{"id":"industrial-magistrates-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005","name":"Industrial Magistrate's Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005","slug":"industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005","collection":"regulation","jurisdiction":"wa","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":176883,"registerId":"wa-industrial-magistrates-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Industrial Magistrate's Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005","content":"![Crest]()Western Australia\n\nIndustrial Relations Act 1979\n\nIndustrial Magistrate’s Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005\n\nWestern Australia\n\nIndustrial Magistrate’s Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005\n\nContents\n\nPart 1 — Preliminary\n\n1. Citation 1\n\n2. Commencement 1\n\n3. Application of these regulations 1\n\n4. Terms used 2\n\nPart 2 — Court’s functions generally\n\n5. Court’s duties in dealing with cases 5\n\n6. Court may act on its own initiative 5\n\n7. Court’s powers to control and manage cases 6\n\n8. Court’s powers to deal with default by party 8\n\n9. Procedural orders may be made conditional 8\n\n10. Use of experts 9\n\n11. Court’s power to order costs 9\n\n12. Court’s power to order payment of interest 9\n\nPart 3 — Making and responding to claims\n\n13. Making claim or counterclaim 11\n\n14. Response to claim 11\n\n15. Party may discontinue claim 12\n\nPart 4 — Pre‑trial conferences\n\n16A. Application of Part 13\n\n16. Listing a pre‑trial conference 13\n\n17. Pre‑trial conference, purpose of 13\n\n18. General duties and powers of clerk at pre‑trial conference 13\n\n19. Orders for proceedings in complex or exceptional cases 14\n\n20. Attendance at a pre‑trial conference 14\n\n21. Failure to comply with order 14\n\n22. Listing the case for further pre‑trial conference or trial 15\n\n23. Status of things said or done at pre‑trial conference 15\n\nPart 5 — Proceedings in exceptional or complex cases\n\nDivision 1 — Disclosure of documents\n\n24. Disclosing documents 16\n\n25. Objection to disclosure of documents 16\n\n26. Inspection of documents 17\n\n27. Production of documents at trial 17\n\nDivision 2 — Inspection of property\n\n28. Inspection of property 17\n\nDivision 3 — Answers to interrogatories\n\n29. Request for answers to interrogatories 18\n\n30. Party must answer interrogatories when ordered 18\n\n31. Objection to answering interrogatories 18\n\nDivision 4 — Invitation to admit an alleged fact\n\n32. Invitation to admit 19\n\n33. Response to invitation to admit 19\n\nPart 6 — Trial\n\nDivision 1 — General\n\n35A. Initial hearing for CIPPLSL cases 20\n\n35. Conduct of trial 20\n\n36. Attendance of parties at trial 21\n\nDivision 2 — Witnesses\n\n37. Issuing witness summons 21\n\n38. Witness summons may be set aside 22\n\n39. Producing evidentiary material before trial 22\n\nPart 7 — Orders and judgments\n\n40. Consent to orders or judgment 23\n\n41. Setting aside default judgment 23\n\nPart 8 — Lodging documents\n\n43. Meaning of lodge 24\n\n45. Documents may be lodged by hand delivery or pre‑paid post 24\n\n46. Certain documents may be lodged electronically 24\n\n47. Certain documents may be lodged by fax 26\n\n48. Court’s seal may be applied electronically 27\n\n49. Clerk’s refusal to accept documents 27\n\nPart 9 — Serving documents\n\nDivision 1 — General\n\n50. Meaning of serve 29\n\n51. Personal service 29\n\n52. Address for service and representative’s details 29\n\n53. Service of a document on a natural person 30\n\n54. Service of a document on a public authority that is not a corporation 31\n\n55. Service of a document on a corporation 31\n\n56. Affidavit of service 32\n\nDivision 2 — Service by email or fax\n\n57. Email and fax address for service 33\n\n58. Service of documents by email 34\n\n59. Service of documents by fax 34\n\n60. Time of service by email or fax 34\n\nPart 10 — Applications\n\n61. Making application 35\n\n62. Application must be served 35\n\nPart 11 — Persons under a legal disability\n\n63. Person under a legal disability, claims by or against 36\n\n64. Represented persons under the *Guardianship and Administration Act 1990* 36\n\n65. Court may appoint litigation guardian 36\n\n66. Clerk’s powers 37\n\n67. Settlement of claims by or against person under legal disability 37\n\nPart 12 — Miscellaneous\n\n68. Form of affidavit 38\n\n69. Availability of forms 38\n\n70. Fees for obtaining documents 38\n\n71. Requirements on parties may be carried out by certain persons 38\n\n72. Practice directions 39\n\n73. Review of a decision of the clerk 39\n\n74. Repeal and savings 39\n\nSchedule 1 — Fees\n\nDivision 1 — Lodgment fees\n\nDivision 2 — Fees for obtaining documents\n\nNotes\n\nCompilation table 42\n\nDefined terms\n\n  \n\nWestern Australia\n\nIndustrial Relations Act 1979\n\nIndustrial Magistrate’s Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005\n\n## Part 1 — Preliminary\n\n##### 1. Citation\n\nThese regulations are the *Industrial Magistrate’s Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005*.\n\n[Regulation 1 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 4.]\n\n##### 2. Commencement\n\nThese regulations come into operation on the day on which the *Courts Legislation Amendment and Repeal Act 2004* comes into operation.\n\n##### 3. Application of these regulations\n\n(1) Unless —\n\n(a) the court in a particular case orders otherwise; or\n\n(b) these regulations provide otherwise,\n\nthe practice and procedure provided for in these regulations applies in every case.\n\n[(2) deleted]\n\n[Regulation 3 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3684; SL 2022/100 r. 5.]\n\n##### 4. Terms used\n\nIn these regulations, unless the contrary intention appears —\n\n  application means an application made under Part 10;\n\n  case means any proceedings in the court involving or in connection with the court’s general jurisdiction as defined in section 81CA(1) of the Act;\n\n  Chief Magistrate means the Chief Magistrate appointed under the *Magistrates Court Act 2004* Schedule 1 clause 6(1) or a person who under Schedule 1 clause 8(2) of that Act is performing the functions of the Chief Magistrate;\n\nCILSLP Board means the Construction Industry Long Service Leave Payments Board established under the *Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985* section 5(1);\n\nCIPPLSL case means any proceedings in the court involving or in connection with the court’s jurisdiction under section 83E of the Act in respect of a provision of the *Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act 1985* that is specified to be a civil penalty provision;\n\n  claim means a claim made to the court by a party (whether a claimant, a defendant or another party);\n\n  claimant means a person who commences a case;\n\n  corporation has the meaning given in the *Corporations Act 2001* (Commonwealth) section 57A;\n\ncounterclaim means a claim made by a respondent against a claimant including a claim for set‑off;\n\ncourt means the industrial magistrate’s court;\n\ncourt‑approved form means a form approved by the Chief Magistrate for the purposes of the provision in which the term is used;\n\n  deal with includes to hear and determine;\n\n  default judgment means a judgment without trial given against a party for a failure by the party to comply with these regulations or an order made by the court, and includes a dismissal of a claim for want of service without consideration of its merits;\n\n  document means any record that is or is capable of being put on paper;\n\n  judgment includes an order under section 83E of the Act imposing a penalty;\n\n  lodge has a meaning affected by regulation 43;\n\n  officer, of a corporation, has the meaning given in the *Corporations Act 2001* (Commonwealth) section 9;\n\n  order includes a direction;\n\n  originating claim means a claim that commences a case;\n\n  party means a party to a case;\n\n  person under a legal disability means —\n\n(a) a person under 18 years of age; or\n\n(b) a represented person as defined by the *Guardianship and Administration Act 1990* section 3(1);\n\npractice direction has the meaning given in regulation 72;\n\n  pre‑trial conference means a conference held under Part 4;\n\n  public authority means an employing authority as defined in the *Public Sector Management Act 1994* section 5;\n\n  representative, in relation to a party, means the legal practitioner or agent representing the party;\n\nrespondent means a party against which a claim is made by the claimant;\n\n  response means a response made under regulation 14 to a claim;\n\n  serve has a meaning affected by regulation 50;\n\n  settle, in relation to a case, includes to accept an offer to consent to judgment, and to compromise;\n\n  working day means a day other than a Saturday, a Sunday or a public holiday.\n\n[Regulation 4 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3684; SL 2022/100 r. 6.]\n\n## Part 2 — Court’s functions generally\n\n##### 5. Court’s duties in dealing with cases\n\n(1) The court must ensure that cases are dealt with justly.\n\n(2) Ensuring that cases are dealt with justly includes ensuring —\n\n(a) that cases are dealt with efficiently, economically and expeditiously;\n\n(b) so far as is practicable, that the parties are on an equal footing; and\n\n(c) that the court’s judicial and administrative resources are used as efficiently as possible.\n\n[Regulation 5 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 7.]\n\n##### 6. Court may act on its own initiative\n\n(1) The court may exercise its powers on the application of a party or on its own initiative unless these regulations or another written law provides otherwise.\n\n(2) The court may make an order on its own initiative with or without —\n\n(a) allowing the parties to make submissions; or\n\n(b) hearing the parties.\n\n(3) If the court decides to allow the parties to make submissions before making an order on its own initiative, it must notify each party likely to be affected by the order of how and when the submissions must be made.\n\n(4) If the court decides to hear the parties before making an order on its own initiative, it must notify each party likely to be affected by the order of the time and place of the hearing.\n\n[Regulation 6 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 8.]\n\n##### 7. Court’s powers to control and manage cases\n\n(1) The court may do all or any of the following for the purposes of controlling and managing cases and trials —\n\n(a) extend the time for complying with any of these regulations, any practice direction, or any order made by the court (even if the time for complying has expired), or shorten it;\n\n(b) adjourn or bring forward a hearing to a specified date;\n\n(c) stay any case, either generally or until a specified date;\n\n(d) consolidate cases;\n\n(e) try 2 or more cases on the same occasion;\n\n(f) order any aspect of a case or a counterclaim in a case to be dealt with as a separate case;\n\n(g) order that particular issues be tried in a particular order;\n\n(h) order that an issue not be tried;\n\n(i) order that an issue be tried separately;\n\n(j) give judgment against a claim after a decision is made on a separate trial of a preliminary issue;\n\n(k) hold a hearing by audio link or video link (as those terms are defined in the *Evidence Act 1906* section 120);\n\n(l) allow a party to amend any document lodged by the party;\n\n(m) order a party to provide additional information to that in or attached to its claim, whether by disclosing or providing documents or by answering interrogatories;\n\n(n) order parties —\n\n(i) to exchange the written statements of the evidence that is anticipated will be given by witnesses;\n\n(ii) to confer, to attend before a clerk or other person or to take other measures, before trial, to try to settle the case or identify the issues that need to be tried;\n\n(iii) except in a CIPPLSL case, to attend before the court before trial to deal with case management, interlocutory and pre‑trial issues;\n\n(iv) to do anything that in the court’s opinion will or may facilitate the case being conducted and concluded efficiently, economically and expeditiously;\n\n(o) by order, limit —\n\n(i) the time a party has at trial to examine, cross‑examine or re‑examine a witness, or to make oral submissions, or to present its case;\n\n(ii) the number of witnesses (including expert witnesses) that may be called in relation to an issue;\n\n(iii) the length of a trial;\n\n(p) refuse to admit into evidence a document that a party has deliberately not disclosed or provided in accordance with these regulations;\n\n(q) as to expert witnesses —\n\n(i) order a party to disclose the nature and substance of the expert evidence to be given by any expert witness the party intends to call;\n\n(ii) order an expert witness to disclose the advice given to, and the work done in relation to the case of, the party that intends to call the expert witness;\n\n(iii) refuse to allow an expert witness to be called without the leave of the court;\n\n(iv) refuse to admit the evidence of an expert witness that has not been disclosed in accordance with these regulations or an order of the court;\n\n(r) take any other action or make any other order for the purpose of complying with regulation 5.\n\n(2) A power in this regulation to make an order includes a power to vary or cancel the order.\n\n[Regulation 7 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3684; SL 2022/100 r. 9.]\n\n##### 8. Court’s powers to deal with default by party\n\n(1) This regulation does not apply to a failure to comply with the judgment of the court in a case or any order made in or as a consequence of the judgment.\n\n(2) If a party does not comply with these regulations, or an order made by the court, the court may give default judgment against the party.\n\n(3A) Without limiting regulation 6, the court may exercise its powers under subregulation (2) on the application of a party or on its own initiative.\n\n(3) The court may set aside a default judgment and may do so on any conditions it thinks fit.\n\n[Regulation 8 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3685; SL 2022/100 r. 10.]\n\n##### 9. Procedural orders may be made conditional\n\n(1) When making an order under regulation 7 or 8 the court may order that the order will take effect unless the party complies with a particular regulation or order, within a particular time, as specified by the court.\n\n(2) The court may vary or cancel an order made under subregulation (1).\n\n[Regulation 9 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 11.]\n\n##### 10. Use of experts\n\n(1) The court, with or without the consent of the parties, may refer a question arising in a case to a person who is an expert in the relevant field for investigation and a report.\n\n(2) The expert has and may exercise any powers of the court that are delegated to experts by these regulations for the purposes of this regulation.\n\n(3) The court may adopt all or some of the expert’s report.\n\n(4) The *Magistrates Court Act 2004* section 37 applies to an expert in respect of the expert’s performance or purported performance of the functions of an expert under this regulation.\n\n[Regulation 10 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 12.]\n\n##### 11. Court’s power to order costs\n\nIn a case other than a case under section 77, 83, 83A, 83B or 83E of the Act, the court may order that costs be paid by a party if and only if, in the opinion of the court, the case has been frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended, as the case requires, by that party.\n\n[Regulation 11 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 13.]\n\n##### 12. Court’s power to order payment of interest\n\n(1) Except as provided in this regulation, if the court orders a party to pay a sum of money, the court may order the party to pay interest on the whole or any part of the sum —\n\n(a) for the whole or any part of the period from the date when the cause of case arose to the date when the order is made; and\n\n(b) at the rate prescribed under the *Civil Judgments Enforcement Act 2004* section 8(1)(a) for that period or part.\n\n(2) When the court orders a party to pay the total of the amounts that another party was entitled to be paid on different dates, the court may order interest to be paid on the total and if it does so it may calculate the interest as the court thinks fit.\n\n(3) This regulation does not authorise the ordering of interest to be paid on costs or any penalty other than a deemed penalty under section 83A of the Act.\n\n(4) Unless good cause is shown to the contrary, if the court orders a party to pay a sum of money under section 83A of the Act, the court must order the party to pay interest on the sum, at such rate as it thinks fit, from the date when the cause of case arose to the date when the order is made.\n\n(5) An order to pay interest under subregulation (4) may be expressed as an order to pay a lump sum.\n\n[Regulation 12 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 14.]\n\n## Part 3 — Making and responding to claims\n\n##### 13. Making claim or counterclaim\n\n(1) If a party wants to make a claim the party must lodge the court‑approved form.\n\n(2) An originating claim must be served within 30 days, or, if in a particular case the clerk so approves, 60 days, after the claim has been lodged.\n\n(3A) The originating claim in respect of a CIPPLSL case must not be served unless the clerk has recorded on the claim the date set for the initial hearing of the trial under regulation 35A.\n\n(3) A claim must be lodged and served together with the court‑approved form for making a response under regulation 14.\n\n(4) A counterclaim may be lodged and served at any time, unless the clerk at a pre‑trial conference has specified a time within which a counterclaim may be made, in which case the counterclaim must be made within that time.\n\n(5) Without limiting subregulation (4), if, at the initial hearing of a CIPPLSL case, the court specifies a time within which a counterclaim in the case may be made, the counterclaim must be made within that time.\n\n[Regulation 13 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3685; SL 2022/100 r. 15.]\n\n##### 14. Response to claim\n\n(1) Except in a CIPPLSL case, a party against which a claim is made must complete the response included with the claim served on the party, and lodge it —\n\n(a) if the party’s address for service is less than 1 000 km from the court’s registry, within 21 days after the service of the claim; and\n\n(b) if the party’s address for service is more than 1 000 km from the court’s registry, within 28 days after the service of the claim.\n\n(2) Except in a CIPPLSL case, the party must serve the response within 14 days after it has been lodged.\n\n(3A) A party against which a claim in a CIPPLSL case is made must —\n\n(a) complete the response included with the claim served on the party, and lodge it; and\n\n(b) after lodging the response, serve it,\n\nwithin 28 days after the service of the claim.\n\n(3) If a party wants to admit the whole or part of a claim made against the party, the party must do so in the response.\n\n(4) If the party admits the whole or part of the claim, the court may give judgment against the party for the whole of the claim or that part, as the case may be, without the need for an appearance by the parties before the court.\n\n[Regulation 14 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3685; SL 2022/100 r. 16.]\n\n##### 15. Party may discontinue claim\n\nIf a party wants to discontinue the whole or part of a claim made by the party it must lodge and serve a notice of discontinuance in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 15 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47.]\n\n## Part 4 — Pre‑trial conferences\n\n##### 16A. Application of Part\n\nThis Part does not apply to CIPPLSL cases.\n\n[Regulation 16A inserted: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3686.]\n\n##### 16. Listing a pre‑trial conference\n\nUnless the whole of an originating claim is admitted, a clerk must list the case for a pre‑trial conference as soon as practicable after a response has been lodged and notify the parties in writing.\n\n##### 17. Pre‑trial conference, purpose of\n\nThe purpose of a pre‑trial conference is —\n\n(a) to give the parties an opportunity to settle the case;\n\n(b) to enable the clerk to make certain orders, including orders in complex or exceptional cases under regulation 19; and\n\n(c) if the case cannot be settled, to list the case for trial.\n\n##### 18. General duties and powers of clerk at pre‑trial conference\n\n(1) The clerk at a pre‑trial conference must —\n\n(a) explain to an unrepresented party the practice and procedure of the court and direct the party to any information that may assist the party made available by the court or the department principally assisting the Minister in the administration of the Act;\n\n(b) assist the parties in any attempt to settle the case; and\n\n(c) specify a time (being the soonest practicable time) within which any counterclaim may be made.\n\n(2) The clerk at a pre‑trial conference may order the parties to lodge and serve on each other —\n\n(a) outlines of the parties’ respective cases in the court‑approved form and, if the clerk thinks it necessary, further and better particulars of those outlines;\n\n(b) copies of the statements of any witnesses who the parties intend to call at trial; or\n\n(c) copies of any records that the parties intend to use in evidence at trial.\n\n[Regulation 18 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 17.]\n\n##### 19. Orders for proceedings in complex or exceptional cases\n\n(1) The clerk at a pre‑trial conference may —\n\n(a) order that a party must provide additional information by disclosing documents relevant to the case;\n\n(b) order that a party must permit the inspection of real or personal property;\n\n(c) order that a party must provide additional information by answering interrogatories; or\n\n(d) order a party to reply to a notice to admit facts.\n\n(2) The clerk may give an order under subregulation (1) if the clerk is satisfied that, given the complexity or the exceptional nature of the case, the order is necessary for the just hearing and determination of the case.\n\n##### 20. Attendance at a pre‑trial conference\n\nA party must attend a pre‑trial conference in person.\n\n##### 21. Failure to comply with order\n\n(1) If a party fails to comply with an order of the clerk under this Part the clerk may, of the clerk’s own motion or on an application by a party, list the case before the court.\n\n(2) When the clerk lists a case before the court under subregulation (1) the clerk must notify the parties in writing.\n\n(3) For the purposes of the court exercising its powers under regulation 8, the order of the clerk is taken to be an order of the court.\n\n(4) This regulation does not apply to an order to reply to a notice to admit facts under regulation 19(1)(d).\n\n[Regulation 21 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 18.]\n\n##### 22. Listing the case for further pre‑trial conference or trial\n\nAfter a pre‑trial conference the clerk must either —\n\n(a) list the case for a further pre‑trial conference; or\n\n(b) list the case for trial,\n\nand notify the parties in writing.\n\n##### 23. Status of things said or done at pre‑trial conference\n\n(1) A pre‑trial conference must be conducted before the clerk, in private.\n\n(2) Anything said or done by a party for the purpose of attempting to settle a case at a pre‑trial conference is taken to be said or done without prejudice to any evidence or submission that the party —\n\n(a) has adduced or made; or\n\n(b) may subsequently adduce or make,\n\nin or in respect of the proceedings, and the saying or doing of that thing does not disqualify the clerk who conducted the pre‑trial conference from later dealing with the case.\n\n[Regulation 23 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 19.]\n\n## Part 5 — Proceedings in exceptional or complex cases\n\n### Division 1 — Disclosure of documents\n\n##### 24. Disclosing documents\n\n(1) Subject to any objection under regulation 25, when the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(a), the party must lodge and serve a list of the documents within the period ordered by the clerk.\n\n(2) Subject to any objection under regulation 25, if the party subsequently —\n\n(a) comes into possession; or\n\n(b) becomes aware that it is in possession,\n\nof further documents required to be disclosed under the clerk’s order, the party must, as soon as practicable after that, lodge and serve a list of those documents.\n\n(3) An order under regulation 19(1)(a) may require a party to provide the list of documents in an affidavit.\n\n(4) Unless the court orders otherwise, a document in the possession, custody or power of the party must not be used by the party as evidence in the trial of the case if it is not disclosed —\n\n(a) when the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(a), in the list of documents referred to in this regulation; or\n\n(b) otherwise before the listing of the case for trial.\n\n[Regulation 24 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n##### 25. Objection to disclosure of documents\n\nA party may object to the disclosure of a document if it —\n\n(a) is privileged from production; or\n\n(b) is inadmissible in evidence,\n\nunder these regulations or any other law.\n\n##### 26. Inspection of documents\n\n(1) If a party wants to inspect documents disclosed by another party it must serve the other party with a written request to inspect.\n\n(2) A party receiving a request for inspection must make the documents available for inspection within 14 days after the service of the request.\n\n(3) If asked to do so by the party which requested inspection, a party making documents available for inspection must also —\n\n(a) provide copies of the documents, at a reasonable cost, to the party which requested inspection; or\n\n(b) if the clerk so orders or the parties agree, permit the documents to be copied at another place by the party which requested inspection.\n\n##### 27. Production of documents at trial\n\nIf a party discloses a document, the party must have the document available at the trial.\n\n### Division 2 — Inspection of property\n\n##### 28. Inspection of property\n\nAn order under regulation 19(1)(b) may require a party to make the property available for —\n\n(a) inspection, whether during a particular process or not;\n\n(b) the taking of measurements or samples;\n\n(c) the conducting of experiments; and\n\n(d) the filming, videotaping or taking of photographs.\n\n### Division 3 — Answers to interrogatories\n\n##### 29. Request for answers to interrogatories\n\n(1) When the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(c) a party wanting to request answers to interrogatories may lodge and serve the request within the period ordered by the clerk.\n\n(2) The request for answers to interrogatories must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 29 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47.]\n\n##### 30. Party must answer interrogatories when ordered\n\n(1) Subject to any objection under regulation 31, when the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(c) and a request is lodged and served under regulation 29, the party receiving the request must lodge and serve the answers within the period ordered by the clerk.\n\n(2) The answers must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n(3) An order under regulation 19(1)(c) may require a party to provide the answers in an affidavit.\n\n[Regulation 30 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47.]\n\n##### 31. Objection to answering interrogatories\n\nA party may object to answering an interrogatory if the answer —\n\n(a) is irrelevant to the case;\n\n(b) is inadmissible in evidence under these regulations or any other law;\n\n(c) cannot practicably be disclosed;\n\n(d) is sought so as to harass or annoy, or to cause delay;\n\n(e) is frivolous, vexatious, scandalous or improper; or\n\n(f) is otherwise not genuinely required for the purposes of the case.\n\n### Division 4 — Invitation to admit an alleged fact\n\n##### 32. Invitation to admit\n\n(1) When the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(d) a party wanting to invite another party to admit a particular alleged fact may lodge and serve the invitation within the period ordered by the clerk.\n\n(2) The invitation to admit must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 32 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47.]\n\n##### 33. Response to invitation to admit\n\n(1) When the clerk gives an order under regulation 19(1)(d) and an invitation to admit is lodged and served under regulation 32, the party receiving the invitation must lodge and serve a response to the invitation within the period ordered by the clerk.\n\n(2) The response must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n(3) If a party fails to comply with subregulation (1), the fact is taken to be admitted unless the court orders otherwise.\n\n[Regulation 33 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47 and 48.]\n\n## Part 6 — Trial\n\n### Division 1 — General\n\n[**34.** Deleted: SL 2022/100 r. 20.]\n\n##### 35A. Initial hearing for CIPPLSL cases\n\n(1) At the initial hearing of a trial of a CIPPLSL case the court may do any or all of the following —\n\n(a) give directions as to how the material necessary to determine the trial must be presented;\n\n(b) give directions setting the date, time and length of time for the hearing of the trial;\n\n(c) set a final hearing date.\n\n(2) At the initial hearing the court may make any order that concludes the trial.\n\n[Regulation 35A inserted: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3686; amended: SL 2022/100 r. 21.]\n\n##### 35. Conduct of trial\n\n(1) A trial must be conducted in public unless the court is of the opinion that the interests of justice will be better served by conducting the trial in private.\n\n(2) The court may hear a trial at any time or place the court thinks fit.\n\n(3) The court may adjourn a trial to a fixed date as the court thinks fit.\n\n(4) Except as provided in these regulations, the court is not bound by the rules of evidence and may inform itself on any matter and in any manner as it thinks fit.\n\n[Regulation 35 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 22.]\n\n##### 36. Attendance of parties at trial\n\nUnless the court orders otherwise, a party must attend the trial in person.\n\n[Regulation 36 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n### Division 2 — Witnesses\n\n##### 37. Issuing witness summons\n\n(1) If a party wants to require a person to give evidence or to produce evidentiary material at a trial the party must lodge and serve on the person a witness summons in the court‑approved form at least 14 days before the first day of the trial.\n\n(2) The witness summons must be served personally.\n\n(3) At the time a witness is served with a witness summons, or at a reasonable time before the attendance date —\n\n(a) an amount that is likely to be sufficient to meet the reasonable expenses of attending the court must be tendered to the witness;\n\n(b) arrangements to enable the witness to attend the court must be made with the witness; or\n\n(c) the means to enable the witness to attend the court must be provided to the witness.\n\n(4) The party that lodges a witness summons must ensure that subregulation (3) is complied with.\n\n(5) The person who serves a witness with a witness summons must record how subregulation (3) was complied with on a copy of the witness summons.\n\n(6) If a copy of a witness summons contains information recorded in accordance with subregulation (5), the information is presumed to be true unless the contrary is proved.\n\n[Regulation 37 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 23.]\n\n##### 38. Witness summons may be set aside\n\n(1) A person summoned to give evidence or to produce evidentiary material at a trial may make an application to set aside the summons, and in that case Part 10 applies as if the person were a party to the case in question.\n\n(2) The court may set aside the witness summons if it is satisfied that —\n\n(a) the person does not have either evidence to give or evidentiary material to produce that is relevant to the case;\n\n(b) the person cannot be lawfully compelled to give any evidence or produce any evidentiary material to the court; or\n\n(c) there are other good reasons for doing so.\n\n[Regulation 38 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n##### 39. Producing evidentiary material before trial\n\nWhere a witness summons requires a person to produce evidentiary material but does not require the person to give evidence, the person may, instead of producing the material at the trial, deliver the material, and a written list describing the material, to the court at least 2 clear working days before the first day of the trial.\n\n[Regulation 39 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n## Part 7 — Orders and judgments\n\n##### 40. Consent to orders or judgment\n\n(1) The parties may settle a case or consent to any other order by lodging a memorandum to that effect in the court‑approved form signed by each party.\n\n(2) The court may give judgment or make an order in accordance with the memorandum of consent without the need for an appearance by the parties before the court.\n\n(3) Where the Act or these regulations require the consent of one party before something can be done, that consent may be given by the party lodging a notice of consent to that effect in the court‑approved form signed by the party.\n\n[Regulation 40 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 24.]\n\n##### 41. Setting aside default judgment\n\n(1) When the court gives a default judgment, the party may, within 14 days after the judgment was given, make an application for the judgment to be set aside.\n\n(2) When the court sets aside the judgment in relation to a case other than a CIPPLSL case it must list the case for a pre‑trial conference and notify the parties in writing.\n\n(3) When the court sets aside the judgment in relation to a CIPPLSL case it must list the case for hearing and notify the parties in writing.\n\n[Regulation 41 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3686; SL 2022/100 r. 25.]\n\n[**42.** Deleted: SL 2022/100 r. 26.]\n\n## Part 8 — Lodging documents\n\n##### 43. Meaning of lodge\n\nIn order to lodge a document a person must lodge it with the court in accordance with this Part together with any fee specified in Schedule 1 Division 1.\n\n[Regulation 43 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 27.]\n\n[**44.** Deleted: SL 2022/100 r. 28.]\n\n##### 45. Documents may be lodged by hand delivery or pre‑paid post\n\n(1) A party may lodge a document by delivering the document to the court’s registry by hand delivery or by pre‑paid post.\n\n(2) A party lodging a document under this regulation must, at the same time also lodge —\n\n(a) a copy to be returned to the party; and\n\n(b) if these regulations require the document to be served, a copy for each other party to be served.\n\n[Regulation 45 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 29.]\n\n##### 46. Certain documents may be lodged electronically\n\n(1) This regulation does not apply to lodging a document by fax.\n\n(2) The clerk must publish a website for the court.\n\n(3) Subject to the requirements of the court’s website and this regulation, a party may lodge a document electronically by lodging an electronic version of it by means of the court’s website.\n\n(4) If these regulations require a document to be signed by a person who is not, or who is not acting on behalf of, the party lodging it, the document cannot be lodged electronically unless it is an affidavit.\n\n(5) If these regulations require a document, before it is lodged, to be signed by or on behalf of the party lodging it and the document is being lodged electronically —\n\n(a) the document need not be signed; and\n\n(b) the party lodging the document electronically must ensure that the electronic version of the document, instead of showing a signature at any place where a signature is required, states the name of the person whose signature is required at the place.\n\n(6) A party which lodges an affidavit electronically must —\n\n(a) ensure that the electronic version of it, instead of showing a signature at any place where a signature appears in the paper version, states the name of the person whose signature it is; and\n\n(b) also lodge an undertaking that the party —\n\n(i) has possession of the paper version signed according to law; and\n\n(ii) will retain the paper version subject to any order of the court.\n\n(7) A document lodged electronically with the court is taken to have been lodged —\n\n(a) if the whole document is received before 4.00 p.m. on a day when the court’s registry is open for business, on that day;\n\n(b) otherwise, on the next day when the court’s registry is open for business.\n\n(8) A document that is sent electronically to the court but not in accordance with the requirements of the court’s website and this regulation is taken not to have been lodged with the court.\n\n[Regulation 46 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 30.]\n\n##### 47. Certain documents may be lodged by fax\n\n(1) Subject to this regulation, a document may be lodged by fax if it is a document that may be lodged without the payment of a fee specified in Schedule 1.\n\n(2) The court must publish a fax number for its registry.\n\n(3) A party wanting to lodge a document by fax must use the published fax number for the court’s registry.\n\n(4) A document that, with any attachments and a cover sheet, is more than 20 pages long, must not be lodged by fax and any such document received by the court is taken not to have been lodged.\n\n(5) A document that is sent by fax to the court must have a cover sheet stating —\n\n(a) the sender’s name, postal address, document exchange number (if any), telephone number and fax number;\n\n(b) the number of pages (including the cover sheet) being sent by fax; and\n\n(c) what the court is to do with the document.\n\n(6) A party which lodges a document by fax must —\n\n(a) endorse the first page of the original document with —\n\n(i) a statement that the document is the original of a document sent by fax; and\n\n(ii) the date and time the document was sent by fax;\n\n(b) keep the endorsed original document and the fax machine’s report evidencing the successful transmission of the document; and\n\n(c) if directed to do so by the court, produce the items in paragraph (b) to the court.\n\n(7) A document lodged by fax with the court is taken to have been lodged —\n\n(a) if the whole document is received before 4.00 p.m. on a day when the court’s registry is open for business, on that day;\n\n(b) otherwise, on the next day when the court’s registry is open for business.\n\n(8) A document that is sent by fax to the court is taken not to have been lodged with the court if —\n\n(a) it is not sent in accordance with the requirements of this regulation; or\n\n(b) if the document is completely or partly illegible or if any of the details on the cover sheet required under subregulation (5) are illegible.\n\n[Regulation 47 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 31.]\n\n##### 48. Court’s seal may be applied electronically\n\nIf the court issues a document in an electronic form that bears a digital version of the court’s seal, the sealed document as it appears electronically, or as it appears when printed on paper, is taken to have the same effect as if the court’s seal had been lawfully applied to it by hand by an officer of the court, unless there is evidence that the document was not issued by the court.\n\n[Regulation 48 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 32.]\n\n##### 49. Clerk’s refusal to accept documents\n\n(1) If a clerk refuses to accept a document delivered or sent to the court then the document is taken not to have been lodged.\n\n(2) If a clerk refuses to accept a document that was sent to the court electronically or by fax, the court must give to the party notice of the refusal.\n\n(3) In an application under the *Magistrates Court Act 2004* section 17(3) for leave to lodge an originating claim, the party wanting to lodge the claim is taken to be a party to a case for the purposes of making the application.\n\n[Regulation 49 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 33.]\n\n## Part 9 — Serving documents\n\n### Division 1 — General\n\n##### 50. Meaning of serve\n\nIf these regulations require a party to serve a document —\n\n(a) the party must serve a copy of the document returned after lodgment bearing the seal of the court; and\n\n(b) unless the regulations provide otherwise, the party must serve it on each other party.\n\n[Regulation 50 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n##### 51. Personal service\n\nWhere these regulations require a person or body to be served personally, the person or body must be served —\n\n(a) in the case of a natural person, in accordance with regulation 53(2);\n\n(b) in the case of a public authority that is not a corporation, by delivering the document in accordance with regulation 54(2);\n\n(c) in the case of a corporation, in accordance with regulation 55(2).\n\n##### 52. Address for service and representative’s details\n\n(1) A document lodged in relation to a case must contain an address for service.\n\n(2) A document lodged in relation to a case by a representative of a party must contain the name, address and telephone number of the representative.\n\n(3) If the address for service or any of the representative’s details change after the lodgment of documents in relation to the case, the party must lodge and serve a notice of change of address or details as soon as practicable after the change.\n\n(4) The notice of change of address or details must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 52 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 34.]\n\n##### 53. Service of a document on a natural person\n\n(1) Except as provided in regulation 54, if a party wants to serve a document on a natural person the party must do so in accordance with this regulation.\n\n(2) A document may be served by delivering it to the person personally.\n\n(3) Any document except a witness summons may be served —\n\n(a) if an address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1), by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post, to that address; or\n\n(b) if no address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1) —\n\n(i) by leaving it at the person’s usual or last known place of residence with a person who, on reasonable grounds, is believed to be over the age of 16 years; or\n\n(ii) if the person is the principal of a business, by leaving it at the person’s usual or last known place of business with a person who, on reasonable grounds, is believed to be in charge of the business;\n\nor\n\n(c) in a CIPPLSL case, by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post, to the person’s address last known to the CILSLP Board.\n\n(4) A document may be served on the person by email or fax under Division 2.\n\n[Regulation 53 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3687; SL 2022/100 r. 35.]\n\n##### 54. Service of a document on a public authority that is not a corporation\n\n(1) If a party wants to serve a document on a public authority that is not a corporation the party must do so in accordance with this regulation.\n\n(2) A document may be served —\n\n(a) if an address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1), by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post, to that address; or\n\n(b) if no address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1), by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post to the office of the public authority; or\n\n(c) in a CIPPLSL case, if no address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1), by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post, to the public authority’s address last known to the CILSLP Board.\n\n(3) A document may be served by email or fax under Division 2.\n\n[Regulation 54 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3687; SL 2022/100 r. 36.]\n\n##### 55. Service of a document on a corporation\n\n(1) Except as provided in the Act section 60, if a party wants to serve a document on a corporation the party must do so in accordance with this regulation.\n\n(2) A document may be served by delivering it to a person who, on reasonable grounds, is believed to be a director, manager or secretary of the corporation.\n\n(3) A document may be served —\n\n(a) if an address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1), by delivering it, or sending it by pre‑paid post, to that address; or\n\n(b) if an address has not been provided under regulation 52(1), to the party’s usual or last known place of residence or principal or last known place of business, as the case may be; —\n\n(i) no address for service has been provided under regulation 52(1); and\n\n(ii) on a reasonable inquiry, a director, manager or secretary cannot be found,\n\nby leaving it at the body’s principal place of business or registered office in the State with a person who, on reasonable grounds, is believed to be over the age of 16 years and employed by the corporation; or\n\n(c) in accordance with the *Corporations Act 2001* (Commonwealth) section 109X if the corporation is a company within the meaning of that Act.\n\n(4) A document may be served by email or fax under Division 2.\n\n[Regulation 55 amended: Gazette 31 Jul 2012 p. 3687.]\n\n##### 56. Affidavit of service\n\n(1) If a document is served by a party, or on behalf of a party by a person, the party must lodge an affidavit of service completed by the person who served the document.\n\n(2) The affidavit of service must state when, where, how and by whom service was effected.\n\n### Division 2 — Service by email or fax\n\n##### 57. Email and fax address for service\n\n(1) For the purposes of enabling the service of documents by email, a party may, in addition to providing an address for service in accordance with regulation 52, provide an email address operating at that address.\n\n(2) For the purposes of enabling the service of documents by fax, a party may, in addition to providing an address for service in accordance with regulation 52, provide a fax number operating at that address.\n\n(3) If a representative of a party practises in a business with one or more other representatives or people —\n\n(a) any email address provided by the representative under subregulation (1) must be the email address of the business and not that of the representative personally; and\n\n(b) any fax number provided by the representative of the party under subregulation (2) must be the fax number of the business and not that of the representative personally.\n\n(4) A party which under this regulation provides an email address or a fax number is taken to have consented to being served with documents by email at that email address or by fax at that fax number.\n\n(5) If a party’s email or fax address for service changes after the email or fax lodgment of documents in relation to a case, the party must by email or fax respectively lodge and serve a notice of change of address as soon as practicable after the address changes.\n\n(6) The notice of change of email or fax address must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 57 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 37.]\n\n##### 58. Service of documents by email\n\n(1) Except as provided in subregulation (2) if a party has provided an email address under regulation 57(1), the party may be served by sending the document by email to that address.\n\n(2) If these regulations require a document to be signed by a person who is not, or who is not acting on behalf of, the party lodging it, the document cannot be served by email unless it is an affidavit.\n\n(3) Regulation 46(5) and (6), with any necessary changes, apply to a document being served by email in the same way as they apply to a document being lodged electronically.\n\n##### 59. Service of documents by fax\n\n(1) If a party has provided a fax number under regulation 57(2), the party may be served by sending the document by fax to that number.\n\n(2) Regulation 47(5)(a) and (b) and (6), with any necessary changes, apply to a document being served by fax in the same way as they apply to a document being lodged by fax.\n\n##### 60. Time of service by email or fax\n\nA document that is served by email or fax on a party is taken to have been served —\n\n(a) if the whole document is sent before 5.00 p.m. on a working day, on that day;\n\n(b) otherwise, on the next working day.\n\n[Regulation 60 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 38.]\n\n## Part 10 — Applications\n\n##### 61. Making application\n\n(1) If a party wants to make an application for an order of the court other than —\n\n(a) a judgment after trial; or\n\n(b) an order made in or as a consequence of a judgment not being an order to set aside a default judgment,\n\nthe party must lodge the court‑approved form unless the court gives leave under subregulation (3).\n\n(2) The application must be lodged together with a supporting affidavit.\n\n(3) A party may, with the leave of the court, make an application orally at any hearing.\n\n[Regulation 61 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 39.]\n\n##### 62. Application must be served\n\n(1) Except as provided in subregulation (2), a party making a written application must serve a copy of the application and any supporting affidavit on every other party after it has been lodged and at least 2 clear working days before the hearing of the application.\n\n(2) Subregulation (1) does not apply if these regulations state that the application may be dealt with in the absence of the respondent to the application.\n\n## Part 11 — Persons under a legal disability\n\n##### 63. Person under a legal disability, claims by or against\n\nExcept as provided in this Part, a person under a legal disability may conduct a case in the person’s own right.\n\n##### 64. Represented persons under the *Guardianship and Administration Act 1990*\n\n(1) If the person under a legal disability is a represented person as defined by the *Guardianship and Administration Act 1990* section 3(1) and the relevant guardianship or administration order —\n\n(a) is plenary; or\n\n(b) otherwise confers on the guardian or administrator the function of conducting or settling legal proceedings on behalf of the person,\n\nthen the guardian or administrator must conduct the case on behalf of the person.\n\n(2) If a party to a case is not a represented person under the *Guardianship and Administration Act 1990* but the court suspects on reasonable grounds that the party may be in need of a guardian or administrator under that Act, the court may —\n\n(a) request the Public Advocate to investigate whether the party is in such need; and\n\n(b) adjourn the case until the court is advised by the Public Advocate of the result of the investigation.\n\n[Regulation 64 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 40.]\n\n##### 65. Court may appoint litigation guardian\n\n(1) Except as provided in regulation 64 and subregulation (2), if the court is of the opinion that a person under a legal disability is not competent to conduct a case in the person’s own right, the court must appoint a litigation guardian to conduct the case on the party’s behalf.\n\n(2) The court must not make the appointment unless the proposed litigation guardian —\n\n(a) has been informed of a litigation guardian’s liability under subregulation (3); and\n\n(b) has agreed to act in that capacity.\n\n(3) The litigation guardian is liable to pay any costs ordered by the court to be paid by the person under a legal disability.\n\n[Regulation 65 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 41.]\n\n##### 66. Clerk’s powers\n\nA clerk may exercise the powers of the court under regulations 64(2) and 65.\n\n[Regulation 66 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 42.]\n\n##### 67. Settlement of claims by or against person under legal disability\n\n(1) The settlement of a case in which there is a claim by or against a person under a legal disability is not valid unless the court approves it.\n\n(2) The court may approve such a settlement and may do so on any reasonable and necessary terms.\n\n[Regulation 67 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 43.]\n\n## Part 12 — Miscellaneous\n\n##### 68. Form of affidavit\n\nAn affidavit must be in the court‑approved form.\n\n[Regulation 68 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 47.]\n\n##### 69. Availability of forms\n\nThe court must make court‑approved forms available —\n\n(a) at the court’s registry;\n\n(b) on request, by post; and\n\n(c) electronically, on the website referred to in regulation 46(2).\n\n[Regulation 69 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 44.]\n\n##### 70. Fees for obtaining documents\n\nA person who wants to obtain a document from the court must pay the fee set out opposite the document in Schedule 1 Division 2.\n\n[Regulation 70 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 48.]\n\n##### 71. Requirements on parties may be carried out by certain persons\n\n(1) In this regulation —\n\n  party includes a litigation guardian conducting a case on behalf of a party who is a person under a legal disability.\n\n(2) When under these regulations a party is required or enabled to sign a document, attend a conference or hearing, or do something else personally and —\n\n(a) the party is a corporation — then an officer of the corporation who is authorised by the corporation to do the thing may do it;\n\n(b) the party is a public authority that is not a corporation —then an officer of the public authority who is authorised by the public authority to do the thing may do it.\n\n##### 72. Practice directions\n\nThe Chief Magistrate from time to time may issue, amend or cancel directions (a practice direction) about the practice or procedure to be followed in the court and its registry.\n\n[Regulation 72 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 45.]\n\n##### 73. Review of a decision of the clerk\n\n(1) If a party objects to a decision of the clerk under these regulations, the party may, within 5 working days after the decision, make an application for a review of the decision.\n\n(2) The court may hear an application under subregulation (1) in the absence of another party.\n\n(3) The court may affirm, vary or set aside the decision as the court considers necessary for the just and expeditious hearing and determination of the case.\n\n[Regulation 73 amended: SL 2022/100 r. 46.]\n\n##### 74. Repeal and savings\n\n(1) The *Industrial Magistrates’ Courts (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2000* are repealed.\n\n(2) Subject to subregulation (3), an action under the repealed regulations subsisting immediately before the commencement day may be continued as if the repealed regulations had not been repealed.\n\n(3) A final order under the repealed regulations is enforceable as if it were a judgment under these regulations, whether the order was made before or after the commencement day.\n\n(4) In this regulation —\n\ncommencement day means the day on which these regulations come into operation;\n\nrepealed regulations means the regulations repealed by subregulation (1).\n\nSchedule 1 — Fees\n\n[r. 43 and 70]\n\nDivision 1 — Lodgment fees\n\n| **Document** | **Fee** |\n| --- | --- |\n| Claim | $40.00 |\n| Application | $10.00 |\n| Witness summons | $6.00 |\n| Any other document | $5.00 |\n\n\nDivision 2 — Fees for obtaining documents\n\n| **Document** | **Fee** |\n| --- | --- |\n| Photocopy of a document | $1.00 per page |\n| Transcript of a hearing | $4.00 for the first page and $1.00 per subsequent page, subject to a minimum of $13.00 per transcript |\n\n\n![]()\n\nNotes\n\nThis is a compilation of the *Industrial Magistrates Courts (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005* and includes amendments made by other written laws. For provisions that have come into operation see the compilation table.\n\nCompilation table\n\n| **Citation** | **Published** | **Commencement** |\n| --- | --- | --- |\n| *Industrial Magistrates Courts (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005* | 15 Apr 2005 p. 1231-74 | 1 May 2005 (see r. 2 and Gazette 31 Dec 2004 p. 7128) |\n| *Industrial Magistrates Courts (General Jurisdiction) Amendment Regulations 2012* | 31 Jul 2012 p. 3683‑7 | r. 1 and 2: 31 Jul 2012 (see r. 2(a));   Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 1 Aug 2012 (see r. 2(b)) |\n| *Industrial Relations Regulations (Consequential Amendments) Regulations 2022* Pt. 2 | SL 2022/100 17 Jun 2022 | 20 Jun 2022 (see r. 2(b)) |\n\n\nDefined terms\n\n*[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]*\n\n**Defined term Provision(s)**\n\napplication 4\n\ncase 4\n\nChief Magistrate 4\n\nCILSLP Board 4\n\nCIPPLSL case 4\n\nclaim 4\n\nclaimant 4\n\ncommencement day 74(4)\n\ncorporation 4\n\ncounterclaim 4\n\ncourt 4\n\ncourt-approved form 4\n\ndeal with 4\n\ndefault judgment 4\n\ndocument 4\n\njudgment 4\n\nlodge 4\n\nofficer 4\n\norder 4\n\noriginating claim 4\n\nparty 4, 71(1)\n\nperson under a legal disability 4\n\npractice direction 4, 72\n\npre-trial conference 4\n\npublic authority 4\n\nrepealed regulations 74(4)\n\nrepresentative 4\n\nrespondent 4\n\nresponse 4\n\nserve 4\n\nsettle 4\n\nworking day 4\n","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":1,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Scope cannot be assessed — no legislative text was retrievable from the provided source. The page returned only a website error and acknowledgement of country statement."},"complexity_factors":["No legislative content was provided — the source URL returned a 'page not found' error message rather than the actual legislation","Unable to assess any legal complexity as the document text is entirely absent","Score of 1 reflects the absence of content, not simplicity of the underlying law"],"plain_english_summary":"**No legislation content could be retrieved.**\n\nThe page that was supposed to contain the *Industrial Magistrate's Court (General Jurisdiction) Regulations 2005* (a Western Australian law) is no longer available on the website. The link has broken, likely due to a website system upgrade.\n\n**What this means for you:** No analysis of this law is possible from the provided source. To find the actual regulations, try:\n- Visiting the [Western Australian Legislation website](https://www.legislation.wa.gov.au) directly\n- Searching for the title using the site's menu or search function\n- Contacting the Parliamentary Counsel's Office Helpdesk as suggested on the error page"},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[],"contradictions":[]},"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"A positive credit balance is required for all requests, including BYOK, so fallback providers remain available. Add credits at https://vercel.com/d?to=%2F%5Bteam%5D%2F%7E%2Fai%3Fmodal%3Dtop-up to continue.","source":"analysis-cron"},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has grown beyond simple procedural rules for industrial matters. The 2012 and 2022 amendments introduced a distinct procedural track for CIPPLSL cases (Construction Industry Portable Paid Long Service Leave Act cases), which are essentially civil penalty proceedings with their own case management rules (initial hearings, no pre-trial conferences). The regulations also now encompass sophisticated electronic document management systems (web lodgment, digital seals, email service) that go well beyond traditional court procedures. Additionally, the scope has expanded to cover general civil jurisdiction broadly, not just traditional industrial relations matters, reflecting the court's evolution into a more generalist civil jurisdiction."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple overlapping procedural tracks: standard cases, CIPPLSL cases (Construction Industry Long Service Leave), and complex/exceptional cases each with different rules","Extensive cross-referencing between regulations (e.g., regulation 19 orders triggering specific procedures in Part 5)","Conditional logic throughout: distance-based time limits (1000km threshold), electronic vs paper filing conditions, conditional orders under regulation 9","21 defined terms in regulation 4, including nested definitions (e.g., 'person under legal disability' incorporates definitions from other Acts)","Multiple amendment layers visible in the text (Gazette 2012, SL 2022/100) creating fragmented reading experience with deleted regulations and inserted provisions","Technical requirements for electronic and fax lodgment (regulations 46-47) with specific page limits, cover sheet requirements, and time-of-day cutoffs (4:00pm)","Exceptions to general rules: CIPPLSL cases exempt from pre-trial conferences (regulation 16A) but have special initial hearing requirements (regulation 35A)","Interaction with multiple external statutes: Industrial Relations Act 1979, Magistrates Court Act 2004, Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), Guardianship and Administration Act 1990, Evidence Act 1906, Civil Judgments Enforcement Act 2004"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this legislation does:**\n\nThese regulations set out the **rules of procedure** for the Industrial Magistrate's Court in Western Australia when it exercises its **general jurisdiction** (handling civil disputes, not just industrial matters). Think of it as the 'instruction manual' for how to run a court case in this specific court.\n\n**Who it affects:**\n\n*   **Parties to disputes** – anyone bringing a claim (claimants) or defending one (respondents) in the Industrial Magistrate's Court.\n*   **Legal representatives** – lawyers and agents acting for parties.\n*   **Court staff** – clerks who manage pre-trial conferences and administrative processes.\n*   **Specific groups** – includes special rules for cases involving the Construction Industry Long Service Leave Payments Board (CIPPLSL cases) and people under legal disability (minors or those with guardians).\n\n**Key things it covers:**\n\n*   **Starting a case** – how to lodge claims and responses, time limits (21 or 28 days depending on distance), and serving documents on the other side.\n*   **Pre-trial conferences** – mandatory settlement conferences managed by court clerks to try to resolve disputes before trial (except for CIPPLSL cases).\n*   **Case management** – the court's extensive powers to control proceedings: ordering document disclosure, witness statements, limiting trial time, appointing experts, and holding hearings by video link.\n*   **Trials** – how trials are conducted, witness summonses, and the fact that the court isn't strictly bound by normal evidence rules.\n*   **Special procedures for complex cases** – extra steps like document inspection, interrogatories (written questions), and requests to admit facts.\n*   **Electronic lodgment** – rules for filing documents via the court website, fax, or email, including digital signatures and electronic seals.\n*   **Service of documents** – detailed rules on how to formally deliver court papers to individuals, corporations, and government bodies, including by email and fax.\n*   **Costs and interest** – limited power to award costs only in 'frivolous or vexatious' cases, and rules for interest on money judgments.\n\n**Why it matters:**\n\nThese regulations ensure that disputes are handled **efficiently, economically and fairly** (regulation 5). They give the court strong 'case management' powers to prevent cases from dragging on, while providing clear steps for people to follow. The inclusion of electronic lodgment and service reflects modern court practice, and the special provisions for CIPPLSL cases show how specific industry schemes are integrated into the court's processes."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":5,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"These regulations replace the 2000 Industrial Magistrates’ Courts (General Jurisdiction) Regulations (reg 74(1)) and set out an updated procedural framework. Key scope changes introduced by this instrument include: (a) explicit electronic lodgment and service procedures and website reliance with technical form and affidavit undertakings (reg 46(2)–(8), regs 57–60); (b) distinct procedural treatment for CIPPLSL cases, including exclusion from Part 4 pre‑trial conference rules and special initial hearing directions (definition reg 4; reg 16A; regs 13(3A), 14(3A), 35A, 41(3)); (c) broadened clerical case‑management powers to order disclosure, inspection, interrogatories and admissions in complex or exceptional cases (regs 18–19); and (d) updated lodging, fax and service regimes with specific form, timing and evidence rules (regs 45–49, 47). The instrument preserves continuity for existing actions (savings in reg 74(2)–(3)) while establishing these newer procedural mechanisms."},"complexity_factors":["Large number of procedural steps with strict time limits for lodging, serving and responding to claims (regs 13–15, 29–33, 61–62).","Distinct rules and carve‑outs for CIPPLSL cases across multiple provisions (definition reg 4; regs 16A, 13(3A), 14(3A), 35A, 41(3)).","Significant delegated discretion to clerks and the court to make pre‑trial and case management orders (regs 6, 7, 18, 19, 66, 72).","Multiple modes of electronic and physical lodgment and service, each with technical and evidentiary requirements and time‑of‑service rules (regs 45–48, 57–60).","Disclosure and discovery‑style procedures (lists of documents, inspection, interrogatories, admissions) with objections and sanctions for non‑compliance (Part 5, regs 24–33, 7(p)).","Interlocking rules on costs and interest with exemptions for certain statutory jurisdictions (regs 11–12).","Special rules protecting persons under legal disability and litigation guardian liability (regs 63–67)."],"plain_english_summary":"# What these regulations do (mechanical changes)\n\nThese regulations set the court procedures for the Industrial Magistrate’s Court when it deals with matters in its general jurisdiction under the Industrial Relations Act 1979. They prescribe how claims are started and responded to, how pre‑trial conferences and trials are run, rules about disclosure and witnesses, how documents are lodged and served (including electronic and fax options), fees for lodging and obtaining documents, and the powers of the court and its clerks to manage cases. The instrument also repeals the earlier 2000 regulations and contains savings for proceedings already under way (reg 74).\n\nKey mechanical features to note:\n- Filing and forms: claims, counterclaims, applications, responses and affidavits must be lodged on court‑approved forms and within specified time limits (regs 13–15, 61, 68) and a lodgment fee is payable (reg 43; Schedule 1). \n- Pre‑trial case management: clerks must list most matters for a pre‑trial conference and may make a range of orders to narrow issues or require disclosure, inspection, interrogatories or admissions in complex or exceptional cases (Part 4, regs 16–23; reg 19). Part 4 does not apply to CIPPLSL cases (reg 16A). \n- Court and clerk powers: the court and clerks have wide powers to extend or shorten time, adjourn or bring forward hearings, consolidate cases, order separate trials on issues, limit witnesses and trial length, and take other management steps to meet the duty to deal with cases justly and efficiently (regs 5–9, 7, 18, 19). The court may act on its own initiative (reg 6). \n- Disclosure procedures: where ordered, parties must disclose documents, permit inspection of property, answer interrogatories and respond to invitations to admit facts; non‑disclosure can prevent use of a document at trial (Part 5, regs 24–33). \n- Trials and witnesses: trials are public unless the court orders otherwise; the court is not bound by the rules of evidence (reg 35). Witness summonses must be personally served and the party summoning must tender reasonable attendance expenses (reg 37). \n- Orders about costs and interest: costs can be ordered only where the court finds a case was frivolously or vexatiously instituted or defended (reg 11); the court may order interest on monetary orders generally (reg 12). \n- Electronic and fax processes: the court must maintain a website for electronic lodgment; rules set how electronic lodgment and service by email or fax operate, including time‑of‑service rules, limits on fax length and special requirements for electronic affidavits (regs 46–48, 57–60). \n- Who decides and who pays: the court (and delegated clerks) make procedural and case management decisions (regs 6, 18, 19, 66, 72). Parties pay lodgment fees and fees for obtaining documents (reg 43; Schedule 1). A litigation guardian who conducts a matter for an incapacitated person is liable for costs ordered against that person (reg 65(3)).\n\n# Official purpose‑claims and how the instrument implements them\n\nThe regulations state the court’s duty is to ensure cases are dealt with justly, which the instrument operationalises by requiring efficient case management, pre‑trial conferences, disclosure tools, and powers to limit time and witnesses (reg 5; regs 7, 16–23, 24–33). These provisions are framed to promote efficiency and timely resolution by giving clerks and the court specific procedural levers (reg 7, reg 19).\n\n# Testing those purpose‑claims against practical trade‑offs and implementation mechanics\n\n- Direct costs and distribution of payments: the instrument imposes fixed lodgment fees and fees for obtaining copies or transcripts (reg 43; Schedule 1). Those are direct, predictable costs for all litigants when commencing or participating in proceedings. A litigation guardian may also directly bear costs ordered against a protected person (reg 65(3)).\n\n- Incentives to settle and to comply: pre‑trial obligations and the ability to limit trial time or refuse evidence not disclosed (regs 18–19, 7(o), 7(p)) create procedural incentives to disclose and to attempt settlement before trial. The court’s power to give default judgment for non‑compliance (reg 8) gives incentive to meet filing and court orders but also places risk on parties who miss time limits.\n\n- Administrative discretion and delegation: the clerk has powers to explain procedure, assist settlement, make many pre‑trial orders and, in some cases, exercise court powers (regs 18, 19, 66). The court may also act on its own initiative without hearing parties (reg 6). Those features concentrate significant case‑management discretion in court officers and create implementation reliance on clerk practice and the Chief Magistrate’s practice directions (reg 72).\n\n- Compliance burden and timing risk: parties face many prescriptive time limits for lodging, serving and responding to claims and interlocutory steps (regs 13–15, 29–33, 61–62), plus specific procedural requirements for electronic lodging (affidavit undertakings, format and website compliance in reg 46). Failure to meet these can lead to default judgments or exclusion of evidence (regs 8, 24, 7(p)).\n\n- Implementation and operational risk of electronic processes: electronic lodgment and service depend on the court’s website and compliance with its technical requirements; documents sent electronically outside those requirements are treated as not lodged (reg 46(2), (7)–(8)). Fax lodging has page limits and cover sheet requirements (reg 47). These rules shift some procedural activity from in‑person to digital channels but require users to meet format and timing conditions.\n\n- Effects on businesses and representatives: corporations and public authorities are expressly covered with tailored service rules and delegation options (regs 51–55, 71). Representatives acting in firms must provide business email/fax addresses for service (reg 57(3)). The regulations therefore regulate how commercial entities participate in litigation (service, authorized officers, and document lodgment).\n\n- Remedies and protections: the regulations preserve protections such as objections to disclosure based on privilege or admissibility (reg 25) and the court can set aside witness summonses or default judgments in defined circumstances (regs 38, 41). The rules for persons under legal disability require court approval for settlements and allow appointment of litigation guardians where needed (regs 64–67).\n\n# Concentrated benefits and diffuse costs (mechanisms, not judgments)\n\n- The regulations create concentrated procedural benefits for the court and court officers (clear statutory powers to manage cases, regulations 6–7, 18–19, 72) that reduce judicial and administrative uncertainty about case management. \n- The costs are borne directly by litigants via lodgment and document fees (reg 43; Schedule 1) and indirectly through compliance costs (time, legal assistance to meet forms, disclosure obligations and electronic format requirements).\n\n# Summary: who pays, who decides, and how behaviour changes\n\n- Who pays: litigants pay lodgment fees and fees for obtaining documents (reg 43; Schedule 1), may be ordered to pay interest on monetary orders (reg 12), and can be ordered to pay costs in limited circumstances (reg 11). Litigation guardians are personally liable for costs ordered against the protected person (reg 65(3)). Parties summoning witnesses must tender reasonable attendance expenses (reg 37(3)).\n- Who decides: the court (the industrial magistrate) makes final orders; clerks have delegated case‑management powers and the Chief Magistrate issues practice directions (regs 6, 18, 19, 66, 72).\n- Behavioural changes: Parties must use court‑approved forms, meet specified time limits, comply with disclosure orders or risk exclusion of evidence or default judgment, and, where possible, can lodge and be served documents electronically instead of by post or personal service (regs 13–15, 24–27, 46–60). Pre‑trial processes and expanded clerk powers are designed to shift activity toward case management and settlement before trial (Part 4, regs 16–23).\n\n(References in parentheses are to the regulation or part numbers in the instrument provided.)"}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005","history":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005/history","analysis":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/industrial-magistrate-s-court-general-jurisdiction-regulations-2005/documents"}}