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MAGISTRATES COURT (TOBACCO INFRINGEMENT NOTICES) REGULATION 2010 (NO 49 OF 2010)
THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR
THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
MAGISTRATES COURT
(TOBACCO INFRINGEMENT NOTICES) REGULATION
2010
SL2010-49
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Simon Corbell MLA
Attorney General
Magistrates Court (Tobacco Infringement Notices) Regulation 2010
Outline
Part 3.8 of the Magistrates Court Act 1930 provides
that offences prescribed by a regulation made under the Magistrates Court Act
can be dealt with by way of an infringement notice. The Magistrates Court
(Tobacco Infringement Notices) Regulation 2010 is being
made under Part 3.8 of the Magistrates Court Act and will enable infringement
notices to be issued for offences of the Tobacco Act
1927.
Infringement notices are intended to provide an alternative to
prosecution. Under the Magistrates Court Act a person authorised to
issue an infringement notice for an offence has the discretion to decide whether
or not to issue a notice. The persons authorised to issue infringement notices
are public servants appointed as inspectors under the Act Infringement notices
may be issued to individuals and businesses for offences related to the sale and
supply of tobacco and tobacco-related products.
Summary of Clauses
Clause 1 – Name of
Regulation
This clause declares the name of the regulation, Magistrates
Court (Tobacco Infringement Notices) Regulation 2010.
Clause 2 –
Commencement
This clause provides that the regulation commences the day
after it is notified by the Parliamentary Counsel on the Legislation Register.
Clause 3 – Dictionary
This clause provides that the
dictionary at the end of the Regulation forms part of the Regulation.
Clause 4 – Notes
This clause provides that a note
included in the Regulation is explanatory and is not part of the
Regulation.
Clause 5 – Purpose of Regulation
This clause
provides that the purpose of the Regulation is to provide for infringement
notices under the Magistrates Court Act 1930, part 3.8, for certain
offences against the Tobacco Act.
Clause 6 – Administering
authority
This clause provides that the administering authority for an
infringement notice offence is the chief executive. Section 163 (2)(a) of the
Legislation Act 2001 defines a provision of an Act or statutory
instrument, with a reference to the chief executive without identifying the
chief executive’s title is a reference to the chief executive of the
administrative unit responsible for the provision.
The relevant chief
executive is the chief executive of the Department of Justice and Community
Safety, who is responsible for the Magistrates Courts Act. Also, under the
Administrative Arrangements 2010 the enforcement of the Tobacco Act is the
responsibility of the Office of Regulatory Services within the Department of
Justice and Community Safety.
Clause 7 – Infringement notice
offences
This clause states that infringement notices can be issued for
the offences listed in the Regulation at schedule 1, column 2. The offences
included in the schedule are all strict liability offences with maximum
penalties in the Act up to 50 penalty units.
Clause 8 –
Infringement notice penalties
The clause provides for the penalty that is
payable by an individual and a corporation served with an infringement notices.
The penalty for individuals for each infringement notices is set in column 4 of
schedule 1. The respective penalty for a corporation in the same circumstance is
five times the amount prescribed in column 4 for an individual.
This
clause also provides that the cost of serving a reminder notice for an
infringement offence is $34.
Clause 9 – Contents of infringement
notices – identifying authorised person
This clause provides for
the contents of infringement notices. An infringement notice must identify the
authorised person who served the notice. In the case of a police officer, the
infringement notice must identify the police officer’s service number. For
an authorised person, the person must be identified in the notice by their full
name, or their surname and initials, and the unique number given to them by the
administering authority for the Regulation. Section 134A of the Magistrates
Court Act provides that an administering authority may appoint a person to be an
authorised person.
Clause 10 – Contents of infringement notices
– other information
This clause provides that an infringement
notice served on a company must include the company’s ACN. In this section
company means a company registered under the Corporations Act
2001. This information is in addition to those requirements set out in
section 121 of the Magistrates Court Act.
Clause 11 – Contents
of reminder notices – identifying authorised person
This clause
provides that a reminder notice for an infringement notice must identify the
authorised person who served the notice. In the case of a police officer, the
infringement notice must identify the police officer’s service number.
Otherwise, an authorised person must be identified in the notice by their full
name, or their surname and initials, and the unique number given to them by the
administering authority for the Regulation. Section 134A of the Magistrates
Court Act defines what is an authorised person.
Clause 12 –
Authorised people for infringement notice offences
The clause prescribes
that an authorised officer under the Tobacco Act is an authorised person for
this regulation. Section 134A(2) of the Magistrates Court Act provides that a
regulation may prescribe a person to be an authorised person for the serving of
an infringement notice and reminder notices. An authorised officer is appointed
under section 32 of the Tobacco Act.
Schedule 1
The
schedule lists the infringement notice offences and penalties under the Tobacco
Act as prescribed by section 7 and 8 of the Regulation.
The
infringement notice penalty amounts in schedule 1, column 4 represent 20 percent
of the maximum penalty provided for that offence for an individual, except in
the case of offences where the maximum penalty is $5500. In such cases the
infringement notice penalty is less than 20 percent at $1000.