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Family Court Decisions


FAMILY LAW ACT 1975

The full Family Law Act and other Acts related to Family Law Proceedings

Section 121 refers to restrictions on publication of court proceedings.

Part VII refers to parenting and children.

Australasian Legal Information Institute

This database contains those full text decisions of the Family Court of Australia from 1988 as selected by the Family Court as suitable for publication because of their value as legal precedents.

This link will take you to a directly to a search facility where you can put in words or phrases that are relevant to your enquiry.

Many of the experiences noted in the various submissions on this web site are not from published decisions. They are the actual courtroom experience of the litigants. There is no onus on Family Court judges to follow any of the decisions of their predecessors, they are only used as a guide and a basis for argument in the adversarial system.

The decisions make for interesting reading due to the complexity of the legal argument, the manner in which decisions are reached and what weight is given to evidence and opinions in reaching a decision. This reasoning can perhaps be of use for the layperson to understand the difficulty of presenting evidence that will 'prove' a point or otherwise.

RECENT CASE DECISIONS RE CONTACT AND RESIDENCE

NJG & KSPG [2006] FamCA 668 (27 July 2006) residency awarded to dad...conflict between parties..

H & R [2006] FamCA 878 (8 September 2006) mum gets kids, dad, no face to face contact...due to long history of proved extreme violence..

AGF & LLS [2006] FamCA 923 (5 September 2006) dad had not seen child for two years, bought a application for contact. Court said he had to get some counseling and abandon his case for residence....he did neither, so the court denied his application...

Court bans fathers use of belt to smack son

27th March 2007, 6:30 WST

A father has lost a legal battle with his former wife for the right to discipline their 10 year old son physically in a case that raises doubts about the legal rights of parents to smack their children. The father argued at a trial in the WA Family Court that he was entitled to discipline his son any way he considered appropriate and that for the court to prevent him from doing so was unwarranted interference with his parental rights. But in a judgment delivered before his retirement last month, WA Family Court chief judge Michael Holden told the father: That is a view I do not share. Justice Holden ordered the father not to inflict any physical discipline on his son and told the father it was glaringly obvious he could repair his strained relationship with his son by refraining from physically disciplining him.

FAMILY LAW ACT 1975 - SECT 121

Restriction on publication of court proceedings

(1) A person who publishes in a newspaper or periodical publication, by radio broadcast or television or by other electronic means , or otherwise disseminates to the public or to a section of the public by any means, any account of any proceedings , or of any part of any proceedings , under this Act that identifies:

(a) a party to the proceedings

(b) a person who is related to, or associated with, a party to the proceedings or is, or is alleged to be, in any other way concerned in the matter to which the proceedings relate; or

(c) a witness in the proceedings ; is guilty of an offence punishable, upon conviction by imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year...

ETC...

FAMILY COURT WEB SITE

User friendly site - down load forms for Court applications, advice and fact sheets.

The Federal Parliament's power to make laws about marriage and divorce

The Federal Parliament has the power to make laws for the whole of Australia, but only in relation to specific subject matter. The Australian Constitution defines these powers.

The Parliament derives its power to make laws about marriage, divorce and matrimonial causes from s 51 (xx) and s 51 (xxi) of the Constitution.

Prior to 1959 there were varying state laws about divorce. The Matrimonial Causes Act 1959 (Cth) introduced the first uniform divorce laws for Australia, however it dealt only with situations where spouses were seeking what is known as "principal relief", for example a divorce or declaration of nullity of marriage.

 

OTHER SUBJECT HEADINGS:

The Players

Evidence and Discretion

Legislation and Law

Venues

Self Representation

Family Court Decisions