Introductory Info
Date introduced: 28 June 2018
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Attorney-General
Commencement: Three months from the day after Royal Assent or earlier by Proclamation.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Family Law Amendment
(Family Violence and Cross-examination of Parties) Bill 2018 (the Bill)
is to amend the Family
Law Act 1975 to provide appropriate protections for victims of family violence during
cross-examination in
family law proceedings. In
particular, the Bill would prohibit personal cross‑examination in certain
circumstances, and require that cross-examination be conducted by a legal
representative. Where personal cross‑examination is not prohibited, the
court would be required to apply other appropriate protections for the victim
of family violence.
Background
The state
of family law
It is often suggested that the family law system is in
crisis, beset by a lack of resources and federal funding, with an exponentially
increasing workload leading to unacceptably long delays.[1]
Much of the recent controversy and debate about the family law courts has
focused on the courts’ handling of the complex problems of family violence.[2]
As various studies have indicated, families
with complex needs, including those related to violence, are the predominant clients
of the family law system.[3]
Compounding these problems is the significant number of self-represented
litigants, many of whom cannot afford legal representation and are traumatised
as a result of family violence and the abuse of children and find it
challenging to navigate the family law system.
There are a number of major initiatives underway aimed at
addressing these problems, one of the more significant being an Australian Law
Reform Commission (ALRC) inquiry. The ALRC has been asked by the Turnbull
Government to inquire into the state of Australia’s family law system and
report to the Government in March 2019. This inquiry represents the first
comprehensive review of the Act since the legislation commenced in 1976.[4]
Another recent and more controversial initiative is the
Government’s announced intention to restructure Australia’s federal courts. This
includes the establishment of a new ‘Federal Circuit and Family Court of
Australia’ and a new Family Law Appeal Division in the Federal Court of
Australia to commence operation from 1 January 2019.[5]
The Government is also progressing other legislative
changes affecting family law, with the Family Law Amendment (Family Violence
and Other Measures) Bill 2017 and the Family Law Amendment (Parenting
Management Hearings) Bill 2017, both introduced into Parliament in December
2017.[6]
These Bills have received mixed reviews with a number of stakeholders arguing, amongst
other things, that such complex reforms should be delayed until the ALRC
inquiry is complete. Further information about these Bills and the state of
family law more generally is available in the relevant Bills Digests.[7]
It is in the context of this complex and changing environment
that the current Bill was introduced into Parliament on 28 June 2018.
Direct
cross-examination in family law proceedings
As the Explanatory Memorandum states, the issue of direct
cross-examination of victims of family violence by their alleged perpetrators
in family law matters has been an issue of community concern for several years.[8]
Direct cross-examination is where a party asks questions of another party or
witness directly, rather than having questions asked by a legal representative.
Direct cross-examination occurs particularly in cases where the parties are
self-represented.
Direct cross-examination by an alleged perpetrator can
expose victims of family violence to re‑traumatisation and can affect
their ability to give clear evidence. It can also be problematic for victims to
directly cross-examine their alleged perpetrator due to the power imbalances
created by family violence.[9]
Courts exercising jurisdiction under the Family Law Act
have a range of powers to protect vulnerable witnesses during hearings,
including alleged victims of family violence. For example, they have specific
powers under the Act to order that witnesses can give evidence via video-link
and disallow cross-examination of witnesses in child-related proceedings.[10]
These powers are described in the Family Violence Best Practice Principles,
published by the Family Court of Australia and the Federal Circuit Court of
Australia.[11]
A number of inquiries and reports going back several years
have considered the matter of personal cross-examination and made
recommendations to ban or restrict direct cross-examination in family law
matters involving allegations of family violence.
For example, the Productivity Commission recommended, in
its 2014 Access to Justice Arrangements inquiry report, that the Family
Law Act be amended ‘to include provisions restricting personal cross-examination
by those alleged to have used violence along the lines of provisions that exist
in State and Territory family violence legislation’ (recommendation 24.2).[12]
Also, at the Council of Australian Governments National
Summit on Reducing Violence against Women and their Children in October 2016,
it was agreed that a ban should be placed on the direct cross-examination of
victims by their perpetrators in family violence and family law proceedings.[13]
The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Social
Policy and Legal Affairs 2017 Parliamentary Inquiry into a Better Family Law
System to Support and Protect Those Affected by Family Violence (Better
Family Law Inquiry) recommended that a Bill be introduced into Parliament
to prohibit perpetrators of family violence from cross-examining the other
party (recommendation 12).[14]
Despite this apparent consensus that reform is needed, the
issue is complex and not amenable to a simple or quick solution. Any proposal
that would impose a mandatory prohibition on direct cross-examinations in proceedings
raises questions regarding procedural fairness and the right to a fair trial. These
matters are discussed in greater detail in other sections of the Bills Digest.
Exposure
Draft
In July 2017 an Exposure Draft of the Bill was released
for public consultation from 17 July 2017 to 25 August 2017.[15]
The Attorney-General’s Department (AGD) received 43 submissions from
organisations, recognised experts, judicial officers writing in their personal
capacity, and members of the public.[16]
Consistent with the Bill, the Exposure Draft contained a
legislative ban which would prevent an unrepresented party from directly
cross-examining, or being cross-examined by, another party if there is an allegation
of family violence between them, and certain circumstances apply.[17]
Like the Bill, the Exposure Draft also provided a discretion for the court to
prevent direct cross-examination in instances where the legislative ban does
not apply but an allegation of family violence between parties exists.
However the Exposure Draft differed in three significant respects
to the Bill:
- in
cases of a mandatory ban on direct cross examination the Exposure Draft
provided that an intermediary (rather than a legal representative) could conduct
the cross-examination
- the
Exposure Draft contained a discretion for the court to grant leave for direct
cross‑examination by the parties despite the ban applying, where the
parties consent to this occurring and the court considers it appropriate to do
so having regard to the quality of the evidence and the potential impact on the
family violence victim and
- the
Exposure Draft did not specify that the court must apply existing protections
where the ban does not apply.
AGD states that changes in the Bill in relation to these
three points were made in response to stakeholder feedback.[18]
The extent
of direct cross-examination in family law proceedings: Australian Institute of
Family Studies
In the month preceding the release of the Exposure Draft
Bill, AGD also engaged the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) to work
with the family courts to determine the prevalence of direct cross-examination
in family law proceedings involving allegations of family violence.[19]
The AIFS research found that up to 227 matters involving
allegations of family violence and at least one self-represented party
proceeded to final hearing in the Family Court of Australia or the Federal
Circuit Court of Australia over two years (between 2015 and 2017). Direct cross‑examination
may have occurred in up to 173 of those 227 matters.[20]
The AIFS report, published on 28 June 2018, the day the
Bill was introduced into Parliament, was used to inform further stakeholder
consultations and support the policy development of the Bill.[21]
While the Attorney-General has referred to the ‘very small
number of cases’ that the AIFS study has revealed,[22]
a number of stakeholders have questioned this assumption and suggest that this
data may not present a full picture. For example, Women’s Legal Service
Australia (WLSA) states that the data does not consider the possibly large but
unknown number of cases which settled due to the threat of cross-examination,
or the victims who chose not to engage with the family law system at all for
fear of further harm.[23]
While acknowledging the findings of the AIFS report are useful, WLSA argues the
findings should not be used to inform the anticipated volume of court users
whose circumstances may trigger the protections in the Bill. WLSA considers
that once the protections in the Bill are in place the number of women and
victim-survivors of family violence who proceed to trial will significantly
increase and will be greater than that flagged in the AIFS report.[24]
WLSA argues that it is therefore important:
[... that] appropriate funding and steps need to be in place so
that the additional protections which the Bill seeks to provide to women and
victim-survivors of family violence can be properly and safely implemented to
all those eligible for such protections.[25]
Committee
consideration
Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee
The Bill was referred to the Senate Legal and
Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 13
August 2018. Details of the inquiry are at the Committee homepage.
The Committee, in its report, was unanimous in
recommending that details regarding the funding of the measures contained in
the Bill be made public prior to the commencement of debate on the Bill in the
Senate. Subject to this recommendation being implemented, the Committee recommended
that the Bill be passed.[26]
A selection of views expressed in submissions to the
Senate inquiry is provided throughout the Bills Digest.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Scrutiny of Bills Committee (Scrutiny
Committee) raised a number of questions with the Bill.[27]
The first relates to proposed paragraph 102NA(1)(c)(iv) which allows the
court a broad discretion to order that direct cross-examination is prohibited
in cases where there are allegations of family violence. The Committee requests
the Attorney-General’s advice as to why such a discretion should apply and also
asks whether an amendment would be appropriate setting out legislative guidance
as to when the discretion should be exercised.[28]
The Scrutiny Committee also has questions regarding Legal
Aid. It observes:
... there does not appear to be anything on the face of the
bill which would require that legal aid be made available to persons to whom
the mandatory requirements apply. Further, while the explanatory memorandum
states that arrangements would be provided for in the court rules and/or
practice directions to facilitate legal representation and to minimise delays,
it is not apparent that these arrangements would be directed at ensuring access
to legal aid. In this regard, the committee notes that reports have found
that retaining a private lawyer can be prohibitively costly, while legal aid
means tests are often set at a level that allows only the poorest Australians
to be eligible, leaving many individuals unable to afford private legal
representation but nevertheless ineligible for legal aid.[29]
The Committee therefore asks the Attorney-General’s advice
as to:
- the circumstances in which legal aid would be available to
parties to family law proceedings involving allegations of family violence; and
- whether, in the circumstances that a person is subject to the
prohibition on personal cross-examination or to other restrictions on their
ability to present their own case, legal aid will be made more readily
available. [30]
Policy
position of non-government parties
Labor
Labor supports the Bill, while also noting that the
Government has been ‘incredibly slow to act on calls for reform’.[31]
The relevant Shadow Ministers, in their media release on the Bill, also raised
questions regarding resources and funding for this initiative. They point to
the already over‑stretched legal-aid lawyers who without extra funding
will be unable to take on the extra workload created by the Bill. They state:
Mr Porter needs to explain how he expects Legal Aid to meet
this extra demand without any extra funding, and should detail the consultation
he has had with the sector on this issue.
It is incredibly important that this overdue change is given
the resources necessary for it to work. Domestic violence victims can wait no
longer.[32]
Australian Greens
The Greens state that the Bill is ‘a step in the right
direction to lessen the trauma of survivors of abuse as they go through the
court process’.[33]
However, while welcoming the Bill, Greens’ justice spokesperson
Senator McKim also says ‘there is so much more that can [be] done to support
survivors of family violence’.[34]
Position of
major interest groups
The Senate Committee inquiring into the Bill received 33
submissions from a range of different stakeholders including the courts, the
legal profession, human rights advocates, women’s legal services, academics and
various advocates of children’s and women’s rights.[35]
Generally submitters support the idea of protecting family
violence victims from being re‑traumatised during court hearings, however
many, particularly members of the legal profession, question the provisions
that impose mandatory exclusion from direct cross‑examination and remove
court discretion. They argue that these provisions raise serious questions of
procedural fairness. Another recurring concern in submissions relates to
funding issues and the financing of Legal Aid. Some suggest that enforcing
legal representation without appropriate funding of Legal Aid may disadvantage
the most vulnerable litigants, the ones whom the Bill is in fact aiming to
protect.
A selection of submitters’ views are set out here and the Keys
issues and provisions section below provides further views on the specific
provisions.
Law Council
of Australia
The Law Council observes that proceedings involving direct
cross-examination between perpetrators and victims at trial, whilst raising
significant concerns, are of limited number in the family law system.[36]
Also, as the submission notes, there are already significant legislative tools
to protect victims from improper exposure:
Where such issues do arise there are significant tools
available to trial judges in the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) to properly
protect victims from improper and unnecessary exposure to perpetrators and are
common to many courts. Further, Division 12A of the Family Law Act
provides explicit powers to a trial judge in parenting proceedings to directly
control the issues permitted to be pursued in proceedings and the mode by which
this is to occur, including in respect of cross-examination. Division 12A also permits
a court to make any necessary preliminary determination, including as to whether
there has in fact been family violence between an alleged perpetrator and victim
and the consequences of the same, including in terms of the proper conduct of the
proceedings subsequently.[37]
The Law Council also explains that the right to
cross-examine the other party is an essential part of any adversarial system of
justice and for that reason it has concerns about removal of that right:
Proceedings under the Family Law Act are essentially
adversarial in nature. While Division 12A provides for greater powers, some of
an inquisitorial nature, in parenting proceedings, such proceedings along with
financial proceedings remain fundamentally adversarial in nature. Fundamental
to any adversarial system of justice and the right of a party to a fair trial
is the right to cross-examine the other party and the witnesses she or he may rely
upon.[38]
Apart from these broader concerns, the Law Council has
serious reservations about several aspects of the Bill including:
• the
lack of clarity regarding the proposed model for participation of a lawyer to perform
the cross-examination. The Law Council would like to know if a legally aided
lawyer will only be appointed to perform the cross-examination, or will they be
appointed to act for the party for the entire hearing. The Law Council also
notes that the Bill does not provide a solution to the situation where a
litigant may attempt to delay proceedings deliberately by refusing to co‑operate
with the cross-examining lawyer acting on his or her behalf
- the
failure by government to confirm that extra funding will be provided to Legal Aid
Commissions to enable them to perform this vital role of cross-examination
- the
lack of clarity regarding the guidelines that will be applied by Legal Aid Commissions
to people who cannot afford a private lawyer to act for them and who seek the
appointment of a legally aided lawyer and
- the
uncertainty about what is to occur if a party cannot afford a private lawyer
and is not eligible for Legal Aid. The Law Council is particularly concerned
that situations may arise where the perpetrator is legally represented, but the
victim of family violence is unable to secure legal representation.[39]
Dr Tracey
Booth, Miranda Kaye and Dr Jane Wangmann
Academics from the
University of Technology Sydney, Dr Tracey Booth, Miranda Kaye and Dr Jane
Wangmann, agree that reform preventing or limiting direct personal cross-examination
in family law proceedings is required. While they consider the current Bill is
an improvement on the Exposure Draft they continue to have several concerns
with the Bill.[40]
They believe that there should be discretion to grant leave
for direct cross-examination, although this should be used sparingly. They also
argue that removing all discretion, as the Bill does, removes women’s autonomy.
They point to state family violence legislative models that do allow a discretion,
although also noting that comparisons between state jurisdictions and the very
different federal family law jurisdiction can be problematic.[41]
In a separate article they state:
There are distinct jurisdictional differences presented by
family law that means that legislative reform is not necessarily
straightforward. In family law proceedings the parties are ‘parties’ not just
‘witnesses’, as is the case for victims in criminal proceedings. Parties in
family law proceedings are participants in the entire trial process.[42]
They note that the family courts have sought to draw
attention to these differences in their recent submissions to various inquiries
and they quote the Family Court of Australia who, in the Better Family Law
Inquiry, drew attention to the breadth of legal issues that may be raised
in an individual case, and the wide array of factual issues that may need to be
determined:
... a case may involve a trial about parenting issues as well
as property issues with allegations of violence, mental health issues,
substance abuse and claims about new partners of both parents, as well as
contested facts in their property dispute. The capacity to challenge evidence
where it is contested is a fundamental
part of our legal system and integral to the capacity of the judge to make
findings where evidence is in dispute. Evidentiary rules provide for less
weight to be given to evidence where it cannot be tested. Policy and
legislative change is a matter for government but care must be taken to ensure
that any change does not involve unintended consequences that disadvantage
those who it seeks to protect.[43]
As Booth, Kaye and Wangmann also note, many self-represented
litigants who are victims of family violence are unable to afford legal
representation and are not entitled to Legal Aid. In those circumstances it
would be unfair to require these victims to pay for costly legal representation
or lose the right to cross-examine the perpetrator of the abuse. Like many
other submitters, they also argue that Legal Aid funding should be increased to
allow Legal Aid to take on representation of self-represented litigants in such
cases.[44]
Australian
Human Rights Commission
The Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) emphasises the
need to ensure that legislative reforms do not commence until availability of
Legal Aid for these matters is guaranteed, to ensure that unrepresented parties
to whom the provisions in this Bill apply are not disadvantaged in putting
their case before the court.[45]
New South
Wales Bar Association
The New South Wales Bar Association does not believe that
the Bill achieves the right balance between the aim of protecting family
violence victims from being re-traumatised during their court hearings with the
need for procedural fairness for parties.[46]
The Bar Association believes there should be no automatic
ban on cross-examination in any circumstances as an automatic ban may prejudice
both the interests of victims and alleged perpetrators, while constraining the
court’s ability to properly determine necessary issues including a finding that
family violence has occurred.[47]
In the Bar Association’s view, the Bill may result in the
unintended consequences of shifting the impact on victims of family violence
and the associated resource burden to state-based court system.[48]
It also argues that the passage of the Bill should be
postponed until the full impact of the Government’s planned restructure of the
courts is known and the ALRC inquiry been completed.[49]
Women’s
Legal Services Australia
Women’s Legal Services Australia (WLSA), while supportive
of the Bill, argues that the protections offered by this Bill can only make a
real difference with:
- proper
funding to ensure that both the victim and the perpetrator have a legal
representative to act on their behalf and conduct the cross-examination
properly for them and
- further
reform to improve the understanding of the family law courts and all
professionals within the system of the dynamics of family violence and trauma informed
and trauma based responses.[50]
National
Legal Aid
National Legal Aid supports the intention of the Bill but
considers that its effective implementation will require the establishment of a
scheme for appropriate legal representation of the parties and a special
Commonwealth fund or funding source dedicated to support the scheme.[51]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that there are no direct
financial implications from implementing the measures in the Bill.[52]
It also states that the Government is working with National Legal Aid ‘to
determine the impacts that are expected to result from the measures in the Bill
and ensure that adequate funding is available’.[53]
Despite this statement, a number of stakeholders have
questioned the financial implications, arguing that it is unclear how Legal Aid
will be supported to meet the new demands created by the Bill without further
funding and investment by the Commonwealth.[54]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[55]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights has
reported that it considers the Bill does not raise human rights concerns.[56]
Key issues
and provisions
Part XI of the Family Law Act contains provisions
relating to procedure and evidence. Item 1 of Schedule 1 to the
Bill inserts into Part XI new Division 4 entitled ‘Cross-examination of
parties where allegations of family violence’. It contains proposed sections 102NA, 102NB and
102NC.
Section
102NA: Mandatory protections for parties in certain cases
Proposed section 102NA sets out the conditions for
when a ban on direct-cross examination will apply in family law proceedings. It
provides that, if in proceedings, a party intends to cross‑examine
another party and there is an allegation of family violence[57]
between these parties and certain circumstances are satisfied, then:
- the
parties must not personally cross-examine each other and
- the
cross-examination must be conducted by a legal practitioner acting on behalf of
the examining party.
The particular circumstances that must be satisfied for
cross-examination to be prohibited are set out in proposed paragraph
102NA(1)(c) and are any of the following:
- either
party has been convicted of, or is charged with, an offence involving violence,
or a threat of violence, to the other party
- a
family violence order (other than an interim order) applies to both parties
- an
injunction under section 68B or section 114 of the Act for the personal
protection of either party is directed against the other party.
The court also has the discretion to order that personal cross-examination
is prohibited (proposed subparagraph 102NA(1)(c)(iv)). The court may do
so on its own initiative, or on the application of the witness party, the
examining party or an independent children’s lawyer appointed for a child in
relation to the proceedings (proposed subsection 102NA(3)).
If the ban applies, the alleged perpetrator will be
prohibited from directly cross-examining the victim, and the victim will also
be prohibited from directly cross-examining the alleged perpetrator.[58]
Where direct cross-examination is prohibited, both parties will be required to
conduct cross-examination through legal representatives. A note confirms that the
section does not limit other provisions in the Act that apply to protect the
witness party.
Mandatory
ban versus court discretion: comment
The Government’s rationale for imposing a mandatory ban on
direct cross-examination in certain circumstances is to provide certainty for
victims.[59]
The AGD submission to the Senate inquiry also suggests that some stakeholders,
in their responses to the Exposure Draft, had argued that allowing the court to
grant leave for direct cross-examination would create the potential for
perpetrators to pressure victims to provide consent to cross-examining.[60]
However, as noted above, a number of submitters to the
Senate inquiry into the Bill expressed strong concern that the Bill removes
court discretion and imposes a mandatory prohibition on direct
cross-examination in certain circumstances. The NSW Bar Association and others
argue that removing court discretion may have a negative impact on victims of
family violence. As WSLA argues:
Processes and systems which are imposed mandatorily on
victim-survivors, risk becoming another means by which that victim-survivor is
being controlled instead of being a means by which that person is able to move
forward with their recovery. WLSA members very strongly consider that the Bill
should be amended so that victim-survivors of family violence who are eligible
for the prohibition of direct cross-examination ultimately have the ability to
choose (and can make the final decision) as to whether that prohibition should
apply.[61]
Legal
representation and funding: comment
As already noted, proposed subsection 102NA(2)
provides that when the ban on direct cross‑examination applies,
cross-examination must be conducted by a legal representative.
The question of how this legal representation will work
has been the subject of some concern in submissions to the Senate inquiry into
the Bill.
The AGD submission to the Senate inquiry provides the
following explanation of how legal representation is to be managed:
Parties will be able to engage their own legal
representation. Where a party is unable to obtain private legal representation,
parties will be able to seek representation through legal aid commissions.
Parties may be required to contribute to the costs of their
representation where they can afford to do so. A party who chooses not to
utilise legal representation, would effectively be foregoing their opportunity
to cross-examine the other party – the matter would proceed nonetheless.
In March 2018, the department formed a Steering Committee
with representatives from National Legal Aid and the family law courts, to
ensure the necessary processes and procedures to successfully implement the measures
are developed prior to their commencement. This work includes determining the
processes and procedures that will best facilitate legal representation when
the ban is in place.
[...]
The Government is working with National Legal Aid to
determine the impacts of the Bill, and ensure adequate funding is available to
ensure the Bill is effectively implemented. This work is currently underway and
includes consideration of issues such as contributions from those that can
afford to pay and ensuring the measure cannot be exploited.[62]
A number of submitters are concerned about the role of Legal
Aid, arguing that unless additional Commonwealth funds are provided, the Bill
will have a significant financial impact on the capacities of Legal Aid Commissions
to fund other aspects of family law disputes.[63]
There appears to be mixed messages from the Government with
the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill stating there will be no financial
implications and at the same time stating that it is working with National
Legal Aid ‘to ensure adequate funding is available’.[64]
National Legal Aid itself has recommended that a special Commonwealth fund or
funding source needs to be established.[65]
Some submitters have also suggested that the compulsory
legal representation will place unfair pressure on victims, particularly those
who are not entitled to Legal Aid but unable to afford privately funded legal
representation. As the Australian Bar Association states:
A single person (without children) will be refused a grant of
Legal Aid if their gross annual income is at or above $52,520. Accordingly, it
ought not be assumed “possible” for a person in receipt of a gross
annual income over that amount, to retain private legal representation.
[...] the ABA considers it of critical importance that adequate
funding be allocated to permit the existing thresholds for grants of Legal Aid
(in proceedings where the mandatory protections are to apply) be relaxed, so as
to ensure procedural fairness to litigants.[66]
There have also been questions about the role that the
legal representative would play in proceedings. AGD states that it is expected
that legal representation provided through Legal Aid Commissions will apply to
the final hearing, where cross-examination is most likely to take place.[67]
However, several submitters including the Law Council and the
various Bar Associations query this. The Law Council considers it necessary for
a legal practitioner appointed as a result of this Bill to be appointed for the
entirety of the hearing in which the cross-examination is expected to occur. It
argues that this is necessary so that a legal practitioner would have access to
all of the evidence before the Court in order to effectively cross-examine a
witness:
Cross-examination is a dynamic and at times, organic process.
Limiting or restricting the process of cross-examination, as proposed in the
amendments, will severely undermine the utility of the process and may
ultimately render a judgment unreliable and subject to appeal.[68]
Factors
triggering the prohibition on direct cross-examination: comment
Party convicted of or charged with an offence of
violence or threat of violence to the other person
In relation to this trigger, the Explanatory Memorandum emphasises
that a mere charge relating to violence is not to carry implications of guilt,
‘but merely recognises that a family violence charge between those parties
infers a power imbalance that requires a certain level of protection for those
parties’.[69]
The Law Council however contends that this provision
conflates a charge with a presumption of guilt and therefore recommends the
reference to ‘or is charged with’ be deleted. The Law Council notes that a
court will have discretion to order the ban if deemed appropriate and may take
into account the fact that a party has been charged with a family violence
offence.[70]
A family violence order (other than an interim order)
applies to both parties
The Explanatory Memorandum justifies the exclusion of an
interim family violence order as a trigger for mandatory ban on direct
cross-examination arguing that these can be made ex parte and/or without a
hearing. This leaves open the potential for a party to obtain an interim family
violence order shortly before or during a family law trial, for the purpose of delaying
or frustrating the family law matter.[71]
However the AHRC is concerned that excluding interim
family violence orders is not consistent with the overall aims of the Bill. As
the Commission notes, interim family violence orders are still issued based on
an assessment of risk made either by police or a court, to provide immediate
protection to a person. To maintain consistency with relevant definitions in
the broader Act and the overall aims of the Bill, the Commission supports the
inclusion of interim family violence orders in this section.[72]
WLSA also considers that subparagraph 102NA(1)(c)(ii)
should be amended to include interim family violence orders as well as final
orders:
While interim orders are usually acquired without a state or
territory court making findings of fact, it is also possible for final orders
to be made without requiring findings of fact (e.g. settling on a without
admission or consent basis). Interim orders are also often based on an assessment
of risk made by either the police or a court. Interim orders can also last for
1- 2 years before final orders are made.[73]
Section
102NB: Court ordered protections in other cases
Proposed section 102NB deals with the situation
when the ban on cross-examination as set out in section 102NA is not applied.
It provides that in situations where:
- a
party intends to cross-examine another party personally and
- there
is an allegation of family violence and
- the
ban on cross-examination as set out in section 102NA does not apply, then
the court must ensure that there are appropriate
protections for the party who is the alleged victim of family violence.
Note 1 to this provision explains that the
protections could include directing or allowing the cross‑examination be
conducted by video or audio link.
Note 2 confirms that this section does not limit
other laws that apply to protect the witness party.
In relation to this provision, several submitters
emphasised the need to ensure that courts are adequately resourced to deal with
the potential increase in demand for the use of alternative protections
provided in the Bill.[74]
Academics Booth, Kaye and Wangmann welcome the
introduction of section 102NB, while noting that such provisions already exist,
although they are rarely used. They suggest that section 102NB be amended to
make it clear that special arrangements are available even where a legal
representative undertakes the cross-examination. Indeed they suggest that section
102NB should be a free standing provision that should be considered in all
family law proceedings and not linked to the issue of direct cross-examination.[75]
Section
102NBC: Review of the amendments
Proposed section 102NC requires that a review of
the amendments be commenced as soon as possible after the second anniversary of
the legislation commencing, although that two-year review period may be
extended by Regulation.
The Explanatory Memorandum states that AGD will review the
amendments internally, in consultation with the family law courts, National
Legal Aid and other relevant stakeholders.
Concluding comments
There appears to be broad support for the intent of the
Bill to ‘ensure that appropriate protections for
victims of family violence are in place during cross-examination in family law proceedings’. However, as has
been observed, the issue is complex and not amenable to a simple or quick
solution. Many submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill suggest there are
concerns with the Bill.
Generally, submitters support the idea of protecting
family violence victims from being re‑traumatised during court hearings
however many, particularly members of the legal profession, question the
provisions that impose mandatory exclusion from direct cross-examination and
remove court discretion. They argue that these provisions raise serious
questions concerning procedural fairness, the right to a fair trial and access
to justice. Another recurring theme in submissions relates to funding and
concerns that the obligatory requirement for legal representation will place
strain on the already limited resources of Legal Aid, and on those litigants
unable to access Legal Aid or afford private representation.
A further question that Parliament might consider is whether
the Bill should progress just months before the ALRC family law inquiry is to
be completed and at a time when the federal courts are soon to be restructured.
The difficult and changing environment of family law may
complicate the impact of this Bill and, as has been observed, care must be
taken to ensure that any change does not involve unintended consequences that
disadvantage those whom the Bill seeks to protect.