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Domestic violence laws in Australia

2. Conflict and inconsistency between orders under the Family Law Act relating to children and State/Territory protection orders

6.2.1. There is considerable scope for inconsistency between State/Territory protection orders made by a State or Territory court, and relating to the members of a family (or extended family), and the orders that a different court, exercising jurisdiction under the FL Act, may make with regard to the care of or contact with children in the same family.

6.2.2. Inconsistency may be apparent on the terms of the orders. For example, an order under the FL Act may allow a parent to spend time with a child, whereas a State/ Territory protection order might state that the parent may not approach or communicate with the child. There is also the possibility of practical inconsistency between two orders, in the sense that it is difficult or impossible in practice to comply fully with both. An example would be where an order under Part VII of the FL Act allows a parent to have contact with a child, but a State/Territory protection order prohibits the parent from contacting the person with whom the child lives, making it practically difficult to arrange contact without breaching the latter order.271

6.2.3. It is recognised widely that women are at increased risk of violence in the period following separation,272 and that periods of contact with children, particularly the handing-over of children for contact, are also periods of elevated risk for women and children (including where contact is facilitated by a service provider).273 In this context, it is important that State/Territory protection orders and orders that facilitate contact with children operate cohesively and in a way that ensures the safety of all parties.

Rules governing the relationship between different orders

6.2.4. There are special provisions in the FL Act which govern the relationship between orders made under the State/Territory protection orders and orders and injunctions made under Part VII of the FL Act. The relationship between State/Territory protection orders and parenting orders and injunctions made under the FL Act is governed by Division 11 of Part VII of the FL Act. The purposes of that Division are (s 68N):

6.2.5. As discussed in Part 5, s 60B sets out the objects and principles that under pin Part VII of the FL Act. These purposes reveal an inherent tension in the way in which the FL Act deals with children and family violence, which is particularly apparent in the conflict that may arise between FL Act orders about contact with children and orders about family violence. The objects of Part VII include ensuring that children ‘have the benefit of both of their parents having a meaningful involvement in their lives, to the maximum extent consistent with the best interests of the child’ (s 60B(1)(a)). Similarly, one of the principles underlying Part VII is that ‘children have a right to know and be cared for by both their parents . . . ’ (s 60B(2)(a)) and ‘children have a right to spend time on a regular basis with, and communicate on a regular basis with, both their parents . . . ’ (s 60B(2)(b)). However, another object of Part VII is to ensure that children’s best interests are met by ‘protecting children from physical or psychological harm from being subjected to, or exposed to, abuse, neglect or family violence’ (s 60B(1)(b)).

6.2.6. Section 60B does not state clearly which of the objects and purposes of Part VII should be given priority if there is a tension or conflict between them. Likewise, Division 11 does not indicate which of its purposes should prevail. It is, therefore, left largely to courts to determine whether children’s rights to know, be cared for and spend time with both parents should prevail over the need to protect children from exposure to family violence.275

Making an order or injunction under the FL Act that is inconsistent with an existing State/Territory protection order

6.2.7. The operation of the rules governing the relationship between FL Act orders and injunctions and State/Territory protection orders depends, in part, on the chronological sequence in which the orders were made – that is, which order was made first.

Facilitating contact with children

6.2.8. An FL Act order or injunction can effectively override an existing State/ Territory protection order so as to facilitate contact between a child and another person. A State/Territory protection order that is inconsistent with an FL Act order or injunction that provides for or expressly or impliedly requires or authorises a person to spend time with a child is, to the extent of the inconsistency, invalid (s 68Q(1) of the FL Act).

6.2.9. The following people may apply for a declaration that a State/Territory protection order is in consistent with an FL Act injunction or order (s 68Q(2)):

A person might apply for a declaration of inconsistency in order to make clear which of the orders prevails, and the extent (if any) to which the State/Territory protection order is invalid.

6.2.10. When a court makes an order or grants an injunction under the FL Act that is inconsistent with an existing State/Territory protection order, the court must comply with the requirements of s 68P(2) and (3). These include:

Orders and injunctions that do not relate to children

6.2.11. Sections68P and 68Q of the FL Act are concerned with orders and injunctions that facilitate contact between a person and a child. As described above, such orders can override a State/Territory protection order to the extent of any inconsistency.

6.2.12. As discussed in Part 5 of this Report, orders and injunctions that do not relate to contact with children are also available under ss 68B and 114 of the FL Act. There is potential for such an order to conflict with a State/Territory protection order. An example might be an injunction granted under s 114 for the personal protection of a party to a marriage, where there are no children. Such an injunction might prevent one party from entering the marital home, when that person is allowed to do so under the terms of a State/Territory protection order. Neither order expressly or impliedly authorises or requires a person to have contact with a child, so s 68Q does not apply; nevertheless, the two orders are clearly inconsistent.276

6.2.13. Section114AB(1) provides that ss 68B and 114 are not intended to exclude or limit the operation of a prescribed law of a State or Territory (i.e. the State/ Territory protection orders legislation)that is capable of operating concurrently with those sections. It follows from s 114AB(1) that, if an order or injunction made under s 68B or s 114 is capable of operating concurrently with a State/ Territory protection order both orders operate in parallel.

6.2.14. Section114AB(1)does not deal expressly with a situation in which orders made under the State/Territory protection orders legislation are not capable of operating concurrently with orders made under s 68B or s 114 of the FL Act. However, on general constitutional principles, an order made pursuant to a Commonwealth law will prevail over an order made under a State or Territory law to the extent that the orders are inconsistent with each other.277

6.2.15. A person affected by the inconsistency between multiple orders could apply to have any or all of the orders varied.278 However, until all the applicable orders are capable of operating in conjunction with each other, there is a risk that the protection they offer to victims of domestic violence could be compromised.

Making a State/Territory protection order that is inconsistent with an existing FL Act order or injunction

6.2.16. There is potential for inconsistency between orders and injunctions made under the FL Act and State/Territory protection orders subsequently made or varied.

6.2.17. As discussed in Chapter 3 of this Part, some courts exercise jurisdiction under State or Territory law and under the FL Act.279 Where such a court is asked to make or vary a State/Territory protection order, and the court also has jurisdiction under Part VII of the FL Act, s 68R provides a mechanism for avoiding inconsistencies between the two orders. When the court makes or varies the State/Territory protection order, it may also revive, vary, discharge or suspend (s 68R(1)):

6.2.18. The power under s 68R to alter existing FL Act orders and injunctions is subject to conditions. A court may not exercise its power under s 69R unless it is also making or varying a State/Territory protection order. A court may only revive, vary, discharge or suspend an FL Act order or injunction if there is material before the court that was not before the court that made the original order or injunction(s68R(3)).

6.2.19. When a court is exercising its power under s 68R to revive, vary, discharge or suspend an order or injunction, it must have regard to whether contact with both parents is in the best interests of the child concerned (s 68R(5)). The court must also have regard to (s 68R(5)(b)):

6.2.20. If, when the original order or injunction was made under s 68B or s 114, it was inconsistent with an existing State/Territory protection order, the court must be satisfied that it is appropriate to revive, vary, discharge or suspend the order or injunction because a person has been exposed, or is likely to be exposed, to family violence as a result of the operation of that order or injunction(s68R(5)(c)).

6.2.21. A court may not discharge an FL Act order, injunction or arrangement in proceedings to make or vary a State/Territory protection order on an interim basis (s 69R(4)). FL Act orders, injunctions and arrangements may be revived, varied or suspended for the duration of an interim order (s 68T(1)).

Making a State/Territory protection order where there are no FL Act orders in place

6.2.22. A State/Territory protection order can be the first judicial response to domestic violence. Applicants may seek a protection order before they contemplate separation or family law proceedings. In such cases, it may be appropriate for the court making a protection order also to consider making orders under the FL Act dealing with parental responsibility and contact between parents and children. (Many courts with jurisdiction to make a State/Territory protection order also have jurisdiction under the FL Act which allows the court to make parenting orders (see paragraph 6.3.18 ff)).

6.2.23. Making orders about who children spend time with, at the same time that orders are made for the personal protection of the children or their parents, has several potential advantages. If a court makes orders under the FL Act and the applicable State/Territory protection orders legislation at the same time, it is less likely that the orders will conflict or that the parties will be uncertain as to which orders prevail.

6.2.24. In some cases, it may also allow a parent who has experienced family violence to argue that the children are at such a risk of experiencing or witnessing further violence that, not only should a protection order be issued in favour of the victim, but the court should also order that the children spend no time with the person responsible for the violence, and that parental responsibility be exercised solely by the parent who has been subjected to that violence. An order of this kind would make it easier, for example, for a woman to take her children to a refuge or safe-house without needing to compromise her and their safety in order to allow the children to spend time with a violent former partner, and without the need to make a further, potentially lengthy, FL Act application to finalise arrangements for the children’s care.281

6.2.25. However, as we observe below, it appears that the magistrates who make protection orders are often unwilling to deal with issues about contact with children – these may be viewed as the domain of Federal Family courts, rather than State local courts.

Mitigating the risk of conflict between orders

6.2.26. The FL Act, and most State/Territory legislation, requires courts to take into account the existence of other relevant orders when considering an application.282 In order to enable courts to do so, most State/Territory protection orders legislation also requires applicants to tell the court about relevant FL Act orders and, in some cases, about pending applications for relevant orders. The Table in the Appendix to this Part sets out the obligations imposed by each of the State and Territory Acts – when a court is required to be told of other relevant orders, what orders the court needs to be informed about, and who is required to provide the information to the court.283

6.2.27. The fact that an applicant is required to tell a court about other relevant orders, and that the court is required to take that information into account, does not, of itself, prevent the court from making an order that is inconsistent with the existing orders. The requirement to inform courts about relevant orders does, however, allow courts to obtain the information they need in order to exercise their powers so as to avoid inconsistency between different orders – for example, by using their power under s 68R of the FL Act to vary an existing parenting order so as to make it consistent with a new State/ Territory protection order, or framing a new parenting order in terms that are consistent with existing State/Territory protection orders.

6.2.28. Section68R should also address, in part, the problem of courts being asked to make consent orders based on incomplete information. Previously, if parties applied for orders by consent, and did not tell the court hearing the application that there was a State/Territory protection order in place, the court might have made the orders sought without being able to consider how the FL Act orders would interact with the consent orders.284

How the law operates in practice

6.2.29. There is evidence that Division 11 of Part VII of the FL Act is not a complete answer to the problem of inconsistency between FL Act contact-related and State/Territory protection orders. Researchers and practitioners in family law continue to report that conflict between contact orders and State/Territory protection orders creates unsafe and traumatic situations for parents and children who have attempted to escape family violence.285 Below we examine several key areas of ongoing difficulty.

‘Gaps’ in the legislative framework

6.2.30. As discussed above, although there is considerable potential for inconsistency between FL Act orders (particularly parenting orders) and State/Territory protection orders, all of the relevant legislation includes provisions designed to avoid or remedy conflicts between orders made under different Acts. In summary, these measures include:

6.2.31. However, as already noted, there are some ‘gaps’ in the coverage of these provisions. For example, the FL Act does not deal directly with conflict between orders made under that Act that do not relate to contact with children and State/Territory protection orders, where those orders are not capable of operating concurrently. As indicated above, for constitutional reasons, the FL Act order will prevail to the extent of any inconsistency. Similarly, the FL Act generally does not deal with conflicts between orders of a court exercising jurisdiction under the FL Act and orders made under child welfare laws in a State or Territory.

Lack of a mechanism for ensuring that courts are informed about other relevant orders

6.2.32. As noted above, the State and Territory protection orders legislation and the FL Act generally require applicants for orders under each respective law to inform the court about other relevant State/Territory protection orders or FL Act orders that are in force, and any pending applications for such orders (see paragraphs 6.2.26 to 6.2.28). However, whether deliberately or inadvertently, some parties to FL Act or State/Territory protection order proceedings may not fully inform a court about other relevant orders or pending applications for orders. The problem is likely to be particularly acute where the parties to the proceedings are unrepresented. Applicants may also be unable to provide a court with copies of the relevant orders. Problems may arise if a court makes an order under the FL Act or State/Territory protection orders legislation in ignorance of existing orders.

6.2.33. At present there is no national repository of information encompassing State/ Territory protection orders and FL Act orders that a court can access in order to determine whether there are already orders in force in relation to a particular family. The Pyke Paper discussed a number of options for overcoming the difficulties courts and police face in obtaining the necessary information, one of which was the establishment of a national database to provide reliable information about State/Territory protection orders and FL Act orders and injunctions.286 Another possibility put forward in the Pyke Paper was the making of regulations under the FL Act to facilitate sharing of information between courts exercising jurisdiction under that Act.287

6.2.34. A national database could be particularly useful to courts hearing ex parte applications for FL Act orders and/or State/Territory protection orders. The Pyke Paper cites the following example of a situation in which a court might be asked to make an order, ex parte, on the basis of incomplete information:

… in the Family Court, sometimes location orders are made where the parent of a child . . . alleges that the other parent has disappeared with the child without their knowledge and seeks that the Court make a location order . . . Whilst the Court may inquire as to whether there are any family violence orders in place, the reality is that it may not be in the interests of a person seeking a location order to inform the Court of the existence of such family violence orders.288

Orders that are practically incompatible but not legally inconsistent

6.2.35. Division11 of Part VII was reworked substantially when the FL Act was amended in 2006. The 2006 reforms aimed to make Division 11 easier to understand and use, and to implement some of the changes that the Family Law Council had proposed in 2004.289 Prior to the reform of Division 11 in 2006, research suggested that it was common for State/Territory protection orders to include an exception for conduct that was undertaken for the purposes of a contact order under the FL Act – for example, an order that a person not approach or contact their former partner, except for the purpose of contact with children pursuant to an order under the FL Act.290 The effect of these ‘standard’ formulae is that there is no direct inconsistency between the FL Act orders and the State/Territory protection order. Both are, in theory, capable of operating alongside each other. However, in terms of outcomes, carving out exceptions to a State/Territory protection order may privilege contact with children over ensuring the safety of the person ostensibly protected by the order.291

6.2.36. Data concerning the operation of Division 11 in its present form are limited; it is not clear whether the 2006 amendments have affected the way in which State/Territory protection orders are made.

Lack of evidence in interim orders proceedings

6.2.37. Courts are often required to make interim orders to determine parenting arrangement spending a final hearing of an application under Part VII of the FL Act. These orders are made without the parties having an opportunity to put the whole of their evidence and argument before the court, and before evidence in support of allegations of family violence can be tested properly.

6.2.38. Even if parties to an application for an interim order about contact with children disclose to the court that there is a State/Territory protection order in place, evidence of that order may not, of itself, constitute evidence that family violence has occurred. Many State/Territory protection orders are granted on the basis that the person the subject of the order consents to it being made without admitting the allegations of the applicant.292 In such a case, the existence of an order cannot be taken as evidence that violence has occurred in the past, or even that the applicant has a reasonable fear for his or her safety.

6.2.39. In this context, a court may be more likely to make an order under the FL Act that allows contact between children and a person against whom a State/ Territory protection order has been made, at least until the allegations of violence can be tested in a full hearing. Courts may exercise caution by ordering that the contact be supervised or subject to other restrictions.

Failure to use powers under s 68R of the FL Act when applications are made for family violence orders

6.2.40. There appears to be a broad consensus that the powers given to courts of summary jurisdiction to make, vary, suspend or discharge FL Act orders when making or varying a State/Territory protection order are under-utilised or are not being used effectively. Instead, protection orders tend to include terms that effectively defer to FL Act orders – for example, by providing that a parent may not have contact with a child except as provided under a parenting order.293

6.2.41. There is some suggestion that applicants, practitioners and magistrates are unfamiliar with the powers conferred by s 68R on courts making State/ Territory protection orders.294 Magistrates in courts of summary jurisdiction may be unwilling to exercise their powers to change the orders that have been made by a superior, specialist court.295 Police applying for a protection order on behalf of a complainant may also be unwilling to seek changes to contact arrangements under the FL Act.296 It also appears that courts of summary jurisdiction frequently do not exercise their powers under s 68R to revive, vary, discharge or suspend contact orders at the same time as they make or vary a State/Territory protection order, for families who have not yet instigated proceedings under the FL Act.297

6.2.42. The Victorian Law Reform Commission recently recommended that magistrates in that jurisdiction undertake extensive training in relation to children, family violence and the impact of contact orders, to enable them more effectively to exercise their existing powers under the FL Act and State law.298

  1. For examples of women’s experience of conflicting orders, see VLRC, Family Violence, op cit; Sera’s Women’s Shelter, North Queensland Domestic Violence Resource Ser vice and the North Queensland Combined Women’s Ser vices, Dragonfly Whispers: The experiences of women who have lived with domestic violence and their journey through the Family Court (2006); B Tinning, Seeking Safety, Needing Support: A report on support requirements for women experiencing domestic violence and accessing the Family Court (Sera’s Women’s Shelter, North Queensland Domestic Violence Resource Ser vice and the North Queensland Combined Women’s Services, 2006).
  2. M Kaye, J Stubbs and J Tolmie ‘Domestic Violence, Separation and Parenting: Negotiating safety using legal processes’ (2003)15(2) Current Issues in Criminal Justice 73; L Laing, ‘Domestic Violence and Family Law’ (Australian Domestic and Family Violence Clearing House, Topic Paper, 2003); P Jaffe, C Crooks and N Bala, Making Appropriate Parenting Arrangements in Family Violence Cases: Applying the literature to identify promising practices (Department of Justice Canada, Ottawa, 2005).
  3. G Sheehan, R Carson, B Fehlberg, R Hunter, A Tomison, R Ip and J Dewar, Children’s Contact Services: Expectation and experience: final report (Griffith Law School, Griffith University, Nathan, 2005); K Rendell, Z Rathus and A Lynch, An Unacceptable Risk: A report on child contact arrangements where there is violence in the family (Women’s Legal Ser vice, QLD, November 2000); Kaye et al, ‘Child Contact Arrangements’, op cit.
  4. The protective purpose of Division 11 is not limited to the protection of children - the Division is intended to ensure that orders made under the FL Act do not expose anyone to family violence: s 68N(aa).
  5. We note that, before Division 11 was overhauled in the 2006 amendments, the Family Law Council recommended to the Attorney-General that the Division should make clear that protection from family violence takes priority over other considerations: Family Law Council, Family Law Council: Review of Division 11 – Family Violence (16 November 2004).
  6. As we observe at paragraph 2.2.9 to 2.2.18, s 114AB(2) limits the circumstances in which a person can apply for an order under s 68B or s 114 if they have already obtained a State/ Territory protection order. However, there may be situations in which a State/Territory protection order and an injunction under s 68B or s 114 are in place at the same time in relation to the same parties.
  7. Section 109 of the Constitution provides that when a law of a State is inconsistent with a law of the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth law prevails and the State law is invalid to the extent of the inconsistency.
  8. See, for example, s 70NBA of the FL Act (which allows a court to var y a parenting order if it is alleged that a person has contravened the order).
  9. Some, but not all, of the courts that exercise jurisdiction under State/ Territory protection orders legislation are courts of summary jurisdiction for the purposes of s 69J.
  10. See further ss 68N and 60B.
  11. It should be noted, however, that orders for no contact between a parent and child are made extremely rarely. Contact centres and other supervision mechanisms are generally used in order to facilitate some contact between a parent and child.
  12. Domestic Violence and Protection Orders Act 2008 (ACT), s 31; Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007 (NSW), s 42; Domestic and Family Violence Act 2007 (NT), s 19; Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 1989 (QLD), s 46C; Domestic Violence Act 1994 (SA), s 6; Family Violence Act 2004 (Tas), ss 14, 18; Restraining Orders Act 1997 (WA), s 12. The Victorian Crimes (Family Violence) Act 1987 does not explicitly require a court to take a FL Act order into account when making a protection order - however, if a court makes a protection order in respect of a child, it is required to determine whether there are FL Act orders that relate to the child’s residence or contact between the child and the defendant (see s 4A). A number of provisions in the Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic) direct courts’ attention to the relationship between orders made under that Act and FL Act orders- see ss 57, 90, 92, 102.
  13. The FL Act and the State/ Territory protection orders legislation does not require applicants to tell the court about any applicable orders or arrangements in place under child welfare laws.
  14. See Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit, p 4.
  15. Rendell et al, An Unacceptable Risk, op cit; Kaye et al, ‘Child Contact Arrangements’, op cit; VLRC, Family Violence, op cit; Sera’s Women’s Shelter, Dragonfly Whispers, op cit; Tinning, Seeking Safety, op cit.
  16. Pyke, op cit, pp 137-40.
  17. Ibid.
  18. Ibid, p 139.
  19. Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit.
  20. See Kaye et al, ‘Child Contact Arrangements’, op cit; Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit; Kaye et al, ‘Separation and Parenting’, op cit.
  21. For a discussion of the risks associated with standard exception clauses in family violence orders, see VLRC, Family Violence, op cit, pp 340-43.
  22. See Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit, 4; R Hunter and J Stubbs, ‘Model Laws or Missed Opportunity?’ (1999)24(1) Alternative Law Journal 12.
  23. See Kaye et al, ‘Child Contact Arrangements’, op cit; Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit; Kaye et al, ‘Separation and Parenting’, op cit.
  24. VLRC, Family Violence, op cit; Kaye et al, ‘Separation and Parenting’, op cit.
  25. Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit, 4; Kaye et al, ‘Separation and Parenting’, op cit.
  26. Kaye et al, ‘Separation and Parenting’, op cit; Family Law Council, Review of Division 11, op cit, 4; VLRC, Family Violence, op cit, pp 335-7.
  27. VLRC, Family Violence, op cit.
  28. Ibid, p 337.

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