{"id":"nsw:act-2007-093","name":"Local Court Act 2007","slug":"local-court-act-2007","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"nsw","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"93 of 2007","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":91517,"registerId":"nsw-act-2007-093-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-02","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"# Part 1 Preliminary\n\nPart 1 Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Name of Act","content":"#### 1 Name of Act\n\n1 Name of Act\n\n> This Act is the [Local Court Act 2007](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2007-093).","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n2 Commencement\n\n> This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by proclamation.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 3 Definitions\n\n3 Definitions\n\n> > (1) In this Act—\n> > \n> > acting Judge means a person appointed under this Act to act as a Judge.\n> > \n> > Assessor means a person appointed under section 17 (1) to be an Assessor of the Local Court.\n> > \n> > Chief Judge means the person appointed under this Act to be the Chief Judge of the Local Court.\n> > \n> > civil jurisdiction, in relation to the Local Court, means the jurisdiction referred to in section 9 (a).\n> > \n> > Court means the Local Court constituted by section 7 (1).\n> > \n> > criminal jurisdiction, in relation to the Local Court, means the jurisdiction referred to in section 9 (c).\n> > \n> > criminal proceedings means proceedings against a person for an offence (whether summary or indictable), and includes the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) committal proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings relating to bail,\n> > \n> > > (c) proceedings relating to sentence,\n> > \n> > > (d) proceedings for the review of a conviction or sentence under the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120),\n> > \n> > but does not include the following—\n> > \n> > > (e) proceedings on an application for an order under the [Crimes (Forensic Procedures) Act 2000](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2000-059),\n> > \n> > > (f) proceedings on an application for an order, or an application to vary or revoke any such order, under the [Child Protection (Offenders Prohibition Orders) Act 2004](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2004-046),\n> > \n> > > (g) proceedings on an application for an order under Part 16A of the [Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2002-103),\n> > \n> > > (h) applications for an order under section 3E or 3F of the [Child Protection (Offenders Registration) Act 2000](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2000-042),\n> > \n> > > (i) proceedings on an appeal against an order under section 282I of the [Fisheries Management Act 1994](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1994-038).\n> > \n> > Deputy Chief Judge means a person appointed under this Act to be a Deputy Chief Judge of the Local Court.\n> > \n> > designated place means a place at which sittings of the Local Court are to be held in accordance with section 22 (1).\n> > \n> > exercise a function includes perform a duty.\n> > \n> > function includes power, authority and duty.\n> > \n> > government sector has the same meaning as it has in the [Government Sector Employment Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-040).\n> > \n> > Judge means a person appointed under this Act to be a Judge of the Local Court.\n> > \n> > mandatory judicial retirement age means the maximum age at which a Judge is required by law to retire.\n> > \n> > part-time Judge means a person—\n> > \n> > > (a) who is appointed to hold the office of Judge on a part-time basis, or\n> > \n> > > (b) who exercises the functions of the office of Judge on a part-time basis, as provided by an agreement referred to in clause 1 (2) of Schedule 1.\n> > \n> > > (c) (Repealed)\n> > \n> > practice note means a practice note issued under section 27.\n> > \n> > Rule Committee means the Local Court Rule Committee established under section 25.\n> > \n> > rules means the rules made under section 26.\n> > \n> > special jurisdiction, in relation to the Local Court, means the jurisdiction referred to in section 9 (b).\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > The [Interpretation Act 1987](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1987-015) contains definitions and other provisions that affect the interpretation and application of this Act.\n> \n> > (2) Notes included in this Act do not form part of this Act.\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > In the notes to this Act, LCA 1982 means the [Local Courts Act 1982](/view/html/repealed/current/act-1982-164), CPA means the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) and DCA means the [District Court Act 1973](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1973-009).\n> \n> **s 3:** Am 2007 No 87, Sch 4.4; 2007 No 92, Sch 4.11 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2009 No 114, Sch 2.3; 2010 No 135, Sch 15 \\[1\\]; 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[1\\]; 2018 No 87, Sch 2.6 \\[1\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[2\\]–\\[4\\].","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"#### 4 Regulations\n\n4 Regulations\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 28)\n\n> The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to be prescribed or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Repeal and savings and transitional provisions","content":"#### 5 Repeal and savings and transitional provisions\n\n5 Repeal and savings and transitional provisions\n\n> > (1) The [Local Courts Act 1982](/view/html/repealed/current/act-1982-164) is repealed.\n> \n> > (2) Schedule 4 has effect.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review of Act","content":"#### 6 Review of Act\n\n6 Review of Act\n\n> > (1) The Minister is to review this Act to determine whether the policy objectives of the Act remain valid and whether the terms of the Act remain appropriate for securing those objectives.\n> \n> > (2) The review is to be undertaken as soon as possible after the period of 5 years from the date of assent to this Act.\n> \n> > (3) A report on the outcome of the review is to be tabled in each House of Parliament within 12 months after the end of the period of 5 years.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"The Local Court of New South Wales","content":"# Part 2 The Local Court of New South Wales\n\nPart 2 The Local Court of New South Wales","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Constitution and jurisdiction","content":"## Division 1 Constitution and jurisdiction\n\nDivision 1 Constitution and jurisdiction","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Constitution of the Court","content":"#### 7 Constitution of the Court\n\n7 Constitution of the Court\n\n(cf LCA, sections 6, 8A and 8B)\n\n> > (1) There is constituted by this Act a court of record to be known as the Local Court of New South Wales.\n> \n> > (2) There is to be a seal of the Court and any document that is required by or under this Act or any other Act or law to be sealed or stamped with the seal of the Court is to be so sealed or stamped.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Single Judge to constitute the Court","content":"#### 8 Single Judge to constitute the Court\n\n8 Single Judge to constitute the Court\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 8)\n\n> Except as may be otherwise provided by or under this Act or any other Act or law, all proceedings in the Court, including all business arising out of any such proceedings, are to be heard and determined by a Judge, who is to constitute the Court.\n> \n> **s 8:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction","content":"#### 9 Jurisdiction\n\n9 Jurisdiction\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 7)\n\n> The Court has—\n> \n> > (a) a civil jurisdiction consisting of the jurisdiction conferred on it by Part 3, and\n> \n> > (b) a special jurisdiction consisting of the jurisdiction conferred on it by or under any other Act or law with respect to proceedings to which Part 4 applies, and\n> \n> > (c) a criminal jurisdiction consisting of the jurisdiction conferred on it by or under any other Act or law with respect to criminal proceedings.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Divisions of the Court","content":"#### 10 Divisions of the Court\n\n10 Divisions of the Court\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 7A)\n\n> For the purpose of exercising its civil jurisdiction, the Court is divided into—\n> \n> > (a) the General Division, and\n> \n> > (b) the Small Claims Division.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"State-wide jurisdiction","content":"#### 11 State-wide jurisdiction\n\n11 State-wide jurisdiction\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 17)\n\n> The Court, wherever sitting, has jurisdiction throughout the whole of New South Wales.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"Division 2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Judges","content":"## Division 2 Judges\n\nDivision 2 Judges\n\n**pt 2, div 2, hdg:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[5\\].","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Composition of the Court","content":"#### 12 Composition of the Court\n\n12 Composition of the Court\n\n> The Court is to be composed of a Chief Judge appointed by the Governor and such other Judges as the Governor may from time to time appoint.\n> \n> **s 12:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appointment and qualifications of Judges","content":"#### 13 Appointment and qualifications of Judges\n\n13 Appointment and qualifications of Judges\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 12)\n\n> > (1) The Governor may, by commission under the public seal of the State, appoint any qualified person to be a Judge.\n> \n> > (2) For the purposes of this section, a person is qualified for appointment as a Judge if the person is—\n> > \n> > > (a) an Australian lawyer of at least 5 years’ standing, or\n> > \n> > > (b) a person who holds, or has held, a judicial office of this State or of the Commonwealth, another State or Territory.\n> \n> > (3) A Judge, while holding office as such, is taken to have been appointed as a justice of the peace.\n> \n> > (4) Part 1 of Schedule 1 has effect with respect to Judges.\n> \n> **s 13:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"The Chief Judge","content":"#### 14 The Chief Judge\n\n14 The Chief Judge\n\n> > (1) The Governor may appoint a qualified person to be the Chief Judge of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (2) A person is a qualified person if the person is—\n> > \n> > > (a) a Judge of the Local Court, or\n> > \n> > > (b) a Judge of the District Court.\n> \n> > (3) The appointment may be made—\n> > \n> > > (a) by the commission of a person’s appointment as a Judge of the Local Court or a Judge of the District Court, or\n> > \n> > > (b) by a subsequent commission under the public seal of the State.\n> \n> > (4) The appointment of a person who is a Judge of the District Court as the Chief Judge of the Local Court also operates to appoint the person as a Judge of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (5) If the Chief Judge also holds office as a Judge of the District Court, the Chief Judge may (while holding office as the Chief Judge) exercise the jurisdiction of the District Court if—\n> > \n> > > (a) the Chief Judge is requested to do so by the Chief Judge of the District Court in relation to particular proceedings before that Court, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the Chief Judge agrees to the request.\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > Section 13 of the [District Court Act 1973](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1973-009) enables the Governor to appoint the Chief Judge as a Judge of the District Court.\n> \n> > (6) Subsection (5) has effect despite Schedule 1, clause 5.\n> \n> > (7) Part 2 of Schedule 1 has effect with respect to the Chief Judge.\n> \n> **s 14:** Subst 2010 No 63, Sch 1.13 \\[1\\]. Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[6\\]–\\[8\\].","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Deputy Chief Judges","content":"#### 15 Deputy Chief Judges\n\n15 Deputy Chief Judges\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 15)\n\n> > (1) The Governor may, by the commission of a person’s appointment as a Judge or by a subsequent commission under the public seal of the State, appoint a Judge to be a Deputy Chief Judge of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (2) More than one person may hold the office of Deputy Chief Judge at any one time.\n> \n> > (3) Part 3 of Schedule 1 has effect with respect to Deputy Chief Judges.\n> \n> **s 15:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Acting Judges","content":"#### 16 Acting Judges\n\n16 Acting Judges\n\n> > (1) The Governor may, by commission under the public seal of the State, appoint any person who is qualified for appointment as a Judge under section 13 to act as a Judge for a term not exceeding 5 years to be specified in the commission.\n> \n> > (2) A person who holds, or has held, a judicial office of this State, or of the Commonwealth, another State or Territory, may be appointed under this section even if he or she has reached the mandatory judicial retirement age (or will have reached that age before the appointment expires) but may not be so appointed for any period extending beyond the day on which he or she reaches the age of 78 years.\n> \n> > (3) Part 4 of Schedule 1 has effect with respect to acting Judges.\n> \n> **s 16:** Am 2015 No 2, Sch 3.7 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2018 No 87, Sch 2.6 \\[2\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"Division 3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Assessors","content":"## Division 3 Assessors\n\nDivision 3 Assessors","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Assessors","content":"#### 17 Assessors\n\n17 Assessors\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 76)\n\n> > (1) The Minister may appoint any person who is an Australian lawyer to be an Assessor.\n> \n> > (2) Schedule 2 has effect with respect to Assessors.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"Division 4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Registrars and other officers","content":"## Division 4 Registrars and other officers\n\nDivision 4 Registrars and other officers","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrars and deputy registrars","content":"#### 18 Registrars and deputy registrars\n\n18 Registrars and deputy registrars\n\n(cf LCA 1982, sections 10 and 10A)\n\n> > (1) Such registrars and deputy registrars as may be necessary to assist in the administration of this Act are to be employed under Part 4 of the [Government Sector Employment Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-040).\n> \n> > (2) A registrar may (but need not) be appointed as the registrar for one or more designated places.\n> \n> **s 18:** Am 2009 No 37, Sch 1.8 \\[1\\]; 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar’s functions generally","content":"#### 19 Registrar’s functions generally\n\n19 Registrar’s functions generally\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 10B)\n\n> > (1) A registrar has and may exercise the functions conferred on a registrar by or under this Act, the rules or any other Act or law.\n> \n> > (2) Subject to any direction of the Secretary of the Department of Justice, a registrar (including a registrar for a designated place or places) may exercise such functions as are conferred on the registrar under subsection (1) in respect of any place, or any particular designated place or places, in the State.\n> \n> > (3) A person employed as a deputy registrar has, under the registrar, all of the functions of the registrar and may exercise those functions in respect of any place in the State at which the registrar may exercise the functions.\n> \n> > (4) The Secretary may delegate the exercise of the Secretary’s function under subsection (2) to—\n> > \n> > > (a) any member of staff employed in the administration of the business of the Court, or\n> > \n> > > (b) any other person (or person belonging to a class of persons) prescribed by the regulations.\n> \n> **s 19:** Am 2008 No 53, Sch 15 \\[1\\]; 2009 No 37, Sch 1.8 \\[2\\]–\\[4\\]; 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[3\\] \\[4\\].","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exercise of functions by registrars, assistant registrars and other officers of the District Court","content":"#### 20 Exercise of functions by registrars, assistant registrars and other officers of the District Court\n\n20 Exercise of functions by registrars, assistant registrars and other officers of the District Court\n\n> > (1) A registrar of the District Court may, subject to the rules, exercise the functions of a registrar of the Local Court and, when exercising those functions, is taken to be a registrar of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (2) An assistant registrar of the District Court may, subject to the rules, exercise the functions of a deputy registrar of the Local Court and, when exercising those functions, is taken to be a deputy registrar of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (3) An officer of the District Court may, subject to the rules, exercise the functions of an officer of the Local Court and, when exercising those functions, is taken to be an officer of the Local Court.","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"References to registrars","content":"#### 21 References to registrars\n\n21 References to registrars\n\n> In any other Act or instrument, a reference to the relevant registrar of the Local Court is a reference to—\n> \n> > (a) when used in connection with a particular place, a registrar authorised to exercise functions at or in relation to that place, or\n> \n> > (b) when used in connection with a particular function, the registrar authorised to exercise that function, or\n> \n> > (c) when used in connection with a particular place and a particular function, the registrar authorised to exercise that function at or in relation to that place, or\n> \n> > (d) when used in relation to particular proceedings, the registrar for the place at which the proceedings are being, or are to be, heard or (if they have been determined) the place at which the proceedings were determined.\n> \n> **s 21:** Am 2009 No 37, Sch 1.8 \\[5\\].","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"Division 5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Exercise of jurisdiction","content":"## Division 5 Exercise of jurisdiction\n\nDivision 5 Exercise of jurisdiction","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Sittings of the Court","content":"#### 22 Sittings of the Court\n\n22 Sittings of the Court\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 11)\n\n> > (1) Sittings of the Court are to be held at such places and times as the Chief Judge may from time to time direct by notice published in the Gazette.\n> \n> > (2) More than one sitting of the Court may be held at the same time.\n> \n> **s 22:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangement of business of the Court","content":"#### 23 Arrangement of business of the Court\n\n23 Arrangement of business of the Court\n\n(cf LCA 1982, sections 11 and 14)\n\n> > (1) The Chief Judge is responsible for ensuring the orderly and expeditious discharge of the business of the Court and for that purpose may, subject to this Act, give directions as to—\n> > \n> > > (a) the Judges or Assessors who are to exercise the Court’s jurisdiction in specified matters or matters of a specified class, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the Judges or Assessors who are to sit at places (including one or more designated places) in the State or exercise certain functions at those places, and\n> > \n> > > (c) the matters or classes of matters that may be dealt with at those places, and\n> > \n> > > (d) the specified functions that are to be exercised by specified Judges or Judges of a specified class.\n> \n> > (2) The Chief Judge must consult with the Attorney General before making a direction under subsection (1) that substantially alters the frequency of sittings at a particular place relative to the previous calendar year.\n> \n> > (3) The Chief Judge may have such consultation with other Judges as is appropriate and practicable before making any direction under subsection (1).\n> \n> > (4) A direction given under subsection (1) may provide for—\n> > \n> > > (a) the establishment of circuits comprised of places at which sittings of the Court are required to be held, or\n> > \n> > > (b) the exercise by Judges of their functions, at specified times or during specified periods, at different places.\n> \n> **s 23:** Am 2009 No 37, Sch 1.8 \\[6\\] \\[7\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contempt of court","content":"#### 24 Contempt of court\n\n24 Contempt of court\n\n(cf LCA 1982, sections 27A and 27B)\n\n> > (1) The Court has, if it is alleged, or appears to the Court on its own view, that a person is guilty of contempt of court committed in the face of the Court or in the hearing of the Court, the same powers as the District Court has in those circumstances.\n> \n> > (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the Court may vacate or revoke an order with respect to contempt of court.\n> \n> > (3) For the purposes of this section—\n> > \n> > > (a) sections 199, 200 and 202 of the [District Court Act 1973](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1973-009) apply to the Local Court and a Judge of the Local Court in the same way as they apply to the District Court and a Judge of the District Court, and\n> > \n> > > (b) a reference in section 200 of that Act to a proclaimed place is taken to be a reference to a designated place, and\n> > \n> > > (c) section 201 of that Act applies to a ruling, order, direction or decision of the Local Court under those provisions as so applied.\n> \n> > (4) Without prejudice to the powers of the Court under this section, if it is alleged, or appears to the Court on its own view, that a person is guilty of contempt of the Court, whether committed in the face or hearing of the Court or not, the Court may refer the matter to the Supreme Court for determination.\n> \n> > (5) The Supreme Court is to dispose of any matter referred to it under this section in the manner it considers appropriate.\n> \n> **s 24:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[7\\].","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"24A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disrespectful behaviour in Court","content":"#### 24A Disrespectful behaviour in Court\n\n24A Disrespectful behaviour in Court\n\n> > (1) Offence A person is guilty of an offence against this section if—\n> > \n> > > (a) the person is an accused person or defendant in, or a party to, proceedings before the Court or has been called to give evidence in proceedings before the Court, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the person intentionally engages in behaviour in the Court during the proceedings, and\n> > \n> > > (c) that behaviour is disrespectful to the Court or the Judge presiding over the proceedings (according to established court practice and convention).\n> > \n> > Maximum penalty—14 days imprisonment or 10 penalty units, or both.\n> \n> > (2) In this section, behaviour includes any act or failure to act.\n> \n> > (3) This section does not apply to the following persons—\n> > \n> > > (a) an Australian legal practitioner appearing in that capacity,\n> > \n> > > (b) a police prosecutor or other public official responsible for the conduct of the prosecution, but only when acting in that capacity.\n> \n> > (4) Proceedings for offences Proceedings against a person for an offence against this section are to be dealt with summarily before—\n> > \n> > > (a) if the person is a child—the Children’s Court, or\n> > \n> > > (b) if the person is not a child—the Local Court.\n> \n> > (5) Proceedings for an offence against this section may be brought at any time within 12 months after the date of the alleged offence.\n> \n> > (6) Proceedings for an offence against this section may be brought only by a person or a member of a class of persons authorised, in writing, by the Secretary of the Department of Justice for that purpose.\n> \n> > (7) A Judge may refer any disrespectful behaviour in proceedings over which the Judge is presiding to the Attorney General.\n> \n> > (8) Proceedings for an offence against this section may be commenced only with the authorisation of the Attorney General. Authorisation may be given by the Attorney General whether or not the disrespectful behaviour is referred to the Attorney General by a Judge under this section.\n> \n> > (9) Evidence An official transcript or official audio or video recording of the proceedings in the Court is admissible in evidence in proceedings for an offence against this section and is evidence of the matter included in the transcript or audio or video recording.\n> \n> > (10) The Judge presiding over the proceedings in which the alleged disrespectful behaviour occurred cannot be required to give evidence in proceedings before any court for an offence against this section.\n> \n> > (11) Contempt and double jeopardy This section does not affect any power with respect to contempt or the exercise of any such power.\n> \n> > (12) A person cannot be prosecuted for an offence against this section and proceeded against for contempt in respect of essentially the same behaviour. However, nothing in this section prevents proceedings for contempt in respect of behaviour that constitutes an offence against this section.\n> \n> **s 24A:** Ins 2016 No 26, Sch 4. Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"Division 6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Rules of court and practice notes","content":"## Division 6 Rules of court and practice notes\n\nDivision 6 Rules of court and practice notes","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Local Court Rule Committee","content":"#### 25 Local Court Rule Committee\n\n25 Local Court Rule Committee\n\n(cf LCA 1982, sections 30 and 31)\n\n> > (1) There is to be a Local Court Rule Committee.\n> \n> > (2) The Rule Committee is to consist of the following members—\n> > \n> > > (a) the Chief Judge,\n> > \n> > > (b) at least one and not more than 6 Judges (in addition to the Chief Judge) appointed by the Chief Judge,\n> > \n> > > (c) a barrister appointed by the Bar Council,\n> > \n> > > (d) a solicitor appointed by the Law Society Council,\n> > \n> > > (e) an officer of the Court appointed by the Chief Judge,\n> > \n> > > (f) a person appointed by the Secretary of the Department of Justice,\n> > \n> > > (g) if the Minister thinks that it is appropriate to appoint a person as a member—a person appointed by the Minister,\n> > \n> > > (h) the additional member or members appointed in accordance with subsection (3) or (4), as the case requires.\n> \n> > (3) The Rule Committee, when exercising its functions in respect of matters relating to the jurisdiction referred to in section 9 (a) and (b), is to have an additional member, being a person appointed by the Chief Judge to represent consumer groups.\n> \n> > (4) The Rule Committee, when exercising its functions in respect of matters relating to the jurisdiction referred to in section 9 (c), is to have 3 additional members as follows—\n> > \n> > > (a) a person appointed by the Chief Judge on the nomination of the Director of Public Prosecutions,\n> > \n> > > (b) a person appointed by the Chief Judge on the nomination of the Legal Aid Commission,\n> > \n> > > (c) a police prosecutor who is an Australian lawyer appointed by the Chief Judge on the nomination of the Commissioner of Police.\n> \n> > (5) Schedule 3 has effect in respect of the Rule Committee.\n> \n> **s 25:** Am 2009 No 77, Sch 2.14 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2013 No 38, Sch 1.7; 2015 No 7, Sch 2.29 \\[1\\]; 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[3\\] \\[4\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\] \\[5\\].","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules generally","content":"#### 26 Rules generally\n\n26 Rules generally\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 28A)\n\n> > (1) The Rule Committee may make rules, not inconsistent with this Act, for or with respect to any matter that is required or permitted to be prescribed by rules, or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed by rules, in relation to the practice or procedure of the Local Court.\n> \n> > (2) In particular, the rules may make provision for or with respect to the following matters—\n> > \n> > > (a) the practice or procedure to be followed in criminal proceedings,\n> > \n> > > (b) the functions of registrars and other officers of the Court,\n> > \n> > > (c) the review of orders or decisions of registrars,\n> > \n> > > (d) any matter incidental to, or relating to, any such practice or procedure,\n> > \n> > > (e) the vacations and holidays of the Court and the hearing and disposal of proceedings during any such vacations or holidays.\n> \n> > (3) A rule may be made under this Act in relation to any matter for which a rule-making power is conferred on the Court by or under any other Act or law.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> See also sections 42 (Rules in civil jurisdiction) and 71 (Rules in application proceedings).\n> \n> **s 26:** Am 2017 No 44, Sch 1.17 \\[1\\].","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Practice notes","content":"#### 27 Practice notes\n\n27 Practice notes\n\n(cf CPA, section 15; LCA 1982, section 28B)\n\n> > (1) Subject to the rules, the Chief Judge may issue practice notes in relation to any matter with respect to which rules may be made.\n> \n> > (2) A practice note must be published in the Gazette.\n> \n> > (3) Sections 40 and 41 of the [Interpretation Act 1987](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1987-015) apply to a practice note in the same way as they apply to a statutory rule.\n> \n> **s 27:** Am 2009 No 56, Sch 4.34; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court may give directions in circumstances not covered by rules","content":"#### 28 Court may give directions in circumstances not covered by rules\n\n28 Court may give directions in circumstances not covered by rules\n\n(cf CPA, section 16; LCA 1982, section 26)\n\n> > (1) In relation to particular proceedings, the Court may give directions with respect to any aspect of practice or procedure not provided for by or under this Act, the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209), the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) or any other Act.\n> \n> > (2) Anything done in accordance with such a direction (including the commencing of proceedings and the taking of any step in proceedings) is taken to have been validly done.","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Civil jurisdiction","content":"# Part 3 Civil jurisdiction\n\nPart 3 Civil jurisdiction","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdictional limit of Court","content":"#### 29 Jurisdictional limit of Court\n\n29 Jurisdictional limit of Court\n\n> > (1) For the purposes of this Part, the jurisdictional limit of the Court is—\n> > \n> > > (a) $100,000, when sitting in its General Division, and\n> > \n> > > (b) $20,000, when sitting in its Small Claims Division.\n> \n> > (2) However, the jurisdictional limit of the Court, when sitting in its General Division, in relation to a claim for damages arising from personal injury or death is $60,000.\n> \n> **s 29:** Subst 2010 No 135, Sch 15 \\[2\\]. Am 2018 No 87, Sch 1.20 \\[1\\].","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"29A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Money claim—meaning","content":"#### 29A Money claim—meaning\n\n29A Money claim—meaning\n\n> In this Part, money claim means a claim for recovery of any debt, demand or damages (whether liquidated or unliquidated).\n> \n> **s 29A:** Ins 2010 No 135, Sch 15 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conferral of jurisdiction","content":"#### 30 Conferral of jurisdiction\n\n30 Conferral of jurisdiction\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 65)\n\n> > (1) Subject to this Part, the Court sitting in its General Division has jurisdiction to hear and determine—\n> > \n> > > (a) proceedings on any money claim, so long as the amount claimed, whether on a balance of account or after an admitted set-off or otherwise, does not exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in that Division, and\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings to recover detained goods, or to recover the assessed value of detained goods, so long as the value of the goods, together with the amount of any consequential damages claimed for their detention, does not exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in that Division, and\n> > \n> > > (b1) proceedings involving company title home unit disputes under section 34A, and\n> > \n> > > (b2) substituted proceedings within the meaning of Part 3A of the [Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-002), so long as the amount of any money claim, or the value of any goods or property, to which the proceedings relate does not exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in that Division, and\n> > \n> > > (c) proceedings that, pursuant to any other Act, are required to be dealt with by the Court sitting in that Division.\n> \n> > (2) Subject to this Part, the Court sitting in its Small Claims Division has jurisdiction to hear and determine—\n> > \n> > > (a) proceedings on any money claim, so long as the amount claimed, whether on a balance of account or after an admitted set-off or otherwise, does not exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in that Division, and\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings to recover detained goods, or to recover the assessed value of detained goods, so long as the value of the goods, together with the amount of any consequential damages claimed for their detention, does not exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in that Division, and\n> > \n> > > (c) proceedings involving company title home unit disputes under section 34A.\n> \n> > (3) Nothing in subsection (2) prevents proceedings under that subsection from being heard and determined by the Court sitting in its General Division.\n> \n> > (4) In determining an amount for the purposes of subsection (1) or (2), any interest up to judgment under section 100 of the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) is to be disregarded.\n> \n> > (5) If—\n> > \n> > > (a) the jurisdictional limit of a Division is increased, and\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings in which an amount of money is claimed are pending in the Court when that increase takes effect,\n> > \n> > the Court may, on the application of a plaintiff, make an order altering the amount specified in the claim to an amount not exceeding the new jurisdictional limit.\n> \n> > (6) In this section, admitted set-off, in relation to proceedings, means set-off admitted by the plaintiff in the originating process in the proceedings.\n> \n> **s 30:** Am 2013 No 6, Sch 1 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2017 No 44, Sch 1.17 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdictional limits may be exceeded for certain money claims","content":"#### 31 Jurisdictional limits may be exceeded for certain money claims\n\n31 Jurisdictional limits may be exceeded for certain money claims\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 66)\n\n> > (1) When sitting in its General Division, the Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine proceedings on a money claim for an amount not exceeding 20 per cent more than the jurisdictional limit of the Court when sitting in its General Division—\n> > \n> > > (a) if a memorandum of consent has been filed in relation to the proceedings, or\n> > \n> > > (b) if no objection to the Court’s jurisdiction has been raised by any of the parties prior to one month before the trial of the proceedings commences.\n> \n> > (2) A memorandum of consent referred to in subsection (1) (a) does not have effect unless—\n> > \n> > > (a) it is signed by each party to the proceedings, or by the party’s Australian legal practitioner, and\n> > \n> > > (b) it states that each of those parties consents to the proceedings being heard and determined by the Court and is aware that, unless the memorandum is filed, the Court will not have jurisdiction to hear or determine the proceedings.\n> \n> > (3) This section applies despite section 30 (1) (a).\n> \n> > (4) Nothing in this section limits the operation of section 140 of the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028).","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction in proceedings for review of contracts","content":"#### 32 Jurisdiction in proceedings for review of contracts\n\n32 Jurisdiction in proceedings for review of contracts\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 68)\n\n> > (1) The Court has the same jurisdiction as the Supreme Court, and may exercise all the powers and authority of the Supreme Court, to refuse to enforce any or all of the provisions of a contract under section 7 (1) (a) of the [Contracts Review Act 1980](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1980-016).\n> \n> > (2) This section applies only if application for the exercise of the jurisdiction is made in proceedings concerning the contract that have previously been commenced in the Court but have not been determined.","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain jurisdiction excluded","content":"#### 33 Certain jurisdiction excluded\n\n33 Certain jurisdiction excluded\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 67)\n\n> > (1) The Court does not have jurisdiction under this Part to hear or determine any of the following kinds of proceedings—\n> > \n> > > (a) proceedings in which the validity or effect of any devise, bequest or limitation under any will or settlement, or under any document in the nature of a settlement, is disputed,\n> > \n> > > (b) proceedings for passing-off, wrongful arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution or defamation,\n> > \n> > > (c) proceedings for infringement of letters patent or copyright,\n> > \n> > > (d) proceedings for invasion of privacy or other privacy contravention, including proceedings for administrative review under the [Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1998-133), section 55,\n> > \n> > > (e) proceedings in which the title to land is in question (other than proceedings on a claim in respect of which the question of the title to land is merely incidental).\n> \n> > (1A) Subsection (1)(d) does not apply to proceedings for invasion of privacy or other privacy contravention if the proceedings are of a class prescribed by the regulations for this subsection.\n> \n> > (1B) Despite the [Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-002), section 34D(1), subsection (1)(d) prevails to the extent of any inconsistency between that paragraph and the [Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-002), Part 3A.\n> \n> > (2) The judgment of the Court in proceedings on a claim in respect of which the question of the title to land is merely incidental, as referred to in subsection (1) (e), is not admissible as evidence of the title to the land in any other legal proceedings.\n> \n> **s 33:** Am 2013 No 80, Sch 11; 2025 No 47, Sch 1\\[1\\] \\[2\\].","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction when cause of action or defendant outside the State","content":"#### 34 Jurisdiction when cause of action or defendant outside the State\n\n34 Jurisdiction when cause of action or defendant outside the State\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 69)\n\n> > (1) The Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine proceedings with respect to a cause of action—\n> > \n> > > (a) even if part of the cause of action arose outside New South Wales, so long as a material part of the cause of action arose within New South Wales, and\n> > \n> > > (b) even if the whole cause of action arose outside New South Wales, so long as the defendant was resident in New South Wales at the time of service of the document that commenced the proceedings, and\n> > \n> > > (c) even if the defendant is not within New South Wales, so long as—\n> > > \n> > > > (i) the whole or a material part of the cause of action arose within New South Wales, and\n> > > \n> > > > (ii) the defendant was within a State or a part of the Commonwealth (within the meaning of the [Service and Execution of Process Act 1992](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth) at the time of service of the document that commenced the proceedings.\n> \n> > (2) Subsection (1) (c) applies whether or not the defendant has ever been resident or carried on business in New South Wales.\n> \n> > (3) In this section, defendant includes, if there are 2 or more defendants, any one of those defendants.","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"34A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction in company title home unit disputes","content":"#### 34A Jurisdiction in company title home unit disputes\n\n34A Jurisdiction in company title home unit disputes\n\n> > (1) The Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine proceedings involving company title home unit disputes.\n> \n> > (2) A company title home unit dispute is a dispute between interested parties about any of the following matters—\n> > \n> > > (a) the health, safety and security of persons occupying or visiting the land owned by a company title corporation or residential premises located on that land (including, for example, safety of children on the premises and waste disposal),\n> > \n> > > (b) the common property on the land owned by a company title corporation (including, for example, parking and vehicle access, repair and maintenance, design and appearance),\n> > \n> > > (c) the use of residential premises located on the land owned by a company title corporation occupied by a shareholder of the corporation (including, for example, external appearance of premises or the keeping of pets),\n> > \n> > > (d) the behaviour of persons occupying or visiting the land owned by a company title corporation or residential premises located on the land (including, for example, noise),\n> > \n> > > (e) the refusal by a company title corporation to allow a shareholder of the corporation to grant a lease or licence to use or occupy premises located on the land owned by the corporation,\n> > \n> > > (f) administrative matters relating to the running of a company title corporation (including, for example, levies).\n> \n> > (3) However, a company title home unit dispute does not include the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) a dispute arising under a residential tenancy agreement to which the [Residential Tenancies Act 2010](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2010-042) applies,\n> > \n> > > (b) a dispute arising under a lease to which the [Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1948](/view/html/repealed/current/act-1948-025) applies,\n> > \n> > > (c) a dispute about the sale, transfer or other disposition of shares in a company title corporation or the forfeiture of such shares,\n> > \n> > > (d) a dispute about any matter that is a superior court matter within the meaning of the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth.\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > Section 1337E of the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth confers jurisdiction on the Local Court in relation to civil matters (other than superior court matters) under that Act. Examples of superior court matters in relation to company title home unit disputes include the winding up of a company title corporation or the oppressive conduct of a company title corporation’s affairs.\n> \n> > (4) A company title corporation is a company registered under the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth that is the owner of land if ownership of a share or shares in that company entitles the owner of the share or shares to the exclusive use and occupation of residential premises on that land, but does not include an owners corporation within the meaning of the [Strata Schemes Management Act 2015](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2015-050) or an association within the meaning of the [Community Land Management Act 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2021-007).\n> \n> > (5) In determining proceedings involving a company title home unit dispute, the Court may make any of the following orders—\n> > \n> > > (a) an order requiring a person to do, or refrain from doing, any act,\n> > \n> > > (b) an order for the payment of damages or other money,\n> > \n> > > (c) an order—\n> > > \n> > > > (i) declaring the rights and obligations arising under a constitution of a company title corporation or any other contract or agreement, or\n> > > \n> > > > (ii) declaring the meaning of any term of a constitution of a company title corporation, or of any other contract or agreement, or\n> > > \n> > > > (iii) declaring that any such term is or is not void, invalid or otherwise unenforceable.\n> \n> > (6) However, the Court does not have jurisdiction to make an order on a money or other claim in the proceedings that would exceed the jurisdictional limit of the Court under this Part when sitting in the Division concerned.\n> \n> > (7) A term of a constitution of a company title corporation, or of any other contract or agreement, that purports to exclude, limit or modify the jurisdiction of the Court in relation to company title home unit disputes is void to the extent that it would otherwise have effect.\n> \n> > (8) The provisions of this section are declared to be Corporations legislation displacement provisions for the purposes of section 5G of the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth in relation to the provisions of that Act generally.\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > Section 5G of the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth provides that if a State law declares a provision of a State law to be a Corporations legislation displacement provision, any provision of the Corporations legislation with which the State provision would otherwise be inconsistent does not apply to the extent necessary to avoid the inconsistency.\n> \n> > (9) In this section, interested party means any of the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) a company title corporation,\n> > \n> > > (b) a shareholder or former shareholder of a company title corporation,\n> > \n> > > (c) a resident or former resident of premises on land owned by a company title corporation.\n> \n> **s 34A:** Ins 2013 No 6, Sch 1 \\[3\\]. Am 2015 No 50, Sch 4.15; 2021 No 7, Sch 4.10.","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Procedure generally in Small Claims Division","content":"#### 35 Procedure generally in Small Claims Division\n\n35 Procedure generally in Small Claims Division\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 70)\n\n> > (1) The jurisdiction of the Court sitting in its Small Claims Division may be exercised by a Judge or an Assessor.\n> \n> > (1A) However, the jurisdiction of the Court in proceedings involving company title home unit disputes under section 34A may only be exercised by a Judge.\n> \n> > (2) Proceedings in the Small Claims Division are to be conducted with as little formality and technicality as the proper consideration of the matter permits.\n> \n> > (3) The rules of evidence do not apply to proceedings being heard or other proceedings in the Small Claims Division.\n> \n> > (4) Witnesses may not be cross-examined except in circumstances in which, and to the extent to which, the cross-examination of witnesses is authorised by the rules or a practice note.\n> \n> > (5) A Judge or an Assessor exercising the jurisdiction of the Court sitting in its Small Claims Division may inform himself or herself on any matter relating to proceedings being heard or other proceedings in the Small Claims Division in such manner as he or she thinks fit.\n> \n> > (6) Proceedings in the Small Claims Division (other than any judgment given or order made in respect of the proceedings) are not required to be recorded.\n> \n> **s 35:** Am 2013 No 6, Sch 1 \\[4\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conciliation of parties","content":"#### 36 Conciliation of parties\n\n36 Conciliation of parties\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 71)\n\n> > (1) A Judge or an Assessor is not to give judgment or make a final order in respect of proceedings being heard in the Court’s Small Claims Division unless the Judge or an Assessor has brought, or has used his or her best endeavours to bring, the parties to the proceedings to a settlement acceptable to the parties.\n> \n> > (2) If such a settlement is reached, the Judge or an Assessor is to give judgment or make a final order that gives effect to the terms of the settlement.\n> \n> **s 36:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs in Small Claims Division","content":"#### 37 Costs in Small Claims Division\n\n37 Costs in Small Claims Division\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 67)\n\n> Except as provided by the rules, the Court sitting in its Small Claims Division has no power to award costs.","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Judgments and orders final","content":"#### 38 Judgments and orders final\n\n38 Judgments and orders final\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 72)\n\n> Subject to this Division, all judgments and orders of the Court exercising jurisdiction under this Part are final and conclusive.","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appeals as of right","content":"#### 39 Appeals as of right\n\n39 Appeals as of right\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 73)\n\n> > (1) A party to proceedings before the Court sitting in its General Division who is dissatisfied with a judgment or order of the Court may appeal to the Supreme Court, but only on a question of law.\n> \n> > (2) A party to proceedings before the Court sitting in its Small Claims Division who is dissatisfied with a judgment or order of the Court may appeal to the District Court, but only on the ground of lack of jurisdiction or denial of procedural fairness.\n> \n> **s 39:** Am 2008 No 53, Sch 15 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appeals requiring leave","content":"#### 40 Appeals requiring leave\n\n40 Appeals requiring leave\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 74)\n\n> > (1) A party to proceedings before the Court sitting in its General Division who is dissatisfied with a judgment or order of the Court on a ground that involves a question of mixed law and fact may appeal to the Supreme Court but only by leave of the Supreme Court.\n> \n> > (2) A party to proceedings before the Court sitting in its General Division who is dissatisfied with any of the following judgments or orders of the Court may appeal to the Supreme Court, but only by leave of the Supreme Court—\n> > \n> > > (a) an interlocutory judgment or order,\n> > \n> > > (b) a judgment or order made with the consent of the parties,\n> > \n> > > (c) an order as to costs.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Determination of appeals","content":"#### 41 Determination of appeals\n\n41 Determination of appeals\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 75)\n\n> > (1) The Supreme Court may determine an appeal made under section 39 (1) or 40—\n> > \n> > > (a) by varying the terms of the judgment or order, or\n> > \n> > > (b) by setting aside the judgment or order, or\n> > \n> > > (c) by setting aside the judgment or order and remitting the matter to the Local Court for determination in accordance with the Supreme Court’s directions, or\n> > \n> > > (d) by dismissing the appeal.\n> \n> > (2) The District Court may determine an appeal made under section 39 (2)—\n> > \n> > > (a) by varying the terms of the judgment or order, or\n> > \n> > > (b) by setting aside the judgment or order, or\n> > \n> > > (c) by setting aside the judgment or order and remitting the matter to the Local Court for determination in accordance with the District Court’s directions, or\n> > \n> > > (d) by dismissing the appeal.\n> \n> **s 41:** Am 2008 No 53, Sch 15 \\[3\\] \\[4\\].","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules in civil jurisdiction","content":"#### 42 Rules in civil jurisdiction\n\n42 Rules in civil jurisdiction\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 79)\n\n> > (1) The rules may make provision for or with respect to the following matters relating to the civil jurisdiction of the Court—\n> > \n> > > (a) the practice and procedure in the Court and in proceedings before a registrar,\n> > \n> > > (b) the transfer of proceedings between the Small Claims Division and the General Division,\n> > \n> > > (c) the referral of matters to Community Justice Centres for mediation under the [Community Justice Centres Act 1983](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1983-127),\n> > \n> > > (d) the functions of registrars,\n> > \n> > > (e) the filing and serving of notices under this Act,\n> > \n> > > (f) the times for doing any matter or thing for the purposes of this Part,\n> > \n> > > (g) the excusal of non-compliance with the rules,\n> > \n> > > (h) costs in relation to proceedings in the Court’s Small Claims Division,\n> > \n> > > (i) the manner of doing any matter or thing for the purposes of this Part.\n> \n> > (2) This section does not give power to make rules with respect to any matter relating to costs that is regulated by the legal costs legislation (as defined in section 3A of the [Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2014-016)).\n> \n> > (3) This section does not give power to make rules in terms inconsistent with those of the uniform rules under the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028) unless the uniform rules expressly permit rules under this section to be made in those terms.\n> \n> > (4) The rules made under this section may authorise or require the use of an ECM system established under clause 2 of Schedule 1 to the [Electronic Transactions Act 2000](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2000-008) in relation to any proceedings in the Court in respect of which the use of such a system is authorised by an order in force under clause 3 of Schedule 1 to that Act.\n> \n> **s 42:** Am 2010 No 119, Sch 2.28 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2015 No 7, Sch 2.29 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Special jurisdiction","content":"# Part 4 Special jurisdiction\n\nPart 4 Special jurisdiction","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 43 Definitions\n\n43 Definitions\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 4)\n\n> In this Part—\n> \n> applicant means a person by whom application proceedings are commenced.\n> \n> application proceedings means proceedings to which this Part applies as referred to in section 44.\n> \n> authorised officer has the same meaning as in the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209).\n> \n> public officer means any of the following persons, but only when acting in an official capacity—\n> \n> > (a) an employee in the Public Service or the NSW Police Force,\n> \n> > (b) an officer or employee of a statutory body representing the Crown,\n> \n> > (c) an employee of a council within the meaning of the [Local Government Act 1993](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1993-030),\n> \n> > (d) a member of staff of Local Land Services,\n> \n> > (e) the Director of Public Prosecutions, Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions or Solicitor for Public Prosecutions,\n> \n> > (f) an officer or employee of a body declared by the regulations to be a public body for the purposes of this definition.\n> \n> respondent means a person against whom application proceedings are commenced.\n> \n> **s 43:** Am 2008 No 112, Sch 6.17; 2013 No 51, Sch 7.27.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Part","content":"#### 44 Application of Part\n\n44 Application of Part\n\n> This Part applies to any proceedings with respect to matters for which jurisdiction is conferred on the Court by or under any other Act or law, other than—\n> \n> > (a) criminal proceedings, or\n> \n> > (b) proceedings with respect to any matter for which jurisdiction is conferred on the Court by Part 3.","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement of proceedings by application notice","content":"#### 45 Commencement of proceedings by application notice\n\n45 Commencement of proceedings by application notice\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 37)\n\n> Application proceedings are to be commenced in the Court by the issuing and filing of an application notice in accordance with this Division.","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement of proceedings by police officer or public officer","content":"#### 46 Commencement of proceedings by police officer or public officer\n\n46 Commencement of proceedings by police officer or public officer\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 38)\n\n> If a police officer or public officer is authorised to commence application proceedings against a person, the officer may commence the proceedings by issuing an application notice and filing the notice in accordance with this Division.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement of private actions","content":"#### 47 Commencement of private actions\n\n47 Commencement of private actions\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 39)\n\n> > (1) If a person other than a police officer or public officer is authorised to commence application proceedings against a person, the person may commence the proceedings by issuing an application notice, signed by a registrar, and filing the notice in accordance with this Division.\n> \n> > (2) A registrar must not sign an application notice if—\n> > \n> > > (a) the registrar is of the opinion that the notice does not disclose grounds for the proceedings, or\n> > \n> > > (b) the registrar is of the opinion that the notice is not in the appropriate form, or\n> > \n> > > (c) the registrar is of the opinion that a ground for refusal set out in the rules applies to the notice.\n> \n> > (3) If a registrar refuses to sign an application notice proposed to be issued by any such person, the question of whether the application notice is to be signed and issued is to be determined by the Court on application by the person.\n> \n> > (4) An application under subsection (3) is not required to be signed by a registrar.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application notice to be for one matter only","content":"#### 48 Application notice to be for one matter only\n\n48 Application notice to be for one matter only\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 41)\n\n> An application notice may not relate to more than one matter.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Service of application notice","content":"#### 49 Service of application notice\n\n49 Service of application notice\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 42)\n\n> > (1) An application notice issued by a police officer must be served by a police officer in accordance with the rules.\n> \n> > (2) An application notice issued by a public officer must be served by a police officer or public officer or other person authorised by the rules in accordance with the rules.\n> \n> > (3) An application notice issued by a person other than a police officer or a public officer must be served by a person authorised by the rules in accordance with the rules.\n> \n> > (4) A copy of an application notice must be filed in the Court in accordance with the rules.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"When proceedings commence","content":"#### 50 When proceedings commence\n\n50 When proceedings commence\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 43)\n\n> > (1) All proceedings are taken to have commenced on the date on which an application notice is filed.\n> \n> > (2) An application notice may be filed even though it has not been served if—\n> > \n> > > (a) the notice is not able to be served, despite reasonable attempts to do so, or\n> > \n> > > (b) the registrar gives leave to do so after forming the opinion that it is not reasonable in the circumstances of the case to require prior service of the notice.\n> \n> > (3) Nothing in this section affects any other Act or law under which proceedings are taken to have commenced on another date.","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time limit for commencement of proceedings","content":"#### 51 Time limit for commencement of proceedings\n\n51 Time limit for commencement of proceedings\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 44)\n\n> > (1) Application proceedings may not be commenced later than 6 years from the date when the matter is alleged to have arisen.\n> \n> > (2) This section is subject to any other Act or law.","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Relationship to other law or practice","content":"#### 52 Relationship to other law or practice\n\n52 Relationship to other law or practice\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 45)\n\n> If an Act or a statutory rule provides for application proceedings to be commenced otherwise than by issuing an application notice, the proceedings may nevertheless be commenced in accordance with this Act.","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time for hearing","content":"#### 53 Time for hearing\n\n53 Time for hearing\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 46)\n\n> > (1) On the first return date for an application notice in any proceedings, or at such later time as the Court determines, the Court must set the date, time and place for hearing and determining the matter.\n> \n> > (2) The Court must notify the respondent of the date, time and place, if the respondent is not present.\n> \n> > (3) However, if the respondent is not present at the first return date, the Court may proceed to hear and determine the matter on that day at its discretion.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> The powers of the Court to adjourn proceedings are set out in section 61.","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Proceedings to be open to public","content":"#### 54 Proceedings to be open to public\n\n54 Proceedings to be open to public\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 47)\n\n> > (1) Application proceedings before the Court are to be heard in open court.\n> \n> > (2) This section is subject to the provisions of any other Act or law.","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Change of venue","content":"#### 55 Change of venue\n\n55 Change of venue\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 48)\n\n> The Court may make an order changing the venue of the proceedings if it thinks it appropriate in the circumstances.","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Right to defend action","content":"#### 56 Right to defend action\n\n56 Right to defend action\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 49)\n\n> A respondent in application proceedings may defend the action and any proceedings ancillary to the action.","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Right of representation","content":"#### 57 Right of representation\n\n57 Right of representation\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 50)\n\n> > (1) An applicant or respondent may appear personally or by an Australian legal practitioner or other representative empowered by an Act or other law to appear for the applicant or respondent.\n> \n> > (2) An applicant who is a police officer may appear personally or by a person permitted by subsection (1) or by a police prosecutor.","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conduct of case","content":"#### 58 Conduct of case\n\n58 Conduct of case\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 51)\n\n> > (1) The applicant’s case may be conducted by the applicant or by the applicant’s Australian legal practitioner or any other representative permitted to appear for the applicant (whether under this or any other Act).\n> \n> > (2) The respondent’s case may be conducted by the respondent or by the respondent’s Australian legal practitioner or any other representative permitted to appear for the respondent (whether under this or any other Act).","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"59","sectionType":"section","heading":"Evidence to be on oath","content":"#### 59 Evidence to be on oath\n\n59 Evidence to be on oath\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 52)\n\n> The usual oath must be administered to a witness before the witness is examined.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> For the form of oaths and declarations see the [Oaths Act 1900](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1900-020).","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"60","sectionType":"section","heading":"Recording of evidence","content":"#### 60 Recording of evidence\n\n60 Recording of evidence\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 53)\n\n> > (1) The evidence of each witness in application proceedings must be recorded.\n> \n> > (2) Rules may be made for or with respect to the manner in which the evidence may be recorded and the authentication of evidence or of transcripts of evidence given in proceedings.","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"61","sectionType":"section","heading":"Adjournments","content":"#### 61 Adjournments\n\n61 Adjournments\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 54)\n\n> > (1) The Court may at any stage of proceedings adjourn the proceedings to a specified time and place.\n> \n> > (2) An adjournment of proceedings may be in such terms as the Court thinks fit.","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"62","sectionType":"section","heading":"Irregularity","content":"#### 62 Irregularity\n\n62 Irregularity\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 55)\n\n> > (1) If, in or in connection with application proceedings or the commencement of application proceedings, there is a failure to comply with any requirement of this Act or the rules, the failure is to be treated as an irregularity and does not nullify the proceedings or any step taken in the proceedings, or any judgment, document or order in the proceedings.\n> \n> > (2) Subsection (1) applies to a failure to comply with a requirement relating to time, place, manner, form or content or any other failure.\n> \n> > (3) In the case of an irregularity, the Court may, on terms, set aside wholly or in part the proceedings or any step taken in the proceedings or any document, judgment or order in the proceedings or exercise its powers under the rules to allow judgments and to make orders dealing with the proceedings generally.\n> \n> > (4) The Court must not take action under subsection (3) on the application of a party unless that application is made within a reasonable time and before the party has taken any fresh step after becoming aware of the irregularity.","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"63","sectionType":"section","heading":"Power to dispense with rules","content":"#### 63 Power to dispense with rules\n\n63 Power to dispense with rules\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 56)\n\n> > (1) In relation to particular application proceedings, the Court may, if of the opinion that it is in the interests of justice to do so, dispense with or vary a requirement of the rules.\n> \n> > (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the Court may make directions as to the conduct of application proceedings.\n> \n> > (3) The power conferred by this section does not extend to any rule declared by the rules to be mandatory.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> The Court may also give directions with respect to any aspect of practice or procedure not provided for by or under this Act or any other Act (see section 28).","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"64","sectionType":"section","heading":"Power to stay proceedings","content":"#### 64 Power to stay proceedings\n\n64 Power to stay proceedings\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 57)\n\n> > (1) Subject to the rules, the Court may at any time and from time to time, by order, stay any application proceedings before it, either permanently or until a specified day.\n> \n> > (2) The power to stay proceedings includes power to order a stay of an enforcement of an order.","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"65","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrest of respondent during proceedings","content":"#### 65 Arrest of respondent during proceedings\n\n65 Arrest of respondent during proceedings\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 58)\n\n> > (1) A Judge may, at any time when or after a matter is first before the Court and before it is finally disposed of by the Court, issue a warrant to arrest a respondent if the respondent fails to appear personally or to appear by an Australian legal practitioner or other representative and the Judge is satisfied that the respondent had notice of the date, time and place of the proceedings.\n> \n> > (1A) A Judge before whom the respondent is brought after having been arrested under the warrant may make a bail decision in respect of the respondent under the [Bail Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-026).\n> \n> > (1B) The [Bail Act 2013](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2013-026) applies to the respondent as if—\n> > \n> > > (a) the respondent were accused of an offence, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the proceedings at which the respondent is required to appear were proceedings for that offence.\n> \n> > (1C) Bail may be granted for the period between—\n> > \n> > > (a) the respondent’s being brought before the Judge, and\n> > \n> > > (b) the respondent’s appearance before the Court in the proceedings at which he or she is required to appear.\n> \n> > (2) A Judge before whom a respondent is brought on arrest on a warrant issued under this section may, if bail is not dispensed with or granted, issue a warrant—\n> > \n> > > (a) committing the respondent to a correctional centre or other place of security, and\n> > \n> > > (b) ordering the respondent to be brought before the Court at the date, time and place specified in the order.\n> \n> > (3) The Judge must give notice of the date, time and place set to the applicant.\n> \n> > (4) (Repealed)\n> \n> **s 65:** Am 2014 No 5, Sch 2.23 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2025 No 61, Schs 1\\[3\\], 3.8\\[1\\] \\[2\\].","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"66","sectionType":"section","heading":"Witnesses and production of evidence","content":"#### 66 Witnesses and production of evidence\n\n66 Witnesses and production of evidence\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 59)\n\n> The provisions of Part 3 of Chapter 4 of the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209) apply, with any necessary modifications, to application proceedings in the same way as they apply to proceedings for summary offences under that Act.","sortOrder":86},{"sectionNumber":"67","sectionType":"section","heading":"Warrants of arrest and warrants of commitment","content":"#### 67 Warrants of arrest and warrants of commitment\n\n67 Warrants of arrest and warrants of commitment\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 60)\n\n> The provisions of Part 4 of Chapter 4 of the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209) apply, with any necessary modifications, to warrants of arrest, or warrants of commitment, issued under this Act in the same way as they apply to warrants of arrest or warrants of commitment issued under that Act.","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"68","sectionType":"section","heading":"Enforcement of orders for payment of money","content":"#### 68 Enforcement of orders for payment of money\n\n68 Enforcement of orders for payment of money\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 61)\n\n> An order for the payment of money by a party to application proceedings (including an order as to payment of costs) may be enforced in a court of competent jurisdiction as if it were a debt due to the person to whom the money is ordered to be paid.","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"69","sectionType":"section","heading":"Costs","content":"#### 69 Costs\n\n69 Costs\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 62)\n\n> > (1) The Court may award costs in application proceedings at its discretion and may determine by whom, to whom and to what extent costs are to be paid in or in relation to application proceedings.\n> \n> > (2) The Court may order costs to be assessed on the basis set out in the legal costs legislation (as defined in section 3A of the [Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2014-016)) or on an indemnity basis.\n> \n> > (3) This section is subject to this Act, the rules and any other Act.\n> \n> **s 69:** Am 2015 No 7, Sch 2.29 \\[2\\].","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"70","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appeals","content":"#### 70 Appeals\n\n70 Appeals\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 64)\n\n> > (1) In relation to any order arising from an application notice—\n> > \n> > > (a) an application for annulment may be made in accordance with Part 2 of the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120), and\n> > \n> > > (b) an appeal to the District Court may be made in accordance with Part 3 of the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120), and\n> > \n> > > (c) an appeal to the Supreme Court may be made in accordance with Part 5 of the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120),\n> > \n> > in the same way as such an application or appeal may be made in relation to a conviction arising from a court attendance notice dealt with under Part 2 of Chapter 4 of the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209).\n> \n> > (2) An application or appeal may not be made under subsection (1) in relation to an order referred to in that subsection if the making of such an application or appeal is prohibited by the Act or law pursuant to which the order was made.\n> \n> > (3) If any other Act—\n> > \n> > > (a) provides for an appeal to the District Court against an order of the Court under that Act, or\n> > \n> > > (b) provides for an appeal against such an order without identifying to which court such an appeal is to be made,\n> > \n> > such an appeal is to be made to the District Court in accordance with Part 3 of the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120) in the same way as an appeal under that Part may be made in relation to a conviction arising from a court attendance notice dealt with under Part 2 of Chapter 4 of the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209).\n> \n> > (4) If any other Act provides for an appeal to the Supreme Court against an order of the Court under that Act, such an appeal is to be made to the Supreme Court in accordance with Part 5 of the [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120) in the same way as an appeal under that Part may be made in relation to a conviction arising from a court attendance notice dealt with under Part 2 of Chapter 4 of the [Criminal Procedure Act 1986](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1986-209).\n> \n> > (5) The [Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2001-120) applies to an application or appeal arising under this section with such modifications as are made by or in accordance with the regulations under that Act.\n> \n> > (6) In this section, a reference to an order includes a reference to any determination that the Court has jurisdiction to make, and any penalty that the Court has jurisdiction to impose.\n> \n> **s 70:** Am 2009 No 4, Sch 2.3.","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"71","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules in application proceedings","content":"#### 71 Rules in application proceedings\n\n71 Rules in application proceedings\n\n(cf LCA 1982, section 63)\n\n> > (1) The rules may make provision for or with respect to the following matters relating to application proceedings—\n> > \n> > > (a) the practice and procedure in the Court and in proceedings before a registrar,\n> > \n> > > (b) the filing and service (including substituted service) of notices under this Act,\n> > \n> > > (c) additional requirements for the form of warrants,\n> > \n> > > (d) the functions of registrars,\n> > \n> > > (e) the hearing of proceedings, including the procedure to be followed and the orders to be made, when a party fails to attend,\n> > \n> > > (f) empowering the Court to dispense with rules of evidence for proving any matter that is not genuinely in dispute in any proceedings and to dispense with rules of evidence that might cause expense or delay in proceedings if those rules were applied in specified circumstances,\n> > \n> > > (g) prescribing matters relating to expert evidence, including the disclosure, by providing copies of reports or otherwise, of the nature of expert evidence to be given, and including the exclusion of expert evidence in the case of non-compliance with the rules relating to expert evidence or with any order for disclosure of the nature of expert evidence,\n> > \n> > > (h) providing for any matter relating to the costs of proceedings.\n> \n> > (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the rules may adopt, with or without modification, the provisions of any rules made under the [Civil Procedure Act 2005](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-028).\n> \n> > (3) This section does not give power to make rules with respect to any matter relating to costs that is regulated by the legal costs legislation (as defined in section 3A of the [Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2014-016)).\n> \n> **s 71:** Am 2015 No 7, Sch 2.29 \\[3\\].","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"72","sectionType":"section","heading":"Forms","content":"#### 72 Forms\n\n72 Forms\n\n(cf CPA, section 17; LCA 1982, section 40)\n\n> > (1) The Chief Judge—\n> > \n> > > (a) may approve forms for documents to be used in connection with application proceedings, and\n> > \n> > > (b) in the case of documents filed with the Court, or issued by the Court, by means of an ECM system within the meaning of the [Electronic Transactions Act 2000](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2000-008), may approve the format in which such documents are to be filed or issued.\n> \n> > (2) Copies of the approved forms are to be made available for public inspection at each registry of the Court and on the Court’s internet website.\n> \n> > (3) If a form is approved in relation to a document to be used in connection with proceedings in the Court, a document that is filed with or issued by the Court is to be in that form.\n> \n> > (4) An application notice must do the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) describe the grounds for the proceedings and the remedy sought,\n> > \n> > > (b) contain the name of the applicant,\n> > \n> > > (c) require the respondent to appear before the Court or a Judge at a specified date, time and place.\n> \n> > (5) The rules may prescribe additional matters to be included in application notices.\n> \n> **s 72:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[3\\].","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 1","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Provisions relating to Judges","content":"# Schedule 1 Provisions relating to Judges\n\nSchedule 1 Provisions relating to Judges\n\n(Sections 13 (4), 14 (2), 15 (3) and 16 (3))\n\n**sch 1, hdg:** Am 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[9\\].\n\n**sch 1:** Am 2010 No 63, Sch 1.13 \\[2\\]–\\[5\\]; 2010 No 135, Sch 15 \\[3\\]–\\[5\\]; 2012 No 60, Sch 11; 2015 No 2, Sch 3.7 \\[3\\] \\[4\\]; 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[5\\]–\\[8\\]; 2016 No 54, Sch 1.13 \\[1\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[10\\]–\\[19\\].","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"9A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cashing out of pre-2002 extended leave entitlements","content":"#### 9A Cashing out of pre-2002 extended leave entitlements\n\n9A Cashing out of pre-2002 extended leave entitlements\n\n> > (1) A conditions of service determination may make provision for an alternative extended leave scheme for Judges with pre-2002 extended leave entitlements.\n> \n> > (2) An alternative extended leave scheme is a scheme under which a Judge accrues extended leave on a different basis to his or her pre-2002 extended leave entitlement.\n> \n> > (3) A conditions of service determination may permit a Judge to elect—\n> > \n> > > (a) to be paid, as a gratuity, the monetary value of the Judge’s pre-2002 extended leave entitlement, and\n> > \n> > > (b) to accrue extended leave, on and from the date of election, in accordance with the alternative extended leave scheme.\n> \n> > (4) An alternative extended leave scheme may provide that the Judge accrues extended leave as if the Judge had first been appointed as a Magistrate or Judge on or after the election takes effect (that is, disregarding service as a Magistrate or Judge or in the government sector before the election takes effect).\n> \n> > (5) In this section, a pre-2002 extended leave entitlement is any right to extended leave or to accrue extended leave that a person appointed as a Magistrate before 20 September 2002 has by virtue of section 25 (1) of the [Local Courts Act 1982](/view/html/repealed/current/act-1982-164), as in force immediately before its repeal.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> Section 30 (1) (c) of the [Interpretation Act 1987](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1987-015) provides that the repeal of an Act does not affect any right, privilege, obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under the Act.","sortOrder":105},{"sectionNumber":"10A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Remuneration of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge","content":"#### 10A Remuneration of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge\n\n10A Remuneration of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge\n\n> If the Chief Judge also holds office as a Judge of the District Court, the Chief Judge is not entitled to receive remuneration as a Judge or Chief Judge of the Local Court while receiving remuneration as a Judge of the District Court.","sortOrder":108},{"sectionNumber":"10B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Superannuation entitlements of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge","content":"#### 10B Superannuation entitlements of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge\n\n10B Superannuation entitlements of Chief Judge who is District Court Judge\n\n> > (1) This clause applies to the Chief Judge if the Chief Judge—\n> > \n> > > (a) is appointed as a Judge of the District Court at the same time as being appointed as the Chief Judge or while he or she holds office as the Chief Judge, and\n> > \n> > > (b) is a contributor to a State public sector superannuation scheme immediately before being appointed as a Judge of the District Court.\n> \n> > (2) When this clause applies to the Chief Judge, the Chief Judge—\n> > \n> > > (a) ceases on his or her appointment as a Judge of the District Court to be an employee who is entitled to be a contributor under the State public sector superannuation scheme concerned, and\n> > \n> > > (b) is taken on that appointment to have preserved his or her superannuation benefits under the scheme in accordance with the relevant statutory provisions governing the scheme.\n> \n> > (3) This clause does not—\n> > \n> > > (a) prevent the Chief Judge from contributing to the FSS Fund in a capacity other than as an employee within the meaning of the [First State Superannuation Act 1992](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1992-100) if he or she is permitted to do so by the trust deed under which the Fund is maintained and administered, or\n> > \n> > > (b) otherwise affect the provisions of any other Act or regulation relating to the rights of contributors under superannuation schemes.\n> \n> > (4) In this clause—\n> > \n> > FSS Fund means the Fund within the meaning of the [First State Superannuation Act 1992](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1992-100).\n> > \n> > State public sector superannuation scheme means each of the following—\n> > \n> > > (a) a STC scheme within the meaning of the [Superannuation Administration Act 1996](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1996-039),\n> > \n> > > (b) the FSS Fund,\n> > \n> > > (c) any other scheme or fund prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this clause.","sortOrder":109},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 2","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Provisions relating to Assessors","content":"# Schedule 2 Provisions relating to Assessors\n\nSchedule 2 Provisions relating to Assessors\n\n(Section 17 (2))\n\n**sch 2:** Am 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[9\\].","sortOrder":114},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 3","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Provisions relating to Rule Committee","content":"# Schedule 3 Provisions relating to Rule Committee\n\nSchedule 3 Provisions relating to Rule Committee\n\n(Section 25 (5))\n\n**sch 3:** Am 2015 No 58, Sch 3.56 \\[3\\] \\[4\\]; 2025 No 61, Sch 1\\[11\\].","sortOrder":123},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 4","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Savings, transitional and other provisions","content":"# Schedule 4 Savings, transitional and other provisions\n\nSchedule 4 Savings, transitional and other provisions\n\n(Section 5 (2))\n\n**sch 4:** Am 2008 No 53, Sch 15 \\[5\\] \\[6\\]; 2009 No 77, Sch 2.14 \\[3\\]; 2010 No 63, Sch 1.13 \\[6\\]; 2010 No 135, Sch 15 \\[6\\] \\[7\\]; 2013 No 6, Sch 1 \\[5\\] \\[6\\]; 2016 No 54, Sch 1.13 \\[2\\]; 2018 No 87, Sch 1.20 \\[2\\]; 2025 No 47, Sch 1\\[3\\]; 2025 No 61, Schs 1\\[20\\], 3.8\\[3\\].","sortOrder":130},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Courts Legislation Amendment Act 2010","content":"# Part 5 Provision consequent on enactment of Courts Legislation Amendment Act 2010\n\nPart 5 Provision consequent on enactment of [Courts Legislation Amendment Act 2010](/view/html/repealed/current/act-2010-063)","sortOrder":148},{"sectionNumber":"Part 6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provisions consequent on enactment of Courts and Crimes Legislation Further Amendment Act 2010","content":"# Part 6 Provisions consequent on enactment of Courts and Crimes Legislation Further Amendment Act 2010\n\nPart 6 Provisions consequent on enactment of [Courts and Crimes Legislation Further Amendment Act 2010](/view/html/repealed/current/act-2010-135)","sortOrder":150},{"sectionNumber":"Part 7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court Amendment (Company Title Home Unit Disputes) Act 2013","content":"# Part 7 Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court Amendment (Company Title Home Unit Disputes) Act 2013\n\nPart 7 Provision consequent on enactment of [Local Court Amendment (Company Title Home Unit Disputes) Act 2013](/view/html/repealed/current/act-2013-006)","sortOrder":153},{"sectionNumber":"Part 8","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Justice Portfolio Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2016","content":"# Part 8 Provision consequent on enactment of Justice Portfolio Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2016\n\nPart 8 Provision consequent on enactment of [Justice Portfolio Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2016](/view/html/repealed/current/act-2016-054)","sortOrder":155},{"sectionNumber":"Part 9","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Justice Legislation Amendment Act (No 3) 2018","content":"# Part 9 Provision consequent on enactment of Justice Legislation Amendment Act (No 3) 2018\n\nPart 9 Provision consequent on enactment of [Justice Legislation Amendment Act (No 3) 2018](/view/html/repealed/current/act-2018-087)","sortOrder":157},{"sectionNumber":"Part 10","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court Amendment (Jurisdiction) Act 2025","content":"# Part 10 Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court Amendment (Jurisdiction) Act 2025\n\nPart 10 Provision consequent on enactment of [Local Court Amendment (Jurisdiction) Act 2025](/view/pdf/asmade/act-2025-47)","sortOrder":159},{"sectionNumber":"Part 11","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025—bail amendments","content":"# Part 11 Provision consequent on enactment of Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025—bail amendments\n\nPart 11 Provision consequent on enactment of [Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025](/view/pdf/asmade/act-2025-61)—bail amendments","sortOrder":161},{"sectionNumber":"Part 12","sectionType":"part","heading":"Provisions consequent on enactment of Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025—new judicial offices","content":"# Part 12 Provisions consequent on enactment of Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025—new judicial offices\n\nPart 12 Provisions consequent on enactment of [Local Court and Bail Legislation Amendment Act 2025](/view/pdf/asmade/act-2025-61)—new judicial offices","sortOrder":163}],"analysis":{"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act’s scope has been altered by subsequent amendments and transitional provisions recorded in the text.  Notable changes include: renaming and restructuring judicial offices (abolishing Chief Magistrate/Deputy Chief Magistrate/Magistrate and creating Chief Judge/Deputy Chief Judge/Judge with transitional appointments preserved) and related consequences for commissions and oaths (Schedule 4, Part 12, clauses 23–30); insertion of jurisdiction for company title home unit disputes (s 34A, 2013 amendment); introduction of a statutory summary offence for disrespectful behaviour in Court (s 24A, 2016 insertion); adjustments to jurisdictional monetary limits and related transitional carve‑outs (ss 29–31 and Schedule 4 Parts 6, 15, 19); and reallocation of certain privacy‑related proceedings to the District Court by an amending Act with specific transitional treatment (Schedule 4, Part 10).  These changes alter who decides which matters, where proceedings are heard, and some procedural pathways, and are implemented through the Act’s rule‑making, appointment and transitional machinery (see ss 5, 6; ss 22–27; Schedule 4)."},"complexity_factors":["Interlocking structure: multiple Parts, Divisions and Schedules governing judges, assessors, registrars, procedure and transitional arrangements (whole Act; Schedule 1–4).","Cross‑references to many other statutes (Civil Procedure Act 2005; Criminal Procedure Act 1986; Corporations Act 2001; Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014; and others) increasing interpretive complexity (e.g. ss 26, 32, 33, 42, 71).","Broad discretionary powers vested in the Chief Judge, Rule Committee and Secretary (ss 23; 25–26; s 19(2)–(4)), producing operational variability.","Multiple jurisdictional rules, monetary thresholds and carved‑out exclusions (ss 29–34A) with special regimes (Small Claims Division, company title disputes).","Detailed procedural rules and exceptions for different kinds of proceedings (application proceedings, Small Claims, civil jurisdiction) including recording, evidence dispensation, adjournments and stays (ss 35–37; ss 45–72).","Amendments and transitional provisions that change office titles and reassign pending proceedings (Schedule 4 Parts 10–12), requiring careful mapping of old to new provisions.","Newly created criminal summary offence with prosecutorial authorisation constraints (s 24A) adding a distinct procedural track."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does\n\n- Creates and organises the Local Court of New South Wales as a court of record and sets out how it is run and who runs it (Chief Judge, Deputy Chief Judges, Judges, acting Judges, Assessors and registrars) (ss 7, 12–16, 17–21; Schedule 1 & 2).  The Governor appoints Judges (s 13).  Remuneration and superannuation entitlements are dealt with in the schedules and by reference to existing remuneration and superannuation Acts (Schedule 1 cl 6; Schedule 2 cl 2).\n\n- Defines the Court’s jurisdictions and internal structure: civil (General Division and Small Claims Division), special jurisdiction (matters conferred by other Acts), and criminal jurisdiction (s 9; s 10).  It gives state‑wide jurisdiction (s 11) and sets monetary limits for civil claims ($100,000 General Division; $20,000 Small Claims; $60,000 cap for personal injury in General Division) with narrowly framed exceptions and mechanisms to exceed limits in limited circumstances (ss 29–31).\n\n- Establishes procedure and practice rules: a Rule Committee makes rules about the Court’s practice and procedure and the Chief Judge issues practice notes (ss 25–27).  The rules may adopt or modify existing uniform rules and may cover filing, service, registrars’ functions, evidence and use of electronic case management (ss 26, 42).\n\n- Sets out how particular kinds of civil and administrative application proceedings are started, heard and enforced (Part 4).  It includes filing, service, time limits, recording and adjournment powers, powers to stay proceedings, and enforcement of money orders as debts (ss 45–72; ss 50, 60, 61, 64, 68).\n\n- Provides special procedural features for the Small Claims Division: informal procedure, limited evidence rules, prohibition on most awards of costs, and a duty to attempt conciliation before final orders (ss 35–37).\n\n- Limits and channels appeals from the Local Court (appeals on law only to the Supreme Court from General Division; limited appeals from Small Claims to the District Court) and sets how appeals are to be determined (ss 38–41).\n\n- Gives the Court contempt powers (linked to District Court provisions) and creates a separate summary offence for disrespectful behaviour in Court subject to specified procedural constraints and prosecutorial authorisations (ss 24, 24A).\n\n- Includes transitional and savings provisions that: repeal the former Local Courts Act 1982, preserve prior appointments and proceedings as appropriate, handle changes made by subsequent amending Acts (including transfer or exclusion of particular matters, office renaming, and shifting existing proceedings between courts) (s 5; Schedule 4; Parts 10–12 of Schedule 4).\n\n# Who it affects\n\n- Litigants and defendants who bring or are subject to civil, special or certain application proceedings in the Local Court (Parts 3–4).\n- Judges, acting Judges, Deputy Chief Judges, the Chief Judge, Assessors, registrars and Court staff (ss 12–21; Schedule 1 & 2).\n- Legal practitioners and other authorised representatives who appear in Court (ss 57–58).\n- Government bodies and public officers who bring or defend application proceedings (s 43; ss 46, 49).\n- Owners, residents and companies involved in company‑title home unit disputes (s 34A).\n- Parties who previously relied on provisions of the repealed Local Courts Act 1982 — transitional provisions preserve many prior rights, positions and forms (Schedule 4).\n\n# Why it matters (mechanics first, then the Act’s stated purpose)\n\nMechanically: the Act defines what kinds of matters the Local Court may decide, where and when it sits, who decides them, how proceedings start, who may appear, what procedural rules apply, how evidence is handled, and how orders are enforced or appealed.  It distributes decision‑making authority (Governor appoints judges (s 13); Chief Judge sets sittings and allocates business (ss 22–23); Rule Committee makes rules (ss 25–26); Secretary and registrars exercise administrative functions (s 19)).  It also prescribes limits on monetary jurisdiction (ss 29–31) and sets special procedures for Small Claims and application proceedings (ss 35–37; ss 45–72).\n\nThe Act itself states purposes in procedural terms (for example, it requires a Ministerial review after five years to check whether the Act’s policy objectives remain valid (s 6)).  Where the Act or later amending provisions assert objectives (for example, expanding or excluding certain jurisdictions such as company title disputes (s 34A) or moving privacy‑related claims to another court (Schedule 4, Part 10)), those claims are statements from the legislation about the intended effect; the Act implements these intentions through jurisdictional definitions, rule‑making powers and transitional arrangements.\n\n# Effects on incentives, costs and behaviour (source‑grounded, with section references)\n\n- Forum choice and litigation costs: jurisdictional limits (ss 29–31) and exclusions (s 33) affect where parties can bring claims.  Raising or lowering monetary thresholds or transferring classes of disputes between courts (see transitional clauses in Schedule 4, Parts 9–11) changes litigation cost incentives and may shift caseload and fee burdens between courts.\n\n- Parties’ procedural obligations and compliance burden: the Act gives broad rule‑making powers to the Rule Committee and the Chief Judge (ss 25–27) and requires particular forms and contents for originating documents (s 72).  Complying with rules, practice notes and approved forms creates direct compliance costs for litigants and their advisers.\n\n- Administrative discretion and operational risk: the Chief Judge has significant discretion to allocate sittings and judges (ss 22–23) and must consult the Attorney General if substantially changing sitting frequency (s 23(2)).  The Secretary can direct or delegate registrars’ territorial exercise of functions (s 19(2)–(4)).  These provisions create avenues for administrative decision‑making that determine access and timetabling.\n\n- Enforcement and private ordering: an order for payment of money is enforceable as a debt (s 68), which maintains parties’ ability to convert judicial outcomes into enforceable claims.  The Small Claims Division’s limits on awarding costs (s 37) and informal procedure (s 35) change parties’ incentives to litigate and settle smaller claims.\n\n- Impact on private enterprise and contracts: the Court’s power in contract‑review matters (s 32) and its jurisdiction over company title home unit disputes (s 34A) affect disputes arising from private contracts and company constitutions.  The Act removes effectiveness of contract terms that purport to oust the Court’s jurisdiction for company title disputes (s 34A(7)), which changes the contractual allocation of forum risk for those disputes.\n\n- Effect on individual rights and speech: the contempt powers (s 24) remain available and the Act creates a summary offence for disrespectful behaviour in Court with specified prosecutorial controls (s 24A).  Those provisions constrain behaviour in courtrooms and channel certain misconduct to summary criminal process rather than to pure contempt proceedings; the Act also limits who may bring prosecutions and requires Attorney‑General authorisation for such prosecutions (s 24A(6)–(8)), which affects prosecutorial discretion and procedural safeguards.\n\n# Trade‑offs, opportunity costs and implementation risks\n\n- Concentrated vs diffuse impacts: changes to judicial offices and remunerations (Schedule 1) concentrate benefits and costs on officeholders (who retain prior terms during conversions under transitional clauses, Part 12 of Schedule 4).  Jurisdictional reallocations (for example, moving privacy claims to the District Court — Schedule 4, Part 10) produce concentrated benefits for some practitioners and courts and diffuse costs to litigants who may face different cost structures.\n\n- Rulemaking and operational discretion: giving the Rule Committee broad rule‑making powers (ss 25–26) and allowing the Court to dispense with rules in individual proceedings (s 63) permit flexible case management but also introduce variability that increases compliance and advisory costs for parties and lawyers.\n\n- Cross‑law interaction and complexity risk: the Act repeatedly relies on and modifies the operation of other Acts (Civil Procedure Act 2005, Criminal Procedure Act 1986, Corporations Act 2001, Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014, etc.) (see numerous cross‑references, e.g. ss 26, 32, 33, 42, 71).  This interdependence raises the cost of legal compliance and increases the risk of inconsistent interpretation until clarified by rules or case law.\n\n# Implementation and administrative considerations\n\n- The Governor and Minister retain appointment and service‑condition roles (s 13; Schedule 1 cl 9).  The Chief Judge and Rule Committee handle day‑to‑day court organisation and rule development (ss 23, 25–26).  Registrars have delegated administrative authority but act subject to Secretary directions (s 19).\n\n- Transitional measures carry forward existing appointments, pending proceedings and forms to reduce disruption (Schedule 4; Parts 2, 10–12), but they require careful administration to determine which proceedings move courts and how prior rights are preserved.\n\n# Bottom line\n\nThis Act sets the Local Court’s institutional structure, jurisdictional boundaries, procedural framework and administrative governance.  It delegates significant operational discretion to the Chief Judge, Rule Committee and administrative officers, establishes thresholds that affect forum choice and litigation economics (ss 29–31), and provides transitions for earlier arrangements and appointments (Schedule 4).  The Act’s mechanics — rule‑making power, allocation of jurisdiction, appointment processes and enforcement measures — are the tools used to implement its stated procedural and policy aims (s 6), but those tools also create compliance costs, require administrative capacity to execute consistently, and interact with many other laws (see cross‑references throughout)."},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[],"contradictions":[]},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"provider":"moonshot","completionTokens":2077},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"While originally enacted in 2007 to consolidate and replace the Local Courts Act 1982, the legislation has expanded significantly beyond its original court-constitution framework. Key expansions include: the addition of company title home unit dispute jurisdiction (2013); the creation of specific contempt and disrespectful behaviour offences (2016); amendments to jurisdictional limits for personal injury claims; and substantial restructuring in 2025 renaming all judicial offices from Magistrates to Judges with accompanying transitional provisions. The Schedule 4 savings and transitional provisions have grown to accommodate 12 separate amending Acts, indicating continual expansion of the Act's subject matter."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple defined terms in section 3 with nested inclusions and exclusions (e.g., 'criminal proceedings' includes bail and sentence proceedings but specifically excludes forensic procedures and child protection orders)","Extensive cross-referencing to other NSW legislation including the Civil Procedure Act 2005, Criminal Procedure Act 1986, Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001, and Bail Act 2013","Jurisdictional limits with conditional exceptions (section 31 allows exceeding $100,000 limit by 20% if parties consent or don't object)","Four separate schedules containing detailed employment conditions, superannuation preservation rights, and leave provisions for judicial officers","Schedule 4 contains complex transitional provisions spanning 12 separate Parts dealing with amendments from 2007 through to 2025, including recent changes renaming judicial offices from 'Magistrate' to 'Judge'","Nested divisions within Parts (e.g., Part 3 has 5 Divisions covering different aspects of civil jurisdiction) and multiple office-holder categories (Chief Judge, Deputy Chief Judges, Judges, acting Judges, Assessors)"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this Act does**\n\nThis Act establishes the **Local Court of New South Wales** — the state's lower court that handles less serious legal matters. It replaced the old Local Courts Act 1982 and brings all local courts under a single statewide court structure.\n\n**Who it affects**\n\n- **The public**: Anyone bringing or defending a civil claim (like debt recovery or property disputes), facing minor criminal charges, or dealing with certain regulatory matters.\n- **Legal professionals**: Lawyers appearing in the court, and judicial officers who work there.\n- **Government agencies**: Police and public officers who commence proceedings in the court.\n\n**Key features**\n\n**Structure of the Court**\n- The Court is led by a **Chief Judge** (assisted by Deputy Chief Judges), with other judicial officers now called **Judges** (previously known as Magistrates until recent changes).\n- It operates as a single court across all of NSW, holding sittings in various designated places.\n\n**Types of cases handled**\n- **Criminal matters**: Summary offences (less serious crimes) and committal proceedings for more serious offences.\n- **Civil jurisdiction** (money and property disputes):\n  - **General Division**: Claims up to $100,000 (or $60,000 for personal injury/death claims). Parties can consent to hear claims slightly above these limits.\n  - **Small Claims Division**: Claims up to $20,000, conducted informally without strict rules of evidence. Assessors (as well as Judges) can hear these cases.\n- **Special jurisdiction**: Various statutory applications commenced by notice (e.g., some enforcement actions, regulatory offences).\n- **Company title disputes**: Disputes about shared properties owned by companies rather than strata schemes.\n\n**What the Act covers**\n- **Powers and procedures**: How to start proceedings, serve documents, conduct hearings, and enforce judgments.\n- **Appeals**: Decisions from the General Division can be appealed to the Supreme Court (usually only on legal questions). Small Claims decisions can be appealed to the District Court on limited grounds (jurisdiction or fairness).\n- **Judicial officers**: How Judges and Assessors are appointed, their terms of service, salaries, and retirement.\n- **Rules**: Establishes a Rule Committee (including judges, lawyers, and consumer representatives) to make detailed court rules and practice notes.\n- **Contempt**: Powers to deal with people who disrupt court proceedings, including specific offences for disrespectful behaviour in court.\n\n**Why it matters**\nThis Act governs how everyday legal disputes and minor criminal matters are resolved in NSW. It ensures accessible justice for small claims through informal procedures while maintaining formal processes for more serious civil matters and criminal cases."},"summary":{"complexity_score":4,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"Given the 35+ amendments over nearly two decades, the Act has almost certainly expanded or refined its original scope. Courts legislation of this type typically accumulates additional provisions dealing with technology (e.g. audio-visual links), new offence categories, procedural reforms, and jurisdictional changes over time. However, the full text of the Act's provisions is not visible in the provided content, so a definitive assessment of exactly how scope has shifted cannot be made from this metadata alone."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive amendment history with over 35 point-in-time versions since 2007, meaning the current state of the law has evolved significantly from its original form","Interaction with numerous other pieces of legislation that govern court procedures, criminal law, and civil matters","Institutional and constitutional nuances around judicial appointments, court structure, and jurisdictional limits","The substantive content of the Act itself is not fully reproduced in the provided text, limiting full analysis — only metadata and version history are visible","Cross-references to related bills (e.g. Water Management Legislation Amendment Bill 2025) suggest the Act's scope intersects with other regulatory regimes in ways not immediately obvious"],"plain_english_summary":"## Local Court Act 2007 (NSW)\n\n**What is this?**\nThis is the foundational law that establishes and governs the **Local Court of New South Wales** — the busiest court in NSW that most everyday people are likely to encounter. Think of it as the rulebook for how that court is set up, who runs it, and how it operates.\n\n**Who does it affect?**\nPretty much anyone in NSW who has a legal matter go before a local court — which covers a huge range of situations:\n- People charged with **criminal offences** (like traffic violations, minor assaults, or drug possession)\n- People involved in **civil disputes** (like unpaid debts or minor contract disagreements)\n- Anyone dealing with **fines**, **apprehended violence orders (AVOs)**, or similar matters\n- Magistrates (the judges who run Local Courts) and court staff\n\n**Why does it matter?**\nThe Local Court handles the overwhelming majority of all court cases in NSW. This Act sets out the legal framework that makes the whole system work — things like:\n- How the court is constituted (set up and staffed)\n- The powers of **magistrates** (the judicial officers who decide cases in the Local Court)\n- How court proceedings are to be conducted\n- Rules around **jurisdiction** (what types of cases the court is allowed to deal with)\n\n**Key points for everyday people:**\n- If you're ever taken to court in NSW for a common matter, it will almost certainly start in the Local Court under this framework\n- The Act has been updated **many times** since 2007 (over 35 versions), meaning it has evolved significantly to keep pace with changes in the justice system\n- It sits under the responsibility of the **Attorney General**, NSW's chief law officer"}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007","history":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007/history","analysis":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/local-court-act-2007/documents"}}