(1) A person who is
served with, or otherwise given, a summons or notice containing a notation
made under section 21 must not disclose—
(a) the
existence of the summons or notice or any information about it; or
(b) the
existence of, or any information about, any official matter connected with the
summons or notice.
Maximum penalty: $2 200 or imprisonment for 1 year.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not prevent the person from making a
disclosure—
(a) in
accordance with the circumstances, if any, specified in the notation; or
(b) to a
legal practitioner for the purpose of obtaining legal advice or representation
relating to the summons, notice or matter; or
(c) if
the person is a body corporate—to an officer or agent of the body
corporate for the purpose of ensuring compliance with the summons or notice;
or
(d) if
the person is a legal practitioner—for the purpose of obtaining the
agreement of another person under section 23(3) to the legal practitioner
answering a question or producing a document at an examination before an
examiner.
(3) If a disclosure is
made to a person as permitted by subsection (2) or (4), the following
provisions apply:
(a)
while he or she is a person of a kind to whom a disclosure is so permitted to
be made, he or she must not disclose the existence of, or any information
about, the summons or notice, or any official matter connected with it, except
as permitted by subsection (4);
(b)
while he or she is no longer such a person, he or she must not, in any
circumstances, make a record of, or disclose the existence of, the summons,
notice or matter, or disclose any information about any of them.
Maximum penalty: $2 200 or imprisonment for 1 year.
(4) A person to whom
information has been disclosed, as permitted by subsection (2) or this
subsection, may disclose that information—
(a) if
the person is an officer or agent of a body corporate referred to in
subsection (2)(c)—
(i)
to another officer or agent of the body corporate for the
purpose of ensuring compliance with the summons or notice; or
(ii)
to a legal practitioner for the purpose of obtaining
legal advice or representation relating to the summons, notice or matter; or
(b) if
the person is a legal practitioner—for the purpose of giving legal
advice, or making representations, relating to the summons, notice or matter.
(5) This section
ceases to apply to a summons or notice after—
(a) the
notation contained in the summons or notice is cancelled by
section 21(4); or
(b) 5
years elapse after the issue of the summons or notice, whichever is sooner.
(6) A reference in
this section to disclosing something’s existence includes disclosing
information from which a person could reasonably be expected to infer its
existence.
(7) In this
section—
"official matter" means any of the following (whether past, present or
contingent):
(a) the
determination referred to in section 19(3);
(b) an
ACC operation/investigation;
(c) an
examination held by an examiner;
(d)
court proceedings.