Judges' Salaries and Pensions Act 1950 (WA)
Western Australia
Western Australia
Western Australia
Judges’ Salaries and Pensions Act 1950This Act may be cited as the
(1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears —
(a) would be payable to the judge if he had not retired or died; or
(b) is determined under subsection (2);
(a) the widow or widower of the judge or former judge; or
(b) a person who, at the time of the death of the judge or former judge, was a de facto partner of the judge or former judge.
(2) If a pensionable office is abolished, the Minister shall, for the purposes of the definition of “current judicial salary”, determine the rate of salary that shall apply to the calculation of a pension under this Act.
(3) For the purposes of a pension under this Act —
(a) length of service in a pensionable office is the total period of service in that office and in another pensionable office or other pensionable offices to the extent that the total period of service in all such offices, whether before or after the commencement of the 1987 Act, was continuous or the Minister certifies that it was substantially continuous; and
(b) prior service —
(i) as a judge of a court of the Commonwealth or of another State or a Territory (not being service as a justice of the peace or a magistrate); or
(ii) in an office of the Commonwealth or of another State or a Territory (other than the office of a judge referred to in subparagraph (i)), the holder of which office qualifies for a pension of the same kind as that for which a person serving as such a judge qualifies,
is service as a judge.
(4) In subsections (2) and (3)
pensionable office means an office that is pensionable —(a) under this Act; or
(b) under this Act as applied by another written law.
This Act shall apply to the Chief Justice of Western Australia, the President of the Court of Appeal and all other judges of the Supreme Court of Western Australia appointed or to be appointed under section 7A of the
The Acts specified in the first column of the First Schedule are amended as respectively specified in the second column of the First Schedule and as so amended may be cited as respectively specified in the third column of the First Schedule.
(1) The rate of the annual salary payable to a judge while his commission remains in force shall be determined from time to time under section 7 of the
Salaries and Allowances Act 1975 but —(a) the rate of the annual salary payable to the President of the Court of Appeal shall not exceed that payable to the Chief Justice of Western Australia;
(b) the rate of the annual salary payable to the senior judge of appeal, other than the Chief Justice of Western Australia and the President of the Court of Appeal, shall not exceed that payable to the senior puisne judge.
(1a) A judge who is appointed to act in the office of Chief Justice under section 10(3) of the
Supreme Court Act 1935 shall be entitled, for so long as his commission remains in force, to be remunerated and to receive other allowances and reimbursements as if he had been appointed substantively to the office of Chief Justice under section 7A(5) of theSupreme Court Act 1935 .(1aa) A judge of appeal who is appointed to act in the office of President under section 10A(3) of the
Supreme Court Act 1935 shall be entitled, for so long as his commission remains in force, to be remunerated and to receive other allowances and reimbursements as if he had been appointed substantively to the office of President under section 7A(6) of theSupreme Court Act 1935 .(1b) The rate of the annual salary payable to a person —
(a) who is an auxiliary judge; and
(b) who is receiving a non‑contributory pension under this Act or any other Act, or under a law of the Commonwealth or of another State or a Territory,
shall be the difference between the rate of that pension and the rate of the annual salary payable under subsection (1) to that person, in lieu of the full amount of that rate of salary.
(1c) For the purposes of the provisions of this Act relating to pensions, the salary of any judge retiring after 24 December 1954, and before 1 December 1955, shall be deemed to be $6 800.
(1d) For the purposes of the provisions of this Act relating to pensions, the salary of any judge who retired after 27 February 1959, and before 30 June 1959, shall be deemed to be $10 500.
(2) Such salaries are hereby charged on the Consolidated Account and such Account, to the extent required for the payment thereof, is hereby permanently appropriated.
(3) Subject to section 7 of the
Salaries and Allowances Act 1975 , judges shall be entitled to such travelling and other allowances or reimbursements as the Governor may from time to time approve.(4) A person who holds more than one office under the
Supreme Court Act 1935 is entitled to the rate of annual salary of only one of those offices.(5) If a judge is appointed to be also a judge of appeal and as a result ceases to be the senior puisne judge, he is entitled to retain the rate of annual salary of the senior puisne judge if that rate is higher than his rate of annual salary as a judge of appeal.
(1) Where a judge who has attained the age of 60 years retires, before the commencement of the 1987 Act, after serving as a judge for not less than 10 years, he is entitled to a pension at a rate equal to 50% of his final salary.
(2) Where a judge, not being a judge to whom subsection (1) applies, retires before the commencement of the 1987 Act and the Minister certifies that his retirement is due to permanent disability or infirmity, he is entitled —
(a) if his retirement occurs before he has completed 6 years’ service as a judge to a pension at a rate equal to 40% of his final salary; or
(b) in any other case, to a pension at a rate equal to 40% of his final salary at an additional rate equal to 2% of his final salary for each complete year of his service as a judge in excess of 5 years of such service, but so that the rate of his pension shall not exceed 50% of his final salary.
(2a) Where a judge who has attained the age of 60 years retires, on or after the commencement of the 1987 Act, after serving as a judge for not less than 10 years, he is entitled to a pension at a rate equal to 60% of the current judicial salary.
(2aa) Where a judge who has attained the age of 55 years but has not attained the age of 60 years retires, on or after the commencement of the
Judges’ Salaries and Pensions Amendment Act 1990 1 , after serving as a judge for not less than 10 years, he is entitled to a pension —(a) at a rate equal to 50% of the current judicial salary; and
(b) at an additional rate equal to 2% of the current judicial salary for each year by which his age exceeds 55 years,
but so that the rate of his pension shall not exceed 60% of the current judicial salary.
(2ab) Where a judge retires on attaining the age of 70 years having served as a judge for less than 10 years, the judge is entitled to a pension at a rate equal to the percentage (
P% ) of the current judicial salary calculated using the formula —
where —
D 1 is the length of service as a judge, expressed in days;
D 2 is the number of days in the period of 10 years ending on the day on which the judge retires.
(2b) Where a judge, not being a judge to whom subsection (2a), (2aa) or (2ab) applies, retires on or after the commencement of the 1987 Act and the Minister certifies that his retirement is due to permanent disability or infirmity, he is entitled —
(a) if his retirement occurs before he has completed 6 years’ service as a judge to a pension at a rate equal to 50% of the current judicial salary; or
(b) in any other case, to a pension at a rate equal to 50% of the current judicial salary and at an additional rate equal to 2% of the current judicial salary for each complete year of his service as a judge in excess of 5 years of such service, but so that the rate of his pension shall not exceed 60% of the current judicial salary.
(2c) Unless the Governor decides otherwise no pension is payable under this section to a judge who has been removed under section 55 of the
Constitution Act 1889 , or section 9 of theSupreme Court Act 1935 .(3) Subject to subsection (3a), if a person entitled to receive, or in receipt of, a pension under this Act —
(a) holds any judicial office under the Crown in right of Western Australia, of the Commonwealth or of another State or a Territory for which he is remunerated out of the moneys of the Crown, then the pension otherwise receivable under this Act by that person shall be reduced by an amount equal to the amount of the salary remuneration received by that person in respect of that judicial office;
(b) is in receipt of a pension received by that person by reason of having held the office of a judge within the meaning of section 2(3)(b)(i) (in this paragraph referred to as
the other judicial pension ), then the pension otherwise receivable under this Act by that person shall be reduced by an amount equal to the amount of the other judicial pension; or(c) is in receipt of any pension under the
Superannuation and Family Benefits Act 1938 2 received by that person by reason of having been a contributor within the meaning of that Act, then the pension otherwise receivable under this Act by that person shall be reduced by an amount equal to the State share of his pension payable in respect of service as an employee within the meaning of that Act3 .
(3a) If a person entitled to receive, or in receipt of, a pension under this Act holds the office of auxiliary judge, then, while that person holds that office, subsection (3) does not apply to or in relation to that person in respect of that office.
(3b) Service as an auxiliary judge does not constitute service as a judge for the purposes of this section.
(3c) In subsections (3a) and (3b) —
(4) In subsection (3)(c) —
(1) The Second Schedule sets out the pensions and allowances payable under this Act to and in respect of spouses, de facto partners and children of judges and retired judges.
(2) A person is eligible to receive a pension or allowance under the Second Schedule whether the circumstances or events which gave rise to the eligibility occurred before, on, or after the date on which the Second Schedule comes into operation.
(3) A pension is not payable under this Act to a de facto partner of a judge or former judge who died before the commencement of this subsection.
Where a spouse or de facto partner is entitled to receive or is in receipt of —
(a) a pension under this Act as the spouse or de facto partner of a judge or retired judge; and
(b) a pension under the
Superannuation and Family Benefits Act 1938 2 , by reason of being the spouse or de facto partner of a judge who was at some time a contributor under that Act,
then the first mentioned pension shall be reduced by such proportion of the pension under the
(1) Subject to this section, every pension payable under this Act shall be increased in each year, commencing with the year 1976, with effect on and from 1 January in that year by the percentage by which the Index for the quarter ending on the immediately preceding 31 December is greater than the Index for the quarter ending on the penultimate preceding 31 December.
(2) The following provisions apply to and in relation to the first increase of a pension pursuant to this section if, on 1 January in the year in which the increase is to be made, or would, but for paragraph (a) be made the pension has been in force for less than 12 months, namely —
(a) in the case of a pension which first becomes payable after 1 October in any year, the first increase of that pension shall be made so as to operate from 1 January in the second year after the year in which the pension first became payable; and
(b) in the case of a pension which first becomes payable on or before 1 October in any year, the first increase in that pension shall be made so as to operate from 1 January in the year next after the year in which the pension first becomes payable, and the annual amount by which the pension is to be increased shall be calculated in accordance with the prescribed formula.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(b), the prescribed formula is the formula —
where —
P represents the annual amount referred to in that paragraph;
A represents the amount by which, but for the operation of that subsection, the pension would have been increased; and
Q represents the number of whole quarters (ending on 30 June, 30 September and 31 December) within the period commencing on the day on which the pension became payable and ending on the following 31 December, for which the pension was payable.
(4) If, in any year, the Index for the quarter ending on the immediately preceding 31 December is less than the Index for the quarter ending on the penultimate preceding 31 December, no increase shall be made in pensions for that year, and the percentage by which the first‑mentioned Index is less than the second‑mentioned Index shall first be taken into account before any subsequent adjustments of pensions are made pursuant to this section.
[(5) deleted] (6) This section does not apply to —
(a) the pension of a judge who retires on or after the commencement of the 1987 Act or to a pension payable under the Second Schedule to the spouse or de facto partner of such a judge or in respect of any eligible child of such a judge; or
(b) a pension payable under the Second Schedule to the spouse or de facto partner, or in respect of any eligible child, of a judge who dies prior to retiring and after the commencement of the 1987 Act.
The pensions and allowances payable under or by virtue of this Act —
(a) shall grow due from day to day; and
(b) shall be payable monthly, or at such other frequency as is agreed between the Minister and the person entitled to the pension, and charged to the Consolidated Account which is, to the necessary extent, hereby appropriated accordingly.
(1) The provisions of sections 6 to 11 (inclusive) shall apply to and in relation to every judge who is appointed after the commencement of this Act.
(2) The provisions of sections 6 to 11 (inclusive) shall not apply to or in relation to any judge who is serving as a judge at the date of the commencement of this Act unless, by notice in writing to the Minister within 6 months after the commencement of this Act, he elects to come within the application of those provisions.
(3) A judge to and in relation to whom the provisions of sections 6 to 11 (inclusive) apply by virtue of an election in pursuance of the last preceding subsection shall, as on and from the date of his election, have the rights and benefits provided by those provisions in substitution for any right to pension to which he would have been entitled under any provision of an Act specified in the first column of the First Schedule if the Act so specified had not been amended as provided in this Act.
(4) A judge who is serving as such at the date of the commencement of this Act and who does not make an election in pursuance of subsection (2) shall retain any right to pension to which he was entitled, immediately prior to the commencement of this Act, under any provision of an Act specified in the first column of the First Schedule, and that provision shall continue to apply to and in relation to that judge as if the Act so specified had not been amended as provided in this Act.
(1) For the purposes of the provisions of this Act relating to pensions, any person —
(a) who has been appointed an acting judge under the provisions of section 11 of the
Supreme Court Act 1935 ; and(b) who while holding the office under that appointment is appointed a judge,
shall be deemed to have been appointed a judge on and from the date of the first‑mentioned appointment.
(2) On and from 1 July 1960, the provisions of section 5 apply to the salary and any adjustment thereto, of a person who before 4 March in that year was so appointed an acting judge and who while holding that office is appointed a judge before 31 December in that year.
(1) Subject to this section, if any person who may be entitled to or be in receipt of a pension by virtue of this Act shall practise as a barrister, solicitor or proctor in Western Australia, or in any other part of Her Majesty’s Dominions, his right to such pension shall be forfeited and the pension, if already granted, shall cease to be payable.
(2) The Governor may in writing exempt a person who is entitled to or in receipt of a pension by virtue of this Act from the application of subsection (1) in respect of any circumstances, matter or purpose specified in that exemption.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to or in relation to a person exempted under subsection (2) in respect of the circumstances, matter or purpose specified in that exemption.
(1) A retired judge who —
(a) is in receipt of a pension under this Act; and
(b) is liable to pay a surcharge as a result of becoming entitled to that pension,
may commute part of the pension for the purpose of paying all or part of the surcharge.
(2) If a surcharge becomes payable from the estate of a deceased judge or retired judge, a person who is in receipt of a pension under section 7 as a result of the judge’s or retired judge’s death may commute part of the pension for the purpose of paying all or part of the surcharge on behalf of the executor or administrator of the estate.
(3) A person wanting to commute a pension under subsection (1) or (2) is to give to the Minister a notice to that effect, setting out the amount of the lump sum benefit that the person wants to be paid (the
requested amount ), which cannot be more than the surcharge.(4) On receipt of a notice under subsection (3) the Minister is to give to the person a notice setting out the amount by which the person’s pension would be reduced under subsection (6)(b) if the commutation was effected on the day on which the Minister gives the notice.
(5) If, after receiving the Minister’s notice, the person wants to proceed with the commutation, the person is to give to the Minister a notice to that effect.
(6) On receipt by the Minister of a notice under subsection (5) —
(a) the person becomes entitled to a lump sum benefit of an amount equal to the requested amount; and
(b) the person’s pension (as at the date of that receipt) is reduced to an amount determined by the Minister, on the advice of an actuary, to be actuarially equivalent to the value of the pension before the application of this section, reduced by the requested amount.
(7) A notice given to the Minister for the purposes of this section is to be —
(a) made in the form and manner, and given within the period, determined by the Minister; and
(b) accompanied by such information as is determined by the Minister.
(8) In this section —
(1) If a judge ceases to hold office as a judge (other than as a result of the death of the judge) but does not become entitled to a pension under this Act, the judge is entitled to —
(a) if the judge is under 55 years of age, a preserved benefit; or
(b) otherwise, payment of a lump sum benefit,
of an amount determined under subsection (3).
(2) If a judge who does not have a spouse or de facto partner dies while still in office a lump sum benefit of an amount determined under subsection (3) is to be paid to the executor or administrator of the judge’s estate.
(3) The amount of the lump sum benefit is the amount determined by the Minister on the advice of an actuary to be —
(a) the minimum benefit required for the State not to incur an individual superannuation guarantee shortfall in respect of the judge; less
(b) the employer sponsored component of any benefit —
(i) to which the judge is entitled as a result of ceasing to hold office as a judge; or
(ii) payable as a result of the death of the judge,
(as the case requires) from any other superannuation scheme to which the State contributed in respect of the judge while he or she was a judge.
(4) A preserved benefit to which a judge is entitled under subsection (1)(b) is to be dealt with in accordance with the
Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 of the Commonwealth as if —(a) the benefit were a preserved benefit in a regulated superannuation fund (within the meaning of that Act); and
(b) the preservation age for the judge was 55 years (or such greater age as is prescribed).
(5) If a judge who is entitled to a benefit under subsection (1) dies before it is paid, the benefit is to be paid to the executor or administrator of the judge’s estate.
(6) Benefits payable under this section are to be charged to the Consolidated Account which is, to the necessary extent, appropriated accordingly.
(7) The Governor may make regulations prescribing an age greater than 55 years for the purposes of subsection (4)(b).
(8) In subsection (3) —
(1) A judge who becomes entitled to a lump sum benefit under section 17 and is liable to pay a surcharge as a result of becoming entitled to that benefit may —
(a) convert all or part of the benefit into a commutable pension; and
(b) fully commute that pension.
(2) A judge wanting to convert a benefit under subsection (1) is to give to the Minister a notice to that effect, setting out the amount that the judge wants to be paid in the form of the commuted pension (the
requested amount ), which cannot be more than the surcharge.(3) On receipt by the Minister of a notice under subsection (2) —
(a) the benefit to which the judge is entitled under section 17 is reduced by the amount of the requested amount;
(b) the judge becomes entitled to a pension of an amount calculated to be actuarially equivalent to a lump sum benefit of the requested amount; and
(c) that pension is commuted into, and the judge becomes entitled to, a lump sum of the amount of the requested amount.
(4) In this section —
The costs of administering sections 6 to 17 are to be charged to the Consolidated Account which is, to the necessary extent, appropriated accordingly.
[s. 4]
Delete from section one the words “a day to be fixed by proclamation after the King’s approval thereto has been proclaimed in the State,” and substitute the words “the twenty‑fourth day of September, 1949.” | ||
Section fifty‑six is repealed. | ||
Delete from the Fourth Schedule the words and figures following: — | ||
Chief Justice . . . 2 600 First Puisne Judge . . . . . . 2 300 Second Puisne Judge . . . . . . 2 300 Third Puisne Judge . . . . . . 2 300 Fourth Puisne Judge . . . . . . 2 300 | ||
Sections thirteen and fourteen are repealed. | ||
Section four is repealed. |
[s. 7 and 8B(6)]
If a judge dies and is survived by a spouse or de facto partner, the spouse or de facto partner is entitled to a pension of an amount equal to —
(a) if the judge died before 1 December 1987, 62.5% of the pension to which the judge would have been entitled under section 6(2) if the judge had retired on the day the judge dies; or
(b) if the judge died on or after 1 December 1987, 37.5% of current judicial salary.
If a former judge dies after retiring and is survived by a spouse or de facto partner, the spouse or de facto partner is entitled to a pension of an amount equal to —
(a) if the former judge retired before 1 December 1987, 62.5% of the pension which the former judge was receiving before death; or
(b) if the former judge retired on or after 1 December 1987, 62.5% of the pension which would have been payable to the former judge if the former judge had not died.
(1) Subject to subclause (2), a pension under this Part is payable from the day after the judge died.
(2) If a person entitled to a pension under clause 2 —
(a) was not the former judge’s spouse or de facto partner when the former judge retired; and
(b) has not attained the age of 55 years on the day the former judge died,
the pension is payable from —
(c) the day on which the person attains the age of 55 years; or
(d) such earlier day as the Minister considers appropriate in the circumstances.
(3) A pension under this Part is payable until the death of the person to whom it is payable.
This Division applies where the death of a judge or former judge occurs before the commencement of the 1987 Act.
(1) Subject to the following, upon the death of a judge or of a former judge who was in receipt of pension under this Act, an allowance of $8.00 per week is payable in respect of each of his children who was at that time wholly or substantially dependent upon the judge or former judge.
(2) Allowance is payable under this item only during any period when the child —
(a) is wholly or substantially dependent upon the surviving parent or other person having the care of the child; and
(b) is under the age of 16 years or is a student child under the age of 25 years.
(1) Subject to the following, an allowance at the rate fixed by sub‑item (2) is payable in respect of the child of a judge or of a former judge who was in receipt of pension under this Act, where —
(a) the judge or former judge had died and was at the date of his or her death a widow or widower or divorced and not remarried, in which case the allowance is payable as from the day after the death of the judge or former judge; or
(b) the judge or former judge had died and was survived by a widow or widower who has since died, in which case the allowance is payable from the day after the death of that widow or widower.
(2) The rate per week at which allowance is payable under this item is the greater of the following rates —
(a) $10.00; or
(b) $4.00 plus the amount calculated in accordance with the formula
where —
R is the rate of reversionary pension that was payable (or would if the widow or widower were eligible, have been payable) to the surviving widow or widower at the date of her or his death (or the rate of reversionary pension that would have been so payable if the spouse of the judge or former judge had survived the judge or former judge); and
N is 4 or the number of children of the judge to whom allowance is payable under this item, whichever is the greater.
(3) Allowance is payable under this item only during any period when the child is under the age of 16 years or is a student child under the age of 25 years.
(4) Allowance is not payable under this item in respect of a child who was not, at the date of the death of the judge, wholly, or substantially dependent upon him or her.
This Division applies where the death of a judge or former judge occurs on or after the commencement of the 1987 Act.
In this Division —
(a) a child under the age of 16 years; or
(b) a child who —
(i) has attained the age of 16 years but is under the age of 25 years; and
(ii) is receiving full‑time education at a school, college or university,
who is for the time being, in the opinion of the Minister, wholly or substantially dependent on the person having the care of the child;
(a) where a judge has died, 60% of the current judicial salary;
(b) where a retired judge has died, the pension that would have been payable to the judge had the judge not died.
(1) Where a judge or a retired judge dies leaving a spouse or de facto partner, there shall, in addition to any pension that is payable to the spouse or de facto partner under Part I, be paid, in respect of any eligible child, or any eligible children, of the judge or retired judge, a pension at a rate equal to the applicable percentage of the rate of the relevant pension in relation to the judge.
(2) For the purposes of sub‑item (1), the applicable percentage is —
(a) where there is one eligible child, 12.5%;
(b) where there are 2 eligible children, 25%; or
(c) where there are 3 or more eligible children, 37.5%.
(1) Where —
(a) the spouse or de facto partner of a judge or retired judge, being a spouse or de facto partner who became entitled upon the death of the judge or retired judge to a pension under Part I, has died; or
(b) a judge or retired judge has died without leaving a spouse or de facto partner who became entitled, upon the death of the judge or retired judge, to a pension under Part I,
there shall be paid, in respect of any eligible child, or any eligible children of the judge or retired judge, a pension at a rate equal to the applicable percentage of the rate of the relevant pension in relation to the judge.
(2) For the purposes of sub‑item (1), the applicable percentage is —
(a) where there is one eligible child, 25%;
(b) where there are 2 eligible children, 50%;
(c) where there are 3 eligible children, 75%;
(d) where there are 4 or more eligible children, 100%.
Where a person is entitled under the foregoing provisions of this Schedule to receive more than one pension or child’s allowance, or both such a pension and allowance, only the greatest of them shall be paid to that person.
Any child’s allowance payable under the provisions of Part II may be paid to the parent or other person or body having the care or support of the child, or directly to the child, as the Minister may determine.
If more than one person is entitled under Part I to a pension as the spouse or de facto partner of a particular judge or former judge, then each of those persons are entitled only to a share of the pension that would be payable if there was only one spouse or de facto partner, apportioned between them as is determined by the Minister.
35 of 1950 (14 and 15 Geo. VI No. 35) | 16 Dec 1950 | 16 Dec 1950 | |
70 of 1953 (2 Eliz. II No. 70) | 9 Jan 1954 | 9 Jan 1954 | |
57 of 1955 (4 Eliz. II No. 57) | 9 Dec 1955 | 9 Dec 1955 | |
13 of 1959 (8 Eliz. II No. 13) | 25 Sep 1959 | 25 Sep 1959 | |
2 of 1960 (9 Eliz. II No. 2) | 6 Oct 1960 | 6 Oct 1960 | |
45 of 1961 (10 Eliz. II No. 45) | 23 Nov 1961 | 23 Nov 1961 | |
32 of 1962 (11 Eliz. II No. 32) | 4 Oct 1962 | 4 Oct 1962 | |
47 of 1964 (13 Eliz. II No. 47) | 19 Nov 1964 | 19 Nov 1964 | |
30 of 1966 | 27 Oct 1966 | 27 Oct 1966 | |
26 of 1969 | 16 May 1969 | 16 May 1969 | |
99 of 1970 | 8 Dec 1970 | 8 Dec 1970 | |
18 of 1972 | 26 May 1972 | 26 May 1972 | |
91 of 1972 | 4 Dec 1972 | 1 Jan 1973 (see s. 2) | |
13 of 1973 | 25 May 1973 | 25 May 1973 | |
23 of 1974 | 23 Oct 1974 | 1 Jul 1974 (see s. 2) | |
45 of 1975 | 18 Sep 1975 | 8 Aug 1975 (see s. 2) | |
108 of 1975 | 1 Dec 1975 | 1 Jan 1976 (see s. 2) | |
125 of 1976 | 2 Dec 1976 | 1 Jan 1977 (see s. 2) | |
35 of 1979 | 11 Oct 1979 | ||
7 of 1982 | 6 May 1982 | 6 May 1982 | |
82 of 1987 | 1 Dec 1987 | 1 Dec 1987 (see s. 2) | |
12 of 1989 | 2 Nov 1989 | s. 6: 1 Jan 1989 (see s. 2(2)); Act other than s. 6: 2 Nov 1989 (see s. 2(1)) | |
62 of 1990 | 17 Dec 1990 | 17 Dec 1990 (see s. 2) | |
4 of 1993 | 19 Aug 1993 | 1 Dec 1987 (see s. 2) | |
6 of 1993 | 27 Aug 1993 | 1 Jul 1993 (see s. 2(1)) | |
49 of 1996 | 25 Oct 1996 | 25 Oct 1996 (see s. 2(1)) | |
23 of 1997 | 18 Sep 1997 | 18 Sep 1997 (see s. 2) | |
28 of 2003 | 22 May 2003 | 1 Jul 2003 (see s. 2 and | |
65 of 2003 | 4 Dec 2003 | 1 Jan 2004 (see s. 2 and | |
45 of 2004 | 9 Nov 2004 | 1 Feb 2005 (see s. 2 and | |
77 of 2006 | 21 Dec 2006 | 1 Feb 2007 (see s. 2(1) and | |
33 of 2007 | 21 Dec 2007 | s. 1 and 2: 21 Dec 2007 (see s. 2(a)); Act other than s. 1 and 2: 22 Dec 2007 (see s. 2(b)) | |
19 of 2010 | 28 Jun 2010 | 11 Sep 2010 (see s. 2(b) and | |
47 of 2011 | 25 Oct 2011 | 26 Oct 2011 (see s. 2(b)) | |
43 of 2000 (as amended by No. 65 of 2003 s. 106) | 2 Nov 2000 | To be proclaimed (see s. 2(2)) |
“
(1) The amendments in this section are to the
Judges’ Salaries and Pensions Act 1950 .(2) Section 6(3)(c) is deleted and the following paragraph is inserted instead —
“
(c) is a Member under the
State Superannuation Act 2000 and is in receipt of a pension under that Act, then the pension under this Act is to be reduced by an amount equal to the State share (as defined under that Act) of the pension payable under theState Superannuation Act 2000 .
”.
(3) Section 6(4) is repealed.
(4) Section 8A is repealed and the following section is inserted instead —
“
If the spouse or de facto partner of a Judge —
(a) is entitled to, or in receipt of, a spouse or de facto partner’s pension under this Act; and
(b) is in receipt of a spouse or de facto partner’s pension under the
State Superannuation Act 2000 ,
then the pension under this Act is to be reduced by an amount equal to the State share (as defined under the
”.
”.
actuary........................................................................................................................... 2(1)
auxiliary judge............................................................................................................. 6(3c)
commencement of the 1987 Act................................................................................. 2(1)
current judicial salary.................................................................................................. 2(1)
final salary..................................................................................................................... 2(1)
Index............................................................................................................................... 2(1)
individual superannuation guarantee shortfall..................................................... 17(8)
judge.............................................................................................................................. 2(1)
P%.............................................................................................................................. 6(2ab)
pensionable office........................................................................................................ 2(4)
requested amount............................................................................................ 16(3), 18(2)
retirement....................................................................................................................... 2(1)
senior puisne judge..................................................................................................... 2(1)
spouse or de facto partner.......................................................................................... 2(1)
State share of his pension.......................................................................................... 6(4)
surcharge.......................................................................................................... 16(8), 18(4)
the other judicial pension........................................................................................... 6(3)
0
0
0