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JUSTICES ACT 1959 - SECT 27 Proceedings may be commenced by complaint

JUSTICES ACT 1959 - SECT 27

Proceedings may be commenced by complaint

(1)  Subject to subsections (2) and (3) , and except as otherwise enacted or prescribed under any enactment, proceedings before justices shall be commenced by a complaint, which may be made or laid by the complainant in person, or by his or her lawyer or other person authorized in that behalf.
(2)  Where a person has been arrested without a warrant, oral information of the substance of the charge may take the place of a complaint up to the stage of the proceedings at which a complaint is needed for the person charged to plead to it.
(3)  A complaint of a breach of the Criminal Code may not be made by a person other than –
(a) a public officer;
(b) a person authorized or directed to make the complaint by the Crown or the Commonwealth; or
(c) an officer of a municipality or another statutory public or local authority –
acting in good faith in his official capacity, without the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions, who shall satisfy himself by affidavit, statutory declaration, or otherwise that the complainant is acting in good faith and on reasonable grounds.
(4)  If a matter purporting to be a complaint has been made by a public officer in the name of, and on behalf of, an agency, Department or instrumentality purportedly in reliance on rule 6(3)(b) of the Justices Rules 2003 as in force on and from 1 January 2004 until 1 June 2009 –
(a) the matter is taken to be a complaint validly made by the public officer who signed it; and
(b) that public officer is taken to be the complainant and to have made the complaint in his or her own right in accordance with subsection (1) ; and
(c) the complaint need not be sworn before a justice.
(5)  Subsection (4) applies –
(a) subject to subsection (6) , to a matter purporting to be a complaint referred to in subsection (4) , whether or not the proceedings on the purported complaint have been finally determined; and
(b) to the public officer who made the purported complaint in the name of, and on behalf of, an agency, Department or instrumentality, whether or not the public officer was employed in that agency, Department or instrumentality.
(6)  If before the commencement of subsection (4) a matter purporting to be a complaint referred to in that subsection has been dismissed by a court on the basis that the purported complainant is not a person who has the legal capacity to bring a complaint, that subsection –
(a) does not apply to that purported complaint; and
(b) does not affect the decision of the court.