ACTIn ForceAct
Building Act 2004
50Notification by certifier of contraventions of building and
Start here
Get a plain-English read of 50
Turn the raw legal text into a practical explanation grounded in Building Act 2004.
50 Notification by certifier of contraventions of building and
development approvals—building work
(1) A certifier commits an offence if—
(a) a contravention of part 3 (Building work) or part 4 (Stop and
other notices and demolition orders) or conduct that the certifier
reasonably believes may be an offence under section 76
(Occupation and use of buildings), section 77 (Use of buildings
restricted) or section 78 (Occupation and use of ex-government
buildings), comes to the notice of the certifier; and
(b) the certifier does not tell the construction occupations registrar
about the contravention or conduct—
(i) for a contravention in relation to building work that is
fundamentally noncompliant—not later than the next
working day after the day the contravention comes to the
certifier’s attention; or
(ii) in any other case—within 21 days after the day the
contravention or conduct comes to the certifier’s attention.
Note Notice of a contravention given under this section is taken to be a
complaint made under the Construction Occupations (Licensing)
Act 2004, s 117.
(2) Subsection (1) applies whether or not a notice under section 44 (2) (a)
(Stage inspections) has been given in relation to the matter.
(3) However, subsection (1) does not apply to a contravention in relation
to building work only because the work does not comply with
section 42 (Requirements for carrying out building work) if—
(a) the building work is not fundamentally noncompliant; and
(b) the certifier gives the building licensee in charge of the building
work written notice that—
(i) the work does not comply with section 42; and
(ii) includes directions that are reasonable and appropriate for
achieving compliance; and
(iii) states the date that the noncompliance came to the
certifier’s attention; and
(c) the certifier is satisfied on reasonable grounds that—
(i) the building licensee in charge of the building work has
done what is reasonable and appropriate to achieve
compliance (even if what is done is not in accordance with
the directions in the notice); and
(ii) the licensee achieved compliance within 14 days after the
date mentioned in paragraph (b) (iii).
Note The certifier has the evidentiary burden of establishing the matters
mentioned in s (3) (see Criminal Code, s 58).
(4) A regulation may prescribe when building work is fundamentally
noncompliant.