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SUPREME COURT AMENDMENT RULES 2003 (NO 5) (NO 49 OF 2003)
SUPREME COURT AMENDMENT RULES 2003 (No 5)
Subordinate Law SL2003-49
Issued by the Authority
of the Judges of the
Supreme Court of the Australian Capital
Territory
The resident Judges of the Court (of whom there are currently four, including
the Chief Justice) or any two of the resident Judges, may make Rules of Court
regulating the practice and procedure of the Court pursuant to section 36 of the
Supreme Court Act 1933.
These rules replace the provisions in the
Supreme Court Rules relating to discovery and production of documents and
interrogatories. They have been made as part of the modernisation of the rules
and following extensive consultation with the profession.
The rules
establish a regime for disclosure of documents which are required to be
discovered by parties to litigation in civil proceedings in the Supreme Court.
They empower the court to make a range of orders in aid of this process. They
provide for the methods by which disclosure is to be made and provide for
continuing disclosure until trial.
The rules further provide for the
production of the documents disclosed and their inspection by parties.
Provision is made for claims of privilege from production for discovered
documents and the court is empowered to decide disputes over such claims. The
court is also empowered to make orders to facilitate such inspection. The rules
provide a regime for production of documents at trial.
Interrogatories
are questions that a party to civil proceedings may require another party to
answer on oath. The rules establish a regime for the administering of
interrogatories and a codified range of objections to answers that the
interrogated party must make. The court is empowered to make a range of orders
in order to decide disputes about whether the interrogatories are proper,
whether the answers are adequate and whether answers or better answers must be
provided.
The rules identify the persons who are required to verify the
list of discovered documents or answer interrogatories for a range of bodies
other than individuals.
The rules also make provision for penalties that
the court may impose where orders relating to these matters are not complied
with. They also provide sanctions for the improper use of discovered documents
or the failure to disclose discoverable documents.