Minister: Treasurer and Minister for Trade and Investment
Agency: Queensland Treasury

Minister: Attorney-General and Minister for Justice and Minister for Training and Skills
Agency: Department of Justice and Attorney-General


State Penalties Enforcement Act 1999


Queensland Crest
State Penalties Enforcement Act 1999

An Act about the issue and enforcement of infringement notices, the enforcement of court ordered fines and certain court ordered debts, and for other purposes

Part 1 Preliminary

1Short title

This Act may be cited as the State Penalties Enforcement Act 1999.

2Commencement

This Act commences on a day to be fixed by proclamation.

3Definitions

The dictionary in schedule 2 defines particular words used in this Act.

4Objects

The objects of this Act include—
(a)maintaining the integrity of fines as a viable sentencing or punitive option for offenders; and
(b)maintaining confidence in the justice system by enhancing the way fines and other money penalties may be enforced; and
(c)reducing the cost to the State of enforcing fines and other money penalties.

5Act has limited application to children

(1)This Act does not apply to a child within the meaning of the Youth Justice Act 1992 other than to the extent it allows a child to pay a fine stated in an infringement notice for an offence in full or by instalments to an administering authority instead of being prosecuted for the offence.
(2)However, an enforcement order, fine collection notice or warrant may not be issued under this Act against a child within the meaning of the Youth Justice Act 1992.

s 5 amd 2009 No. 34s 45(1) sch pt 1 amdt 31

6Act binds State, Commonwealth and other States

(1)This Act binds the State and, as far as the legislative authority of the Parliament permits, the Commonwealth and the other States.
(2)However, an entity mentioned in subsection (1) can not be prosecuted for an offence against this Act.

Part 2 The State Penalties Enforcement Registry

7The State Penalties Enforcement Registry

A State Penalties Enforcement Registry (SPER) is established.

8Functions of SPER

(1)SPER has the functions conferred or imposed on it under this or another Act.
(2)In particular, SPER has the following functions—
(a)collecting amounts payable to SPER under this or another Act;
(b)administering the making of enforcement orders;
(c)taking enforcement action under this Act.
(3)The functions must be performed in accordance with the SPER charter.

9The SPER charter

The SPER charter includes the following—
(a)maximising the collection, for victims of offences, of amounts ordered to be paid under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992 by way of restitution or compensation;
(b)maximising the amount of fines and other money penalties paid before enforcement action is taken;
(c)promoting a philosophy that non-monetary satisfaction of SPER debts is for the needy in the community and not an alternative to payment of a fine for those who can afford to pay the fine;
(d)reducing the use of imprisonment for fine default by encouraging the use of other enforcement mechanisms;
(e)promoting public education about the obligations of offenders and the consequences of not satisfying the obligations.

s 9 amd 2017 No. 13 s 8

10Staff and contractors

(1)There is to be a registrar of SPER.
(2)The registrar and other staff of the registry are to be employed under the Public Service Act 2008.
(3)Also, for the administration and enforcement of this Act, the registrar may engage under a contract—
(a)debt collectors as enforcement officers; and
(b)other persons for other purposes.
(4)Persons engaged under subsection (3) are engaged under this Act and not the Public Service Act 2008.

Maximum penalty—40 penalty units.

s 10 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2002 No. 34 s 53; 2009 No. 25s 83 sch; 2014 No. 35s 72; 2014 No. 19s 152sch 1 pt 2

10AService contractors

(1)This section applies if, under section 10(3)(b), the registrar engages an entity (the service contractor) under a contract (the service contract) to provide services to assist the registrar in the administration and enforcement of this Act.
(2)The service contract may—
(a)state the services (each, an authorised service) the service contractor is required to provide; and
(b)impose a condition on the provision of an authorised service by the service contractor; and

Example for paragraph (b)—

a condition requiring the service contractor to obtain the registrar’s approval before providing a particular authorised service
(c)include a delegation by the registrar under section 10C(1) or (3); and
(d)authorise the service contractor to subcontract the provision of an authorised service; and
(e)impose a condition on the service contractor’s authority to subcontract.

Example for paragraph (e)—

a condition requiring the service contractor to subcontract only with subcontractors approved by the registrar
(3)When providing an authorised service in accordance with the service contract, the service contractor may—
(a)use the name of SPER; and
(b)do anything necessary for, or incidental to, the provision of the authorised service.
(4)In the performance of an authorised service by the service contractor in accordance with the service contract—
(a)laws applying to the registrar, other than a law prescribed by regulation, apply to the service contractor as if the service contractor were the registrar; and
(b)laws applying to SPER, other than a law prescribed by regulation, apply to the service contractor as if the service contractor were SPER.
(5)Anything done—
(a)by the service contractor in accordance with the service contract; or
(b)in relation to the service contractor in relation to an authorised service;

is taken to have been done by or in relation to the registrar or SPER, as the case requires.

(6)However, the engagement of the service contractor under the service contract does not relieve the registrar of the registrar’s obligations in relation to the proper administration and enforcement of this Act.

s 10A ins 2014 No. 35s 73

10BService subcontractors

(1)This section applies if, in accordance with a service contract, the service contractor subcontracts with another entity (the service subcontractor) for the provision of an authorised service.
(2)The contract (the service subcontract) between the service contractor and the service subcontractor must comply with any condition imposed by the service contract in relation to subcontracting an authorised service.
(3)The service subcontract—
(a)must state the authorised service the service subcontractor is required to provide; and
(b)may impose a condition on the service subcontractor’s provision of the authorised service.
(4)If the service contract includes a delegation under section 10C(1), the service subcontract may include a delegation of the prescribed function to the service subcontractor that complies with the delegation in the service contract.
(5)If the service contract includes a delegation under section 10C(3), the service subcontract may include a subdelegation of the prescribed function to the service subcontractor that complies with the delegation in the service contract.
(6)When providing an authorised service in accordance with the service subcontract, the service subcontractor may—
(a)use the name of SPER; and
(b)do anything necessary for, or incidental to, the provision of the authorised service.
(7)In the performance of an authorised service by the service subcontractor in accordance with the service subcontract—
(a)laws applying to the registrar, other than a law prescribed by regulation, apply to the service subcontractor as if the service subcontractor were the registrar; and
(b)laws applying to SPER, other than a law prescribed by regulation, apply to the service subcontractor as if the service subcontractor were SPER.
(8)Anything done—
(a)by the service subcontractor in compliance with the service subcontract; or
(b)in relation to the service subcontractor in relation to an authorised service;

is taken to have been done by or in relation to the registrar or SPER, as the case requires.

(9)However, the engagement of the service subcontractor under the service subcontract does not relieve—
(a)the registrar of the registrar’s obligations in relation to the proper administration and enforcement of this Act; or
(b)the service contractor of the service contractor’s obligations under the service contract.
(10)In this section—
prescribed function see section 10C(6).

s 10B ins 2014 No. 35s 73

10CDelegation of prescribed functions

(1)The registrar may delegate the registrar’s power to delegate a prescribed function to a service contractor.

Note—

For the registrar’s power to delegate, see section 161.
(2)A delegation under subsection (1) can not permit the subdelegation of the delegated power.
(3)Also, the registrar may delegate a prescribed function to a service contractor.
(4)A delegation under subsection (3) may permit the subdelegation of the prescribed function by the service contractor.
(5)However, the service contractor must not delegate or subdelegate a prescribed function to anyone other than—
(a)an appropriately qualified agent, employee or executive officer of the service contractor; or
(b)an appropriately qualified subcontractor engaged by the service contractor; or
(c)an appropriately qualified agent, employee or executive officer of a service subcontractor mentioned in paragraph (b).
(6)In this section—
prescribed function means a function or power of the registrar, or of SPER, under this Act that is prescribed by regulation for this section.

s 10C ins 2014 No. 35s 73

11Management of office

(1)The registrar may make or issue an enforcement order, fine collection notice or warrant under this Act.
(2)The registrar has, for making or issuing an order or warrant under this Act, the same immunities and protection as officers of a court.
(3)Anything done by the registrar in the name of or for SPER is taken to have been done by SPER.

s 11 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 4

11AIdentity cards

(1)The registrar must issue an identity card to each enforcement officer.
(2)The identity card must—
(a)contain a recent photograph of the enforcement officer; and
(b)contain a copy of the enforcement officer’s signature; and
(c)identify the person as an enforcement officer appointed under this Act; and
(d)state an expiry date for the card.
(3)This section does not prevent the issue of a single identity card to a person for this Act and other purposes.

s 11A ins 2014 No. 35s 74

11BReturn of identity card

If the office of a person as an enforcement officer ends, the person must return the person’s identity card to the registrar within 21 days after the office ends unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty—40 penalty units.

s 11B ins 2014 No. 35s 74

12Protection from liability

(1)An official does not incur civil liability for an act done, or omission made, honestly and without negligence, when acting as an official.
(2)If subsection (1) prevents a civil liability attaching to an official, liability attaches instead to the State.
(3)In this section—
official means—
(a)the registrar; or
(b)another member of the staff of SPER; or
(c)an enforcement officer.

Part 3 Infringement notices

Division 1 Service of infringement notices

13Service of infringement notices—generally

(1)If an authorised person reasonably believes a person has committed an infringement notice offence, the authorised person may serve an infringement notice on the person for the offence.
(2)If the infringement notice offence involves a vehicle, the infringement notice may be served under section 14.
(3)Section 14 does not limit the ways an infringement notice may be served on a person.
(4)An infringement notice for an offence must not be served on a person after the end of the period within which an administering authority may start a prosecution for the offence and, if served, must be withdrawn.
(5)Section 28(2) to (4) applies to the withdrawal of an infringement notice under subsection (4).

s 13 amd 2017 No. 13 s 9

14Service of infringement notices for infringement notice offences involving vehicles

(1)An infringement notice for an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle may be served—
(a)on the owner of the vehicle; or
(b)on the person named in a known user declaration as the person who was in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time; or
(c)on the person named in a sold vehicle declaration as the person to whom the vehicle had been sold or otherwise disposed of before the relevant time.
(2)If the infringement notice is to be served by post, the notice may be addressed to the person—
(a)for the owner of the vehicle—at the address of the owner in the register of vehicles kept under a registration Act; or
(b)for the person named in a known user declaration—at the person’s address stated in the declaration or another address for the person in the register of vehicles kept under a registration Act; or
(c)for the person named in a sold vehicle declaration—at the person’s address stated in the declaration or another address for the person in the register of vehicles kept under a registration Act.
(3)Also, the infringement notice may be served by securely placing or attaching the notice, addressed to the owner, without further description, on or to the vehicle in a conspicuous position.
(4)If the infringement notice is served under subsection (3), it is taken to have been served on the owner on the day it is placed on or attached to the vehicle.
(5)A person must not interfere with an infringement notice placed on or attached to a vehicle unless the person is the owner or the person in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time.

Maximum penalty for subsection (5)—40 penalty units.

s 14 amd 2017 No. 13 s 10

15Infringement notices

(1)An infringement notice must be in the form approved by the administering authority.
(2)The notice must state the following—
(a)a unique number for the notice;
(b)the date of the notice;
(c)in relation to the alleged offender, unless the notice is served under section 14(3)—
(i)the alleged offender’s full name, or surname and any initial, and address; or
(ii)the particulars that are, under a regulation, identifying particulars for the alleged offender;
(d)in relation to the offence, particulars that are enough to show clearly the nature of the offence, including the following—
(i)if the offence is one prescribed under a regulation for this paragraph—the identifying particulars prescribed under the regulation for the offence;
(ii)if the offence took place over a period and did not involve a vehicle—the period over which the offence was committed;
(iii)the place the offence was committed and, subject to subparagraph (ii), the time and date of the offence;
(iv)if the offence involves a vehicle—the identifying particulars prescribed under a regulation for the vehicle;
(v)if the offence involves an animal—the identifying particulars prescribed under a regulation for the animal;
(e)the fine for the offence and how and where the fine may be paid;
(f)that the alleged offender must, within 28 days after the date of the notice—
(i)pay the fine in full to the administering authority; or
(ii)make to the administering authority an election to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court; or
(iii)if relevant, give to the administering authority an illegal user declaration, a known or unknown user declaration or a sold vehicle declaration for the vehicle for the offence;
(g)that the notice may be withdrawn before or after the fine is paid;
(h)if the offence involves a vehicle, the general effect of section 17.
(3)The infringement notice must also state—
(a)if the fine is at least the threshold amount—
(i)the alleged offender may, within 28 days after the date of the infringement notice, apply to the administering authority to pay the fine by instalments of not less than the minimum instalment; and
(ii)if the administering authority approves the application and the alleged offender pays the first instalment, the alleged offender may pay all remaining instalments to SPER in any way acceptable to SPER; and
(b)that if the alleged offender defaults, enforcement action may be taken to recover the amount, including by registering it with SPER, and additional fees may be payable.

s 15 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 5

16Effect of this part on prosecution

(1)The fact that an infringement notice has been, or could be, served on a person for an offence, does not affect the starting or continuation of a proceeding against the person or anyone else in a court for the offence.
(2)This part does not—
(a)require the serving of an infringement notice on a person for an offence, as opposed to proceeding against the person in another way; or
(b)limit or otherwise affect the penalty that may be imposed by a court for an offence.

Division 2 Liability for infringement notice offences involving vehicles

17Liability for infringement notice offences involving vehicles

(1)If—
(a)an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle happens; and
(b)an infringement notice for the offence is served on the person who is the owner of the vehicle at the time of the offence;

the owner is taken to have committed the offence even though the actual offender may have been someone else.

(2)If the actual offender is someone else, subsection (1) does not affect the liability of the actual offender, but—
(a)the owner and the actual offender can not both be punished for the offence; and
(b)if a fine is paid or a penalty is imposed on one of them for the offence, a further penalty must not be imposed on or recovered from the other person for the offence.
(3)However, the owner must not be taken under subsection (1) to have committed the offence if, within 28 days after the date of an infringement notice or service of a summons for the offence, the owner makes and gives to the administering authority an illegal user declaration, a known or unknown user declaration or a sold vehicle declaration for the vehicle for the offence.
(4)The declaration must be made by—
(a)if the owner is an individual—the owner; or
(b)if the owner is a corporation—an executive officer of the corporation or the responsible operator.

s 17 amd 2017 No. 13 s 13

18Effect of illegal user declaration

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle happens; and
(b)an infringement notice for the offence is served on the person who is the owner of the vehicle at the relevant time; and
(c)the person makes and gives to the administering authority an illegal user declaration for the vehicle.
(2)In a proceeding for the offence against the owner, a court must not find the owner guilty of the offence if it is satisfied, whether on the statements contained in the declaration or otherwise, the vehicle was stolen or illegally taken at the relevant time.

19Effect of known user declaration

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle happens; and
(b)an infringement notice for the offence is served on the person who is the owner of the vehicle at the relevant time; and
(c)the person makes and gives to the administering authority a known user declaration for the vehicle.
(2)This section and section 17 apply as if the person named in the declaration as the person in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time (the user) were the owner of the vehicle at that time.
(3)A proceeding for the offence may be started against the user only if a copy of the declaration has been served on the user.
(4)In a proceeding for the offence against the user, the declaration is evidence that the user was in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time.
(5)In a proceeding for the offence against the owner mentioned in subsection (1)(b), a court must not find the owner guilty of the offence if it is satisfied, whether on the statements contained in the declaration or otherwise, the owner was not in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time.

20Effect of sold vehicle declaration

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle happens; and
(b)an infringement notice for the offence is served on the person who is the owner of the vehicle at the relevant time; and
(c)the person makes and gives to the administering authority a sold vehicle declaration for the vehicle.
(2)This section and section 17 apply as if the person named in the declaration as the person to whom the vehicle was sold or otherwise disposed of (the buyer) were the owner of the vehicle from the time of the sale or disposal.
(3)A proceeding for the offence may be started against the buyer only if a copy of the declaration has been served on the buyer.
(4)In a proceeding for the offence against the buyer, the declaration is evidence that the buyer was the owner of the vehicle at the relevant time.
(5)In a proceeding for the offence against the owner mentioned in subsection (1)(b), a court must not find the owner guilty of the offence if it is satisfied, whether on the statements contained in the declaration or otherwise, the owner had sold or disposed of the vehicle before the relevant time and was not in charge of the vehicle at that time.

21Effect of unknown user declaration

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle happens; and
(b)an infringement notice for the offence is served on the person who is the owner of the vehicle at the relevant time; and
(c)the owner makes and gives to the administering authority an unknown user declaration for the vehicle.
(2)In a proceeding for the offence against the owner, a court must not find the owner guilty of the offence if it is satisfied, whether on the statements contained in the declaration or otherwise—
(a)that—
(i)if the owner is an individual—the owner was not in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time; or
(ii)if the owner is a corporation—the vehicle was not being used for the purposes of the corporation at the relevant time; and
(b)that the inquiries made to find out the name and address of the person who was in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time—
(i)were reasonable in the circumstances; and
(ii)were carried out with appropriate diligence.

Division 3 Obligations and options under infringement notices

22Ways alleged offender may deal with infringement notice

(1)If an infringement notice is served on an alleged offender for an offence, the alleged offender must, within 28 days after the date of the infringement notice—
(a)pay the fine in full to the administering authority; or
(b)make to the administering authority an election to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court; or
(c)if relevant, give to the administering authority an illegal user declaration, a known or unknown user declaration or a sold vehicle declaration for the vehicle for the offence.
(2)Also, if the fine is at least the threshold amount, the alleged offender may, within 28 days after the date of the infringement notice, apply to the administering authority to pay the fine by instalments.

s 22 amd 2007 No. 3s 6

23Application to pay fine by instalments

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an alleged offender is served with an infringement notice for an offence; and
(b)the fine for the offence is at least the threshold amount.
(2)Within 28 days after the date of the infringement notice, the alleged offender may apply to the administering authority for approval to pay the fine by instalments of not less than the minimum instalment.
(3)The application must be made in—
(a)the approved form; or
(b)another way acceptable to the administering authority.

Examples of other ways an application may be made that may be acceptable to the administering authority—

by telephone
by use of the internet
(4)The application must be accompanied by the first instalment, unless the application authorises the payment of the instalment by direct debit from an account the person holds with a financial institution.
(5)The administering authority must approve the application if—
(a)the application complies with this section; and
(b)the administering authority is satisfied the application was made by the alleged offender.
(6)If the administering authority approves the application, the alleged offender may pay all remaining instalments to SPER in any way acceptable to SPER.
(7)The administering authority must, at the time the alleged offender makes the application, inform the alleged offender of the consequences of failing to pay the instalments.
(8)Subsection (4) only requires an administering authority to accept payment of an instalment by direct debit if the administering authority is capable of accepting it.

s 23 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 7

24Registration of instalment payments for infringement notices

(1)If an administering authority approves an application to pay an infringement notice fine by instalments, the administering authority must give to SPER, for registration, the particulars that are prescribed under a regulation of the offence to which the application relates and of the unpaid amount.
(2)No registration fee is payable for registering the particulars.
(3)The registrar must register the particulars, or the amended particulars given under subsection (6), as soon as practicable after receiving them.
(4)On registration—
(a)SPER becomes responsible for the collection of, and may collect, the unpaid amount; and
(b)the registrar must give to the person an instalment payment notice.
(4A)The registrar may, if satisfied that it is appropriate, allow the unpaid amount to be paid by stated instalments of less than the minimum instalment.
(5)SPER may retain out of each instalment received a management fee prescribed under a regulation.
(6)An administering authority may give to SPER for registration amended particulars mentioned in subsection (1).
(7)If amended particulars are given and an instalment payment notice for different particulars has already been given to the person, a fresh instalment payment notice must be given to the person.

s 24 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2010 No. 42s 184

25Alleged offender who pays can not be prosecuted

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an infringement notice is served on an alleged offender for an offence; and
(b)the alleged offender pays the fine for the offence as required by the infringement notice or the alleged offender begins to otherwise discharge the fine.
(2)The alleged offender must not be prosecuted in a court for the offence.
(3)Subsection (2) applies even though more than 1 infringement notice has been served on the alleged offender for the offence.

s 25 sub 2017 No. 13 s 17

26When alleged offender can not elect to have offence decided by court

(1)This section applies if a person served with an infringement notice for an offence—
(a)pays the fine for the offence to the administering authority; or
(b)applies to the administering authority to pay the fine for the offence by instalments.
(2)The person may not elect to have the matter decided by a Magistrates Court.

27When infringement notice offence is to be decided by court

(1)If, within 28 days after the date of an infringement notice, an alleged offender—
(a)elects under section 22(1)(b) to have the matter of the offence decided by a Magistrates Court; or
(b)takes no action under section 22;

a proceeding for the offence may be started under the Justices Act 1886.

(2)Subsection (1)(b) does not prevent the administering authority from giving SPER prescribed particulars of the offence for registration under part 4.

Division 4 Withdrawal and re-issue of infringement notice

28Administering authority may withdraw infringement notice

(1)An administering authority may withdraw an infringement notice at any time before the fine is satisfied in full.
(2)For the withdrawal to be effective, the administering authority must—
(a)serve on the alleged offender a withdrawal notice in the approved form; and
(b)repay to the alleged offender any amount paid to the administering authority for the offence; and
(c)if prescribed particulars of the infringement notice offence are registered under part 4, give to SPER a copy of the withdrawal notice.
(3)On complying with subsection (2)—
(a)this Act, other than this part, stops applying to the infringement notice offence; and
(b)a proceeding for the offence may be taken against any person (including the alleged offender) as if the notice had not been served on the alleged offender.
(4)No compensation is payable to a person because of the administering authority’s refusal to withdraw an infringement notice.

s 28 amd 2017 No. 13 s 20(1)

29Cancellation of registration on withdrawal of infringement notice

(1)If an administering authority gives SPER a copy of a withdrawal notice under section 28(2)(c), the registrar must, as soon as practicable after receiving the notice—
(a)cancel the registration of the relevant infringement notice default; and
(b)cancel any enforcement order issued because of the registration of the relevant infringement notice default; and
(c)refund any amount paid to SPER because of the registration of the infringement notice default.
(2)If a person is subject to a work and development order for an enforcement order made because of the relevant infringement notice default—
(a)the registrar must revoke the work and development order or, if the work and development order is for more than the amount of the enforcement order, vary the work and development order to the lesser amount; and
(b)the person is not entitled to compensation for performing an activity under the work and development order, other than unpaid work; and
(c)if the person performed unpaid work under the work and development order, the administering authority must compensate the person for the unpaid work.
(3)For subsection (2)(c), the registrar may, having regard to the amounts prescribed for unpaid work under section 165(11)(c), decide the amount of the compensation.
(4)If the registrar revokes or varies a work and development order under subsection (2)(a), the registrar must give the person written notice of the revocation or variation.

s 29 sub 2017 No. 13 s 21

30Application to cancel infringement notice for mistake of fact

(1)This section applies to an infringement notice for which a default certificate for the relevant infringement notice offence has been given to SPER for registration under section 33(1).
(2)If the registrar is satisfied—
(a)a person has been incorrectly named in the infringement notice as the alleged offender for the relevant infringement notice offence because of a mistake of fact or the misuse of the name and other particulars of the person named in the infringement notice; and
(b)the administering authority has refused to withdraw the relevant infringement notice;

the registrar may apply to a Magistrates Court for an order cancelling the infringement notice.

(3)The court may cancel or refuse to cancel the infringement notice.
(4)The court may decide an application under subsection (2) on written materials in the absence of a party if the court considers it appropriate.

s 30 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2010 No. 42s 185

31Effect of cancellation of infringement notice

(1)This section applies if an infringement notice is withdrawn under section 28 or cancelled under section 30.
(2)If, because of the infringement notice, demerit points have been allocated against the alleged offender for an infringement notice offence under the Nature Conservation Act 1992 or another law, prescribed under a regulation, that provides for the allocation of demerit points—
(a)the demerit points for the offence are cancelled; and
(b)the relevant administering authority must make a note on any record it keeps in relation to the person clearly indicating that the demerit points allocated against the person have been cancelled.
(3)Without limiting subsection (2), if, because of the infringement notice, demerit points have been allocated against the alleged offender’s traffic history for an infringement notice offence under the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995 or the Heavy Vehicle National Law (Queensland)—
(a)the demerit points for the offence are cancelled; and
(b)the chief executive of the department within which the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995 is administered must remove the record of the allocation of the demerit points from the alleged offender’s traffic history.
(4)Further, if, because of the infringement notice, a licence, permit or other authority has been suspended or cancelled, the suspension or cancellation stops having effect, unless the person’s licence, permit or authority would still be suspended, cancelled or no longer in force for another reason.

s 31 amd 2013 No. 26s 105sch 1

32Proceedings after cancellation of infringement notice

(1)This section applies if an infringement notice is withdrawn under section 28 or cancelled under section 30.
(2)If the infringement notice is withdrawn or cancelled and the name of the actual offender is known, nothing in this or any other Act prevents the administering authority issuing an infringement notice against the actual offender or starting a proceeding in a court for the offence against the actual offender.
(3)However, the period of limitation within which a proceeding for the offence may be started against the actual offender starts on the day the infringement notice is withdrawn or cancelled.
(4)Subsection (3) provides some other time limit for making complaint for the purposes of the Justices Act 1886, section 52.

s 32 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2010 No. 42s 186

Part 3B Work and development orders

pt hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32FDefinitions for part

In this part—
approved sponsor, for a work and development order, means a person or entity approved by the registrar for that type of work and development order.
eligibility assessment see section 32K(1).
work and development order see section 32G(1).

s 32F ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32GWork and development orders

(1)A work and development order is an order requiring a person to undertake any of the following to satisfy all or part of the enforceable amount of the person’s SPER debt—
(a)unpaid work for, or on behalf of, an approved sponsor;
(b)medical or mental health treatment under an approved sponsor’s treatment plan provided by a health practitioner;
(c)an educational, vocational or life skills course as decided by an approved sponsor;
(d)financial or other counselling as decided by an approved sponsor;
(e)drug or alcohol treatment as decided by an approved sponsor;
(f)if the person is under 25 years of age—a mentoring program as decided by an approved sponsor;
(g)if the person is an Aborigine or a Torres Strait Islander and lives in a remote area—a culturally appropriate program as decided by an approved sponsor.
(2)A work and development order must be in the approved form and state—
(a)the amount of a person’s SPER debt that is to be satisfied by complying with the order; and
(b)the activities that must be undertaken to comply with the order.
(3)In this section—
health practitioner means—
(a)a medical practitioner; or
(b)a psychologist within the meaning of the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law; or
(c)a registered health practitioner endorsed by the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia as a nurse practitioner under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law.
registered health practitioner see the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law, section 5.
remote area means an area of the State prescribed by regulation.

s 32G ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32HEligibility for work and development order

An individual is eligible for a work and development order if the individual is an enforcement debtor and is unable to pay the enforceable amount of the individual’s SPER debt because the individual—
(a)is experiencing financial hardship; or
(b)has a mental illness within the meaning prescribed by regulation; or
(c)has a cognitive or intellectual disability; or
(d)is homeless; or
(e)has a substance use disorder as prescribed by regulation; or
(f)is experiencing domestic and family violence.

s 32H ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32INo work and development order for restitution or compensation

A work and development order can not be applied to satisfy that part of a person’s SPER debt that a court has ordered the person pay to someone else by way of restitution or compensation under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 35(1).

s 32I ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32JApplication for work and development order

(1)An approved sponsor may, with the agreement of an individual (the subject applicant), apply on behalf of the individual to the registrar for a work and development order to satisfy all or part of the enforceable amount of the individual’s SPER debt if the individual is eligible for the order under section 32H.
(2)The application must—
(a)state the grounds on which the subject applicant is eligible for the order; and
(b)state the activities that are proposed to be carried out by the subject applicant under a work and development order and the time by which the activities are proposed to be completed.
(3)An application for a work and development order to satisfy an amount mentioned in section 32I is of no effect.

s 32J ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32KEligibility assessment by approved sponsor

(1)Before making an application for a work and development order under section 32J, the approved sponsor must undertake an assessment (an eligibility assessment) of the applicant’s eligibility for a work and development order under section 32H.
(2)The registrar may require the sponsor to give the registrar evidence to support the eligibility assessment within a stated period of not less than 28 days.
(3)If the approved sponsor fails to comply with the requirement within the stated period, the application is taken to have been withdrawn.

s 32K ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32LDecision on application

(1)After receiving an application for a work and development order under section 32J, the registrar must—
(a)make the order as applied for; or
(b)refuse to make the order.
(2)The registrar must refuse to make the work and development order if making the order would result in more than the maximum number, as prescribed by regulation, of work and development orders applying to the person proposed to be subject to the order.
(3)If the registrar makes the work and development order as applied for—
(a)the registrar must give a copy of the order to the person to be subject to the order; and
(b)the order takes effect when the order is made or on the later date stated in the order.
(4)If the registrar refuses to make the work and development order, the registrar must give the applicant a notice of the decision complying with the QCAT Act, section 157.

s 32L ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32MUnpaid work must be performed cumulatively

All unpaid work required to be undertaken by a person under a work and development order is to be undertaken cumulatively with any community service the person must perform under another Act.

s 32M ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32NEffect of this part on enforcement action

(1)This section applies if a work and development order is made for an individual in relation to an amount.
(2)No enforcement action may be taken against the individual in relation to the amount while the individual is complying with the order.
(3)To remove any doubt, it is declared that nothing in subsection (2) prevents enforcement action being taken against the individual in relation to an amount that is not subject to the order.

s 32N ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32OVariation of work and development order

(1)An approved sponsor for a work and development order may, with the agreement of the individual subject to the order, apply to SPER on behalf of the individual for an increase in the order amount because an additional enforceable amount of the individual’s SPER debt is proposed to become subject to the order.
(2)The individual subject to a work and development order may apply to SPER for a decrease in the order amount because the individual proposes to pay an amount to SPER or enter into a payment plan for an amount.
(3)After considering an application made under subsection (1) or (2), the registrar must—
(a)vary the work and development order; or
(b)refuse to vary the work and development order.
(4)If the registrar varies the work and development order, the registrar must—
(a)give the individual subject to the order a copy of the varied order in the approved form; and
(b)notify the approved sponsor that the order has been varied.
(5)If the registrar refuses to vary the work and development order, the registrar must give the applicant a notice of the decision complying with the QCAT Act, section 157.
(6)The registrar may, with the agreement of the individual subject to a work and development order, vary the order by giving the individual a copy of the varied order in the approved form.
(7)In this section—
order amount, in relation to a work and development order, means the amount of an individual’s SPER debt that would be satisfied under the order if the order were fully complied with.

s 32O ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32PWithdrawal of work and development order

(1)The approved sponsor for a work and development order may apply to the registrar to withdraw the order because the approved sponsor is unable to continue as the approved sponsor.
(2)The individual subject to a work and development order may apply to the registrar to withdraw the order because the individual believes the approved sponsor will be unable to continue as the approved sponsor.
(3)After considering an application made under subsection (1) or (2), the registrar must—
(a)withdraw the work and development order; or
(b)refuse to withdraw the work and development order.
(4)If the registrar withdraws the work and development order, the registrar must give written notice of the decision to—
(a)the applicant; and
(b)if the applicant is not the individual subject to the work and development order—the individual.
(5)If the registrar refuses to withdraw the work and development order, the notice given to an applicant under subsection (4) must comply with the QCAT Act, section 157.
(6)To remove any doubt, it is declared that any amount not taken to be satisfied under the work and development order when it is withdrawn continues to be payable to SPER.
(7)Subsection (8) applies if—
(a)a person is subject to a work and development order; and
(b)before the work and development order is due to end, the registrar becomes aware that the amount remaining to be satisfied under the order is nil.
(8)As soon as practicable after becoming aware of the matter, the registrar must withdraw the work and development order and give the person notice of the withdrawal.

s 32P ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32QRevocation of work and development order

(1)The registrar may revoke a work and development order if—
(a)the registrar is satisfied that the individual subject to the order has failed, without reasonable excuse, to comply with the order; or
(b)the registrar believes that—
(i)information provided in, or in connection with, the application for the order is false or misleading in a material particular; or
(ii)information provided in, or in connection with, an eligibility assessment provided by an approved sponsor is false or misleading in a material particular; or
(iii)the individual subject to the order no longer meets the eligibility criteria stated in the person’s application for the order; or
(iv)the approved sponsor supervising compliance with the order is unable to satisfactorily continue the supervision or is in breach of any obligation under this part; or
(v)the person or entity supervising compliance with the order is no longer an approved sponsor.
(2)Before revoking the work and development order the registrar must, by written notice given to the person subject to the order, advise the person that—
(a)the registrar proposes to revoke the order and the reason for revoking the order; and
(b)the person may object to the registrar revoking the order by giving the registrar, within a stated period of at least 28 days, written reasons as to why the order should not be revoked.
(3)After considering all objections, if any, made under subsection (2)(b), the registrar must decide to—
(a)take no further action in relation to the order; or
(b)vary the order; or
(c)revoke the order.
(4)After making a decision under subsection (3) the registrar must give the person written notice of the decision.
(5)Also, if the decision is to vary or revoke the order, the notice of the decision must comply with the QCAT Act, section 157.

s 32Q ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32RSatisfaction of SPER debt

(1)This section applies to a person subject to a work and development order.
(2)If the person complies with the order, the amount stated in the order is taken to be satisfied.
(3)If the person pays the amount stated in the order, the order is taken to have been complied with.
(4)If a person complies with some, but not all, of the requirements of the order, the amount stated in the order is only satisfied to the extent of the value of the activities that have been undertaken at the rate or rates set out in the order.

s 32R ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

32SExternal review of decisions under this part

(1)This section applies to a person entitled to be given notice of any of the following decisions—
(a)a decision to refuse to make a work and development order under section 32L;
(b)a decision to refuse to vary a work and development order under section 32O;
(c)a decision to vary or revoke a work and development order under section 32Q.
(2)The person may apply, as provided under the QCAT Act, to QCAT for a review of the decision.

s 32S ins 2017 No. 13 s 24

Part 4 Enforcement orders

Division 1 Default commences enforcement process

33Default by person served with infringement notice

(1)If a person served with an infringement notice has not, within 28 days after the date of the infringement notice—
(a)paid the fine in full to the administering authority; or
(b)applied to the administering authority to pay the fine by instalments; or
(c)made to the administering authority an election to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court; or
(d)if relevant, given to the administering authority an illegal user declaration, a known or unknown user declaration or a sold vehicle declaration for the vehicle for the offence;

the administering authority may give to SPER for registration a certificate (default certificate) for the relevant infringement notice offence.

(2)For subsection (1)(c), an election may be made—
(a)in the approved form; or
(b)in another way acceptable to the administering authority.

Examples of other ways an election may be made that may be acceptable to the administering authority—

by telephone
by use of the internet
(3)A default certificate must not be given to the registrar after the end of the time within which a person may start a prosecution for the offence, and if given, must not be registered.
(4)A default certificate given under subsection (1) by an administering authority that is entitled under an Act to retain the amount of any fine paid to it must be accompanied by the registration fee.
(5)The registrar must register the default certificate as soon as practicable after it is received.
(6)An authorised person may give an amended default certificate to SPER, for registration, if amendment of an earlier certificate is necessary because of error, the dishonour of a cheque, or for another reason.
(7)No fee is payable for registering an amended default certificate.

s 33 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 8

34Default in paying fine, penalty or other amount under court order

(1)This section applies to any of the following orders made by a court—
(a)an order fining a person for an offence;
(b)an order under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 33B(1) that an amount be paid on the forfeiture of a recognisance;
(c)an order that a person pay to someone else an amount by way of restitution or compensation under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 35(1);
(d)an order that a person pay a penalty mentioned in the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 182A or 185;
(e)an order under the Bail Act 1980, section 32(1) or 32A(1) that an amount be paid on the forfeiture of an undertaking;
(f)an order under the Justices Act 1886, section 161A that an amount be recoverable by execution or that details of the amount be registered under this Act;
(g)an order made before 27 November 2000 that a person pay an amount under the Crown Proceedings Act 1980, section 13 or 14;
(h)an order mentioned in the Industrial Relations Act 2016, section 380(1) or 406(1).
(2)Subsection (1)(a) to (f) or (h) applies to an order whether made before or after the commencement of this section.
(2A)At any time after the order is made, if all or part of the fine or other amount is unpaid, the court registrar may give to SPER, for registration, the prescribed particulars of the unpaid amount.

Note—

See also the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 179F, the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000, sections 115 and 781 and the Victims of Crime Assistance Act 2009, sections 120 and 193.
(2B)However, subsection (2A) does not apply to an unpaid amount under an order mentioned in subsection (1)(d) or (f) if, at the time the court makes the order, the court can not order that payment of the unpaid amount can be satisfied by imprisoning the person for a period.
(3)The registrar must register the particulars as soon as practicable after receiving them.
(4)Also, the registrar may issue an enforcement order, an enforcement warrant or a fine collection notice against the person concerned for the unpaid amount.
(5)Subsection (2) applies unless the person is ordered to be imprisoned under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 39 or 185A.

s 34 amd 2007 No. 3s 9; 2009 No. 48s 4; 2012 No. 17s 43; 2016 No. 63 s 1157 sch 6

35Effect of registration under this division

(1)This section applies if the registrar registers a default certificate under section 33 or prescribed particulars under section 34.
(2)On registration of the default certificate or particular—
(a)if the amount is registered because of a default certificate, the amount unpaid is increased by the amount of the registration fee; and
(b)SPER becomes responsible for the collection of, and may collect, the unpaid amount; and
(c)if the amount is registered because of a default certificate, a proceeding against the person for the offence may be started in a court only under this part.
(3)In this section—
amount unpaid, for an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle, includes the cost of establishing ownership of the vehicle.

s 35 amd 2007 No. 3s 10

36Default in paying instalment

If a person served with an instalment payment notice fails to pay an instalment under the notice within the time allowed, the registrar may cancel the instalment payment notice without notice to the person.

s 36 amd 2007 No. 3s 11

37Effect of cancellation of instalment payment notice

On the cancellation of an instalment payment notice under this division, the registrar must—
(a)increase the unpaid amount to which the notice relates by the amount of the registration fee; and
(b)issue to the person an enforcement order for the total of the unpaid amount.

Division 2 Enforcement orders

38Issue of enforcement order

(1)This section applies if—
(a)the registrar registers a default certificate for a person; or
(b)this Act expressly authorises the registrar to issue an enforcement order against a person.
(2)The registrar must, in writing, order the person (enforcement debtor) to pay the amount stated in the order (enforcement order) to SPER within 28 days after the date of the order.
(3)The amount stated in an enforcement order must be—
(a)the amount that is registered as the unpaid amount for an offence; or
(b)the amount for which the registrar is expressly authorised to issue the order.
(4)The enforcement order may be made in the absence of, and without notice to, the enforcement debtor.
(5)The enforcement order must be made in the approved form.
(6)To remove any doubt, it is declared that a single enforcement order may relate to 1 or more infringement notice defaults.

s 38 amd 2007 No. 3 s 12; 2017 No. 13 s 26(3)

39[Repealed]

s 39 om 2007 No. 3 s 13

40Service of enforcement order

The registrar may serve an enforcement order on a person by—
(a)serving the order on the person personally; or
(b)sending the order by ordinary post to the address for the person known to SPER; or
(c)sending the order by electronic communication under section 158.

s 40 sub 2017 No. 13 s 28

Division 3 Obligations and options under enforcement order

41Ways enforcement debtor may deal with enforcement order

(1)If an enforcement order is served on an enforcement debtor for an amount, the enforcement debtor must, within 28 days after the date of the enforcement order—
(a)pay the amount stated in the order in full to SPER; or
(b)apply to SPER, in the approved form or in another way acceptable to SPER, to pay the amount by instalments of not less than the minimum instalment; or
(c)if the order relates to an infringement notice offence—make to SPER an election to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court.
(2)Also, an approved sponsor may, with the agreement of the debtor, apply on behalf of the debtor under part 3B for—
(a)a work and development order to satisfy the amount stated in the order; or
(b)if the debtor is subject to a work and development order—a variation of the order.

s 41 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2002 No. 34s 54; 2007 No. 3s 14; 2017 No. 13 s 29(3)–(5)

42Application to pay by instalments

(1)Within 28 days after the date of an enforcement order, the enforcement debtor may apply to SPER for approval to pay the amount stated in the order by instalments.
(2)The application must be made—
(a)in the approved form; or
(b)in another way acceptable to SPER.

Examples of other ways an application may be made that may be acceptable to SPER—

by telephone
by use of the internet
(3)The enforcement debtor must, at the time of making the application, be informed by SPER of the consequences of failing to pay the account within the time allowed, including by instalments.
(4)If the registrar is satisfied the application was made by the enforcement debtor, the registrar may allow the amount to be paid by stated instalments of not less than the minimum instalment.
(5)Despite subsection (4), the registrar may, if satisfied exceptional circumstances exist, allow the amount to be paid by stated instalments of less than the minimum instalment.
(6)The registrar must give the enforcement debtor notice of the decision.
(7)If the registrar decides to allow payment of the amount by instalments, the registrar must also give the enforcement debtor an instalment payment notice for the amount.

s 42 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch

sub 2007 No. 3s 15

43[Repealed]

s 43 om 2017 No. 13 s 30

44[Repealed]

s 44 om 2017 No. 13 s 30

45[Repealed]

s 45 om 2017 No. 13 s 30

46[Repealed]

s 46 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 16; 2010 No. 42s 187

om 2017 No. 13 s 30

47[Repealed]

s 47 om 2017 No. 13 s 30

48[Repealed]

s 48 om 2017 No. 13 s 30

49[Repealed]

s 49 amd 2007 No. 37s 162 sch

om 2017 No. 13 s 30

50[Repealed]

s 50 amd 2002 No. 34s 55

om 2017 No. 13 s 30

51Election for court hearing

(1)If, within 28 days after the date of an enforcement order made against an enforcement debtor for an infringement notice offence for which the fine is unpaid, the enforcement debtor—
(a)elects under the order to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court; or
(b)takes no action under section 42 or 43;

a proceeding for the offence may be started under the Justices Act 1886.

(2)If either of the following happens, any enforcement order for the offence stops having effect—
(a)the enforcement debtor elects under subsection (1)(a) to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court;
(b)the enforcement debtor is granted a rehearing of the complaint for the offence in a Magistrates Court under the Justices Act 1886, section 142.
(3)Also, if a proceeding against the enforcement debtor for the offence is reopened under the Justices Act 1886, section 147A, any enforcement order for the offence stops having effect.
(4)The registrar must notify the enforcement debtor and the relevant administering authority of the effect of subsection (2) or (3).
(5)The notification under subsection (4) must be given as soon as practicable after the registrar knows that the enforcement order stops having effect because of this section.

Division 4 Default after enforcement order

52Default after time to pay

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor—
(a)fails to pay an amount stated in an enforcement order within 28 days after the date of the order; or
(b)fails to pay an amount stated in an instalment payment notice issued under section 42 in accordance with the notice.
(2)The registrar may issue an enforcement warrant, a fine collection notice or an arrest and imprisonment warrant for the enforcement debtor for the balance of the unpaid amount stated in the enforcement order or instalment payment notice.
(3)Also, if the failure relates to an instalment payment notice, the registrar may cancel the instalment payment notice without notice to the enforcement debtor.
(4)If the registrar decides to issue an arrest and imprisonment warrant, the warrant must be for the arrest and imprisonment of the enforcement debtor for the period stated in the warrant worked out for the unpaid amount under section 52A.

s 52 amd 2007 No. 3s 17

52AWorking out period of imprisonment for arrest and imprisonment warrant

(1)The period of imprisonment that may be stated in an arrest and imprisonment warrant for an amount ordered to be paid by a court must be the period worked out by dividing the amount stated in the warrant, less any enforcement or administrative fees added by SPER, by the relevant cut-out rate for a court order rounded down to the nearest whole number and expressed as a number of days.
(2)The period of imprisonment that may be stated in an arrest and imprisonment warrant for an infringement notice offence must be the period worked out by dividing the amount stated in the warrant, less any enforcement or administrative fees added by SPER, by the cut-out rate for an infringement notice offence, rounded down to the nearest whole number and expressed as a number of days.
(3)However, the maximum period that may be stated in an arrest and imprisonment warrant for an amount a surety must pay under the Bail Act 1980 or the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992 must not be more than 2 years.

s 52A ins 2007 No. 3s 18

53[Repealed]

s 53 om 2017 No. 13 s 34

Division 5 Effect of appeal on enforcement order

54Effect of appeal on enforcement order

(1)This section applies if, after an enforcement order is made for a penalty imposed by a court for an offence, the enforcement debtor appeals against the conviction or sentence for the offence.
(2)The appeal suspends the enforcement order.
(3)If the appeal is upheld, the registrar must refund to the enforcement debtor any amount paid to SPER for the offence.
(4)If the appeal is dismissed, the suspension of the enforcement order is lifted and the registrar may continue to enforce the order.
(5)As soon as the registrar becomes aware of the appeal mentioned in subsection (1), the registrar must ensure that any steps taken under this Act to enforce the enforcement order are discontinued immediately and no further action is taken until the appeal is decided.

54AEffect of appeal on enforcement order for offender levy

(1)This section applies if after an enforcement order is made for an offender levy, the enforcement debtor appeals against all of the convictions that resulted in the imposition of the offender levy.
(2)The appeals suspend the enforcement order made for the offender levy.
(3)If all convictions are quashed, the registrar must refund to the enforcement debtor any amount paid to SPER for the levy.
(4)Otherwise, the suspension of the enforcement order is lifted and the registrar may continue to enforce the order.
(5)As soon as the registrar becomes aware of the circumstances mentioned in subsection (1), the registrar must ensure that any steps taken under this Act to enforce the enforcement order are discontinued immediately and no further action is taken until all of the appeals are decided.

s 54A ins 2012 No. 17s 44

Division 6 Cancellation of certain enforcement orders

55Application of div 6

This division applies to an enforcement order for an infringement notice offence registered with SPER under section 33 (relevant enforcement order).

s 55 amd 2010 No. 42s 188

56Applications for cancellation of enforcement orders

(1)An enforcement debtor may apply in writing to SPER for the cancellation of the relevant enforcement order for any of the following reasons—
(a)the person did not receive—
(i)the infringement notice; or
(ii)any reminder notice the relevant administering authority sent to the person about the infringement notice; or
(iii)the enforcement order;
(b)the person received a notice or order mentioned in paragraph (a) after the time allowed for taking action stated in the notice or order;
(c)the person was prevented by accident or illness or for another similar reason from taking action in relation to the infringement notice or enforcement order;
(d)the person is electing to have the matter of the offence to which the relevant enforcement order relates decided in a Magistrates Court.
(2)The application must be made within the earlier of the following—
(a)14 days after the debtor becomes aware of the existence of the order;
(b)6 months after the issue of the relevant enforcement order.
(3)Despite subsection (2), an application under subsection (1) may be made after the periods mentioned in subsection (2) have ended if the registrar is satisfied the applicant has reasonable grounds for the delay.
(4)A person must not, without the approval of the registrar, make more than 1 application in relation to the relevant enforcement order.

s 56 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 19; 2010 No. 42s 189

57Decision on application

(1)The registrar may cancel the relevant enforcement order only if the registrar is satisfied the order should be cancelled for the reason stated in the application.
(2)The registrar may ask the applicant to give to the registrar any information prescribed under a regulation that will help the registrar decide the application.
(3)The registrar may consider the application in the absence of the applicant.
(4)If the registrar cancels the relevant enforcement order, the registrar must refer the matter of the offence to the administering authority.
(5)The administering authority may—
(a)start a proceeding against the applicant for the offence; or
(b)accept payment of the fine in full as stated in the infringement notice for the offence; or
(c)issue a fresh infringement notice for the offence.
(6)The registrar must give the applicant notice of the decision in the approved form.

s 57 amd 2007 No. 3s 20; 2010 No. 42s 190

58Appeal against refusal to cancel enforcement order

(1)If, within 14 days after the date of the notice of the decision under section 57(6) and, after considering an application to cancel an enforcement order, the registrar refuses to cancel the order, the applicant may apply in writing to a Magistrates Court in the Magistrates Court district in which the offence is alleged to have been committed to have the original application decided by the court.
(2)The application must be filed with the relevant court registrar.
(3)The court registrar must, as soon as practicable, refer the matter to the court and notify the applicant and the registrar of when and where the application is to be decided.
(4)The court may make any decision about the application that the registrar could have made.
(5)The court may decide the application in the absence of the applicant if the court is satisfied the applicant is avoiding service of the notice or can not, after reasonable search and inquiry, be found.
(6)Also, the court may decide the application if it is satisfied that no party to the application will be prejudiced by the non-service of, or any error or omission in, the notice of the decision under section 57(6).

s 58 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 21

59[Repealed]

s 59 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch

om 2007 No. 3s 22

60Provisions relating to cancellation of enforcement order

(1)On an application under section 56 or 58, the registrar or a Magistrates Court may stay enforcement action under a relevant enforcement order on the conditions the registrar or the court considers appropriate.
(2)A single application may be made for the cancellation of 2 or more relevant enforcement orders against the same person.
(3)A relevant enforcement order that is cancelled stops having effect on the making of the order cancelling it and any enforcement action already taken must, if practicable, be reversed.
(4)Without limiting subsection (3), if a relevant enforcement order is cancelled—
(a)enforcement costs are not payable for the issue of the order; and
(b)any amount that has been paid under the order is repayable to the person by whom it was paid; and
(c)the period of limitation within which a proceeding for the offence to which the order relates may be started for the matter starts on the day the order is cancelled.
(5)Also, section 31 applies as if the infringement notice to which the relevant enforcement order relates were cancelled under section 30.
(6)Subsection (4)(c) provides some other time limit for making complaint for the purposes of the Justices Act 1886, section 52.

s 60 amd 2010 No. 42s 191

Part 5 Civil enforcement

Division 1 Preliminary

61Application of pt 5

Subject to section 62, this part applies—
(a)if—
(i)the unpaid amount stated in an enforcement order is not paid within 28 days after the date of the order; and
(ii)if relevant, the enforcement debtor has not elected under section 51 to have the matter of an offence decided in a Magistrates Court; or
(b)if this Act expressly authorises the registrar to issue an enforcement warrant or a fine collection notice for an unpaid amount.

s 61 amd 2007 No. 3s 23

62Part does not prevent issue of arrest and imprisonment warrant

Nothing in this part prevents the registrar, instead of acting under this part, issuing an arrest and imprisonment warrant for an enforcement debtor who may be arrested under this or another Act because of the enforcement debtor’s failure to pay an amount.

Division 2 Enforcement warrants

63Issue of enforcement warrant

(1)The registrar may issue a warrant (enforcement warrant) under this division for an unpaid amount.
(2)An enforcement warrant may be a warrant—
(a)to seize and sell real and personal property, other than exempt property, in which the enforcement debtor has a legal or beneficial interest; or
(b)imposing a charge on specified property.
(3)An enforcement warrant must—
(a)be in the approved form; and
(b)be directed to all enforcement officers; and
(c)for an enforcement warrant to seize and sell property—state the date and time of issue and the date, within 1 year after the warrant’s issue, the warrant ends; and
(d)for an another enforcement warrant—state the date and time of issue and the date, within 6 months after the warrant’s issue, the warrant ends; and
(e)include any other particulars required under section 140 or 141.
(4)On the issue of an enforcement warrant, the amount owing by the enforcement debtor is increased to the total of the amount unpaid before the warrant was issued and the civil enforcement fee.
(5)A copy of the enforcement warrant must be served on the enforcement debtor.
(6)Nothing in this Act prevents the registrar from issuing an enforcement warrant to seize and sell a vehicle while it is subject to an immobilisation warrant.
(7)However, an enforcement warrant can not be enforced while a vehicle is immobilised under an immobilisation warrant.
(8)A charge imposed on personal property under an enforcement warrant—
(a)is declared to be a statutory interest to which section 73(2) of the PPS Act applies; and
(b)has priority over all security interests in relation to the personal property other than those registered on the PPS register before the charge is mentioned on the register.
(9)Subsection (10) applies to the following fees, expenses and costs to the extent the fees, expenses and costs relate to personal property under an enforcement warrant—
(a)the enforcement officer’s fees and expenses mentioned in section 73J(2);
(b)other enforcement costs mentioned in section 73J(3)(a).
(10)The fees, expenses and costs mentioned in subsection (9)—
(a)are declared to be statutory interests to which section 73(2) of the PPS Act applies; and
(b)have priority over all security interests in relation to the personal property.
(11)In this section—
exempt property see the Civil Proceedings Act 2011, schedule 1.
personal property see the PPS Act, section 10.
PPS Act means the Personal Property Securities Act 2009 (Cwlth).
PPS register means the Personal Property Securities Register under the PPS Act.
security interest see the PPS Act, section 12.

s 63 amd 2007 No. 3s 24; 2009 No. 48s 5; 2011 No. 27s 337; 2011 No. 45s 217sch 1A (amd 2012 No. 17s 11)

63ARenewal of enforcement warrant

(1)Before an enforcement warrant ends, the warrant may be renewed by the registrar for a period of—
(a)for an enforcement warrant to seize and sell property—not more than 1 year at any one time, from the date the warrant ends; or
(b)for another enforcement warrant—not more than 6 months at any one time, from the date the warrant ends.
(2)A renewed enforcement warrant must state the period for which the warrant has been renewed.
(3)The priority of a renewed enforcement warrant is decided according to the date the warrant was originally issued.
(4)A copy of the renewed enforcement warrant must be served on the enforcement debtor.

s 63A ins 2009 No. 48s 6

64Registrar may cancel, suspend or vary enforcement warrant for seizure of property

(1)A person claiming an interest in property that is or is about to be seized or sold under an enforcement warrant may apply to the registrar for the cancellation, suspension or variation of all or part of the warrant, including because of facts that arise or are discovered after the warrant was issued.
(2)The application must state the facts relied on by the applicant.
(3)The registrar may, by order, cancel, suspend or vary an enforcement warrant.

65Enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property

(1)An enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property may charge all or part of the enforcement debtor’s interest in specified land, interests in managed investment schemes or securities.
(2)The registrar may issue an enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property belonging to a partnership only if the registrar has given the partners—
(a)notice of intention to issue the warrant; and
(b)at least 10 days to give reasons the warrant should not be issued.
(3)For this section, service on each partner who resides in the State is sufficient service on any partner who resides outside the State.

s 65 amd 2001 No. 45s 29sch 3

66Effect of warrant imposing charge on property

(1)An enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property entitles SPER to the same remedies as SPER would have had if the charge had been made in SPER’s favour by the enforcement debtor.
(2)However, SPER may not take proceedings to obtain a remedy in relation to particular charged property until—
(a)the enforcement warrant imposing the charge is served on the enforcement debtor and, for interests in managed investment schemes or securities, the person who issued or administers the interests or securities; and
(b)21 days have passed since the later service.

s 66 amd 2001 No. 45s 29sch 3

67Order to set aside or restrain sale, etc. of charged property

(1)The registrar may apply to the Supreme Court for an order restraining the sale, transfer or other dealing with property under an enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property.
(2)The Supreme Court may restrain the sale, transfer or other dealing, unless to do so would prejudice the rights or interests of a genuine purchaser or chargee without notice.
(3)Also, the Supreme Court may—
(a)order that property mentioned in the order must not be sold, transferred or otherwise dealt with; or
(b)order that property mentioned in the order be sold, transferred or otherwise dealt with only in a stated way or circumstance.
(4)In addition, the Supreme Court may set aside any sale, transfer or other dealing with property charged under an enforcement warrant, unless to do so would prejudice the rights or interests of a genuine purchaser or chargee without notice.

68Offence of dealing with charged or restrained property

(1)An enforcement debtor who is served with a copy of an enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property or an order made under section 67, must not knowingly contravene the warrant or order by concealing, selling, transferring or otherwise dealing with the property.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

(2)A person who is served with a copy of an enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property or an order made under section 67 and issued or administers the charged property must not conceal, sell, transfer or otherwise deal with the property.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

(3)If, despite subsection (2), the person who issued or administers the charged property conceals, sells, transfers or otherwise deals with the property, the person is liable to SPER for the value or amount of the charged property dealt with or the amount owing by the enforcement debtor, whichever is smaller.

68AOffence of concealing, selling, transferring or otherwise dealing with property subject to seizure

An enforcement debtor who is served with a copy of an enforcement warrant to seize and sell property must not conceal, sell, transfer or otherwise deal with the property with intent to—
(a)defeat the enforcement of the warrant; or
(b)adversely affect any seizure or sale of the property under this Act.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

s 68A ins 2009 No. 48s 7

69Enforcement of enforcement warrant may be made conditional

(1)If the registrar issues an enforcement warrant to seize and sell real and personal property, the registrar may also instruct any or all enforcement officers not to enforce the warrant until the steps in this section are followed.
(2)The enforcement officer must first attempt to recover the amount owing in full.
(3)If the enforcement debtor can not pay the amount owing in full, the enforcement officer must attempt to interview the enforcement debtor.
(4)If the enforcement officer reasonably believes the enforcement debtor will not, or is unwilling to, take part in the interview, the enforcement officer may enforce the warrant.
(5)If, after interviewing the enforcement debtor, the enforcement officer is satisfied the enforcement debtor is unable to pay the amount owing in full, but can pay the amount in a way mentioned in subsection (6) or (7), and the enforcement debtor agrees, the enforcement officer—
(a)must not enforce the warrant; and
(b)must ensure the enforcement debtor takes all action necessary for the amount to be satisfied in the agreed way, including, for example, by giving the enforcement officer necessary information or completing necessary documents.
(6)If the enforcement officer is satisfied the enforcement debtor can pay the amount owing by instalments at the full instalment rate, the ways the amount may be paid are as follows—
(a)by regular redirection from a financial institution account at the full instalment rate;
(b)by regular redirection from earnings.
(7)If the enforcement officer is satisfied the enforcement debtor can not pay the amount owing by instalments at the full instalment rate, the ways the amount may be paid are as follows—
(a)by paying the amount by regular redirection from a financial institution account at a rate less than the full instalment rate;
(b)by satisfying the amount by undertaking activities under a work and development order.

s 69 amd 2017 No. 13 s 42

69AParticular matters about enforcement of enforcement warrant

(1)The registrar must give an enforcement warrant to an enforcement officer to be enforced, subject to any instruction under section 69(1) for the warrant.
(2)An enforcement officer must—
(a)have the warrant in the enforcement officer’s possession when enforcing the warrant; and
(b)for a warrant to seize or sell property—show the warrant to any person claiming an interest in the property to be seized.
(3)Actual seizure is not necessary to authorise the sale of real property under an enforcement warrant.
(4)If there is an advertisement of a notice about real property under section 73H, an enforcement officer is taken to have seized the real property for the purpose of this division.

s 69A ins 2009 No. 48s 8

70Power of entry to enforce enforcement warrant

(1)An enforcement officer may, at any reasonable time of the day or night, enter any premises stated in an enforcement warrant for the purposes of executing the warrant.
(2)However, an enforcement officer may enter a part of premises used only for residential purposes only if the occupier consents to the entry or entry is authorised under a search warrant.

71Search warrant

(1)If an enforcement officer reasonably believes there may be in any premises property that may be seized under an enforcement warrant, the enforcement officer may apply to a magistrate or a justice of the peace (magistrates court) who is not an official within the meaning of section 12, for the issue of a search warrant under this section.
(2)The magistrate or justice (issuer) may refuse to consider the application until the enforcement officer gives the issuer all the information the issuer requires about the application in the way the issuer requires.

Example—

The issuer may require additional information about the application to be given by statutory declaration.
(3)The issuer may issue the warrant only if satisfied there are reasonable grounds for believing there is in the premises property an enforcement officer may seize under an enforcement warrant.
(4)The warrant must be in the approved form and state—
(a)that a stated enforcement officer, or all enforcement officers, may enter the place and exercise the powers under section 72; and
(b)if the warrant is to be enforced at night—the hours when the place may be entered; and
(c)the warrant ends 7 days after it is issued.

72Powers under search warrant

(1)An enforcement officer has the following powers under a search warrant—
(a)power to enter and re-enter stated premises and to stay on the premises for the time reasonably necessary to exercise the power mentioned in paragraph (b);
(b)power to search for and seize any property the enforcement officer may seize under an enforcement warrant;
(c)power to use reasonable help and force for paragraphs (a) and (b);
(d)power to do anything else reasonably necessary to be done that is incidental to searching for and seizing any property the enforcement officer may seize under an enforcement warrant.
(2)However, an enforcement officer does not have power under this section to seize property under any enforcement warrant or order issued under another Act while the person is in premises only under a search warrant under this Act.

s 72 amd 2009 No. 48s 9

73Powers supporting seizure

Having seized a thing, an enforcement officer may—
(a)move the thing from the place where it was seized (the place of seizure); or
(b)leave the thing at the place of seizure, but take reasonable action to restrict access to it.

Examples of restricting access to a thing—

1sealing a thing and marking it to show access to it is restricted
2sealing the entrance to a room where the seized thing is situated and marking it to show access to it is restricted

73ANotice to enforcement debtor etc. if seizure

(1)An enforcement officer who seizes property under an enforcement warrant must serve a notice complying with subsection (2) on the enforcement debtor or the person who is in possession of the property immediately before it is seized.
(2)For subsection (1), the notice must—
(a)be in the approved form; and
(b)state the property that is seized for sale under the warrant; and
(c)state that it is an offence—
(i)to conceal, sell, transfer or otherwise deal with the property seized with intent to—
(A)defeat the enforcement of the enforcement warrant; or
(B)adversely affect any seizure or sale of the property under this Act; or
(ii)to interfere with property, seized by an enforcement officer, left at the place of seizure or a seizure tag or sticker placed on the property.

s 73A ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73BEnforcement officer may authorise tow

(1)This section applies if an enforcement officer arranges for a motor vehicle seized under an enforcement warrant to be towed to a holding yard.
(2)An enforcement officer may sign a towing authority for the seized vehicle.
(3)The driver of a tow truck towing the seized motor vehicle under a towing authority must tow the vehicle to—
(a)if the enforcement officer directs the driver to tow the motor vehicle to a particular holding yard—the holding yard; or
(b)if paragraph (a) does not apply—the holding yard to which the driver ordinarily tows motor vehicles.
(4)In this section—
towing authority means—
(a)a towing authority under the Tow Truck Act 1973; or
(b)another document authorising a person to tow a motor vehicle.

s 73B ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73COrder of selling property

(1)An enforcement officer must seize and sell property in the order appearing to the enforcement officer to be best for—
(a)the prompt enforcement of the warrant without undue expense; and
(b)subject to paragraph (a), minimising hardship to the enforcement debtor and other persons.
(2)However, the registrar may, after having regard to the matters mentioned in subsection (1)(a) and (b), direct the enforcement officer to seize and sell property in an order different to the order mentioned in the subsection.
(3)An enforcement officer may seize and sell an item of property even though the enforcement officer considers that the item’s value exceeds the amount recoverable, but the enforcement officer must not also seize and sell additional items.

s 73C ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73DPayment by enforcement debtor before sale

An enforcement officer must not sell property seized under an enforcement warrant if, at or before the sale, the enforcement debtor pays to the enforcement officer—
(a)the amount stated in the warrant; and
(b)the costs of enforcement then known to the enforcement officer.

s 73D ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73EStorage before sale

(1)Until sale, an enforcement officer must put goods seized under an enforcement warrant in an appropriate place, or give them to an appropriate person, approved by the registrar for the purpose.
(2)SPER must pay any storage expenses but may recover them as costs of enforcement.

s 73E ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73FNature of sale

(1)Unless the registrar directs otherwise, an enforcement officer must put up for sale by public auction all property liable to be sold under an enforcement warrant—
(a)as early as possible; and
(b)at a place and in a way appearing to the enforcement officer to be suitable for a beneficial sale of the property.
(2)The public auction may be conducted by the enforcement officer or a person authorised by the registrar.
(3)Property sold by public auction must be sold under the following conditions of sale—
(a)the property must be sold—
(i)for goods, if the person conducting the auction considers the particular lot in which the goods are to be auctioned is worth less than $500, or for other property if the enforcement debtor agrees—at the best price obtainable; or
(ii)otherwise, if the reserve is reached—to the highest bidder;
(b)if the person conducting the auction considers there is a dispute as to who is the highest bidder, the property is to be reauctioned and knocked down to the highest bidder.
(4)However, before a sale by public auction, the enforcement debtor may apply to the registrar for a direction that the property be sold privately.
(5)The application must state the facts relied on by the enforcement debtor.
(6)If the registrar gives a direction under subsection (4)—
(a)the registrar may give the direction to an enforcement officer; and
(b)the enforcement debtor must pay any costs already incurred by an enforcement officer for the auction.
(7)If property put up for sale at public auction is not sold by auction, an enforcement officer may sell the property privately—
(a)for an amount not less than the highest bid made at the auction that the registrar considers is a reasonable amount for the property; or
(b)if no bid was made at the auction—for an amount the registrar considers is a reasonable amount for the property.

Note—

See section 73G (Sale at best price obtainable).
(8)In this section—
reserve, for property to be sold at auction, means the reserve amount set by the registrar, that is an amount the registrar considers is not less than a reasonable amount for the property.

s 73F ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73GSale at best price obtainable

(1)This section applies if the enforcement debtor’s property has not been sold under section 73F.
(2)The registrar may direct an enforcement officer to sell the property at the best price obtainable.

s 73G ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73HAdvertising

(1)Before selling property seized under an enforcement warrant an enforcement officer must arrange advertisement of a notice giving the time and place of sale together with details of the property to be sold.
(2)However, an enforcement officer may sell seized goods without arranging the advertisement if—
(a)the goods are of a perishable nature; or
(b)the enforcement debtor requests it in writing.
(3)Also, if property seized under an enforcement warrant is put up for sale at a public auction to be conducted by a person other than an enforcement officer—
(a)it is sufficient for a notice under subsection (1) to contain only the details reasonable and usual for a public auction of property of the same nature as the seized property; and
(b)subsection (5) does not apply and advertisement of the notice may be done in the way reasonable and usual for a public auction of property of the same nature as the seized property; and
(c)the registrar may require any additional advertising the registrar considers reasonable.
(4)An enforcement officer must send a copy of the notice by prepaid post to the enforcement debtor at the enforcement debtor’s last known address.
(5)In this section—
advertisement, of a notice, means—
(a)in any case—publication of the notice on SPER’s website; and
(b)if there are 2 or more newspapers circulating in the district where the property is located—publication of the notice once in each of 2 of the newspapers not less than 2 weeks, and no more than 4 weeks, before the date of sale; and
(c)if there is only 1 newspaper circulating in the district where the property is located—publication of the notice twice in the newspaper (on different days, if practicable) not less than 2 weeks, and no more than 4 weeks, before the date of sale; and
(d)if there is no newspaper circulating in the district where the property is located and the property to be sold is an interest in land—posting the notice on the land not less than 2 weeks, and no more than 4 weeks, before the date of sale; and
(e)if there is no newspaper circulating in the district where the property is located and the property to be sold is not an interest in land—posting the notice at the place where the sale is to take place not less than 2 weeks, and no more than 4 weeks, before the date of sale.
district means Magistrates Courts district.

s 73H ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73IPostponement of sale

(1)The registrar may, on application by the enforcement debtor or on the advice of an enforcement officer, direct that a sale of property seized under an enforcement warrant be postponed to a stated date.
(2)If the enforcement warrant authorising the seizure would otherwise end before the stated date, the postponement extends the warrant’s validity until the end of the stated date.

s 73I ins 2009 No. 48s 10

73JAccountability for, and distribution of, money received

(1)An enforcement officer must pay to the registrar all proceeds of sale and other money received by the enforcement officer under an enforcement warrant as soon as practicable after receiving the money, whether before or after the seizure of property under the warrant.
(2)However, before making the payment, the enforcement officer may deduct the enforcement officer’s fees and expenses in relation to enforcement or attempted enforcement.
(3)The registrar must apply the money received from the enforcement officer in the following order—
(a)in payment of any other enforcement costs incurred by SPER in seizing and selling, or attempting to seize and sell, the property;
(b)if there is an amount owing to an entity under a security interest registered for the property on the PPS register before the charge on the property is mentioned on the register—in payment of the amount owing under the security interest;
(c)in payment of the amount recoverable under the enforcement warrant other than costs;
(d)if there is an amount owing to an entity under a security interest registered for the property on the PPS register after the charge on the property is mentioned on the register—in payment of the amount owing under the security interest;
(e)in payment of any balance to the enforcement debtor.
(4)To remove any doubt, it is declared for subsection (3)(b) and (d) that, if there is an amount owing to more than 1 entity, the priority between the entities is to be determined under the PPS Act.
(5)In this section—
charge means a charge mentioned in section 63(8).
PPS Act means the Personal Property Securities Act 2009 (Cwlth).
PPS register means the Personal Property Securities Register under the PPS Act.
security interest see the PPS Act, section 12.

s 73J ins 2009 No. 48s 10

amd 2011 No. 27s 338

73KReserve price provisions

(1)To set an amount as a reasonable value of the property to be sold, an enforcement officer may require the enforcement debtor to give the enforcement officer any information about the property that is known to, or can reasonably be obtained by, the enforcement debtor.
(2)An enforcement debtor required under subsection (1) to give an enforcement officer any information about the property that is known to, or can reasonably be obtained by, the enforcement debtor must comply with the requirement, unless the enforcement debtor has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty—10 penalty units.

(3)A failure by the enforcement debtor to comply with the enforcement officer’s requirement does not prevent the registrar setting a reserve under section 73F.
(4)The enforcement officer may communicate the amount set as a reasonable value of property to any person before the sale only if the communication is necessary to conduct the sale or there is another sufficient excuse.

s 73K ins 2009 No. 48s 10

74Return of enforcement warrant

(1)An enforcement officer must give to the registrar a return about the enforcement or otherwise of an enforcement warrant.
(2)The return must be made by giving to the registrar a certificate signed by the enforcement officer stating what was done to enforce the warrant, or what other action, if any, was taken.

Division 3 Fine collection notices

75Issue of fine collection notice

(1)The registrar may issue a notice (fine collection notice) under this division for an unpaid amount.
(2)A fine collection notice may be a notice—
(a)to redirect earnings of the enforcement debtor; or
(b)to redirect all or part of a debt owed to the enforcement debtor; or
(c)for regular redirection from a financial institution account; or
(d)directing a financial institution to make payment of an amount from money held by the institution on behalf of the debtor.
(3)On the issue of a fine collection notice, the amount owing by the enforcement debtor is increased to the total of the amount unpaid before the notice was issued and the civil enforcement fee prescribed under a regulation.
(4)The fine collection notice must be in the approved form.

s 75 amd 2009 No. 48 s 11; 2017 No. 13 s 44(1)–(2)

76Issue of fine collection notice after enforcement warrant

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor agrees under section 69 to satisfy an amount for which an enforcement warrant has been issued by payments under a fine collection notice.
(2)The issue of the fine collection notice suspends the operation of the enforcement warrant for so long as amounts are deducted under the notice.

77Registrar may cancel, suspend or vary fine collection notices

(1)An enforcement debtor may apply to the registrar for the cancellation, suspension or variation of all or part of a fine collection notice, including because of facts that arise or are discovered after the notice was issued.
(2)The application must state the facts relied on by the applicant.
(3)The registrar may cancel, suspend or vary a fine collection notice.
(4)If the registrar cancels, suspends or varies a fine collection notice for redirection of the enforcement debtor’s earnings, the registrar must give notice of the cancellation, suspension or variation to the enforcement debtor’s employer.
(5)If the registrar cancels, suspends or varies a fine collection notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account, the registrar must give notice of the cancellation, suspension or variation to the financial institution named in the notice.
(6)If the registrar cancels, suspends or varies a fine collection notice for regular redirection of a debt owing to the enforcement debtor, the registrar must give notice of the cancellation, suspension or variation to the third person to whom the fine collection notice was given.
(7)The cancellation, suspension or variation of a fine collection notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account does not take effect until the end of 7 days after the day notice of the cancellation, suspension or variation to is given to the financial institution.

78Copy of notices under this division to be given to enforcement debtor

The registrar must give a copy of any fine collection notice, or notice cancelling, varying or suspending a fine collection notice, to the enforcement debtor as soon as practicable after it is issued.

Division 4 Provisions about fine collection notices redirecting earnings

79When registrar may issue fine collection notice for redirection of earnings

(1)The registrar may issue to a person a fine collection notice for the redirection of an enforcement debtor’s earnings only if the registrar is satisfied the person is the debtor’s employer.
(2)If the registrar considers it necessary or desirable to cancel or vary a fine collection notice, the registrar must, as soon as is practicable, give written notice to the employer of the cancellation or variation of the relevant notice.

s 79 amd 2017 No. 13 s 45

80Two or more employers of 1 employee

If an enforcement debtor receives earnings from 2 or more employers, the registrar may—
(a)treat any of the employers as the only employer of the enforcement debtor; or
(b)treat any 2 or more of the employers as joint employers of the enforcement debtor.

81Duty of employer to make deductions

(1)Subject to section 82, an employer who pays earnings to an employee for whom a fine collection notice for redirection of the enforcement debtor’s earnings is in force must, when paying the earnings, deduct an amount from the earnings as required under this division.

Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.

(2)On the conviction of a person for an offence against subsection (1), the court may, in addition to imposing a penalty, order the person to pay to SPER, as a debt, an amount of not more than the total of the amount the person did not deduct under the fine collection notice.

82Working out amount to be deducted

(1)The amount an employer must deduct from an enforcement debtor’s earnings for each week under a fine collection notice is the weekly deduction amount specified in the notice.
(2)However, if the deduction of an amount under subsection (1) would reduce the enforcement debtor’s earnings for the period to less than the protected earnings amount, the employer must deduct only the amount, if any, that would reduce the enforcement debtor’s earnings for the period to an amount equal to the protected earnings amount.

Examples for subsection (2)—

1If the employee earns $250 and the protected earning rate is $275, no deduction may be made.
2If the employee earns $290, the protected earnings rate is $275 and the amount to be deducted is $25, the employer may only deduct the difference between the protected earnings rate and the amount actually earned or $15.

83Provisions for working out earnings for s 82

(1)This section applies for working out the amount of earnings an employer pays to an employee.
(2)Any amount an employer pays to an employee for piecework is taken to have been paid to the employee for the period that started when the employee started the work and ended when the work ended.
(3)Any amount an employer pays to an employee for services under a contract that is wholly or principally for the labour of the employee is taken to have been paid to the employee for the period that started when the employee started to provide the services and ended when the provision of the services ended.
(4)Any amount an employer pays for other work performed or services provided, but not for a particular period, is taken to have been paid for the period of 52 weeks ending the day before the day the amount is paid.
(5)If the employee is entitled to be paid an amount for a period of more than 1 week, the employer is taken to have paid an amount of earnings to the employee for each week or part of a week in the period, worked out by dividing the amount of earnings actually paid by the number of days in the period and multiplying the result—
(a)for each week—by 7; and
(b)for a part of a week—by the number of days in the part of the week.
(6)If an employer pays earnings for a week or part of a week in 2 or more separate amounts, the amounts must be aggregated, and the employer may make a deduction from 1 amount or partly from 2 or more amounts.
(7)For this section, the amount of any earnings is taken to be the amount of the earnings after deducting any amount the employer is required to deduct from the earnings under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth), part 6, division 2.

84Additional duties of employers

(1)An employer who deducts an amount from an employee’s earnings under a fine collection notice must, within 7 days after the end of the month in which the amount is deducted or the longer period, of not more than 21 days, the registrar allows—
(a)pay to the registrar the amounts deducted; and
(b)give to the registrar a return in the approved form.

Maximum penalty—50 penalty units or 6 months imprisonment.

(2)An employer who does not deduct an amount from an employee’s earnings under a fine collection notice relating to an employee in a particular month must, within 7 days after the end of the month, or the longer period, of not more than 21 days, the registrar allows, give to the registrar a return in the approved form.

Maximum penalty—15 penalty units.

(3)An employer who pays earnings to an employee while a fine collection notice relating to the employee is in force must give to the employee a written notice stating—
(a)the amount deducted under the notice; or
(b)if no deduction is made, that no deduction has been made under the notice.

Maximum penalty—15 penalty units.

(4)If an employee to whom a fine collection notice relates stops being an employee while the notice is in force, the employer must give to the registrar notice of that fact in the approved form within 7 days after the end of the month in which the employment ended or the longer period the registrar allows.

Maximum penalty for subsection (4)—10 penalty units.

85Discharge of enforcement debtor’s liability to registrar and employer’s liability to enforcement debtor

If an employer deducts an amount under this division from the earnings of an enforcement debtor—
(a)the enforcement debtor is, to the extent of the amount deducted, discharged from the enforcement debtor’s liability to make payments to the registrar; and
(b)the employer is discharged from liability to pay the amount to any person other than the registrar.

86Payment by trustees of deducted amounts

(1)This section applies if—
(a)an amount is payable to the registrar by an employer; and
(b)the property of the employer has become vested in, or the control of the property of the employer has passed to, a trustee.
(2)The trustee is liable to pay the amount to the registrar.

87Penalty for late payment to registrar of deducted amounts

(1)If an employer other than a government body fails to pay an amount deducted under a fine collection notice (deducted amount) to the registrar in accordance with section 81, the employer must pay to SPER, as a penalty (late payment penalty)—
(a)10% of the deducted amount; and
(b)interest at the rate of 10% each year on the daily balance of the unpaid deducted amount.
(2)Interest is payable on the deducted amount from the day after the amount should have been paid until the day the amount is actually paid.

88Penalty for failure to make deductions from earnings

(1)If an employer other than a government body fails to deduct an amount that could have been deducted from an employee’s earnings under a fine collection notice (undeducted amount), the employer must pay to SPER, as a penalty (late payment penalty), interest at the rate of 10% each year on the undeducted amount.
(2)Interest is payable on the undeducted amount from the day the undeducted amount should have been deducted until the day the amount is actually paid.

89When late payment penalty may be waived

(1)The registrar may waive all or part of a late payment penalty if the registrar is satisfied of any of the following—
(a)if the circumstances that contributed to the delay were not caused directly or indirectly by an act or omission of the employer—the employer has taken reasonable steps to avoid or minimise the effects of the circumstances;
(b)if the circumstances that contributed to the delay were directly or indirectly caused by an act or omission of the employer—
(i)the employer has taken reasonable steps to avoid or minimise the effects of the circumstances; and
(ii)having regard to the nature of the circumstances, it would be fair and reasonable to waive the penalty or part of the penalty;
(c)there are special circumstances because of which it would be fair and reasonable to waive all or part of the penalty.
(2)If the registrar decides to waive part only of a late payment penalty, or not to waive any part of a late payment penalty, the registrar must give written notice of the decision to the employer concerned and the reasons for the decision.

90Application of interest payable on judgment debt

(1)This section applies if a court gives judgment for the State for the payment of an amount that is or is part of a relevant amount (judgment debt).
(2)The relevant amount, or part of the relevant amount, must not be taken, for this division, to have stopped being payable only because of the judgment.
(3)However, interest payable on the judgment debt must be applied to reduce the amount of interest that would otherwise be payable under this Act.
(4)In this section—
relevant amount means—
(a)a deducted amount; or
(b)the amount of a late payment penalty; or
(c)an undeducted amount.

91Penalty is alternative to prosecution for certain offences against part

(1)If a prosecution is started against an employer for an offence against section 81, any amount payable by the employer as a late payment penalty in the circumstances of the contravention is not payable.
(2)If—
(a)a person who must pay a late payment penalty to the registrar under this division pays an amount to the registrar in full or partial discharge of the person’s liability for the penalty; and
(b)a prosecution is started against the person for an offence against section 81 in the circumstances in which the late payment penalty became payable;

the registrar must either refund the amount to the person, or apply the amount in full or partial discharge of another debt the person owes to SPER under this Act.

(3)However, if the prosecution is withdrawn, the person again becomes liable to pay the late payment penalty.
(4)For subsection (3), the period of the prosecution is not counted for the purpose of calculating a late payment penalty under section 87 or 88.

92Employers not to prejudice employees because of action under this part

(1)An employer must not, because another person is an enforcement debtor—
(a)refuse to employ or pay earnings to the person; or
(b)dismiss, or threaten to dismiss, the person from employment; or
(c)terminate or threaten to terminate the payment of earnings to the person; or
(d)prejudice or threaten to prejudice the person in the person’s employment or otherwise in the receipt of earnings; or
(e)intimidate, coerce, impose a money or other penalty on, or take any other disciplinary action against, the person.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units or 2 years imprisonment.

(2)On the conviction of an employer for an offence against subsection (1), the court may, whether or not it imposes any penalty for the offence, make either or both of the following orders—
(a)order the offender to pay compensation to the enforcement debtor for loss or damage suffered because of the offence;
(b)order the taking of action to remedy or reduce the loss or damage suffered by the enforcement debtor because of the offence.
(3)The enforcement debtor may recover compensation ordered to be paid under subsection (2)(a) as a debt.
(4)Subsection (2) does not limit the powers of a court under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, part 3, division 4.

93Employers not to disclose information etc.

(1)This section applies to a person who is or has been—
(a)an employer of an enforcement debtor; or
(b)a person employed by, or performing services for, an employer of an enforcement debtor.
(2)The person must not directly or indirectly disclose or communicate to another person any information about the financial affairs of the enforcement debtor that is disclosed or obtained under this division and acquired by the person because of, or in performing, the employer’s duties under this division, other than—
(a)for this Act; or
(b)for performing the employer’s duties under this Act; or
(c)for carrying on the employer’s business affairs.

Maximum penalty for subsection (2)—25 penalty units or 6 months imprisonment.

94Records to be kept by employers

(1)An employer must keep written records, in English, of—
(a)all amounts deducted or required to be deducted from earnings under a fine collection notice; and
(b)other acts done, or required to be done, by the employer under this division.

Maximum penalty—25 penalty units or 6 months imprisonment.

(2)The employer must—
(a)keep the records in a way that correctly records and explains the matters to which they relate; and
(b)keep a particular record for 5 years after it is made.

Maximum penalty—25 penalty units or 6 months imprisonment.

(3)This section does not require a person to keep records if the registrar has notified the person, in writing, that keeping the records is not required.
(4)In a proceeding for an offence against subsection (2)(a), it is a defence for the employer to prove that the employer did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to have known, that the record to which the proceeding relates did not correctly record and explain the matter to which the record relates.

95Access to premises etc.

(1)For enforcing this part against an employer, the registrar may give an enforcement officer written authority to exercise powers under this section.
(2)The enforcement officer may not exercise powers under this section unless the enforcement officer first produces the written authority for inspection by the employer and an identity card.
(3)The powers the enforcement officer has under this section are as follows—
(a)power, at all reasonable times, to enter premises of an employer, other than premises used exclusively as a residence, and remain on the premises for the time reasonably necessary to exercise powers under this section;
(b)power to inspect or examine any business records relevant to the employer’s obligations under this Act on the employer’s premises;
(c)power to make copies of, or take extracts from, any document the enforcement officer considers is reasonably necessary for ensuring compliance with this Act;
(d)power to require the occupier of the premises to give the enforcement officer reasonable help to exercise a power mentioned in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).
(4)A person required under subsection (3)(d) to give an officer reasonable help must comply with the request, unless the person has a reasonable excuse for not doing so.

Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.

(5)To the extent reasonable help required by an enforcement officer would involve the production of a document or the giving of information, it is a reasonable excuse for the purposes of subsection (4) that the production of the document or the giving of the information would tend to incriminate the person.

96Application of amounts paid or credited if 2 or more debts due

(1)This section applies if—
(a)2 or more debts are payable to SPER by an employer under this part; and
(b)an employer pays an amount, or the registrar credits an amount towards a debt.
(2)Division 9 applies to the amount despite any direction of the employer to the contrary.

Division 5 Provisions about fine collection notice for redirection of a debt

97When debt redirected under fine collection notice

(1)A fine collection notice authorising redirection of a debt belonging to an enforcement debtor from a third person must be served on the third person to have effect.
(2)On service of the notice on the third person, the debt is redirected in the hands of the third person to SPER to the extent of the amount stated in the notice.
(3)However, this section does not limit the right of—
(a)the third person to dispute liability to pay all or part of the debt to the enforcement debtor; or
(b)another interested person including, for example, a person other than an enforcement debtor, to claim an entitlement to all or a part of the debt or to a charge or lien on it.
(4)This section does not apply to a regular redirection of a regular debt belonging to an enforcement debtor from a financial institution.

98Payment to enforcement debtor despite redirection

(1)This section applies if, after redirection of a debt in the hands of a third person—
(a)the third person acts with reasonable diligence to give effect to the redirection; and
(b)despite the third person acting with reasonable diligence, the third person deals with the redirected debt in a way that satisfies, as between the third person and the enforcement debtor, all or part of the redirected debt, including, for example, by payment to the enforcement debtor.
(2)If, after acting under subsection (1), the amount still available for redirection is less than the amount owing to SPER, the registrar may vary or cancel the fine collection notice.

99Discharge of the third person

(1)A payment to SPER made by a third person in compliance with a fine collection notice is a valid discharge of the person’s liability to the enforcement debtor to the extent of the amount paid.
(2)Subsection (1) applies even if, after payment, the fine collection notice is cancelled.

Division 6 Provisions about regular redirection from a financial institution account

100Application of div 6

This division applies if—
(a)an enforcement debtor has an account with a financial institution; and
(b)another person (depositor) regularly deposits earnings into the account (a regular deposit).

101Service of fine collection notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account

(1)This section applies if the registrar issues a fine collection notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account under section 75.
(2)The notice must be served on the enforcement debtor and on the financial institution.
(3)The notice does not have effect until the end of 7 days after the day on which the notice is served on the financial institution.
(4)The notice continues in force until the total amount stated in the notice is paid or the notice is cancelled or varied or expires according to its terms.

102Financial institution to make payments

(1)For each regular deposit into the enforcement debtor’s account while the fine collection notice for regular redirection is in force, the financial institution—
(a)within 2 days after the deposit, must deduct from the account the amount stated in the notice and pay it to SPER as stated in the notice; and
(b)may only charge the enforcement debtor an amount (an administration charge), as an administrative cost of complying with the notice, of not more than the amount prescribed by regulation; and
(c)must give the enforcement debtor notice of the deduction and any administration charge.
(2)However, the financial institution must not deduct an amount from the account if—
(a)the deduction would cause the account to be overdrawn; or
(b)the deduction would cause the total balance of all the accounts the enforcement debtor holds with the financial institution to be less than the amount prescribed by regulation (the protected amount).
(3)Also, in applying subsection (1)(a) to the last deduction, the financial institution must deduct the amount, not more than the amount stated in the notice for deduction for each regular deposit, that results in the total amount deducted by the financial institution being the total amount to be deducted under the notice.
(4)If the financial institution is prevented by subsection (2) from deducting from the account the full amount of the recoverable amount, it must deduct as much of the amount, if any, that it may deduct without contravening subsection (2).

Example—

If the recoverable amount is $950, the protected amount is $400 and the enforcement debtor’s account has a balance of $725, the financial institution must deduct $325 from the account.
(5)A deduction paid or kept by a financial institution under this section is a valid discharge of the financial institution’s liability to the enforcement debtor to the extent of the deduction.

s 102 sub 2017 No. 13 s 46

103Offence of intentionally defeating notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account

(1)An enforcement debtor who is served with a copy of a fine collection notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account must ensure that enough funds remain in the enforcement debtor’s account with the financial institution after each regular deposit for the deduction from the account of the amount stated in the notice.
(2)The enforcement debtor must notify SPER if—
(a)the depositor discontinues regular payments of earnings to the enforcement debtor; or
(b)the enforcement debtor closes the account or arranges for the depositor to pay the enforcement debtor in another way.
(3)An enforcement debtor who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) with intent to defeat a notice for regular redirection from a financial institution account commits an offence.

Maximum penalty for subsection (3)—20 penalty units.

Division 6A Provisions about direction to pay amount from financial institution account

div hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 47

103AApplication of division

This division applies if the registrar issues a fine collection notice for the payment of an amount from a financial institution account under section 75(1)(d).

s 103A ins 2017 No. 13 s 47

103BCopy of fine collection notice to enforcement debtor

The registrar must serve a copy of the fine collection notice on the enforcement debtor.

s 103B ins 2017 No. 13 s 47

103CFinancial institution to make deduction

(1)As soon as practicable after receiving the fine collection notice, the financial institution must deduct the amount stated in the notice (the recoverable amount) from the accounts held by the enforcement debtor with the institution.
(2)Unless required under the fine collection notice to deduct the recoverable amount from a particular account held by the enforcement debtor with the financial institution—
(a)the institution may decide the account from which to deduct the recoverable amount; and
(b)the institution may deduct the recoverable amount by deducting lesser amounts from 2 or more of the accounts held by the enforcement debtor.

Example—

If the recoverable amount is $1,200, the financial institution may deduct $1,000 from one account and $200 from another account.
(3)However, the financial institution must not deduct an amount from an account if—
(a)the deduction would cause the account to be overdrawn; or
(b)the deduction would cause the total balance of all the accounts the enforcement debtor holds with the financial institution to be less than the amount prescribed by regulation (the protected amount).
(4)If the financial institution is prevented by subsection (3) from deducting from the accounts the full amount of the recoverable amount, it must deduct as much of the amount, if any, that it may deduct without contravening subsection (3).

Example—

If the recoverable amount is $950, the protected amount is $400 and the enforcement debtor’s account has a balance of $725, the financial institution must deduct $325 from the account.
(5)If the financial institution makes a deduction under this section, the institution may only charge the enforcement debtor an amount, as an administrative cost of complying with the fine collection notice, of not more than the amount prescribed by regulation.

s 103C ins 2017 No. 13 s 47

103DFinancial institution to make payment

As soon as practicable after making a deduction under section 103C, the financial institution must pay the amount of the deduction to SPER and, if the deduction is less than the recoverable amount, inform SPER of the reasons why the amount is less.

s 103D ins 2017 No. 13 s 47

Division 7 Suspension of driver licence

104Criteria for suspending driver licence

(1)This division applies whether or not the enforcement debtor has a driver licence.
(2)The registrar may suspend an enforcement debtor’s driver licence under this division if satisfied the debtor is not taking steps to pay or otherwise discharge the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt.

s 104 amd 2005 No. 70s 148; 2007 No. 3s 25; 2009 No. 48s 12; 2017 No. 13 s 48

105Suspension of driver licence

(1)If the registrar decides to suspend an enforcement debtor’s driver licence the registrar must serve on the enforcement debtor a notice of intention to suspend the licence.
(2)If the enforcement debtor does not pay the unpaid amount stated in the notice within 14 days, the enforcement debtor’s driver licence is suspended.
(3)The driver licence is suspended until the enforcement debtor pays the unpaid amount or the amount is otherwise discharged under this Act.

106General effect of suspension of driver licence

(1)Despite any other Act, the suspension of a driver licence under section 105 operates to suspend the driver licence of an enforcement debtor who holds a driver licence issued outside Queensland while the person is in Queensland.
(2)A renewal or replacement of a driver licence suspended under section 105 does not affect the suspension.
(3)Also, the suspension of a driver licence under section 105 does not affect the powers a court or another person may exercise under another Act to suspend or cancel the licence.
(4)If a person does not hold a driver licence, the person is also disqualified from holding or obtaining a driver licence until the person pays the unpaid amount or the amount is otherwise discharged under this Act.

s 106 amd 2010 No. 26s 128

107Review of suspension of driver licence

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor’s driver licence is suspended for 3 months or more.
(2)As soon as practicable after the end of each 3 months of the suspension, the registrar must review the suspension.
(3)If the registrar is satisfied the enforcement debtor is not taking steps to satisfy the unpaid amount stated in the notice of intention to suspend the driver licence, the registrar may issue an arrest and imprisonment warrant for the enforcement debtor for the amount, without notice to the enforcement debtor.

108Effect of suspension of driver licence on vehicle insurance

(1)The suspension of a person’s driver licence under this Act does not terminate a vehicle insurance policy.
(2)Also, a claim under a vehicle insurance policy can not be refused only because a person’s driver licence is suspended under this Act.
(3)This section has effect despite anything to the contrary in a vehicle insurance policy or any other agreement.
(4)In this section—
vehicle insurance policy means a policy of insurance for damage or loss caused by or arising out of the use or operation of a vehicle, but does not include a CTP insurance policy within the meaning of the Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994.

Division 7A Enforcement by vehicle immobilisation

div hdg ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

Subdivision 1 Criteria for vehicle immobilisation

sdiv hdg ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108ACriteria for vehicle immobilisation

A vehicle may be immobilised under this division if—
(a)the vehicle is of a type that under section 108B may be immobilised under this division; and
(b)an enforcement debtor is the sole registered operator of the vehicle; and
(c)the amount owing by the enforcement debtor is at least the amount prescribed under a regulation; and
(d)the registrar is satisfied the enforcement debtor is not taking steps to pay or otherwise discharge the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt; and
(e)the registrar is satisfied either—
(i)it is not possible or appropriate for another form of enforcement action under this Act to be applied to the enforcement debtor; or
(ii)another form of enforcement action has been attempted unsuccessfully under this Act in relation to the enforcement debtor.

s 108A ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 52

108BTypes of vehicles that may be immobilised

(1)The following vehicles may be immobilised under this division—
(a)a motor vehicle that has wheels;
(b)a trailer, including a caravan, built to be attached to a motor vehicle that has wheels.
(2)However, the following vehicles may not be immobilised under this division—
(a)a motorised wheelchair;
(b)a motorised wheeled recreational device;
(c)any of the following used wholly or primarily by a person with a disability or by the person’s carer—
(i)a scooter;
(ii)a quad bike;
(iii)a motor vehicle that has been adapted to accommodate the disability.

s 108B ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

Subdivision 2 Notice of intention to issue immobilisation warrant

sdiv hdg ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108CRegistrar to serve notice of intention to issue immobilisation warrant

If the registrar wants to immobilise 1 or more vehicles under this division, the registrar must serve the enforcement debtor with a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant in the approved form.

s 108C ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 53

Subdivision 3 Immobilisation warrant and related matters

sdiv hdg ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108DIssue and service of immobilisation warrant

(1)The registrar may issue a warrant (an immobilisation warrant), in the approved form, to immobilise 1 or more vehicles of an enforcement debtor if, within 14 days after the registrar serves on the debtor a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant—
(a)the debtor does not pay SPER the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt; and
(b)the debtor is not otherwise discharging the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt.
(2)In deciding whether to issue an immobilisation warrant for a vehicle, the registrar may have regard to whether immobilising the vehicle would cause severe or unusual hardship to the enforcement debtor, the enforcement debtor’s family or another person who uses the vehicle but has no capacity to ensure the enforcement debtor pays the amount owing.
(3)A copy of the immobilisation warrant must be served on the enforcement debtor as soon as practicable after it is issued.

s 108D ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 54

108ERegistrar may cancel, suspend or vary immobilisation warrant

(1)A person claiming an interest in a vehicle that is or is about to be immobilised under an immobilisation warrant may apply to the registrar for the cancellation, suspension or variation of all or part of the warrant, including because of facts that arise or are discovered after the warrant was issued.
(2)The application must be written and state the facts relied on by the applicant.
(3)The registrar may, by order, cancel, suspend or vary an immobilisation warrant.

s 108E ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108FEffect of immobilisation warrant

(1)An immobilisation warrant for a vehicle authorises an enforcement officer to immobilise the vehicle stated in the warrant, without further notice to the enforcement debtor and without the enforcement debtor’s consent, by attaching an immobilising device to the vehicle.
(2)Under an immobilisation warrant, an enforcement officer has the additional powers stated in section 108I.
(3)On the issue of an immobilisation warrant, the amount owing by the enforcement debtor is increased to the total of the amount unpaid before the warrant was issued and the civil enforcement fee.
(4)An immobilisation warrant ends 12 months after the date of issue of the warrant or the earlier date, decided by the registrar, stated in the warrant.

s 108F ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 55(2)

108GWho may enforce an immobilisation warrant

An immobilisation warrant may be enforced by an enforcement officer.

s 108G ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108HWhere and when an immobilisation warrant may or may not be enforced

(1)Under an immobilisation warrant for a vehicle, an immobilising device may be attached to the vehicle stated in the warrant if it is parked or stopped—
(a)in a public place; or
(b)on property occupied by the enforcement debtor; or
(c)if the enforcement debtor is not an individual, at the enforcement debtor’s place of business or registered office; or
(d)at any other premises, but only with the consent of the occupier of the premises.
(2)The vehicle may be immobilised even if it is unattended.
(3)An enforcement officer may enforce an immobilisation warrant at any reasonable time of the day or night.
(4)An enforcement officer must not enforce an immobilisation warrant—
(a)at a place where the vehicle, if immobilised, could impede the use of the place or the road network or be a risk to safety; or
(b)at a place where the enforcement officer reasonably believes the safety of the driver and any other occupants of the vehicle may be at risk, for example, at an isolated location; or
(c)if, before the immobilising device is attached to the enforcement debtor’s vehicle—
(i)the debtor pays SPER the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt; or
(ii)the debtor begins to otherwise discharge the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt.
(5)In this section—
public place means an area that is open to or used by the public and is developed for, or has as one of its uses, the driving or riding of motor vehicles, whether on payment of a fee or otherwise.

s 108H ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 56

108IAdditional powers under an immobilisation warrant

(1)For the purpose of enforcing an immobilisation warrant for a vehicle, an enforcement officer may also—
(a)enter and re-enter a public place; and
(b)enter and re-enter premises occupied by the enforcement debtor, without the enforcement debtor’s consent; and
(c)enter and re-enter premises, other than premises mentioned in paragraph (b), with the consent of the occupier of the premises; and
(d)do anything else reasonably necessary to immobilise the vehicle.
(2)However, an enforcement officer may, under subsection (1)(b), enter a part of any premises used only for residential purposes only if the occupier consents to the entry or entry is authorised under an immobilisation search warrant.
(3)In this section—
public place means a place that is open to or used by the public, whether or not on payment of a fee.

s 108I ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108JEntry to ask occupier for consent to enter

For the purpose of asking an occupier of premises for consent to enter, an enforcement officer may, without the occupier’s consent or a warrant—
(a)enter land around the premises to an extent that is reasonable to contact the occupier; or
(b)enter part of the premises the enforcement officer reasonably considers members of the public ordinarily are allowed to enter when they wish to contact the occupier.

s 108J ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108KEntry with consent

(1)This section applies if an enforcement officer intends to ask an occupier of premises to consent to the enforcement officer or another enforcement officer entering the premises under section 108I.
(2)Before asking for the consent, the enforcement officer must show the occupier the immobilisation warrant and tell the occupier—
(a)the purpose of the entry; and
(b)that the occupier is not required to consent.
(3)If the consent is given, the enforcement officer may ask the occupier to sign an acknowledgement of the consent.
(4)The acknowledgement must state—
(a)the occupier has been told—
(i)the purpose of the entry; and
(ii)that the occupier is not required to consent; and
(b)the purpose of the entry; and
(c)the occupier gives the enforcement officer consent to enter and re-enter the premises and enforce the warrant; and
(d)the time and date the consent was given.
(5)If the occupier signs the acknowledgement, the enforcement officer must immediately give a copy to the occupier.
(6)If—
(a)an issue arises in a proceeding about whether the occupier consented to the entry or re-entry; and
(b)an acknowledgement complying with subsection (4) for the entry or re-entry is not produced in evidence;

the onus of proof is on the person relying on the lawfulness of the entry or re-entry to prove the occupier consented.

s 108K ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108LImmobilisation search warrant

(1)This section applies if an enforcement officer reasonably believes there may be a vehicle, mentioned in an immobilisation warrant, at a premises.
(2)The enforcement officer may apply to a magistrate or a justice of the peace (magistrates court), who is not an official within the meaning of section 12, for the issue of a search warrant (immobilisation search warrant) under this section.
(3)The magistrate or justice (issuer) may refuse to consider the application until the enforcement officer gives the issuer all the information the issuer requires about the application in the way the issuer requires.

Example—

The issuer may require additional information about the application to be given by statutory declaration.
(4)The issuer may issue the immobilisation search warrant only if satisfied there are reasonable grounds for believing the vehicle may be at the premises.
(5)The immobilisation search warrant must be in the approved form and state—
(a)that a stated enforcement officer, or all enforcement officers, may enter the stated premises and exercise the powers mentioned in section 108M; and
(b)if the warrant is to be enforced at night—the hours when the stated premises may be entered; and
(c)the time, no later than 7 days after the warrant is issued, when the warrant ends.

s 108L ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 57

108MPowers under immobilisation search warrant

An enforcement officer has the following powers under an immobilisation search warrant—
(a)power to enter and re-enter stated premises and to stay on the premises for the time reasonably necessary to search for the vehicle;
(b)power to search for the vehicle;
(c)power to use reasonable help for paragraphs (a) and (b).

s 108M ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108NImmobilisation notice

(1)As soon as practicable after immobilising a vehicle under an immobilisation warrant, an enforcement officer must attach a notice (immobilisation notice) to a prominent place on the vehicle, for example, the windscreen of a motor vehicle.
(2)The immobilisation notice must be in the approved form.

s 108N ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 58

108OImmobilisation period and access to vehicle

(1)An immobilising device and immobilisation notice may be attached to a vehicle stated in an immobilisation warrant for no longer than 14 days (the immobilisation period).
(2)The enforcement debtor is not prevented from accessing the vehicle, for example, to retrieve personal property, during the immobilisation period.

s 108O ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 59

108PWhen immobilising device may be removed before end of immobilisation period

(1)The registrar must direct an enforcement officer to remove the immobilising device and immobilisation notice as soon as practicable if, before the end of the immobilisation period, the registrar is satisfied that—
(a)the enforcement debtor has paid SPER the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt or the debtor is otherwise discharging the amount; or
(b)the immobilised vehicle is impeding the use of a place or the road network or is a risk to safety.
(2)The registrar may also direct an enforcement officer to remove the immobilising device and immobilisation notice as soon as practicable if, before the end of the immobilisation period, the registrar is satisfied that if the immobilising device is not removed before the end of the immobilisation period, severe or unusual hardship would be caused to—
(a)the enforcement debtor or the enforcement debtor’s family; or
(b)another person who uses the vehicle but has no capacity to ensure the enforcement debtor pays the amount owing.

s 108P ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 60

108QRemoval of immobilising device immediately after immobilisation period ends

An enforcement officer must remove the immobilising device and immobilisation notice from the vehicle immediately after the immobilisation period for the vehicle ends.

s 108Q ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108RDirection by registrar to seize vehicle under enforcement warrant

The registrar may direct an enforcement officer to seize a vehicle under an enforcement warrant if—
(a)the immobilisation period has ended or the immobilising device and immobilisation notice have been removed from the vehicle before the end of the immobilisation period; and
(b)the enforcement debtor has not paid SPER the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt; and
(c)the enforcement debtor is not otherwise discharging the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt.

s 108R ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

amd 2017 No. 13 s 61

108SDirection by registrar to re-enforce current immobilisation warrant

(1)This section applies if—
(a)the enforcement of an immobilisation warrant was stopped because the affected enforcement debtor was discharging the enforceable amount of the debtor’s SPER debt under a payment plan or work and development order; and
(b)the payment plan is cancelled or the work and development order is withdrawn or revoked.
(2)The registrar may direct an enforcement officer to re-enforce the immobilisation warrant.

s 108S ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

sub 2017 No. 13 s 62

108TReturn of immobilisation warrant

(1)An enforcement officer must, within a reasonable time, give to the registrar a return about the enforcement or otherwise of an immobilisation warrant.
(2)The return must be made by giving to the registrar a certificate signed by the enforcement officer stating what was done to enforce the warrant, or what other action, if any, was taken.

s 108T ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108UNotice of damage—immobilisation warrant

(1)This section applies if an enforcement officer damages property when exercising or purporting to exercise a power under an immobilisation warrant.
(2)The officer must immediately give written notice of particulars of the damage to the person who appears to the officer to be the owner of the property.
(3)If the officer believes the damage was caused by a latent defect in the property or circumstances beyond the officer’s control, the enforcement officer may state the belief in the notice.
(4)If, for any reason, it is impracticable to comply with subsection (2), the officer must leave the notice in a conspicuous position and in a reasonably secure way where the damage happened.
(5)This section does not apply to damage the officer reasonably believes is trivial.
(6)In this section—
owner, of property, includes the person in possession or control of it.

s 108U ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108VCompensation—immobilisation warrant

(1)A person may claim from the State the cost of repairing or replacing property damaged by an enforcement officer when exercising or purporting to exercise a power under an immobilisation warrant.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1), compensation may be claimed for a loss or expense incurred in complying with a requirement made of the person under section 114.
(3)Compensation may be claimed and ordered to be paid in a proceeding—
(a)brought in a court with jurisdiction for the recovery of the amount of compensation claimed; or
(b)for an offence against this Act brought against the person claiming compensation.
(4)A court may order compensation to be paid only if it is satisfied it is just to make the order in the circumstances of the particular case.

s 108V ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108WEffect of immobilisation on vehicle insurance

(1)A claim under a vehicle insurance policy for an event that occurred during the immobilisation period can not be refused merely because the vehicle was immobilised under this division.
(2)Subsection (1) applies despite anything to the contrary in a vehicle insurance policy or other agreement.

s 108W ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

Subdivision 4 Offences

sdiv 4 (ss 108X–108Z) ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108XOffences of concealing, selling, transferring or otherwise dealing with vehicle with particular intent

(1)An enforcement debtor who is the registered operator of a vehicle mentioned in a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant must not conceal, sell, transfer or otherwise deal with the vehicle with intent to avoid the issue of an immobilisation warrant for the vehicle.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

(2)An enforcement debtor who is the registered operator of a vehicle mentioned in an immobilisation warrant must not conceal, sell, transfer or otherwise deal with the vehicle with intent to avoid the enforcement of the warrant.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

sdiv 4 (ss 108X–108Z) ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108YOffence of interfering with or removing immobilised vehicle

A person must not interfere with, or remove, an immobilised vehicle during the immobilisation period with intent to adversely affect any seizure or sale of the vehicle under this Act.

Maximum penalty—200 penalty units or 3 years imprisonment.

sdiv 4 (ss 108X–108Z) ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

108ZOffence of tampering with or removing immobilising device or immobilising notice

A person must not, without reasonable excuse, tamper with, or remove, or attempt to remove, an immobilising device or an immobilisation notice attached to a vehicle under this Act.

Maximum penalty—50 penalty units.

sdiv 4 (ss 108X–108Z) ins 2009 No. 48 s 13

Division 8 Other enforcement options

109[Repealed]

s 109 om 2017 No. 13 s 63

110Registration of interests

(1)The registrar may register with the registrar of titles or any other person required or permitted to keep a register about dealing with property, an interest in land or an interest in any other property if—
(a)the total amount owing by the enforcement debtor is—
(i)for an interest in a motor vehicle—more than $500; or
(ii)otherwise—more than $1,000; and
(b)the registrar issues an enforcement warrant for the amount.
(2)The registration of an interest in a motor vehicle under subsection (1) does not prevent the registrar issuing any of the following in relation to the vehicle—
(a)a notice of intention to immobilise a vehicle;
(b)an immobilisation warrant;
(c)an enforcement warrant to seize and sell property.
(3)On registration of an interest in land or other property, the amount accrues interest at the annual rate prescribed under the Civil Proceedings Act 2011, section 59(3).
(4)Also, the amount and any accruing interest becomes a charge on the debtor’s interest in the land or other property ranking in priority according to the time of registration of the interest.
(5)Subsection (4) applies subject to any other Act.

s 110 amd 2009 No. 48s 14; 2010 No. 42s 192; 2011 No. 45s 217sch 1A

Division 9 Order of satisfaction of fines etc.

111Order of satisfaction of fines for infringement notice offences

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor pays all or part of the amount payable under an enforcement order, enforcement warrant, immobilisation warrant, fine collection notice or an arrest and imprisonment warrant for an infringement notice offence.
(2)The amount must be applied as follows—
(a)first, to any amount required to be paid as fees;
(b)then to the amount of the fine.
(3)However, if the enforcement debtor also has an amount unpaid under an enforcement order to which section 112 applies, the amount paid must be applied in accordance with section 112 until all relevant amounts under that section are paid before it is applied under subsection (2).

s 111 amd 2009 No. 48s 15

112Order of satisfaction of other amounts

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor pays all or part of an unpaid amount payable under an enforcement order, enforcement warrant, immobilisation warrant, fine collection notice or an arrest and imprisonment warrant other than for an infringement notice offence.
(2)Subject to section 113, the amount must be applied towards satisfying the unpaid amount in the following order—
(a)compensation;
(b)restitution;
(c)damages;
(d)a fixed portion of a penalty;
(e)an offender levy;
(f)court fees;
(g)witnesses’ expenses payable under the decision;
(h)professional costs;
(i)any other fees or costs;
(j)any other amount ordered to be paid, including a fine;
(k)any amount liable to be paid to the State under the Victims of Crime Assistance Act 2009, section 117(4);
(l)any amount liable to be paid to the State under the Victims of Crime Assistance Act 2009, section 191(4).
(3)For subsection (2)(j), subject to any direction given in relation to the amount, the amounts must be applied in the way fines, penalties or forfeitures are applied.
(4)This section applies subject to any direction in the Act under which the relevant amount is ordered to be paid.

s 112 amd 2009 No. 35s 217; 2009 No. 48s 16; 2010 No. 42s 193; 2012 No. 17s 45

113Order of satisfaction if more than 1 enforcement order

(1)This section applies if an enforcement debtor pays all or part of an unpaid amount stated in an enforcement order, enforcement warrant, immobilisation warrant, fine collection notice or an arrest and imprisonment warrant other than for an infringement notice offence and there are 2 or more orders, warrants or notices to which the amount could be applied.
(2)The amount must first be applied to satisfy all outstanding amounts in the first relevant category in section 112(2) in the order in which they became payable.
(3)After all amounts in the first relevant category are satisfied, any remaining amount must be applied to satisfy unpaid amounts in the next relevant category and then to each other relevant category in the same way until each relevant category is satisfied.

Examples for subsection (3)—

1If the enforcement debtor has been ordered to pay the following amounts under a court order—

(a)$200 for a fine, $80 costs of court, $50 witness expenses, $250 professional fees and $300 restitution, under an order made on 2 January 1999;
(b)$500 for a fine, $80 costs of court, $50 witness expenses, $600 professional fees and $350 restitution, under an order made on 4 January 1999;

any part payments must first satisfy the restitution amounts ordered on 2 January 1999 and 4 January 1999 in that order before any other part payments may be applied to satisfy amounts outstanding in the next relevant category.

2If the enforcement debtor must pay the following outstanding amounts—

(a)$172 ($130 for a speeding fine and $42 for the SPER registration fee) under an enforcement order made on 1 January 1999;
(b)$200 for a fine, $80 costs of court, $50 witness expenses, $250 professional fees and $300 restitution, under a court order made on 2 January 1999;
(c)$222 ($180 for a speeding fine and $42 for the SPER registration fee) under an enforcement order made on 3 January 1999;
(d)$500 for a fine, $80 costs of court, $50 witness expenses, $600 professional fees and $350 restitution, under a court order made on 4 January 1999;

any part payments must first be applied to discharge the amounts ordered as restitution on 2 January 1999 and 4 January 1999, in order, before any other part payment may be applied to satisfy amounts outstanding in the next relevant category for the orders made on 2 and 4 January 1999. Once those orders are satisfied, the part payments must then be applied to satisfy all outstanding amounts for the speeding fines.

s 113 amd 2009 No. 48s 17

Division 10 General provisions

114Power of person serving fine collection notice or enforcing warrant to demand name and address etc.

(1)An enforcement officer serving a fine collection notice or enforcing a warrant under this Act may require a person the enforcement officer reasonably suspects to be the person named in the notice or warrant to provide any of the following information that is relevant to the notice or warrant or the exercise of powers under this Act because of the notice or warrant—
(a)the person’s full name and address;
(b)the person’s employment details;
(c)the person’s bank account details;
(d)the person’s driver licence number;
(e)who owns specified property;
(f)the person’s pension details;
(g)the person’s income and expenditure;
(h)the person’s date of birth.
(2)Also, an enforcement officer may require the person to provide evidence to the officer of the correctness of the information if, in the circumstances, it would be reasonable to expect the person to be in possession of evidence of the correctness of the information or to otherwise be able to give the evidence.
(3)When making a requirement under subsection (1), the enforcement officer must warn the person that, unless the person has a reasonable excuse, it is an offence not to provide the information required.
(4)When making a requirement under subsection (2), the enforcement officer must warn the person that, unless the person has a reasonable excuse, it is an offence to fail to provide evidence of the correctness of information provided by the person.
(5)An enforcement officer who is enforcing an immobilisation warrant may require a person the enforcement officer reasonably suspects to be the person named in the warrant to answer a question relevant to the warrant or the exercise of powers under this Act because of the warrant.

Example of a question under this subsection—

a question to establish a vehicle’s location
(6)When making a requirement under subsection (5), the enforcement officer must warn the person that, unless the person has a reasonable excuse, it is an offence not to provide the answer required.
(7)A person must comply with a requirement under subsection (1), (2) or (5), unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty—10 penalty units.

(8)A person does not commit an offence against subsection (7) if the person given the requirement is not proved to be the person named in the notice or warrant.
(9)Before exercising a power under subsection (1) or (5) in relation to a person, the enforcement officer must show the person the identity card given to the enforcement officer under section 11A(1).

s 114 amd 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch; 2009 No. 48 s 18; 2017 No. 13 s 66

115Effect of particular proceedings

(1)If, for an offence—
(a)a person served with an infringement notice—
(i)pays the amount owing under an enforcement order for the offence in full; or
(ii)pays the amount stated in an enforcement order for the offence under a payment plan; or
(iii)is subject to a work and development order for the amount stated in an enforcement order for the offence; or
(b)an enforcement warrant, an immobilisation warrant or an arrest and imprisonment warrant is enforced against a person served with an infringement notice for the amount owing under an enforcement order for the offence;

the proceedings that may be brought against, and the penalties that may be imposed on, the person for the offence are limited to proceedings and penalties that could be brought or imposed if the person had already been convicted of, and punished for, the offence.

(2)Subsection (1)(a) stops applying if the enforcement order is withdrawn or cancelled after the amount is paid.
(3)The making of the enforcement order is not a conviction for the offence.
(4)Payment of an amount for the offence is not an admission for any civil or criminal proceeding arising out of the event for which the infringement notice was issued.
(5)The Governor may waive all or part of an unpaid amount stated in an enforcement order, whether or not any part of the amount is payable to someone other than the State, and on the giving of the waiver the enforcement order stops having effect to the extent of the waiver.

s 115 amd 2009 No. 48s 19; 2017 No. 13 s 67

116Offence of obstructing enforcement officer

A person must not threaten, obstruct or assault an enforcement officer acting in the performance of duties under this Act.

Maximum penalty—50 penalty units or 1 year’s imprisonment.

s 116 amd 2009 No. 48s 20

117Offence of defacing or removing seizure tags

A person must not interfere with an item seized by an enforcement officer left at the place of seizure or a seizure tag or sticker placed on it.

Maximum penalty—50 penalty units.

s 117 amd 2009 No. 48s 21

Part 6 Imprisonment

118[Repealed]

s 118 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2003 No. 77s 111

sub 2007 No. 3s 26

amd 2009 No. 48s 22; 2010 No. 42s 194

om 2017 No. 13 s 68

119Enforcement by imprisonment

(1)This section applies if, after attempting to enforce an enforcement warrant or immobilisation warrant against an enforcement debtor, the registrar is satisfied the unpaid amount under the warrant can not be satisfied in any other way authorised under this Act.
(2)This section also applies if the registrar issues an instalment payment notice or fine collection notice or makes a fine option order for an enforcement debtor after attempting to enforce an enforcement warrant or immobilisation warrant and the enforcement debtor fails to comply with the notice or order.
(3)The registrar may issue a warrant (arrest and imprisonment warrant), directed to all police officers, for the arrest and imprisonment of the enforcement debtor for the period stated in the warrant.
(4)The period of imprisonment is to be worked out for the unpaid amount in the same way as the period of imprisonment for an amount stated in an enforcement order is worked out under section 52A.
(5)However, if the registrar issues the warrant without first taking action under part 5 for which a civil enforcement fee may be added to an unpaid amount, the unpaid amount for subsection (4) is increased by the amount of the warrant issue fee prescribed under a regulation.
(6)The warrant stops having effect if the unpaid amount is paid before the enforcement debtor is imprisoned.
(7)The period of imprisonment an enforcement debtor must serve under the warrant is cumulative on any other period of imprisonment the debtor must serve under any other warrant or an order of a court.

s 119 amd 2002 No. 34s 56; 2007 No. 3s 27; 2009 No. 48s 23

120Satisfaction of fine by imprisonment

(1)If a person serves the total period of imprisonment under an arrest and imprisonment warrant, the unpaid amount stated in the warrant is taken to be satisfied.
(2)If, after an arrest and imprisonment warrant is issued, but before the person named in the warrant is imprisoned, the person pays part of the unpaid amount stated in the warrant, the warrant has effect as if the period of imprisonment stated in it were the balance remaining to be paid divided by—
(a)for a court ordered amount—the relevant cut-out rate for the court order, rounded down to the nearest whole number and expressed as a number of days; or
(b)for an infringement notice offence—the cut-out rate for the infringement notice offence, rounded down to the nearest whole number and expressed as a number of days.

Example for subsection (2)(a)—

B is fined $1,000 and ordered to serve 14 days imprisonment if the fine is not paid. Before B is imprisoned, B pays $600 of the fine. The cut-out rate is $71.42 and the period for which B may be imprisoned is reduced to 5 days.

Example for subsection (2)(b)—

J owes SPER a total of $350 for an infringement notice offence and charges for which J may be imprisoned for 6 days. Before J is imprisoned, J pays $110. If the cut-out rate is $60, the period for which J may be imprisoned is 4 days.
(3)If a person who is imprisoned under an arrest and imprisonment warrant wants to pay the balance of the unpaid amount stated in the warrant, the balance is the amount worked out by multiplying the number of days remaining to be served by the relevant cut-out rate.

Example for subsection (3)—

B is imprisoned for failing to pay a fine of $1,000. After serving 5 days imprisonment, B decides to pay the balance of the amount. If the cut-out rate is $60, B must pay $660.
(4)On the satisfaction of the unpaid amount under this section, the person’s imprisonment ends and the person must be released.

121Order of satisfaction of fines if enforcement debtor imprisoned

If an enforcement debtor is imprisoned, the period of imprisonment discharges the unpaid amount in the reverse order to the order of satisfaction that would have applied under part 5, division 9 if the person had not been imprisoned.

Part 7 [Repealed]

pt hdg om 2017 No. 13 s 71

122[Repealed]

s 122 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

123[Repealed]

s 123 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

124[Repealed]

s 124 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

125[Repealed]

s 125 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

126[Repealed]

s 126 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

127[Repealed]

s 127 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

128[Repealed]

s 128 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

129[Repealed]

s 129 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

130[Repealed]

s 130 om 2017 No. 13 s 71

Part 8 Reciprocal enforcement of fines

131Definitions for pt 8

In this part—
conviction means a finding of guilt, or the acceptance of a plea of guilty, by a court, whether before or after the commencement of this part, in a proceeding for an offence, and includes an enforcement order or a similar order under a law of another State.
fine includes an amount stated in an enforcement order or a similar order under a law of another State.
Queensland fine means—
(a)a fine payable under a conviction of a Queensland court; or
(b)an amount payable under an enforcement order under this Act; or
(c)another amount for which the registrar must take enforcement action.

def Queensland fine amd 2017 No. 13 s 72

reciprocating court means a court declared under section 132 to be a reciprocating court for this Act.
relevant officer of a reciprocating court means the registrar, however called, of the reciprocating court.

132Declaration of reciprocating court

If another State has laws providing for the enforcement in that State of a Queensland fine, the Governor in Council may, under a regulation, declare a court that exercises criminal jurisdiction in the other State to be a reciprocating court for this Act.

133Enforcement of Queensland fine by reciprocating court

(1)SPER may, on the registrar’s initiative or on the request of the registrar of a Queensland court, give to the relevant officer of the reciprocating court a request for the enforcement of a particular Queensland fine in that State.
(2)An amount received from a reciprocating court in satisfaction of all or part of a Queensland fine must be applied as if the amount had been paid to SPER by the person by whom the fine was payable in satisfaction of all or part of the fine.
(3)If, after a request is made under subsection (1), SPER receives an amount in satisfaction of all or part of the fine from someone other than the relevant officer of the reciprocating court to whom the request was made, SPER must, as soon as practicable, notify the relevant officer of the amount of the payment.

s 133 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch

134Enforcement of fine imposed by reciprocating court

(1)This section applies if—
(a)under a conviction of a reciprocating court, a fine is payable by a person having or appearing to have property in Queensland; and
(b)SPER receives a request from the relevant officer of the reciprocating court for the enforcement of the fine; and
(c)the request is accompanied by—
(i)a copy, certified by the relevant officer to be correct, of the conviction; and
(ii)a certificate by the relevant officer stating the amount of the fine that remains unpaid.
(2)The registrar must register the certified copy of the conviction and write the date of registration on it.
(3)On registration of the conviction—
(a)the conviction is, for this part, taken to be a conviction of a Queensland court; and
(b)the registrar must make an enforcement order under this Act for the purpose of recovering the amount stated as unpaid in the certificate relating to the conviction.
(4)If, after SPER receives a request under this section in relation to a fine payable under a conviction of a reciprocating court, SPER receives a notification from the relevant officer of the reciprocating court of payment of an amount in satisfaction of all or part of the amount of the fine—
(a)the registrar must register particulars of the payment; and
(b)the payment is, for the purposes of enforcement action under this Act, taken to be a payment under an enforcement order made under this section.
(5)The registrar must pay the amount of any fine recovered by the registrar under the enforcement order into the consolidated fund, unless the amount must be dealt with in another way under an agreement between the Minister and the relevant Minister of the other State.
(6)A document that appears to have been signed by the relevant officer of a reciprocating court is taken to have been signed by the relevant officer, unless the contrary is proved.

s 134 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch

Part 8A Information sharing

pt hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

Division 1 Preliminary

div hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134ADefinitions for part

In this part—
confidential information means information, including a document, that is disclosed to, obtained by, or otherwise held by, an official under or in relation to this Act.
official means a person who is, or has been, engaged in administering or enforcing this Act, including a person who is providing, or has provided, an authorised service under a service contract or service subcontract.
police commissioner means the commissioner of the police service under the Police Service Administration Act 1990.

s 134A ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

Division 2 Information collection

div hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134BInformation from police commissioner

(1)For the purpose of taking action against a person to enforce payment of an amount under this Act, the registrar may, by written notice given to the police commissioner, ask the police commissioner for any of the following information—
(a)the person’s criminal history;
(b)a brief description of the circumstances of a conviction mentioned in the person’s criminal history;
(c)any address of the person known to the commissioner;
(d)any assets of the person known to the commissioner.
(2)If the registrar advises the police commissioner under section 134M about a particular warrant, the registrar may ask the commissioner for any of the following information about any person known to the commissioner to reside at premises where the registrar proposes to have the warrant enforced—
(a)the person’s criminal history;
(b)whether any warning, including, for example, a warning about the health or behaviour of the person, is recorded in a document in the possession of the commissioner;
(c)the details of any warning mentioned in paragraph (b).
(3)The police commissioner may comply with a request of the registrar made under subsection (1) or (2) to the extent the information is in the commissioner’s possession or to which the commissioner has access.
(4)If the police commissioner gives the registrar information under this section in writing, the registrar must destroy the information as soon as practicable after the registrar is satisfied it is no longer needed for the purpose for which it was given.
(5)This section applies subject to the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000, chapter 21, part 2.

s 134B ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134CRegistrar may require person to give information

(1)For the administration or enforcement of this Act the registrar may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to—
(a)give the registrar, either orally or in writing, information in the person’s knowledge about a stated matter within a stated reasonable period and in a stated reasonable way; or
(b)give the registrar a document about a stated matter in the person’s possession or control within a stated reasonable period and in a stated reasonable way.
(2)When making the requirement, the registrar must warn the person it is an offence not to comply with the requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.
(3)The person must comply with the requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(4)It is not a reasonable excuse for an individual to fail to comply with the requirement because complying with the requirement might tend to incriminate the individual.
(5)It is a reasonable excuse for a person to fail to comply with the requirement because the person reasonably believes complying with the requirement is likely to endanger a person’s safety.
(6)This section does not apply to the Queensland Police Service.

s 134C ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134DRegistrar may require attendance by persons

(1)For the administration or enforcement of this Act the registrar may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend before the registrar, at a stated reasonable time and place, to do either or both of the following—
(a)give the registrar, either orally or in writing, information in the person’s knowledge about a stated matter;
(b)give the registrar a document about a stated matter in the person’s possession or control.
(2)The registrar may require—
(a)the information to be given on oath; or
(b)the information or document given to be verified by statutory declaration.
(3)When making the requirement, the registrar must warn the person it is an offence to fail to comply with the requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.
(4)The person must not fail, without reasonable excuse, to—
(a)attend as required by the notice; or
(b)give the registrar information the person is required to give the registrar, and in the way required, under the notice; or
(c)give the registrar a document the person is required to give under the notice; or
(d)give information on oath if required by the registrar; or
(e)verify information or a document by statutory declaration if required by the registrar.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(5)It is not a reasonable excuse for an individual to fail to give the registrar information or a document because the information or document might tend to incriminate the individual.
(6)It is a reasonable excuse for a person to fail to give the registrar information or a document because the person reasonably believes giving the registrar the information or document is likely to endanger a person’s safety.
(7)A person, other than an enforcement debtor or the enforcement debtor’s representative, who is required under this section to attend a place is entitled to be paid the expenses prescribed by regulation.
(8)For subsection (2)(a), the registrar may administer an oath.
(9)This section does not apply to the Queensland Police Service.

s 134D ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134EPower to record giving of information

(1)This section applies if a person is giving information to the registrar under section 134D.
(2)With the person’s knowledge, a recording may be made, in the way the registrar considers appropriate, of questions asked by the registrar and information given by the person.
(3)The registrar must give the person a copy of the recording if asked to do so by the person.

s 134E ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134FRegistrar may require translation or conversion of information

(1)This section applies if—
(a)a person gives information to the registrar; and
(b)the registrar reasonably believes the information is relevant to the administration or enforcement of this Act.
(2)The registrar may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to do 1 or more of the following within a stated reasonable period—
(a)translate the information into the English language;
(b)convert the information into a written document;
(c)convert any amount mentioned in the information into Australian currency.
(3)The person must comply with the requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(4)If the person does not comply with the requirement, the registrar may have the information translated or converted as mentioned in subsection (2).
(5)The costs and expenses incurred under subsection (4) are a debt payable to the State by the person.

s 134F ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134GFalse or misleading information

(1)A person must not, in relation to the administration or enforcement of this Act, give the registrar or SPER information the person knows is false or misleading in a material particular.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to a person if the person, when giving information in a document—
(a)tells the registrar or SPER, to the best of the person’s ability, how the information is false or misleading; and
(b)if the person has, or can reasonably obtain, the correct information—gives the correct information.

s 134G ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

Division 3 Information protection

div hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134HUnauthorised disclosure of confidential information

(1)An official must not disclose confidential information acquired by the official in the official’s capacity to someone else unless the disclosure is authorised under division 4.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(2)A person who knowingly acquires confidential information without lawful authority must not disclose the information to someone else.

Example—

A person employed by a cleaning contractor engaged by the State to clean reads a document in the registrar’s office containing confidential information.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(3)A person who receives confidential information and knows, or ought reasonably to know, it is confidential information must not disclose the information to someone else unless the disclosure is authorised under division 4.

Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.

(4)However, subsection (3) does not apply to the person if, under division 4, the registrar disclosed the confidential information to the person and the person disclosed the information—
(a)to the extent necessary to enable the person to exercise a power or perform a function conferred on the person under a law for the administration or enforcement of the law; or
(b)for the purpose for which the information was disclosed to the person; or
(c)to someone else for any purpose if the information relates to the person.

s 134H ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134INon-disclosure of particular information

(1)A person engaged in the administration or enforcement of this Act can not be compelled to disclose to a court or QCAT in a proceeding, or to a party to the proceeding—
(a)confidential information; or
(b)whether or not the person has received particular confidential information; or
(c)the identity of the source of particular confidential information.
(2)This section does not apply to a proceeding for the administration or enforcement of this Act.

s 134I ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134JLimited use of self-incriminating information

(1)This section applies if, in compliance with a requirement to give the registrar information or a document under section 134C or 134D, a person gives the registrar information or a document that might tend to incriminate the person.
(2)Evidence of, or evidence directly or indirectly derived from, the information or document is not admissible in evidence against the person in a criminal proceeding, other than a proceeding in which the falsity or misleading nature of the information or document is relevant.

s 134J ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

Division 4 Information sharing

div hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134KInformation-sharing arrangements

(1)The registrar may enter into an arrangement (an information-sharing arrangement) with an entity prescribed by regulation for the purpose of sharing information held by SPER or the prescribed entity.
(2)Under the information-sharing arrangement, a party to the arrangement may request and receive information held by another party to the arrangement for any of the following purposes—
(a)the administration or enforcement of this Act;
(b)the administration or enforcement of a court order;
(c)the enforcement of an offence administered by a prescribed entity;
(d)another purpose prescribed by regulation.
(3)However, the registrar may only disclose information prescribed by regulation under the information-sharing arrangement.
(4)Disclosure of information by a prescribed entity under an information-sharing arrangement is subject to any limitation on disclosure of the information under another Act.
(5)Each party to the information-sharing arrangement must review their compliance with the requirements of the arrangement annually.
(6)In this section—
enforcement, of an offence, includes the following—
(a)investigating the offence;
(b)prosecuting the offence;
(c)imposing or collecting a fine for the offence;
(d)applying to a court for a civil penalty or other order for the offence.
prescribed entity means an entity prescribed by regulation under subsection (1).

s 134K ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134LDisclosure of confidential information by registrar

(1)The registrar may disclose confidential information that includes personal information—
(a)to the person to whom the information relates or to someone else—
(i)with the consent, express or implied, of the person to whom the information relates; or
(ii)who the registrar reasonably believes is acting for the person to whom the information relates; or
(b)if the disclosure is expressly permitted or required under another Act; or
(c)in connection with the administration or enforcement of this Act or a revenue law; or
(d)in relation to a legal proceeding under this Act; or
(e)to the Minister, or an officer of the department, for—
(i)developing or monitoring policies for, or for the operation of, this Act; or
(ii)administering the Financial Accountability Act 2009, section 21; or
(f)to a law enforcement agency for the purpose of an investigation or proceeding, including for the purpose of deciding whether to start an investigation or proceeding.
(2)The registrar may disclose confidential information that does not include personal information to any person, or for any purpose, the registrar is satisfied is appropriate in the circumstances.
(3)If confidential information contains personal information, the registrar may disclose the confidential information under subsection (2) if the registrar first removes or conceals the personal information.

Note—

Under section 161 the registrar may delegate a power of the registrar under this section to an appropriately qualified person.
(4)This section does not create a right in any person to be given information under this section.
(5)In this section—
law enforcement agency means—
(a)an enforcement body within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988 (Cwlth); or
(b)the Queensland Police Service under the Police Service Administration Act 1990; or
(c)the Crime and Corruption Commission; or
(d)the department in which the Corrective Services Act 2006 is administered.
personal information, about a person, means information that—
(a)identifies, or is likely to identify, the person; or
(b)discloses matters about the person’s affairs.
revenue law means—
(a)a law of the Commonwealth or a State about the assessment, imposition or collection of a tax, fee, duty, royalty or other impost; or
(b)another law administered by the Commissioner of State Revenue appointed under the Taxation Administration Act 2001.

Note—

See the Taxation Administration Act 2001, sections 7 and 8 for the appointment and functions of the Commissioner of State Revenue.

s 134L ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

134MRegistrar may advise police commissioner about particular warrants

(1)The registrar may advise the police commissioner of the following information—
(a)that the registrar has issued a particular warrant;
(b)when and where the registrar proposes to have the warrant enforced.
(2)The information may only be used by the Queensland Police Service for the enforcement of the warrant.
(3)In this section—
warrant means an enforcement warrant or an immobilisation warrant.

s 134M ins 2017 No. 13 s 73

Part 9 Miscellaneous

Division 1 Content of particular notices, orders and warrants

135Default certificate for infringement notice offence

A default certificate for an infringement notice offence must be in the approved form and state the following—
(a)the full name and address of the person liable to pay the fine for the offence;
(b)the offence;
(c)an infringement notice was, on a stated day, served on the alleged offender for the offence;
(d)for an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle, the amount the administering authority paid to establish ownership of the vehicle;
(e)before the certificate was given to SPER for registration, the alleged offender did not—
(i)pay to the administering authority the amount stated in the notice as the unpaid amount for the offence; or
(ii)apply to the administering authority to pay the fine by instalments; or
(iii)make to the administering authority an election to have the matter of the offence decided in a Magistrates Court;
(f)a proceeding has not been started against the alleged offender for the offence;
(g)a proceeding against the alleged offender for the offence has not been withdrawn under section 28;
(h)anything else prescribed under a regulation.

s 135 amd 2007 No. 3s 28

136Instalment payment notice

(1)A notice of registration of instalment payments (instalment payment notice) must be in the approved form and state the following—
(a)the full name and address of the person liable to pay the instalments;
(b)the offence;
(c)the unpaid amount;
(d)the amount to be paid for each instalment;
(e)when each instalment must be paid and how it is to be paid;
(f)if the person has an unpaid amount under an instalment payment notice (an earlier instalment payment notice) given to the person earlier—
(i)the offence to which the earlier instalment payment notice related; and
(ii)the unpaid amount under the earlier instalment payment notice; and
(iii)that the amount to be paid for each instalment under this instalment payment notice (the current instalment payment notice) includes an amount paid to satisfy the earlier instalment payment notice; and
(iv)that the requirement to pay instalments under the earlier instalment payment notice ends on the giving of the current instalment payment notice to the person;
(g)if instalment payments are not made as required, the registrar may cancel the instalment payment notice without further notice;
(h)if the instalment payment notice is cancelled and an enforcement order has not been made—
(i)an enforcement order may be made against the person for the unpaid amount; and
(ii)a registration fee prescribed under a regulation will be added to the unpaid amount;
(i)if an instalment payment notice issued after the making of an enforcement order is cancelled—
(i)an enforcement warrant, immobilisation warrant, a fine collection notice or an arrest and imprisonment warrant may be issued against the person for the unpaid amount; and
(ii)a registration fee or, if relevant, the civil enforcement fee, will be added to the unpaid amount; and
(iii)the person’s driver licence, if the person holds one, may be suspended without further notice;
(j)anything else prescribed under a regulation.
(2)If a person who has an earlier instalment payment notice is given a current instalment payment notice that states the information mentioned in subsection (1)(f), any previous arrangement to pay instalments under the earlier instalment payment notice ends on the giving of the current instalment payment notice to the person.
(3)For subsections (1)(f) and (2), a reference to an earlier instalment payment notice includes an instalment payment notice given to a person before the commencement of this subsection.

s 136 amd 2007 No. 3s 29; 2009 No. 48s 24

137[Repealed]

s 137 amd 2002 No. 34 s 57; 2007 No. 3 s 30; 2009 No. 48 s 25; 2010 No. 42 s 195

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

138[Repealed]

s 138 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

139[Repealed]

s 139 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

140[Repealed]

s 140 amd 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

141[Repealed]

s 141 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

142[Repealed]

s 142 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

143[Repealed]

s 143 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

144[Repealed]

s 144 amd 2003 No. 77 s 112

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

145[Repealed]

s 145 om 2017 No. 13 s 74

146[Repealed]

s 146 amd 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

146A[Repealed]

s 146A ins 2009 No. 48 s 26

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

146B[Repealed]

s 146B ins 2009 No. 48 s 26

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

146C[Repealed]

s 146C ins 2009 No. 48 s 26

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

146D[Repealed]

s 146D ins 2009 No. 48 s 26

om 2017 No. 13 s 74

Division 2 Other enforcement related provisions

147Effect of notices, orders and warrants

(1)For this Act, a fine collection notice, an enforcement order or a warrant issued by the registrar is taken to be a notice, order or warrant of a Magistrates Court in the central division of the Brisbane Magistrates Court district.
(2)If the registrar believes that the enforcement debtor or any of the enforcement debtor’s property is in a Magistrates Court district other than the Brisbane Magistrates Court district (the receiving district), the registrar may send a warrant issued by the registrar to the registrar of the court in the receiving district (the receiving registrar).
(3)The receiving registrar must—
(a)record the warrant; and
(b)stamp the warrant with the court seal; and
(c)issue the warrant to an enforcement officer in the receiving district and record having issued it.
(4)An enforcement officer in the receiving district—
(a)is authorised and required to act as if the warrant had been directed to the enforcement officer; and
(b)must, within a reasonable time, report in writing to the receiving registrar about what the enforcement officer has done to enforce the warrant; and
(c)must, within a reasonable time, give the receiving registrar any money received in the enforcement of the warrant.

s 147 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2007 No. 3s 31; 2009 No. 48s 27

148Electronic transmission of particular documents

(1)A notice, order or warrant, or any document under this Act containing information or a request for information, that is required or permitted by this Act to be given by someone to someone else may be transmitted electronically to the person or entity to whom it is to be given or directed.

Note—

For service of documents under this Act, see section 158.
(2)For serving a notice or enforcing an enforcement warrant or immobilisation warrant that is transmitted electronically, the enforcement officer to whom it is transmitted must arrange for a copy of the notice or warrant to be converted into written form, and to be completed in the way required under a regulation.

s 148 amd 2009 No. 48s 28; 2014 No. 35s 75

149Enforcement costs and their allocation

(1)A regulation may prescribe the enforcement costs payable for any step taken for enforcing payment of a fine, penalty or another amount under this Act.
(2)If no enforcement costs are prescribed, no enforcement costs are payable.
(3)The amount prescribed as enforcement costs may include costs payable to an entity other than SPER that takes the step.

149AReferences to amounts otherwise being discharged

(1)A reference in this Act to a person otherwise discharging an amount, other than by paying the amount, is a reference to the person satisfying the amount in full by any 1 or a combination of the following—
(a)payment of an amount;
(b)the payment of instalments under a payment plan;
(c)undertaking activities under a work and development order.

Example—

The $2,000 amount of a person’s SPER debt is otherwise discharged if the person makes a payment to SPER of $250, is subject to a work and development order for $750 and enters into a payment plan for the remaining $1,000.
(2)However, the person ceases to be satisfying the amount if—
(a)the person is satisfying all or part of the amount through the payment of instalments under a payment plan and the plan is cancelled; or
(b)the person is satisfying all or part of the amount by undertaking activities under a work and development order and the order is withdrawn or revoked.

s 149A ins 2017 No. 13 s 76

150Dishonoured cheques etc.

(1)This section applies if full or part payment of a fine or another amount payable under this Act is made—
(a)by cheque, and the cheque is dishonoured on presentation; or
(b)by credit card, and the credit provider declines to authorise the payment; or
(c)by direct debit from an account held with a financial institution, and the financial institution can not comply with the transfer request because there is not enough money in the account; or
(d)in another electronic way acceptable to SPER and the way of making the payment is not successful.
(2)Payment is taken not to have been made—
(a)if the payment is made by cheque, until—
(i)the cheque is honoured on presentation; or
(ii)payment in cash or in another way acceptable to the administering authority or to SPER is made in place of the cheque; or
(b)in any other case—until payment is made in cash or in another way acceptable to SPER.

s 150 amd 2007 No. 37s 162 sch

150ARegistrar may write off unpaid fine or other amount

(1)The registrar may write off all or part of a fine or another amount payable by a person under this Act, whether or not any part of the fine or other amount is payable to someone other than the State—
(a)if the person dies; or
(b)if the person is a corporation that has been deregistered; or
(c)if there is insufficient information to establish the identity of the person liable to pay the fine or other amount; or
(d)in other circumstances permitted under a guideline issued by the Minister under section 150B.
(2)However, a fine or other amount that has been written off may be reinstated if—
(a)the fine or other amount was incorrectly identified for writing off; or
(b)the reinstatement is permitted under a guideline issued by the Minister under section 150B.
(3)The fine or other amount—
(a)stops being payable from the time it is written off; and
(b)starts being payable again from the time it is reinstated.

s 150A ins 2007 No. 3 s 32

amd 2010 No. 26 s 129

150AARegistrar may waive or return fee

(1)The registrar may waive or return all or part of a fee payable by a person under this Act in the circumstances prescribed by regulation.
(2)However, a fee that is waived may be reinstated if—
(a)the fee was incorrectly identified for waiver; or
(b)the reinstatement is permitted under the circumstances prescribed by regulation.

s 150AA ins 2017 No. 13 s 77

150ABRedirecting amounts to unpaid SPER debts

(1)This section applies if—
(a)SPER is to pay an amount to a person under this Act; and
(b)the person has a SPER debt.
(2)Despite any other provision of this Act, SPER may apply the whole or part of the amount to the SPER debt instead of paying the money to the person.
(3)This section does not apply to the payment of any balance to an enforcement debtor under section 73J(3)(e) because of the sale of property by an enforcement officer.
(4)In this section—
pay includes transfer or refund.

s 150AB ins 2017 No. 13 s 77

150BGuidelines

(1)The Minister may issue guidelines about the writing off or reinstatement of fines and other amounts payable by persons under this Act.
(2)A guideline issued under subsection (1) must not be made available to members of the public.
(3)The Minister may make guidelines, not inconsistent with this Act, about work and development orders.
(4)The registrar may issue guidelines for the purposes of section 108B, 108C, 108D(2), 108H(4)(a) or (b) or 108P(1)(b) or (2).
(5)Without limiting subsection (4), a guideline for the purposes of section 108D(2) or 108P(2) may deal with—
(a)whether there is severe or unusual hardship caused by depriving an enforcement debtor of the enforcement debtor’s means of earning a living; and
(b)whether there is severe or unusual hardship caused other than by depriving an enforcement debtor of the enforcement debtor’s means of earning a living.
(6)The registrar—
(a)may have regard to a guideline issued by the registrar for the purposes of section 108B, 108D(2) or 108P(2); and
(b)must have regard to a guideline issued by the registrar for the purposes of section 108C or 108P(1)(b).
(7)An enforcement officer must have regard to a guideline issued by the registrar for the purposes of section 108H(4)(a) or (b).
(8)A guideline under subsection (3) or (4) must be publicly available including available on SPER’s website.

s 150B ins 2007 No. 3 s 32

amd 2009 No. 48 s 29; 2010 No. 26 s 130; 2017 No. 13 s 78

151Registrar may arrange for use of information system

(1)The registrar may approve a system (an information system) for—
(a)generating, sending, receiving, storing or otherwise processing electronic communications between SPER and an administering authority; or
(b)generating, sending, receiving, storing or otherwise processing electronic communications between SPER and an enforcement debtor or other person; or
(c)generating a decision of the registrar, other than a decision prescribed by regulation.
(2)A decision generated by an information system is taken to be a decision made by the registrar.

s 151 prev s 151 amd 2002 No. 34 s 58; 2000 No. 5 s 810 sch 4 (amd 2006 No. 26 ss 84, 86); 2009 No. 48 s 29A

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

pres s 151 ins 2017 No. 13 s 79

151A[Repealed]

s 151A ins 2009 No. 48 s 30

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152[Repealed]

s 152 amd 2007 No. 3 s 33

sub 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152A[Repealed]

s 152A ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152B[Repealed]

s 152B ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152C[Repealed]

s 152C ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152D[Repealed]

s 152D ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152E[Repealed]

s 152E ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152F[Repealed]

s 152F ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152G[Repealed]

s 152G ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

amd 2014 No. 35 s 76

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152H[Repealed]

s 152H ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

152I[Repealed]

s 152I ins 2012 No. 25 s 174

om 2017 No. 13 s 80

153Register

(1)The registrar must keep a State penalties enforcement register.
(2)The register must include particulars of the following orders, notices and warrants, any payments made and any enforcement action taken after the issue by the registrar of any of the following—
(a)an instalment payment notice;
(b)an enforcement order;
(c)a fine option order;
(d)an enforcement warrant to seize and sell personal property;
(e)an enforcement warrant imposing a charge on property;
(g)a fine collection notice;
(i)a notice suspending a driver licence;
(j)a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant;
(k)an immobilisation warrant;
(l)an arrest and imprisonment warrant.
(3)The register must also include particulars of enforcement action taken under part 8.

s 153 amd 2009 No. 48 s 31; 2017 No. 13 s 81(1)

154No fees payable for registration under other Acts

No fee is payable by SPER for—
(a)lodging in a registry any order or instrument under this Act or any instrument lodged to transfer property to the State under this Act; or
(b)doing anything else for which registry fees are fixed.

Example of paragraph (b)—

If fees are fixed for register searches or copies of anything in a register, SPER is not required to pay the fees.

155Non-reviewable decision

(1)This section applies to any of the following decisions (the decision)—
(a)a decision of the chief executive (corrective services) about—
(i)the suitability of a person to perform community service work under a fine option order under section 48; or
(ii)the failure of a person to comply with a fine option order under this Act;
(b)a decision of the registrar to refuse an application for instalment payments under section 42;
(c)a decision of the registrar to issue—
(i)an enforcement order under section 38; or
(ii)an enforcement warrant under section 63; or
(iii)a fine collection notice under section 75; or
(iv)a notice of intention to suspend a driver licence under section 105; or
(v)an arrest and imprisonment warrant under section 119;
(d)a decision of the registrar to register an interest in land or property under section 110;
(e)a decision of the registrar to issue—
(i)a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant; or
(ii)an immobilisation warrant.
(2)The Judicial Review Act 1991, parts 3 and 4 does not apply to the following matters—
(a)conduct engaged in for the purpose of making the decision;
(b)other conduct that relates to the making of the decision;
(c)the making of the decision;
(d)the decision.
(3)Without limiting subsection (2), the Supreme Court does not have jurisdiction to hear and decide applications made to it under the Judicial Review Act 1991, part 3 or 4 about matters mentioned in that subsection.

s 155 amd 2009 No. 48s 32; 2017 No. 13 s 82(2)–(3)

156Responsibility for acts or omissions of representatives

(1)This section applies in a proceeding for an offence against this Act.
(2)If it is relevant to prove a person’s state of mind about a particular act or omission, it is enough to show—
(a)the act was done or omitted to be done by a representative of the person within the scope of the representative’s actual or apparent authority; and
(b)the representative had the state of mind.
(3)An act done or omitted to be done for a person by a representative of the person within the scope of the representative’s actual or apparent authority is taken to have been done or omitted to be done also by the person, unless the person proves—
(a)if the person was in a position to influence the conduct of the representative in relation to the act or omission—the person took reasonable steps to prevent the act or omission; or
(b)the person was not in a position to influence the conduct of the representative in relation to the act or omission.
(4)In this section—
representative means—
(a)for a corporation—an executive officer, employee or agent of the corporation; or
(b)for an individual—an employee or agent of the individual.

157Evidentiary provisions

(1)This section applies to a proceeding under this or another Act.
(2)A certificate purporting to be signed by or for an administering authority and stating any of the following matters is evidence of the matter—
(a)a stated infringement notice was served in a stated way on a stated person at a stated address on a stated day for a stated infringement notice offence;
(b)an alleged offender did not pay a fine as required under an infringement notice;
(c)an alleged offender elected to have a matter of an offence decided in a Magistrates Court;
(d)an alleged offender applied to the administering authority to pay the fine under an infringement notice by instalments;
(e)an infringement notice has not been withdrawn or was withdrawn on a stated date;
(f)an offence stated in an infringement notice involved a stated vehicle or animal;
(g)a stated person owned a stated vehicle or animal at a stated time;
(h)a stated person owned a stated animal at a stated time;
(i)a stated address is the address of the owner of a stated vehicle in the record of registration of vehicles under a registration Act;
(j)a stated person has or has not given the administering authority an illegal user declaration, known or unknown user declaration or sold vehicle declaration for an offence stated in an infringement notice;
(k)a fine has not been paid by, and a penalty has not been imposed on, a stated or any person for an offence stated in an infringement notice.
(3)A certificate purporting to be signed by the registrar and stating any of the following matters is evidence of the matter—
(a)stated information or particulars were registered under the Act on a stated day;
(b)a stated amount was paid to SPER on a stated day to satisfy all or a stated part of a stated amount owing under a stated notice, order or warrant;
(c)a stated person applied to SPER to pay an amount under a payment plan;
(d)a stated enforcement action is being taken, or has been taken, against a stated person, including the date the action was taken, ceased or withdrawn;
(e)the amount of a stated person’s SPER debt, including information about the unpaid amount of the debt and the history of the debt;
(f)a stated payment plan was accepted by a stated person on a stated day, or cancelled on a stated date;
(g)a stated work and development order was made, varied, withdrawn or revoked on a stated day;
(h)a notice of intention to suspend the driver licence of a stated person was served on the person in a stated way on a stated day;
(i)an administering authority withdrew an infringement notice on a stated day;
(j)a stated enforcement order was cancelled on a stated day;
(k)a stated document was issued on a stated day.
(4)The registrar must give an administering authority a certificate under subsection (3) about a matter mentioned in subsection (3)(j) if requested by the authority for the purpose of starting a proceeding against a person for an infringement notice offence.
(5)In this section—
enforcement action means any of the following actions taken by the registrar—
(a)serving an enforcement order;
(b)issuing an enforcement warrant;
(c)issuing a fine collection notice;
(d)serving a notice of intention to suspend a driver licence;
(e)serving a notice of intention to issue an immobilisation warrant;
(f)issuing an immobilisation warrant;
(g)registering an interest in land or other property under section 110;
(h)issuing an arrest and imprisonment warrant.

s 157 amd 2003 No. 77 s 113; 2009 No. 48 s 33; 2017 No. 13 s 83(1), (3), (5), (6)–(7)

158Service of document

(1)A document may be served under this Act—
(a)as provided for under the Acts Interpretation Act 1954, part 10; or
(b)if a person gives SPER or the registrar a unique electronic address for the person—by using electronic communication to send the document to the address; or
(c)if a person consents to SPER using a unique electronic address for serving a document to the person—by using electronic communication to send the document to the address; or
(d)in another way prescribed by regulation.
(2)Also, in addition to being able to send a document to a person by post as provided for under the Acts Interpretation Act 1954, part 10, the registrar may send the document by post to another address for the person known to the registrar.
(3)A document is taken to have been served on a person—
(a)for a document served by using electronic communication—
(i)on the day the communication is sent to the person; or
(ii)if the communication is sent after 5pm—on the following business day; or
(b)for a document served in a way prescribed by regulation—the day prescribed by regulation for the method of service.

Note—

For the time of giving a document by post, see the Acts Interpretation Act 1954, section 39A(1)(b).

(4)In this section—
communication network means a network—
(a)capable of electronic communication; and
(b)designed to enable a user of the network to communicate with a specific person or a group of people.

Examples—

a telephone network or computer network
unique electronic address, for a person, means a fixed designation on a communication network assigned to the person for the purpose of the person receiving information.

Examples—

an email address, mobile phone number or user account

s 158 amd 2009 No. 48 s 34; 2014 No. 35 s 77; 2017 No. 13 s 84

159Proceedings for offences

A proceeding for an offence against this Act may be taken by way of summary proceedings under the Justices Act 1886
(a)within 1 year after the commission of the offence; or
(b)within 6 months after the commission of the offence comes to the complainant’s knowledge, but within 2 years after the commission of the offence.

159ARegistrar may communicate with enforcement debtors by SMS

The registrar may communicate with an enforcement debtor by SMS, without the enforcement debtor’s consent, about—
(a)enforcement action under the Act that is being, or may be, taken against the enforcement debtor; or
(b)matters relating to the enforcement debtor’s payment of the amount owing.

s 159A ins 2009 No. 48s 35

Division 3 General

160Delegation by administering authority

The chief executive officer of an administering authority may delegate the administering authority’s powers under this Act to an appropriately qualified person.

161Delegation by registrar

(1)Subject to section 10C, the registrar may delegate functions and powers of the registrar, or of SPER, under this Act to an appropriately qualified person.
(2)Without limiting subsection (1), the registrar may delegate the registrar’s powers to engage a debt collector as an enforcement officer to a bailiff.

s 161 amd 2014 No. 35s 78; 2014 No. 19s 152sch 1 pt 2

162Approval of forms by administering authority

An administering authority may approve forms for use as infringement notices under this Act.

163Approval of other forms

The registrar may approve forms for use under this Act, other than forms for use as infringement notices.

s 163 sub 2017 No. 13 s 85

164[Repealed]

s 164 om 2017 No. 13 s 86

165Regulation-making power

(1)The Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act.
(2)A regulation may prescribe an offence to be an infringement notice offence.
(3)A regulation may prescribe an infringement notice fine for an infringement notice offence.
(4)A regulation may prescribe an infringement notice fine for a corporation up to 5 times the amount payable by an individual for the offence under an infringement notice.
(5)Also, a regulation may make provision for enforcing enforcement orders, enforcement warrants and fine collection notices including, but not limited to—
(a)the conduct of hearings or interviews for enabling the registrar to obtain information to facilitate the enforcement of fines, penalties and other amounts under enforcement orders, enforcement warrants, immobilisation warrants and fine collection notices; and
(b)requiring enforcement debtors to prepare and give to the registrar statements of the enforcement debtor’s financial position; and
(f)the order of priority for enforcing enforcement warrants.
(6)A regulation may be made about fees.
(7)A regulation may be made about an offender levy including, for example, the prescribed particulars for an offender levy.
(8)A regulation may prescribe a law to be a law that does not apply to—
(a)a service contractor under section 10A(4); or
(b)a service subcontractor under section 10B(7).
(9)A regulation may prescribe a function or power of the registrar, or of SPER, under this Act to be a prescribed function for section 10C.
(10)A regulation may be made about—
(a)the way in which a document may be served under this Act; and
(b)when a document is taken to have been served under this Act.
(11)A regulation may be made about the following for work and development orders—
(a)the activities that are unpaid work, and the restrictions, if any, on those activities being unpaid work, including, for example—
(i)the places where an activity may be undertaken; and
(ii)the licences, authorisations or qualifications a person must have to undertake an activity;
(b)the courses, plans or programs that may be undertaken under an order;
(c)the amount by which a SPER debt is taken to be satisfied by undertaking particular activities under an order.
(12)A regulation may be made about the following—
(a)the approval of persons or entities as approved sponsors, including conditions of approvals;
(b)the keeping of records relating to work and development orders;
(c)the supporting evidence for eligibility assessments for work and development orders;
(d)disciplinary action that may be taken against approved sponsors, including immediate suspension or cancellation of approvals.

s 165 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch; 2005 No. 70s 149; 2009 No. 48s 36; 2012 No. 17s 46; 2014 No. 35s 79; 2017 No. 13 s 87

Part 10 Transitional, validating and declaratory provisions

pt hdg sub 2003 No. 77s 114

amd 2005 No. 70s 150

Division 1 Transitional provisions for Act No. 70 of 1999

div hdg ins 2003 No. 77s 114

sub 2007 No. 3s 34

167Amnesty period

(1)During the amnesty period, a warrant of commitment issued under—
(a)the Justices Act 1886 for an infringement notice offence under the Justices Act 1886, part 4A; or
(b)the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992 for non-payment of a fine imposed under that Act;

but not enforced before the amnesty period started (outstanding warrant) must not be enforced.

(2)Also, during the amnesty period a person may satisfy an outstanding warrant by paying the amount stated in the warrant free of any warrant issue fee mentioned in the warrant.
(3)Subsection (1) does not apply to the enforcement of a warrant of commitment for a person who is a prisoner within the meaning of the Corrective Services Act 1988.
(4)This section has effect despite anything to the contrary in the Justices Act 1886 or any other Act.
(5)In this section—
amnesty period means a 2-month period commencing on the commencement of this section or, if a longer period is prescribed under a regulation, the longer period.

168Saving of infringement notice

An infringement notice issued under the Justices Act 1886, part 4A as in force before the commencement of section 167 is taken to be an infringement notice issued under this Act, and the penalty stated in the infringement notice is taken to be a fine under the notice.

169Saving of enforcement orders

(1)This section applies to enforcement orders issued under the Justices Act 1886, section 98P for an existing penalty and in force immediately before the commencement of this section.
(2)Each enforcement order continues to have effect until the registrar issues an enforcement order under subsection (3) or an enforcement warrant or fine collection notice under subsection (5).
(3)As soon as practicable after the commencement of this section, the registrar must issue an enforcement order under this Act for each infringement notice to which an enforcement order mentioned in subsection (1) relates.
(4)Subsection (3) does not apply to an enforcement order that is amended under the Justices Act 1886, section 98R.
(5)If a person contravenes an enforcement order mentioned in subsection (4), the registrar may issue an enforcement warrant or fine collection notice for the amount unpaid under the order.

s 169 amd 2009 No. 48s 37

170Issue of infringement notices by administering authority

(1)Despite the repeal of the Justices Act 1886, part 4A, an administering authority may continue to issue an infringement notice that complies with that Act for a period ending 6 months after the commencement of this section.
(2)However, the administering authority must at the same time issue a notice in the approved form to the alleged offender stating—
(a)the infringement notice will be enforced as if it is was issued under this Act; and
(b)the rights and obligations of the alleged offender under section 22.
(3)The infringement notice may be enforced as if it were an infringement notice issued under this Act.

s 170 amd 2000 No. 58s 2 sch

171Existing warrant of commitment

(1)If a warrant of commitment issued against a person under the Justices Act 1886 or the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992 for non-payment of an amount that may be registered under this Act was not enforced before the commencement of this section, the registrar may, despite the relevant Act, recall the warrant and cancel it.
(2)If, at the end of the amnesty period the amount has not been paid, the SPER registrar—
(a)may issue an enforcement order under this Act for the amount stated in the cancelled warrant; but
(b)is not required to serve a copy of the enforcement order on the person or to give the person any further time to pay the amount before taking enforcement action under part 5 or 6.
(3)The registrar may take enforcement action under this Act for the amount at any time after the order is made.

172Existing fine option order

(1)A fine option order made for a person on an application under the Justices Act 1886, section 98U and in force immediately before the commencement of this section is taken to be a fine option order made under this Act.
(2)If the fine option order is revoked, the registrar—
(a)may issue an enforcement warrant or a fine collection notice under this Act for the amount concerned; but
(b)is not required to serve a copy of the warrant or notice on the person.
(3)The registrar may take enforcement action under this Act at any time after the fine option order is revoked.

Division 2 Validating and declaratory provisions

div hdg ins 2003 No. 77s 115

amd 2005 No. 70s 151

173Infringement notice for Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994

(1)This section applies to an infringement notice for an offence against the Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994.
(2)An infringement notice issued or served by a police officer before 20 December 2002 is taken to have been issued or served by an authorised person.
(3)In this section—
infringement notice means an infringement notice under this Act or the Justices Act 1886, repealed part 4A.

s 173 ins 2003 No. 77s 115

174Infringement notice for a corporation

To remove any doubt, it is declared that section 165(4), as in force immediately before the commencement of the Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2005, section 149 was not and has never been, a contrary intention for the purposes of the application of the Statutory Instruments Act 1992, sections 24 and 25.

s 174 ins 2005 No. 70s 152

174AParticular orders made under Industrial Relations Act 2016

(1)Subsection (2) applies if, before the commencement of this section—
(a)a magistrate gave particulars of a relevant order to the court registrar for the purpose of registering the prescribed particulars, in relation to the unpaid amount payable under the order, under section 34; or
(b)a court registrar purported, under section 34, to give to SPER, for registration, the prescribed particulars in relation to the unpaid amount payable under the order.
(2)The giving of the particulars by the magistrate and the giving of the prescribed particulars by the court registrar is, and always has been, lawful.
(3)Subsection (4) applies if, before the commencement of this section—
(a)the registrar purportedly registered, under section 34, prescribed particulars in relation to the unpaid amount payable under a relevant order; or
(b)a person took action purportedly under the Act to enforce a relevant order.
(4)The registration of the prescribed particulars, and the action taken, is as valid, and always has been as valid, as if, at the time the relevant order was made, it was an order to which section 34 applied.
(5)In this section—
relevant order means an order mentioned in the Industrial Relations Act 2016, section 380(1) or 406(1).

s 174A ins 2009 No. 48s 38

amd 2016 No. 63 s 1157 sch 6

Division 3 Transitional provisions for State Penalties Enforcement and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2007

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

175Definition for div 3

In this division—
amendment Act means the State Penalties Enforcement and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2007.

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

176Transitional provision about management of office

(1)This section applies if, immediately before the commencement of the amendment provision, an enforcement order, warrant or fine collection notice properly made or issued by a member of the staff of the registry was still in force.
(2)The order, warrant or notice continues in force according to its terms as if the amendment provision had not commenced.
(3)A member of the staff of the registry continues to have the same immunities and protections in relation to making or issuing the relevant document as the staff member would have had if the amendment provision had not commenced.
(4)In this section—
amendment provision means section 4 of the amendment Act.

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

177Transitional provision for extension of time to pay an amount stated in an enforcement order

(1)This section applies if, immediately before the commencement of this section, an application for an extension of time to pay an amount stated in an enforcement order has been made under repealed section 41(b) or 42(1)(a) but not decided.
(2)On the commencement, the application is taken to be cancelled.
(3)In this section—
repealed section 41(a) or 42(1)(a) means section 41(a) or 42(1)(a) as in force before the commencement of section 15 of the amendment Act.

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

178Transitional provision for cancellation of enforcement order

(1)This section applies if, immediately before the commencement of this section, the registrar had cancelled an enforcement order under previous section 57 but had not referred the matter of the offence to a Magistrates Court.
(2)On the commencement—
(a)the registrar must not refer the matter of the offence to a Magistrates Court; and
(b)new section 57 applies to the cancellation of the enforcement order as if the cancellation had happened after the commencement.
(3)In this section—
new section 57 means section 57 as amended by the amendment Act.
previous section 57 means section 57 as in force before the commencement of section 20 of the amendment Act.

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

179Transitional provision for good behaviour order

(1)After the commencement of this section, a good behaviour order may be made under the new section 118 in relation to an enforcement warrant or a fine collection notice issued or that could have been issued before the commencement as if the enforcement warrant or fine collection notice was issued after the commencement.
(2)In this section—
new section 118 means section 118 as in force after the commencement of section 26 of the amendment Act.

div 3 (ss 175–179) ins 2007 No. 3s 35

Division 4 [Repealed]

div 4 (s 180) ins 2009 No. 50s 18 sch

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

180[Repealed]

div 4 (s 180) ins 2009 No. 50s 18 sch

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

Division 5 [Repealed]

div 5 (s 181) ins 2009 No. 47s 40 sch

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

181[Repealed]

div 5 (s 181) ins 2009 No. 47s 40 sch

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

Division 6 Transitional provision for Civil and Criminal Jurisdiction Reform and Modernisation Amendment Act 2010

div 6 (s 182) ins 2010 No. 26s 131

182Effect of provision disqualifying person from holding or obtaining driver licence

Section 106(4) as amended by the Civil and Criminal Jurisdiction Reform and Modernisation Amendment Act 2010 has effect in relation to a person whose licence is suspended under section 105 regardless of whether the suspension happened before or after the commencement of this section.

div 6 (s 182) ins 2010 No. 26s 131

Division 7 Transitional provisions for State Penalties Enforcement Amendment Act 2017

div hdg prev div 7 hdg ins 2011 No. 27s 339

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

pres div 7 hdg ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

183Definitions for division

In this division—
amendment Act means the State Penalties Enforcement Amendment Act 2017.
amendments means the amendments of this Act made by the amendment Act.
community service has the meaning given by the Corrective Services Act 2006, schedule 4.
fine option order means an order converting the unpaid amount of a fine under an enforcement order to hours of unpaid community service.
former, in relation to a provision, means the provision as in force immediately before its amendment by the amendment Act.

s 183 prev s 183 ins 2011 No. 27s 339

om 2013 No. 39s 109sch 2

pres s 183 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

183ADepartment (corrective services) is approved sponsor

(1)From the commencement, the department (corrective services) is taken to be an approved sponsor for a work and development order to undertake unpaid work.
(2)The chief executive (corrective services) may appoint an appropriately qualified person to supervise a person undertaking unpaid work under a work and development order.
(3)The Corrective Services Act 2006 applies to a person appointed under subsection (2) as if a reference in that Act to a community service supervisor were a reference to the person.
(4)A corrective services officer has, subject to the directions of the chief executive (corrective services), the powers necessary to facilitate the department (corrective services) carrying out the functions of an approved sponsor.
(5)In this section—
corrective services officer see the Corrective Services Act 2006, schedule 4.
department (corrective services) means the department in which the Corrective Services Act 2006 is administered.

s 183A ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

184Other approved sponsors

(1)This section applies if, before the commencement, the registrar published, on the department’s website, a list of entities that are to be approved sponsors under this Act.
(2)From the commencement, an entity included in the published list is taken to be an approved sponsor for the types of work and development orders stated for the entity in the list.
(3)Nothing in this section prevents the registrar from cancelling an approval granted under subsection (2) or otherwise taking disciplinary action against the approved sponsor as provided by a regulation made under section 165(12).

s 184 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

185Conversion of fine option orders

(1)This section applies if immediately before the commencement a person was subject to a fine option order.
(2)The fine option order is taken to be a work and development order to undertake unpaid work for, or on behalf of, an approved sponsor.
(3)If the person was subject to 2 or more fine option orders, the registrar may combine the orders into a single work and development order applying under subsection (2).
(4)The registrar must assign an approved sponsor for a work and development order mentioned in subsection (2).
(5)The registrar may revoke the order under this section if after the commencement—
(a)a fine option order breach notice is in force under section 190; and
(b)the registrar is satisfied the person concerned has contravened the order without reasonable excuse.
(6)Former section 129 applies for revoking the order despite the repeal of that section by the amendments.
(7)The registrar must give the person a written notice explaining the effect of this section and stating the name of the approved sponsor for the person’s work and development order.

s 185 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

186Conversion of applications for fine option orders

(1)This section applies if, before the commencement, a person applied to SPER under former section 43 for the conversion of an amount stated in an enforcement order to hours of unpaid community service under a fine option order and, on the commencement, the application had not been finally dealt with under this Act.
(2)The application is taken to be an application for a work and development order to undertake unpaid work for, or on behalf of, an entity.
(3)For processing the application as an application for a work and development order—
(a)the registrar must assign an approved sponsor for the application; and
(b)despite the amendments, former sections 44 to 46 continue to apply for the application as if a reference in the provisions to a fine option order were a reference to a work and development order; and
(c)former sections 47 to 50 do not apply for the application, regardless of whether the application was referred to the chief executive (corrective services) under former section 47; and
(d)if, before the commencement, the chief executive (corrective services) decided the applicant was not suitable for performing community service under former section 48, the registrar may have regard to the decision when deciding whether to grant the application as an application for a work and development order.

s 186 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

187Continuation of good behaviour orders

(1)This section applies if immediately before the commencement a good behaviour order (a continuing order) applied to a person.
(2)The former provisions of this Act that applied for good behaviour orders continue to apply for the continuing order as if the provisions had not been amended or repealed under the amendment Act.

s 187 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

193Continuation of particular certificate evidence

In a proceeding under this or another Act a certificate purporting to be signed by the registrar and stating any of the following matters is evidence of the matter—
(a)a stated person applied to SPER to pay the fine under an infringement notice by instalments;
(b)a stated person applied to SPER for conversion, of an amount payable because of a fine, to hours of unpaid community service under a fine option order;
(c)a stated fine option order relating to a stated person was revoked on a stated day.

s 193 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

194Transitional regulation-making power

(1)A regulation (a transitional regulation) may make provision of a saving or transitional nature—
(a)for which it is necessary to make provision to allow or facilitate the change from the operation of the former provisions of this Act to the operation of the provisions of this Act as in force after the commencement; and
(b)for which this Act does not make provision or sufficient provision.
(2)A transitional regulation may have retrospective operation to not earlier than the commencement.
(3)A transitional regulation must declare it is a transitional regulation.
(4)A transitional regulation may only be made within 1 year after the commencement.
(5)This section and a transitional regulation expire 2 years after the commencement.

s 194 ins 2017 No. 13 s 88

exp 4 December 2019 (see s 194(5))

Schedule 2 Dictionary

section 3

account, for a financial institution, includes a withdrawable share account.
address means—
(a)for an individual—
(i)the address of the place where the individual usually resides; or
(ii)a postal address for the individual; or
(iii)if a matter relates to a business owned or controlled by the individual—the address of the business; or
(b)for a corporation—
(i)the head office, a registered office or a principal office of the corporation; or
(ii)a postal address for the corporation.

def address sub 2017 No. 13 s 89(1), (3)

administering authority, for an infringement notice or infringement notice offence, means the entity prescribed under a regulation as the administering authority for the notice or offence.
administration charge ...

def administration charge om 2017 No. 13 s 89(1)

alleged offender, for an infringement notice, means the person on whom the notice is served.
appropriately qualified ...

def appropriately qualified om 2014 No. 35 s 80(1)

appropriately qualified public service officer means a public service officer who has the training and experience to perform an enforcement function under this Act.

def appropriately qualified public service officer ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

approved form means a form approved under section 162 or 163.
approved sponsor see section 32F.

def approved sponsor ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)

arrest and imprisonment warrant see section 119.

def arrest and imprisonment warrant amd 2002 No. 34 s 59(3)

authorised corrective services officer ...

def authorised corrective services officer om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

authorised person means—
(a)for an infringement notice—a person who, under a regulation, may serve the infringement notice; or
(b)for a withdrawal from acting under this Act—a person who, under a regulation, may effect the withdrawal.
authorised service see section 10A(2).

def authorised service ins 2014 No. 35 s 80(2)

chief executive (corrective services) ...

def chief executive (corrective services) sub 2002 No. 34 s 59(1)–(2)

om 2007 No. 37 s 162 sch

civil enforcement fee means the fee prescribed under a regulation for part 5.
commercial agent ...

def commercial agent sub 2002 No. 34 s 59(1)–(2)

om 2014 No. 19 s 152 sch 1 pt 2

community service has the meaning given by the Corrective Services Act 2006, schedule 4.

def community service sub 2006 No. 29 s 518 sch 3

community service order ...

def community service order om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

compliance period ...

def compliance period om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

confidential information, for part 8A, see section 134A.

def confidential information ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

conviction, for part 8, see section 131.
corrective services office ...

def corrective services office amd 2006 No. 29 s 518 sch 3

om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

court registrar means—
(a)for the Supreme Court or District Court—the registrar of the relevant court; or
(b)for a Magistrates Court—the clerk of the relevant court.
criminal history of a person means the person’s criminal history within the meaning of the Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Act 1986.
customer reference number means a unique number used by the department within which the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995 is administered to identify a person on whom an infringement notice for an infringement notice offence involving a vehicle has been served.
cut-out rate, for a fine or unpaid amount, means—
(a)for a court order under which an offender is required to serve a term of imprisonment for failing to pay a penalty or a forfeited recognisance under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992—the rate worked out by dividing the penalty or the amount of the recognisance by the number of days of imprisonment ordered, expressed in dollars for each day; or
(b)for a court order under which an offender is not required to serve a term of imprisonment for failing to pay a penalty under the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992—the amount prescribed under a regulation for this paragraph or, if no amount is prescribed, $75; or
(c)for a court order under which a surety is required to serve a term of imprisonment for failing to pay an amount under the Bail Act 1980 or the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992—the rate worked out by dividing the amount by the number of days of imprisonment ordered, expressed in dollars for each day; or
(d)for a court order under which a surety is not required to serve a term of imprisonment for failing to pay an amount under the Bail Act 1980 or the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992—the amount prescribed under a regulation for this paragraph or, if no amount is prescribed, $75; or
(e)for an infringement notice offence—the amount prescribed by regulation for this paragraph or, if no amount is prescribed, $60.

def cut-out rate amd 2007 No. 3 s 36; 2017 No. 13 s 89(5)

debt collector means a debt collector or subagent under the Debt Collectors (Field Agents and Collection Agents) Act 2014.

def debt collector ins 2014 No. 19 s 152 sch 1 pt 2

deducted amount see section 87.
default certificate see section 33.
driver licence has the meaning given by the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995, schedule 4.
earnings, of an enforcement debtor, means wages, salary, fees, bonuses, commission, overtime pay or other compensation for services or profit arising from office or employment, a pension, benefit or similar payment, an annuity or an amount payable instead of leave or retirement benefit owing or accruing to the enforcement debtor.
electronic communication means communication of information in the form of—
(a)data, text or images by guided or unguided electromagnetic energy; or
(b)sound by guided or unguided electromagnetic energy, if the sound is capable of being processed at its destination as language.

def electronic communication ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

eligibility assessment, for part 3B, see section 32K(1).

def eligibility assessment ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)

employer, of an enforcement debtor, means a person (including the State) who, as principal, rather than as a servant or agent, pays, or is likely to pay, earnings to the enforcement debtor.
enforceable amount, of a person’s SPER debt, means that part of the person’s SPER debt for which the registrar may take enforcement action under part 5 or 6 (regardless of whether the registrar has started the action) less any amount for which recovery or enforcement action is suspended.

def enforceable amount ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)

enforcement action means action taken under this Act by the registrar or SPER to recover an amount a person must pay to SPER, including an action the registrar or SPER may take under this Act because the person failed to pay an amount to SPER.

Examples of enforcement action—

issuing an enforcement warrant, issuing a fine collection notice, issuing a notice of intention to suspend a licence or issuing an immobilisation warrant

def enforcement action ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)

enforcement debtor see section 38.
enforcement officer means—
(a)an appropriately qualified public service officer; or
(b)the sheriff, deputy sheriff and the bailiff of a court; or
(c)a debt collector engaged under section 10(3)(a); or
(d)another person authorised to perform the functions, and exercise the powers, of an enforcement officer.

def enforcement officer sub 2009 No. 48 s 39

amd 2014 No. 35 s 80(3); 2014 No. 19 s 152 sch 1 pt 2

enforcement order see section 38.
enforcement warrant see section 63.
executive officer, of a corporation, means a person, by whatever name called and whether or not the person is a director of the corporation, who is concerned with, or takes part in, the management of the corporation.
fine
(a)generally, includes—
(i)an amount stated in an infringement notice as the fine for a stated infringement notice offence and, for a particular infringement notice, the fine stated in the infringement notice; and
(ii)for an offence for which a fine is imposed by a court—any amount payable under an ancillary order of the court; and
(b)for part 8—see section 131.

Examples of ancillary orders—

1professional fees, witnesses’ expenses and interpreters’ allowances
2royalties or another similar amount, including conservation value payable under the Nature Conservation Act 1992
fine collection notice see section 75.
fine option order ...

def fine option order amd 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch

om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

fine option order breach notice ...

def fine option order breach notice sub 2017 No. 13 s 89(1), (3)

om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

good behaviour order ...

def good behaviour order ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

government body means—
(a)the State, another State, the Commonwealth or a local government; or
(b)a department, service, agency, authority, commission, corporation, instrumentality, board, office or other entity established for a State government purpose; or
(c)a part of an entity mentioned in paragraph (b).
illegal user declaration, for an offence involving a vehicle, means a statutory declaration stating facts establishing the vehicle was stolen or illegally taken at the relevant time.
immobilisation notice see section 108N.

def immobilisation notice ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

immobilisation period see section 108O.

def immobilisation period ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

immobilisation search warrant see section 108L.

def immobilisation search warrant ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

immobilisation warrant see section 108D.

def immobilisation warrant ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

immobilising device, for a vehicle, means—
(a)wheel clamps; or
(b)another device that effectively detains the vehicle.

def immobilising device ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

infringement notice means a notice under section 15.
infringement notice fine, for an infringement notice offence, means the amount prescribed under a regulation to be the fine payable for the offence under an infringement notice.
infringement notice offence means an offence, other than an indictable offence or an offence against the person, prescribed under a regulation to be an offence to which this Act applies.
instalment, of a fine under an infringement notice, means the amount payable as an instalment of the fine.
instalment payment notice see section 136.
interest in a managed investment scheme has the meaning given by the Corporations Act, section 9.

def interest in a managed investment scheme ins 2001 No. 45 s 29 sch 3

interfere with includes the following—
(a)remove;
(b)damage;
(c)destroy;
(d)deface.
known user declaration, for an offence involving a vehicle, means a statutory declaration stating—
(a)if the owner is—
(i)an individual—the owner was not in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time; or
(ii)a corporation—the vehicle was not being used for the corporation at the relevant time; and
(b)the name and address of the person who was in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time.
late payment penalty
(a)for a deducted amount—see section 87; or
(b)for an undeducted amount—see section 88.
minimum instalment means the amount prescribed under a regulation as the minimum amount a person who may pay an amount by instalments must pay.
motor vehicle means a vehicle propelled by a motor that forms part of the vehicle, and includes a trailer attached to the vehicle.

def motor vehicle ins 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch

offence, for a particular infringement notice, means the offence stated in the notice.
offence involving a vehicle means an offence in which an offender and a vehicle are involved, regardless of the extent to which the vehicle is actually involved in the offence.
offender, other than for part 3, includes alleged offender.
offender levy see the Penalties and Sentences Act 1992, section 179C.

def offender levy ins 2012 No. 17 s 47

officer, of a corporation, includes a former officer of the corporation.
official, for part 8A, see section 134A.

def official ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

owner, of a vehicle, includes the person in whose name the vehicle is registered under a registration Act.
partner includes a former partner.
police commissioner, for part 8A, see section 134A.

def police commissioner ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

postal address, of a person, means—
(a)the address of the place where the person receives mail sent by post, other than a place at which the person usually resides or works; or
(b)a location or other designation sufficient to identify the part of a place where the person receives mail sent by post.

Example for paragraph (b)—

a post office box or parcel locker

def postal address ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

premises includes any structure, building, aircraft, vehicle, vessel or place, whether built on or not.
prescribed interest ...

def prescribed interest om 2001 No. 45 s 29 sch 3

prescribed particulars, for part 4, means particulars prescribed under a regulation.
protected earnings amount, for a period for which earnings are paid, means the amount worked out by applying the protected earnings rate to the period for which the earnings are paid.
protected earnings rate has the meaning given by the Child Support (Registration and Collection) Act 1988 (Cwlth), section 4.
public service officer ...

def public service officer ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

om 2014 No. 35 s 80(1)

quad bike means a 4-wheeled motor vehicle that is ridden in the same way as a 2-wheeled motor vehicle.

def quad bike ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

Queensland fine, for part 8, see section 131.
reciprocating court, for part 8, see section 131.
registered operator, of a vehicle—
(a)
means the registered operator of the vehicle under the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995 (transport registered operator); and
(b)if there is not, but has been, a transport registered operator of the vehicle—includes the last transport registered operator of the vehicle.

def registered operator ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

registrar means the person employed under section 10 to be registrar.
registration Act means—
(a)the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995 or another Act prescribed under a regulation that deals with the registration of vehicles; or
(b)a law of the Commonwealth or another State that deals generally with the same subject matter as an Act mentioned in paragraph (a).
registration fee means the fee prescribed under a regulation for registering an unpaid amount under this Act.
relevant officer, for part 8, see section 131.
relevant person ...

def relevant person om 2017 No. 13 s 89(2)

relevant time, for an offence involving a vehicle, means the time and date specified in the infringement notice as the time and date of the offence.
responsible operator, of a vehicle, means a person nominated as a responsible operator for the vehicle under the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995, section 170.
search warrant see section 71.
securities includes—
(a)annuities; and
(b)debentures; and
(c)stocks; and
(d)bonds; and
(e)shares; and
(f)marketable securities; and
(g)units of—
(i)shares; or
(ii)marketable securities; or
(iii)interests prescribed under a regulation.
service contract see section 10A(1).

def service contract ins 2014 No. 35 s 80(2)

service contractor see section 10A(1).

def service contractor ins 2014 No. 35 s 80(2)

service subcontract see section 10B(2).

def service subcontract ins 2014 No. 35 s 80(2)

service subcontractor see section 10B(1).

def service subcontractor ins 2014 No. 35 s 80(2)

SMS means short messaging service.

def SMS ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

sold vehicle declaration, for an offence involving a vehicle, means a statutory declaration stating facts establishing the owner had sold or otherwise disposed of the vehicle before the relevant time and was not in charge of the vehicle at that time, including—
(a)the name and address of the person to whom the vehicle was sold or disposed of; and
(b)the date and, if relevant, time of the sale or disposal; and
(c)if an agent made the sale or disposal for the owner, the name and address of the agent.
SPER means the registry established under part 2.
SPER debt, of a person at a particular time, means the total amount the person must pay to SPER at that time, including, for example, fines and fees payable under this Act.

def SPER debt ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

State penalties enforcement register means the register kept under section 153(1).

def State penalties enforcement register ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(3)

suspend, a driver licence, includes suspend a person’s eligibility to apply for or obtain a driver licence.
third person means a person, including the State, from whom a debt—
(a)is payable to an enforcement debtor; or
(b)is likely to become payable to an enforcement debtor.
threshold amount, for an infringement notice fine, means the amount, prescribed under a regulation, at or above which a person may apply to an administering authority for approval to pay the fine by instalments.
undeducted amount see section 88.
unknown user declaration, for an offence involving a vehicle, means a statutory declaration stating—
(a)if the owner is—
(i)an individual—the owner was not in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time; or
(ii)a corporation—the vehicle was not being used for the corporation at the relevant time; and
(b)the person making the declaration has not been able to find out who was in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time; and
(c)the nature of the inquiries made to find out the name and address of the person in charge of the vehicle at the relevant time.
unpaid work means—
(a)if a person’s approved sponsor is the department in which the Corrective Services Act 2006 is administered—the community service offered to the person by that department; or
(b)otherwise—an activity, prescribed by regulation, that is performed by a person without pay.

def unpaid work ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)

vehicle includes a boat.

def vehicle ins 2000 No. 58 s 2 sch

vehicle insurance policy see section 108(4).

def vehicle insurance policy ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

wheelchair see the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995, schedule 4.

def wheelchair ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

wheeled recreational device see the Transport Operations (Road Use Management) Act 1995, schedule 4.

def wheeled recreational device ins 2009 No. 48 s 39(2)

work and development order see section 32G(1).

def work and development order ins 2017 No. 13 s 89(4)