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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
South Australia
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio)
(No 2) Bill 2013
A BILL FOR
An Act to amend various Acts the administration of which is the
responsibility of the Attorney-General.
Contents
Part 1—Preliminary
1Short title
2Commencement
3Amendment
provisions
Part 2—Amendment of Community Titles
Act 1996
4Amendment of section
37—Restrictions on the making of by-laws
Part 3—Amendment of Criminal Law
Consolidation Act 1935
5Amendment of section 63C—Pornographic
nature of material
Part 4—Amendment of Criminal Law
(Sentencing) Act 1988
6Amendment of section
3—Interpretation
Part 5—Amendment of District Court
Act 1991
7Insertion of section
11A
11AAppointment of Chief
Judge
8Amendment of section 12—Appointment of
other judicial officers
9Amendment of section 13—Judicial
remuneration
10Amendment of section 54—Accessibility to
Court records
Part 6—Amendment of Evidence
Act 1929
11Amendment of section 13C—Court's power
to make audio visual record of evidence of vulnerable witnesses in criminal
proceedings
Part 7—Amendment of Graffiti Control
Act 2001
12Amendment of section 7—Appointment and
powers of authorised persons
Part 8—Amendment of Magistrates Court
Act 1991
13Amendment of section 51—Accessibility to
Court records
Part 9—Amendment of Police
(Complaints and Disciplinary Proceedings) Act 1985
14Amendment of section
3—Interpretation
15Substitution of heading to Part 3
16Amendment of section
13—Constitution of Internal Investigation Section
17Consequential
amendments to Act
18Amendment of section 19—Action on
complaint being made to Ombudsman
19Amendment of section 21—Determination by
Ombudsman that investigation not warranted
Part 10—Amendment of Strata Titles
Act 1988
20Amendment of section
3—Interpretation
21Amendment of section 19—Articles of
strata corporation
Part 11—Amendment of Summary Offences
Act 1953
22Amendment of section 67—General search
warrants
23Substitution of heading to
Schedule
Part 12—Amendment of Supreme Court
Act 1935
24Amendment of section 131—Accessibility
to court records
The Parliament of South Australia enacts as
follows:
This Act may be cited as the Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's
Portfolio) (No 2) Act 2013.
This Act will come into operation on a day to be fixed by
proclamation.
In this Act, a provision under a heading referring to the amendment of a
specified Act amends the Act so specified.
Part 2—Amendment
of Community Titles
Act 1996
4—Amendment
of section 37—Restrictions on the making of by-laws
(1) Section 37(1)(d)—delete paragraph (d) and
substitute:
(d) prevent an occupier of a lot who has a disability from keeping a
relevant animal on the lot or restrict the use of a relevant animal by the
occupier if the relevant animal is trained to assist the occupier in respect of
the disability; or
(2) Section 37(1)(e)—delete "suffers from a disability from
using a dog" and substitute:
who has a disability from using a relevant animal
(3) Section 37—after subsection (2) insert:
(3) In this section—
assistance animal has the same meaning as in the Equal
Opportunity Act 1984;
relevant animal means an assistance animal or a therapeutic
animal;
therapeutic animal has the same meaning as in
section 88A of the
Equal
Opportunity Act 1984.
Part 3—Amendment
of Criminal Law Consolidation
Act 1935
5—Amendment
of section 63C—Pornographic nature of material
Section 63C—after subsection (2) insert:
(2a) No offence is committed against this Division by reason of the
production, dissemination or possession of material in good faith
by—
(a) a police officer or other law enforcement officer acting in the course
of his or her duties; or
(b) any other person acting in the course of his or her duties in the
administration of the criminal justice system.
(2b) No offence is committed against this Division by reason of the
production, dissemination or possession of material in good faith by a person
acting reasonably for the purpose of providing genuine child protection or legal
advice.
Part 4—Amendment
of Criminal Law (Sentencing)
Act 1988
6—Amendment
of section 3—Interpretation
Section 3(1)—before the definition of the Parole
Board insert:
Minister for Correctional Services means the Minister
responsible for the administration of the
Correctional
Services Act 1982;
Minister for Family and Community Services means the Minister
responsible for the administration of the
Family
and Community Services Act 1972;
Part 5—Amendment
of District Court
Act 1991
Before section 12 insert:
11A—Appointment of Chief Judge
(a) a Judge of the
Supreme Court assigned by the Governor, by proclamation, to be the Chief Judge;
or
(b) a legal
practitioner of at least 10 years standing or a District Court Judge
appointed by the Governor as the Chief Judge.
(2) Before the Governor assigns a Judge of the Supreme Court to be the
Chief Judge, the Attorney-General must consult with the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court about the proposed assignment.
(3) A Judge of the Supreme Court assigned to be the Chief Judge ceases to
be the Chief Judge if the person ceases to be a Judge of the Supreme
Court.
(4) The remuneration and conditions of service of a Judge of the Supreme
Court assigned to be the Chief Judge will be the same as if he or she had not
been so assigned and his or her service as the Chief Judge will be regarded as
if it were service as a Judge of the Supreme Court.
(5) A person appointed as Chief Judge under
subsection (1)(b)
will be taken to have been appointed as a Judge of the District Court (if he or
she is not already a Judge of the District Court) and as a Judge of the Supreme
Court of South Australia.
(6) The Chief Judge may
not perform the duties, or exercise the powers, of a Judge of the Supreme Court
unless the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, with the consent of the Chief
Judge, assigns the Chief Judge to perform the duties and exercise the powers of
a Judge of the Supreme Court for a period determined by the Chief
Justice.
(7) The Chief Judge must, as soon as is reasonably practicable after
consenting to an assignment under
subsection (6),
notify the Attorney-General that he or she has so consented and the
Attorney-General must, as soon as is reasonably practicable after receiving such
notification, publish in the Gazette a notice setting out—
(a) the fact that the Chief Judge has consented to an assignment under
subsection (6);
and
(b) the period of the assignment.
(8) The office of Judge of the Supreme Court is the primary judicial
office of the Chief Judge and—
(a) the remuneration and conditions of service of the Chief Judge will be
the same as if he or she held a single appointment as a Judge of the Supreme
Court; and
(b) service as the Chief Judge will be regarded as if it were service as a
Judge of the Supreme Court.
(9) Subject to
subsection (10), the
retirement, resignation or removal from office of a person appointed as the
Chief Judge under
subsection (1)(b) is
governed by the law applicable to the retirement, resignation or removal from
office of a Judge of the Supreme Court and the Chief Judge will, until
retirement, resignation or removal from office (or earlier death), continue to
hold both of those appointments.
(10) A person appointed
as the Chief Judge under
subsection (1)(b)—
(a) may not, except
with the approval of the Governor, resign from the office of the Chief Judge and
the office of Judge of the District Court, without also resigning from the
office of Judge of the Supreme Court; but
(b) may resign from the
office of the Chief Judge and the office of Judge of the Supreme Court without
simultaneously resigning from the office of Judge of the District
Court,
and a resignation under
paragraph (a) or
(b) will not give rise to
any right to pension, retirement leave or other similar benefit.
(11) The Governor
may, by proclamation, made at the request or with the consent of a Judge of the
Supreme Court assigned to be the Chief Judge under
subsection (1)(a),
revoke the assignment of that Judge under this section.
8—Amendment
of section 12—Appointment of other judicial officers
(1) Section 12(1)—after "Appointments" insert:
under this section
(2) Section 12(2)(a)—delete paragraph (a)
(3) Section 12(4)—after "judicial office of the Court"
insert:
(other than under section 11A)
9—Amendment
of section 13—Judicial remuneration
Section 13(1)—delete "The" and substitute:
Subject to section 11A, the
10—Amendment
of section 54—Accessibility to Court records
(1) Section 54(2)(c)—delete "(including material furnished
under section 7 of the Criminal
Law (Sentencing) Act 1988)"
(2) Section 54—after subsection (4) insert:
(4a) Despite the preceding subsections, if 100 years have passed
since the end of the calendar year in which material referred to in this section
became part of the Court's records—
(a) in the case of records that have been delivered into the custody of
State Records—section 26 of the State
Records Act 1997 applies (to the exclusion of this section) to the
giving of access to the records; and
(b) in any other case—a member of the public may, without any
requirement to seek permission of the Court, be given access to the
records.
Part 6—Amendment
of Evidence
Act 1929
11—Amendment
of section 13C—Court's power to make audio visual record of evidence of
vulnerable witnesses in criminal proceedings
(1) Section 13C(2)—delete "and access to the record is to be
restricted to court officials who are responsible for its custody"
(2) Section 13C—after subsection (2) insert:
(2a) Rules of court may be made regulating access to, and responsibility
for, an audio visual record in the custody of the court.
Part 7—Amendment
of Graffiti Control
Act 2001
12—Amendment
of section 7—Appointment and powers of authorised
persons
(1) Section 7(2)—delete "cans of spray paint" and
substitute:
graffiti implements
(2) Section 7(5)—delete subsection (5) and
substitute:
(5) An authorised person must, on demand by a person affected by an
exercise or proposed exercise of a power under this section, produce, for
inspection by that person—
(a) if the authorised person is a police officer not in uniform—his
or her warrant card; and
(b) in any other case—the identity card issued to the authorised
person under the Local
Government Act 1999.
Part 8—Amendment
of Magistrates Court
Act 1991
13—Amendment
of section 51—Accessibility to Court records
(1) Section 51(2)(c)—delete "(including material furnished
under section 7 of the Criminal
Law (Sentencing) Act 1988)"
(2) Section 51—after subsection (4) insert:
(4a) Despite the preceding subsections, if 100 years have passed
since the end of the calendar year in which material referred to in this section
became part of the Court's records—
(a) in the case of records that have been delivered into the custody of
State Records—section 26 of the State
Records Act 1997 applies (to the exclusion of this section) to the
giving of access to the records; and
(b) in any other case—a member of the public may, without any
requirement to seek permission of the Court, be given access to the
records.
Part 9—Amendment
of Police (Complaints and Disciplinary
Proceedings) Act 1985
14—Amendment
of section 3—Interpretation
Section 3(1), definition of internal investigation
branch—delete the definition and substitute:
Internal Investigation Section or IIS means the
section of the police force established under Part 3;
15—Substitution
of heading to Part 3
Part 3 heading—delete the heading and substitute:
Part 3—Internal Investigation
Section
16—Amendment
of section 13—Constitution of Internal Investigation
Section
(1) Section 13(1)—delete "branch" and substitute:
section (Internal Investigation Section or
IIS)
(2) Section 13(2)—delete "internal investigation branch" and
substitute:
IIS
17—Consequential
amendments to Act
(1) Act—delete "internal investigation branch" wherever occurring
and substitute:
IIS
(2) Act—delete "that branch" wherever occurring and
substitute:
the IIS
(3) Act—delete "branch" wherever occurring and substitute:
IIS
18—Amendment
of section 19—Action on complaint being made to
Ombudsman
(1) Section 19(1)(b)—after "subject to" insert:
subsection (1a) and
(2) Section 19—after subsection (1) insert:
(1a) The Ombudsman may, in such manner as the Ombudsman thinks fit,
undertake a preliminary inquiry in relation to a complaint.
19—Amendment
of section 21—Determination by Ombudsman that investigation not
warranted
Section 21(1)—delete subsection (1) and
substitute:
(1) The Ombudsman may refuse to entertain a complaint to which this Act
applies (whether being a complaint made to the Ombudsman or a complaint of which
the Ombudsman has been notified under section 18), or, having commenced to
investigate a matter raised in a complaint, may refuse to continue the
investigation if of the opinion that—
(a) the matter raised in the complaint is trivial; or
(b) the complaint is frivolous or vexatious or is not made in good faith;
or
(c) the complainant or the person on whose behalf the complaint was made
has not a sufficient personal interest in the matter raised in the complaint;
or
(d) having regard to all the circumstances of the case, the investigation
or the continuance of the investigation of the matter raised in the complaint,
is unnecessary or unjustifiable.
Part 10—Amendment
of Strata Titles
Act 1988
20—Amendment
of section 3—Interpretation
(1) Section 3(1)—after the definition of
allotment insert:
assistance animal has the same meaning as in the Equal
Opportunity Act 1984;
(2) Section 3(1)—after the definition of registered
encumbrance insert:
relevant animal means an assistance animal or a therapeutic
animal;
(3) Section 3(1)—after the definition of strata
scheme insert:
therapeutic animal has the same meaning as in
section 88A of the
Equal
Opportunity Act 1984;
21—Amendment
of section 19—Articles of strata corporation
Section 19(4)(c)—delete paragraph (c) and
substitute:
(c) prevent an occupier of a unit who has a disability from keeping a
relevant animal at the unit, or restrict the use of a relevant animal by the
occupier if the relevant animal is trained to assist the occupier in respect of
the disability; or
(d) prevent a visitor to a unit who has a disability from using a relevant
animal trained to assist the visitor in respect of the disability.
Part 11—Amendment
of Summary Offences
Act 1953
22—Amendment
of section 67—General search warrants
Section 67(2)—delete "the Schedule" and substitute:
Schedule 1
23—Substitution
of heading to Schedule
Heading to Schedule—delete the heading and substitute:
Schedule 1—General search
warrant
Part 12—Amendment
of Supreme Court
Act 1935
24—Amendment
of section 131—Accessibility to court records
(1) Section 131(2)(c)—delete "(including material furnished
under section 7 of the Criminal
Law (Sentencing) Act 1988)"
(2) Section 131—after subsection (4) insert:
(4a) Despite the preceding subsections, if 100 years have passed
since the end of the calendar year in which material referred to in this section
became part of the court's records—
(a) in the case of records that have been delivered into the custody of
State Records—section 26 of the State
Records Act 1997 applies (to the exclusion of this section) to the
giving of access to the records; and
(b) in any other case—a member of the public may, without any
requirement to seek permission of the court, be given access to the
records.