Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972 (Vic)
Version No. 031
Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
No. 8305 of 1972
Version incorporating amendments as at
6 September 2023
TABLE OF PROVISIONS
Section Page
1Short title
2Repeal
3Performance of Attorney-General's functions by Minister
4Office of Solicitor-General
5Functions of Solicitor-General
6Pensions
7Salary sacrifice
Schedule
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Endnotes
1 General information
2 Table of Amendments
3 Explanatory details
Version No. 031
Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
No. 8305 of 1972
Version incorporating amendments as at
6 September 2023
An Act relating to the Offices of Attorney-General and
Solicitor-General.
BE IT ENACTED by the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council and the Legislative Assembly of Victoria in this present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same as follows (that is to say):
1Short title
This Act may be cited as the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972.
2Repeal
(1)The Acts mentioned in the Schedule to the extent thereby expressed to be repealed are hereby repealed accordingly.
(2)Except as in this Act expressly or by necessary implication provided all persons things and circumstances appointed or created by or under the repealed Acts or existing or continuing under such Acts immediately before the commencement of this Act shall under and subject to this Act continue to have the same status operation and effect as they respectively would have had if such Acts had not been so repealed.
3Performance of Attorney-General's functions by Minister
Where by virtue of any rule of law or practice the Attorney-General is entitled to exercise any power or required to perform any duty, the power may be exercised or the duty performed by any Minister for the time being acting for or on the behalf of the Attorney-General.
4Office of Solicitor-General
(1)The Governor in Council may subject to this Act appoint one of Her Majesty's counsel or His Majesty's counsel or a Senior Counsel to be the Solicitor-General and may remove any person so appointed.
(2)The office of Solicitor-General shall not be held by a responsible Minister of the Crown.
(3)The Solicitor-General—
(a)shall be paid such salary and allowances as are for the time being payable to a Judge of the Supreme Court (other than the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal or a Judge of Appeal);
(b)shall not engage in the practice of his or her profession nor in any other employment except in the exercise of the functions of his or her office.
5Functions of Solicitor-General
The Solicitor-General—
(a)may act as counsel for the Crown in right of Victoria and may perform such other duties of counsel as the Attorney-General directs;
(b)subject to this Act may exercise any powers and functions conferred on the Solicitor-General by any Act;
(c)has precedence after the Attorney-General in all cases whatever.
6Pensions
(1)The Solicitor-General and the partner and children of the Solicitor-General shall be entitled to pensions in the same circumstances and at the same rates and on the same terms and conditions as a judge of the Supreme Court (other than the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal or a Judge of Appeal) and the partner and children of such a judge under Part III of the Constitution Act 1975 and any such pension shall be liable to be suspended or determined in the same circumstances and to the same extent as pensions under said Part III are liable to be suspended or determined.
(2)A pension under this section may be commuted in the same circumstances and to the same extent as pensions under sections 83AC, 83AF and 83AI of the Constitution Act 1975 may be commuted and for that purpose sections 83AA to 83AI of that Act apply with such modifications as are necessary.
(3)If, on the expiration of his or her term of office as Solicitor-General, a person who served as Solicitor-General for not less than 10 years is not under subsection (1) entitled to a pension only because he or she has not attained the age of 65 years—
(a)on that person attaining the age of 65 years he or she, and his or her spouse and children, become entitled to pensions under that subsection in the circumstances, at the rates and on the terms and conditions set out in that subsection as if he or she had only retired from the office of Solicitor-General on attaining that age; and
(b)any such pension is liable to be suspended or determined in the circumstances and to the extent set out in that subsection.
(3A)Without limiting or otherwise affecting section 83 of the Constitution Act 1975, the entitlement of a former Solicitor-General to a pension under this section arising by force of subsection (3) is suspended while he or she holds the office of Judge of the Supreme Court, having been appointed to that office after having attained the age of 65 years.
(4)All pensions under this section and any payments of lump sums provided by the commutation of those pensions shall be payable out of the Consolidated Fund which is hereby appropriated accordingly.
(5)In this section—
domestic partner of a person means—
(a)a person who is, or was at the time of the person's death, in a registered domestic relationship with the person; or
(b)a person to whom the person is not married but with whom, in the opinion of the Minister, the person is, or was at the time of the person's death, living as a couple on a genuine domestic basis (irrespective of gender);
partner of a person means the person's spouse or domestic partner;
spouse of a person means a person to whom the person is, or was at the time of the person's death, married.
(6)For the purposes of the definition of domestic partner in subsection (5)—
(a)registered domestic relationship has the same meaning as in the Relationships Act 2008; and
(b)in determining whether persons who are not in a registered domestic relationship are domestic partners of each other, all the circumstances of their relationship are to be taken into account, including any one or more of the matters referred to in section 35(2) of the Relationships Act 2008 as may be relevant in a particular case.
(7)For the purposes of subsection (1), the definition of partner as substituted by section 110(1) of the Superannuation Legislation Amendment Act 2010 applies in respect of the entitlement to a pension of a partner of a Solicitor-General or former Solicitor-General only if the death of the Solicitor-General or former Solicitor-General occurs on or after the commencement of the substituting section.
7Salary sacrifice
(1)The Solicitor-General may by notice in writing to the Attorney-General enter into an arrangement under which the Solicitor-General agrees to receive the whole or part of his or her total amount of future salary as non-salary benefits of an equivalent value.
(2)The notice must specify a date from which the arrangement is to take effect which must be the date on which the notice is given or a later date.
(3)A member may vary or revoke a notice he or she has given under subsection (1) by notice in writing to the Attorney-General.
(4)The notice of variation or revocation must specify a date from which the variation or revocation is to take effect which must be the date on which the notice is given or a later date.
(5)In this section non-salary benefits has the same meaning as it has in clauses 3(5) and 3(6) of Schedule 1A to the Public Administration Act 2004.
SCHEDULE
| Number of Act | Title of Act | Extent of Repeal |
| 6374 | Solicitor-General Act 1958 | The whole |
| 6980 | Solicitor-General (Pensions) Act 1963 | The whole |
| 7066 | Judges' Pensions Act 1963 | Section 5 |
| 7958 | Solicitor-General (Pensions) Act 1970 | The whole |
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ENDNOTES
1 General information
See for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.
The Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972 was assented to on 24 October 1972 and came into operation on 24 October 1972.
INTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)
Style changes
Section 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.
References to ILA s. 39B
Sidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided section or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subsections or subclauses, the original section or clause becomes subsection or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression "(1)" at the beginning of the original section or clause.
Interpretation
As from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:
• Headings
All headings included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any heading inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. This includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; sections; clauses; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms. See section 36(1A)(2A).
• Examples, diagrams or notes
All examples, diagrams or notes included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Act. See section 36(3A).
• Punctuation
All punctuation included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 forms part of that Act. Any punctuation inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. See section 36(3B).
• Provision numbers
All provision numbers included in an Act form part of that Act, whether inserted in the Act before, on or after 1 January 2001. Provision numbers include section numbers, subsection numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).
• Location of "legislative items"
A "legislative item" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of an Act is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.
• Other material
Any explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of an Act.
See section 36(3)(3D)(3E).
2 Table of Amendments
This publication incorporates amendments made to the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972 by Acts and subordinate instruments.
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Statute Law Revision Act 1977, No. 9019/1977
Assent Date: 17.5.77 Commencement Date: S. 2(1)(Sch. items 6, 7) on 17.5.77: s. 1(2) CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1980, No. 9462/1980 (as amended by No. 9549)
Assent Date: 16.12.80 Commencement Date: 16.12.80 CurrentState: All of Act in operation
Statute Law Revision (Repeals) Act 1982, No. 9863/1982
Assent Date: 5.1.83 Commencement Date: 5.1.83 CurrentState: All of Act in operation
Constitution (Court of Appeal) Act 1994, No. 109/1994
Assent Date: 20.12.94 Commencement Date: S. 34(4) on 7.6.95: Special Gazette (No. 41) 23.5.95 p. 1 CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Legal Practice Act 1996, No. 35/1996
Assent Date: 6.11.96 Commencement Date: S. 446 on 1.1.97: s. 2(3) CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Judicial and Other Pensions Legislation (Amendment) Act 2001, No. 19/2001
Assent Date: 29.5.01 Commencement Date: S. 3 on 30.5.01: s. 2 CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Attorney-General and Solicitor-General (Amendment) Act 2003, No. 51/2003
Assent Date: 16.6.03 Commencement Date: 17.6.03: s. 2 CurrentState: All of Act in operation
Justice Legislation (Further Amendment) Act 2006, No. 79/2006
Assent Date: 10.10.06 Commencement Date: S. 3 on 18.10.06: Special Gazette (No. 273) 17.10.06 p. 1 CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Constitution Amendment (Judicial Pensions) Act 2008, No. 23/2008
Assent Date: 3.6.08 Commencement Date: S. 19 on 4.6.08: s. 2(1) CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Salaries Legislation Amendment (Salary Sacrifice) Act 2008, No. 83/2008
Assent Date: 11.12.08 Commencement Date: S. 17 on 11.12.08: s. 2(1) CurrentState: This information relates only to the provisions amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Relationships Amendment (Caring Relationships) Act 2009, No. 4/2009
Assent Date: 10.2.09 Commencement Date: S. 37(Sch. 1 item 3) on 1.12.09: s. 2(2) CurrentState: This information relates only to the provision/s amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Superannuation Legislation Amendment Act 2010, No. 40/2010
Assent Date: 30.6.10 Commencement Date: S. 110 on 1.7.10: Government Gazette 1.7.10 p. 1359 CurrentState: This information relates only to the provision/s amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
Statute Law Amendment (References to the Sovereign) Act 2023, No. 25/2023
Assent Date: 5.9.23 Commencement Date: S. 7(Sch. 1 item 3) on 6.9.23: s. 2 CurrentState: This information relates only to the provision/s amending the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General Act 1972
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3 Explanatory details
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