{"id":"oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018","name":"Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018","slug":"oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"vic","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":174196,"registerId":"vic-oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018","content":"Version No. 008\n\n**Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018**\n\n**No. 6 of 2018**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n1 July 2021\n\n**TABLE OF PROVISIONS**\n\n*Section Page*\n\nPart 1—Preliminary 1\n\n1 Purposes 1\n\n2 Commencement 1\n\n3 Definitions 2\n\n4 Application of this Act 5\n\n5 Act binds the Crown 5\n\nPart 2—Oaths and affirmations 6\n\n6 Application of Part 6\n\n7 Choice of oath or affirmation 6\n\n8 Form of oaths and affirmations 7\n\n9 Oath or affirmation to be said aloud 7\n\n10 Effect on oath of religious texts and beliefs 8\n\n11 Administration to multiple persons 8\n\n12 Powers of courts, certain officers of courts and other persons to administer oaths and affirmations 8\n\n13 Appointment by interstate or overseas court or body to take or receive evidence 10\n\n14 Officer must refuse to administer oath or affirmation in certain circumstances 11\n\n15 Reasonable modifications may be made 11\n\n16 Audio and audio-visual evidence 11\n\n17 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity 12\n\nPart 3—Affidavits 13\n\n18 Application of Part 13\n\n18A Electronic signatures and initials 13\n\n19 Affidavits made in Victoria 13\n\n20 Offence to require payment of fee to take affidavit 16\n\n21 Affidavits made out of Victoria 16\n\n22 Offence to take affidavit if not authorised affidavit taker and offence to purport to be authorised affidavit taker 18\n\n23 Prescribed form of affidavit 18\n\n24 Authorised affidavit taker authorised to administer oath or affirmation 18\n\n25 Signature and oath requirements—deponent 18\n\n26 Requirements of authorised affidavit taker 19\n\n27 Jurat 20\n\n28 Affidavit by illiterate, blind or cognitively impaired person 21\n\n28A Inability to comply with requirements—admission into evidence 22\n\n28B Audio visual procedures do not limit other duties and obligations 22\n\n29 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity 22\n\nPart 4—Statutory declarations 23\n\n29A Electronic signatures and initials 23\n\n30 Statutory declarations made in Victoria 23\n\n30A Requirements if statutory declaration made or witnessed by audio visual link or in electronic form 25\n\n30B Audio visual procedures do not limit other duties and obligations 25\n\n31 Offence to take statutory declaration if not statutory declaration witness and offence to purport to be statutory declaration witness 26\n\n32 Provision of assistance to person making statutory declaration 26\n\n33 Statutory declarations made out of Victoria 27\n\n34 Reasonable modifications may be made 28\n\n35 Statutory declaration by illiterate, blind or cognitively impaired person 28\n\n36 Offence to make false statutory declaration 29\n\n37 False or misleading statement as to making of statutory declaration 29\n\n38 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity 29\n\nPart 5—Certification 30\n\nDivision 1—Authorised certifiers 30\n\n39 Authorised certifiers 30\n\nDivision 2—Scheme for certification of copies of original documents 30\n\n40 Application 30\n\n41 Process for certifying copies of documents 31\n\n42 Process for certifying copy of a certified copy 31\n\n43 Multiple page documents 32\n\n44 Documents in languages other than English 32\n\n45 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity 33\n\nDivision 3—General certification offences 33\n\n46 Application 33\n\n47 Offence to present false copy of a document for certification 33\n\n48 Offence to certify certain copies of documents 33\n\n49 False or misleading statement as to certification of copy of document 34\n\nPart 6—General 35\n\n50 Perjury to make false statement by oath, affirmation or affidavit 35\n\n51 Infringement offences 35\n\n52 Regulations 35\n\nPart 7—Transitional provisions, repeals and consequential amendments 38\n\nDivision 1—Repeals and transitional provisions 38\n\n53 Administration of oaths and affirmations 38\n\n54 Oaths affirmations affidavits declarations 38\n\n55 Attestations verifications acknowledgements notarial Acts etc. 38\n\n56 Persons making wilful false statements on oath, declaration etc. guilty of perjury 38\n\n57 Abolition of extra-judicial oaths 38\n\n58 Form of oath and affirmation and affirmations in writing 38\n\n60 Transitional provisions—Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021 39\n\nSchedule 1—Form of oath and affirmation 40\n\n═══════════════\n\nEndnotes 42\n\n1 General information 42\n\n2 Table of Amendments 44\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation 46\n\n4 Explanatory details 47\n\n**Version No.** **008**\n\n**Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018**\n\n**No. 6 of 2018**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n1 July 2021\n\n**The Parliament of Victoria enacts:**\n\nPart 1—Preliminary\n\n\t1 Purposes\n\nThe purposes of this Act are—\n\n(a) to re-enact and modernise the law relating to oaths, affirmations, affidavits and statutory declarations; and\n\n(b) to establish a scheme for the certification of copies of documents; and\n\n(c) to repeal Divisions 1 to 11 of Part IV, Part V and other provisions of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958**; and\n\n(d) to make consequential amendments to the **Evidence Act 2008**, the **Constitution Act 1975**, the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984** and other Acts.\n\n\t2 Commencement\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), this Act comes into operation on a day or days to be proclaimed.\n\n(2) If a provision of this Act does not come into operation before 1 March 2019, it comes into operation on that day.\n\n\t3 Definitions\n\nIn this Act—\n\n***administering officer*** means any person authorised to administer oaths or affirmations by or under this Act or any other Act or by convention;\n\n***Australian consular officer*** means a person appointed to hold or act in any of the following offices (being an office of the Commonwealth) in a country or place outside Australia—\n\n(a) ambassador;\n\n(b) high commissioner;\n\n(c) Minister;\n\n(d) head of mission;\n\n(e) commissioner;\n\n(f) chargé d'affaires;\n\n(g) counsellor or secretary at an embassy, high commissioner's office, legation or other post;\n\n(h) consul-general;\n\n(i) consul;\n\n(j) vice-consul;\n\n(k) trade commissioner;\n\n(l) consular agent;\n\n(m) envoy;\n\n***authorised affidavit taker*** means a person authorised to take an affidavit by or under Part 3;\n\n***authorised certifier*** means a person authorised to certify a copy of a document by or under Part 5;\n\n***certify*** does not include attest;\n\n***child*** means a person under the age of 18 years;\n\n***cognitive impairment*** includes an intellectual disability, an acquired brain injury, autism spectrum disorder and a neurological impairment;\n\n***exhibit*** includes annexure or attachment;\n\n***honorary justice*** has the same meaning as it has in the **Honorary Justices Act 2014**;\n\n***identical*** does not mean of the same size or colour, provided that the use of a different size or colour does not result in the loss of any material information;\n\n***judicial officer*** means any of the following—\n\n(a) a Judge or reserve Judge of the Supreme Court;\n\n(b) an Associate Judge or reserve Associate Judge of the Supreme Court;\n\n(c) a Judge or reserve Judge of the Supreme Court who is appointed or assigned to VCAT;\n\n(d) a judge of the County Court;\n\n(e) a reserve judge of the County Court;\n\n(f) an associate judge of the County Court;\n\n(g) a reserve associate judge of the County Court;\n\n(h) a person referred to in paragraph (d) or (e) who is appointed or assigned to VCAT;\n\n(i) a magistrate or reserve magistrate;\n\n(j) a magistrate or reserve magistrate who is appointed or assigned to the Children's Court, the Coroners Court or VCAT;\n\n(k) a reserve coroner;\n\n(l) a person appointed under section 94 of the **Coroners Act 2008**;\n\n(m) a judicial registrar of the following courts—\n\n(i) the Supreme Court;\n\n(ii) the County Court;\n\n(iii) the Magistrates' Court;\n\n(iv) the Children's Court;\n\n(v) the Coroners Court;\n\n***jurat*** means a written statement at the end of an affidavit setting out where and when the affidavit was sworn or affirmed, followed by the signature and authority of the authorised affidavit taker;\n\n***original document***, in Part 5, means a document that an authorised certifier, having used the authorised certifier's best judgment, determines is—\n\n(a) original; or\n\n(b) a document or extract that has been certified, otherwise than under Division 2 of that Part, as a true extract from, or copy of, a register of public documents or any other official record by the keeper or holder of that register or record;\n\n***person acting judicially*** includes the following—\n\n(a) any arbitrator;\n\n(b) any person or body having by law or by consent of parties authority to hear, receive and examine evidence;\n\n(c) any officer in any public department having in the discharge of the person's duties authority to examine evidence;\n\n***public document*** has the same meaning as it has in the **Evidence Act 2008**;\n\n***statutory declaration witness*** means a person authorised to witness a statutory declaration by or under Part 4.\n\n\t4 Application of this Act\n\nNothing in this Act limits—\n\n(a) in the case of the Supreme Court, the Court's inherent jurisdiction, implied jurisdiction or statutory jurisdiction; or\n\n(b) in the case of a court other than the Supreme Court, the court's implied jurisdiction or statutory jurisdiction; or\n\n(c) in the case of a tribunal, the tribunal's statutory jurisdiction; or\n\n(d) any other powers of a court or tribunal arising or derived from the common law or under any other Act (including any Commonwealth Act), rule of court, practice note or practice direction.\n\n\t5 Act binds the Crown\n\nThis Act binds the Crown in right of Victoria and, to the extent that the legislative power of the Parliament permits, the Crown in all its other capacities.\n\nPart 2—Oaths and affirmations\n\n\t6 Application of Part\n\n(1) This Part sets out basic requirements for oaths and affirmations that may be used if an oath or affirmation is required to be taken by or under an Act or by convention.\n\n(2) Only section 12 of this Part applies in respect of an oath taken or an affirmation made by—\n\n(a) a witness in a proceeding to which the **Evidence Act 2008** applies; or\n\n(b) a person acting as an interpreter in a proceeding to which that Act applies.\n\n**Note**\n\nSection 4 of the **Evidence Act 2008** specifies the proceedings to which that Act applies. Division 2 of Part 2.1 of that Act sets out the requirements for oaths and affirmations in respect of proceedings to which that Act applies but does not specify who may administer an oath or affirmation.\n\n\t7 Choice of oath or affirmation\n\n(1) A person who is required to take an oath or make an affirmation may choose whether to take an oath or make an affirmation.\n\n(2) The administering officer must inform the person that the person has this choice, unless the officer is satisfied that the person knows that the person has the choice.\n\n(3) The administering officer may direct the person to make an affirmation if—\n\n(a) the person refuses to choose whether to take an oath or make an affirmation; or\n\n(b) it is not reasonably practicable for the person to take an appropriate oath.\n\n\t8 Form of oaths and affirmations\n\n(1) An oath may be taken or an affirmation may be made in accordance with the form of Schedule 1 or in a similar form unless the oath or affirmation is required to be in a particular form—\n\n(a) specified by or under any other Act; or\n\n(b) by convention or otherwise.\n\n**Examples**\n\nSection 88AA of the **Constitution Act 1975**. Section 16(1)(c) of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (Victoria).\n\n(2) An affirmation made in accordance with subsection (1) has the same effect for all purposes as an oath.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), without limiting the meaning of a similar form, in the case of a child or a person with a cognitive impairment, the following words are taken to be a similar form of oath or affirmation—\n\n\"I promise to tell the truth.\".\n\n**Note**\n\nOther Acts or regulations may also give a person power to administer an oath or affirmation and provide for the form or manner of the administration of an oath or affirmation.\n\nS. 9 amended by No. 11/2021 s. 69 (ILA s. 39B(1)).\n\n\t9 Oath or affirmation to be said aloud\n\n(1) A person who takes an oath or makes an affirmation must say the words of the oath or affirmation aloud in the presence of the administering officer.\n\nS. 9(2) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 69.\n\n(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an oath or affirmation may be said aloud in the physical presence of the administering officer or by audio visual link or audio link.\n\n\t10 Effect on oath of religious texts and beliefs\n\n(1) A person may use a religious text in taking an oath, but is not required to do so.\n\n(2) A person may take an oath even if the person's religious or spiritual beliefs do not include a belief in the existence of a god.\n\n(3) An oath is effective even if the person who takes it does not have—\n\n(a) a religious belief; or\n\n(b) a religious belief of a particular kind.\n\n(4) Despite anything to the contrary in this Act, the form of oath made by a person—\n\n(a) need not include a reference to a god; and\n\n(b) may instead refer to the basis of the person's beliefs.\n\n\t11 Administration to multiple persons\n\n(1) An oath may be taken or an affirmation may be made by more than one person at the same time.\n\n(2) The words of an oath or affirmation may be altered and the process for administering the oath or affirmation adapted to enable the oath or affirmation to be administered to more than one person at the same time.\n\n\t12 Powers of courts, certain officers of courts and other persons to administer oaths and affirmations\n\n(1) The following have the power to administer an oath or affirmation—\n\n(a) a court, tribunal, judicial officer or a person acting judicially—\n\n(i) to any witness who is lawfully called before the court, tribunal, judicial officer or person acting judicially; or\n\n(ii) to any interpreter in a proceeding in the court or tribunal or before a judicial officer or person acting judicially; or\n\n(iii) to any other person required to take an oath or make an affirmation in a proceeding in the court or tribunal or before the judicial officer or person acting judicially;\n\n(b) a person who is performing duties in relation to a court or tribunal;\n\n(c) a person who is performing duties in relation to a court or tribunal who is authorised by any of the following for any purpose connected with the person's duties—\n\n(i) the court or tribunal;\n\n(ii) a judicial officer or a member of the tribunal;\n\n(iii) any rules of court or orders, practice directions or practice notes regulating the procedure of the court or tribunal;\n\n(d) a person performing duties as authorised by a person acting judicially for any purpose connected with the first person's duties;\n\n(e) a person who is directed to take an examination in any proceeding in a court or tribunal or before a person acting judicially;\n\n(f) a person authorised to take or receive evidence by section 13;\n\n(g) any prescribed person or person who is a member of a prescribed class of persons.\n\n**Note**\n\nOther Acts or regulations may also give a person power to administer an oath or affirmation.\n\n(2) A person or a person belonging to a class of persons specified by or under a specific Act or a specific statutory rule to administer an oath or affirmation in specified circumstances or in a specified manner is authorised to administer an oath or affirmation for that purpose.\n\n(3) A person must not administer an oath or affirmation unless—\n\n(a) the person is authorised to do so by or under this Act or another Act or by convention; or\n\n(b) the oath or affirmation is made in respect of a matter or thing—\n\n(i) touching the preservation of the peace; or\n\n(ii) touching any proceedings before the Legislative Council or Legislative Assembly or any committee of the Legislative Council or Legislative Assembly; or\n\n(c) the oath or affirmation is required by the law of any foreign or other country out of Victoria to give validity to instruments in writing designed to be used in foreign or other countries respectively; or\n\n(d) the oath or affirmation is for an oath of office.\n\n\t13 Appointment by interstate or overseas court or body to take or receive evidence\n\nIf a judicial officer, a person acting judicially or a person who, or court or body that, is authorised under the law of a jurisdiction outside Victoria to take or receive evidence on oath or affirmation in that jurisdiction appoints a person to take or receive evidence in Victoria—\n\n(a) if the person appointed is a court, a judicial officer or a person acting judicially, that person has the power to take or receive that evidence; or\n\n(b) in any other case, that person only has the power to take or receive the evidence if the person has first obtained the consent of the Attorney-General.\n\n\t14 Officer must refuse to administer oath or affirmation in certain circumstances\n\nIf it appears to an administering officer that a person taking an oath or making an affirmation is unable to understand the nature of an oath or affirmation, the officer must refuse to administer the oath or affirmation.\n\n\t15 Reasonable modifications may be made\n\nWithout limiting section 14, the administering officer may make reasonable modifications to the process of taking an oath or making an affirmation if the person taking the oath or making the affirmation has a disability that prevents the person from doing so in accordance with this Part.\n\n**Examples**\n\n1 A hearing impaired person may read and sign an oath or affirmation instead of saying it aloud.\n\n2 A person who is unable to speak may be able to listen to an oath or affirmation being read and nod assent.\n\n\t16 Audio and audio-visual evidence\n\nAn oath to be taken or an affirmation to be made by a witness giving evidence by audio-visual link or audio link may be administered either—\n\n(a) by means of the audio-visual link or audio link, in as nearly as practicable the same way as if the witness were to give evidence at the courtroom or other place where the court, tribunal or person acting judicially is sitting; or\n\n(b) at the direction of, and on behalf of, the court, tribunal or person acting judicially at the remote point by a person authorised by the court, tribunal or person acting judicially.\n\n\t17 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity\n\nAn oath or affirmation is not invalid merely because of an inadvertent non-compliance with a requirement imposed by this Part that does not materially affect the nature of the oath or affirmation.\n\nPart 3—Affidavits\n\n\t18 Application of Part\n\n(1) This Part—\n\n(a) sets out basic requirements for affidavits; and\n\n(b) applies unless a specific requirement of any other Act is inconsistent with the requirements of this Part.\n\n**Note**\n\nMore specific requirements may be found in other Acts such as the **Evidence Act 2008** or in rules of court.\n\n(2) Nothing in this Part limits or affects the powers of a court or tribunal to make rules of court in relation to affidavits.\n\nS. 18A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 70.\n\n\t18A Electronic signatures and initials\n\nA requirement under this Part for a deponent or an authorised affidavit taker to sign or initial an affidavit, a jurat, an exhibit, a certificate or other document attached to an affidavit is satisfied if the deponent or the authorised affidavit taker signs or initials the affidavit, jurat, exhibit, certificate or other document by electronic means.\n\n\t19 Affidavits made in Victoria\n\n(1) The following persons are authorised affidavit takers for the purpose of a person making any affidavit within Victoria for use in any court or tribunal or before a person acting judicially for any purpose or in any way authorised by law (whether by or under any Act, including a Commonwealth Act), by custom or otherwise—\n\n(a) a judicial officer;\n\n(b) an associate to a judicial officer;\n\n(c) an honorary justice;\n\n(d) the prothonotary or a deputy prothonotary of the Supreme Court;\n\n(e) the registrar of probates or an assistant registrar of probates;\n\n(f) the registrar or a deputy registrar of the County Court;\n\n(g) the principal registrar, a registrar or a deputy registrar of the Magistrates' Court;\n\n(h) the principal registrar, a registrar or a deputy registrar of the Children's Court;\n\n(i) the principal registrar, deputy registrar or a registrar of VCAT;\n\n(j) the principal registrar or a registrar of the Coroners Court;\n\n(k) a member of VCAT;\n\n(l) a member or former member of either House of the Parliament of Victoria;\n\n(m) a member or former member of either House of the Parliament of the Commonwealth;\n\n(n) a public notary;\n\n(o) an Australian legal practitioner;\n\n(p) a police officer of or above the rank of sergeant or for the time being in charge of a police station;\n\n(q) a person employed under Part 3 of the **Public Administration Act 2004** with a prescribed classification;\n\nS. 19(1)(r) amended by No. 9/2020 s. 390(Sch. 1 item 73).\n\n(r) a senior officer of a Council as specified in section 48(5) of the **Local Government Act 2020**;\n\n(s) a person registered as a patent attorney under Chapter 20 of the Patents Act 1990 of the Commonwealth;\n\n(t) a fellow of the Institute of Legal Executives (Victoria) ACN 004 670 928;\n\n(u) a person acting judicially;\n\n(v) any other officer or person empowered, authorised or permitted by or under any Act or rules of a court or rules of a tribunal to take affidavits;\n\n(w) any prescribed person or person who is a member of a prescribed class of persons.\n\n(2) A court, tribunal or person acting judicially must take judicial and official notice of the seal or signature of any person referred to in subsection (1) on, attached or appended to any affidavit.\n\n(3) For the purpose of subsection (2), judicial and official notice of the seal or signature of the person means that there is a presumption that, unless the contrary is proved—\n\n(a) the person signed the affidavit; and\n\n(b) the person was an authorised affidavit taker at the time of taking the affidavit.\n\n(4) An Australian legal practitioner is not prevented from taking any affidavit by reason only that the legal practitioner is acting for any of the parties to the proceeding, matter or instrument in respect of which the affidavit is sworn or affirmed.\n\n(5) It is not lawful for a person to take an affidavit unless the person is authorised to do so by or under this Act or another Act or by convention.\n\n\t20 Offence to require payment of fee to take affidavit\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), an authorised affidavit taker referred to in section 19 must not request, require or accept the payment of a fee for—\n\n(a) administering an oath or affirmation for an affidavit; or\n\n(b) signing an affidavit.\n\n1. 10 penalty units.\n\n\n**Note**\n\nSection 46 of the **Honorary Justices Act 2014** provides that it is an offence for an honorary justice to demand, take or accept from any person any fee, gratuity, patronage or reward for carrying out duties under that Act.\n\n(2) It is not an offence for a public notary to request, require or accept the payment of a fee for taking an affidavit when performing services or notarial acts which relate to documents intended solely for use outside Australia.\n\n\t21 Affidavits made out of Victoria\n\n(1) In addition to a person referred to in section 19, the following persons are authorised affidavit takers for the purpose of a person making any affidavit in any place out of Victoria for use in Victoria in any court or tribunal or before a person acting judicially for any purpose or in any way authorised by law (whether by or under any Act, including a Commonwealth Act), by custom or otherwise—\n\n(a) an Australian consular officer exercising the officer's functions in that place;\n\n(b) an employee of the Commonwealth referred to in section 3(c) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 of the Commonwealth;\n\n(c) an employee of the Australian Trade and Investment Commission referred to in section 3(d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 of the Commonwealth;\n\n(d) any person having authority to administer an oath or affirmation in that place.\n\n(2) If by any Act or subordinate instrument an affidavit is required, authorised or permitted to be administered or made before a justice of the peace or a bail justice, it is sufficient if the affidavit is made before a justice of the peace or bail justice (however described) for that place outside Victoria where the affidavit is made.\n\n(3) A court, tribunal or person acting judicially must take judicial and official notice of the signature of any justice of the peace or bail justice for a place outside Victoria referred to in subsection (2) when that person's signature is attached or appended to any affidavit.\n\n(4) For the purpose of subsection (3), judicial and official notice of the signature of the justice of the peace or bail justice for a place outside Victoria means that there is a presumption that, unless the contrary is proved—\n\n(a) the justice of the peace or bail justice signed the affidavit; and\n\n(b) the justice of the peace or bail justice was an authorised affidavit taker at the time of taking the affidavit.\n\n\t22 Offence to take affidavit if not authorised affidavit taker and offence to purport to be authorised affidavit taker\n\n(1) A person who is knowingly not an authorised affidavit taker must not take an affidavit.\n\nPenalty: 60 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months or both.\n\n(2) A person who is knowingly not an authorised affidavit taker must not represent that the person is an authorised affidavit taker.\n\nPenalty: 10 penalty units.\n\n\t23 Prescribed form of affidavit\n\nAn affidavit may be in the prescribed form.\n\n\t24 Authorised affidavit taker authorised to administer oath or affirmation\n\n(1) An authorised affidavit taker has the power to administer an oath or affirmation to a deponent for the purpose of taking an affidavit.\n\n(2) An oath or affirmation must be administered in accordance with Part 2.\n\n\t25 Signature and oath requirements—deponent\n\nS. 25(1) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 71(a).\n\n(1) Subject to section 28, the deponent of an affidavit must do the following in the presence (whether physically or by audio visual link) of an authorised affidavit taker—\n\n(a) sign or initial any alteration to the affidavit;\n\n(b) sign each page of the affidavit;\n\n(c) sign the affidavit;\n\n(d) if the affidavit refers to a document, sign a certificate attached to the document identifying the document as an exhibit to the affidavit;\n\n(e) take the oath or make the affirmation in accordance with Part 2.\n\nS. 25(2) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 71(b).\n\n(2) The deponent must swear or affirm the affidavit by saying the prescribed oath or affirmation aloud in the presence (whether physically or by audio visual link) of the authorised affidavit taker, unless the deponent has a disability that prevents the deponent from doing so.\n\n\t26 Requirements of authorised affidavit taker\n\n(1) An authorised affidavit taker before whom an affidavit is sworn or affirmed must do the following—\n\n(a) sign or initial any alteration to the affidavit;\n\n(b) sign each page of the affidavit;\n\n(c) administer the oath or affirmation to the deponent in accordance with Part 2;\n\n(d) comply with section 27.\n\n(2) If an affidavit refers to a document, the authorised affidavit taker must attach a certificate to the document identifying the document as an exhibit to the affidavit and do the following—\n\n(a) sign and date the certificate;\n\n(b) write, type or stamp below the affidavit taker's signature on the certificate the details referred to in section 27(1)(c).\n\n**Note**\n\nA certificate under this subsection may be prepared or produced by a person other than the authorised affidavit taker.\n\n(3) An authorised affidavit taker must ensure that an affidavit is dated.\n\n(4) Part 5 does not apply to a certificate attached to an exhibit under this section.\n\nS. 26(5) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 72.\n\n(5) If an affidavit has been signed and sworn or affirmed by a deponent under section 25 by audio visual link, an authorised affidavit taker may use a scanned or electronic copy of the affidavit for the purposes of complying with the requirements of this section and section 27.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee the offence in section 126B of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958**.\n\n\t27 Jurat\n\n(1) An authorised affidavit taker before whom any affidavit is made must do the following—\n\n(a) state truly in the jurat at what place and on what date the affidavit was sworn or affirmed;\n\n(b) complete and sign the jurat;\n\n(c) legibly write, type or stamp below that affidavit taker's signature the following—\n\n(i) the authorised affidavit taker's name and address (whether personal or professional);\n\n(ii) a statement of the capacity in which the affidavit taker has authority to take the affidavit.\n\nS. 27(1A) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 73.\n\n(1A) If an affidavit has been signed and sworn or affirmed by a deponent by audio visual link and the authorised affidavit taker has used a scanned or electronic copy of the affidavit for the purposes of complying with the requirements of section 26, the authorised affidavit taker, in addition to any other requirements of this section, must state that—\n\n(a) the affidavit was signed and sworn or affirmed by the deponent by audio visual link; and\n\n(b) the authorised affidavit taker has used a scanned or electronic copy of the affidavit and not the original in completing the jurat requirements under subsection (1).\n\n(2) The signature of an authorised affidavit taker, when appearing in any jurat to an affidavit, is prima facie evidence that the affidavit was duly sworn or affirmed—\n\n(a) before the person purporting to have attested the affidavit in the jurat; and\n\n(b) on the day, and in the place, attested to in the jurat.\n\n\t28 Affidavit by illiterate, blind or cognitively impaired person\n\n(1) If it appears to an authorised affidavit taker that the deponent is illiterate, blind or has a cognitive impairment, the authorised affidavit taker must certify in or below the jurat that the affidavit was read to the deponent by the authorised affidavit taker.\n\n(2) If an affidavit is made by an illiterate deponent, a blind deponent or a deponent with a cognitive impairment and a certification in accordance with subsection (1) does not appear on the affidavit, the affidavit must not be used in evidence unless the court or tribunal in which, or the person acting judicially before whom, the affidavit is used is satisfied that the affidavit was read to the deponent.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee also section 14.\n\nS. 28A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 74.\n\n\t28A Inability to comply with requirements—admission into evidence\n\nA court or tribunal may admit a purported affidavit that does not comply with section 25, 26 or 27 into evidence in a particular proceeding if—\n\n(a) the purported affidavit states the reason why the deponent or authorised affidavit taker (as the case requires) was unable to comply with section 25, 26 or 27; and\n\n(b) the court or tribunal, in considering the reason, is satisfied that it is in the interests of justice to admit the purported affidavit into evidence.\n\nS. 28B inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 74.\n\n\t28B Audio visual procedures do not limit other duties and obligations\n\n(1) The use of audio visual procedures under this Part in relation to affidavits applies subject to any express contrary intention imposed by any other duty or obligation under any Act (including a Commonwealth Act) or at common law applying to a person as a deponent or an authorised affidavit taker in relation to affidavits.\n\n(2) Nothing in this Part limits any requirement imposed by this Part by which a person must not write or do something without first being satisfied of certain matters.\n\n\t29 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity\n\nAn affidavit is not invalid merely because of an inadvertent non-compliance with a requirement imposed by this Part that does not materially affect the nature of the affidavit.\n\nPart 4—Statutory declarations\n\nS. 29A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 75.\n\n\t29A Electronic signatures and initials\n\nA requirement under this Part for a person making a statutory declaration or a statutory declaration witness to sign or initial a statutory declaration, an exhibit, a certificate or other document attached to a statutory declaration is satisfied if the person making a statutory declaration or a statutory declaration witness signs or initials the statutory declaration, exhibit, certificate or other document by electronic means.\n\n\t30 Statutory declarations made in Victoria\n\n(1) A statutory declaration must be in the prescribed form.\n\nS. 30(2) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 76(a).\n\n(2) A statutory declaration must be declared in the presence (whether physically or by audio visual link) of—\n\n(a) an authorised affidavit taker; or\n\n**Note**\n\nSee section 19(1) for a list of authorised affidavit takers. Refer also to the definition of ***authorised affidavit taker*** in section 3.\n\n(b) a person authorised to take a statutory declaration by or under any other Act; or\n\n(c) a person authorised by or under a Commonwealth Act to take a statutory declaration under that Commonwealth Act; or\n\n(d) any other prescribed person or person who is a member of a prescribed class of persons.\n\nS. 30(3) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 76(b).\n\n(3) The person making the statutory declaration and the statutory declaration witness must do the following in the presence (whether physically or by audio visual link) of each other—\n\n(a) sign or initial any alteration to the statutory declaration;\n\n(b) sign or initial each page of the statutory declaration;\n\n(c) if the statutory declaration refers to a document, sign a certificate attached to the document identifying the document as an exhibit to the statutory declaration;\n\n(d) sign and date the statutory declaration;\n\n(e) legibly write, type or stamp that person's name and address on the statutory declaration.\n\nS. 30(4) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 76(c).\n\n(4) The person making the statutory declaration must make an oral declaration by saying the prescribed words aloud in the presence (whether physically or by audio visual link) of the statutory declaration witness, unless the person has a disability that prevents the person from doing so.\n\n(5) The statutory declaration witness must write or stamp under that person's signature required by subsection (3)(c) and (d) that person's qualification as a statutory declaration witness.\n\n(6) For the purposes of subsection (3)(e), the address of the statutory declaration witness may be a personal address or a professional address.\n\n(7) Nothing in this Act prevents an Australian legal practitioner from acting as a statutory declaration witness by reason only that the Australian legal practitioner is acting or assisting any person acting for any of the parties to a proceeding or matter in respect of which the statutory declaration is made.\n\nS. 30A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 77.\n\n\t30A Requirements if statutory declaration made or witnessed by audio visual link or in electronic form\n\n(1) If a statutory declaration is made in electronic form or is witnessed under section 30 by audio visual link, the statutory declaration witness may use a scanned or electronic copy of the statutory declaration for the purposes of complying with the requirements of this Part.\n\n(2) If a statutory declaration is made in electronic form or is witnessed under section 30 by audio visual link, in addition to any other requirements of this Part, the statutory declaration must include a statement—\n\n(a) specifying the manner of that making or witnessing; and\n\n(b) whether a scanned or electronic copy of the statutory declaration was used in accordance with subsection (1).\n\n(3) A statement required under subsection (2) may be pre-filled on the form of statutory declaration.\n\nS. 30B inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 77.\n\n\t30B Audio visual procedures do not limit other duties and obligations\n\n(1) The use of audio visual procedures under this Part in relation to statutory declarations applies subject to any express contrary intention imposed by any other duty or obligation under any Act (including any Commonwealth Act) or at common law applying to a person who makes a statutory declaration or a statutory declaration witness in relation to statutory declarations.\n\n(2) Nothing in this Part limits any requirement imposed by this Part by which a person must not write or do something without first being satisfied of certain matters.\n\n\t31 Offence to take statutory declaration if not statutory declaration witness and offence to purport to be statutory declaration witness\n\n(1) A person who is knowingly not a statutory declaration witness must not witness a statutory declaration.\n\nPenalty: 60 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months or both.\n\n(2) A person who is knowingly not a statutory declaration witness must not represent that the person is a statutory declaration witness.\n\nPenalty: 10 penalty units.\n\n\t32 Provision of assistance to person making statutory declaration\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (3), any person who assists a person to make a statutory declaration must on the face of the document legibly—\n\n(a) write or stamp the name and address of the assistant; and\n\n(b) explain the nature of the assistance provided to the person making the declaration.\n\n**Examples**\n\nTranslation assistance, assistance with writing or reading.\n\n(2) The assistant referred to in subsection (1) may be the same person who witnesses the statutory declaration if qualified under section 30(2).\n\n(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who, in a professional capacity, prepares or writes a statutory declaration for the person's client on the client's instructions, including—\n\n(a) an Australian legal practitioner; or\n\n(b) a licensed conveyancer; or\n\n(c) a person assisting another person to prepare a Victim Impact Statement.\n\n\t33 Statutory declarations made out of Victoria\n\n(1) In addition to a person referred to in section 30(2), the following persons are authorised as statutory declaration witnesses for the purpose of a person making any statutory declaration in any place out of Victoria for use in Victoria in any court or tribunal or before a person acting judicially or for any purpose or in any way authorised by law (whether by or under any Act, including a Commonwealth Act), by custom or otherwise—\n\n(a) an Australian consular officer exercising the officer's functions in that place;\n\n(b) an employee of the Commonwealth referred to in section 3(c) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 of the Commonwealth;\n\n(c) an employee of the Australian Trade and Investment Commission referred to in section 3(d) of the Consular Fees Act 1955 of the Commonwealth;\n\n(d) any person having authority to administer an oath or affirmation in that place.\n\n(2) If by any Act or subordinate instrument a statutory declaration is required, authorised or permitted to be administered or made before a justice of the peace or a bail justice, it is sufficient if the statutory declaration is made before a justice of the peace or bail justice (however described) for that place outside Victoria where the statutory declaration is made.\n\n(3) A court, tribunal or person acting judicially must take judicial and official notice of the signature of any justice of the peace or bail justice for a place outside Victoria referred to in subsection (2) when that person's signature is attached or appended to any statutory declaration.\n\n(4) For the purpose of subsection (3), judicial and official notice of the signature of the justice of the peace or bail justice for a place outside Victoria means that there is a presumption that, unless the contrary is proved—\n\n(a) the justice of the peace or bail justice signed the statutory declaration; and\n\n(b) the justice of the peace or bail justice was an authorised statutory declaration witness at the time of taking the statutory declaration.\n\n\t34 Reasonable modifications may be made\n\nThe statutory declaration witness may make or permit reasonable modifications to the process of making a statutory declaration if the person making the statutory declaration has a disability that prevents the person from doing so in accordance with this Part.\n\n**Examples**\n\nA hearing impaired person may read and sign the oral declaration instead of saying it aloud. A person who is unable to speak may be able to listen to a statutory declaration being read and nod assent.\n\n\t35 Statutory declaration by illiterate, blind or cognitively impaired person\n\nWithout limiting section 34, if it appears to a statutory declaration witness that the person making the statutory declaration is illiterate, blind or has a cognitive impairment, the statutory declaration witness must certify on the face of the statutory declaration that the statutory declaration was read to the person making the statutory declaration by the statutory declaration witness.\n\n\t36 Offence to make false statutory declaration\n\nA person must not make a statement in a statutory declaration that the person knows to be untrue.\n\nPenalty: 600 penalty units or imprisonment for 5 years or both.\n\nNote to s. 36 inserted by No. 22/2020 s. 21.\n\n**Note**\n\nThe penalty applicable to this offence means the offence is an indictable offence—see section 112(1) of the **Sentencing Act 1991**. See also section 28 of the **Criminal Procedure Act 2009** regarding indictable offences that may be heard and determined summarily.\n\n\t37 False or misleading statement as to making of statutory declaration\n\nA person must not make a false or misleading statement, knowing that the statement is false or misleading, as to—\n\n(a) the circumstances in which a statutory declaration or a document purporting to be a statutory declaration was made; or\n\n(b) whether or not a statutory declaration or a document purporting to be a statutory declaration was made.\n\nPenalty: 10 penalty units.\n\n\t38 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity\n\nA statutory declaration is not invalid merely because of an inadvertent non-compliance with a requirement imposed by this Part that does not materially affect the nature of the declaration.\n\nPart 5—Certification\n\nDivision 1—Authorised certifiers\n\n\t39 Authorised certifiers\n\nThe following persons may certify a copy of a document—\n\n(a) an authorised affidavit taker;\n\n**Note**\n\nSee section 19(1) for a list of authorised affidavit takers. Refer also to the definition of ***authorised affidavit taker***  in section 3.\n\n(b) a statutory declaration witness;\n\n**Note**\n\nSee section 30(2) for a list of statutory declaration witnesses. Refer also to the definition of ***statutory declaration witness*** in section 3.\n\n(c) a person authorised or required by or under any other Act in relation to a document under that Act;\n\n(d) any other prescribed person or member of a prescribed class of persons.\n\nDivision 2—Scheme for certification of copies of original documents\n\n\t40 Application\n\n(1) The certification scheme in this Division may be used by an authorised certifier to certify a copy of an original document as a true copy.\n\n(2) This Division does not apply to any certification requirement of or under any other Act unless this Division is expressly applied by or under that Act.\n\n(3) Without limiting subsection (2), this Division does not apply to the certification of a document—\n\n(a) by the keeper of a register of public documents, in relation to an extract from or a copy of a document in that register; or\n\n(b) by the holder of any other official record, in relation to an extract from or a copy of that record.\n\n\t41 Process for certifying copies of documents\n\n(1) Before certifying a copy of an original document, an authorised certifier must—\n\n(a) inspect the original document to ensure that it is an original document; and\n\n(b) inspect the copy to ensure it is identical to the original document.\n\n(2) An authorised certifier may certify a copy of an original document by—\n\n(a) legibly writing on or stamping the copy with the prescribed words; and\n\n(b) signing and dating the copy; and\n\n(c) legibly writing on or stamping the copy with the name, qualification and address (whether personal or professional) of the authorised certifier.\n\n\t42 Process for certifying copy of a certified copy\n\n(1) Before certifying a copy of a certified copy of an original document, an authorised certifier must—\n\n(a) inspect the certified copy of the original document to ensure that it appears to be authentic; and\n\n(b) inspect the copy of the certified copy of the original document to ensure it is identical to the certified copy of the original document.\n\n(2) An authorised certifier may certify a copy of a certified copy of an original document by—\n\n(a) legibly writing on or stamping the copy with the prescribed words; and\n\n(b) signing and dating the copy of the certified copy; and\n\n(c) legibly writing on or stamping the copy of the certified copy with the name, qualification and address (whether personal or professional) of the authorised certifier.\n\n\t43 Multiple page documents\n\nIn the case of a multiple page document, an authorised certifier may certify the copy of the document and any attachments in accordance with the following procedure instead of using the process set out in section 41(2) or 42(2)—\n\n(a) signing or initialling each page of the copy; and\n\n(b) numbering each page of the copy; and\n\n**Example**\n\nPage 1 of 26.\n\n(c) legibly writing on or stamping the copy with the prescribed words; and\n\n(d) signing and dating the copy; and\n\n(e) legibly writing on or stamping the copy with the name, qualification and address (whether personal or professional) of the authorised certifier.\n\n\t44 Documents in languages other than English\n\nNothing in this Part prevents an authorised certifier from certifying a document in a language other than English if the authorised certifier is of the opinion that the copy and the original document are identical.\n\n\t45 Minor non-compliance does not affect validity\n\nA certified copy is not invalid merely because of an inadvertent non-compliance with a requirement imposed by this Part that does not materially affect the nature of the certification.\n\nDivision 3—General certification offences\n\n\t46 Application\n\nThis Division applies to certification of copies of documents, whether under Division 2 or otherwise.\n\n\t47 Offence to present false copy of a document for certification\n\nA person must not present a document for certification as a true copy of the original document, if the person knows it is not a copy of that original document.\n\nPenalty: 600 penalty units or imprisonment for 5 years or both.\n\nNote to s. 47 inserted by No. 22/2020 s. 22.\n\n**Note**\n\nThe penalty applicable to this offence means the offence is an indictable offence—see section 112(1) of the **Sentencing Act 1991**. See also section 28 of the **Criminal Procedure Act 2009** regarding indictable offences that may be heard and determined summarily.\n\n\t48 Offence to certify certain copies of documents\n\nA person must not certify a copy of a document as a true copy of an original document if the person knows that—\n\n(a) the purported original document is not in fact an original document; or\n\n(b) the purported true copy is not in fact a true copy.\n\nPenalty: 600 penalty units or imprisonment for 5 years or both.\n\nNote to s. 48 substituted as Notes by No. 22/2020 s. 23.\n\n**Notes**\n\n1 See the definition of ***original document***  in section 3.\n\n2 The penalty applicable to this offence means the offence is an indictable offence—see section 112(1) of the **Sentencing Act 1991**. See also section 28 of the **Criminal Procedure Act 2009** regarding indictable offences that may be heard and determined summarily.\n\n\t49 False or misleading statement as to certification of copy of document\n\nA person must not make a false or misleading statement, knowing that the statement is false or misleading, as to—\n\n(a) the circumstances in which the certification of a true copy of a document or a document purporting to be a certified true copy of a document was made; or\n\n(b) whether or not a certified true copy of a document or a document purporting to be a certified true copy of a document was made.\n\nPenalty: 10 penalty units.\n\nPt 5A (Headings and ss 49A–49H) inserted by No. 11/2020 s. 39, amended by No. 27/2020 s. 36, repealed by No. 6/2018 s. 49H (as amended by No. 27/2020 s. 36).\n\n* * * * *\n\nPart 6—General\n\n\t50 Perjury to make false statement by oath, affirmation or affidavit\n\n(1) A person who intentionally makes a false statement, whether orally or in writing, under oath or affirmation or in an affidavit is liable to the penalties of perjury.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee section 314(2) of the **Crimes Act 1958**.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) applies whether the oath, affirmation or affidavit is made under this Act, or made or required by or under any other Act, whether passed before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n\t51 Infringement offences\n\n(1) A police officer may serve an infringement notice on a person who the police officer has reason to believe has committed an offence against section 20(1).\n\n(2) An offence referred to in subsection (1) for which an infringement notice may be served is an infringement offence within the meaning of the **Infringements Act 2006**.\n\n(3) The infringement penalty for an offence against a provision referred to in subsection (1) is 1 penalty unit.\n\n\t52 Regulations\n\n(1) The Governor in Council may make regulations for or with respect to—\n\n(a) prescribing forms or information for the purposes of this Act;\n\n(b) prescribing fees for the purposes of this Act;\n\n(c) prescribing persons or classes of persons as administering officers;\n\n(d) prescribing persons or classes of persons as authorised affidavit takers;\n\n(e) prescribing persons or classes of persons as statutory declaration witnesses;\n\n(f) prescribing persons or classes of persons as authorised certifiers;\n\n(g) prescribing procedures to facilitate electronic communication of documents to which this Act applies, including but not limited to the appending of electronic signatures;\n\n(h) prescribing procedures for the use of interpreters in relation to anything done under this Act;\n\n(i) any other matter or thing required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed or necessary to be prescribed to give effect to this Act.\n\n(2) The regulations may—\n\n(a) be of general or limited application;\n\n(b) differ according to differences in time, place or circumstances;\n\n(c) confer a discretionary authority or impose a duty on a specified person or body or class of persons or bodies;\n\n(d) provide in a specified case or class of cases for the exemption of persons or things or a class of persons or things from any of the provisions of the regulations—\n\n(i) whether unconditionally or on specified conditions; and\n\n(ii) either wholly or to any extent that is specified;\n\n(e) impose a penalty not exceeding 20 penalty units for a contravention of the regulations.\n\nPart 7—Transitional provisions, repeals and consequential amendments\n\nDivision 1—Repeals and transitional provisions\n\n\t53 Administration of oaths and affirmations\n\nSection 42Y of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\n\t54 Oaths affirmations affidavits declarations\n\nDivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10 and 11 of Part IV of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** are **repealed**.\n\n\t55 Attestations verifications acknowledgements notarial Acts etc.\n\nPart V of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\n\t56 Persons making wilful false statements on oath, declaration etc. guilty of perjury\n\nSection 141 of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\n\t57 Abolition of extra-judicial oaths\n\nSection 151 of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\n\t58 Form of oath and affirmation and affirmations in writing\n\nThe Third Schedule to the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\nS. 59 repealed by No. 6/2018 s. 59(4).\n\n* * * * *\n\nPt 7 Divs 2–4 (ss 60–69) repealed by No. 6/2018 s. 69.\n\n* * * * *\n\nNew s. 60 inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 78.\n\n\t60 Transitional provisions—Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021\n\nOn and from the commencement of Part 11 of the **Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021**, any statutory declaration made under this Act as modified by Part 3 of the COVID-19 Omnibus (Emergency Measures) (Electronic Signing and Witnessing) Regulations 2020 (as in force immediately before their revocation) continues to be a valid statutory declaration despite that revocation.\n\nSchedule 1—Form of oath and affirmation\n\nSection 8\n\nForm of oath\n\nI swear (or promise) by Almighty God (or the person may name a god recognised by the person's religion) that [*words of the oath prescribed or allowed by law*].\n\nForm of affirmation\n\nI solemnly and sincerely declare and affirm that [*words of the affirmation prescribed or allowed by law*].\n\nSch. 2 repealed by No. 6/2018 s. 69.\n\n* * * * *\n\n ═══════════════\n\nEndnotes\n\n1 General information\n\nSee [www.legislation.vic.gov.au](http://www.legislation.vic.gov.au) for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.\n\n*Minister's second reading speech—*\n\n*Legislative Assembly: 7 June 2017*\n\n*Legislative Council: 21 September 2017*\n\nThe long title for the Bill for this Act was \"A Bill for an Act to re-enact and modernise the law relating to oaths, affirmations, affidavits and statutory declarations, to establish a scheme for the certification of copies of documents, to repeal Divisions 1 to 11 of Part IV and Part V and repeal or amend other provisions of the **Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958**, to make consequential amendments to the **Evidence Act 2008**,  the **Constitution Act 1975**, the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984** and other Acts and for other purposes.\"\n\nThe **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** was assented to on 27 February 2018 and came into operation on 1 March 2019: section 2(2).\n\nINTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)\n\nStyle changes\n\nSection 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.\n\nReferences to ILA s. 39B\n\nSidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided section or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subsections or subclauses, the original section or clause becomes subsection or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression \"(1)\" at the beginning of the original section or clause.\n\nInterpretation\n\nAs from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:\n\n• Headings\n\nAll headings included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any heading inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. This includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; sections; clauses; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms. See section 36(1A)(2A).\n\n• Examples, diagrams or notes\n\nAll examples, diagrams or notes included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Act. See section 36(3A).\n\n• Punctuation\n\nAll punctuation included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 forms part of that Act. Any punctuation inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. See section 36(3B).\n\n• Provision numbers\n\nAll provision numbers included in an Act form part of that Act, whether inserted in the Act before, on or after 1 January 2001. Provision numbers include section numbers, subsection numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).\n\n• Location of \"legislative items\"\n\nA \"legislative item\" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of an Act is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.\n\n• Other material\n\nAny explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of an Act.  \nSee section 36(3)(3D)(3E).\n\n2 Table of Amendments\n\nThis publication incorporates amendments made to the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** by Acts and subordinate instruments.\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n**Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018, No. 6/2018**\n\n| Assent Date: | 27.2.18 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 59(4), 69 on 1.3.19: s. 2(2); s. 49H inserted on 25.4.20 by No. 11/2020 s. 39: s. 2 (as amended by No. 27/2020 s. 36) |\n| Note: | S. 69 repealed Pt 7 Divs 2–4 (ss 60–69), Sch. 2 on 1.3.20; s. 59(4) repealed s. 59 on 1.3.21; s. 49H repealed Pt 5A (ss 49A–49H) on 26.4.21 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n**Building Amendment (Registration of Building Trades and Other Matters) Act 2018, No. 46/2018**\n\n| Assent Date: | 25.9.18 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 76 on 26.9.18: s. 2(1) |\n\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n| --- | --- |\n\n\n**Local Government Act 2020, No. 9/2020**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.3.20 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 390(Sch. 1 item 73) on 1.7.21: s. 2(4) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n**COVID-19 Omnibus (Emergency Measures) Act 2020, No. 11/2020**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.4.20 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 39 on 25.4.20: s. 2 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n**Justice Legislation Miscellaneous Amendments Act 2020, No. 22/2020**\n\n| Assent Date: | 30.6.20 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 21–23 on 1.7.20: s. 2 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n**COVID-19 Omnibus (Emergency Measures) and Other Acts Amendment Act 2020, No. 27/2020**\n\n| Assent Date: | 20.10.20 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 36 on 21.10.20: s. 2 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n\n\n**Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021, No. 11/2021**\n\n| Assent Date: | 23.3.21 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 69–78 on 26.4.21: s. 2(2) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018** |\n\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation\n\nThis version does not contain amendments that are not yet in operation.\n\n4 Explanatory details\n\nNo entries at date of publication.","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":3,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The Act appears to remain focused on its original intent: modernising and consolidating the rules for oaths and affirmations in Victoria. There is no evidence from the available text of scope creep or significant divergence from its stated purpose."},"complexity_factors":["The subject matter (oaths and affirmations) is conceptually straightforward for most people","Consolidates and modernises existing law rather than creating entirely new legal frameworks","Some nuance around which oath forms apply to which roles or proceedings","Religious and non-religious equivalence provisions require careful drafting but are easy to understand in practice","The legislation text provided was severely truncated, limiting full analysis"],"plain_english_summary":"## Oaths and Affirmations Act 2018 (Victoria)\n\nThis Act governs how **oaths and affirmations** are made in Victoria.\n\n- An **oath** is a solemn promise made by swearing on a religious text (like the Bible or Quran)\n- An **affirmation** is a non-religious alternative — a solemn promise made without reference to religion\n\n### Who does this affect?\nAnyone required to take a formal oath or affirmation in Victoria — including witnesses in court, public officials taking office, people signing statutory declarations, and those being commissioned as notaries or justices of the peace.\n\n### Why does it matter?\nIt modernises and consolidates the rules around how these solemn promises are made, ensuring people of all faiths (or no faith) can participate equally in legal and official processes without being compelled to swear on a religious text that may not reflect their beliefs.\n\n### Key practical effect\nIf you're ever called as a witness in a Victorian court, asked to take an official oath when starting a government role, or making a formal legal declaration, this Act sets the rules for how you do that — and confirms you always have the right to choose an affirmation instead of a religious oath.\n\n> ⚠️ **Note:** The legislation text provided appears to be incomplete or a metadata/version history extract only. This summary is based on the known content of the Act rather than full legislative text."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act’s core stated purpose is to re‑enact and modernise rules for oaths, affidavits, statutory declarations and to create a certification scheme (s 1). Subsequent amendments incorporated in the supplied text expand that scope to explicitly permit electronic signatures, scanned copies and audio-visual witnessing and to set procedural statements where remote methods are used (see ss 18A, 29A, 30A, 27(1A), 30B, 28A–28B). The Act also repeals prior provisions of the Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1958 and establishes the new certification regime (s 1(c), Part 7, ss 40–44). These additions change the practical scope by authorising remote/electronic execution and by creating specified duties and offences tied to certification and false declarations (ss 41–48, 36)."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-references to other Acts and courts' rules (e.g. Evidence Act 2008, Constitution Act 1975) increasing interpretive complexity (see s 4, notes).","Multiple detailed procedural requirements for affidavits and statutory declarations (signing each page, jurat content, exhibit certificates) creating compliance tasks (see ss 25–27, 30, 41).","Large lists of authorised persons with open-ended regulatory power to add classes by regulation (see ss 19(1), 39, s 52(1)(c)–(f)).","Newer electronic and audio-visual procedures layered onto traditional in-person rules, with specific recordkeeping statements required when remote methods are used (see ss 9(2), 16, 18A, 27(1A), 30A).","A mix of civil/infringement mechanisms and indictable criminal offences with different penalty scales complicates enforcement choices (see ss 20, 22, 31, 36, 47–48, 51).","Discretionary carve-outs and powers (reasonable modifications, court admission of non-compliant affidavits, regulatory discretion) require case-by-case judgements (see ss 15, 28A, s 52(2)(c)).","Transitional and repeal provisions interacting with prior statutes and emergency modifications add temporal complexity (see s 1(c), Part 7, s 60)."],"plain_english_summary":"What this law does (mechanical effect)\n\n- Replaces and modernises Victoria's rules for oaths, affirmations, affidavits, statutory declarations and certified copies. It sets the forms, who may administer or witness them, how they must be signed or recorded, and offences and penalties for false statements or improper certification (see s 1, Parts 2–5).\n\n- Establishes a certification procedure for copies of original documents: an authorised certifier must inspect the original and the copy, and then stamp/write prescribed words, sign, date and add name/qualification/address (see ss 39, 40–44, 41(1)–(2)).\n\n- Lists who may take affidavits and act as witnesses or certifiers (broad lists of judicial officers, court officers, legal practitioners, notaries, certain public servants, prescribed classes etc.) and requires courts to take judicial and official notice of their seals or signatures (see ss 19(1), 30(2), 39, 19(2)–(3), 21(3)–(4), 33(3)–(4)).\n\n- Permits use of audio and audio-visual links for taking oaths, administering affidavits and witnessing statutory declarations, and allows electronic signatures/scanned copies in specified circumstances (see ss 9(2), 16, 18A, 25, 27(1A), 30A, 30B, 28A, 28B, 29A).\n\nWho is affected\n\n- Individuals who must swear oaths, make affirmations, lodge affidavits or statutory declarations, or require certified copies of documents.\n- Persons authorised to administer oaths, take affidavits, witness statutory declarations, or certify copies (a listed and potentially expanded class under the regulations) (see ss 12, 19, 30(2), 39, s 52(1)(c)–(f)).\n- Courts and tribunals that receive and rely on these documents (see s 4, ss 19(2)–(3)).\n\nWhy it matters (stated purpose and practical trade-offs)\n\n- The Act’s stated purpose is to re-enact and modernise the law on oaths and declarations and to create a certification scheme for document copies (s 1). Mechanically, it centralises procedural rules (forms, signature and jurat requirements), allows remote and electronic processes in defined ways, and creates criminal and civil penalties for misuse (see Parts 2–5, s 36, ss 47–48).\n\n- Implementation trade-offs and incentive/cost structure: the Act reduces the need for physical presence by permitting audio-visual procedures and electronic signatures in defined circumstances (ss 9(2), 16, 18A, 30A, 27(1A)). This can lower travel and time costs for users but shifts time and inspection costs to authorised witnesses and certifiers, who must inspect originals and copies and comply with page-by-page signing, jurat content and certification wording (see ss 25, 26, 27, 41–43). Courts retain discretion to admit imperfectly compliant documents where justice requires it (s 28A) and to take official notice of authorised signatures (ss 19(2)–(3), 21(3)–(4), 33(3)–(4)).\n\n- Who pays and enforcement: authorised affidavit takers must not charge fees for administering or signing affidavits except public notaries for documents intended solely for use outside Australia (s 20). Regulations may nevertheless prescribe fees for other things under the Act (s 52(1)(b)). Penalties are set for unauthorised taking or witnessing (ss 22, 31), for making false statutory declarations or presenting false copies (ss 36, 47–48) and for misleading statements about declarations or certifications (ss 37, 49); some of these are indictable offences with substantial penalties.\n\n- Discretion and administrative burden: the Act gives administering officers power to make reasonable modifications for disabilities (ss 15, 34) and allows regulations to prescribe classes of authorised persons and confer discretionary authorities (s 52(2)(c)). At the same time, many procedural requirements are mandatory: signing each page, completing a jurat with place/date and capacity, attaching exhibit certificates and including witness addresses (see ss 25–27, 30, 41). Non-compliance that is inadvertent and immaterial does not automatically invalidate a document (ss 17, 29, 38, 45).\n\n- Concentrated benefits and diffuse costs: groups who use remote or electronic witnessing and need certified copies (legal practitioners, litigants, people overseas) gain convenience from the Act’s modernised processes (ss 9(2), 16, 30A, 41). The people who must implement and police the processes — authorised certifiers, affidavit takers, statutory declaration witnesses and courts — bear compliance costs and potential criminal exposure if they fail to follow the Act (ss 20, 22, 31, 47–48). The power to prescribe further authorised persons by regulation (s 52(1)(c)–(f)) centralises the authority to expand who may perform these functions.\n\nMechanics to watch for in practice\n\n- Presence may be physical or by audio-visual/audio link; if audio-visual is used, the jurat or statutory declaration must record that fact and whether a scanned/electronic copy was used (ss 9(2), 27(1A), 30A(2)).\n- Affidavits and declarations require signatures/initials on each page and certificates for exhibits (ss 25(1), 26(2), 30(3)).\n- Serious criminal penalties apply for knowingly acting without authority to take affidavits/declarations and for making or certifying false documents (ss 22, 31, 36, 47–48).\n- The Act binds the Crown (s 5) and expressly preserves courts’ inherent and statutory jurisdictions (s 4)."},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":5,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The Act remains consistent with its original purposes as stated in section 1: modernising oaths/affirmations/affidavits/statutory declarations, establishing a certification scheme, and repealing old provisions. While amendments have added electronic signatures and audio-visual procedures (COVID-19 adaptations), these are implementation mechanisms rather than scope expansion. The certification scheme in Part 5 was part of the original enactment."},"complexity_factors":["23 defined terms in section 3, including nested definitions like 'judicial officer' with 13 sub-categories","Multiple cross-references to other Acts (Evidence Act 2008, Constitution Act 1975, Honorary Justices Act 2014, etc.)","Conditional logic throughout: different rules apply depending on whether the person is a child, has cognitive impairment, is illiterate, is blind, or has another disability","Dual pathways for in-person and audio-visual/remote procedures, with specific additional requirements for remote witnessing (sections 26(5), 27(1A), 30A)","Extensive lists of authorised persons across three categories (affidavit takers, statutory declaration witnesses, certifiers) with some overlap but subtle differences","Exceptions to general rules: e.g., public notaries can charge fees for overseas documents (section 20(2)), certain provisions don't apply to Evidence Act proceedings (section 6(2))","Transitional provisions and amendment history showing evolution of the Act (COVID-19 emergency measures later consolidated)"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this law does:**\n\nThis Act is Victoria's rulebook for how people formally promise to tell the truth in legal and official settings. It covers four main things:\n\n1. **Oaths and affirmations** (Part 2): When you need to formally promise to tell the truth—like in court or before a tribunal—you can choose between a religious oath (swearing on a religious text) or a non-religious affirmation. The person running the proceeding must tell you that you have this choice. There are special rules for children and people with cognitive impairments—they can simply say \"I promise to tell the truth.\"\n\n2. **Affidavits** (Part 3): These are written statements sworn to be true, used as evidence in court. The Act lists exactly who can witness you signing one (judges, lawyers, police sergeants, justices of the peace, etc.) and the steps they must follow. It allows for electronic signatures and witnessing by video link (audio-visual link), and makes it a crime to charge fees for taking an affidavit (except for public notaries handling overseas documents).\n\n3. **Statutory declarations** (Part 4): These are formal written statements used for non-court purposes—like verifying your identity for a government form. Similar to affidavits, the Act specifies who can witness them, allows electronic and remote witnessing, and makes it a serious offence (up to 5 years prison) to make a false one.\n\n4. **Certification of documents** (Part 5): This creates a standard scheme for certifying that a copy of a document is a true copy of the original. Authorised people (like those who can witness affidavits) can certify copies by signing and dating them, with specific procedures for multi-page documents.\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- Anyone giving evidence in Victorian courts or tribunals\n- Anyone making a statutory declaration for official purposes\n- Lawyers, judges, police, justices of the peace, and other authorised officers who administer oaths or witness documents\n- People needing certified copies of documents for legal or administrative purposes\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis Act modernised and consolidated Victoria's laws on formal truth-telling, replacing scattered old provisions from the 1958 Evidence Act. It introduced flexibility for people with disabilities, allowed electronic signatures and remote witnessing (particularly important during COVID-19), and created a clear, consistent framework for document certification. It ensures that promises to tell the truth are taken seriously, with penalties for false statements, while being accessible to people of all faiths and abilities."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018","history":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018/history","analysis":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/oaths-and-affirmations-act-2018/documents"}}