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CITY OF BRISBANE ACT 2010 - SECT 136
Entry with, and in accordance with, a court order
136 Entry with, and in accordance with, a court order
(1) A person may enter a property with, and in accordance with, a court order
made under this section.
(2) The person must apply to a magistrate for the
court order.
(3) The application must— (a) be in the form approved by the
department’s chief executive; and
(b) be sworn; and
(c) state the grounds
on which the court order is sought.
(4) The person must, as soon as
practicable, give a copy of the application to— (a) if the person is not the
owner of the property—the owner of the property; and
(b) the occupier of
the property.
(5) The magistrate may refuse to consider the application until
the person gives the magistrate all the information that the magistrate
requires about the application in the way that the magistrate requires.
Example— The magistrate may require additional information supporting the
application to be given by statutory declaration.
(6) If the magistrate is
satisfied that entry to the property is necessary to allow the person to take
action under any of the local government related laws, the magistrate may make
the court order.
(7) The court order must— (a) direct the occupier of the
property to allow the person to enter the property and take all action that is
necessary under any local government related law; and
(b) state the hours of
the day or night when the property may be entered; and
(c) state the day
(within 14 days after the court order is made) when the court order ends.
(8)
If the person who applied for the court order is a council worker, the court
order may authorise the council worker to use necessary and reasonable help
and force to enter the property.
(9) The magistrate must record the reasons
for making the court order.
(10) As soon as the person enters the property
under the court order, the person must do, or make a reasonable attempt to do,
the following things— (a) inform any occupier of the property— (i) of the
reason for entering the property; and
(ii) that the person is authorised
under the court order to enter the property without the permission of the
occupier;
(b) if the court order authorises the person to use force to enter
the property—give the occupier a reasonable opportunity to allow the person
to immediately enter the property without using force.
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