions of the Commonwealth under this Part shall be exercised by the Secretary on behalf of the Commonwealth.\n  Statement of Conditions\n  (2) The Secretary must, in exercising the powers of the Commonwealth under this Part, comply with the Statement of Conditions determined in an instrument under this section, as the Statement of Conditions is in force from time to time.\n  (3) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, determine the Statement of Conditions for the purposes of subsection (2).\n\n> Note: See subsection (6) for the content of the Statement of Conditions.\n\n  Revocation and replacement of Statement of Conditions\n  (4) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, revoke the Statement of Conditions in force under this section. If the Minister does so, the Minister must, in that instrument, determine another Statement of Conditions for the purposes of subsection (2).\n\n> Note: See subsection (6) for the content of the Statement of Conditions.\n\n  Variation of Statement of Conditions\n  (5) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, vary the Statement of Conditions in force under this section.\n  Content of Statement of Conditions\n  (6) The Statement of Conditions under this section must deal with:\n    (a) the risks against which the Commonwealth will undertake insurance under this Part; and\n    (b) other terms and conditions relating to insurance undertaken by the Commonwealth under this Part.\n  This subsection does not limit the matters that may be dealt with by the Statement of Conditions.\n  No removal of right of person to receive payment\n  (7) The Minister must not revoke or vary the Statement of Conditions so as to remove the right of a person to receive a payment to which the person had become entitled before the revocation or variation took effect.","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"38B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer of assets and liabilities","content":"#### 38B Transfer of assets and liabilities\n\n  (1) On the commencing day:\n    (a) all insurance rights that immediately before that day were vested in the Corporation, vest in the Commonwealth by force of this subsection; and\n    (b) the Commonwealth becomes, by force of this subsection, liable to pay or discharge any insurance debts of the Corporation that existed immediately before that day.\n  (2) Any insurance contract to which the Corporation was a party immediately before the commencing day has effect on and after that day as if:\n    (a) the Commonwealth were substituted for the Corporation as a party to the contract; and\n    (b) any reference in the contract to the Corporation were (except in relation to things that happened before that day) a reference to the Commonwealth.\n  (3) If, immediately before the commencing day, insurance proceedings to which the Corporation was a party were pending in any court, the Commonwealth is, on that day, by force of this subsection, substituted for the Corporation as a party to the proceedings and has the same rights in the proceedings as the Corporation had.\n  (4) In this section:\n\n> Corporation insurance means an insurance undertaken by the Corporation, or that the Corporation is to be taken to have undertaken, under this Act as in force at any time before the commencing day.\n\n> Insurance contract means:\n\n    (a) a contract relating to any Corporation insurance;\n    (b) a concessions agreement of the kind referred to in subsection 38(4C) or 38(4D) of this Act as in force at any time before the commencing day; or\n    (c) a contract or arrangement of the kind referred to in section 38A of this Act as then in force.\n\n> Insurance debts means any debts, liabilities or obligations arising out of, or relating to, any Corporation insurance.\n\n> Insurance proceedings means any proceedings relating to any Corporation insurance.\n\n> Insurance rights means any rights, property or assets arising out of, or relating to, any Corporation insurance or insurance contract.","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"38C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Insurance of dwelling‑houses and rights of residence in retirement villages","content":"#### 38C Insurance of dwelling‑houses and rights of residence in retirement villages\n\n  Dwelling‑houses\n  (1) The Commonwealth may undertake insurance of, or in relation to:\n    (a) a dwelling‑house that is wholly or partially owned by an eligible recipient; or\n    (b) building materials on a site where there is, or is to be, a dwelling‑house referred to in paragraph (a), being materials that are for use in the building of, or use otherwise in relation to, the dwelling‑house; or\n    (c) any permanent domestic improvement of a structural kind that has been made:\n    (i) to a dwelling‑house referred to in paragraph (a); or\n    (ii) on the land on which such a dwelling‑house is built, is being built or is to be built; or\n    (d) building materials on a site where there is, or is to be, an improvement referred to in paragraph (c), being materials that are for use in the building of, or use otherwise in relation to, the improvement.\n\n> Note: For eligible recipient, see subsection 4(1).\n\n  (2) The Commonwealth may undertake insurance against risks related to the land on which a dwelling‑house referred to in paragraph (1)(a) is built, is being built or is to be built.\n  Rights of residence in retirement villages\n  (3) The Commonwealth may undertake insurance of, or in relation to:\n    (a) a right of residence in a retirement village that is a right held by an eligible recipient; or\n    (b) building materials on a site where there is, or is to be, a retirement village covered by paragraph (a), being materials that are for use in the building of, or use otherwise in relation to, the retirement village; or\n    (c) any permanent domestic improvement of a structural kind that has been made to a retirement village covered by paragraph (a); or\n    (d) building materials on a site where there is, or is to be, an improvement referred to in paragraph (c), being materials that are for use in the building of, or use otherwise in relation to, the improvement.\n\n> Note: For eligible recipient, see subsection 4(1).\n\n  (4) The Commonwealth may undertake insurance against risks related to the land on which a retirement village covered by paragraph (3)(a) is built, is being built or is to be built.","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"38CB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Powers of Commonwealth under this Part","content":"#### 38CB Powers of Commonwealth under this Part\n\n  The Commonwealth may do all things necessary or convenient to be done for the purpose of undertaking insurance under this Part and, without limiting the generality of its powers under this section, may enter into an agreement of a kind known as a concessions agreement with a person who is, or is likely to be, the mortgagee of property insured with the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"38E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Termination of insurance","content":"#### 38E Termination of insurance\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) the Commonwealth has undertaken insurance under section 38C in relation to a dwelling‑house that is wholly or partially owned by, or a right of residence in a retirement village that is a right held by, a person who is:\n    (i) a member of the Defence Force or a former member of the Defence Force; or\n    (ii) a member of a Peacekeeping Force or a former member of a Peacekeeping Force; and\n    (b) the person dies.\n  Notice that insurance will cease to have effect\n  (2) If this section applies:\n    (a) the insurance undertaken in relation to the dwelling‑house, or the right of residence in the retirement village, does not cease to have effect because of the death of the person; and\n    (b) unless the insurance has already ceased to have effect for some other reason, the Secretary must give reasonable notice in writing to each person having an interest in the dwelling‑house, or the right of residence in the retirement village, that the insurance will cease to have effect on a day specified in the notice.\n  Day insurance ceases to have effect\n  (3) If the Secretary gives a notice under paragraph (2)(b), the insurance ceases to have effect on the day specified in the notice, unless it has already ceased to have effect.\n  Exception\n  (4) If this section applies and the person referred to in paragraph (1)(a) is survived by a widow or widower, the Secretary must not give a notice under paragraph (2)(b) in relation to the dwelling‑house or the right of residence in the retirement village.\n  (5) Subsection (4) does not prevent the insurance ceasing to have effect for a reason other than the giving of a notice under paragraph (2)(b).\n  Notice not a legislative instrument\n  (6) A notice under paragraph (2)(b) is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"38F","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reinsurance","content":"#### 38F Reinsurance\n\n  The Commonwealth may enter into a contract or arrangement with an insurer to ensure that money will be available to assist in meeting its liabilities under insurances undertaken by it under this Part.","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"38G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Payments for fire brigade services","content":"#### 38G Payments for fire brigade services\n\n  (1) Where under a law of a State, a person carrying on in that State the business of insuring against the risk of fire is liable to make payments to the State, or to an authority of the State, to assist in meeting the cost of the fire brigade services in the State, the Commonwealth may make payments to the State, or authority, for that purpose.\n  (2) The amount of a payment under this section shall not be more than the amount that the Commonwealth would be liable to pay under the law of the State if the law applied to the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"38GA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Payments for State Emergency Services","content":"#### 38GA Payments for State Emergency Services\n\n  (1) Where under a law of a State a person carrying on in that State the business of insuring against the risk of loss of, or damage to, property is liable to make payments to the State, or to an authority of the State, to assist in meeting the cost of the State Emergency Service of the State, the Commonwealth may make payments to the State, or authority, for that purpose.\n  (2) The amount of a payment under this section must not be more than the amount that the Commonwealth would be liable to pay under the law of the State if the law applied to the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"38H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Limitation of liability of Commonwealth","content":"#### 38H Limitation of liability of Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The amount of the total liability of the Commonwealth to pay money to persons under this Part in relation to contracts of insurance to which it is a party, or that have effect as if the Commonwealth were a party, shall not at any time be more than the total amount of the insurance assets of the Commonwealth at that time.\n  (2) In this section:\n\n> insurance assets means rights, property and assets vested in the Commonwealth under section 38B or acquired by the Commonwealth as a result of the exercise of its powers under this Part.","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"Part VIA","sectionType":"part","heading":"Other insurance activities","content":"## Part VIA—Other insurance activities","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Other insurance activities","content":"#### 39 Other insurance activities\n\n  (1) The Commonwealth may engage in activities with respect to insurance within the meaning of paragraph 51(xiv) of the Constitution, other than State insurance that does not extend beyond the limits of the State concerned, as an agent (including an authorised representative) for an insurer.\n  (2) The Secretary may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, do anything necessary or convenient for the purposes of carrying out such activities.","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"Part VII","sectionType":"part","heading":"Finance","content":"## Part VII—Finance","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Defence Service Homes Insurance Account","content":"#### 40 Defence Service Homes Insurance Account\n\n  (1) There is continued in existence the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account.\n\n> Note: The Account was established by subsection 5(3) of the Financial Management Legislation Amendment Act 1999.\n\n  (2) The Account is a special account for the purposes of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n  (3) There must be credited to the Account amounts equal to all payments to the Commonwealth in connection with its activities:\n    (a) as an insurer under this Act, including a payment to it under a contract or arrangement referred to in section 38F; and\n    (b) with respect to insurance, as an agent for an insurer.\n  (4) The purpose of the Account is to make all payments by the Commonwealth in connection with its activities:\n    (a) as an insurer under this Act, including:\n    (i) a payment by it under a contract or arrangement referred to in section 38F; and\n    (ii) a payment by it under section 38G or 38GA; and\n    (iii) a payment by it that it is not legally required to make but that is of a kind that would be made by a person carrying on the business of insurance in accordance with sound commercial principles; and\n    (b) with respect to insurance, as an agent for an insurer.","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"40A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interest on amounts invested","content":"#### 40A Interest on amounts invested\n\n  (1) Subject to this section, there must be credited to the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account, in respect of each financial year ending after the commencement of this section, an amount, calculated in such manner as the Finance Minister determines, by way of interest on the amount standing to the credit of the Account during that year, whether that amount has been invested by the Finance Minister or not.\n  (2) If interest is received by the Commonwealth from the investment of an amount standing to the credit of the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account, an amount equal to the interest must be credited to the Account.","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appropriation","content":"#### 41 Appropriation\n\n  The following payments by the Commonwealth to a credit provider shall be made out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, which is appropriated accordingly:\n    (a) payments of subsidy;\n    (b) payments under subclause 4.7 of the Bank agreement or under the corresponding provision of any other agreement.","sortOrder":86},{"sectionNumber":"Part VIII","sectionType":"part","heading":"Miscellaneous","content":"## Part VIII—Miscellaneous","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Internal review of reviewable decisions","content":"#### 43 Internal review of reviewable decisions\n\n  (1) The Secretary shall, as soon as practicable after making a reviewable decision, cause a notice in writing to be given to the person whose interests are affected by the decision containing:\n    (a) the terms of the decision;\n    (b) the reasons for the decision; and\n    (c) a statement setting out particulars of the person’s right to have the decision reviewed under this section.\n  (2) A person whose interests are affected by a reviewable decision may apply in writing to the Secretary for a review of the decision.\n  (3) An application for a review shall be made within 30 days after the day on which the decision first came to the notice of the applicant, or within such further period (if any) as the Secretary, either before or after the end of that period, allows.\n  (4) Subject to subsection (5), the Secretary shall, on receiving an application, review the decision, or cause it to be reviewed by a person to whom the Secretary’s power under this section is delegated, being a person other than the person who made, or was involved in the making of, the decision and occupying a position senior to that occupied by the last‑mentioned person.\n  (5) Where a reviewable decision is made by the Secretary personally, the Secretary shall refer an application for review of the decision to the Minister and the Minister shall review the decision.\n  (6) A person who reviews a reviewable decision may make a decision affirming, varying or revoking the reviewable decision and, where the person revokes the decision, may make such other decision as the person thinks appropriate.\n  (7) A reference in this section to a person whose interests are affected by a reviewable decision is a reference to such a person other than a credit provider.","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review of decisions by Administrative Review Tribunal","content":"#### 44 Review of decisions by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  (1) Where a person makes a decision under subsection 43(6) affirming or varying a reviewable decision, the person shall cause a notice in writing to be given to the person whose interests are affected by the decision (other than a credit provider) containing:\n    (c) the terms of the decision;\n    (d) the reasons for the decision; and\n    (e) a statement to the effect that, subject to the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024, application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for review of the decision to which the notice relates.\n  (2) Failure to include in a notice under subsection (1) a statement of the kind referred to in paragraph (1)(e) does not affect the validity of the decision to which the notice relates.\n  (3) Subject to the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024, application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal by a person other than a credit provider for a review of a decision made under subsection 43(6) affirming or varying a reviewable decision.\n  (4) In this section:\n\n> decision has the same meaning as in the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024.","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain provisions of Bank agreement not to be revoked or amended","content":"#### 45 Certain provisions of Bank agreement not to be revoked or amended\n\n  (1) An agreement between the Commonwealth and the Bank that revokes, amends or otherwise affects the operation of subclause 8.1, 11.2, 11.3, 11.5, 11.7.6, 11.9, 11.10, 11.11, 11.12 or 11.13 of the Bank agreement has no effect.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to any agreement made between the Commonwealth and the Bank within 3 months after the day on which the Veterans’ Affairs Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 1996 receives the Royal Assent that amends, or otherwise affects, the operation of clause 8.1 or 11 of the Bank agreement.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply to any agreement made between the Commonwealth and the Bank within 3 months after the day on which the Defence Service Homes Amendment Act 1997 receives the Royal Assent that amends or otherwise affects the operation of clause 11 of the Bank agreement.\n  (4) An agreement made between the Commonwealth and the Bank within 3 months after the day on which that Act receives the Royal Assent that amends or otherwise affects the operation of the Bank agreement may be expressed to apply, or to have applied, from 5 January 1998.","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"45A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Bankruptcy of purchaser or borrower","content":"#### 45A Bankruptcy of purchaser or borrower\n\n  (1) Except with the approval of the Secretary, the estate or interest of a purchaser or borrower in any land, land and dwelling‑house or right of residence in a retirement village, that is the subject of a contract of sale, or of a mortgage or other security securing a Corporation advance or a subsidised advance:\n    (a) shall not be taken from the purchaser or borrower under the Bankruptcy Act 1966; and\n    (b) shall not be sold in satisfaction of a judgment debt, otherwise than by a credit provider or another mortgagee in the exercise of powers under a contract of sale, or a mortgage or other security.\n  (2) Where 2 persons who are spouses or de facto partners of each other are joint purchasers or borrowers in relation to land, land and a dwelling‑house or a right of residence in a retirement village, the Secretary may give an approval under subsection (1) in relation to the estate or interest of both of them if either of them becomes bankrupt or incurs a judgment debt.","sortOrder":91},{"sectionNumber":"45B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exchange of information","content":"#### 45B Exchange of information\n\n  (1) The Commonwealth shall give the Bank, as provided by the Bank agreement, any information in the possession of the Commonwealth that is required to be disclosed or provided to the Bank under the Bank agreement.\n  (1A) If an agreement between the Commonwealth and a credit provider other than the Bank requires any information in the possession of the Commonwealth to be disclosed or provided to the credit provider, the Commonwealth must give the information to the credit provider.\n  (2) The Bank shall give the Commonwealth, as provided by the Bank agreement, any information in the possession of the Bank that is required to be disclosed or provided to the Commonwealth under the Bank agreement.\n  (3) If an agreement between the Commonwealth and a credit provider other than the Bank requires any information in the possession of the credit provider to be disclosed or provided to the Commonwealth, the credit provider must give the information to the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"45C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Use and disclosure of personal information","content":"#### 45C Use and disclosure of personal information\n\n  (1) This section applies to personal information about any of the following people:\n    (a) an applicant for a certificate of entitlement;\n    (b) a person who has been issued with a certificate of entitlement (whether or not the certificate is in force);\n    (c) a person, or the assignee of a person, to whom a subsidised advance has been made;\n    (d) a widow or widower of a person (other than an assignee) covered by paragraph (a), (b) or (c).\n  (2) A person covered by subsection (3) may, for a purpose prescribed by the regulations:\n    (a) use the personal information; or\n    (b) disclose the personal information to another person covered by that subsection.\n  (3) This subsection covers the following people:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a delegate of the Secretary under section 6A;\n    (c) a delegate of the Secretary under the Defence Home Ownership Assistance Scheme Act 2008 (the 2008 Act) or the Defence Force (Home Loans Assistance) Act 1990 (the 1990 Act);\n    (d) a credit provider, if the credit provider has:\n    (i) received an application for a subsidised advance from the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) of this section; or\n    (ii) made a subsidised advance to the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) of this section;\n    (e) a loan provider as defined under section 3 of the 2008 Act, if the loan provider has:\n    (i) received an application for a subsidised loan (as defined under section 3 of the 2008 Act) from the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) of this section; or\n    (ii) made a subsidised loan (as defined under section 3 of the 2008 Act) to the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) of this section;\n    (f) the Bank as defined under section 3 of the 1990 Act, if the Bank has:\n    (i) received an application for a subsidised loan (as defined under section 3 of the 1990 Act) from the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(b) of this section; or\n    (ii) made a subsidised loan (as defined under section 3 of the 1990 Act) to the person mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) of this section.\n  (4) The use and disclosure of personal information under subsection (2) is taken to be authorised by this Act for the purposes of:\n    (a) the Privacy Act 1988; and\n    (b) any provision of a law of a State or Territory that provides that personal information may be used or disclosed if the use or disclosure is authorised by law.\n\n> Note: The authorisation under this subsection is only for the use and disclosure of personal information for a prescribed purpose mentioned in subsection (2).\n\n  (5) The regulations may prescribe circumstances in which a person may, or must not, use or disclose personal information for the purposes of this section.\n  (6) In this section:\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reports from inspectors and valuers","content":"#### 46 Reports from inspectors and valuers\n\n  The Secretary may, from time to time, obtain a report from an inspector or valuer as to the manner in which any advance has been expended and used by the borrower, and generally as to the state and condition of any land or land and dwelling‑house in respect of which a contract of sale has been entered into or an advance has been made.","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dwelling‑houses for incapacitated soldiers","content":"#### 47 Dwelling‑houses for incapacitated soldiers\n\n  The Secretary may provide a dwelling‑house for the use of a person who is receiving, or is eligible to receive, a pension under Part II of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 and to whom section 24 of that Act applies.","sortOrder":95},{"sectionNumber":"50A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Improper use of certain words","content":"#### 50A Improper use of certain words\n\n  (1) No person shall, without the authority of the Secretary, proof whereof shall lie upon the person accused, assume or use in connexion with his trade, business, calling or profession any words which would reasonably lead to the belief that his trade, business, calling or profession is being carried on under or for the purposes of this Act, or by or under the authority or control of the Corporation.\n\nPenalty: 1 penalty unit.\n\n  (2) Without limiting the preceding subsection, any person who:\n    (a) places, or suffers or permits to be placed, on the building in which he carries on his trade, business, calling or profession; or\n    (b) uses in any advertisement or sign published or displayed in connexion with his trade, business, calling or profession; or\n    (c) uses on any document, as a description of his trade, business, calling or profession; or\n    (d) uses as a business name (within the meaning of the Business Names Registration Act 2011) or part of a business name;\n  the words “War Service Homes” or “Defence Service Homes” or any words so nearly resembling them as to be likely to deceive, whether alone or in conjunction with any words, is taken to have committed an offence against that subsection.\n  (3) An offence under this section is an offence of strict liability.\n\n> Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.","sortOrder":96},{"sectionNumber":"50B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Annual Report","content":"#### 50B Annual Report\n\n  (1) The Secretary shall as soon as practicable after the last day of June first occurring after the commencing day, prepare and give to the Minister a report on the administration and operation of this Act (including the operations of the Corporation) during the period beginning on 1 July 1988 and ending on that last day of June.\n  (2) The report referred to in subsection (1) shall be accompanied by:\n    (a) financial statements, in such form as the Finance Minister approves, in respect of the operations of the Corporation (other than under section 38 of this Act as in force before the commencing day) during the period beginning on 1 July 1988 and ending on the winding‑up day; and\n    (b) financial statements, in such form as the Finance Minister approves, in respect of the operations of the Corporation under section 38 of this Act, as in force before the commencing day, and the administration of Part VI of this Act, as in force on and after that day, during the period to which the report relates.\n  (3) The Secretary shall, as soon as practicable after each subsequent 30 June prepare and give to the Minister a report on the administration and operation of this Act during the year that ended on that day.\n  (4) A report referred to in subsection (3) shall be accompanied by financial statements, in such form as the Finance Minister approves, relating to the administration of Part VI of this Act during the year to which the report relates.\n  (5) Before giving financial statements to the Minister, the Secretary shall submit them to the Auditor‑General, who shall report to the Minister:\n    (a) whether the statements are based on proper accounts and records;\n    (b) whether the statements are in agreement with those accounts and records; and\n    (c) as to such other matters arising out of the statements as the Auditor‑General thinks should be reported to the Minister.\n  (6) The Minister shall cause a copy of each report and its accompanying financial statements, together with the Auditor‑General’s report on those statements, to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after the day on which the Minister receives the report.","sortOrder":97},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"#### 51 Regulations\n\n  The Governor‑General may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, prescribing all matters, which by this Act are required or permitted to be prescribed, or which are necessary or convenient to be prescribed, for giving effect to this Act and, in particular, making provision for, and in relation to, the undertaking of insurance by the Commonwealth under Part VI.","sortOrder":98}],"analysis":{"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"Section 4 — Definition of 'mortgage' (duplicate definition)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Having two distinct definitions of 'mortgage' in the same subsection creates genuine interpretive uncertainty. A court would have to determine which definition applies in a given context, and the definitions are not reconcilable as one says 'includes a security over shares' while the other says 'includes any interest in property securing obligations.' The broader second definition arguably swallows the first, but the duplication itself is a drafting error that creates ambiguity.","confidence":0.9,"description":"The term 'mortgage' is defined twice in subsection 4(1) with different and non-overlapping content. The first definition states 'mortgage includes a security over an interest in shares that are shares giving rise to a company title.' The second definition states 'mortgage includes: (a) any interest in, or power over, property securing obligations of a borrower or guarantor; and (b) a credit provider's title to land or goods that are subject to a sale by instalments.' These are two separate, inconsistent statutory definitions of the same term in the same subsection, with no indication that one supersedes the other."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"Section 4BA(6) — 'prescribed period' for surrender election","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The window for making a surrender election closed 6 months after the amending Act commenced in 1988. The provision remains in the Act as though it were a live mechanism, but it is permanently spent. Any person who did not make the election within that window cannot do so now. The section creates an elaborate framework — including the revocation mechanism in s 4BB — that is now entirely incapable of producing new legal effects.","confidence":0.95,"description":"The 'prescribed period' for making a surrender election under section 4BA is defined as 'the period of 6 months starting on the day on which this section commences.' This was a one-time window tied to the commencement of the section (which occurred decades ago). The provision remains on the books but the prescribed period has permanently expired, rendering the election mechanism entirely inoperative. No eligible person can ever again make a valid surrender election under this section."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"Section 4BB — Revocation of surrender election","severity":"low","reasoning":"Like s 4BA, these are spent provisions with hard-coded calendar deadlines that have long passed. They remain in the Act as historical artefacts but have zero operative effect. Their continued presence is harmlessly confusing rather than actively problematic, but they represent a classic retroactive impossibility.","confidence":0.98,"description":"Section 4BB(1) permits revocation of a surrender election by giving notice 'before 1 July 1992', and section 4BB(2) permits revocation by giving notice 'on or after 1 July 1992 and before 1 January 1993.' Both windows closed over 30 years ago. These provisions remain in the Act but are entirely incapable of ever being exercised. No person can lawfully revoke a surrender election under either subsection."},{"type":"circular_definition","section":"Section 4BB(2)(d) — Condition of ignorance required for revocation","severity":"low","reasoning":"The precondition for the s 4BB(2) revocation right is ignorance of the s 4BB(1) revocation right. It is not truly circular in the logical sense but creates a perverse incentive: only legally uninformed persons qualify for the extended revocation window. This is more a policy absurdity than a pure logical flaw, and the entire provision is now moot given the elapsed deadlines.","confidence":0.7,"description":"To revoke a surrender election after 1 July 1992 (under s 4BB(2)), a person must satisfy the Secretary that they 'were not aware before 1 July 1992 that the person's surrender election was revocable.' This creates a circular logical problem: the revocation right under s 4BB(1) itself only existed from a point in time, so a person would only know their election was revocable if the law told them so — but the law only told them so via s 4BB(1), which is the very provision they must demonstrate they were unaware of."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"Section 25(1)(a) — Maximum initial advance capped at $25,000","severity":"medium","reasoning":"While not logically impossible to comply with — a credit provider can still make a $25,000 advance — the provision is effectively absurd in practical terms. The purpose of the Act (assisting defence personnel to obtain homes) cannot be meaningfully served by a $25,000 cap in 2025. The Act nominally operates but delivers essentially no real-world benefit proportionate to its stated objectives. This is a policy absurdity bordering on a practical impossibility of purpose.","confidence":0.85,"description":"The maximum amount for an initial subsidised advance is capped at $25,000. This figure, set in 1988 and never indexed, is grotesquely inadequate for any modern property purchase in Australia. The provision purports to assist eligible persons in acquiring or improving a home, but $25,000 will not fund any meaningful purpose related to home acquisition in the current market, rendering the core benefit of the scheme functionally illusory."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"Section 50B(1) — One-time annual report obligation","severity":"low","reasoning":"The 'first occurring after the commencing day' language makes this a singular, one-time obligation that was due in 1989. The subsection and its accompanying obligations (s 50B(2)) remain on the books but are permanently exhausted. Section 50B(3) handles ongoing annual reports correctly, so there is no practical gap, but the spent s 50B(1) creates minor legislative clutter.","confidence":0.92,"description":"Section 50B(1) requires the Secretary to prepare a report 'as soon as practicable after the last day of June first occurring after the commencing day.' This is a one-time obligation tied to the first 30 June after the commencing day (1988/89). That report was due over 35 years ago. The provision remains in force but can never again be triggered — it is permanently spent."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"Section 43(4) — Internal review by person 'senior to' original decision-maker","severity":"medium","reasoning":"In a small agency or for decisions made at or near the top of the delegate chain, it may be structurally impossible to find a reviewer who satisfies all three criteria simultaneously. The Act provides no fallback for this scenario other than the s 43(5) personal-Secretary pathway. This creates a potential compliance gap in the review mechanism.","confidence":0.65,"description":"Section 43(4) requires that a review be conducted by 'a person other than the person who made, or was involved in the making of, the decision and occupying a position senior to that occupied by the last-mentioned person.' Where the original decision is made by the most senior officer in the relevant hierarchy below the Secretary, there may be no person who is (a) not involved in the original decision, (b) not the Secretary, and (c) senior to the original decision-maker. Section 43(5) then separately handles the case where the Secretary made the decision personally (referral to Minister). This gap could leave reviewable decisions with no eligible reviewer."},{"type":"other","section":"Section 21A(f) — Home support advance: certificate could not be issued","severity":"low","reasoning":"While not strictly impossible, s 21A(f) requires the Secretary to make a notional determination about the unavailability of a different type of certificate as a precondition for the home support certificate. This creates an implicit obligation to assess eligibility for advance types the person has not applied for. It is administratively awkward and potentially creates appeal rights about the notional refusal determination.","confidence":0.6,"description":"Section 21A(f) requires, as a condition for issuing a certificate of entitlement for a home support advance, that 'a certificate of entitlement that relates to an initial advance, an additional advance or a further advance could not be issued to the person in respect of the application concerned.' This requires the Secretary to affirmatively determine the negative — that a certificate could not be issued — before issuing a home support certificate. This is effectively a requirement to process and reject a hypothetical application before processing the real one, creating a procedurally circular precondition."},{"type":"other","section":"Section 4 — Definition of 'retirement village' including 'granny flat'","severity":"low","reasoning":"The definitional inclusion of a granny flat (which by definition cannot be owned by the eligible person) within 'retirement village' creates downstream inconsistencies when provisions of the Act contemplate the eligible person having ownership or mortgageable interests in their 'retirement village.' The scheme appears designed for this, but the circularity of the granny flat definition within the retirement village definition — and the ownership exclusion — creates interpretive friction in several provisions.","confidence":0.7,"description":"The definition of 'retirement village' in s 4(1) includes 'a granny flat.' The definition of 'granny flat' requires that the residence 'is not owned, wholly or partly, by the eligible person.' This means a granny flat (and therefore a retirement village) can be the eligible person's principal home but must not be owned by them. However, the Act elsewhere contemplates insurance of 'a dwelling-house that is wholly or partially owned by an eligible recipient' (s 38C(1)(a)) and mortgage arrangements over property interests. The inclusion of a non-owned granny flat in the definition of 'retirement village' creates definitional tension throughout the Act wherever ownership rights in retirement villages are assumed."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Section 4BA(3) — Election irrevocable","section_b":"Section 4BB(1) and 4BB(2) — Election revocable","confidence":0.85,"description":"Section 4BA(3) explicitly states that a surrender election 'is irrevocable.' Sections 4BB(1) and 4BB(2) then establish mechanisms by which that same election can be revoked. While the legislature clearly intended 4BB to be an exception to 4BA(3), the unqualified statement of irrevocability in 4BA(3) directly contradicts the revocability provisions in 4BB without any qualifying language such as 'subject to section 4BB.'"},{"severity":"low","section_a":"Section 18(1)(b) — Person must not own a dwelling-house","section_b":"Section 18(2)(e) — Advance may be for enlarging/modifying/repairing a dwelling-house","confidence":0.55,"description":"Section 18(1)(b) requires, as a condition for issuing a certificate of entitlement for an advance, that the person 'is not the owner of a dwelling-house' (other than the one the advance relates to). Section 18(2)(e) permits an advance to 'enlarge, modify or repair a dwelling-house on a holding of the person.' If the advance is for enlarging/modifying/repairing a dwelling-house the person already owns, the person would be the owner of that dwelling-house — which is precisely what s 18(1)(b) appears to prohibit. The exception in s 18(1)(b) ('other than the dwelling-house ... in respect of which the advance is payable') saves this, but only partially: it presupposes the person already owns the dwelling-house being repaired, while s 18(1)(b) simultaneously requires them not to own it."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Section 22(3) — Certificate of entitlement under s 22 only to eligible person","section_b":"Section 22(3A) — Certificate relating to home support advance to eligible person or eligible veteran","confidence":0.8,"description":"Section 22(3) states that a certificate of entitlement under section 22 'may be issued only to a proposed transferee who is an eligible person.' Section 22(3A) then states that a certificate 'that relates to a home support advance may be issued only to a proposed transferee who is an eligible person or an eligible veteran.' The relationship between these two subsections is ambiguous: does s 22(3A) create a carve-out from s 22(3), or does s 22(3) still apply to home support advance certificates (limiting them to eligible persons only, contrary to s 22(3A))? The absence of a 'subject to subsection (3A)' qualifier in s 22(3) creates interpretive conflict."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Section 24A(2) — Subsidy not payable if 2008 Act subsidy ever payable","section_b":"Section 24(1) — Subsidy payable by Commonwealth","confidence":0.75,"description":"Section 24(1) provides broadly that 'subsidy is payable by the Commonwealth to a credit provider on a subsidised advance.' Section 24A(2) then provides that subsidy is 'not payable' if 2008 Act subsidy 'is, or has ever been, payable' to the person. The Act does not define how 'ever been payable' interacts with the broad positive obligation in s 24(1). A person who received 2008 Act subsidy decades ago, even for a different property or advance, is permanently barred from subsidy under this Act — but s 24(1) contains no qualification directing readers to s 24A. This creates a facially contradictory position where subsidy 'is payable' under s 24(1) but simultaneously 'is not payable' under s 24A(2) for the same person, with no internal cross-reference."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"Section 35AB(1)(c) — Interest rate capped at 6.85% per year","section_b":"Section 35AC(1)(c)/(d)/(e) — Interest rate set at 3.75%, 4.5% or 6.85%","confidence":0.6,"description":"Section 35AB reduces a single-tiered interest rate exceeding 6.85% per year down to 6.85%. Section 35AC applies when two or more different interest rates are payable on different parts of a balance, and can result in a single rate of 3.75%, 4.5% or 6.85%. Section 35AC(7) provides that s 35AC does not apply 'if this section would increase the total amount of interest payable.' This creates a tension: where s 35AC would set a rate of 6.85% on a multi-tiered balance that was previously lower overall (blended rate below 6.85%), s 35AC(7) disapplies it — but s 35AB may then apply to reduce any portion above 6.85%. The interaction of the two sections in their limiting provisions is not clearly reconciled, particularly given that s 35AB is stated to be 'subject to section 35AA' but makes no mention of s 35AC."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Section 43(4) — Review by delegate senior to original decision-maker","section_b":"Section 6A(1) — Secretary may delegate 'any of his powers' under the Act","confidence":0.75,"description":"Section 43(4) requires that a review be conducted by a delegate 'occupying a position senior to that occupied by' the original decision-maker. Section 6A(1) allows the Secretary to delegate 'any of his powers' — including the review power in s 43. If the Secretary delegates the review power to a person at the same level or lower than the original decision-maker, s 43(4) is violated. The Act does not require the Secretary, when delegating under s 6A, to ensure the delegate is more senior than whoever made the original decision. The two provisions are in tension because s 6A creates unconstrained delegation discretion while s 43(4) imposes a seniority constraint on exactly the kind of delegate s 6A would create."}]},"summary":{"complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act began in 1918 as a narrowly focused scheme to help WWI veterans buy or build homes, administered directly by a government corporation (the Defence Service Homes Corporation). Over more than a century of amendments, its scope has expanded dramatically in several directions: (1) Eligible persons now include not just WWI veterans but also WWII veterans, Korean and Malayan War veterans, peacekeeping force members, regular full-time servicemen, national servicemen, merchant mariners, YMCA workers, and war/munition workers — each with their own complex eligibility rules; (2) The advance types have multiplied from basic home purchase loans to include widow/widower advances, essential repair advances, home support advances, and a novel 'assigned advance' framework for retirement village accommodation; (3) The administration has shifted from a direct government lender model to a subsidy-on-commercial-loans model, formalised through an entrenched private contract with Westpac (the 1988 Bank agreement) that is incorporated into the Act; (4) A full government home insurance scheme (Part VI) has been added and expanded to cover retirement village rights of residence; (5) An unjust transactions court jurisdiction (Part IIIA) has been grafted on, resembling consumer credit legislation; (6) The Act now extends to Norfolk Island and retirement villages, including granny flats — concepts entirely foreign to its original purpose; (7) Personal information sharing, privacy compliance, and interaction with the Defence Home Ownership Assistance Scheme Act 2008 have added modern regulatory overlays. The Act is now a complex, multi-purpose veterans' housing and insurance statute that bears only a family resemblance to its 1918 origins."},"complexity_factors":["Extremely large interpretation section (section 4) with over 70 defined terms, many of which are interdependent","The definition of 'Australian Soldier' alone spans 10 sub-paragraphs (a)–(j) with multiple nested conditions, date-specific qualifiers, and cross-references to the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986","Heavy cross-referencing across the Act itself, the Bank agreement (a separate legal document incorporated by reference), Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986, Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004, Privacy Act 1988, Family Law Act 1975, Acts Interpretation Act 1901, and the Criminal Code","'Regular serviceman' definition (section 4AAA) has 6 subsections with multiple conditional branches based on enlistment dates (14 May 1985, 17 August 1977, 7 December 1972), service types, and discharge reasons","Multiple advance types (initial, additional, further, widow/widower, essential repairs, home support, assigned) each with distinct eligibility criteria, maximum amounts, interest rates, and term rules, all interacting with each other","Interest rate provisions (sections 35AA, 35AB, 35AC) involve a complex blended-rate calculation using a multi-step method statement with mathematical formulae, rounding rules, and special carve-outs for specific historical rate combinations","The 'assignee/assignor' framework for retirement village advances adds a distinct legal layer with its own certificate type, eligibility rules, and subsidy cancellation triggers","Subsidy cancellation provisions (sections 26, 27, 27A) contain numerous distinct grounds with different notice requirements, recovery mechanisms, and interaction rules","Unjust transactions regime (Part IIIA) with 12 sections establishing its own court jurisdiction, factors, time limits, and exceptions, operating partly independently of the rest of the Act","The Act incorporates the Bank agreement (a private contract with Westpac) as a legally operative document, with some clauses of that agreement entrenched and non-amendable (section 45), creating a two-layer legal framework that readers cannot fully understand from the Act alone","Transitional provisions and date-dependent rules throughout (commencing day, winding-up day, vesting date, Consumer Credit Codes commencing day) create historical complexity","Nested exceptions to exceptions, e.g. subsections 4(2A), (2AA), (2AB), (2AC) progressively carve out and reinstate eligibility for specific categories of women's wartime service"],"plain_english_summary":"## Defence Service Homes Act 1918 — Plain English Summary\n\n### What is this law about?\n\nThis Act sets up a Commonwealth program to help **eligible veterans and defence personnel** buy, build, repair, or maintain a home. It does this primarily through **subsidised home loans** — meaning the Commonwealth pays part of the interest on certain home loans made by approved lenders (called \"credit providers\"), making those loans cheaper for eligible people.\n\nIt also runs a **government-backed home insurance scheme** (the Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme) for eligible recipients.\n\n---\n\n### Who is eligible?\n\nThe Act defines eligibility broadly, covering:\n\n- **Veterans of WWI, WWII, Korea, and Malaya** (called \"Australian Soldiers\")\n- **Regular and national servicemen** — people who served full-time in the Australian Defence Force for a qualifying period (generally 3–6 years, depending on when they joined)\n- **Munition and war workers** who went to Great Britain during WWI to assist the war effort\n- **Merchant mariners** who served during WWII on certain vessels\n- **YMCA representatives** who served abroad with Australian forces during WWI\n- **Peacekeeping Force members**\n- **Widows, widowers, and dependent parents** of the above\n- **Eligible veterans** as defined under the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986\n\nSome people can voluntarily give up (\"surrender\") their eligible status, and in limited circumstances, reverse that decision.\n\n---\n\n### What help does the Act provide?\n\nThe Commonwealth pays a **subsidy** (a financial top-up) to an approved lender on behalf of the eligible person, reducing the effective interest rate on the home loan. There are several types of subsidised advances (loans):\n\n- **Initial advance** — to buy land, build, purchase, or repair a home (up to $25,000)\n- **Additional advance** — to enlarge, modify or repair an existing home, or to discharge a mortgage (capped so total does not exceed $25,000)\n- **Further advance** — for people who have already had a loan under the scheme and need another\n- **Widow or widower advance** — to help surviving partners keep up with repairs and rates on their property, where paying those costs would cause financial hardship\n- **Advance for essential repairs** — for eligible borrowers facing serious financial hardship who need critical repairs done\n- **Home support advance** — a smaller loan (up to $10,000) to help eligible people stay living independently in their home (e.g. for modifications or support-related costs)\n- **Assigned advance** — where the subsidy is channelled through the retirement village operator (the \"assignee\") on the eligible person's behalf, to help them access or stay in a **retirement village or granny flat**\n\nInterest rates are set by the Act and are well below commercial rates (e.g. 6.85% per year for most advances; only 3.75% for widow/widower advances). There is also a mechanism that **automatically reduces** the interest rate further if commercial benchmark rates fall below a certain level.\n\n---\n\n### How does it work in practice?\n\n1. An eligible person applies to the **Secretary** (of the relevant government department) for a **notice of eligibility** or a **certificate of entitlement**.\n2. With a certificate of entitlement, the person takes this to an approved lender (primarily **Westpac Banking Corporation**, under a formal agreement with the Commonwealth signed in 1988).\n3. The lender makes the loan, and the Commonwealth pays the lender a subsidy — the difference between the commercial rate and the subsidised rate.\n4. The subsidy can be **cancelled** if the person used the loan for the wrong purpose, made false statements, transferred the property without approval, or in certain other circumstances. Repayment of subsidy already paid may also be required.\n\n---\n\n### Property and legal protections\n\n- Eligible borrowers' homes **cannot be seized in bankruptcy** without the Secretary's approval — an important protection for vulnerable veterans.\n- Transfers of subsidised properties generally require the Secretary's approval and must be to another eligible person.\n- A dedicated **unjust transactions** framework (Part IIIA) lets borrowers, mortgagors (people who have given a mortgage as security), or guarantors apply to a court to have unfair loan contracts, mortgages, or guarantees reviewed and potentially set aside or varied.\n\n---\n\n### The Insurance Scheme\n\nThe Act maintains a **government insurance scheme** for:\n- Dwelling-houses wholly or partly owned by eligible recipients (current or former Defence Force or Peacekeeping Force members, or their widows/widowers)\n- Retirement village rights of residence held by eligible recipients\n\nThe Commonwealth can also act as an **agent for private insurers** (Part VIA).\n\nA dedicated **Defence Service Homes Insurance Account** (a special government account) holds premiums and pays claims. The Commonwealth's total liability is capped at the total value of the insurance assets in that account.\n\n---\n\n### Administration and oversight\n\n- The **Secretary** of the relevant department handles day-to-day administration, with powers to delegate.\n- **Reviewable decisions** (such as refusing a certificate of entitlement or cancelling a subsidy) can be internally reviewed, and then appealed to the **Administrative Review Tribunal**.\n- Annual reports must be prepared and tabled in Parliament.\n- Using the words \"War Service Homes\" or \"Defence Service Homes\" in a business name or advertisement without authority is a **strict liability offence** (meaning you can be convicted even without intending to break the law).\n\n---\n\n### Why does it matter?\n\nThis Act delivers a longstanding government commitment to help Australia's veterans and defence community access affordable home ownership. It provides **below-market interest rates, flexible loan types, bankruptcy protection, and home insurance** — a significant financial benefit for those who have served. The scheme is now largely administered through the Commonwealth's agreement with Westpac."},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"provider":"moonshot","completionTokens":3415},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has grown far beyond its original 1918 purpose of providing simple housing loans for returning WWI soldiers. It now encompasses a multi-layered scheme covering service in WWII, Korea, Malaya, and numerous later conflicts, as well as peacetime regular and national service. The scope expanded to include not just traditional home ownership but also retirement village accommodation, 'granny flats', home insurance, and complex assignment arrangements. The 1988 amendments fundamentally changed the delivery mechanism from a government corporation building and selling homes to a subsidy model administered through a private bank (Westpac)."},"complexity_factors":["Over 50 defined terms in section 4(1), many with nested sub-clauses (e.g., the definition of 'Australian Soldier' contains 10 lettered paragraphs with sub-paragraphs referring to operational areas in the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986).","Heavy reliance on external instruments not reproduced in the Act, particularly the 1988 'Bank agreement' with Westpac (referenced in sections 6B, 25, 35AA, etc.) and the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986.","Multiple, distinct categories of advances (initial, additional, further, widow/widower, essential repairs, home support, assigned), each with unique eligibility criteria (sections 18–21A) and interest rate rules (sections 31–35AAA).","Complex, formula-driven interest rate calculations in sections 35AA, 35AB, and 35AC, including 'blended interest rates', 'reduced Benchmark rates', and specific rounding instructions (0.005% rounded up).","Layered transitional provisions dealing with the 1988 transfer of the loan portfolio from the Defence Service Homes Corporation to the Bank (sections 6B, 6D, 38B) and the interaction with newer legislation like the Defence Home Ownership Assistance Scheme Act 2008 (section 24A).","Nested exceptions and carve-outs, such as section 4(2A) excluding certain auxiliary service members from the definition of 'Australian Soldier', which is then overridden by section 4(2AA) for WWII service.","Different rules apply based on historical cut-off dates (e.g., service before/after 14 May 1985, enlistment before/after 17 August 1977) affecting eligibility for regular servicemen (section 4AAA)."],"plain_english_summary":"This Act runs the **Defence Service Homes Scheme**, a federal program that helps veterans and current defence members buy, build, or keep a home by subsidising their mortgage interest payments.\n\n**How it works**\nThe government partners with banks (primarily Westpac, called \"the Bank\" in the Act) to offer **subsidised advances** (low-interest loans). The borrower pays a capped interest rate—usually **3.75%** (for widows/widowers) or **6.85%** per year—and the Commonwealth pays the bank the difference between that rate and the commercial rate. The Secretary of the Department of Veterans' Affairs issues **certificates of entitlement** that allow a person to apply for these loans.\n\n**Who is covered**\nThe definition of **\"Australian Soldier\"** is extremely broad and has expanded over a century. It now includes:\n*   Veterans of WWI, WWII, Korea, and Malaya;\n*   Members who served in specific post-1945 operational areas (e.g., Vietnam, Gulf War, East Timor);\n*   Regular servicemen and national servicemen (with specific service-length rules);\n*   Approved welfare workers who served with the forces;\n*   The **widows, widowers, and dependent parents** of eligible members who have died.\n\n**What the loans can be used for**\n*   Buying land or a dwelling-house;\n*   Building, repairing, or enlarging a home;\n*   Paying for **retirement village** accommodation or \"granny flats\" (including via an **assigned advance**, where the veteran assigns their entitlement to a retirement village operator);\n*   Essential repairs or home support for older veterans to remain independent;\n*   Special advances for widows/widowers to pay rates or maintenance.\n\n**Insurance**\nThe Act also establishes a **Defence Service Homes Insurance Scheme**, run by the Commonwealth, which insures the homes and contents of eligible recipients against fire and other risks.\n\n**History**\nOriginally enacted in 1918 to provide \"War Service Homes\" for returning WWI diggers, the Act has been repeatedly updated. In 1988, the government transferred most home loans to Westpac (the \"Bank agreement\"), while the Commonwealth retained responsibility for paying the interest subsidies and running the insurance fund."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act as presented incorporates substantive changes and later arrangements from its original form: it approves and incorporates a 1988 Bank agreement (section 4B), provides for vesting of portfolio assets in the Bank and consequential transfer mechanics (section 6B), and creates provisions for transfer of other assets to the Commonwealth on a winding‑up day (section 6D). The Act therefore extends its original administrative and financial architecture to include a named banking counterparty, a detailed subsidy regime tied to that agreement, and a Commonwealth insurance structure (Part VI) with a dedicated insurance account (sections 38, 40). These features alter the operational scope compared with a simple grant‑or‑loan statute by embedding long‑term contractual arrangements, vesting rules and insurance accounting mechanisms (see sections 4B, 6B, 6D, 38–41)."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive, technical definitions and cross‑references (section 4) that drive eligibility and scope","Dependence on an external Bank agreement and specified portfolio arrangements (sections 4B, 6B) with unamendable clauses (section 45)","Multiple distinct certificate types and administrative preconditions (sections 15–23A, 22(2))","Detailed, multi‑step interest‑rate calculations and caps (sections 31–35AC, 35AA) with interaction between provisions","Broad administrative discretion vested in the Secretary and Minister, plus many delegated instrument powers (sections 6, 6A, 4A, 38A)","Judicial and administrative review avenues alongside the power for courts to reopen transactions (Part IIIA and sections 43–44)","Transitional and vesting rules that transfer assets and liabilities between the Corporation, the Bank and the Commonwealth (sections 6B, 6D, 38B)","Insurance scheme with limited Commonwealth liability tied to a dedicated account and investment/interest rules (sections 38H, 40, 40A)","Prescriptive constraints on transfers, bankruptcy treatment and sale of interests that affect property market behaviour (sections 22, 45A)"],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and how it works (plain English)\n\n- What the law mechanically does\n  - It creates a federally‑run system that subsidises home loans, manages related portfolio assets, and runs an insurance scheme for certain homes and retirement‑village rights. The Commonwealth pays subsidy amounts to credit providers when those providers make or hold qualifying subsidised advances (loans) under certificates of entitlement issued by the Department (see sections 17 and 24). The Bank named in the Act (Westpac) and any credit provider that has an agreement with the Commonwealth are the principal intermediaries for these subsidised advances (see definitions and section 4B).\n  - The Act sets out detailed eligibility rules for who may obtain subsidy‑backed advances (many definitions in section 4 and the eligibility criteria in sections 18–21). It prescribes how certificates of entitlement, notices of eligibility and certificates of assignment are applied for and issued (section 15–17, 23A), and it controls transfers of property that are subject to subsidised advances or portfolio assets (section 22).\n  - The Act fixes interest rates, maximum loan terms and formulas that can reduce rates (parts V and sections 31–36, 35AA–35AC). It authorises the Secretary and the Minister to exercise significant administrative discretion (see sections 6, 6A, 4A, 26, 38A) and to make or approve guidelines and legislative instruments (see sections 21(3), 23(6), 38A(3)–(5)).\n  - It establishes a Commonwealth insurance scheme for dwelling‑houses and retirement‑village rights held by eligible recipients (Part VI, sections 38–38C) and restricts the Commonwealth’s total liability for that insurance to the assets in the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account (section 38H and Part VII, sections 40–41).\n\n- Who decides and who pays\n  - The Secretary of the Department administers the scheme day‑to‑day: issuing notices and certificates, determining eligibility, cancelling subsidy, and obtaining reports or valuations (see sections 16, 17, 22, 26, 46). The Minister has delegation and instrument‑making powers and may set policy statements for the insurance scheme (see sections 6, 6A, 38A).\n  - The Commonwealth (Consolidated Revenue Fund) pays subsidy amounts and certain related payments (see sections 24 and 41). The Act also creates the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account to receive premiums and make insurance payments (section 40).\n\n- Who is affected\n  - Eligible persons and eligible veterans (defined in section 4) and their spouses/de facto partners when treated together (section 4A) can apply for subsidised advances, certificates and insurance. Credit providers and the Bank (Westpac) are affected as recipients of subsidy and as parties to the Bank agreement (see section 4B and the definitions). Purchasers, borrowers, transferees and assignees dealing with property subject to subsidised advances or portfolio assets must follow the Act’s certificate and transfer rules (see section 22).\n\n- How behaviour and market choices are changed by the Act\n  - Borrowers/Applicants: they must apply in approved form and satisfy detailed eligibility and purpose tests before subsidy‑backed advances are issued (see sections 15–19, 21A). Transfers of property that are subject to a portfolio asset or mortgage generally require a Secretary’s certificate of entitlement for the transferee (section 22), limiting the free transferability of such interests without administrative consent.\n  - Credit providers/Bank: they are required to provide advances in accordance with certificates and the Bank agreement; they receive subsidies from the Commonwealth (section 24). The Act fixes or caps interest rates and contains rules that can reduce multi‑tiered or high rates (sections 31–35AC, 35AA), which alters lenders’ contractual terms for subsidised loans.\n  - The Secretary and courts: the Secretary has broad discretionary power to issue or cancel subsidy, set conditions and approve arrangements (sections 17, 22, 26). Courts are empowered to reopen transactions judged unjust under Part IIIA (sections 23AA–23F), which creates a legal route to vary or unwind contract terms found unjust in the relevant circumstances.\n\n- Administrative burden, discretion and review\n  - Administrative burden for applicants and credit providers is material: multiple distinct certificates (eligibility, entitlement, assignment, instalment relief), prescribed forms and documentary proof are required (sections 15–17, 23A, 23). The Secretary may require undertakings or actions before issuing certificates (section 22(2)).\n  - Bureaucratic discretion is concentrated in the Secretary (and in delegated officers): discretion to treat spouses/de facto partners together (section 4A), to cancel subsidy (section 26, 27, 27A), to set instalment relief (section 23), and to approve guidelines (sections 21(3), 23(6)).\n  - Internal review and external review rights exist: internal review by the Secretary (section 43) and further review to the Administrative Review Tribunal for persons (section 44). Courts have specific jurisdiction to reopen unjust transactions (Part IIIA).\n\n- Costs, incentives and trade‑offs (mechanisms, not policy conclusions)\n  - Benefit flow: subsidy payments go to credit providers when eligible advances are made or maintained (section 24). That creates a direct financial incentive for credit providers to participate under the Bank agreement or other agreements approved by the Commonwealth (section 4B and definition of “the agreement”).\n  - Fiscal cost: subsidy and certain payments are funded from the Consolidated Revenue Fund (section 41); insurance liabilities are limited to the assets in the Defence Service Homes Insurance Account (section 38H), which bounds the Commonwealth’s exposure to amounts on hand.\n  - Contract stability vs. corrective review: the Act fixes loan terms and interest calculations (sections 31–36, 35AA–35AC) to standardise treatment, but Part IIIA gives courts power to reopen and adjust transactions judged unjust (sections 23AA–23F). This creates a legal check on unfair terms at the expense of introducing potential post‑contractual litigation and administrative workload.\n  - Transferability and market liquidity: transfers of interests subject to subsidised advances or portfolio assets require Secretary consent by certificate (section 22), which restricts unencumbered sale or assignment without administrative approval; the Secretary can also cancel subsidy where transfers are arranged to non‑transferees (section 26(2)).\n\n- Implementation risks and compliance points to watch\n  - Cross‑reference complexity: the Act relies on an external Bank agreement, legislative instruments, and cross‑references to other Acts and schedules (see sections 4 (definitions), 4B, 6B, 38A). That requires coordinated contract and administrative compliance.\n  - Discretion concentrates decision power (Secretary/Minister) and requires transparent guidelines and recordkeeping because cancellations, conditions and eligibility decisions materially affect subsidy and loan pricing (sections 17, 22, 26, 23(6), 21(3)).\n\n(Primary statutory references: definitions and eligibility — section 4; certificates and applications — sections 15–23A; subsidy and payment — sections 24–30, 41; interest and terms — sections 31–37, 35AA–35AC; unjust transactions and remedies — Part IIIA (sections 23AA–23K); Bank agreement, vesting and transfers — sections 4B, 6B, 6C; insurance scheme — Part VI (sections 38–38H); administration and review — sections 6, 6A, 43–44.)"}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918","history":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918/history","analysis":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/defence-service-homes-act-1918/documents"}}