ACTIn ForceAct
Road Transport (General) Act 1999
65Disqualification until court order
Start here
Get a plain-English read of 65
Turn the raw legal text into a practical explanation grounded in Road Transport (General) Act 1999.
65 Disqualification until court order
holding or obtaining a driver licence because of being convicted,
or found guilty, of an offence, or offences, against the road
transport legislation or any other territory law; and
(b) the total period of disqualification (the compulsory
disqualification period) is 12 months or more.
(2) If the court that convicts the person, or finds the person guilty, of an
offence mentioned in subsection (1) is satisfied, after considering the
matters mentioned in subsection (7) and any other matters the court
considers relevant, that it is necessary in the public interest to do so,
the court may disqualify the person from holding or obtaining a driver
licence from the end of the compulsory disqualification period until
the disqualification is set aside under subsection (3).
(3) If a court is satisfied, on application by a person who is disqualified
under subsection (2) and after considering the matters mentioned in
subsection (7) and any other matters the court considers relevant, that
the disqualification is no longer necessary in the public interest, it
may set the disqualification aside.
(4) An application under subsection (3) must be given to the registrar of
the court with an affidavit of the applicant setting out the grounds of
the application.
(5) The respondents to an application are the road transport authority and
the chief police officer.
(6) If the Magistrates Court commits a person mentioned in
subsection (1) to the Supreme Court for sentence under the
Magistrates Court Act 1930, section 92A, subsection (2) applies as if
the Supreme Court had convicted the person.
(7) For subsection (2) or (3), the court must consider the following
matters:
(a) the total period for which the person concerned is, or has been,
disqualified from holding or obtaining a driver licence;
(b) the person’s history of offences (including offences for which
infringement notices were served on the person)—
(i) against the road transport legislation or a law of another
jurisdiction corresponding to it (or to part of it); or
(ii) against another law of any jurisdiction in relation to the use
of motor vehicles;
(c) any relevant rehabilitation or remedial action undertaken, or to
be undertaken, by the person;
(d) the risk to the safety of other road users.
(8) In this section:
infringement notice includes a notice (however described) served on
a person under the law of another jurisdiction that gives the person
the option of paying an amount for an offence instead of being
charged with the offence.