Series S820 - FILES - DIVORCE EXCEPTIONS AND INTERSTATE DIVORCE

Identity area

Reference code

AU WA S820

Title

FILES - DIVORCE EXCEPTIONS AND INTERSTATE DIVORCE

Date(s)

  • 1962-04-26 - 1977-04-28 (Creation)

Level of description

Series

Medium

Format

Files

Status

Context area

Name of creator

AU WA A44 - SUPREME COURT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA (1861-01-01 -)

Administrative history

A Court of Quarter Sessions was established in Western Australia in 1830 and a Civil Court established two years later. However, as the colony grew and as society became more complex, the judiciary became overtaxed. In the 1850s the equity jurisdiction of the Civil Court was challenged while the courts' jurisdiction in criminal matters was questioned. For these and other reasons, the Supreme Court Ordinance of 1861 was introduced.

The Supreme Court Ordinance (proclaimed on 18 June 1861) provided for a Supreme Court which had the same criminal, common law, and equity jurisdiction as the Courts of Westminister. The Ordinance amalgamated the Court of Quarter Sessions with the Supreme Court and transferred to it a number of functions of the Civil Court. For example, the Supreme Court was empowered to grant probates and letters of administration and given jurisdiction in bankruptcy matters. After 1863, the Supreme Court was also given jurisdiction in matrimonial causes (i.e. divorces).

Under the Ordinance, the officers of the Supreme Court were to be the Chief Justice (Archibald Paull Burt), an Attorney-General, a Master, and a Registrar.

In 1880 a new Supreme Court Act was introduced. The Act which came into force on 1 August 1881, clarified the Court's jurisidiction in admiralty matters and empowered the Chief Justice to make Rules for the conduct of the Court. Provision was also made for the appointment of one or more puisne judges and for the Chief Justice and other judges to sit as a Full Court. Initially, the Full Court could only entertain motions for retrials and pronounce on points of law, but after 1886 it was given the status of a Court of Appeal.

The first sitting of the Supreme Court was held on 3 July 1861 and for the first few years it occupied premises in the Police Court and Gaol Building in Beaufort Street, Perth. In 1863 it moved to the old (1836) Court House in Stirling Gardens and in 1880 moved again to the old (1835) Commissariat Store at the foot of Barrack Street. Despite alterations the Commissariat building was inadequate and in the 1890's work began on a new, purposely-designed courthouse. The new building, completed in 1903, is still the principal seat of the Supreme Court of Western Australia.

Archival history

Content and structure area

Scope and content

These are files related to divorce which fall outside the usual applications to file for dissolution of marriage under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1959.

There are three categories:
1. Applications under Section 43 of the Act, seeking to vary the provision that proceedings for a decree of dissolution shall not be instituted within 3 years after the date of the marriage.
2. Applications under Section 10(1A) of the Matrimonial Causes Act Rules where the applicant feels that the Act and the Rules do not make provision for the case in question.
3. Writs of Attachment, certificates of decrees or orders relating to dissolutions of marriages granted in other states, where one of the parties is now resident in Western Australia.
4. State Archives does not hold registers which give access to these files.
Names of the parties to each case and file numbers are given on the consignment list. File numbers allocated in another state are also shown where applicable.

Accruals

System of arrangement

Annual single number

Conditions of access and use area

Conditions governing access

Restricted 75 years

Conditions governing access (legacy)

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Existence and location of originals

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Archivist's note

Range Control Symbol = 1/1962 - 9/1975

Accession area

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