{"id":"legal-aid-act-1978","name":"Legal Aid Act 1978","slug":"legal-aid-act-1978","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"vic","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":176347,"registerId":"vic-legal-aid-act-1978-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title and commencement 1","content":"1 Short title and commencement 1\n\nPart I—Preliminary 2\n\n","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions 2","content":"2 Definitions 2\n\nPart II—Victoria Legal Aid 12\n\n3 Establishment 12\n\n4 Objectives 13\n\n5 VLA not to represent the Crown 13\n\n6 Functions and powers 13\n\n7 Duties of VLA 17\n\n8 Arrangements and guidelines for allocation of legal aid work 20\n\n9 Guidelines for provision of legal aid 21\n\n10 Delegation 22\n\n11 Board of directors 23\n\n12 Role of board 24\n\n12B Appointment of directors 25\n\n12C Terms and conditions of appointment of directors 26\n\n12D Vacancies, resignations, removal of directors from office 26\n\n12E Acting chairperson 27\n\n12G Validity of decisions of board 29\n\n12H Proceedings of board 30\n\n12I Resolutions without meetings 30\n\n12J Disclosure of interests 31\n\n12JA Role of chief executive officer 32\n\n12JB Appointment of chief executive officer 32\n\n12JC Terms and conditions of appointment of chief executive officer 33\n\n12JD Vacancy, resignation, removal from chief executive officer's office 33\n\n12JE Acting chief executive officer 34\n\n12JF Validity of decisions of chief executive officer 35\n\n","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"12K","sectionType":"section","heading":"Community consultative committee 35","content":"12K Community consultative committee 35\n\n","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"12L","sectionType":"section","heading":"Terms and conditions of appointment to community consultative committee 36","content":"12L Terms and conditions of appointment to community consultative committee 36\n\n12LA Collaborative planning committee 36\n\n12LB Terms and conditions of appointment to collaborative planning committee 38\n\n12LC Reports of collaborative planning committee 38\n\n","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"12M","sectionType":"section","heading":"Attorney-General may give directions to the board 39","content":"12M Attorney-General may give directions to the board 39\n\n12MA Directions regarding funding of community legal services 40\n\n12MB Strategic plan 40\n\n12MC Annual corporate plan 42\n\n","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"12N","sectionType":"section","heading":"Annual report 43","content":"12N Annual report 43\n\n","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"12O","sectionType":"section","heading":"Quarterly reports 44","content":"12O Quarterly reports 44\n\nPart III—Officers of commission 46\n\n","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Officers and employees 46","content":"15 Officers and employees 46\n\n","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"VLA and its officers are subject to legal professional standards and duties 46","content":"16 VLA and its officers are subject to legal professional standards and duties 46\n\n17 In any proceeding signature of officer of VLA deemed to be signature of legal practitioner for a party to the proceeding 48\n\nPart IV—Independent reviewers 49\n\n","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Panel of independent reviewers 49","content":"18 Panel of independent reviewers 49\n\n","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions of independent reviewers 50","content":"19 Functions of independent reviewers 50\n\nPart V—Provision of legal assistance 53\n\n","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Applications for legal assistance 53","content":"23 Applications for legal assistance 53\n\n","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Circumstances in which legal assistance may be provided 54","content":"24 Circumstances in which legal assistance may be provided 54\n\n25 Legal assistance may be provided notwithstanding that the interests of the assisted person are adverse to the State or the Commonwealth 57\n\n26 Certain legal aid provided without charge 57\n\n27 Conditions 58\n\n27A Refund of money paid in accordance with section 27 60\n\n28 Decisions relating to the provision of legal services 61\n\n29 Variation of a decision to provide legal assistance 61\n\n29A Practitioner panels 62\n\n29B Assignment of case to practitioner panel 64\n\n30 Selection of practitioner 65\n\n30A Immunity of participants 73\n\n31 Relationship between legal practitioner and client 74\n\n32 Private legal practitioner to demand, take or accept payment allowed by the Act 75\n\n33 Statement of reasons for a decision to be given 77\n\nPart VI—Reconsideration and review of decisions: complaints 79\n\n34 Reconsideration of decisions of VLA and independent reviewer 79\n\n35 Review of decisions of VLA 79\n\n36 Review of decisions of independent reviewer 81\n\n37 Conflicts of interest 83\n\nPart VIA—Law Aid Scheme 84\n\n40A Definitions 84\n\n40B Immunity 85\n\n40C Fee agreement 85\n\n40D Contingent payments 85\n\n40F Certain information not to be revealed 86\n\n40G Recovery of costs 86\n\n40H Grant to trust fund 88\n\nPart VIB—Alternative dispute resolution 89\n\n40I Alternative dispute resolution programs 89\n\n40J Confidentiality 89\n\n40K Freedom of Information Act 1982 91\n\n40L Admissibility of evidence 91\n\n40M Immunity for conference chairpersons 92\n\nPart VII—Financial 93\n\n","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Legal Aid Fund 93","content":"41 Legal Aid Fund 93\n\nPart VIII—Miscellaneous 96\n\n43 Officers etc. of VLA not to reveal any information without consent of VLA 96\n\n44 False statements 98\n\n45 Court may order a person convicted of offence under section 44 to pay an amount to VLA 99\n\n46 Legal costs 99\n\n47 Costs to be paid to the Fund 100\n\n47A Costs may be charged on the land 101\n\n47B Charges over Transfer of Land Act land 102\n\n47D Extinguishment of charge 103\n\n47E Enforcement of the charge 103\n\n47F Action not barred by Limitation of Actions Act 1958 105\n\n48 Costs 106\n\n48B Certificate of costs 108\n\n48C Assignment of right to recover money to VLA 108\n\n49 State may enter into agreements and arrangements 109\n\n49AA VLA's power to enter legal aid arrangements 110\n\n49A Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction 110\n\n49B Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction 110\n\n50 Regulations 111\n\n51 Transitional provisions (1997 Amending Act) 111\n\n52 Transitional provisions: Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998 113\n\n53 Saving provision—Justice Legislation (Evidence and Other Acts) Amendment Act 2016 114\n\n54 Transitional provision—Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018 115\n\nEndnotes 117\n\n1 General information 117\n\n2 Table of Amendments 119\n\n3 Explanatory details 124\n\n**Version No.** **073**\n\n**Legal Aid Act 1978**\n\n**No. 9245 of 1978**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n\nAn Act to establish a Legal Aid Commission and for\n\nother purposes.\n\n**BE IT ENACTED by the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council and the Legislative Assembly of Victoria in this present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same as follows (that is to say):**\n\n\t1 Short title and commencement\n\nS. 1(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 4.\n\n(1) This Act may be cited as the **Legal Aid Act 1978**.\n\n(2) The several provisions of this Act shall come into operation on the day or the respective days to be fixed by proclamation or successive proclamations of the Governor in Council published in the Government Gazette.\n\nS. 1(3) repealed by No. 10/1986 s. 4(d).\n\n\tPart I—Preliminary\n\nS. 2  \namended by No. 61/1989 s. 4(a).\n\n\t2 Definitions\n\n(1) In this Act, unless inconsistent with the context or subject-matter—\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *alternative dispute resolution program* inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 3(a).\n\n***alternative dispute resolution program*** means a program for the resolution of disputes out of court and includes conferencing;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *annual report* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 18.\n\n***annual report*** means a report under section 12N(1);\n\n***applicant*** means a person who has made application for legal assistance under this Act;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *assisted person* amended by No. 48/1995 s. 5(c).\n\n***assisted person*** means a person to whom legal assistance is provided under this Act, except Part VIA;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Australian lawyer* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), repealed by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(a)).\n\n***Australian Legal Aid Office*** means the division of the Attorney-General's Department of the Commonwealth that is designated the Australian Legal Aid Office;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *board* inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 5(b).\n\n***board*** means the board of directors of VLA established under section 11;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *chairman* repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *chairperson* inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 5(b).\n\n***chairperson*** means the chairperson of the board;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *chief executive officer* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 22(2).\n\n***chief executive officer*** means the chief executive officer of VLA appointed under section 12JB;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *commencing day*  \nrepealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Commission* amended by No. 10/1986 s. 4(c), repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Common-wealth Commission* amended by No. 48/1995 s. 5(d).\n\n***Commonwealth Commission*** means the Attorney-General's Department of the Commonwealth exercising its functions in respect of legal aid;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *community legal service* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 11.\n\n***community legal service*** has the same meaning as in the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria);\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *conference chairperson* inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 3(a).\n\n***conference chairperson*** means a person to whom a matter has been referred for conferencing;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *conferencing* inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 3(a).\n\n***conferencing*** means a structured negotiation process in which a conference chairperson assists the parties to a dispute to settle the dispute;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *corporate plan* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 18.\n\n***corporate plan*** means a plan under section 12MC(1);\n\n***Court*** includes a tribunal;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *current practitioner* inserted by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.1(a)), amended by No. 102/1997 s. 49(Sch.  \nitem 3), repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(b)).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Director* repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *duty lawyer services* amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(c)).\n\n***duty lawyer services*** means legal services provided by an Australian lawyer attending a court, being legal services consisting of appearing on behalf of a person or giving legal advice to a person at that court, otherwise than by prior arrangement with the person;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Federation of Community Legal Centres* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 37.\n\n***Federation of Community Legal Centres*** means the Federation of Community Legal Centres (Vic.) Inc. ABN 30 036 539 902;\n\n***Fund*** means the Legal Aid Fund established under section 41;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *incorporated legal practice* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(b)).\n\n***incorporated legal practice*** has the same meaning as in the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria);\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *incorporated practitioner* inserted by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.1(b)), repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(b)).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *independent reviewer* inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(1)(a).\n\n***independent reviewer*** means member of the panel of independent reviewers appointed under section 18 and includes the panel chairperson;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Law Institute* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 37.\n\n***Law Institute*** has the same meaning as in the **Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014**;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *law practice* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(b)).\n\n***law practice*** has the same meaning as in the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria);\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *legal advice* amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(c)).\n\n***legal advice*** means advice on matters of law given by an Australian lawyer and includes assistance in preparing an application for legal assistance and in furnishing information required for that purpose;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *legal aid* amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 5(e), 17/2005 s. 3(b), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(d)).\n\n***legal aid*** means—\n\n(a) education, advice or information in or about the law;\n\n(b) any legal services that may be provided by a law practice or an Australian lawyer; and\n\n(c) any other matter within the scope of section 6, 7 or 8—\n\nand, without limiting or affecting the generality of the foregoing, includes alternative dispute resolution programs, duty lawyer services, legal advice and legal assistance;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of l*egal aid appeal committee* inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 16(a)(i), repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(1)(b).\n\n *** * * * ***\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *legal aid arrangement* inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 13.\n\n***legal aid arrangement*** means an arrangement with respect to the provision of legal aid under which—\n\n(a) the Commonwealth—\n\n(i) makes available amounts of money for the provision of legal aid; and\n\n(ii) specifies the legal aid VLA is to provide in consideration of those amounts of money, including any priorities to be observed by VLA in providing legal aid as between classes of persons or classes of matters; and\n\n(b) VLA provides that legal aid in accordance with that arrangement;\n\nS. 2(1) def of *legal aid review committee* substituted by No. 10/1986 s. 9(a), repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(1)(b).\n\n *** * * * ***\n\n***legal assistance*** means legal services provided under this Act other than by way of duty lawyer services or legal advice;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *legal assistance information* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 11.\n\n***legal assistance information*** means information that is—\n\n(a) for use by the community; and\n\n(b) designed to provide guidance or education in relation to the law, including—\n\n(i) guidance (other than legal advice) for identifying, preventing or dealing with legal problems; and\n\n(ii) information on support services that are related to the law;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *legal practitioner* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(c)).\n\n***legal practitioner*** means an Australian legal practitioner;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *managing director* inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 5(b), repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 22(1).\n\n***order for costs*** means a judgment, order, decree, award or direction for payment of the costs of one party to the proceedings by another or others, whether given or made in that proceedings or not;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *officer of the Commission* repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *panel chairperson* inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(1)(c).\n\n***panel chairperson*** means chairperson of the panel of independent reviewers appointed under section 18;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *panel member* inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(1)(c).\n\n***panel member***, in relation to the panel of independent reviewers, includes the panel chairperson;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *practitioner* repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(b)).\n\n***prescribed*** means prescribed by regulations made under this Act;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *previous committee* repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 5(a).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *principal* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(b)).\n\n***principal***, of a law practice, has the same meaning as in the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria);\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *private law practice* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)).\n\n***private law practice*** means a law practice other than VLA;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *private legal practitioner* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)).\n\n***private legal practitioner*** means a legal practitioner who is not employed by VLA;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *private practitioner* substituted by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.1(c)), amended by No. 102/1997 s. 49(Sch.  \nitem 3), repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(b)).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *professional association* inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.1(a)), substituted by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.1(d)).\n\n***professional association*** means a local professional association within the meaning of the **Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014**;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Review Committee* repealed by No. 10/1986 s. 16(a)(ii).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *solicitor* repealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.1(d)).\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *strategic plan* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 18.\n\n***strategic plan*** means a plan under section 12MB(1);\n\n***the State*** means the State of Victoria;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Victoria Law Foundation* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 37.\n\n***Victoria Law Foundation*** means the body corporate continued by section 4 of the **Victoria Law Foundation Act 2009**;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *Victorian Bar* inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 37.\n\n***Victorian Bar*** has the same meaning as in the **Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014**;\n\nS. 2(1) def. of *VLA* inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 5(b).\n\n***VLA*** means Victoria Legal Aid established under section 3.\n\nS. 2(2) inserted by No. 61/1989 s. 4(b).\n\n(2) It is the intention of Parliament that in this Act ***person*** includes a body corporate.\n\nPt 2 (Heading and ss 3–12) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 4(a)(b), 5–7, 8(2), 9(b)(c), 13(2), 20(2)(a) (b), 16/1987 s. 4(3)(Sch. 1 item 13), 38/1992 ss 4–6, 14/1994 ss 3, 4, substituted as Pt 2  \n(Heading and ss 3–12N) by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\nPart II—Victoria Legal Aid[[1]](#endnote-2)\n\nS. 3 substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Establishment","content":"\t3 Establishment\n\n(1) There is established a body by the name \"Victoria Legal Aid\".\n\n(2) VLA—\n\n(a) is a body corporate with perpetual succession;\n\n(b) has an official seal;\n\n(c) may sue and be sued;\n\n(d) may acquire, hold and dispose of real and personal property;\n\n(e) may do and suffer all acts and things that a body corporate may by law do and suffer.\n\n(3) All courts must take judicial notice of the seal of VLA affixed to a document and, until the contrary is proved, must presume that it was duly affixed.\n\n(4) The official seal of VLA must be kept in such custody as VLA directs and must not be used except as authorised by VLA.\n\nS. 4  \n\n","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Objectives","content":"\t4 Objectives\n\nThe objectives of VLA are—\n\n(a) to provide legal aid in the most effective, economic and efficient manner;\n\n(b) to manage its resources to make legal aid available at a reasonable cost to the community and on an equitable basis throughout the state;\n\nS. 4(ba) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 12.\n\n(ba) to ensure the coordination of the provision of legal aid so that it responds to the legal and related needs of the community;\n\nS. 4(bb) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 12.\n\n(bb) to ensure the coordination of the provision of legal assistance information so that the information responds to the legal and related needs of the community, including by being—\n\n(i) accessible; and\n\n(ii) current; and\n\n(iii) high quality; and\n\n(iv) of sufficient breadth;\n\n(c) to provide to the community improved access to justice and legal remedies;\n\n(d) to pursue innovative means of providing legal aid directed at minimising the need for individual legal services in the community.\n\nS. 5  \n\n","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"VLA not to represent the Crown","content":"\t5 VLA not to represent the Crown\n\nVLA does not represent the Crown.\n\nS. 6  \n\n","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Functions and powers","content":"\t6 Functions and powers\n\n(1) The functions of VLA are—\n\n(a) to provide legal aid in accordance with this Act;\n\nS. 6(1)(ab) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 13(1).\n\n(ab) to coordinate, and undertake strategic planning for, the provision of legal aid by—\n\n(i) VLA; and\n\n(ii) subject to subsection (1A), community legal services; and\n\n(iii) private legal practitioners by arrangement with VLA;\n\nS. 6(1)(ac) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 13(1).\n\n(ac) subject to subsection (1B), to coordinate the provision of legal assistance information, including by facilitating the expansion of the provision of that information as appropriate;\n\nS. 6(1)(b) amended by No. 39/2022  \ns. 844(1).\n\n(b) to control and administer the Fund;\n\nS. 6(1)(c) inserted by No. 39/2022  \ns. 844(2).\n\n(c) to provide advocacy services other than in connection with legal services;\n\n**Example**\n\n***Non-legal mental health advocacy services*** within the meaning of the **Mental Health and Wellbeing Act 2022**.\n\nS. 6(1)(d) inserted by No. 39/2022  \ns. 844(2).\n\n(d) to coordinate, and participate in, strategic planning for the provision of services of a kind referred to in paragraph (c) by VLA and other bodies.\n\nS. 6(1A) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 13(2).\n\n(1A) VLA does not have the function of coordinating, and undertaking strategic planning for, the provision of legal aid in Victoria by—\n\n(a) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporation Family Violence Prevention and Legal Service (Victoria) ABN 47 125 370 108; or\n\n(b) Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service  \nCo-operative Ltd ABN 45 926 675 900; or\n\n(c) any other organisation (whether incorporated or not) that holds itself out as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Service.\n\nS. 6(1B) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 13(2).\n\n(1B) VLA does not have the function of coordinating the provision of legal assistance information in Victoria by an entity referred to in subsection (1A).\n\n(2) VLA may—\n\n(a) in co-operation with a government department or body concerned with social service or social welfare, arrange measures and take steps that may be conducive to meeting the need for legal aid in the community;\n\n(b) enter into arrangements from time to time with a body or person with respect to any investigation, study or research that, in the opinion of VLA, is necessary or desirable for the purposes of this Act;\n\n(c) make recommendations to or through the Attorney-General with respect to any reforms of the law the desirability for which has come to its attention in the course of performing its functions;\n\n(d) initiate and carry out educational programs designed to promote an understanding by the public, and by sections of the public who have special needs in this respect, of their rights, powers, privileges and duties under the laws in force in the State;\n\n(e) undertake research into all aspects of legal aid including new methods of financing and providing legal aid;\n\nS. 6(2)(f) amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(a).\n\n(f) subject to and in accordance with any agreement or arrangement made between the Commonwealth and the State under section 49, provide financial assistance to voluntary legal aid bodies in the State in respect of the provision of legal aid;\n\nS. 6(2)(fa) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(b).\n\n(fa) subject to this Act, enter into legal aid arrangements and provide legal aid in accordance with those arrangements;\n\n(g) do all things necessary or convenient to be done for, or in connection with, the performance of its functions.\n\nS. 6(3) inserted by No. 55/2009  \ns. 53, substituted by No. 82/2012 s. 163(1).\n\n(3) VLA may enter into arrangements to provide legal services—\n\nS. 6(3)(a) amended by Nos 82/2012 s. 310, 30/2016 s. 82(a).\n\n(a) on behalf of the prescribed person referred to in section 151 of the **Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission Act 2011**, to applicants for legal assistance under that section;\n\n(b) on behalf of the Secretary to the Department of Justice, to other persons.\n\nS. 6(4) inserted by No. 55/2009  \ns. 53, amended by Nos 82/2012 s. 163(2), 30/2016 s. 82(b).\n\n(4) If an arrangement is entered into under subsection (3)(a), VLA may carry out the functions of the prescribed person under section 151 of the **Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission Act 2011**.\n\nS. 6(5) inserted by No. 55/2009  \ns. 53.\n\n(5) An arrangement entered into under subsection (3)(b) requires the prior approval of the Attorney‑General.\n\nS. 6(6) inserted by No. 55/2009  \ns. 53.\n\n(6) Parts V, VI, VIA, VIB and VII do not apply to the provision of legal services under an arrangement entered into under subsection (3).\n\nS. 7  \nsubstituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6, amended by No. 55/2009 s. 54 (ILA s. 39B(1)).\n\n","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of VLA","content":"\t7 Duties of VLA\n\n(1) In performing its functions, VLA must—\n\nS. 7(1)(a) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 14(1).\n\n(a) ensure that legal aid is provided in the most effective, efficient and economic manner and in a manner which dispels fear and distrust, including by—\n\nS. 7(1)(a)(i) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 14(1).\n\n(i) arranging, as appropriate, for legal aid to be provided by VLA, community legal services and private legal practitioners by arrangement with VLA; and\n\nS. 7(1)(a)(ii) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 14(1).\n\n(ii) arranging for the provision of legal aid that is appropriate and proportionate to the capabilities of the person to whom it is provided and also to the complexity of the matter for which it is provided;\n\n(b) establish any local offices that it considers appropriate and generally use its best endeavours to make legal aid available throughout the State;\n\nS. 7(1)(c) amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(c)  \n(i)–(iii).\n\n(c) subject to and in accordance with any legal aid arrangement and the agreements and arrangements made between the Commonwealth and the State under section 49 from time to time—\n\n(i) determine or vary priorities in the provision of legal aid as between classes of persons and classes of matters or both;\n\n(ii) have regard to the recommendations of the Commonwealth Commission concerning the provision of legal aid by VLA—\n\n(A) in or in connection with a claim, right or proceeding involving a matter arising under a law of the Commonwealth; or\n\n(B) in a proceeding in a federal court or in a State court exercising federal jurisdiction; or\n\n(C) in respect of persons who are agreed by the Attorney-General and the Attorney-General of the Commonwealth to be persons in respect of whom the Commonwealth has a special responsibility;\n\n(iii) liaise and co-operate with the Commonwealth Commission in the performance by that Commission of its functions and, in particular, provide to the Commonwealth Commission such statistics and other information as that Commission may reasonably require;\n\nS. 7(1)((d) amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(d).\n\n(d) subject to any legal aid arrangement, determine the matters or classes of matters in respect of which legal services may be performed on behalf of assisted persons by way of legal aid;\n\nS. 7(1)((e) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.2(a)).\n\n(e) co-operate and, if VLA considers it desirable to do so, make reciprocal arrangements with other legal aid commissions, professional associations and other bodies engaged or interested in the provision of legal aid in the State or elsewhere;\n\nS. 7(1)((f) substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.2(b)).\n\n(f) liaise with professional associations in order to facilitate the use, in appropriate circumstances, of services provided by private legal practitioners;\n\nS. 7(1)((g) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.2(c)).\n\n(g) make maximum use of services which private legal practitioners offer to provide on a voluntary basis;\n\n(h) endeavour to secure the services of interpreters, marriage counsellors, welfare officers and other appropriate persons to assist in connection with matters in respect of which legal aid is provided;\n\n(i) inform the public of the services provided by VLA and the conditions on which those services are provided;\n\n(j) encourage and permit law students to participate, so far as VLA considers it practicable and proper to do so, on a voluntary basis and under professional supervision in the provision of legal aid;\n\n(k) have regard to the amount of money for the time being standing to the credit of the Fund and the amount of money likely to be received by VLA for the purposes of the Fund.\n\nS. 7(1A) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 14(2).\n\n(1A) In performing its function under section 6(1)(ab), VLA must consult with—\n\n(a) the Law Institute; and\n\n(b) the Victorian Bar; and\n\n(c) the Victoria Law Foundation; and\n\n(d) the Federation of Community Legal Centres; and\n\n(e) community legal services; and\n\n(f) private legal practitioners who provide legal aid by arrangement with VLA.\n\nS. 7(1B) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 14(2).\n\n(1B) In performing its function under section 6(1)(ac), VLA must determine, in consultation with persons and bodies who produce and provide legal assistance information in Victoria, how that information is best produced and provided.\n\nS. 7(2) inserted by No. 55/2009  \ns. 54.\n\n(2) VLA must account separately for all money paid under an arrangement entered into under section 6(3) and that money is not payable to the Legal Aid Fund.\n\nS. 8  \n\n","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangements and guidelines for allocation of legal aid work","content":"\t8 Arrangements and guidelines for allocation of legal aid work\n\n(1) Legal aid may be provided by VLA—\n\n(a) by making available the services of officers of VLA;\n\nS. 8(1)(b) amended by Nos 17/2005 s. 4, 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.3(a)).\n\n(b) by arranging for the services of private legal practitioners or other persons to be made available;\n\n(c) by making available and by arranging both the services referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b).\n\nS. 8(2) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.3(a)).\n\n(2) VLA must determine guidelines in relation to the allocation of work between officers of VLA and private legal practitioners having regard to—\n\n(a) the need for legal assistance services to be readily available and easily accessible to disadvantaged people;\n\nS. 8(2)(ab) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(e).\n\n(ab) the requirements (if any) of any legal aid arrangement;\n\nS. 8(2)(b) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.3(b)).\n\n(b) the desirability of an assisted person being entitled to select a legal practitioner of his or her choice;\n\n(c) the need for appropriate use to be made of the services capable of being provided by officers of VLA;\n\n(d) the importance of maintaining the independence of the private legal profession;\n\n(e) the need for the Fund to be used effectively and efficiently.\n\nS. 9  \nsubstituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6, amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(f).\n\n","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Guidelines for provision of legal aid","content":"\t9 Guidelines for provision of legal aid\n\nVLA must determine, having regard to funds available, any legal aid arrangement and relevant recommendations of the Commonwealth Commission, guidelines in relation to the provision of legal aid and, in particular, guidelines to be applied in—\n\n(a) the application of section 24 for the purpose of determining whether legal assistance may be provided to a person under this Act;\n\n(b) the application of section 26(2) for the purpose of determining whether a person requiring legal advice should be required to make an application for legal assistance;\n\n(c) determining whether the providing of legal assistance to a person will be subject to all or any of the conditions referred to in section 27(1);\n\n(d) determining the amount of costs or disbursements that will be required to be paid to VLA by an assisted person if the proceeding in respect of which the legal assistance was provided is decided, compromised or results in the person's favour;\n\n(e) determining the extent, if any, to which VLA will pay costs awarded against a legally assisted person in a proceeding.\n\nS. 10 substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation","content":"\t10 Delegation\n\nVLA may, by instrument under its official seal, delegate to—\n\n(a) a director of VLA;\n\nS. 10(ab)  inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 23.\n\n(ab) the chief executive officer;\n\n(b) an officer of VLA;\n\nS. 10(c) substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.4).\n\n(c) a private law practice;\n\nS. 10(d) substituted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(2).\n\n(d) an independent reviewer—\n\nS. 10(e) repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(2).\n\nany power of VLA, other than—\n\nS. 10(f) amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(g).\n\n(f) the powers referred to in sections 7(c)(i) and (d), 8(2), 9 and 49AA; and\n\n(g) subject to section 12A(c)(ii), this power of delegation.\n\nS. 11 substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Board of directors","content":"\t11 Board of directors\n\nThere shall be a board of directors of VLA consisting of—\n\nS. 11(a) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(1)(a).\n\n(a) a chairperson nominated by the Attorney-General;\n\nS. 11(b) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(1)(a), repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 24(1).\n\nS. 11(c) substituted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(1)(b), amended by Nos 38/2016 s. 12, 15/2018 s. 24(2).\n\n(c) 6 directors nominated by the Attorney-General of whom—\n\n(i) at least one must have experience in financial management; and\n\nS. 11(c)(ii) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 24(3).\n\n(ii) at least one must have experience in public management; and\n\nS. 11(c)(iii) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 24(4).\n\n(iii) at least one must have experience with criminal proceedings (whether as a legal practitioner or a judicial officer); and\n\nS. 11(c)(iv) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 24(4).\n\n(iv) at least one must have experience in other areas of legal practice engaged in by VLA or its officers.\n\nS. 11(d) repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(1)(b).\n\nS. 12 substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Role of board","content":"\t12 Role of board\n\n(1) The board of VLA—\n\n(a) is responsible for the management of the affairs of VLA and ensuring that it achieves its objectives; and\n\n(b) may exercise the powers of VLA.\n\n(2) Without limiting subsection (1), it is the role of the board—\n\n(a) to determine the policies, priorities and strategies of VLA; and\n\nS. 12(2)(ab) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 15(1).\n\n(ab) to make decisions regarding how amounts to be paid out of the Fund are to be allocated across—\n\n(i) VLA; and\n\n(ii) community legal services; and\n\n(iii) private legal practitioners providing legal aid by arrangement with VLA; and\n\n(b) to deal with any matters in accordance with guidelines issued by the board under subsection (3); and\n\n(c) to ensure that VLA performs its functions and exercises its powers in an effective, efficient and economical manner.\n\n(3) The board may issue guidelines specifying matters or classes of matter relating to the provision of legal aid that it requires to be referred to it for decision.\n\nS. 12(4) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(2).\n\n(4) The board must have regard to any legal aid arrangement in carrying out its role under subsections (2) and (3).\n\nS. 12(5) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 15(2).\n\n(5) The board must have regard to the advice and recommendations of the collaborative planning committee in carrying out its role under subsection (2)(ab).\n\nS. 12A inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6, repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 25.\n\nS. 12B inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"12B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appointment of directors","content":"\t12B Appointment of directors\n\n(1) The chairperson and other directors of VLA shall be appointed by the Governor in Council.\n\nS. 12B(2) amended by No. 46/1998  \ns. 7(Sch. 1), substituted by Nos 108/2004 s. 117(1) (Sch. 3 item 111.1), 80/2006 s. 26(Sch. item 58.1), amended by No. 15/2018 s. 26(1).\n\n(2) The **Public Administration Act 2004** (other than Part 3 of that Act) applies to a director of VLA in respect of the office of director.\n\nS. 12B(3) amended by No. 46/1998  \ns. 7(Sch. 1), substituted by No. 108/2004 s. 117(1) (Sch. 3 item 111.1), repealed by No. 80/2006 s. 26(Sch. item 58.1), new s. 12B(3) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 26(2).\n\n(3) The chief executive officer is not eligible to be appointed to be the chairperson or any other director.\n\nS. 12C (Heading) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 27(1).\n\nS. 12C inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"12C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Terms and conditions of appointment of directors","content":"\t12C Terms and conditions of appointment of directors\n\nS. 12C(1) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 27(2).\n\n(1) A director of VLA shall be appointed for such term as is specified in the instrument of appointment, not exceeding 3 years.\n\nS. 12C(1)(a)(b) repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 27(3).\n\n(2) A director of VLA is eligible for re-appointment.\n\nS. 12C(3) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 27(4).\n\n(3) A director of VLA holds office, subject to this Part, on such terms and conditions as are specified in the instrument of appointment.\n\nS. 12C(4) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 27(5).\n\n(4) A director of VLA holds office on a part-time basis.\n\nS. 12C(4)(a)(b) repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 27(6).\n\nS. 12D (Heading) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 28(1).\n\nS. 12D inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"12D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Vacancies, resignations, removal of directors from office","content":"\t12D Vacancies, resignations, removal of directors from office\n\nS. 12D(1) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 28(2).\n\n(1) The office of a director of VLA becomes vacant if the director—\n\n(a) without the board's approval, fails to attend 3 consecutive meetings of the board; or\n\n(b) becomes bankrupt, applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, compounds with his or her creditors or makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for their benefit; or\n\n(c) is convicted of an indictable offence or an offence which, if committed in Victoria, would be an indictable offence.\n\nS. 12D(2) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 28(2).\n\n(2) A director of VLA may resign by writing delivered to the Attorney-General for transmission to the Governor in Council.\n\nS. 12D(3) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 28(2).\n\n(3) The Governor in Council may remove a director of VLA, or all such directors, from office.\n\nS. 12D(4) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 28(2).\n\n(4) If a director of VLA—\n\n(a) is convicted of an offence relating to his or her duties as a director; or\n\n(b) fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with section 12J—\n\nthe director must be removed from office by the Governor in Council.\n\nS. 12E inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"12E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Acting chairperson","content":"\t12E Acting chairperson\n\nS. 12E(1) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(2).\n\n(1) The Governor in Council may appoint a person nominated by the Attorney-General to act as chairperson—\n\n(a) during a vacancy in the office; or\n\n(b) during any period or all periods when the chairperson is absent from duty or from the State or is for any other reason unable to perform the duties of his or her office.\n\n(2) While so acting, the person appointed under subsection (1) has all the powers and may perform all the functions and duties conferred by this Act or any other Act on the chairperson.\n\n(3) An appointment under subsection (1) is on the terms and conditions determined by the Governor in Council but in the case of an appointment to act during a vacancy, must not be for a period of more than 12 months.\n\n(4) A person appointed under subsection (1) may resign by writing delivered to the Attorney-General for transmission to the Governor in Council.\n\n(5) The Governor in Council may at any time terminate an appointment under subsection (1).\n\n(6) If a person is acting as chairperson in accordance with subsection (1)(b) and the office of chairperson becomes vacant while he or she is so acting, the appointment continues until—\n\n(a) it is terminated by the Governor in Council; or\n\n(b) the vacancy is filled; or\n\n(c) the expiration of 12 months after the date on which the vacancy occurred—\n\nwhichever first occurs.\n\nS. 12F inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6, amended by Nos 46/1998  \ns. 7(Sch. 1), 108/2004 s. 117(1) (Sch. 3 item 111.2), 80/2006 s. 26(Sch. item 58.2), repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 29.\n\nS. 12G (Heading) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 30.\n\nS. 12G inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"12G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Validity of decisions of board","content":"\t12G Validity of decisions of board\n\n(1) An act or decision of the board of VLA is not invalid merely because of—\n\n(a) a defect or irregularity in, or in connection with, the appointment of a director; or\n\n(b) a vacancy in the membership of the board, including a vacancy arising from the failure to appoint an original director.\n\n(2) Anything done by or in relation to a person purporting to act as chairperson or as a director is not invalid merely because—\n\n(a) the occasion for the appointment had not arisen; or\n\n(b) there was a defect or irregularity in relation to the appointment; or\n\n(c) the appointment had ceased to have effect; or\n\n(d) the occasion for the person to act had not arisen or had ceased.\n\nS. 12H  \n\n","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"12H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Proceedings of board","content":"\t12H Proceedings of board\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), meetings of the board of VLA shall be held at such times and places as the board determines.\n\n(2) The chairperson may at any time convene a meeting but must do so when requested by a director.\n\nS. 12H(3) amended by No. 38/2016 s. 13.\n\n(3) Four directors constitute a quorum of the board.\n\n(4) A question arising at a meeting shall be determined by a majority of votes of directors present and voting on that question and, if voting is equal, the person presiding has a casting, as well as a deliberative, vote.\n\n(5) The board must ensure that minutes are kept of each of its meetings.\n\n(6) Subject to this Part, the board may regulate its own proceedings.\n\nS. 12I  \n\n","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"12I","sectionType":"section","heading":"Resolutions without meetings","content":"\t12I Resolutions without meetings\n\n(1) If all the directors of VLA for the time being (other than a director who is absent from Australia when the other directors sign) sign a document containing a statement that those directors are in favour of a resolution in terms set out in the document, a resolution in those terms shall be taken to have been passed at a meeting of the board held on the day on which the document is signed or, if the directors do not sign it on the same day, on the day on which the last director to sign signs the document.\n\n(2) If a resolution is, under subsection (1), taken to have been passed at a meeting of the board, each director must be advised as soon as practicable and given a copy of the terms of the resolution.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), two or more separate documents containing a statement in identical terms, each of which is signed by one or more directors, shall be taken to constitute one document.\n\nS. 12J  \n\n","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"12J","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure of interests","content":"\t12J Disclosure of interests\n\n(a) a director of VLA has a direct or indirect pecuniary interest in a matter being considered, or about to be considered, by the board; and\n\n(b) the interest could conflict with the proper performance of the director's duties in relation to the consideration of the matter—\n\nthe director, as soon as practicable after the relevant facts come to the director's knowledge, must disclose the nature of the interest at a meeting of the board.\n\n(2) A disclosure under subsection (1) must be recorded in the minutes of the meeting and, unless the board otherwise determines, the director—\n\n(a) must not be present during any deliberation of the board in relation to the matter; and\n\n(b) must not take part in any decision of the board in relation to the matter.\n\nS. 12JA inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JA Role of chief executive officer\n\nThe chief executive officer—\n\n(a) has control of the day to day administration of the affairs of VLA in accordance with—\n\n(i) the strategic plans and annual corporate plans; and\n\n(ii) the policies, priorities and strategies determined by the board; and\n\n(iii) any directions given to the chief executive officer by the board; and\n\n(b) may exercise any power delegated to the chief executive officer by the board; and\n\n(c) subject to directions of the board, may, by instrument, delegate to an officer of VLA—\n\n(i) any power of the chief executive officer under this Act, other than this power of delegation; or\n\n(ii) any power delegated to the chief executive officer by VLA.\n\nS. 12JB inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JB Appointment of chief executive officer\n\n(1) The board, with the approval of the Attorney-General, may appoint a person as chief executive officer of VLA.\n\n(2) The **Public Administration Act 2004** (other than Part 3 of that Act) applies to the chief executive officer of VLA in respect of the office of chief executive officer.\n\n(3) A director of VLA is not eligible to be appointed as chief executive officer.\n\nS. 12JC inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JC Terms and conditions of appointment of chief executive officer\n\n(1) The chief executive officer is appointed for the period, not exceeding 5 years, specified in the instrument of appointment.\n\n(2) The chief executive officer is eligible for re‑appointment.\n\n(3) The chief executive officer is appointed on the terms and conditions (including remuneration and allowances) specified in the instrument of appointment.\n\n(4) The chief executive officer may hold office on a full-time or part-time basis.\n\nS. 12JD inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JD Vacancy, resignation, removal from chief executive officer's office\n\n(1) The office of the chief executive officer becomes vacant if the chief executive officer—\n\n(a) becomes bankrupt, applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, compounds with the officer's creditors or makes an assignment of the officer's remuneration for their benefit; or\n\n(b) is convicted of an indictable offence or an offence which, if committed in Victoria, would be an indictable offence.\n\n(2) The chief executive officer may resign by notice in writing delivered to the board.\n\n(3) The board, with the Attorney-General's approval, may remove the chief executive officer from office.\n\nS. 12JE inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JE Acting chief executive officer\n\n(1) Subject to this section, the board may appoint a person to act as chief executive officer—\n\n(a) during a vacancy in the office; or\n\n(b) during any period or all periods when the chief executive officer is absent from duty or from the State or is for any other reason unable to perform the duties of that office.\n\n(2) An appointment under subsection (1) must not be for a period of more than 6 months.\n\n(3) Subject to subsection (4), an acting chief executive officer is eligible for re‑appointment.\n\n(4) The Attorney-General's approval is required for the re‑appointment of an acting chief executive officer if the re‑appointment would result in the person having been appointed to act as chief executive officer for more than 6 months in any one 12 month period.\n\n(5) Subject to subsections (2) and (6), an appointment under subsection (1) is on the terms and conditions determined by the board.\n\n(6) An appointment under subsection (1) must be on terms not more favourable than those applying to the chief executive officer.\n\n(7) While so acting, the person appointed under subsection (1) has all the powers and may perform all the functions and duties conferred by this Act or any other Act on the chief executive officer.\n\n(8) The **Public Administration Act 2004** (other than Part 3 of that Act) applies to an acting chief executive officer of VLA in respect of the office of acting chief executive officer.\n\nS. 12JF inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 31.\n\n\t12JF Validity of decisions of chief executive officer\n\n(1) An act or decision of the chief executive officer is not invalid merely because of a defect or irregularity in, or in connection with, the appointment of the chief executive officer.\n\n(2) Anything done by or in relation to a person purporting to act as chief executive officer is not invalid merely because—\n\n(a) the occasion for the appointment had not arisen; or\n\n(b) there was a defect or irregularity in relation to the appointment; or\n\n(c) the appointment had ceased to have effect; or\n\n(d) the occasion for the person to act had not arisen or had ceased.\n\nS. 12K inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n\t12K Community consultative committee\n\n(1) There shall be established a community consultative committee.\n\n(2) The function of the committee is to make recommendations to the board in relation to any matter referred to the committee by the board.\n\n(3) The committee must consist of not less than 2 members of whom—\n\nS. 12K(3)(a) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 38(1).\n\n(a) one shall be a person nominated by the Federation of Community Legal Centres; and\n\n(b) one shall be a person representing staff of VLA nominated by the staff—\n\nand any other person or persons who may be appointed by the board to be members of the committee.\n\nS. 12K(4) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 38(2).\n\n(4) If the Federation of Community Legal Centres or the staff of VLA do not within one month after receiving a request in writing from the board to submit a nomination for the purposes of this section, submit a nomination, the board may appoint a person whom the board considers appropriate and that person shall be deemed to have been nominated by the Federation of Community Legal Centres or the staff of VLA, as the case may be.\n\n(5) Subject to directions of the board, the committee may regulate its own procedure.\n\nS. 12L (Heading) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 16.\n\nS. 12L inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n\t12L Terms and conditions of appointment to community consultative committee\n\n(1) A member of the community consultative committee holds office for the period, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the instrument of appointment and is eligible for re-appointment.\n\n(2) The board may in the instrument of appointment of a member of the committee specify terms and conditions of appointment.\n\n(3) The board may remove a member of the committee from office at any time.\n\n(4) A member may resign his or her office in writing given to the board.\n\n(5) A member of the committee is entitled to be paid any fees for attendance at meetings of the committee and allowances that are determined by the board in relation to that member.\n\nS. 12LA inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 17.\n\n\t12LA Collaborative planning committee\n\n(1) There shall be established a collaborative planning committee.\n\n(2) The function of the committee is to provide evidence-based advice and recommendations to the board in relation to—\n\n(a) the legal and related needs of the community; and\n\n(b) the provision of legal aid; and\n\n(c) VLA's functions under section 6(1)(ab) and (ac).\n\n(3) The committee—\n\n(a) must consist of—\n\n(i) an employee or officer of VLA (other than a director of the board) appointed by the board; and\n\n(ii) a person nominated by the Federation of Community Legal Centres; and\n\n(iii) a person nominated by the Law Institute; and\n\n(iv) a person nominated by the Victorian Bar; and\n\n(v) a person nominated by the Department of Justice and Regulation; and\n\n(vi) a person nominated by the Victoria Law Foundation; and\n\n(b) may additionally consist of no more than 3 persons nominated by the committee.\n\n(4) In nominating a person as described in subsection (3)(b), the committee must have regard to the need for the committee to have experience and expertise that is relevant to its functions.\n\n(5) On receiving a nomination referred to in subsection (3)(a)(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi) or (3)(b), the board must appoint the nominated person to the committee.\n\n(6) The committee may regulate its own procedure.\n\n(7) The committee is to have a chairperson, who is to be appointed by the committee in accordance with the committee's procedures.\n\nS. 12LB inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 17.\n\n\t12LB Terms and conditions of appointment to collaborative planning committee\n\n(1) A member of the collaborative planning committee holds office for the period, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the instrument of appointment and is eligible for re-appointment.\n\n(2) The board may, in the instrument of appointment of a member of the committee, specify terms and conditions of the appointment.\n\n(3) A member, other than a member who is employed under Part 3 of the **Public Administration Act 2004**,  is entitled to be paid the remuneration and allowances fixed in the instrument of appointment by the board.\n\n(4) A member of the committee may resign from that office in writing given to the board.\n\nS. 12LC inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 17.\n\n\t12LC Reports of collaborative planning committee\n\n(1) The collaborative planning committee may give the board recommendations in the form of a report that includes a request for a response.\n\n(2) The board must provide a response within 3 months of receiving a report under subsection (1).\n\n(3) The board's response must set out the action (if any) that has been taken, or will be taken, in relation to the recommendations in the report.\n\n(4) Nothing in this section prevents the collaborative planning committee from giving recommendations to the board other than in accordance with this section.\n\nS. 12M inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n\t12M Attorney-General may give directions to the board\n\nS. 12M(1) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 13(3).\n\n(1) The Attorney-General may give to the board written directions in relation to—\n\n(a) the performance of the functions or exercise of the powers of VLA;\n\n(b) the policies, priorities or guidelines of VLA, including priorities in the funding of legal aid;\n\nS. 12M(1)(c) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 14(1).\n\n(c) the provision of legal aid by VLA in accordance with a legal aid arrangement.\n\nS. 12M(1A) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 14(2).\n\n(1A) The Attorney-General may only give a direction under subsection (1)(c) if that direction has been requested in writing by the Commonwealth Attorney-General after the Commonwealth Attorney-General has consulted with the Attorney-General and VLA.\n\n(2) A direction under subsection (1) must not relate to the grant of legal aid to any specific person.\n\n(3) The board must comply with any direction given under subsection (1).\n\nS. 12M(4) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 32.\n\n(4) A direction has effect when written notice of the direction is received by the chairperson.\n\n(5) The Attorney-General must cause a copy of a direction given under this section to be tabled in each House of the Parliament within 10 sitting days of the House after notice of the direction is given.\n\nS. 12MA inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 19.\n\n\t12MA Directions regarding funding of community legal services\n\n(1) The Attorney-General may give the board a written direction requiring that the total amount paid out of the Fund to community legal services in a financial year must not be below a specified amount.\n\n(2) The Attorney-General may specify an amount referred to in subsection (1) by specifying a method for calculating that amount.\n\n(3) The board must comply with any direction given under subsection (1).\n\n(4) The Attorney-General may vary or revoke a direction under subsection (1).\n\nS. 12MB inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 19.\n\n\t12MB Strategic plan\n\n(1) VLA must, in respect of each applicable period—\n\n(a) prepare a plan regarding VLA's strategy for its operation during that period; and\n\n(b) submit the plan to the Attorney-General on or before the day specified for that period by the Attorney-General by notice in writing given to VLA.\n\n(2) The ***applicable periods*** are the consecutive periods of 4 years, the first of which begins on 1 July 2018.\n\n(3) The Attorney-General may specify that the strategic plan for the first applicable period is to be submitted on a day that is later than 1 July 2018.\n\n(4) The strategic plan for an applicable period must—\n\n(i) the intended achievements and financial projections of VLA for that period; and\n\n(ii) the matters which VLA intends to prioritise or have regard to when making decisions during that period; and\n\n(b) be in a form agreed to by VLA and the Attorney-General.\n\n(5) No later than one month after a strategic plan is received by the Attorney-General, the Attorney-General may—\n\n(a) approve the plan; or\n\n(b) request VLA to amend the strategic plan.\n\n(6) If, by the end of the period referred to in subsection (5), the Attorney-General has not taken an action referred to in subsection (5)(a) or (b), the Attorney-General is taken to have approved the strategic plan.\n\n(7) If the Attorney-General requests amendments under subsection (5)(b), VLA must—\n\n(a) consult the Attorney-General about the requested amendments; and\n\n(b) amend the plan as agreed with the Attorney-General; and\n\n(c) submit the amended plan no later than 2 months after the amendments were requested.\n\n(8) VLA may, with the Attorney-General's agreement, amend a strategic plan approved by the Attorney-General.\n\n(9) VLA must publish a strategic plan on its internet site—\n\n(a) as soon as practicable after it is approved by the Attorney-General; and\n\n(b) if the plan is later amended under subsection (8), as soon as practicable after that amendment.\n\nS. 12MC inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 19.\n\n\t12MC Annual corporate plan\n\n(1) Before 31 August in each year, VLA must—\n\n(a) prepare a plan in accordance with this section for the financial year that begins in that year; and\n\n(b) submit the plan to the Attorney-General.\n\n(2) The corporate plan for a financial year must—\n\n(i) VLA's budget for that financial year, including the total amount that is to be paid out of the Fund to community legal services in that year; and\n\n(ii) the priorities, intended achievements and intended activities for that financial year; and\n\n(iii) the financial projections of VLA for that financial year; and\n\n(b) be consistent with—\n\n(i) each strategic plan that applies to any part of that financial year; and\n\n(ii) any direction given under section 12MA(1) for that financial year; and\n\n(c) be in a form agreed to by VLA and the Attorney-General.\n\n(3) No later than one month after a corporate plan is received by the Attorney-General, the Attorney-General may give VLA comments on the corporate plan.\n\n(4) If, by the end of the period referred to in subsection (3), the Attorney-General has not given VLA comments in accordance with that subsection, VLA must publish the corporate plan on its internet site as soon as practicable.\n\n(5) If the Attorney-General gives comments under subsection (3), the following provisions apply—\n\n(a) VLA may amend the corporate plan having regard to the comments; and\n\n(b) no later than one month after comments are given, VLA must—\n\n(i) publish the plan, incorporating any amendments made under paragraph (a), on its internet site; and\n\n(ii) if the plan was amended, give a copy of the amended plan to the Attorney-General.\n\nS. 12N (Heading) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 20(1).\n\nS. 12N inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 6.\n\n\t12N Annual report\n\nS. 12N(1) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 20(2).\n\n(1) VLA must each September furnish to the Attorney-General a report of the operations of VLA during the year ending on 30 June of that year together with the audited financial statements in respect of that year.\n\nS. 12N(1A) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 20(3).\n\n(1A) The annual report for a financial year must set out the operations of VLA by reference to, or comparison with, the budget, intended achievements, intended activities and financial projections set out in the corporate plan for that financial year.\n\nS. 12N(2) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 20(4).\n\n(2) The Attorney-General must cause the annual report and the audited financial statements to be laid before both Houses of Parliament as soon as practicable after receipt or, if Parliament is not then sitting, as soon as practicable after the next meeting of Parliament.\n\n(3) Subject to subsection (4) but despite any other provision in this Act, VLA—\n\n(a) may at any time furnish to the Attorney-General any report it considers necessary; and\n\n(b) must provide without delay to the Attorney-General any information that the Attorney-General may require in relation to any matter dealt with by VLA.\n\n(4) VLA is not required to provide information of the kind referred to in section 43 unless the assisted person concerned consents to the provision of the information.\n\nS. 12O inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 21.\n\n\t12O Quarterly reports\n\n(1) No later than 2 months after the end of a quarter, VLA must prepare and publish a quarterly report on VLA's internet site.\n\n(2) The quarterly report for a quarter must—\n\n(i) VLA's financial performance for that quarter; and\n\n(ii) a projection of VLA's financial performance for the next quarter; and\n\n(iii) VLA's service delivery performance for that quarter; and\n\n(iv) a projection of VLA's service delivery performance for the next quarter; and\n\n(b) measure those performances and projected performances against indicators specified by the Attorney-General by notice in writing given to VLA.\n\n(3) For the purposes of this section, each of the following periods is a ***quarter***—\n\n(a) the period beginning on 1 January and ending on 31 March;\n\n(b) the period beginning on 1 April and ending on 30 June;\n\n(c) the period beginning on 1 July and ending on 30 September;\n\n(d) the period beginning on 1 October and ending on 31 December.\n\nPart III—Officers of commission\n\nSs 13, 14 repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 10(a).\n\n\t15 Officers and employees\n\nS. 15(1) substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 10(b)(i).\n\n(1) VLA may employ any officers and employees necessary for the purposes of this Act.\n\nS. 15(2) substituted by No. 48/1995 s. 10(b)(i).\n\n(2) VLA must consult with the Secretary to the Department of Justice on the terms and conditions of employment of officers and employees.\n\nS. 15(2A) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 8(1), repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 10(b)(ii).\n\nS. 15(3) repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 10(b)(ii).\n\nS. 15(4) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(b)(iii).\n\n(4) VLA, if it is practicable to do so, shall make reciprocal arrangements with other legal aid commissions for the purpose of facilitating the transfer of staff between VLA and any of those other legal aid commissions.\n\nS. 16 amended by Nos 61/1989 ss 6, 15(1), 48/1995 s. 10(c)–(g), 35/1996 s. 453(Sch. 1 items 47.2–47.4), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.5).\n\n\t16 VLA and its officers are subject to legal professional standards and duties\n\n(1) VLA or an officer of VLA when engaging in legal practice—\n\n(a) must observe the same rules and standards of professional conduct and ethics as those that a legal practitioner is, by law or a custom of the legal profession, required to observe in engaging in legal practice; and\n\n(b) is subject to the same professional duties as those to which a legal practitioner is subject, by law or a custom of the legal profession, in engaging in legal practice.\n\n(2) For the purpose of the application of subsection (1) in respect of a member of staff of VLA who is providing legal services to a person—\n\n(a) VLA is deemed to be a law practice retained by the person to act on the person's behalf; and\n\n(b) the members of staff of VLA are deemed to be employed by that law practice.\n\n(3) For the purposes of this section, a reference to engaging in legal practice or providing legal services includes a reference to exercising a right of audience in a court.\n\n(4) VLA must indemnify an officer of VLA against any negligent act or omission by the officer in the course of the performance of his or her duties or in good faith in the purported performance of those duties.\n\nS. 16(5) amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.2).\n\n(5) Parts 4.2 and 4.5 of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria) apply to the VLA as if it were an incorporated legal practice.\n\nS. 17 amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(h), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.5).\n\n","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"In any proceeding signature of officer of VLA deemed to be signature of legal practitioner for a party to the proceeding","content":"\t17 In any proceeding signature of officer of VLA deemed to be signature of legal practitioner for a party to the proceeding\n\nWhere in any proceedings a document is required or permitted to be signed by a legal practitioner for a party to the proceedings who is an assisted person, the signature of an officer of VLA authorised by the Board to sign documents on behalf of VLA for the purposes of this section, shall be deemed to be the signature of the legal practitioner for that party.\n\nPt 4 (Heading) amended by No. 10/1986  \ns. 9(d), substituted by No. 44/1997  \n\nPart IV—Independent reviewers\n\nS. 18 amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9, 48/1995  \ns. 10(i), substituted by No. 44/1997  \n\n\t18 Panel of independent reviewers\n\n(1) The Attorney-General may appoint a panel of independent reviewers for the purposes of this Act consisting of—\n\n(a) an eligible person appointed as chairperson of the panel; and\n\n(b) as many other eligible persons appointed as members of the panel as are required.\n\n(2) A person is eligible to be appointed as a panel member if—\n\nS. 18(2)(a) amended by No. 15/2018 s. 33.\n\n(a) he or she is not a director of VLA, the chief executive officer or an officer or employee of VLA; and\n\n(b) he or she is a person with knowledge and experience that, in the opinion of the Attorney-General, is relevant to the functions of an independent reviewer.\n\n(3) A panel member—\n\n(a) holds office for the term (not exceeding 3 years) specified in the instrument of appointment;\n\n(b) is eligible for re-appointment;\n\n(c) is, while acting as an independent reviewer, entitled to be paid the remuneration and allowances (if any) fixed in respect of him or her by the Governor in Council from time to time.\n\nS. 18(4) substituted by Nos 46/1998  \ns. 7(Sch. 1), 108/2004 s. 117(1) (Sch. 3 item 111.3), 80/2006 s. 26(Sch. item 58.3).\n\n(4) The **Public Administration Act 2004** (other than Part 3 of that Act) applies to a panel member in respect of the office of panel member.\n\n(5) The Attorney-General may, in the instrument of appointment of a panel member, specify terms and conditions of appointment.\n\n(6) The Attorney-General may at any time remove a panel member from office.\n\n(7) A panel member may resign from office by delivering to the Attorney-General a signed letter of resignation.\n\nS. 19 amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 10, 48/1995  \ns. 10(j)(i)(ii), substituted by No. 44/1997  \n\n\t19 Functions of independent reviewers\n\n(1) The functions of a member of the panel of independent reviewers are—\n\n(a) to exercise any powers or carry out any functions delegated to him or her by VLA;\n\n(b) when appointed by the chairperson of the panel to do so, to review decisions of VLA or of an officer of VLA or of another independent reviewer with respect to—\n\n(i) refusal to provide legal assistance of the nature or to the extent applied for;\n\n(ii) the conditions on which legal assistance will be provided;\n\n(iii) the variation or termination of legal assistance;\n\nS. 19(1)(b)(iv) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.6).\n\n(iv) the allocation of work amongst law practices;\n\n(c) to hear and determine any matter referred to him or her under section 30;\n\nS. 19(1)(d) repealed by No. 93/1998  \ns. 10(2).\n\nS. 19(1A) inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.7).\n\n(1A) For the purposes of subsection (1), VLA is deemed to be a law practice.\n\n(2) An independent reviewer may, in the interest of justice, reconsider any decision that he or she has made and vary or reverse that decision if he or she considers it necessary.\n\nS. 19A inserted by No. 10/1986  \ns. 11, amended by No. 48/1995  \ns. 10(k), repealed by No. 44/1997  \n\nS. 20 amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 14(2), 61/1989 s. 7, 48/1995  \ns. 10(k), repealed by No. 44/1997  \n\nS. 21 amended by No. 10/1986  \ns. 9(b), repealed by No. 44/1997  \n\nS. 22 amended by No. 10/1986  \ns. 9(b), repealed by No. 44/1997  \n\nPart V—Provision of legal assistance\n\n\t23 Applications for legal assistance\n\nS. 23(1) amended by No. 61/1989  \ns. 8 (as amended by No. 48/1995  \ns. 11(7)(a)).\n\n(1) An application for legal assistance, other than legal assistance of a class prescribed as exempted from the provisions of this subsection, shall be in writing in or to the like effect of the form approved by VLA.\n\n(2) An application for legal assistance may be lodged at or posted to—\n\nS. 23(2)(a) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(l).\n\n(a) any office of VLA; or\n\nS. 23(2)(b) substituted by No. 57/1989 s. 3(Sch.  \nitem 115.1(a)).\n\n(b) a venue of the Magistrates' Court.\n\nS. 23(3) amended by Nos 57/1989 s. 3(Sch. item 115.1(b)), 48/1995 s. 10(l).\n\n(3) An application lodged at or posted to a venue of the Magistrates' Court must be forwarded immediately to VLA or as VLA may from time to time direct.\n\nS. 23(4) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(l).\n\n(4) VLA may, in special circumstances, treat an application that does not comply with all the requirements of subsection (1) as having been duly made.\n\nS. 23(5) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(l).\n\n(5) An applicant for legal assistance shall furnish to VLA such information and such declarations and other documents as VLA requires for the purpose of enabling a decision to be made as to whether legal assistance should be granted in respect of the application.\n\n\t24 Circumstances in which legal assistance may be provided\n\nS. 24(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(m)(i).\n\n(1) VLA may provide legal assistance to a person if—\n\nS. 24(1)(a) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.8(a)).\n\n(a) in its opinion the person is in need of that legal assistance by reason that he is unable to afford the full cost of obtaining from a private legal practitioner the legal services in respect of which the legal assistance is sought; and\n\n(b) it is reasonable having regard to all relevant matters to provide the legal assistance.\n\nS. 24(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(m)(i).\n\n(2) In the making of a decision whether legal assistance shall be provided to a person charged with—\n\n(a) an indictable offence;\n\n(b) a summary offence in circumstances where the person could have been proceeded against for the same offence by indictment; or\n\n(c) an indictable offence which by consent has ceased to be indictable—\n\nif VLA is of opinion that it is desirable in the interests of justice that the person should have legal representation, regard shall be had only to the matters referred to in paragraph (a) of subsection (1).\n\nS. 24(2A) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 4, amended by No. 55/2014 s. 149.\n\n(2A) In the making of a decision whether legal assistance is to be provided to a person who is subject to a supervision order under Part 5 or 5A of the **Crimes (Mental Impairment and Unfitness to be Tried) Act 1997** (including a person who is deemed to be subject to a custodial supervision order by force of clause 2 of Schedule 3 to that Act) in relation to any proceeding under that Act with respect to that supervision order, VLA is to have regard only to the matters referred to in subsection (1)(b).\n\nS. 24(3) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.8(b)).\n\n(3) In the making of a decision whether a person is in need of legal assistance by reason that he is unable to afford the full cost of obtaining from private legal practitioners the legal services in respect of which the legal assistance is sought, regard shall be had to all relevant matters, including the following matters—\n\n(a) the income of the person;\n\n(b) the cash that is readily available to the person or can be made so available;\n\n(c) the debts, liabilities and other financial obligations of the person;\n\n(d) the cost of living in the locality in which the person resides;\n\nS. 24(3)(e) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.8(b)).\n\n(e) the cost of obtaining the legal services from private legal practitioners; and\n\nS. 24(3)(f) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.8(b)).\n\n(f) any other matters affecting the ability of the person to meet the full cost of obtaining the legal services from private legal practitioners—\n\nbut, without limiting the generality of the preceding provision of this section—\n\nS. 24(3)(f)(i) repealed by No. 10/1986 s. 12(a).\n\n(ii) the assets and financial circumstances of a person who is involved only in a representative, fiduciary or official capacity—\n\nshall not be taken into account as affecting the ability of the person to meet the cost of obtaining the legal services from private legal practitioners.\n\n(4) In the making of a decision whether it is reasonable in all the circumstances to provide legal assistance to a person, regard shall be had to all relevant matters, including—\n\n(a) the nature and extent of any benefit that may accrue to the person, to the public or to any section of the public from the provision of the assistance or of any detriment that may be suffered by the person, by the public or by any section of the public if the assistance is not provided;\n\n(b) in the case of assistance in relation to a proceeding in a court other than a criminal appeal—whether the proceeding is likely to terminate in a manner favourable to the person; and\n\n(c) in the case of assistance in relation to a criminal appeal—whether there are reasonable grounds for the appeal.\n\nS. 24(5) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(m)(ii).\n\n(5) Except where a reciprocal arrangement is made pursuant to section 7(e) with another legal aid commission, legal assistance shall not be provided under this Act to a person who is not ordinarily resident in the State unless the assistance relates to—\n\n(a) a proceeding in a court in the State; or\n\n(b) a matter arising under the law in force in the State.\n\n(6) Legal assistance shall not be provided under this Act to a person in or in connexion with a review under Part VI.\n\nS. 24(7)  \nrepealed by No. 10/1986 s. 12(b),  \nnew s. 24(7) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 16(3).\n\n(7) This section is subject to any legal aid arrangement.\n\n\t25 Legal assistance may be provided notwithstanding that the interests of the assisted person are adverse to the State or the Commonwealth\n\nLegal assistance may be provided under this Act to a person in relation to any matter notwithstanding that the interests of that person are, or may be, adverse to the interests of the State or the Commonwealth, the interests of an authority or body established for a public purpose by a law of the State or the Commonwealth or the interests of an incorporated company in which the State, the Commonwealth or such an authority or body has an interest.\n\n","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain legal aid provided without charge","content":"\t26 Certain legal aid provided without charge\n\n(1) Legal aid provided under this Act by way of—\n\n(a) duty lawyer services; or\n\n(b) legal advice—\n\nshall, subject to subsection (2), be provided without charge.\n\nS. 26(2) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(n), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.9 (a)(b)).\n\n(2) Where legal advice is being provided to a person under this Act and it appears to an officer of VLA or a private legal practitioner that the legal advice required by the person is likely to be of a substantial or continuing nature, the officer or private legal practitioner may require the person to make an application for legal assistance in accordance with section 23, and where such a requirement is made subsections (1) and (4) of that section and sections 24, 27 and 33 shall apply to the application.\n\n","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conditions","content":"\t27 Conditions\n\nS. 27(1) amended by No. 10/1986 s. 13(1)(a).\n\n(1) The granting under this Act of an application by a person for legal assistance, other than legal assistance to which section 26(1) applies, may be on the basis that the assistance will be provided without charge or may be subject to all or any of the following conditions—\n\nS. 27(1)(a) amended by Nos 38/1992 s. 7(a)(i)(ii), 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(a) a condition that the person pays to VLA or as directed by VLA a contribution of a specified amount or an amount to be specified towards the cost to VLA of providing the assistance and that the person is or may be required to pay interest on the specified amount or amount to be specified, upon any terms and conditions determined by VLA; and\n\nS. 27(1)(b) amended by Nos 38/1992 s. 7(b)(i)(ii), 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(b) a condition that the person makes a payment or payments to VLA or as directed by VLA in respect of any out-of-pocket expenses incurred, or to be incurred, by VLA in providing the assistance and that the person is or may be required to pay interest on the payment or payments incurred or to be incurred, upon any terms and conditions determined by VLA; and\n\nS. 27(1)(c) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 13(1)(b), amended by Nos 38/1992 s. 7(c), 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(c) a condition that the cost or part of the cost, and any interest payable on the whole or the part of the cost to VLA of providing assistance be secured—\n\nS. 27(1)(c)(i) amended by No. 38/1992 s. 10(3).\n\n(i) by a charge under section 47A(1) over any land or a charge over any other property which is recovered or preserved for that person in the proceedings; or\n\nS. 27(1)(c)(ii) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(o), 76/2001 s. 3.\n\n(ii) in any other manner VLA thinks fit over any property, whether land or any other property, in which the person has an interest or in which the person acquires an interest during the period of assistance.\n\nS. 27(1A) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 13(1)(c), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(1A) VLA must advise the applicant in writing before imposing any condition under subsection (1)(c) on the provision of legal assistance.\n\nS. 27(1B) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 7(d), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(1B) VLA may not impose a condition under subsection (1) requiring a person to pay a rate of interest which exceeds 70% of the rate fixed under section 2 of the **Penalty Interest Rates Act 1983**.\n\nS. 27(1C) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 7(d), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(1C) If VLA has imposed a condition under subsection (1) requiring a person to pay interest on any amount payable to VLA, interest must not accrue until 30 days after VLA has communicated to the assisted person under section 33—\n\n(a) its decision to impose a condition requiring the payment of the amount; and\n\n(b) its decision to impose the condition requiring the payment of interest.\n\nS. 27(1D) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 7(d).\n\n(1D) If communication of one decision to impose a condition is given at a different time from the other, interest must not accrue until 30 days after the later communication.\n\nS. 27(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 13(1)(d), 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(2) An amount required to be paid by an assisted person under this section shall be paid or secured in such manner and within such time as VLA directs.\n\nS. 27(3) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(o).\n\n(3) If a person who is or has been an assisted person has not paid an amount payable by him to VLA under this section, the amount is recoverable by VLA by action in a court of competent jurisdiction as a debt due and payable to VLA.\n\nS. 27(4) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 5.\n\n(4) All money paid by persons in accordance with a condition imposed under subsection (1) on account of costs or out-of-pocket expenses in advance of legal assistance to be provided by VLA—\n\nS. 27(4)(a) amended by Nos 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.10), 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.3).\n\n(a) is not required to be treated as trust money within the meaning of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria), despite anything to the contrary in that Act; and\n\n(b) must be paid into the Fund.\n\nS. 27A inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 6.\n\n","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"27A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Refund of money paid in accordance with section 27","content":"\t27A Refund of money paid in accordance with section 27\n\nIf a person has paid money in accordance with a condition imposed under section 27 on account of costs or out-of-pocket expenses in advance of legal assistance to be provided by VLA and that assistance is not provided, VLA must refund to that person any unexpended part of that money out of the Fund.\n\nS. 28 amended by Nos 10/1986  \ns. 9(b), 48/1995 s. 10(p)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(3).\n\n","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Decisions relating to the provision of legal services","content":"\t28 Decisions relating to the provision of legal services\n\nWhere a decision is made to provide legal assistance under this Act, VLA or the independent reviewer (as the case may be) shall also decide in accordance with guidelines determined by VLA in pursuance of sections 8 and 9—\n\nS. 28(a) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(p)(i), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.11).\n\n(a) whether the legal assistance should be provided by making available the services of a private legal practitioner, whether the legal assistance should be provided by making available the services of an officer of VLA or whether both such services should be provided;\n\n(b) the nature and extent of the legal assistance to be provided; and\n\nS. 28(c) amended by No. 10/1986 s. 13(2).\n\n(c) whether the legal assistance is to be provided without charge or subject to all or any of the conditions referred to in section 27(1).\n\n","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Variation of a decision to provide legal assistance","content":"\t29 Variation of a decision to provide legal assistance\n\nA decision to provide legal assistance to a person under this Act may be varied at any time so as to—\n\n(a) terminate the provision of legal assistance;\n\n(b) alter the nature or extent of the legal assistance (including the variation of a decision relating to the person or persons who will provide legal services);\n\n(c) make the provision of the legal assistance subject to conditions; or\n\n(d) alter a condition to which the provision of the legal assistance is subject.\n\nS. 29A inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 19.\n\n","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"29A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Practitioner panels","content":"\t29A Practitioner panels\n\nS. 29A(1) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(a)).\n\n(1) VLA may establish different panels for—\n\n(a) different classes of matters in relation to which legal assistance may be provided under this Act; or\n\n(b) different parts of the State—\n\nand may determine the conditions subject to which a private law practice or private legal practitioner may be included on any such panel.\n\nS. 29A(2) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(b)).\n\n(2) If VLA proposes to establish a panel under subsection (1) or include additional names on an established panel, it must, by notice published in a daily newspaper circulating generally throughout Victoria or in the relevant part of the State (as the case requires), invite expressions of interest from private law practices or private legal practitioners in having their names included on the panel.\n\n(3) A notice under subsection (2)—\n\n(a) must be published not later than 21 days before the panel is established by VLA or any additional name included on it, as the case requires; and\n\n(b) must specify—\n\nS. 29A(3)(b)(i) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(c)).\n\n(i) the qualifications and experience that a private law practice or private legal practitioner included on the panel must have or the part of the State within which their principal place of practice must be located; and\n\nS. 29A(3)(b)(ii) amended by Nos 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(c)), 53/2007 s. 22.\n\n(ii) the period (not exceeding 5 years) during which a private law practice or private legal practitioner may be included on the panel; and\n\nS. 29A(3)(b)(iii) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(c)).\n\n(iii) the basis on which payment will be made to any private law practice or private legal practitioner included on the panel for services performed as a panel member on behalf of an assisted person; and\n\n(iv) performance standards in relation to the provision of services by panel members; and\n\n(v) requirements with respect to the making of reports to VLA and the keeping of records that must be complied with by panel members in respect of the performance of services on behalf of assisted persons; and\n\nS. 29A(3)(b) (vi) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(c)).\n\n(vi) the grounds on which, and process by which, a private law practice or private legal practitioner may be removed from the panel.\n\nS. 29A(4) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(d)).\n\n(4) The name of a private law practice or private legal practitioner may be included on a panel whether or not their name is also included on a referral panel under section 30 or on another panel established under this section.\n\nS. 29A(5) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(d)).\n\n(5) A private law practice or private legal practitioner may be re-included on a panel after the expiry of the period for which they were included.\n\nS. 29A(6) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.12(d)).\n\n(6) A private law practice or private legal practitioner may, by writing to VLA, request that their name be removed from a panel and VLA must comply with that request.\n\nS. 29A(7) substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.13).\n\n(7) If the name of a private law practice is included on a panel, the names of all the private legal practitioners who are partners, directors or employees of the private law practice are deemed to be included on the panel.\n\nS. 29A(8) repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.13).\n\nS. 29B inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 19.\n\n","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"29B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Assignment of case to practitioner panel","content":"\t29B Assignment of case to practitioner panel\n\nS. 29B(1) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.14).\n\n(1) VLA may assign the conduct of an assisted person's case to a private law practice or private legal practitioner included on a panel established under section 29A.\n\nS. 29B(2) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.14).\n\n(2) If VLA assigns a case as mentioned in subsection (1), VLA must, on behalf of the assisted person, select a private law practice or private legal practitioner from the names on the panel.\n\nS. 30 substituted by No. 10/1986 s. 14(1).\n\n","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Selection of practitioner[[2]](#endnote-3)","content":"\t30 Selection of practitioner[[2]](#endnote-3)\n\nS. 30(1) substituted by No. 14/1994 s. 5,  \namended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a)), 44/1997 s. 20(1), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.15).\n\n(a) legal services are to be performed on behalf of an assisted person by a private legal practitioner; and\n\n(b) VLA has not assigned the conduct of the assisted person's case to a private legal practitioner chosen after VLA called for tenders to conduct the case; and\n\n(c) VLA has not under section 29B assigned the conduct of the assisted person's case to a private law practice or private legal practitioner included on a panel established under section 29A—\n\nthe assisted person is entitled to select a private law practice from the names on a referral panel.\n\nS. 30(2) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a)), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.15).\n\n(2) If an assisted person does not wish to exercise the right to select a private law practice under subsection (1), VLA must, on that person's behalf, select a private law practice from the names on a referral panel.\n\nS. 30(3) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a) (b)), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.15).\n\n(3) In selecting a private law practice under subsection (2), the paramount consideration is the interests of the assisted person but, subject to that consideration, VLA must allocate work equitably amongst the private law practices named on referral panels.\n\nS. 30(4) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(a), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996 s. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a)(c)), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(4) A private law practice may apply to VLA for inclusion on a referral panel.\n\nS. 30(5) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(d)(i) (ii)), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(5) A private law practice is not eligible to apply under subsection (4) during any period—\n\n(a) for which the private law practice is disqualified from applying in accordance with this section; or\n\n(b) of removal under subsection (10) or (11).\n\nS. 30(6) amended by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a) (e)), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(6) On receiving an application under subsection (4), VLA may—\n\n(a) accept the application and include the name of the private law practice on a referral panel; or\n\n(b) subject to subsection (14), refuse the application and may disqualify the private law practice from making another application under subsection (4) for a specified period.\n\nS. 30(7) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 20(2), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(7) VLA must prepare and maintain panels of names of private law practices from the names of the private law practices that have applied under subsection (4) and been accepted for inclusion.\n\nS. 30(8) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(f)(i)(ii), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a) (f)(i)(ii), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(8) If the name of a private law practice is included on a referral panel, the names of all the private legal practitioners who are partners, directors or employees of the private law practice are, by force of this subsection, also included on the panel, except the name of any of those legal practitioners that has been removed under this section.\n\nS. 30(9) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(g), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii)(iii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a) (g)(h)), substituted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(9) If the name of a sole practitioner is included on a referral panel, the names of all the practitioners who are employed by the sole practitioner are, by force of this subsection, also included on the panel, except the name of any of those practitioners employed by the sole practitioner which has been removed under this section.\n\nS. 30(9A) inserted by No. 61/1989 s. 9(1)(h), amended by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(i)), repealed by No. 93/1998  \n\nS. 30(10) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(i), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(j)(i)(ii), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(10) Subject to subsection (15), VLA may remove from a referral panel for a specified period the name of—\n\n(a) any private law practice; or\n\n(b) any private legal practitioner who is a partner, director or employee of a private law practice.\n\nS. 30(11) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(j), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(a)(k)), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(11) Without limiting VLA's powers to refuse an application made under subsection (4) or remove a name from a referral panel, VLA may—\n\n(a) refuse an application made under subsection (4) or remove from a referral panel the name of a private law practice if the name of a private legal practitioner who is a partner, director or employee of the private law practice is removed from the panel;\n\n(b) remove from a referral panel the name of any private law practice that habitually takes an excessive time to defend persons charged with criminal offences.\n\nS. 30(12) amended by Nos 57/1989 s. 3(Sch. item 115.2), 61/1989 s. 9(1)(k), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(4)(a), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(12) VLA may amend a referral panel—\n\n(a) to remove the name of any private law practice that, or private legal practitioner who, has ceased to practise; or\n\n(b) to record any change in name of a private law practice or private legal practitioner; or\n\n(c) to remove a name in accordance with a request under subsection (13).\n\nS. 30(13) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(4)(b)(i)(ii), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \n\n(13) A private law practice or a private legal practitioner may, by writing to VLA, request that their name be removed from a referral panel and VLA must comply with that request.\n\nS. 30(14) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(4)(c)(i)(ii), substituted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(14) Before refusing an application made under subsection (4), VLA must—\n\n(a) give written notice to the applicant setting out—\n\n(i) the reasons for the proposed refusal; and\n\n(ii) the period of any proposed disqualification; and\n\n(b) afford the applicant a reasonable opportunity to be heard and show cause why the application should not be refused or the disqualification should not be made.\n\nS. 30(15) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(l), 48/1995 s. 10(q)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(l)), 44/1997  \ns. 17(4)(d), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \ns. 7, 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.17).\n\n(15) Before removing a name from a referral panel under subsection (10) or (11), VLA must—\n\n(a) give written notice to the private law practice or private legal practitioner concerned setting out the reasons for the proposed removal; and\n\n(b) afford them a reasonable opportunity to be heard and show cause why the removal should not be made.\n\nS. 30(16) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(4)(e)(i)(ii), substituted by Nos 93/1998  \ns. 7, 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.17).\n\n(16) A notice given to a private law practice under subsection (14) or (15) may be given to any principal of the practice.\n\nS. 30(16A) inserted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(16A) If a person wishes to be heard in accordance with subsection (14) or (15), the panel chairperson must appoint an independent reviewer to hear and determine the matter of the refusal, removal or disqualification.\n\nS. 30(16B) inserted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(16B) Subject to this Act and the regulations (if any), in hearing and determining a matter under this section the reviewer—\n\n(a) may consider any relevant matters as grounds for removal, refusal or disqualification and is not limited to consideration of the grounds set out in the notice provided by VLA under subsection (14)(a) or (15)(a);\n\n(b) may—\n\n(i) confirm, vary or refuse to confirm the proposed removal, refusal or disqualification; or\n\n(ii) substitute his or her own determination for the proposed removal, refusal or disqualification—\n\nand make a determination accordingly;\n\n(c) may regulate his or her own proceedings.\n\nS. 30(16C) inserted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(16C) The independent reviewer must determine a matter under this section as expeditiously as possible after the end of the hearing.\n\nS. 30(16D) inserted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(16D) After hearing the matter, the independent reviewer must advise VLA of his or her determination.\n\nS. 30(16E) inserted by No. 93/1998  \n\n(16E) An independent reviewer must keep records of his or her determinations and proceedings under this section.\n\nS. 30(16F) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 7, amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.18).\n\n(16F) VLA must give notice of its decision under subsection (6)(b), (10) or (11) or the determination of the independent reviewer under subsection (16A) to the private law practice or private legal practitioner concerned.\n\nS. 30(17) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(q)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 15(1).\n\n(17) An action does not lie against any director of the board any officer or employee of VLA or any member of a legal aid review committee on account of any proceedings taken or thing said or done in the course of or in relation to any proceedings or hearing under this section before the commencement of section 17(4) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997** or, in the case of a member of a legal aid review committee, after that commencement in accordance with section 51.\n\nS. 30(17A) inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 15(2).\n\n(17A) A director or officer or employee of VLA or an independent reviewer is not personally liable for anything done or omitted to be done in good faith after the commencement of section 17(4) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**—\n\n(a) in the exercise of a power or the discharge of a duty under this section; or\n\n(b) in the reasonable belief that the act or omission was in the exercise of a power or the discharge of a duty under this section.\n\nS. 30(17B) inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 15(2).\n\n(17B) Any liability resulting from an act or omission that would, but for subsection (17A), attach to a director or officer or employee of VLA or to an independent reviewer attaches instead to VLA.\n\nS. 30(18) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 9(1)(m), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(m)), substituted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 8.\n\n(18) A decision of VLA or a determination of an independent reviewer under this section is final and not subject to appeal.\n\nS. 30(18A) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 8\n\n(18A) Nothing in subsection (18) prevents the taking of proceedings—\n\n(a) seeking the grant of any relief or remedy in the nature of certiorari, prohibition, mandamus or quo warranto or the grant of a declaration or an injunction; or\n\n(b) seeking any order under the **Administrative Law Act 1978**—\n\nin respect of any decision of VLA or determination of an independent reviewer under this section.\n\n(19) In this section—\n\nS. 30(19) def. of *firm of solicitors* substituted by No. 61/1989  \ns. 9(1)(n), substituted by def. of *firm* by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(n)(i)), repealed by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.19(a)).\n\nS. 30(19) def. of *participating employee* inserted by No. 61/1989 s. 9(1)(n), repealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(n) (ii)).\n\nS. 30(19) def. of *referral panel* amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.19(b)).\n\n***referral panel*** means a panel prepared under subsection (7);\n\nS. 30(19) def. of *sole practitioner* repealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.6(n) (ii)).\n\nS. 30A inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 9.\n\n","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"30A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Immunity of participants","content":"\t30A Immunity of participants\n\nIn a proceeding before an independent reviewer under section 30—\n\n(a) a person representing a party has the same protection and immunity as a legal practitioner has in a proceeding in the Supreme Court; and\n\n(b) a party to the proceeding has the same protection and immunity as a party to a proceeding has in a proceeding in the Supreme Court; and\n\n(c) a person appearing as a witness has the same protection and immunity as a witness has in a proceeding in the Supreme Court.\n\n","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Relationship between legal practitioner and client","content":"\t31 Relationship between legal practitioner and client\n\nS. 31(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 15(a), 61/1989 s. 10(a)(i)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.7(a)), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.20(a)).\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (3), the relationship, and any privilege arising out of the relationship, between legal practitioner and client is not, and the rights of any of them are not, affected by the disclosure of information or the circumstances of a private legal practitioner giving his or her services in pursuance of this Act.\n\nS. 31(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 15(b), 48/1995 s. 10(r)(i)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.7(b)), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.20(b)).\n\n(2) Subject to subsection (3), the like privileges as those that arise from the relationship of client and legal practitioner acting in his professional capacity and in the course of his professional employment shall arise between an applicant or an assisted person and VLA or a legal practitioner who is an officer of VLA when VLA or that officer practises as, or performs any of the functions of, the legal practitioner for the applicant or assisted person in pursuance of this Act.\n\nS. 31(3) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 15(c), 16(b), 48/1995 s. 10(r)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(5)(a)(b), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.21).\n\n(3) A relevant person in relation to an assisted person must disclose to VLA, an officer of VLA or an independent reviewer any information that is within the relevant person's knowledge or to which the relevant person has access that is required by VLA, the officer or the independent reviewer for the purposes of performing functions under this Act and that—\n\n(a) is relevant to the provision of services by way of legal assistance to the assisted person; or\n\n(b) concerns the progress and disposal of the matter.\n\nS. 31(4) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 15(d), repealed by No. 61/1989 s. 10(b), new s. 31(4) inserted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.21).\n\n(4) In subsection (3)—\n\n***relevant person***, in relation to an assisted person, means—\n\n(a) a private law practice that has been selected to perform, is performing, or has performed, services for the assisted person in respect of any matter; or\n\n(b) a private legal practitioner who is or was a partner, director or employee of that private law practice.\n\n","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Private legal practitioner to demand, take or accept payment allowed by the Act","content":"\t32 Private legal practitioner to demand, take or accept payment allowed by the Act\n\nS. 32(1) amended by No. 10/1986 s. 17(a), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.22).\n\n(1) If a private legal practitioner performs or has performed legal services on behalf of an assisted person, he or she must not demand, take or accept any payment for performing those services other than the payment to which the private law practice of which he or she is a principal or employee is entitled under this Act.\n\n1. 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months.\n\nS. 32(2) amended by No. 10/1986 s. 17(b)(i)(ii) substituted by Nos 61/1989 s. 11, 38/1992 s. 8, amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(s), 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(h)(i), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(a)).\n\n(2) Subject to any legal aid arrangement, VLA may determine scales of payments to be made to private law practices for the performance of services on behalf of assisted persons.\n\nS. 32(2A) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 17(c), substituted by Nos 61/1989 s. 11, 38/1992 s. 8, amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(b)).\n\n(2A) The payment to be made to a private law practice for the performance of services on behalf of assisted persons is—\n\n(a) the amount payable under any applicable scale determined pursuant to subsection (2); or\n\nS. 32(2A)(b) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(s).\n\n(b) in any matter for which an applicable scale has not been determined, an amount determined by VLA.\n\nS. 32(2B) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 17(c), repealed by No. 61/1989 s. 11, new  \ns. 32(2B) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 8,  \namended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(s), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.8), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(c)), 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.4).\n\n(2B) VLA must consult the Victorian Legal Services Board and any professional associations that VLA considers it appropriate to consult, before making a determination under subsection (2).\n\nS. 32(2BA)  \ninserted by No. 44/1997 s. 18(1), amended by Nos 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(h)(ii), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(d)).\n\n(2BA) Despite anything to the contrary in this Act and subject to any legal aid arrangement, VLA may—\n\nS. 32(2BA)(a) amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(d)).\n\n(a) determine a limit on the total amount of payments which may be made to a private law practice under this Act for a class of matter or different classes of matters; and\n\n(b) vary (whether by increasing or reducing the amount of a limit) or revoke a determination under paragraph (a)—\n\nand a private law practice is not entitled to any payment in respect of such a matter in excess of a limit determined and in force under this subsection.\n\nS. 32(2C) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 8, amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(s), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(d)).\n\n(2C) Despite subsection (2A), VLA may enter into an agreement with a private law practice to undertake work on behalf of an assisted person for payments which are different from those determined by VLA.\n\nS. 32(3) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(s), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.23(e)), 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.5) (as amended by No. 8/2015 s. 13).\n\n(3) On the application of the assisted person or VLA the bill of costs relating to the performance of those services shall be reviewed in accordance with Part 4.3 of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria).\n\n","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Statement of reasons for a decision to be given","content":"\t33 Statement of reasons for a decision to be given\n\nS. 33(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 48/1995 s. 10(s), 44/1997  \ns. 17(6).\n\n(1) Where a decision in relation to the provision of legal assistance or in relation to the making of any payment in respect of costs, including a decision reconsidering or reviewing a previous decision, is made by VLA or by an independent reviewer under this Act, VLA—\n\n(a) within fourteen days after the decision is made, shall communicate the decision to the person who applied for the legal assistance or for the payment, as the case may be; and\n\n(b) in the case where the decision is a decision refusing to provide legal assistance or imposing a condition on the provision of legal assistance, shall, if requested to do so, cause to be furnished to the person a short statement of the reasons for the decision.\n\n(2) The communication to a person of a decision referred to in subsection (1) shall be effected—\n\nS. 33(2)(a) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(s), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.24).\n\n(a) in a case where the matter to which the decision relates was dealt with on behalf of the person by a private legal practitioner—by giving to the private legal practitioner, or by sending to the private legal practitioner by post to the address of the private legal practitioner last known to VLA, a document setting out the terms of the decision and particulars of the right of the person to have the decision reconsidered and reviewed in accordance with Part VI; and\n\n(b) in any other case—by giving such a document to the person or by sending such a document to the person—\n\nS. 33(2)(b)(i) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(s).\n\n(i) by post to the address of the person last known to VLA; or\n\n(ii) in any other way authorized by the person.\n\nPart VI—Reconsideration and review of decisions: complaints\n\n","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reconsideration of decisions of VLA and independent reviewer","content":"\t34 Reconsideration of decisions of VLA and independent reviewer\n\nS. 34(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 18(a), 14/1994 s. 6(a), 48/1995 s. 10(t)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \nss 17(6), 21.\n\n(1) A person affected by a decision of VLA or an officer of VLA or an independent reviewer or a delegate of VLA with respect to the provision of legal assistance may within the time fixed by VLA (being not less than 7 days after the date of the decision) request reconsideration of the decision.\n\nS. 34(1A) inserted by No. 61/1989  \ns. 12(1) (as amended by Nos 48/1995  \ns. 11(7)(b), 44/1997 s. 25), amended by No. 68/2009 s. 97(Sch. item 76.1).\n\n(1A) VLA may waive or extend the time fixed by it in a particular case except where the request for reconsideration relates to a criminal trial, criminal hearing or criminal appeal in the Supreme Court or the County Court.\n\nS. 34(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 14/1994 s. 6(b), 48/1995 s. 10(t)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(7).\n\n(2) Upon receipt of a request under subsection (1), VLA or an officer of VLA or the independent reviewer (as the case may be) shall reconsider the decision and may confirm vary or reverse the decision.\n\n","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review of decisions of VLA","content":"\t35 Review of decisions of VLA\n\nS. 35(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 18(b), 14/1994 s. 6(c), 48/1995 s. 10(v)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \nss 17(8), 21.\n\n(1) A person who has made a request under section 34(1) in respect of a decision of VLA or an officer or delegate of VLA and who is dissatisfied with the result of the reconsideration may apply in writing to VLA within the time fixed by VLA (being not less than 7 days after the date of the decision) for the review of the matter by an independent reviewer.\n\nS. 35(1A) inserted by No. 61/1989  \ns. 12(2) (as amended by Nos 48/1995  \ns. 11(7)(b), 44/1997 s. 25), amended by No. 68/2009 s. 97(Sch. item 76.2).\n\n(1A) VLA may waive or extend the time fixed by it in a particular case except where the request for review relates to a criminal trial, criminal hearing or criminal appeal in the Supreme Court or the County Court.\n\nS. 35(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 48/1995 s. 10(v)(i), 44/1997  \ns. 17(9)(a)(b).\n\n(2) Upon receipt of an application under subsection (1), the panel chairperson must appoint an independent reviewer to review the matter and that reviewer may confirm vary or reverse any decision.\n\nS. 35(2A) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 18(c), amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(10)(a).\n\n(2A) An independent reviewer—\n\nS. 35(2A)(a) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(10)(b).\n\n(a) must review only the actual decision referred to him or her for review; and\n\nS. 35(2A)(b) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(v)(i), 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(i).\n\n(b) in reviewing a decision must comply with and give effect to this Act, any legal aid arrangement and the determinations of VLA.\n\nS. 35(3) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 44/1997  \ns. 17(11).\n\n(3) The decision of an independent reviewer under this section is final and conclusive.\n\n","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review of decisions of independent reviewer","content":"\t36 Review of decisions of independent reviewer\n\nS. 36(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 16(b), 18(d), 48/1995 s. 10(x)(i), 44/1997  \nss 17(12)  \n(a)(b), 21.\n\n(1) A person who has made a request under section 34(1) in respect of a decision of an independent reviewer and who is dissatisfied with the result of the reconsideration may apply in writing to VLA within the time fixed by VLA (being not less than 7 days after the date of the decision) for the review of the matter by another independent reviewer.\n\nS. 36(1A) inserted by No. 61/1989  \ns. 12(3) (as amended by Nos 48/1995  \ns. 11(7)(b), 44/1997 s. 25) amended by No. 68/2009 s. 97(Sch. item 76.3).\n\n(1A) VLA may waive or extend the time fixed by it in a particular case except where the request for review relates to a criminal trial, criminal hearing or criminal appeal in the Supreme Court or the County Court.\n\nS. 36(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 16(b), 48/1995 s. 10(x)(i), 44/1997  \ns. 17(13)(a)(b).\n\n(2) Upon receipt of an application under subsection (1), the panel chairperson shall appoint another independent reviewer to review the matter and that reviewer may confirm vary or reverse any decision.\n\nS. 36(2A) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 18(e), amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(14)(a).\n\n(2A) An independent reviewer appointed under this section—\n\nS. 36(2A)(a) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(14)(b).\n\n(a) must review only the actual decision referred to him or her for review; and\n\nS. 36(2A)(b) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(x)(i), 93/1998  \ns. 16(1)(j).\n\n(b) in reviewing a decision must comply with and give effect to this Act, any legal aid arrangement and the determinations of VLA.\n\nS. 36(3) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 16(b), 44/1997  \ns. 17(15).\n\n(3) The decision of an independent reviewer under this section is final and conclusive.\n\nS. 36(4) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 16(b), 48/1995 s. 10(x)(i), 44/1997  \ns. 17(16).\n\n(4) An independent reviewer must cause notice of his or her decision under this section to be sent to VLA and to the person who requested the review and shall, if so requested by that person, cause a short term statement in writing of the reasons for the decision to be sent to him.\n\nS. 36(5) amended by No. 10/1986 s. 18(f).\n\n(5) In this section and sections 34 and 35 ***decision*** means—\n\n(a) a decision refusing to provide legal assistance under this Act;\n\nS. 36(5)(b) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 18(2).\n\n(b) a decision refusing to provide legal assistance under this Act of the nature or to the extent applied for other than a decision giving effect to a determination under section 32(2) or 32(2BA);\n\n(c) a decision imposing a condition on the provision of legal assistance under this Act or varying adversely to an assisted person a condition so imposed; or\n\n(d) a decision to terminate or vary the provision of legal assistance; or\n\nS. 36(5)(e) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 18(f), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(x)(i).\n\n(e) a decision of VLA under section 48.\n\nS. 37 amended by No. 10/1986 ss 9(b), 16(b),  \nsubstituted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 16.\n\n","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conflicts of interest","content":"\t37 Conflicts of interest\n\nAn independent reviewer who has a personal interest (whether pecuniary or otherwise) in a matter which could conflict with the proper performance of his or her duties in relation to the matter, must not exercise any power or carry out any function in relation to that matter at any time after becoming aware of the conflict of interest.\n\nS. 38 amended by Nos 10/1986  \ns. 16(b)(c), 48/1995  \ns. 10(y)(i)–(iii), repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(17).\n\nS. 39 amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(c), 16(b), 14/1994 s. 6(d), 48/1995 s. 10(z), repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(17).\n\nS. 40 amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 14/1994 s. 6(e), 48/1995 s. 10(z), 44/1997  \ns. 17(18)(a)(b) (i)(ii), repealed by No. 93/1998  \ns. 10(1).\n\nPt 6A (Heading and ss 40A–40G) inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\nPart VIA—Law Aid Scheme\n\nS. 40A inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"40A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"\t40A Definitions\n\nIn this Part—\n\n***assisted person*** means a person to whom litigation assistance is provided under and in accordance with the trust deed;\n\n***committee*** means the Law Aid Committee to be established under the trust deed;\n\nS. 40A def. of *funding agreement* inserted by No. 22/1996 s. 14, amended by No. 15/2018 ss 39(1)(a), 40(1)(a).\n\n***funding agreement*** means the Law Aid Funding Agreement entered or to be entered into by the Attorney-General, the Law Institute and the Victorian Bar in connection with the establishment of the Law Aid Scheme;\n\n***trust fund*** means the trust fund to be established by the trust deed;\n\nS. 40A def. of *trust deed* amended by No. 15/2018 ss 39(1)(b), 40(1)(b).\n\n***trust deed*** means the Law Aid Deed of Trust entered or to be entered into by the Law Institute, the Victorian Bar and the trustees for the purpose of establishing a trust fund to provide litigation assistance to parties in civil proceedings;\n\n***trustees*** means the trustees named in the trust deed or the trustees for the time being of the trust fund.\n\nS. 40B inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"40B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Immunity","content":"\t40B Immunity\n\nNo action lies against a trustee or a member of the committee in respect of any thing done or omitted to be done in good faith by the trustee or member in the performance or purported performance of his or her duties in administering the trust fund.\n\nS. 40C inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"40C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Fee agreement","content":"\t40C Fee agreement\n\n(1) Despite any other law to the contrary, the trustees may enter into an agreement with an assisted person or an applicant for litigation assistance under which the assisted person or applicant is required to pay to the trustees, for payment into the trust fund, a fee, which is dependent on the result of, or payable only in the event of success in, a legal proceeding in respect of which the assistance is or is to be provided.\n\n(2) A fee referred to in subsection (1) may be expressed as a percentage, not exceeding 10 per cent, of—\n\n(a) the award or settlement, excluding costs; or\n\n(b) the market value of any property that may be recovered—\n\nin the legal proceeding.\n\nS. 40D inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"40D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contingent payments","content":"\t40D Contingent payments\n\n(1) Despite any other law to the contrary, a person in his or her capacity as trustee or member of the committee or employee or agent of the trustees may enter into an agreement with the assisted person under which payment of a fee to the trustees is contingent on the outcome of the proceeding.\n\nS. 40D(2)–(4) repealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.9).\n\nS. 40E inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7,  \nrepealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.10).\n\nS. 40F inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7, amended by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.25).\n\n","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"40F","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain information not to be revealed","content":"\t40F Certain information not to be revealed\n\nAny—\n\n(a) communication between the trustees, or the members of the committee or an employee or agent of the trustees, and an applicant for litigation assistance from the trust fund or an assisted person; or\n\n(b) document in the possession of the trustees or the committee or an employee or agent of the trustees concerning the affairs of an applicant for litigation assistance from the trust fund or an assisted person—\n\nis privileged from production or disclosure in the same way and to the same extent as if it were a privileged communication between legal practitioner and client.\n\nS. 40G inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 7.\n\n","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"40G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Recovery of costs","content":"\t40G Recovery of costs\n\n(1) A court may make in favour of an assisted person any order for costs that it may otherwise make, even though no amount has been paid or is or will be payable for costs by the assisted person in whose favour the order is made or that the costs so ordered are in excess of the total amount paid or payable for costs by the assisted person.\n\n(2) All costs payable under the terms of—\n\n(a) a judgment or order; or\n\n(b) settlement of an action or claim—\n\nto a person who has received litigation assistance in the obtaining of the judgment, order or settlement (except any portion of the costs that may be for services rendered or disbursements paid for that person before litigation assistance was provided) are payable to the trustees.\n\n(3) The trustees are entitled to exercise in the name of the assisted person referred to in subsection (2) all rights and remedies in relation to the recovery of the costs referred to in that subsection which that person would be entitled to exercise if the person were not an assisted person.\n\nS. 40G(4) amended by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.11).\n\n(4) If—\n\n(a) a person is liable to pay costs payable under this section to the trustees; and\n\nS. 40G(4)(b) amended by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.11).\n\n(b) the trustees or the legal practitioner acting for the assisted person gives notice to the person referred to in paragraph (a), or the legal practitioner acting for that person, of the rights of the trustees in relation to the costs—\n\nthe person is not discharged from liability by reason only of making a payment in respect of costs to a person other than the trustees or the legal practitioner for the assisted person.\n\nS. 40G(5) amended by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.12).\n\n(5) On the assessment of costs payable to an assisted person under the terms of—\n\n(a) a judgment or order; or\n\n(b) settlement of an action or claim—\n\nno item shall be disallowed merely because the assisted person, by reason of being an assisted person, is under no obligation to pay, wholly or partly, for the service to which the item relates or, in the case of a disbursement (whether for counsel's fees or otherwise) merely because the amount has not been paid before the assessment.\n\nS. 40H inserted by No. 22/1996 s. 15, amended by No. 15/2018 ss 39(2), 40(2).\n\n","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"40H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Grant to trust fund","content":"\t40H Grant to trust fund\n\nIn accordance with the funding agreement, there shall be granted to the Law Institute and the Victorian Bar an amount determined by the Attorney-General, to be applied in accordance with the funding agreement.\n\nPt 6B (Heading and ss 40I–40M) inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\nPart VIB—Alternative dispute resolution\n\nS. 40I inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"40I","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alternative dispute resolution programs","content":"\t40I Alternative dispute resolution programs\n\n(1) VLA may provide an alternative dispute resolution program to the following—\n\n(a) persons who have applied to VLA for legal assistance, whether or not the application for legal assistance is successful; or\n\n(b) persons who have not applied to VLA for legal assistance but have been referred to VLA to engage in an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n(2) An alternative dispute resolution program may be provided—\n\n(a) by officers or employees of VLA; or\n\n(b) by persons or bodies with expertise in the area of alternative dispute resolution that are engaged by VLA specifically to conduct an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\nS. 40J inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"40J","sectionType":"section","heading":"Confidentiality","content":"\t40J Confidentiality\n\n(1) In this section—\n\n***relevant person*** means—\n\n(a) an officer or employee of VLA;\n\n(b) a conference chairperson or other person or body employed or engaged in the conduct of an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n(2) A party, or a person representing a party, to an alternative dispute resolution program must not, except in accordance with subsection (4) and section 40L(2), give to any other person or body, including a court, information acquired in the course of, or otherwise in connection with, the conduct of an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n1. 60 penalty units.\n\n(3) A relevant person must not, except in accordance with subsection (4) or (5), give to any other person or body, including a court, information acquired in the course of, or otherwise in connection with, the conduct of an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n1. 60 penalty units.\n\n(4) Subsections (2) and (3) do not apply where a party, or a person representing a party, or a relevant person gives, whether voluntarily or at the request of VLA, the information to VLA to fulfil its functions and duties, and for the administration of VLA generally.\n\n(5) Subsection (3) does not apply where VLA has given its consent to a relevant person, and the relevant person gives the information to another person or body in the following circumstances—\n\n(a) the person from whom the information was originally obtained has consented to giving it; or\n\n(b) there are reasonable grounds to believe that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or minimise the danger of injury to a person or damage to property; or\n\n(c) for statistical purposes without revealing, or being likely to reveal, the identity of a person about whom the information relates; or\n\n(d) if the information is required for referring a party to any person, agency, organisation or other body, and the disclosure is made with the consent of the party, for aiding in the resolution of a dispute or assisting the party in any other matter; or\n\n(e) the information is connected with a proceeding founded on fraud alleged to be connected with, or to have happened during, an alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n(6) Nothing in this section limits or affects the operation of section 43.\n\nS. 40K inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"40K","sectionType":"section","heading":"Freedom of Information Act 1982","content":"\t40K Freedom of Information Act 1982\n\n(1) A document which contains information acquired in the course of, or otherwise in connection with, the conduct of an alternative dispute resolution program under this Act is an exempt document within the meaning of section 38 of the **Freedom of Information Act 1982**.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not limit the operation of section 38 of the **Freedom of Information Act 1982**.\n\nS. 40L inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"40L","sectionType":"section","heading":"Admissibility of evidence","content":"\t40L Admissibility of evidence\n\n(1) The following is not admissible in evidence in any court or legal proceeding—\n\n(a) anything said at or during the course of;\n\n(b) any admission or agreement made at or during the course of;\n\n(c) any document prepared for the purposes of, or in the course of, or as a result of—\n\nan alternative dispute resolution program.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply in the following circumstances—\n\n(a) if all the parties to an alternative dispute resolution program and VLA consent to the admission of the evidence or document;\n\n(b) if the parties to an alternative dispute resolution program have created any—\n\n(i) note; or\n\n(ii) record; or\n\n(iii) minute of orders—\n\nsigned by the parties for the express purpose of submitting it to a court, for admission in evidence;\n\n(c) if there are reasonable grounds to believe that the admission of the evidence or document is necessary to prevent or minimise the danger of injury to a person or damage to property.\n\nS. 40M inserted by No. 17/2005 s. 5.\n\n","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"40M","sectionType":"section","heading":"Immunity for conference chairpersons","content":"\t40M Immunity for conference chairpersons\n\n(1) A conference chairperson is not personally liable for anything done or omitted to be done in good faith—\n\n(a) in the capacity of conference chairperson under this Act; or\n\n(b) in the reasonable belief that the thing was done or omitted to be done in the capacity of conference chairperson under this Act.\n\n(2) Any liability that would, but for subsection (1), attach to a conference chairperson, attaches instead to VLA.\n\nPart VII—Financial\n\nS. 41(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n\t41 Legal Aid Fund\n\n(1) There shall be established a Fund to be controlled and administered by VLA and known as the Legal Aid Fund.\n\n(2) Into the Legal Aid Fund shall be paid—\n\n(a) all moneys made available by the State and the Commonwealth or by one or other of them for the purposes of legal aid;\n\nS. 41(2)(b) substituted by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.13(a)), amended by Nos 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.26(a)), 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.6).\n\n(b) all amounts payable to the fund under section 143 of the **Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014**;\n\nS. 41(2)(ba) inserted by No. 9697 s. 4, repealed by No. 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.13(b)).\n\nS. 41(2)(c) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(c) any moneys paid to VLA pursuant to the provisions of the **Appeals Costs Fund Act 1964**;\n\nS. 41(2)(d) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 15(2), 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.13(c)), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.26(b)), 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 55.7).\n\n(d) all moneys, other than money required to be paid into a trust account by section 137 of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria), paid to VLA by assisted persons;\n\n(e) income derived from the investment of moneys forming part of the Fund;\n\nS. 41(2)(f) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(f) costs payable to VLA under section 46;\n\n(g) any amount standing at the commencement of this Part to the credit of the Legal Aid Fund established under section 10 of the **Legal Aid Act 1969**; and\n\nS. 41(2)(h) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(h) any other moneys paid to VLA for the purposes of the provision of legal assistance or otherwise for the purposes of the Fund.\n\n(3) Out of the Fund shall be paid—\n\n(a) amounts payable in or in connexion with the provision of legal aid;\n\nS. 41(3)(b) substituted by No. 10/1986 s. 19(b), amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(za)(i), 44/1997  \ns. 17(19), 15/2018 s. 34.\n\n(b) the remuneration and allowances of the directors of the board, the acting chairperson, the chief executive officer and acting chief executive officer, the members of the community consultative committee and independent reviewers;\n\nS. 41(3)(c) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(c) the administrative costs and expenses incurred by VLA in the provision of legal assistance including—\n\n(i) the costs and expenses of providing premises and equipment; and\n\nS. 41(3)(c)(ii) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(ii)(iii).\n\n(ii) salaries and wages and other payments to or in respect of the members of the staff of VLA; and\n\nS. 41(3)(d) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(d) such other amounts as are necessary in order that VLA may properly exercise and perform its powers functions and duties under this Act.\n\nS. 41(4) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iii).\n\n(4) Subject to the approval of the Treasurer VLA may from time to time invest such portion of the Fund as is not immediately required for the purposes of this Act in such a manner as it thinks fit.\n\nS. 41(5) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 19(a).\n\n(5) The Treasurer may advance from the Public Account any moneys required during the course of a financial year to meet payments out of the Fund pending the payment into the Fund of the moneys referred to in subsection (2)(b).\n\nS. 41(6) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 19(a).\n\n(6) All moneys advanced to the Fund under subsection (5) must be repaid to the Public Account in the same financial year in which the moneys were advanced.\n\nS. 41(7)(8) inserted by No. 61/1989 s. 15(3), repealed by No. 48/1995 s. 10(za)(iv).\n\nS. 42 substituted by No. 10/1986 s. 20(1), repealed by No. 31/1994 s. 4(Sch. 2 item 47).\n\nPart VIII—Miscellaneous\n\n","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Officers etc. of VLA not to reveal any information without consent of VLA","content":"\t43 Officers etc. of VLA not to reveal any information without consent of VLA\n\nS. 43(1AA) inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 41(1).\n\n(1AA) Subsections (1) and (2) apply to a person who is or was—\n\n(a) the chairperson or another director of the board; or\n\n(b) the chief executive officer; or\n\n(c) a member of the community consultative committee; or\n\n(d) a member of the collaborative planning committee; or\n\n(e) an independent reviewer; or\n\n(f) an employee or officer of VLA; or\n\n(g) a delegate of VLA; or\n\n(h) a person employed by a delegate of VLA.\n\nS. 43(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 16(b), 61/1989 s. 13(1), 14/1994 s. 7(1), 48/1995 s. 10(zb)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(20)(a), 15/2018 s. 41(2).\n\n(1) A person to whom this subsection applies shall not without the consent of VLA—\n\nS. 43(1)(a) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(zb)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(20)(b).\n\n(a) produce in a court any document received by VLA or any officer of VLA or by an independent reviewer in relation to an application for legal assistance or the provision of legal assistance; or\n\nS. 43(1)(b) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(zb)(ii), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.14(a)), 44/1997  \ns. 17(20)(b).\n\n(b) communicate or permit to be communicated to any person other than the legal practitioner acting for the assisted person or give in evidence in a court any information received by VLA or any officer of VLA or by an independent reviewer in relation to an application for legal assistance or the provision of legal assistance.\n\n1. 25 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months.\n\nS. 43(2) amended by Nos 10/1986 ss 9(b), 16(b), 61/1989 s. 13(2), 48/1995 s. 10(zc)(i)(ii), 44/1997  \ns. 17(21), 15/2018 s. 41(3).\n\n(2) A court shall not have power to compel a person to whom this subsection applies to produce any such document or communicate or give in evidence any such information unless VLA, the applicant for legal assistance or the assisted person has consented to that production or communication.\n\nS. 43(3) inserted by No. 14/1994 s. 7(2), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zd)(i)(ii), repealed by No. 15/2018 s. 41(4).\n\nS. 43(4) inserted by No. 14/1994 s. 7(2), amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(ze), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.14(b)), substituted by No. 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.27).\n\n(4) If VLA calls for tenders to conduct a case, a private law practice that, or private legal practitioner who, is supplied with any information about the case by VLA, and any person who is a partner, director or employee of such a private law practice, must not without the consent of VLA—\n\n(a) communicate or permit to be communicated to any person, or give in evidence in a court, any of that information; or\n\n(b) produce in a court any document received from VLA in relation to the case.\n\n1. 25 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months.\n\nS. 43(5) inserted by No. 14/1994 s. 7(2), amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(ze), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 57.28).\n\n(5) A court does not have the power to compel any private law practice or partner, director or employee of a private law practice to communicate, or give in evidence, any such information or to produce any such document unless VLA, or the person on whose behalf the case is being (or was) conducted, has consented to the communication or production.\n\nS. 44 amended by No. 9945 s. 3(1)(Sch. 1 item 34), substituted by No. 10/1986 s. 21.\n\n","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"False statements","content":"\t44 False statements\n\n(1) A person who in or in connexion with an application for legal assistance or the provision of legal assistance under this Act—\n\n(a) knowingly makes a false statement; or\n\n(b) supplies information that person knows to be false; or\n\n(c) fails to disclose information which that person knows to be relevant to the application or to the provision of legal assistance—\n\nis guilty of an offence.\n\n1. 25 penalty units or imprisonment for six months.\n\n(2) Despite anything to the contrary in any Act, proceedings for any offence against this section may be brought within the period of three years after the commission of the alleged offence, or with the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions, at any later time.\n\n","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court may order a person convicted of offence under section 44 to pay an amount to VLA","content":"\t45 Court may order a person convicted of offence under section 44 to pay an amount to VLA\n\nS. 45(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(1) Where an assisted person is convicted for an offence against section 44 the court convicting him may order him to pay to VLA a sum equal to the expenses incurred under this Act on his behalf less any moneys paid by the assisted person or recovered by VLA for or towards his expenses.\n\n(2) Any sum ordered under this section to be paid by the assisted person shall be deemed in all respects to be a judgment for a civil debt and may be entered for the purposes of execution in any court of competent jurisdiction.\n\n","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Legal costs","content":"\t46 Legal costs\n\n(1) A court may make in favour of an assisted person any such order for costs as it may make in favour of a person who is not an assisted person notwithstanding that no amount has been paid or is or will be payable for costs by the assisted person in whose favour the order is made or that the costs so ordered are in excess of the total amount paid or payable for costs by the assisted person.\n\nS. 46(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(2) All costs payable under the terms of any judgment or order or of any settlement of an action or claim to a person who has been assisted under this Act in the obtaining of such judgment order or settlement (except any portion of such costs as may be for services rendered or disbursements paid for that person before he was so assisted) shall be payable to VLA which shall be entitled to exercise in the name of that person all rights and remedies in relation to the recovery of such costs which that person would be entitled to exercise if he were not an assisted person.\n\nS. 46(3) amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(zf), 35/1996  \ns. 453(Sch. 1 item 47.15).\n\n(3) A person who is liable to pay any costs payable under this section to VLA and to whose legal practitioner notice in writing of the rights of VLA in relation thereto has been given by VLA or the legal practitioner who obtained the judgment order or settlement for the assisted person shall not be discharged from his liability by reason only of his making any payment in respect thereof to any person other than VLA or such legal practitioner.\n\nS. 46(4) amended by No. 44/1997  \ns. 24.\n\n(4) On the assessment of costs payable under the terms of any judgment or order or of any settlement of an action or claim to an assisted person no item thereof shall be disallowed merely because the assisted person is by reason of his being an assisted person under no obligation to pay in whole or in part for the service to which the item relates or in the case of a disbursement (whether for counsel's fees or otherwise) merely because the amount thereof has not been paid prior to the assessment.\n\n","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs to be paid to the Fund","content":"\t47 Costs to be paid to the Fund\n\nS. 47(1) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 9(b), 48/1995 s. 10(zf), 44/1997  \ns. 17(22).\n\n(1) All costs received or recovered which are payable to VLA under section 46 and all moneys paid by assisted persons towards costs in accordance with any terms or conditions imposed by VLA or an independent reviewer shall be paid to the Fund.\n\nS. 47(2) amended by Nos 38/1992 s. 9, 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(2) Where the costs paid in any matter to VLA and all moneys, other than interest, paid by the assisted person in respect of that matter together exceed the amount which in the opinion of VLA would if the assisted person was not an assisted person be properly chargeable to him for costs as between solicitor and client in that matter the amount of the excess shall be paid to the assisted person.\n\nS. 47A inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 10(1).\n\n","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"47A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs may be charged on the land","content":"\t47A Costs may be charged on the land\n\nS. 47A(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(1) If any amount required to be paid to VLA by an assisted person is subject to a condition under section 27(1)(c)(i), VLA may secure the payment of that amount (including any unpaid interest) and any interest which may become due and unpaid on the whole or any part of that amount under this Act by taking out a charge over any land which is recovered or preserved for the assisted person in the proceedings.\n\nS. 47A(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(2) If—\n\nS. 47A(2)(a) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(a) an amount required to be paid to VLA by an assisted person has not been paid; and\n\n(b) the assisted person is registered as the proprietor of an estate in fee simple, either solely or as a joint tenant or a tenant in common, in land under the **Transfer of Land Act 1958** or holds an estate in fee simple or an equity of redemption, either solely or as a joint tenant or a tenant in common, in land not under that Act; and\n\nS. 47A(2)(c) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(c) the assisted person has refused or failed to pay the amount, within the time directed by VLA, or to give a charge over the land to secure the payment of that amount—\n\nVLA may secure the payment of any amount which has not been paid (including any unpaid interest) and any interest which may become due and unpaid on the whole or any part of that amount under this Act by taking out a charge over that land.\n\nS. 47A(3) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zf).\n\n(3) A charge taken out by VLA is to be for the benefit of the Legal Aid Fund.\n\nS. 47B inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 10(1).\n\n","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"47B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Charges over Transfer of Land Act land","content":"\t47B Charges over Transfer of Land Act land\n\nS. 47B(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zg)(i)(ii), substituted by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.1).\n\n(1) If VLA proposes to take out a charge over land, VLA must lodge a notice of the charge identifying the land to which it applies and the amount which has not been paid (including any interest which may become due and unpaid on the whole or any part of that amount).\n\nS. 47B(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zg)(ii).\n\n(2) The Registrar of Titles must, subject to the provisions of Division 1 of Part V of the **Transfer of Land Act 1958**, record in the register a notice lodged by VLA and upon the recording of that notice the land becomes charged with the payment of the amount which has not been paid (including any interest) and any interest which may become due and unpaid on the whole or any part of that amount.\n\n(3) The charge may be registered without submission to the Registrar of any relevant certificate of title.\n\nS. 47C inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 10(1), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zg)(i)(ii) (zh), repealed by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.2).\n\nS. 47D inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 10(1).\n\n","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"47D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Extinguishment of charge","content":"\t47D Extinguishment of charge\n\nS. 47D(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zi), substituted by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.3).\n\n(1) If the amount secured by the charge is paid, recovered or waived, VLA must seal a certificate stating this and lodge the certificate with the Registrar.\n\nS. 47D(2) substituted by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.3).\n\n(2) If the Registrar of Titles receives a certificate under subsection (1) with respect to land, he or she must cancel any recording of the charge on the Register or record the cancellation of the charge in the Register.\n\nS. 47D(3) repealed by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.4).\n\nS. 47E inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 10(1).\n\n","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"47E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Enforcement of the charge","content":"\t47E Enforcement of the charge\n\nS. 47E(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(i).\n\n(1) For the purpose of enforcing a charge to which section 47A(2) applies, VLA may sell the land charged.\n\nS. 47E(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(i).\n\n(2) If VLA intends to enforce the charge by selling the land it must serve notice of its intention to sell the land on the assisted person.\n\n(3) The notice—\n\n(a) must be in writing; and\n\n(b) must be served not less than 1 month before the intended sale; and\n\n(c) must state—\n\n(i) the amount owing at the date of the notice; and\n\n(ii) that the sale will not proceed if payment is made within 1 month of the service of the notice; and\n\n(iii) the address at which payment may be made.\n\nS. 47E(3A) inserted by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.5).\n\n(3A) If the land to be sold is not under the **Transfer of Land Act 1958**, it must be brought under that Act before it is sold.\n\nS. 47E(4) amended by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.6).\n\n(4) Section 77 of the **Transfer of Land Act 1958** applies to the sale as if—\n\n(a) the charge were a registered mortgage; and\n\nS. 47E(4)(b) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(i).\n\n(b) VLA were a mortgagee under such a mortgage; and\n\n(c) the registered proprietor of the land were a mortgagor under such a mortgage; and\n\n(d) the requirement relating to the giving of notice were deleted; and\n\nS. 47E(4)(e) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(ii).\n\n(e) after subsection (3)(a) there were **inserted**—\n\n\"(aa) Secondly, in the case of a charge under section 47A of the **Legal Aid Act 1978**, in paying the money owing in respect of mortgages or charges ranking higher in priority than the charge, in order of their respective priorities\";\n\n(f) in subsection (3), references to 'secondly', 'thirdly' and 'fourthly' were references to 'thirdly', 'fourthly' and 'fifthly' respectively.\n\nS. 47E(5) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(i), repealed by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.7).\n\nS. 47E(6) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(iii)., repealed by No. 85/1998 s. 24(Sch. item 38.7)\n\n(7) For the purpose of enforcing a charge or registering an instrument connected with an enforcement of a charge—\n\n(a) the Registrar of Titles may cancel the folio of the Register for the land charged and create a new folio;\n\nS. 47E(7)(b) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zj)(i).\n\n(b) VLA may require a person holding a document that is part of the chain of title for land not under the **Transfer of Land Act 1958** to produce it to VLA.\n\nS. 47F inserted by No. 76/2001 s. 4.\n\n","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"47F","sectionType":"section","heading":"Action not barred by Limitation of Actions Act 1958","content":"\t47F Action not barred by Limitation of Actions Act 1958\n\nSection 20 of the **Limitation of Actions Act 1958** does not apply, and is deemed never to have applied, to an action brought by VLA to recover money, being an amount payable by an assisted person to VLA under section 27 or an amount in respect of costs and interest that the assisted person is required to reimburse or pay to VLA under section 48(6), if payment of the money is or was—\n\n(a) secured in accordance with a condition referred to in section 27(1)(c), whether by a charge taken out under section 47A(1) or otherwise; or\n\n(b) secured by a charge taken out under section 47A(2); or\n\n(c) secured under section 48(6); or\n\n(d) secured by a charge taken out under section 48A as inserted by the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1986** and repealed by the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1992**; or\n\n(e) secured by a charge otherwise lawfully taken out for the benefit of the Legal Aid Fund established under section 41 or the Legal Aid Fund established under section 10 of the **Legal Aid Act 1969**—\n\nand such an action may be brought at any time, whether or not that action could have been brought before the commencement of the **Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 2001**.\n\n","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs","content":"\t48 Costs\n\nS. 48(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(1) Where—\n\nS. 48(1)(a) amended by Nos 10/1986 s. 22, 38/1992 s. 11(a).\n\n(a) legal assistance is provided under this Act to a person in relation to a proceeding (including a cross-proceeding) in a court or before a tribunal; and\n\n(b) the court or tribunal makes an order in the proceeding directing the assisted person to pay costs incurred by another party to the proceeding—\n\neither the assisted person or that other party may request VLA to pay to that other party on behalf of the assisted person an amount representing the whole or a part of the costs that the assisted person was so directed to pay.\n\nS. 48(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(2) Subject to subsection (3), VLA shall pay so much (if any) of the amount requested to be paid as VLA considers just and equitable.\n\nS. 48(3) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(3) VLA shall not pay an amount in respect of costs incurred in a proceeding at first instance unless it appears to VLA that the person who made the request will suffer substantial hardship if that amount is not paid by VLA.\n\nS. 48(4) amended by Nos 61/1989 s. 14(1), 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(4) Subject to subsection (6), any amount paid by VLA under this section shall be deemed to have been paid by the assisted person.\n\n(5) Where a person is legally assisted in connexion with part only of any proceeding, the reference in this section to the costs of the other party in that proceeding is a reference to so much of those costs as is attributable to that part.\n\nS. 48(6) inserted by No. 61/1989 s. 14(2), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(6) If VLA agrees to pay an amount in respect of costs under subsection (2), VLA may require the assisted person—\n\nS. 48(6)(a) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(a) to reimburse VLA for the whole or part of the amount paid under subsection (2); and\n\nS. 48(6)(b) amended by Nos 38/1992 s. 11(b), 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(b) to secure the reimbursement in any manner that VLA thinks fit.\n\nS. 48(6)(c) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 11(b), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(c) pay interest on the reimbursement at any time and upon any terms and conditions determined by VLA.\n\nS. 48(7) inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 11(c), amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zk).\n\n(7) VLA may not require the payment of interest under subsection (6)(c) at a rate which exceeds 70% of the rate fixed under section 2 of the **Penalty Interest Rates Act 1983**.\n\nS. 48A inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 23, repealed by No. 38/1992 s. 10(2).[[3]](#endnote-4)\n\nS. 48B inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 23, amended by Nos 48/1995 s. 10(zl)(i)(ii), 15/2018 s. 35.\n\n","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"48B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificate of costs","content":"\t48B Certificate of costs\n\nIn any proceedings a certificate signed by the chief executive officer stating the amount owed to VLA at the date of the certificate by any assisted person is evidence of the amount owed by that person at that date.\n\nS. 48C inserted by No. 38/1992 s. 12.\n\n","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"48C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Assignment of right to recover money to VLA","content":"\t48C Assignment of right to recover money to VLA\n\nS. 48C(1) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zm).\n\n(a) an assisted person has a right to recover money in respect of any matter for which that person has been given assistance under this Act; and\n\nS. 48C(1)(b) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zm).\n\n(b) the assisted person owes money in respect of that matter to VLA; and\n\nS. 48C(1)(c) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zm).\n\n(c) the assisted person has not recovered that money within a time which is, in the opinion of VLA, reasonable—\n\nthe person must, within 21 days after VLA has served a notice on him or her to do so, assign to VLA those rights and remedies which he or she has in respect of the recovery of that money which are specified by VLA in the notice.\n\nS. 48C(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zm).\n\n(2) A person who does not comply with a notice under subsection (1) is to be taken to have assigned those rights and remedies to VLA on the expiration of 21 days after the service of the notice.\n\nS. 48C(3) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zm).\n\n(3) VLA must pay to the assisted person any amount of money recovered by VLA through the exercise of a right or remedy assigned under this section which exceeds any money owing to VLA in respect of that matter and any of the costs to VLA of recovering the money.\n\n","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"State may enter into agreements and arrangements","content":"\t49 State may enter into agreements and arrangements\n\n(1) The State may from time to time enter into an agreement or arrangement with the Commonwealth for or with respect to—\n\n(a) the moneys to be made available by the Commonwealth, or by the State and the Commonwealth, for the purposes of legal aid;\n\n(b) the priorities to be observed, in relation to moneys made available by the Commonwealth, in the provision of legal aid as between classes of persons or classes of matters, or both;\n\n(c) the sharing of—\n\nS. 49(1)(c)(i) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zn), repealed by No. 93/1998  \ns. 17(a).\n\nS. 49(1)(c)(ii) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zn).\n\n(ii) operational costs incurred in the provision of legal aid by VLA;\n\nS. 49(1)(d)(e) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zn), repealed by No. 93/1998  \ns. 17(b).\n\nS. 49(1)(f) amended by No. 93/1998  \ns. 17(c).\n\n(f) any matter incidental to a matter mentioned in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).\n\nS. 49(2) amended by No. 48/1995 s. 10(zn).\n\n(2) Any such agreement or arrangement shall, to the extent that it involves matters within the purview of VLA, be binding on VLA.\n\nS. 49AA inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 15.\n\n\t49AA VLA's power to enter legal aid arrangements\n\n(1) Despite anything to the contrary in section 49,  VLA may enter into legal aid arrangements.\n\n(2) The Attorney-General must approve a legal aid arrangement before VLA enters into that arrangement.\n\nS. 49A inserted by No. 48/1995 s. 8.\n\n","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"49A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction","content":"\t49A Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction\n\nIt is the intention of this section to alter or vary section 85 of the **Constitution Act 1975** to the extent necessary to prevent the bringing before the Supreme Court of an action of a kind referred to in section 30(17) or 40B.\n\nS. 49B inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 22.\n\n","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"49B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction","content":"\t49B Supreme Court—limitation of jurisdiction\n\n(1) It is the intention of section 30(17A) to alter or vary section 85 of the **Constitution Act 1975**.\n\n(2) It is the intention of section 35(3), as amended by section 17(11) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**, to alter or vary section 85 of the **Constitution Act 1975**.\n\n(3) It is the intention of section 36(3), as amended by section 17(15) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**, to alter or vary section 85 of the **Constitution Act 1975**.\n\nS. 49B(4) inserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 11.\n\n(4) It is the intention of section 30(18) as substituted by section 8 of the **Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998** to alter or vary section 85 of the **Constitution Act 1975**.\n\n","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"\t50 Regulations\n\nThe Governor in Council may make regulations for or with respect to—\n\n(a) disseminating information to the public concerning the provisions of this Act;\n\n(b) prescribing forms to be used and procedures to be followed under this Act;\n\nS. 50(ba) inserted by No. 10/1986 s. 18(g).\n\n(ba) prescribing times within which applications for the reconsideration or review of a decision under this Act must be made;\n\nS. 50(c) amended by No. 10/1986 ss 9(c), 16(c), repealed by No. 44/1997  \ns. 17(23).\n\n(d) generally all matters authorized or required to be prescribed for carrying into effect the provisions of this Act.\n\nNew s. 51 inserted by No. 44/1997  \ns. 23.\n\n","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transitional provisions (1997 Amending Act)","content":"\t51 Transitional provisions (1997 Amending Act)\n\n(1) On the commencement of section 13 of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**, the directors of Victoria Legal Aid appointed under section 11(c) of this Act, as in force immediately before that commencement, go out of office.\n\n(2) Victoria Legal Aid is to be taken to be the same body despite the changes made to the composition of its board of directors by section 13 of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997** and, except as otherwise provided by subsection (1), no act, proceeding, matter or thing is to be affected because of those changes.\n\n(3) On the commencement of section 14 of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**, any legal aid review committee established under this Act that is in existence immediately before that commencement is abolished and its members go out of office.\n\n(4) On the commencement of section 17(17) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997**, any legal aid appeal committee established under this Act that is in existence immediately before that commencement is abolished and its members go out of office.\n\n(5) A matter before a legal aid review committee or a legal aid appeal committee that had not been determined by that committee as at the commencement of section 14 or 17(17) (as the case requires) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997** must, until it is determined or until 1 August 1997 (whichever is the earlier), continue to be dealt with by that committee in accordance with this Act as if the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997** had not been enacted.\n\n(6) For the purpose of subsection (5) and despite anything to the contrary in this Act, a legal aid review committee or a legal aid appeal committee continues to exist until all matters referred to in that subsection have been determined by it or until 1 August 1997, whichever is the earlier.\n\n(7) A matter referred to in subsection (5) that has not been determined by the legal aid review committee or the legal aid appeal committee (as the case requires) as at 1 August 1997 is to be dealt with by an independent reviewer in accordance with this Act and for that purpose—\n\n(a) anything done in relation to the matter by the committee before that date is deemed to have been done by the independent reviewer; and\n\n(b) the independent reviewer may have regard to any record of the committee relating to the matter.\n\n(8) An application, request or complaint made, or other matter arising, before the commencement of section 14 or 17(17) of the **Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997** (including a request under section 34(1) for reconsideration of a decision of a legal aid review committee) that under this Act as in force before that commencement would have been dealt with by a legal aid review committee or a legal aid appeal committee but was not before such a committee as at that commencement is to be dealt with by an independent reviewer in accordance with this Act.\n\nNew s. 52  \ninserted by No. 93/1998  \ns. 12.\n\n","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transitional provisions: Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998","content":"\t52 Transitional provisions: Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998\n\n(1) Section 30 of this Act as in force immediately before the commencement of Part 4 of the **Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998** continues to apply to—\n\n(a) the taking of any action or the making of any decision by VLA under that section; and\n\n(b) the hearing and determination of any matters by an independent reviewer under that section; and\n\n(c) any application to the Supreme Court under section 30(18)—\n\nwhich had begun before that commencement.\n\n(2) Despite the substitution of section 30(18) of this Act by section 8 of the **Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998**, an application may be made to the Supreme Court under that subsection as in force immediately before the commencement of section 8 of that Act for an order setting aside an exclusion or removal that occurred—\n\n(a) before the commencement of Part 4 of that Act; or\n\n(b) after the commencement of Part 4 of that Act but to which section 30 as in force immediately before that commencement continues to apply by virtue of subsection (1)—\n\nand that application may be dealt with and determined as if section 30(18) of this Act had not been so substituted.\n\nNew s. 53 inserted by No. 38/2016 s. 14.\n\n","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Saving provision—Justice Legislation (Evidence and Other Acts) Amendment Act 2016","content":"\t53 Saving provision—Justice Legislation (Evidence and Other Acts) Amendment Act 2016\n\nDespite the amendment made to section 11 by section 12 of the **Justice Legislation (Evidence and Other Acts) Amendment Act 2016**, on and after the commencement of section 12—\n\n(a) the board is taken to be the same body  \nas it was immediately before that commencement; and\n\n(b) no decision, matter or thing is affected because of the amendment made by section 12; and\n\n(c) a director of the board who held office immediately before that commencement continues in office, subject to this Act, on the same terms and conditions on which the director held office immediately before that commencement.\n\nNew s. 54 inserted by No. 15/2018 s. 36.\n\n","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transitional provision—Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018","content":"\t54 Transitional provision—Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018\n\n(1) Despite the amendments made to section 11 by section 24 of the **Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018**—\n\n(a) the board is taken to be the same body as it was immediately before the commencement of those amendments; and\n\n(b) no decision, matter or thing is affected because of those amendments; and\n\n(c) a director of the board who held office immediately before that commencement continues in office, subject to this Act, on the same terms and conditions on which the director held office immediately before that commencement.\n\n(2) On and after the day on which section 25 of the **Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018** comes into operation, the person who, immediately before that day, held the office of managing director under section 12A as in force immediately before that day—\n\n(a) ceases to be a member of the board; and\n\n(b) is taken to be appointed as chief executive officer for the remainder of the term that is specified in the instrument of appointment as managing director.\n\nPt 9 (Heading and ss 51–64) amended by No. 50/1988 s. 93(2)(Sch. 2 Pt 2 item 30), repealed by No. 14/1994 s. 8.\n\nEndnotes\n\n1 General information\n\nSee [www.legislation.vic.gov.au](http://www.legislation.vic.gov.au) for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.\n\nThe **Legal Aid Commission Act 1978** was assented to on 19 December 1978 and came into operation as follows:\n\nSection 4 on 4 April 1979: Government Gazette 4 April 1979 page 901; sections 1–3, 5–8, 12, 13, 15, 18, 19, 21, 22, 49–64 on 13 February 1980: Government Gazette 13 February 1980 page 498; rest of Act on 1 September 1981: Government Gazette 15 July 1981 page 2307.\n\nAppointed day under section 51 is 1 September 1981.\n\nThe name of this Act was changed from the **Legal Aid Commission Act 1978** to the **Legal Aid Act 1978** by the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1995**, No. 48/1995 section 4.\n\nINTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)\n\nStyle changes\n\nSection 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.\n\nReferences to ILA s. 39B\n\nSidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided section or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subsections or subclauses, the original section or clause becomes subsection or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression \"(1)\" at the beginning of the original section or clause.\n\nInterpretation\n\nAs from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:\n\n• Headings\n\nAll headings included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any heading inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. This includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; sections; clauses; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms. See section 36(1A)(2A).\n\n• Examples, diagrams or notes\n\nAll examples, diagrams or notes included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Act. See section 36(3A).\n\n• Punctuation\n\nAll punctuation included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 forms part of that Act. Any punctuation inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. See section 36(3B).\n\n• Provision numbers\n\nAll provision numbers included in an Act form part of that Act, whether inserted in the Act before, on or after 1 January 2001. Provision numbers include section numbers, subsection numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).\n\n• Location of \"legislative items\"\n\nA \"legislative item\" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of an Act is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.\n\n• Other material\n\nAny explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of an Act.  \nSee section 36(3)(3D)(3E).\n\n2 Table of Amendments\n\nThis publication incorporates amendments made to the **Legal Aid Act 1978** by Acts and subordinate instruments.\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n**Legal Profession Practice (Amendment) Act 1981, No. 9697/1981**\n\n| Assent Date: | 5.1.82 |\n| Commencement Date: | 31.3.82: s. 1(3) |\n\n**Penalties and Sentences (Amendment) Act 1983, No. 9945/1983**\n\n| Assent Date: | 20.9.83 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 3(1)(Sch. 1 item 34) on 20.12.83: Government Gazette 14.12.83 p. 4035 |\n\n**Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1986, No. 10/1986**\n\n| Assent Date: | 8.4.86 |\n| Commencement Date: | 1.5.86: Government Gazette 30.4.86 p. 1116 |\n\n**Community Services Act 1987, No. 16/1987**\n\n| Assent Date: | 12.5.87 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 4(3)(Sch. 1 item 13) on 22.2.89: Government Gazette 22.2.89 p. 386 |\n\n**State Superannuation Act 1988, No. 50/1988**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.5.88 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 93(2)(Sch. 2 Pt 2 item 30) on 1.7.88: Government Gazette 1.6.88 p. 1487 |\n\n**Magistrates' Court (Consequential Amendments) Act 1989, No. 57/1989**\n\n| Assent Date: | 14.6.89 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 4(1)(a)–(e)(2) on 1.9.89: Government Gazette 30.8.89 p. 2210; rest of Act on 1.9.90: Government Gazette 25.7.90 p. 2217 |\n\n**Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1989, No. 61/1989** (as amended by Nos 48/1995, 35/1996, 44/1997)\n\n| Assent Date: | 12.9.89 |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 1–4, 6, 7, 9(1)(a)(f)–(n), 10, 11, 13–15 on 20.9.89: Government Gazette 20.9.89 p. 2403; s. 12 on 14.7.97: Special Gazette (No. 77) 10.7.97 p. 1; s. 8 on 28.7.97: Government Gazette 24.7.97 p. 1824; s. 9(1)(d)(i) never proclaimed, repealed by No. 35/1996 s. 453(Sch. 1 item 48(b)(i)) |\n\n**Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1992, No. 38/1992**\n\n| Assent Date: | 16.6.92 |\n| Commencement Date: | 12.8.92: Government Gazette 12.8.92 p. 2178 |\n\n**Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1994, No. 14/1994**\n\n| Assent Date: | 3.5.94 |\n| Commencement Date: | 3.5.94 |\n\n**Financial Management (Consequential Amendments) Act 1994, No. 31/1994**\n\n| Assent Date: | 31.5.94 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 4(Sch. 2 item 47) on 1.1.95: Government Gazette 28.7.94 p. 2055 |\n\n**Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1995, No. 48/1995**\n\n| Assent Date: | 14.6.95 |\n| Commencement Date: | Pt 1 (ss 1–3) on 14.6.95: s. 2(1); rest of Act on 14.12.95: s. 2(3) |\n\n**Miscellaneous Acts (Omnibus Amendments) Act 1996, No. 22/1996**\n\n| Assent Date: | 2.7.96 |\n| Commencement Date: | Pt 5 (ss 13–15) on 2.7.96: s. 2(1) |\n\n**Legal Practice Act 1996, No. 35/1996**\n\n| Assent Date: | 6.11.96 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 453(Sch. 1 items 47.1–47.15) on 1.1.97: s. 2(3) |\n\n**Law and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1997, No. 44/1997**\n\n| Assent Date: | 11.6.97 |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 12, 18, 24 on 11.6.97: s. 2(1); ss 14–17, 19–23 on 14.7.97: Special Gazette (No. 77) 10.7.97 p. 1; s. 13 on 1.7.98: s. 2(3) |\n\n**Legal Practice (Amendment) Act 1997, No. 102/1997**\n\n| Assent Date: | 16.12.97 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 49(Sch. item 3) on 16.12.97: s. 2(1) |\n\n**Public Sector Reform (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1998, No. 46/1998**\n\n| Assent Date: | 26.5.98 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 7(Sch. 1) on 1.7.98: s. 2(2) |\n\n**Transfer of Land (Single Register) Act 1998, No. 85/1998**\n\n| Assent Date: | 17.11.98 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 24(Sch. item 38) on 1.1.99: s. 2(3) |\n\n**Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 1998, No. 93/1998**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.11.98 |\n| Commencement Date: | All of Act (*except* Pts 3, 4) on 24.11.98: s. 2(1); Pt 3 (ss 5, 6) Pt 4 (ss 7–12) on 1.1.99: s. 2(3) |\n\n**Legal Aid (Amendment) Act 2001, No. 76/2001**\n\n| Assent Date: | 27.11.01 |\n| Commencement Date: | 28.11.01: s. 2 |\n\n**Public Administration Act 2004, No. 108/2004**\n\n| Assent Date: | 21.12.04 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 117(1)(Sch. 3 item 111) on 5.4.05: Government Gazette 31.3.05 p. 602 |\n\n**Justice Legislation (Amendment) Act 2005, No. 17/2005**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.5.05 |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 3–5 on 25.5.05: s. 2(1) |\n\n**Legal Profession (Consequential Amendments) Act 2005, No. 18/2005**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.5.05 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 18(Sch. 1 item 57) on 12.12.05: Government Gazette 1.12.05 p. 2781 |\n\n**Public Sector Acts (Further Workplace Protection and Other Matters) Act 2006, No. 80/2006**\n\n| Assent Date: | 10.10.06 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 26(Sch. item 58) on 11.10.06: s. 2(1) |\n\n**Justice Legislation Amendment Act 2007, No. 53/2007**\n\n| Assent Date: | 17.10.07 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 22 on 18.10.07: s. 2(1) |\n\n**Justice Legislation Further Amendment Act 2009, No. 55/2009**\n\n| Assent Date: | 22.9.09 |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 53, 54 on 30.10.09: Government Gazette 29.10.09 p. 2729 |\n\n**Criminal Procedure Amendment (Consequential and Transitional Provisions) Act 2009, No. 68/2009**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.11.09 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 97(Sch. item 76) on 1.1.10: Government Gazette 10.12.09 p. 3215 |\n\n**Integrity and Accountability Legislation Amendment Act 2012, No. 82/2012**\n\n| Assent Date: | 18.12.12 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 163 on 10.2.13: Special Gazette (No. 32) 6.2.13 p. 2; s. 310 on 11.2.13: s. 2(5) |\n\n**Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014, No. 17/2014** (as amended by No. 8/2015)\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 25.3.14 |\n| *Commencement Date:* | S. 160(Sch. 2 item 55) on 1.7.15: Special Gazette (No. 151) 16.6.15 p. 1 |\n\n**Criminal Organisations Control and Other Acts Amendment Act 2014, No. 55/2014**\n\n| Assent Date: | 26.8.14 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 149 on 31.10.14: Special Gazette (No. 330) 23.9.14 p. 1 |\n\n**Integrity and Accountability Legislation Amendment (A Stronger System) Act 2016, No. 30/2016**\n\n| Assent Date: | 31.5.16 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 82 on 1.7.16: Special Gazette (No. 194) 21.6.16 p. 1 |\n\n**Justice Legislation (Evidence and Other Acts) Amendment Act 2016, No. 38/2016**\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 28.6.16 |\n| *Commencement Date:* | Ss 12–14 on 3.10.16: Special Gazette (No. 296) 27.9.16 p. 1 |\n\n**Justice Legislation Amendment (Access to Justice) Act 2018, No. 15/2018**\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 29.5.18 |\n| *Commencement Date:* | Ss 22–36, 41 on 1.11.18: Special Gazette (No. 517) 30.10.18 p. 1; ss 11–21, 37–40 on 12.4.19: Special Gazette (No. 135) 9.4.19 p. 1 |\n\n**Mental Health and Wellbeing Act 2022, No. 39/2022**\n\n| Assent Date: | 6.9.22 |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 844 on 1.9.23: s. 2(2) |\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n3 Explanatory details\n\n1. Pt 2: Section 9 of the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1995**, No. 48/1995 (*repealed*) read as follows:\n\n  9 Transitional provision—abolition of LACV\n\n  (1) In this section—\n\n  ***appointed day*** means the day on which section 6 comes into operation;\n\n  ***VLA*** has the same meaning as in the Principal Act;\n\n  ***former body*** means the Legal Aid Commission of Victoria established under section 3 of the Principal Act as in force immediately before the appointed day.\n\n  (2) On the appointed day—\n\n  (a) the former body shall be abolished and the members of the former body shall go out of office; and\n\n  (b) the Director of Legal Aid shall go out of office; and\n\n  (c) all rights, property and assets that, immediately before that day, were vested in the former body are, by force of this subsection, vested in VLA; and\n\n  (d) all debts, liabilities and obligations of the former body existing immediately before that day shall become, by force of this subsection, debts, liabilities and obligations of VLA; and\n\n  (e) VLA shall, by force of this subsection, be substituted as a party to any proceedings pending in any court to which the former body was a party immediately before that day; and\n\n  (f) VLA shall, by force of this subsection, be substituted as a party to any arrangement or contract entered into by or on behalf of the former body as a party and in force immediately before that day; and\n\n  (g) all officers or employees of the former body immediately before that day shall become, by force of this subsection, officers or employees (as the case requires) of VLA; and\n\n  (h) any reference to the former body in any Act or in any proclamation, Order in Council, rule, regulation, order, agreement, instrument, deed or other document whatsoever shall, so far as it relates to any period after that day and if not inconsistent with the context or subject-matter, be construed as a reference to VLA.\n\n  (3) A person transferred to VLA under subsection (2)(g) is to be regarded as—\n\n  (a) having been employed by VLA with effect from the appointed day; and\n\n  (b) having been so employed on the same terms and conditions as those that applied to the person, immediately before the appointed day, as an officer or employee of the former body; and\n\n  (c) having accrued an entitlement to benefits, in connection with that employment by VLA, that is equivalent to the entitlement that the person had accrued, as an officer or employee of the former body, immediately before the appointed day.\n\n  (4) The service of a person referred to in subsection (3) as an officer or employee of VLA is to be regarded for all purposes as having been continuous with the service of the person, immediately before the appointed day, as an officer or employee of the former body.\n\n  (5) A person referred to in subsection (3) is not entitled to receive any payment or other benefit by reason only of having ceased to be an officer or employee of the former body because of this Act.\n\n  (6) Nothing in this section prevents—\n\n  (a) any of the terms and conditions of employment of a person referred to in subsection (2) from being altered by or under any law, award or agreement with effect from any time after the appointed day;\n\n  (b) a person referred to in subsection (2) from resigning or being dismissed at any time after the appointed day in accordance with the then existing terms and conditions of his or her employment by VLA.\n\n  (7) Section 43 of the Principal Act continues to apply to—\n\n  (a) any document or information received by the former body or an officer of the former body or by a legal aid review committee or legal aid appeal committee or by a delegate of the former body or a person employed by the delegate before the appointed day; and\n\n  (b) any information or document supplied by the former body before the appointed day. [↑](#endnote-ref-2)\n\n2. S. 30: Section 27 of the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1986**, No. 10/1986 (*repealed*) read as follows:\n\n  27 Referral panels\n\n  The referral panels prepared by the Commission under section 30 of the Principal Act before the commencement of this Act are deemed to have been prepared under section 30 as substituted by this Act. [↑](#endnote-ref-3)\n\n3. S. 48A (*repealed*): Section 14 of the **Legal Aid Commission (Amendment) Act 1992**, No. 38/1992 (*repealed*) read as follows:\n\n","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transitional provision—charges","content":"  14 Transitional provision—charges\n\n  Section 48A of the Principal Act as in force immediately before the coming into operation of section 10(2) of this Act, continues to apply to any charge created by it as if section 10 of this Act had not been enacted. [↑](#endnote-ref-4)","sortOrder":82}],"analysis":{"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":689},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has expanded significantly from its original 1978 focus on establishing a Legal Aid Commission. Major expansions include: (1) 2018 amendments adding coordination functions for community legal services and legal assistance information; (2) 2022 amendments adding non-legal mental health advocacy services; (3) creation of alternative dispute resolution programs (2005); (4) establishment of practitioner panels and complex cost-recovery mechanisms; and (5) detailed strategic planning and quarterly reporting requirements. The body has evolved from a simple legal aid provider to a comprehensive access-to-justice coordinator with functions spanning legal education, research, and cross-sector collaboration."},"complexity_factors":["45+ defined terms in section 2, many cross-referencing other legislation (Legal Profession Uniform Law, Mental Health and Wellbeing Act 2022, etc.)","Nested conditional logic for eligibility — multiple exceptions for criminal matters, supervision orders, and Commonwealth vs State jurisdiction","Complex financial mechanisms: contribution conditions, interest calculations, charges over land, cost recovery, and the separate Law Aid trust fund","Multiple overlapping review pathways: internal reconsideration, independent reviewer review, and Supreme Court jurisdiction limitations","Extensive amendment history (73 versions) with transitional provisions preserving old decisions and committee structures","Detailed governance structure with specific board composition requirements (financial management, criminal law experience, etc.)","Confidentiality provisions with multiple exceptions (sections 40J, 43) creating conditional non-disclosure frameworks"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this law does:**\n\nThis Act establishes **Victoria Legal Aid (VLA)** — a government body that provides free or subsidised legal help to Victorians who can't afford a private lawyer.\n\n**Key things the law covers:**\n\n- **Who gets help:** People who can't afford legal services and meet certain criteria (means-tested). Priority goes to criminal cases where justice requires representation.\n\n- **What help is available:** Legal advice, duty lawyer services at court, full legal representation in court, and alternative dispute resolution (mediation/conferencing).\n\n- **How it's delivered:** Through VLA's own lawyers, private lawyers on VLA's panels, or community legal services.\n\n- **Paying it back:** Some people must contribute to costs or pay back VLA if they win money from their case. VLA can place charges over property to secure repayment.\n\n- **Running the show:** A board of directors governs VLA, with a chief executive officer handling day-to-day operations. The Attorney-General can give directions on broad policy but not on individual cases.\n\n- **Complaints and reviews:** Independent reviewers can reconsider decisions about who gets legal aid and on what terms.\n\n- **Special schemes:** The Act also covers the \"Law Aid Scheme\" (a trust fund for civil litigation) and protects confidentiality in dispute resolution programs.\n\n**Why it matters:** This is the backbone of Victoria's legal aid system, ensuring access to justice isn't just for those who can pay. It balances independence from government with accountability through reporting requirements and ministerial oversight."},"summary":{"complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The original 1978 Act was a relatively straightforward framework for establishing a legal aid commission and delivering basic services. Over decades of amendments, its scope has expanded significantly to address new areas of law, incorporate Commonwealth funding arrangements, refine eligibility criteria, and respond to policy shifts around access to justice. The modern consolidated version is considerably broader and more detailed than the original legislation."},"complexity_factors":["The Act has been in force since 1978 and has undergone multiple amendments, meaning the consolidated version contains layered legislative changes that can be difficult to untangle","Eligibility criteria for legal aid involve means testing (financial assessment) and merit testing (assessing the legal merits of a case), which involve complex discretionary judgments","Interactions with Commonwealth legal aid funding agreements add a federal dimension to what appears to be a state law","Administrative law elements — including rights of review and appeal against legal aid decisions — add procedural complexity","The legislation governs a large bureaucratic organisation (Victoria Legal Aid), including governance, financial accountability, and staffing rules","Limited legislative text was provided for analysis, meaning some complexity factors may be understated"],"plain_english_summary":"## Legal Aid Act 1978 (Victoria)\n\nThis is Victoria's foundational law establishing the **legal aid system** — the framework that provides free or subsidised legal assistance to people who cannot afford a lawyer.\n\n**Who does this affect?**\n- People on low incomes who need legal help but can't pay for it\n- Lawyers and law firms that do legal aid work\n- The organisation that administers legal aid (Victoria Legal Aid)\n\n**What does it do?**\n- Establishes the legal body responsible for delivering legal aid services\n- Sets out who is **eligible** to receive legal aid (based on financial means and the nature of their legal problem)\n- Defines what types of legal matters can be funded (e.g. criminal cases, family law, civil disputes)\n- Sets rules around how legal aid is granted, refused, or reviewed\n- Governs how lawyers are paid for doing legal aid work\n\n**Why does it matter?**\nWithout legal aid, many Australians would face serious legal proceedings — including criminal charges or custody battles — without any representation. This Act is the legal backbone ensuring access to justice doesn't depend entirely on how much money you have.\n\n**Important note:** This is a long-standing Act (originally from 1978) that has been amended many times over the decades, meaning the current version may look quite different from when it was first passed."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act's scope has expanded from the original legal‑aid delivery framework to include coordination roles, strategic planning, formalised funding directions for community legal services, alternative dispute resolution programs, a Law Aid trust scheme, and strengthened financial recovery and reporting regimes. These expanded functions are visible in additions such as coordination and strategic planning duties (s 6(1)(ab), (ac)), strategic and annual corporate plan obligations (ss 12MB, 12MC), statutory directions on minimum funding for community legal services (s 12MA), the Law Aid Scheme provisions (Pt VIA, ss 40A–40H), and ADR confidentiality and admissibility rules (Pt VIB, ss 40I–40M). These additions change the Act from being primarily a provider‑focused statute to a broader, system‑management role with expanded governance, reporting and financial recovery powers."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple decision‑makers with overlapping powers: board, chief executive officer, Attorney‑General (ss 11, 12JA, 12M, 12MA).","Extensive delegation and panel mechanisms creating procedural layers for practitioner selection and removal (ss 10, 29A–29B, 30(6)–(16F)).","Detailed eligibility, means testing and discretionary 'reasonableness' standards for providing aid (s 24).","Complex financial structure: Fund rules, recoveries, statutory charges on land, assignment of recovery rights and enforcement provisions (ss 41, 46–48C, 47A–47E, 47F).","Multiple review routes and finality rules with independent reviewers and limited judicial recourse (ss 34–36, 30(18)–(18A)).","Confidentiality, FOI exemptions and evidentiary exclusions for ADR and VLA material (ss 40J–40L, s 43) add legal overlay to information flows.","Cross‑references to other statutes (Legal Profession Uniform Law, Transfer of Land Act, Freedom of Information Act) multiplying compliance obligations.","Layered statutory amendments and transitional provisions embedded in the Act create interpretive complexity (numerous amendment notes and transitional sections)."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and how it works (plain English)\n\n- What it creates and how it operates\n  - The Act establishes Victoria Legal Aid (VLA) as a statutory body corporate responsible for providing and administering legal aid in Victoria (s 3, s 6). VLA controls the Legal Aid Fund (the Fund) and pays for legal aid services out of that Fund (s 41).\n  - VLA must follow stated objectives: provide legal aid effectively, efficiently and economically; make it available equitably across the State; coordinate legal aid and legal assistance information; and pursue innovation to reduce future demand for individual services (s 4, s 6(1)(ab), s 6(1)(ac)).\n\n- Who decides and who runs VLA\n  - VLA is governed by a board of directors appointed by the Governor in Council on the Attorney‑General's nomination (ss 11, 12B). The board sets policy, priorities and how Fund payments are allocated (s 12(2), s 12(2)(ab)).\n  - A chief executive officer handles day‑to‑day administration under the board's strategic and corporate plans (ss 12JA, 12JB, 12JC).\n  - The Attorney‑General may give written directions to the board about VLA's functions, priorities and legal aid arrangements (s 12M). The Attorney‑General can also require that payments to community legal services not fall below a specified amount (s 12MA).\n\n- What services and assistance are covered\n  - \"Legal aid\" under the Act includes legal advice, duty lawyer services, alternative dispute resolution programs, legal assistance and other activities within the Act's scope (definition in s 2; functions in s 6).\n  - VLA may provide services directly (VLA officers), arrange private practitioners to act, or use both (s 8(1)). VLA can also set up ADR and conferencing programs and run educational and advocacy programs (ss 40I–40M; s 6(2)(d)).\n\n- Who pays and how money flows\n  - The Fund is the central account. It is funded by State and Commonwealth money, statutory transfers, recovered costs and payments from assisted persons (s 41(2)). VLA controls the Fund and pays legal‑aid costs and its running costs from it (s 41(1)–(3)).\n  - If legal proceedings produce costs or settlements for an assisted person, the costs may be payable to VLA and then paid into the Fund (ss 46–47). VLA can recover amounts owed by assisted persons and may secure them by charge over land or other property (ss 27(1)(c), 47A, 47B, 47E).\n\n- Eligibility, application and means testing\n  - People apply in writing or at VLA offices (s 23). VLA may provide legal assistance if the person cannot afford private lawyers and it is reasonable to do so (s 24(1)). VLA must consider income, cash on hand, liabilities, local cost of living, cost of private services and other relevant matters (s 24(3)). For criminal matters where representation is in the interests of justice, VLA applies a narrower test (s 24(2)).\n  - Duty lawyer services and basic legal advice are normally provided free (s 26). More substantial assistance may be conditional on contributions, payment of out‑of‑pocket expenses, interest and security over recovered assets (s 27).\n\n- Use of private lawyers and panels\n  - VLA may create practitioner panels and referral panels and specify eligibility, payment terms and performance standards (ss 29A, 30). Assisted people generally can choose a private practice from a referral panel; if they do not choose, VLA selects on their behalf with the assisted person's interests paramount (s 30(1)–(3)).\n  - Private practitioners who accept legal aid are paid under VLA scales or agreements, and they must not seek payment from the assisted person beyond what the Act or VLA allows (s 32(1)–(2A)). VLA can limit total payments for classes of matters (s 32(2BA)) and may enter agreements to pay different amounts in particular cases (s 32(2C)).\n\n- Decision review and independent reviewers\n  - VLA decisions (granting, refusing, varying or attaching conditions) must be communicated and a short statement of reasons can be requested (s 33).\n  - A person affected by a VLA decision can request reconsideration and then seek review by an independent reviewer; reviewers can confirm, vary or reverse decisions and their decision is final under the Act (ss 34–36). Independent reviewers also hear disputes about panels and allocations (ss 19, 30(16A)–(16D)).\n\n- Confidentiality, limits on disclosure and admissibility\n  - Documents and information received by VLA and its officers are protected; those people must not disclose without VLA's consent and courts cannot compel disclosure except with consent (s 43). ADR communications have statutory confidentiality, evidentiary exclusion and FOI exemptions (ss 40J–40L, 40L).\n\n- Recovery, charges and enforcement\n  - If an assisted person obtains a settlement or costs, VLA may be entitled to those costs and to recover payment into the Fund (ss 46–47). VLA can require an assisted person to assign rights to recover money (s 48C), register charges over land to secure reimbursement (ss 27(1)(c), 47A–47B) and, in some cases, sell charged land to enforce payment (s 47E). Limitation periods do not bar VLA actions for amounts secured by statutory charges (s 47F).\n\n- Stated purpose and practical tests against costs and incentives\n  - The Act explicitly frames VLA's purpose as delivering legal aid effectively and economically and managing resources so legal aid is available across Victoria (s 4). It also adds coordination and information provision roles (s 6(1)(ab), (ac)).\n  - Trade‑offs visible in the text: centralised control and funding (board decisions, s 12(2)) and Attorney‑General directions (s 12M) allow the State to prioritise where public funds go; that creates discretion that can reallocate resources between VLA, community legal centres and privately contracted lawyers (s 12(2)(ab), s 12MA). Those choices produce opportunity costs (money spent in one class of matters is not available for others) and concentrated benefits (directed minimum funding to community legal services) with diffuse costs borne by the Fund and ultimately the State/Commonwealth (s 12MA, s 41(2)(a)).\n\n- Compliance burdens and bureaucratic discretion\n  - Applicants must supply information and declarations (s 23(5)) and assisted persons and relevant persons must disclose information for the purpose of administration and case progress (s 31(3)). VLA determines detailed guidelines for allocation and eligibility (ss 8–9). VLA also sets payment scales, limits and panel membership rules (ss 29A, 32). Those provisions create both administrative workload for applicants and practitioners and discretionary authority for VLA to shape service delivery.\n\n- Implementation risks and effects on private choice\n  - The Act gives VLA discretion to decide who does the work (internal officers vs private practices), how much VLA will pay, and when security is taken (ss 8, 32, 27). That discretion lets VLA manage limited funds but also means private practitioners' incentives depend on VLA payment rates and panel inclusion. Assisted persons retain some choice (s 30) but can be assigned a practitioner where VLA has not called tenders or has assigned under panels (s 29B). The recovery and charge powers (ss 47A, 48C, 46) can shift costs back to assisted persons in successful matters.\n\n- Where benefits and costs fall (who pays, who benefits)\n  - Who pays: the Fund (largely State and Commonwealth funding, plus recoveries and assisted person payments) funds VLA operations and legal aid grants (s 41). Assisted persons may pay contributions or be required to secure reimbursements (s 27). Courts' cost awards may be payable to VLA (s 46).\n  - Who benefits: recipients of legal aid and community legal services (direct), VLA (institutional funding and control), and private practitioners engaged under panels (payment and work), while the cost burden is concentrated on the Fund and ultimately the State/Commonwealth where public funding is provided (s 41(2)).\n\n- Key statutory references for quick checking\n  - Establishment and objectives: ss 3–4.\n  - Functions and coordination duties: s 6; duties and guidelines: s 7, ss 8–9.\n  - Governance and oversight: ss 11–12, 12M, 12MA, 12MB–12MC, 12N–12O.\n  - Applications and eligibility: ss 23–24; conditions and recovery: ss 27, 27A, 46–48C.\n  - Panels and selection of private practitioners: ss 29A–30.\n  - Confidentiality and ADR rules: ss 40I–40M, s 43.\n\nThis summary describes the mechanical operation of the Act, who makes the decisions, who pays, what behaviour the law requires or enables, and where discretion and administrative burden lie. The Act states its objectives (s 4); the framework and powers in the sections cited show how those objectives are turned into allocation, eligibility, governance, and recovery mechanisms, and indicate the trade‑offs involved (fund control, provider selection and recovery powers)."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978","history":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978/history","analysis":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/legal-aid-act-1978/documents"}}