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Small Claims Tribunal / Local Court / Magistrates Court

Posted in Local Court, Magistrates Court, Small Claims Tribunal by OnlineLegal on the February 22nd, 2006

Tips to help get you ready for your day in the:

 

  • Small Claims Tribunal
  • Local Court
  • Magistrates Court

across Australia.

Go and check it out in advance  

It will be a very worthwhile investment of your time to go to a sitting of the Small Claims Tribunal, Local Court, or Magistrates Court before the date of your trial and observe other trials in action.

Presenting your case  

Have the originals and copies of any supporting documents you wish to present to the Small Claims Tribunal / Local Court / Magistrates Court. Have the documents well organised, in date order and even bound with a contents page (with page numbers if there are numerous documents) to hand to the Magistrate.  Have an extra copy for yourself and a copy for each defendant.

You will be invited to present your case. This is as simple as telling the facts as clearly as you can, in a logical way.

Your evidence  

Remember, your evidence must be “your evidence”.   If you don’t know something directly, that is a good sign you need someone else to tell that part of the story. You need them as a witness or at least an Affidavit from them.

Questions  

The Magistrate will probably ask you questions.  Answer them as clearly as possible. If you don’t know the answer, don’t be tempted to “shoot from the hip.”  There is no reason why your response in this case can’t be, “I cannot recall, your Honour”.

Credibility  

If you are at trial, it means that the defendant, at least from his/her perspective, has a different story. At the end of the day the Magistrate will be weighing the evidence and deciding who to believe. A significant factor here is how believable you are. Straight talking and staying with the relevant issues (rather than going off on tangents) is important. Additionally, avoid becoming emotional - this can cloud the objective facts, which is really all the Magistrate is interested in.

This material is extracted from our:

Preparing For Your Day In Local / Magistrates Court / Small Claims Tribunal LawPack (for all States & Territories in Australia)

The LawPack provides much more detail and also covers:

  • Register your attendance with the Clerk of the Court
  • You will be called in when it is your turn & time to allow
  • How to speak
  • Witnesses
  • Affidavits
  • Attachments & Exhibits to Affidavits
  • Cross-Examination  

The LawPack also includes:

  • Precedent Affidavit to use to place evidence before the Court / Small Claims Tribunal (Word)
  • Precedent Exhibit Marking (Word)
  • Detailed guidelines about the presentation of your case and getting your evidence before the Court / Small Claims Tribunal and when to use the above document(s)

This LawPack is another resource supplied by www.onlinelegal.com.au

Common Tax Questions

Posted in CGT, GST, Tax by OnlineLegal on the February 5th, 2006

The two tax topics we are consistently asked about are:

  • Goods and Services Tax (GST)
  • Capital Gains Tax (CGT)

The best person to ask these questions of is your accountant who not only knows the law but your own circumstances.

As a starting point however, the Australian taxation Office (ATO) web site is a rich source of answers to many commonly asked questions. The internal site search facility is powerful but not perfect.

Tip for using the ATO site search engine: There are often pages of information that will answer the tax question that you have, which you will only discover by a link from the content of a page revealed by your search which at first glance may not seem directly relevant.

Here are two great starting points:

Guide to capital gains tax 2004-05

GST for small business