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LEGISLATION ACT 2001 - SECT 76 Non–prejudicial provision may commence retrospectively

LEGISLATION ACT 2001 - SECT 76

Non–prejudicial provision may commence retrospectively

    (1)     A statutory instrument may provide that a non-prejudicial provision of the instrument commences retrospectively.

    (2)     Unless this subsection is displaced by, or under authority given by, an Act, a statutory instrument cannot provide that a prejudicial provision of the instrument commences retrospectively.

Example

The Locust Damage Compensation Determination 2003 (a hypothetical disallowable instrument) sets out (among other things) the people who are eligible for compensation under a compensation fund. Previously, there was no restriction on who was eligible. The determination provides that it is taken to have commenced on 1 July 2003, but it is not notified until 15 August 2003. There is nothing in the Act under which the determination is made (or any other Act) that authorises the retrospective commencement.

The provision of the determination that limits who can apply for compensation is a prejudicial provision (ie it adversely affects some people's right to receive compensation) and cannot commence retrospectively. Instead, it would commence on the day after the determination's notification day (see s 73 (3)).

    (3)     This section is a determinative provision.

Note     See s 5 for the meaning of determinative provisions, and s 6 for their displacement.

    (4)     In this section:

"non-prejudicial provision" means a provision that is not a prejudicial provision.

"prejudicial provision" means a provision that operates to the disadvantage of a person (other than the Territory or a territory authority or instrumentality) by—

        (a)     adversely affecting the person's rights; or

        (b)     imposing liabilities on the person.