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Ley de Registro de Nombres Comerciales 2011, Australia

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Versión obsoleta.  Ir a la versión más reciente en WIPO Lex
Detalles Detalles Año de versión 2011 Fechas Adoptado/a: 3 de noviembre de 2011 Tipo de texto Legislación relacionada con la PI Materia Marcas, Nombres comerciales, Otros Notas The Business Names Registration Act 2011 makes reference to trademarks registered in accordance with the Trade Marks Act 1995 in the definitions of 'registered owner' and 'registered trade mark' in section 3.
Section 51 of the Act considers the status of a business name when used in the infringement of an existing trademark.

See section 2 'Commencement' for a detailed explanation of the date of entry into force.

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Textos principales Textos principales Inglés Business Names Registration Act 2011        
 
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 Business Name Registration Act 2011

Note: An electronic version of this Act is available in ComLaw (http://www.comlaw.gov.au/)

Business Names Registration Act 2011

No. 126, 2011

An Act in relation to business names, and for

related purposes

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

i Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Contents

Part 1—Preliminary 2

Division 1—Introduction 2

1 Short title ...........................................................................................2

2 Commencement.................................................................................2

Division 2—Definitions 4

3 Dictionary..........................................................................................4

4 Business.............................................................................................7

5 Entities...............................................................................................7

6 Notified State/Territory registers .......................................................8

Division 3—Constitutional basis and application of this Act and

the Transitional Act 10

7 Constitutional basis for this Act and the Transitional Act ...............10

8 Meaning of referring/adopting State ...............................................11

9 Meaning of referred business names matter....................................13

10 General application of this Act and the Transitional Act.................15

11 Government bodies not liable to prosecution ..................................15

Division 4—Interaction between business names legislation and

State and Territory laws 17

12 Concurrent operation intended ........................................................17

13 When business names legislation does not apply ............................17

14 Avoiding direct inconsistency between Commonwealth and

State and Territory laws...................................................................18

15 Regulations to deal with interaction between laws ..........................20

Division 5—Objects of this Act and consequences of registration 22

16 Objects of this Act ...........................................................................22

17 Consequences of registration of a business name ............................22

Part 2—Offences relating to business names 24 18 Offence—carrying on a business under an unregistered

business name..................................................................................24

19 Offence—must include business name in written

communications...............................................................................25

20 Offence—must display business name at places open to

public...............................................................................................27

21 Offence—carrying on a business under a business name

while disqualified ............................................................................28

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 ii

Part 3—Registering a business name 30 22 The Business Names Register .........................................................30

23 Application to register a business name...........................................30

24 Decision to register a business name to an entity ............................31

25 Is a business name available to an entity? .......................................32

26 Identical or nearly identical names ..................................................33

27 Undesirable names...........................................................................33

28 Restricted words and expressions ....................................................33

29 Priority.............................................................................................34

30 Refusal for failure to pay registration fee on time ...........................35

31 Consent applications........................................................................35

32 Disqualified entities.........................................................................36

33 Steps taken by ASIC to register a business name to an entity .........38

34 Refusal to register............................................................................39

Part 4—Obligations to give information to ASIC 41 35 Notifying changes—entity that gives information to ASIC.............41

36 Obligation to notify ASIC if entity becomes disqualified................41

37 Obligation to give ASIC information if requested ...........................41

38 Notifying ASIC of bankruptcy, insolvency etc................................43

39 Notifying ASIC of appointment of a legal personal

representative...................................................................................44

40 Notification by successor in relation to a deceased estate ...............45

41 Federal Court may order information be given to ASIC..................46

Part 5—Cancelling the registration of a business name 47 42 Cancellation—request by entity to whom business name is

registered .........................................................................................47

43 Cancellation—ASIC becomes aware of matter that would

have affected registration decision ..................................................47

44 Cancellation—entity is disqualified.................................................48

45 Cancellation—Ministerial determination revoked...........................48

46 Cancellation—failure to satisfy a condition of registration .............48

47 Cancellation—entity not carrying on a business under the

business name..................................................................................49

48 Cancellation—failure to provide information..................................49

49 Cancellation—registration has expired............................................50

50 Cancellation—entity to whom business name registered

ceases to exist ..................................................................................51

51 Cancellation—business name used in infringement of trade

mark.................................................................................................51

52 Notification of cancellation of business name .................................51

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

iii Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

53 Notice requirements in relation to partnerships,

unincorporated associations, trusts and joint ventures .....................52

54 Business name held during review period for cancellation

decision............................................................................................52

Part 6—Renewing the registration of a business name 54 55 Application to renew registration ....................................................54

Part 7—Review 56 56 Reviewable decisions ......................................................................56

57 Internal review of certain decisions .................................................58

58 Administrative review of certain decisions......................................60

59 Payment of registration fee if business name to be registered

as result of review............................................................................60

Part 8—Accessing the Business Names Register 62 60 Access to certain information in the Business Names

Register by request ..........................................................................62

61 Certain information to be publicly available....................................63

62 Certain information to be made available to government

bodies ..............................................................................................63

Part 9—Administration 65 63 ASIC’s functions and powers ..........................................................65

64 Directions by Minister .....................................................................65

65 Arrangements with States and Territories........................................66

66 ASIC may arrange for use of computer programs to make

decisions ..........................................................................................66

67 Forms for documents to be lodged with ASIC ................................66

68 Manner in which documents to be lodged with ASIC .....................67

69 ASIC may refuse to receive document etc.......................................68

70 Fees are payable to ASIC on behalf of the Commonwealth ............69

71 When is an application fee fully paid?.............................................69

72 Waiver and refund of fees ...............................................................69

73 Address for receipt of notices ..........................................................70

74 ASIC may destroy or dispose of certain documents ........................70

75 ASIC may issue formal warning......................................................70

76 Interaction with Australian Business Register .................................70

77 Protection of confidentiality of information ....................................71

78 Liability for damages.......................................................................72

79 Delegation .......................................................................................73

80 Minister may delegate prescribed functions and powers

under this Act ..................................................................................73

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 iv

Part 10—General 75 81 Application of this Act to partnerships ............................................75

82 Principal contact of a partnership ....................................................75

83 Application of this Act to unincorporated associations and

bodies ..............................................................................................76

84 Principal contact of an unincorporated association or body ............77

85 Application of this Act to a trust with 2 or more trustees ................77

86 Principal contact of a trust ...............................................................78

87 Joint ventures...................................................................................79

88 Application in the Territories of Christmas Island and Cocos

(Keeling) Islands .............................................................................81

89 Entities that have ceased to exist .....................................................81

90 Regulations......................................................................................82

Schedule 1—Notified State/Territory registers 83 1 New South Wales ............................................................................83

2 Victoria............................................................................................83

3 Queensland ......................................................................................84

4 Western Australia ............................................................................84

5 South Australia ................................................................................84

6 Tasmania .........................................................................................85

7 Australian Capital Territory.............................................................85

8 Northern Territory ...........................................................................86

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 1

Business Names Registration Act 2011

No. 126, 2011

An Act in relation to business names, and for

related purposes

[Assented to 3 November 2011]

The Parliament of Australia enacts:

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 1 Introduction

Section 1

2 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 1—Preliminary

Division 1—Introduction

1 Short title

This Act may be cited as the Business Names Registration Act

2011.

2 Commencement

(1) Each provision of this Act specified in column 1 of the table

commences, or is taken to have commenced, in accordance with

column 2 of the table. Any other statement in column 2 has effect

according to its terms.

Commencement information

Column 1 Column 2 Column 3

Provision(s) Commencement Date/Details

1. Sections 1 and

2 and anything in

this Act not

elsewhere covered

by this table

The day this Act receives the Royal Assent. 3 November

2011

2. Sections 3 to

17

A single day to be fixed by Proclamation. 20 April 2012

(see

F2012L00891)

3. Part 2 A single day to be fixed by Proclamation. 28 May 2012

(see

F2012L00891)

4. Section 22 At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 2.

20 April 2012

5. Sections 23 to

36

At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 3.

28 May 2012

6. Section 37 At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 2.

20 April 2012

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Introduction Division 1

Section 2

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 3

Commencement information

Column 1 Column 2 Column 3

Provision(s) Commencement Date/Details

7. Sections 38 to

62

At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 3.

28 May 2012

8. Sections 63 to

90

At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 2.

20 April 2012

9. Schedule 1 At the same time as the provision(s) covered

by table item 2.

20 April 2012

Note: This table relates only to the provisions of this Act as originally enacted. It will not be amended to deal with any later amendments of this Act.

(2) Any information in column 3 of the table is not part of this Act.

Information may be inserted in this column, or information in it

may be edited, in any published version of this Act.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 2 Definitions

Section 3

4 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Division 2—Definitions

3 Dictionary

In this Act:

ABN for an entity means the entity’s ABN as shown in the

Australian Business Register.

affected Territory means:

(a) the Australian Capital Territory; and

(b) the Northern Territory; and

(c) the Jervis Bay Territory; and

(d) the Territory of Christmas Island; and

(e) the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands.

application fee, for an application by an entity for an extract of the

Business Names Register, means the fee imposed under the

Business Names Registration (Fees) Act 2011 in relation to such an

application.

ASIC means the Australian Securities and Investments

Commission.

ASIC Act means the Australian Securities and Investments

Commission Act 2001.

ASIC member means a member of ASIC (as defined for the

purposes of the ASIC Act).

Australia, when used in a geographical sense, includes the

Territory of Christmas Island and the Territory of Cocos (Keeling)

Islands, but does not include any other external Territory.

Australian Business Register means the register established under

section 24 of the A New Tax System (Australian Business Number)

Act 1999.

available: a business name is available to an entity in the

circumstances set out in:

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Definitions Division 2

Section 3

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 5

(a) section 25 and subsection 31(3) of this Act; and

(b) item 21 of Schedule 1 to the Transitional Act.

business has the meaning given by section 4.

business day means a day that is not a Saturday, a Sunday, a public

holiday or a bank holiday in a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory.

business name means a name used, or to be used, in relation to one

or more businesses.

Business Names Register means the register established and

maintained under section 22.

carrying on a business includes doing anything in the course of the

commencement or termination of the business.

Commonwealth Minister means the Minister.

company means a body registered as a company under the

Corporations Act 2001.

consent application means an application for registration of a

business name that includes a statement that the entity to whom the

business name is currently registered has consented to the

registration of the business name to the applicant.

court means any court.

disqualified: an entity is disqualified in the circumstances

specified in section 32.

entity has the meaning given by section 5.

entity on whose application a decision is reviewable means an

entity on whose application the decision is reviewable under

section 56.

Federal Court means the Federal Court of Australia.

government body has the meaning given by subsection 11(3).

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 2 Definitions

Section 3

6 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

identical: means identical under rules made by the Minister under

section 26.

intelligence or security agency has the meaning given by

section 85ZL of the Crimes Act 1914.

nearly identical: means nearly identical under rules made by the

Minister under section 26.

non-entity joint venture means an arrangement that the

Commissioner of Taxation is satisfied is a contractual arrangement:

(a) under which 2 or more parties undertake an economic

activity that is subject to the joint control of the parties; and

(b) that is entered into to obtain individual benefits for the

parties, in the form of a share of the output of the

arrangement rather than joint or collective profits for all the

parties.

notified State/Territory register has the meaning given by

section 6.

notified successor, in relation to a business name, means an entity

entered on the Business Names Register under subsection 40(4) as

a notified successor in relation to the business name.

priority: an entity has priority over a business name in the

circumstances set out in section 29.

referring/adopting State has the meaning given by section 8.

registered owner, in relation to a registered trade mark, has the

meaning given by section 6 of the Trade Marks Act 1995.

registered trade mark has the meaning given by section 6 of the

Trade Marks Act 1995.

registration fee, for the registration of a business name to an entity,

means the fee imposed under the Business Names Registration

(Fees) Act 2011 in relation to the registration.

renewal fee, for the renewal of the registration of a business name

to an entity, means the fee imposed under the Business Names

Registration (Fees) Act 2011 in relation to the renewal.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Definitions Division 2

Section 4

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 7

reviewable: a decision is reviewable if it is reviewable under

section 56.

staff member has the same meaning as in the ASIC Act.

State, when used in a geographical sense, includes the coastal sea

of the State.

superannuation fund has the same meaning as in the Income Tax

Assessment Act 1997.

Territory, when used in a geographical sense, includes the coastal

sea of the Territory.

this Act includes instruments made under this Act.

Transitional Act means the Business Names Registration

(Transitional and Consequential Provisions) Act 2011, and

includes instruments made under that Act.

4 Business

(1) Business means an activity, or series of activities, done:

(a) in the form of a profession, a trade, employment, a vocation

or a calling; or

(b) in the form of an adventure or concern in the nature of trade;

or

(c) on a regular or continuous basis, in the form of a lease,

licence or other grant of an interest in property.

(2) Business does not include an activity, or a series of activities, done

in circumstances in which an entity doing that activity or series of

activities in, or in connection with, Australia would not be entitled

to an ABN.

5 Entities

(1) Entity means any of the following:

(a) an individual;

(b) a body corporate;

(c) a corporation sole;

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 2 Definitions

Section 6

8 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(d) a body politic;

(e) a partnership;

(f) any other unincorporated association or body of persons;

(g) a trust;

(h) a superannuation fund.

Note: The term entity is used in a number of different but related senses. It covers all kinds of legal persons. It also covers groups of legal persons, and other things, that in practice are treated as having a separate identity in the same way as a legal person does.

(2) Paragraph (1)(f) does not include a non-entity joint venture.

(3) The trustee of a trust or of a superannuation fund is taken to be an

entity consisting of the person who is the trustee, or the persons

who are the trustees, at any given time.

Note: This is because a right or obligation cannot be conferred or imposed on an entity that is not a legal person.

(4) A legal person can have a number of different capacities in which

the person does things. In each of those capacities, the person is

taken to be a different entity.

Example: In addition to his or her personal capacity, an individual may be:

(a) sole trustee of one or more trusts; and

(b) one of a number of trustees of a further trust.

In his or her personal capacity, he or she is one entity. As trustee of each trust, he or she is a different entity. The trustees of the further trust are a different entity again, of which the individual is a member.

(5) If a provision refers to an entity of a particular kind, it refers to the

entity in its capacity as that kind of entity, not to that entity in any

other capacity.

Example: A provision that refers to a company does not cover a company in a capacity as trustee, unless it also refers to a trustee.

6 Notified State/Territory registers

(1) A register is a notified State/Territory register if:

(a) the register is maintained under the law of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory; and

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Definitions Division 2

Section 6

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 9

(b) notice of the names of entities entered on the register is

received by ASIC in electronic form from that State or

Territory, and updated electronically from time to time to

reflect changes in the register; and

(c) the register is specified, or of a kind specified, in Schedule 1

to this Act.

(2) Schedule 1 to this Act has effect subject to any modifications made

by the regulations to reflect changes in the registers, or kinds of

registers, maintained by the States and Territories.

(3) If a Minister of a referring/adopting State or of an affected

Territory notifies the Commonwealth Minister in writing of a

proposed modification to Schedule 1, the Commonwealth Minister

must consult with all other referring/adopting States and affected

Territories about the proposed modification.

(4) In this section:

modifications include additions, omissions and substitutions.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 3 Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act

Section 7

10 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Division 3—Constitutional basis and application of this Act

and the Transitional Act

7 Constitutional basis for this Act and the Transitional Act

Application in a referring/adopting State

(1) The application of this Act and the Transitional Act in a

referring/adopting State is based on:

(a) the legislative powers that the Commonwealth Parliament has

under the Constitution (other than paragraph 51(xxxvii)); and

(b) the legislative powers that the Commonwealth Parliament has

because of a reference or an adoption by the Parliament of

the referring/adopting State under paragraph 51(xxxvii) of

the Constitution.

Application in a Territory

(2) The application of this Act and the Transitional Act in the affected

Territories is based on:

(a) the legislative powers that the Commonwealth Parliament has

under section 122 of the Constitution to make laws for the

government of the Territory; and

(b) the other legislative powers that the Commonwealth

Parliament has under the Constitution.

Despite the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, this Act and the

Transitional Act as applying in the affected Territory are laws of

the Commonwealth.

Application outside Australia

(3) The operation of this Act and the Transitional Act outside Australia

is based on:

(a) the legislative power the Commonwealth Parliament has

under paragraph 51(xxix) of the Constitution; and

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act Division 3

Section 8

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 11

(b) the legislative powers that the Commonwealth Parliament has

under section 122 of the Constitution to make laws for the

government of a Territory; and

(c) the other legislative powers that the Commonwealth

Parliament has under the Constitution.

8 Meaning of referring/adopting State

Meaning of referring/adopting State

(1) A State is a referring/adopting State if, for the purposes of

paragraph 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution, the Parliament of the

State:

(a) has referred the matters covered by subsections (3) and (4) to

the Parliament of the Commonwealth; or

(b) has:

(i) adopted the initial version of this Act and the initial

version of the Transitional Act; and

(ii) referred the matters covered by subsection (4) to the

Parliament of the Commonwealth.

(2) A State is a referring/adopting State even if a law of the State

provides that:

(a) the reference to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of a

matter covered by subsection (3) or (4) is to terminate in

particular circumstances; or

(b) the adoption of the initial version of this Act or the initial

version of the Transitional Act is to terminate in particular

circumstances; or

(c) the reference to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of a

matter covered by subsection (3) or (4) has effect only:

(i) if and to the extent that the matter is not included in the

legislative powers of the Parliament of the

Commonwealth (otherwise than by a reference under

section 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution); or

(ii) if and to the extent that the matter is included in the

legislative powers of the Parliament of the State.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 3 Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act

Section 8

12 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Reference covering the initial versions of this Act and the

Transitional Act

(3) This subsection covers the matters to which the referred provisions

relate to the extent of making laws with respect to those matters by

including the referred provisions in the initial version of this Act

and the initial version of the Transitional Act.

Reference covering amendments of this Act or the Transitional Act

(4) This subsection covers the referred business names matters to the

extent of the making of laws with respect to those matters by

making express amendments of this Act or the Transitional Act.

Effect of terminating reference or adoption of initial versions

(5) A State ceases to be a referring/adopting State if:

(a) in the case where the Parliament of the State has referred to

the Parliament of the Commonwealth the matters covered by

subsection (3)—that reference terminates; or

(b) in the case where the Parliament of the State has adopted the

initial version of this Act and the initial version of the

Transitional Act—the adoption of the initial version of this

Act or the initial version of the Transitional Act terminates.

Effect of terminating amendment reference

(6) A State ceases to be a referring/adopting State if:

(a) the State’s amendment reference terminates; and

(b) subsection (7) does not apply to the termination.

(7) A State does not cease to be a referring/adopting State because of

the termination of its amendment reference if:

(a) the termination is effected by the Governor of that State

fixing a day by Proclamation as the day on which the

reference terminates; and

(b) the day fixed is no earlier than the first day after the end of

the period of 6 months beginning on the day on which the

Proclamation is published; and

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act Division 3

Section 9

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 13

(c) that State’s amendment reference, and the amendment

reference of every other State, terminates on the same day.

Definitions

(8) In this section:

amendment reference of a State means the reference by the

Parliament of the State to the Parliament of the Commonwealth of

the matters covered by subsection (4).

express amendment of this Act or the Transitional Act means the

direct amendment of the text of this Act or the Transitional Act

(whether by the insertion, omission, repeal, substitution or

relocation of words or matter) by another Commonwealth Act, but

does not include the enactment by a Commonwealth Act of a

provision that has, or will have, substantive effect otherwise than

as part of the text of this Act or the Transitional Act.

initial version of the Transitional Act means the Transitional Act

as originally enacted.

initial version of this Act means this Act as originally enacted.

referred business names matter has the meaning given by

section 9.

referred provisions means:

(a) the initial version of this Act; and

(b) the initial version of the Transitional Act;

to the extent to which they deal with matters that are included in

the legislative powers of the Parliaments of the States.

9 Meaning of referred business names matter

(1) Each of the following matters is a referred business names matter:

(a) the registration of business names;

(b) the regulation of the use of business names to assist entities

who engage with an entity carrying on a business under a

business name to identify the entity;

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 3 Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act

Section 9

14 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(c) the regulation of the use of business names to assist entities

who engage with an entity carrying on a business under a

business name to contact the entity;

(d) the regulation of the use of business names to reduce the risks

that arise from an entity carrying on a business under a name

that is not the entity’s own;

(e) the prohibition or restriction of the use of business names that

are undesirable, offensive or confusing;

(f) the prohibition or restriction of the use of business names by

an entity because:

(i) the entity has engaged in unlawful conduct; or

(ii) a person involved in the management of the entity has

engaged in unlawful conduct.

(2) However, none of the following matters is a referred business

names matter:

(a) the imposition of a restriction on a government body

affecting the ability of the body to carry on business under a

name;

(b) the imposition of a restriction on an entity affecting the

ability of the entity to carry on business under a name that is

registered to the entity on a notified State/Territory register;

(c) the imposition of a restriction on an entity affecting the

ability of the entity to carry on business under a name that is

specified as the name of the entity in an Act of a State, or an

instrument made under such an Act;

(d) the imposition of an obligation on a government body to

include a name in a communication or to display a name;

(e) the imposition of an obligation on an entity to include in a

communication, or to display, a name that is registered to the

entity on a notified State/Territory register;

(f) the imposition of an obligation on an entity to include in a

communication, or to display, a name that is specified as the

name of the entity in an Act of a State, or an instrument made

under such an Act;

(g) the omission of an exemption provision without the insertion

of an equivalent provision, or the imposition of a limitation

on the operation of an exemption provision;

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Preliminary Part 1

Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act Division 3

Section 10

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 15

(h) any matter relating to the imposition or payment of taxes

under an Act of a State, or an instrument made under such an

Act.

(3) In this section:

exemption provision means a provision in the terms, or

substantially in the terms, of subsection 19(5) or 20(3).

10 General application of this Act and the Transitional Act

Application in this jurisdiction

(1) Each provision of this Act and the Transitional Act applies in this

jurisdiction.

Geographical coverage of this jurisdiction

(2) This jurisdiction means the geographical area that consists of:

(a) each referring/adopting State (including its coastal sea); and

(b) each affected Territory (including its coastal sea).

11 Government bodies not liable to prosecution

(1) A government body that carries on a business under a business

name:

(a) is not liable to be prosecuted for an offence against this Act

or the Transitional Act; and

(b) is not subject to proceedings for an injunction or any other

remedy in relation to conduct that would constitute an

offence against this Act or the Transitional Act.

(2) However, nothing in this Act or the Transitional Act prevents the

registration of a business name to a government body if the

provisions of this Act or the Transitional Act are otherwise

satisfied.

(3) Each of the following is a government body:

(a) the Commonwealth;

(b) a referring/adopting State;

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 3 Constitutional basis and application of this Act and the Transitional Act

Section 11

16 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(c) an affected Territory;

(d) an agency or authority of the Commonwealth;

(e) an agency or authority of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory;

(f) an agency or authority of the Commonwealth and any of the

referring/adopting States and the affected Territories, acting

jointly;

(g) an agency or authority of any 2 or more of the

referring/adopting States and affected Territories, acting

jointly;

(h) a local government body.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Interaction between business names legislation and State and Territory laws Division 4

Section 12

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 17

Division 4—Interaction between business names legislation

and State and Territory laws

12 Concurrent operation intended

(1) This Act and the Transitional Act (the business names legislation)

are not intended to exclude or limit the concurrent operation of any

law of a referring/adopting State or an affected Territory.

(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the business names legislation is

not intended to exclude or limit the concurrent operation of a law

that:

(a) requires or permits a word or expression to be used by an

entity or class of entities; or

(b) prohibits or restricts the use of a word or expression by an

entity or class of entities; or

(c) relates to the accreditation or licensing of an entity that

carries on a business; or

(d) makes provision for the conversion of one body into another

or the amalgamation of bodies; or

(e) imposes obligations on an entity or class of entities that are in

addition to obligations imposed under this Act; or

(f) makes provision in relation to a notified State/Territory

register; or

(g) specifies a name as the name of an entity.

(3) This section does not apply to a law of a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory if there is a direct inconsistency between that

law and the business names legislation.

Note: Section 14 avoids direct inconsistency arising in some cases by limiting the operation of the business names legislation.

13 When business names legislation does not apply

(1) Subsection (2) applies if a provision of a law of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory declares a matter

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 4 Interaction between business names legislation and State and Territory laws

Section 14

18 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

to be an excluded matter for the purposes of this section in relation

to:

(a) the whole of the business names legislation; or

(b) a specified provision of the business names legislation; or

(c) the business names legislation other than a specified

provision; or

(d) the business names legislation otherwise than to a specified

extent.

(2) By force of this subsection:

(a) none of the provisions of the business names legislation

(other than this section) applies in or in relation to the State

or Territory with respect to the matter if the declaration is one

to which paragraph (1)(a) applies; and

(b) the specified provision of the business names legislation does

not apply in or in relation to the State or Territory with

respect to the matter if the declaration is one to which

paragraph (1)(b) applies; and

(c) the provisions of the business names legislation (other than

this section and the specified provisions) do not apply in or in

relation to the State or Territory with respect to the matter if

the declaration is one to which paragraph (1)(c) applies; and

(d) the provisions of the business names legislation (other than

this section and otherwise than to the specified extent) do not

apply in or in relation to the State or Territory with respect to

the matter if the declaration is one to which paragraph (1)(d)

applies.

(3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the declaration to the extent to

which the regulations provide that that subsection does not apply to

that declaration.

14 Avoiding direct inconsistency between Commonwealth and State

and Territory laws

This section overrides other business names legislation

(1) This section has effect despite anything else in the business names

legislation.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Interaction between business names legislation and State and Territory laws Division 4

Section 14

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 19

When this section does not apply to a referring/adopting State or

Territory law

(2) This section does not apply to a provision of a law of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory that is capable of

concurrent operation with the business names legislation.

Note: This kind of provision is dealt with by section 12.

When this section applies to a referring/adopting State or Territory

law

(3) This section applies to the interaction between a provision (the

displacement provision) of a law of a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory and a provision (the Commonwealth

provision) of the business names legislation only if the

displacement provision is declared by a law of the State or

Territory to be a business names legislation displacement provision

for the purposes of this section (either generally or specifically in

relation to the Commonwealth provision).

Effect of displacement provision

(4) The Commonwealth provision does not:

(a) prohibit the doing of an act; or

(b) impose a liability (whether civil or criminal) for doing an act;

if the displacement provision specifically permits, authorises or

requires the doing of that act.

(5) The Commonwealth provision does not operate in or in relation to

the State or Territory to the extent necessary to ensure that no

inconsistency arises between:

(a) the Commonwealth provision; and

(b) the displacement provision to the extent to which the

displacement provision would, apart from this subsection, be

inconsistent with the Commonwealth provision.

Note 1: The displacement provision is not covered by this subsection if subsection (4) applies to the displacement provision: if that subsection applies there would be no potential inconsistency to be dealt with by this subsection.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 4 Interaction between business names legislation and State and Territory laws

Section 15

20 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Note 2: The operation of the displacement provision will be supported by section 12 to the extent to which it can operate concurrently with the Commonwealth provision.

(6) Subsections (4) and (5) do not apply in relation to the displacement

provision to the extent to which the regulations provide that those

subsections do not apply in relation to the displacement provision.

15 Regulations to deal with interaction between laws

(1) The regulations may modify the operation of the business names

legislation so that:

(a) provisions of the business names legislation do not apply to a

matter that is dealt with by a law of a referring/adopting State

or an affected Territory specified in the regulations; or

(b) no inconsistency arises between the operation of a provision

of the business names legislation and the operation of a

provision of a law of a referring/adopting State or an affected

Territory specified in the regulations.

(2) Without limiting subsection (1), regulations made for the purposes

of that subsection may provide that a provision of the business

names legislation:

(a) does not apply to:

(i) a person specified in the regulations; or

(ii) a body specified in the regulations; or

(iii) circumstances specified in the regulations; or

(iv) a person or body specified in the regulations in the

circumstances specified in the regulations; or

(b) does not prohibit an act to the extent to which the prohibition

would otherwise give rise to an inconsistency with a law of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory; or

(c) does not require a person to do an act to the extent to which

the requirement would otherwise give rise to an

inconsistency with a law of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory; or

(d) does not authorise a person to do an act to the extent to which

the conferral of that authority on the person would otherwise

give rise to an inconsistency with a law of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory; or

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Interaction between business names legislation and State and Territory laws Division 4

Section 15

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 21

(e) does not impose an obligation on a person to the extent to

which complying with that obligation would require the

person not to comply with an obligation imposed on the

person under a law of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory; or

(f) authorises a person to do something for the purposes of the

business names legislation that the person:

(i) is authorised to do under a law of a referring/adopting

State or an affected Territory; and

(ii) would not otherwise be authorised to do under the

business names legislation; or

(g) will be taken to be satisfied if a law of a referring/adopting

State or an affected Territory is satisfied.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 1 Preliminary

Division 5 Objects of this Act and consequences of registration

Section 16

22 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Division 5—Objects of this Act and consequences of

registration

16 Objects of this Act

(1) The objects of this Act are:

(a) to ensure that if an entity carries on a business under a

business name, those who engage or propose to engage with

that business can identify the entity and how the entity may

be contacted; and

(b) to remove the inconvenience caused by the registration of

business names under the law of more than one jurisdiction

within Australia.

(2) These objects are achieved by requiring an entity that intends to

carry on a business under a business name to register the business

name on a nationally established and maintained register of

business names.

(3) The objects of this Act are also:

(a) to avoid confusion by ensuring that business names that are

identical or nearly identical are not registered; and

(b) to ensure that business names that are undesirable (for

example, because they are offensive) are not registered; and

(c) to ensure that business names that should be restricted for

any other reason (for example, because they might mislead

consumers) are not registered.

(4) The objects mentioned in subsection (3) are achieved by rules

dealing with the availability of business names.

17 Consequences of registration of a business name

(1) The registration of a business name does not affect the rights of

any entity in relation to the business name, or a word or an

expression that constitutes or is included in the business name,

under the law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or

under the general law.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Preliminary Part 1

Objects of this Act and consequences of registration Division 5

Section 17

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 23

(2) An entity does not acquire property in a business name, or in a

word or an expression that constitutes or is included in a business

name, because the name is registered to the entity under this Act or

the Transitional Act.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 2 Offences relating to business names

Section 18

24 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 2—Offences relating to business names

18 Offence—carrying on a business under an unregistered business

name

(1) An entity commits an offence if:

(a) the entity carries on a business under a name; and

(b) the name is not registered to the entity as a business name on

the Business Names Register.

Penalty: 30 penalty units.

(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:

(a) the entity is an individual and the name is the individual’s

name; or

(b) the entity is a corporation and the name is the corporation’s

name; or

(c) the entity is a partnership and the name consists of all of the

partners’ names; or

(d) the name is registered to the entity on a notified

State/Territory register; or

(e) an Act of the Commonwealth, a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory, or an instrument made under such an

Act, specifies the name as the name of the entity; or

(f) the entity is a government body; or

(g) the entity is a notified successor in relation to the name; or

(h) other circumstances prescribed by the regulations for the

purposes of this paragraph apply.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (2): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

(3) Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Offences relating to business names Part 2

Section 19

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 25

19 Offence—must include business name in written communications

(1) An entity commits an offence if:

(a) the entity carries on a business under a business name; and

(b) the entity communicates in writing with another entity; and

(c) that communication is a business document connected with

carrying on the business under the name; and

(d) the entity does not include clearly legible business names

information in the document.

Penalty: 5 penalty units.

(2) Business names information means the name and, if the entity has

an ABN, the entity’s ABN, where the business document is of one

of the following kinds:

(a) a document that is lodged with ASIC;

(b) a statement of account (including an invoice);

(c) a receipt;

(d) an order for goods or services;

(e) a cheque;

(f) a promissory note or bill of exchange;

(g) an offer to provide goods or services (rather than an

invitation to treat).

(3) In any other case, business names information means the name.

(4) Subsection (1) does not apply if:

(a) the entity is an individual and the name is the individual’s

name; or

(b) the entity is a corporation and the name is the corporation’s

name; or

(c) the entity is a partnership and the name consists of all of the

partners’ names; or

(d) the name is registered to the entity on a notified

State/Territory register; or

(e) an Act of the Commonwealth, a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory, or an instrument made under such an

Act, specifies the name as the name of the entity; or

(f) the entity is a government body; or

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 2 Offences relating to business names

Section 19

26 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(g) the entity is a notified successor in relation to the name; or

(h) the Minister has exempted the entity from the requirement in

relation to the business and the business name, under

subsection (6); or

(i) other circumstances prescribed by the regulations for the

purposes of this paragraph apply.

(5) Subsection (1) does not require an entity to include a name or the

entity’s ABN in a written communication in circumstances where:

(a) it would be contrary to the law of the Commonwealth or of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory to include

the name or the entity’s ABN in the communication; or

(b) the inclusion of the name in the communication would

directly or indirectly give rise to a representation that would

be contrary to the law of the Commonwealth or of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory; or

(c) the use of the name by the entity would be contrary to the law

of the Commonwealth or of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory.

Note 1: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsections (4) and (5): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

Note 2: As an example, the use of a name would be contrary to the law of a referring/adopting State or an affected Territory if the law of that jurisdiction provided that the name could not be used without the consent of a relevant authority and that consent was not obtained.

(6) The Minister may, by determination in writing, exempt an entity

from the requirement to include a name or the entity’s ABN in a

written communication in connection with a specified business

carried on under a specified business name, if the Minister is

satisfied that the inclusion of that information in a written

communication would create a serious risk to:

(a) public safety; or

(b) significant infrastructure such as:

(i) transport infrastructure; or

(ii) energy infrastructure; or

(iii) communications infrastructure; or

(iv) water infrastructure.

The determination is not a legislative instrument.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Offences relating to business names Part 2

Section 20

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 27

(7) Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

20 Offence—must display business name at places open to public

(1) An entity commits an offence if:

(a) the entity carries on a business under a business name; and

(b) the entity does not display the name prominently at every

place at which the entity carries on the business that is open

to the public.

Penalty: 5 penalty units.

(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:

(a) the entity is an individual and the name is the individual’s

name; or

(b) the entity is a corporation and the name is the corporation’s

name; or

(c) the entity is a partnership and the name consists of all of the

partners’ names; or

(d) the name is registered to the entity on a notified

State/Territory register; or

(e) an Act of the Commonwealth, a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory, or an instrument made under such an

Act, specifies the name as the name of the entity; or

(f) the entity is a government body; or

(g) the entity is a notified successor in relation to the name; or

(h) the Minister has exempted the entity from the requirement in

relation to the business name and the place, under

subsection (4); or

(i) other circumstances prescribed by the regulations for the

purposes of this paragraph apply.

(3) Subsection (1) does not require an entity to display a name at a

place in circumstances where:

(a) it would be contrary to the law of the Commonwealth or of a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory to display

the name at that place; or

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 2 Offences relating to business names

Section 21

28 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(b) displaying the name at the place would directly or indirectly

give rise to a representation that would be contrary to the law

of the Commonwealth or of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory; or

(c) the use of the name by the entity would be contrary to the law

of the Commonwealth or of a referring/adopting State or an

affected Territory.

Note 1: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsections (2) and (3): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

Note 2: As an example, the law of a referring/adopting State or an affected Territory may prohibit advertising in relation to gambling. A sign relating to gambling would not therefore be required to be displayed under this Act.

(4) The Minister may, by determination in writing, exempt an entity

from the requirement to display a specified name at a specified

place, if the Minister is satisfied that the display of that name at

that place would create a serious risk to:

(a) public safety; or

(b) significant infrastructure such as:

(i) transport infrastructure; or

(ii) energy infrastructure; or

(iii) communications infrastructure; or

(iv) water infrastructure.

The determination is not a legislative instrument.

(5) Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

21 Offence—carrying on a business under a business name while

disqualified

(1) An entity commits an offence if it carries on a business under a

business name while disqualified.

Penalty: 30 penalty units.

(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:

(a) the entity is an individual and the name is the individual’s

name; or

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Offences relating to business names Part 2

Section 21

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 29

(b) the entity is a corporation and the name is the corporation’s

name; or

(c) the entity is a partnership and the name consists of all of the

partners’ names; or

(d) the name is registered to the entity on a notified

State/Territory register; or

(e) an Act of the Commonwealth, a referring/adopting State or

an affected Territory, or an instrument made under such an

Act, specifies the name as the name of the entity; or

(f) the entity is a government body; or

(g) the entity is a notified successor in relation to the name; or

(h) other circumstances prescribed by the regulations for the

purposes of this paragraph apply.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (2): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

(3) Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 3 Registering a business name

Section 22

30 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 3—Registering a business name

22 The Business Names Register

(1) ASIC must establish and maintain a Business Names Register.

(2) The purpose of the Business Names Register is to enable those

who engage or propose to engage with a business carried on under

a business name to identify the entity carrying on the business and

how the entity may be contacted.

(3) The Business Names Register may be kept in any form that ASIC

considers appropriate.

(4) The Business Names Register is not a legislative instrument.

23 Application to register a business name

(1) An entity that intends to carry on a business under a name may

lodge with ASIC an application for the name to be registered to the

entity as a business name.

Note: Under section 18, it is an offence to carry on a business under an unregistered business name.

(2) The application must:

(a) include:

(i) details sufficient to identify the entity; and

(ii) the entity’s ABN or, if an application for an ABN is

pending, a statement to that effect and the reference

number for the ABN application; and

(iii) the address of the entity’s principal place of business in

Australia; and

(iv) an address in Australia for service of documents; and

(v) the business name to which the application relates; and

(b) specify the period for which registration is sought; and

(c) specify whether the entity is disqualified.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Registering a business name Part 3

Section 24

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 31

(3) The application:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(4) The applicant must pay the registration fee.

(5) If an application for registration of a business name is lodged with

ASIC by post, it is taken to have been lodged with ASIC

immediately after the end of the period of 5 business days

beginning on the day on which it is received by ASIC.

(6) The prescribed form for an application for registration of a

business name must require the applicant to provide details of a

person’s date and place of birth if it is necessary for or directly

related to the purposes of:

(a) identifying the entity to whom the business name is to be

registered; or

(b) determining whether the entity is disqualified.

24 Decision to register a business name to an entity

(1) ASIC must register the business name to the entity if ASIC is

satisfied that:

(a) the entity has an ABN; and

(b) the registration fee has been paid; and

(c) the name is available to the entity; and

(d) the entity is not disqualified.

(2) ASIC may request the entity in writing to give ASIC, within the

period specified in the request, information or a document that is of

a kind specified in the request and that ASIC needs to be satisfied

of the matters mentioned in subsection (1).

(3) If the entity does not comply with the request within the time

specified, ASIC may refuse the application.

(4) Subsection (3) does not limit the grounds on which ASIC may

refuse an application to register a business name to an entity.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 3 Registering a business name

Section 25

32 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

25 Is a business name available to an entity?

A business name is available to an entity if:

(a) the name is not identical or nearly identical to:

(i) a business name registered to another entity; or

(ii) a name that is reserved or registered under the

Corporations Act 2001 for another body; or

(iii) a name that is registered to another entity on a notified

State/Territory register; or

(iv) if ASIC receives notice electronically from a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory of the

name of a government body and the entity is not that

body—that name; or

(v) if ASIC receives notice electronically from a

referring/adopting State or an affected Territory that an

Act of the State or Territory, or an instrument made

under such an Act, specifies a name as the name of

another entity—that name; or

(vi) if ASIC receives notice electronically from a

Commonwealth government body of the name of that

body and the entity is not that body—that name; or

(vii) if ASIC receives notice electronically from a body that

an Act of the Commonwealth, or an instrument made

under such an Act, specifies a name as the name of that

body and the entity is not that body—that name; and

(b) a name that is identical or nearly identical is not held under

section 54 or a provision of the Transitional Act; and

(c) no other entity has priority over a name that is identical or

nearly identical; and

(d) either:

(i) the name is not of a kind that is undesirable; or

(ii) the name is of a kind that is undesirable but the Minister

has determined under subsection 27(2) that the name is

available to the entity; and

(e) either:

(i) the name is not constituted by, and does not include, a

restricted word or expression; or

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Registering a business name Part 3

Section 26

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 33

(ii) the name is constituted by or includes a word or

expression that is restricted unless a condition is

satisfied, and the entity satisfies the condition.

26 Identical or nearly identical names

The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules for

determining whether a name is identical or nearly identical to

another name.

27 Undesirable names

(1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, determine the kinds of

name that are undesirable for the purposes of this Act.

(2) The Minister may determine in writing that a business name

specified in the determination is to be available to an entity

specified in the determination, even though the name is of a kind

that is undesirable.

(3) A determination under subsection (2) is not a legislative

instrument.

(4) The Minister must, at least 28 days before revoking a

determination made under subsection (2), give notice in writing to

the entity specified in the determination:

(a) informing the entity of the Minister’s intention to revoke the

determination; and

(b) setting out the Minister’s reasons for revoking the

determination.

28 Restricted words and expressions

(1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, determine that a word

or expression specified in the determination:

(a) is restricted; or

(b) is restricted in relation to a specified class of entity or

business unless a condition or conditions specified in the

determination are met.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 3 Registering a business name

Section 29

34 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(2) The Minister may determine in writing that a word or expression

specified in the determination is restricted in relation to a specified

entity or a specified business unless a condition or conditions

specified in the determination are met.

(3) A determination under subsection (2) is not a legislative

instrument.

29 Priority

(1) Where:

(a) 2 or more applications are lodged with ASIC for registration

of business names that are identical or nearly identical; and

(b) none of the applications is a consent application;

the applications take priority in the order in which they are lodged.

(2) To avoid doubt, the priority of an entity over a business name is

not affected by the fact that an ABN application by the entity is

pending.

(3) If an entity’s application for registration of a business name to the

entity is refused, the entity’s priority over the business name is not

affected during the review period in relation to that decision.

(4) The review period, in relation to a decision to refuse an application

by an entity for the registration of a business name to the entity, is:

(a) a period of 28 days beginning on the day on which the entity

is notified of the decision; or

(b) if ASIC determines a longer period under subsection (5)—

that longer period.

(5) ASIC may determine in writing a longer review period. The

determination is not a legislative instrument.

(6) ASIC must give a copy of the determination to the applicant.

(7) ASIC may refuse 2 or more applications for registration of

business names that are identical or nearly identical if all of the

applications take the same priority.

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Registering a business name Part 3

Section 30

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 35

30 Refusal for failure to pay registration fee on time

(1) This section applies if an entity lodges with ASIC an application

for the registration of a business name to the entity, but the entity

does not pay the registration fee when the application is lodged.

(2) The application is taken to have been refused if the registration fee

is not paid before the end of the fee payment period.

(3) The fee payment period begins at the time at which the application

is lodged and ends immediately before that time on the day 10

business days after the day on which the application is lodged.

31 Consent applications

Consent of holder of the business name to registration by another

entity

(1) An entity to whom a business name is registered may, by notice in

accordance with subsection (2), consent to the registration of the

business name to another entity.

Note: So if, for example, the entity to whom the business name is registered uses the business name in relation to a business that is then sold, the entity might also consent to the business name being registered to the purchaser.

Prescribed manner and form

(2) The consent notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

Availability of business name

(3) If:

(a) an application under section 23 for registration of a business

name to an entity (the applicant) is lodged with ASIC; and

(b) each of the following notices is lodged with ASIC:

(i) a notice under subsection (1) by the entity to whom the

business name is registered consenting to the

registration of the business name to the applicant;

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36 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(ii) a notice under subsection 42(1) by the entity to whom

the business name is registered requesting ASIC to

cancel the registration of the business name to the

entity;

the business name is taken to be available to the applicant.

Potential applicant may carry on a business

(4) If an entity to whom a business name is registered gives notice

under subsection (1) consenting to the registration of the business

name to another entity (the potential applicant), the potential

applicant may notify ASIC in accordance with subsection (5) that

the consent has been given.

(5) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(6) If the potential applicant gives notice under subsection (4), the

potential applicant does not commit an offence under subsection

18(1) if the potential applicant carries on a business under the

business name during the period of 3 months beginning on the day

on which that notice is given.

Note 1: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (6): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

Note 2: Subsections (4) to (6) allow the potential applicant to trade while an application for registration of a business name is being processed.

32 Disqualified entities

(1) An entity is disqualified if:

(a) the entity is a person disqualified from managing

corporations under subsection 206B(1) of the Corporations

Act 2001 because the person is convicted of an offence; or

(b) a person involved in the management of the entity is

disqualified from managing corporations under subsection

206B(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 because the person is

convicted of an offence; or

(c) the entity is a person who is not disqualified under subsection

206B(1) of the Corporations Act 2001, but is convicted of an

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Registering a business name Part 3

Section 32

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 37

offence against a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a

Territory or a foreign country that involves dishonesty and is

punishable by imprisonment for at least 3 months; or

(d) the entity is a person who is not disqualified under subsection

206B(1) of the Corporations Act 2001, but is convicted of an

offence against the law of a foreign country that is punishable

by imprisonment for a period of more than 12 months; or

(e) a person involved in the management of the entity is not

disqualified under subsection 206B(1) of the Corporations

Act 2001, but is convicted of an offence referred to in

paragraph (c) or (d) of this subsection.

(2) The entity is disqualified:

(a) in a case mentioned in paragraph (1)(a)—during the period

for which the entity is disqualified under subsection 206B(2)

of the Corporations Act 2001; and

(b) in a case mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)—during the period

for which the person involved in the management of the

entity is disqualified under subsection 206B(2); and

(c) in a case mentioned in paragraph (1)(c) or (d):

(i) if the entity does not serve a term of imprisonment—for

a period of 5 years after the day on which the entity is

convicted; or

(ii) if the entity serves a term of imprisonment—for a

period of 5 years after the day on which the entity is

released from prison; and

(d) in a case mentioned in paragraph (1)(e):

(i) if the person involved in the management of the entity

does not serve a term of imprisonment—for a period of

5 years after the day on which the person is convicted;

or

(ii) if the person involved in the management of the entity

serves a term of imprisonment—for a period of 5 years

after the day on which the person is released from

prison.

(3) The Minister may, on application in writing by a person, determine

that:

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Section 33

38 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(a) where the person is the entity that would otherwise be

disqualified—the entity is not disqualified despite the

conviction; and

(b) where the person is involved in the management of an entity

that would otherwise be disqualified—the entity is not

disqualified despite the conviction.

(4) A determination under subsection (3) must be in writing but is not

a legislative instrument.

33 Steps taken by ASIC to register a business name to an entity

(1) ASIC registers a business name to an entity by entering in the

Business Names Register:

(a) details sufficient to identify the entity, including the entity’s

ABN; and

(b) the business name; and

(c) the address of the entity’s principal place of business in

Australia; and

(d) an address in Australia for service of documents; and

(e) the period for which the business name is registered to the

entity, including the time at which, and the day on which, the

period starts.

(2) The registration period for which the business name is registered to

the entity must be a period of either 1 year or 3 years, unless an

alternative registration period is determined by ASIC under

subsection (3) or (4).

(3) ASIC may determine an alternative registration period for the

registration of a business name to an entity if:

(a) the entity lodges a request with ASIC, in the prescribed form

and manner, to have an alternative registration period

determined; and

(b) the entity is a company; and

(c) the alternative registration period would align the day on

which the registration period for the registration of the

business name to the company would expire with the

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Section 34

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 39

company’s review date, as defined for the purposes of the

Corporations Act 2001.

(4) ASIC may determine an alternative registration period for the

registration of a business name (the new business name) to an

entity if:

(a) the entity lodges a request with ASIC, in the prescribed form

and manner, to have an alternative registration period

determined; and

(b) another business name (the other business name) is

registered to the entity; and

(c) the alternative registration period would align the day on

which the registration period for the registration of the new

business name to the entity would expire with the day on

which the registration period for the registration of the other

business name to the entity would expire.

(5) However, an alternative registration period must be:

(a) if the registration period would otherwise have been 1 year—

of no more than 18 months; and

(b) if the registration period would otherwise have been 3

years—of no more than 3 years and 6 months.

(6) A determination under subsection (3) or (4) must be in writing, but

is not a legislative instrument.

(7) The Business Names Register may include any other details

prescribed, but no others.

(8) ASIC must give the entity notice in writing of:

(a) the fact that the business name has been registered to the

entity; and

(b) the day and time on which the registration took effect; and

(c) the other details entered in relation to the business name and

the entity in the Business Names Register.

34 Refusal to register

(1) If ASIC refuses an application for registration of a business name

to an entity, it must:

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40 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(a) give written notice to the applicant of the refusal and the

reasons for refusal; and

(b) if the applicant has paid the registration fee—refund the

registration fee to the applicant.

(2) If ASIC has not decided an application for registration of a

business name to an entity within 28 days after the application is

lodged, the entity may, at any time, lodge with ASIC notice that

the entity wishes to treat the application as having been refused.

(3) The notice under subsection (2):

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(4) If an entity lodges notice under subsection (2):

(a) for the purposes of Part 7 (Review), ASIC is taken to have

refused the entity’s application for registration on the day on

which the notice is lodged; and

(b) if the entity has paid the registration fee—ASIC must refund

the registration fee to the applicant.

(5) For the purposes of counting the 28 days mentioned in

subsection (2), disregard each period (if any):

(a) starting on the day when ASIC requests the entity under

subsection 24(2) to give ASIC specified information or a

specified document; and

(b) ending at the end of the day the entity gives ASIC the

specified information or specified document.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Obligations to give information to ASIC Part 4

Section 35

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 41

Part 4—Obligations to give information to ASIC

35 Notifying changes—entity that gives information to ASIC

(1) If:

(a) an entity gives information to ASIC; and

(b) the information is recorded in relation to a business name in

the Business Names Register; and

(c) circumstances change so that the information is no longer

correct;

the entity must lodge with ASIC notice of the change within 28

days after becoming aware of it.

(2) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

36 Obligation to notify ASIC if entity becomes disqualified

(1) If an entity becomes disqualified after registration of a business

name to the entity, the entity must immediately lodge with ASIC

notice of the disqualification.

(2) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

37 Obligation to give ASIC information if requested

(1) ASIC may request an entity (other than a government body) to give

ASIC information relevant for the purposes of establishing or

maintaining the Business Names Register.

(2) A request under subsection (1) to an entity:

(a) is to be made by notice in writing to the entity; and

(b) must specify:

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 4 Obligations to give information to ASIC

Section 37

42 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(i) the information the entity is to give; and

(ii) the period within which the entity is to give the

information.

The period specified under subparagraph (b)(ii) must be of at least

28 days, beginning on the day on which the notice is given.

(3) If ASIC requests an entity to give information under this section,

the entity must comply with the request.

Penalty: 5 penalty units.

(4) Subsection (3) is an offence of strict liability.

Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.

(5) The information must be given by lodging a response with ASIC in

the prescribed form and manner.

(6) If:

(a) an entity fails to comply with a request given under this

section; and

(b) ASIC reasonably believes that information on the Business

Names Register to which the request relates is not correct;

ASIC may delete, correct or annotate the information on the

Register.

(7) If:

(a) an entity gives ASIC information in purported compliance

with a request given under this section; and

(b) ASIC reasonably believes that the information is incorrect;

ASIC may decide not to include the information on the register, or

to include the information in a corrected or annotated form.

(8) If ASIC deletes, decides not to include, corrects or annotates

information under subsection (6) or (7), ASIC must give the entity

to whom the business name is registered notice in writing:

(a) setting out the action ASIC has taken; and

(b) in the case of a correction or annotation, setting out the

details of that correction or annotation; and

(c) giving ASIC’s reasons for its decision.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Obligations to give information to ASIC Part 4

Section 38

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 43

38 Notifying ASIC of bankruptcy, insolvency etc.

(1) If:

(a) a business name is registered to an entity; and

(b) a person is appointed or authorised to act as a debtor

representative of the entity;

the person must lodge with ASIC notice of that fact in accordance

with subsection (2).

(2) The notice:

(a) must be given to ASIC within 28 days after the appointment

or authorisation; and

(b) must identify who (if anyone) will carry on a business under

the business name while the person is appointed or

authorised; and

(c) must be in the prescribed form; and

(d) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(3) In this section:

debtor representative means:

(a) a trustee in bankruptcy; or

(b) a liquidator within the meaning given by subsection 6(1) of

the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936; or

(c) a receiver; or

(d) a controller (within the meaning of section 9 of the

Corporations Act 2001); or

(e) an administrator appointed to an entity under Division 2 of

Part 5.3A of the Corporations Act 2001; or

(f) a person appointed, or authorised, under a law of the

Commonwealth, or of a State or Territory, to manage the

affairs of an entity because it is unable to pay all its debts as

and when they become due and payable; or

(g) an administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed

by the entity; or

(h) a foreign representative in respect of a foreign proceeding

that has been recognised for the purposes of the

Cross-Border Insolvency Act 2008.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 4 Obligations to give information to ASIC

Section 39

44 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

trustee in bankruptcy means:

(a) in relation to a bankruptcy—the trustee of the estate of the

bankrupt; or

(b) in relation to a composition or scheme of arrangement under

Division 6 of Part IV of the Bankruptcy Act 1966—the

trustee of the composition or scheme of arrangement; or

(c) in relation to a debtor whose property is subject to control

under Division 2 of Part X of the Bankruptcy Act 1966—the

controlling trustee in relation to the debtor under that Part of

that Act; or

(d) in relation to a personal insolvency agreement under Part X

of the Bankruptcy Act 1966—the trustee of the agreement; or

(e) in relation to the estate of a deceased person in respect of

which an order has been made under Part XI of the

Bankruptcy Act 1966—the trustee of the estate.

39 Notifying ASIC of appointment of a legal personal representative

(1) If:

(a) a business name is registered to an entity that is an

individual; and

(b) the individual dies; and

(c) one of the following is granted to a person (the legal

personal representative):

(i) probate of the will of the deceased;

(ii) letters of administration of the estate of the deceased;

(iii) any other similar grant;

the legal personal representative must lodge with ASIC notice of

the grant within 28 days after the grant is made.

(2) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(3) If ASIC receives notice under this section:

(a) ASIC must (if it has not already done so) register the

Business Name to the estate of the deceased; and

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Obligations to give information to ASIC Part 4

Section 40

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 45

(b) enter the details of the legal personal representative on the

Business Names Register.

40 Notification by successor in relation to a deceased estate

(1) If:

(a) a business name is registered to an entity that is an

individual; and

(b) the individual dies; and

(c) none of the following has been granted to a person:

(i) probate of the will of the deceased;

(ii) letters of administration of the estate of the deceased;

(iii) any other similar grant; and

(d) there are reasonable grounds for concluding that an entity

will inherit assets formerly used by the deceased in carrying

on a business under the business name;

the entity may lodge with ASIC notice of that fact.

(2) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(3) ASIC must register the Business Name to the estate of the

deceased.

(4) ASIC may enter the name of an entity as a notified successor in

relation to a business name, and other prescribed details, if the

entity lodges notice with ASIC in accordance with subsections (1)

and (2).

(5) ASIC may refuse to enter the name of an entity as a notified

successor in relation to a business name if ASIC is not satisfied

that there are reasonable grounds for concluding that the entity will

inherit assets formerly used by the deceased in carrying on a

business under the business name.

(6) ASIC must remove the entry for a notified successor in relation to

a business name from the Business Names Register if ASIC

receives notice in relation to the business name under section 39.

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Part 4 Obligations to give information to ASIC

Section 41

46 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(7) If one or more entities is noted on the Business Names Register as

a notified successor, ASIC is taken to satisfy an obligation under

this Act or the Transitional Act to give notice to the entity to whom

the business name is registered if ASIC gives notice to each

notified successor.

41 Federal Court may order information be given to ASIC

(1) If an entity has failed to comply with any provision of this Act or

the Transitional Act that requires the entity to lodge with ASIC any

information, ASIC may give the entity a written notice requiring

the entity to comply with the requirement within 10 business days

after the notice is given.

(2) If the entity does not comply with the notice within that period, the

Federal Court may, on an application by ASIC, make an order

directing any of the following persons to comply with the

requirement or request:

(a) if the entity is a person—the entity;

(b) if the entity is a body corporate—a director, secretary or

senior manager of the body corporate;

(c) if the entity is a partnership or the trustees of a trust—a

partner or trustee;

(d) if the entity is an unincorporated association—a member of

the committee of management of the association;

(e) in the case of a joint venture, an individual who is a joint

venture entity or involved in the management of a joint

venture entity.

(3) In paragraph (2)(e), joint venture and joint venture entity have the

same meaning as in Part 10.

(4) The order may provide that all costs of and incidental to the

application are to be borne by the person.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Cancelling the registration of a business name Part 5

Section 42

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 47

Part 5—Cancelling the registration of a business

name

42 Cancellation—request by entity to whom business name is

registered

(1) ASIC must cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if

the entity lodges a notice with ASIC requesting ASIC to do so.

(2) The notice:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(3) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity that ASIC

intends to cancel the registration.

43 Cancellation—ASIC becomes aware of matter that would have

affected registration decision

(1) ASIC may cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if:

(a) ASIC becomes aware of a matter after the business name is

registered to the entity; and

(b) ASIC is satisfied that, had it known of the matter at the time

the business name was registered to the entity, ASIC would

not have registered the business name to the entity; and

(c) ASIC is not satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances

justifying the continued registration of the business name.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity:

(a) of the matter that has, since registration, become known to

ASIC; and

(b) that ASIC will cancel the registration of the business name

unless the entity satisfies ASIC that there are exceptional

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Section 44

48 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

circumstances justifying the continued registration of the

business name.

44 Cancellation—entity is disqualified

(1) ASIC must cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if

ASIC becomes aware that the entity is disqualified.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity that:

(a) ASIC has formed the view that the entity is disqualified; and

(b) ASIC proposes to cancel the registration of the business

name on that basis.

45 Cancellation—Ministerial determination revoked

(1) ASIC must cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if

a Ministerial determination in relation to the availability of the

business name to the entity made under subsection 27(2) is

revoked.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity that:

(a) the determination in relation to the availability of the

business name to the entity made under subsection 27(2) has

been revoked; and

(b) ASIC proposes to cancel the registration of the business

name on that basis.

46 Cancellation—failure to satisfy a condition of registration

(1) ASIC must cancel the registration of a business name to an entity

if:

(a) the name contains a word or expression that, under an

instrument made under paragraph 28(1)(b) or subsection

28(2), is restricted unless a condition is satisfied; and

(b) the entity ceases to satisfy the condition.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity that:

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Cancelling the registration of a business name Part 5

Section 47

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 49

(a) ASIC has formed the view that the entity ceases to satisfy the

condition; and

(b) ASIC proposes to cancel the registration of the business

name on that basis.

47 Cancellation—entity not carrying on a business under the

business name

(1) ASIC may cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if:

(a) ASIC is satisfied that:

(i) the entity is not carrying on a business under the

business name; and

(ii) the entity has not, in the immediately preceding period

of 3 months, carried on a business under the business

name; and

(b) the entity is not a government body; and

(c) ASIC is not satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances

justifying the failure to carry on a business under the business

name during that 3 month period.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity:

(a) informing the entity that ASIC intends to cancel the

registration; and

(b) inviting the entity to give ASIC evidence that:

(i) it is carrying on, or has within the immediately

preceding period of 3 months carried on, a business

under the business name; or

(ii) there are exceptional circumstances justifying the failure

to carry on a business under the business name during

that period.

48 Cancellation—failure to provide information

(1) ASIC may cancel the registration of a business name to an entity if:

(a) either:

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Section 49

50 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(i) the entity is obliged under section 35 to notify ASIC of

a change to information and the entity fails to do so

within the period required under that section; or

(ii) ASIC requests the entity to give ASIC information

under section 37 and the entity fails to do so within the

period specified in the request; and

(b) ASIC is satisfied that the failure to provide the information

affects the integrity of the Business Names Register; and

(c) ASIC is not satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances

justifying the failure to give the information.

(2) ASIC must, at least 28 days before cancelling the registration, give

notice in writing to the entity informing the entity that ASIC will

cancel the registration unless:

(a) the information is given to ASIC within that 28 day period;

or

(b) the entity satisfies ASIC that there are exceptional

circumstances justifying the failure to give the information.

49 Cancellation—registration has expired

(1) ASIC must, at least 28 days before the registration period for the

registration of a business name to an entity expires, remind the

entity in writing of the time and day on which the registration

period will expire.

(2) Failure to give a reminder in accordance with subsection (1) does

not affect ASIC’s power to cancel the registration if not renewed.

(3) If the registration period for the registration of a business name to

an entity expires, ASIC may give notice in writing to the entity that

ASIC will cancel the registration unless it is renewed.

(4) ASIC may cancel the registration of a business name to an entity

under this section with effect on the later of:

(a) the end of a period of 3 months beginning when the

registration expires; and

(b) the end of a period of 6 weeks beginning on the day on which

notice is given in accordance with subsection (3).

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Cancelling the registration of a business name Part 5

Section 50

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 51

(5) To avoid doubt, a business name continues to be registered to an

entity after the expiry of the registration period for the registration

unless the registration is cancelled.

50 Cancellation—entity to whom business name registered ceases to

exist

ASIC must cancel the registration of a business name to an entity

(other than an individual) if ASIC is reasonably satisfied that the

entity no longer exists.

51 Cancellation—business name used in infringement of trade mark

(1) To avoid doubt, the relief that a court may grant in an action for an

infringement of a registered trade mark includes an order that the

registration of a business name to an entity must be cancelled.

(2) ASIC must cancel the registration of the business name to the

entity if:

(a) a copy of the court’s order is lodged with ASIC; and

(b) ASIC is satisfied, within a reasonable period after the order is

lodged, that:

(i) no application for the stay of the order is pending; and

(ii) no appeal of the order is pending; and

(iii) the order is not stayed; and

(iv) the order has not been overturned on appeal.

(3) Nothing in this section limits any orders that a court may make (in

an action for an infringement of trade mark or otherwise) in

relation to the registration of a business name, or ASIC’s

obligations under such orders.

52 Notification of cancellation of business name

If ASIC cancels the registration of a business name to an entity,

ASIC must give written notice of the decision to the entity and

ASIC’s reasons for the decision.

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Part 5 Cancelling the registration of a business name

Section 53

52 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

53 Notice requirements in relation to partnerships, unincorporated

associations, trusts and joint ventures

(1) Where ASIC is required under a provision of this Part to give

notice to a partnership, ASIC must also give copy of the notice to

each partner within the partnership in relation to whom ASIC has

details.

(2) Where ASIC is required under a provision of this Part to give

notice to an unincorporated association or body, ASIC must also

give a copy of the notice to each member of the committee of

management of the association or body in relation to whom ASIC

has details.

(3) Where ASIC is required under a provision of this Part to give

notice to a trust and there are 2 or more trustees of the trust, ASIC

must also give a copy of the notice to each trustee in relation to

whom ASIC has details.

(4) Where ASIC is required under a provision of this Part to give

notice to a joint venture, ASIC must also give a copy of the notice

to each joint venture entity in relation to whom ASIC has details.

(5) In subsection (4), joint venture and joint venture entity have the

same meaning as in Part 10.

54 Business name held during review period for cancellation

decision

(1) If ASIC cancels the registration of a business name to an entity:

(a) the business name is held during the review period in relation

to that decision; and

(b) the entity does not commit an offence under subsection 18(1)

if the entity carries on a business under the business name

during the review period in relation to that decision.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in paragraph (1)(b): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

(2) The review period, in relation to a decision to cancel the

registration of a business name to an entity, is:

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Cancelling the registration of a business name Part 5

Section 54

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 53

(a) a period of 4 months beginning on the day on which the

entity is notified of the decision under section 52; or

(b) if ASIC determines a longer period under subsection (3)—

that longer period.

(3) ASIC may determine in writing a longer review period. The

determination is not a legislative instrument.

(4) ASIC must give a copy of the determination to the entity.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 6 Renewing the registration of a business name

Section 55

54 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 6—Renewing the registration of a business

name

55 Application to renew registration

(1) An entity may renew the registration of a business name to the

entity for a period of 1 year or 3 years by lodging the renewal fee

appropriate to that period with ASIC.

(2) An entity may lodge an application with ASIC to have the

registration of a business name to the entity renewed for an

alternative registration period.

(3) The application:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner; and

(c) must specify the period for which renewal is sought; and

(d) must be accompanied by the renewal fee appropriate to the

period sought.

(4) ASIC may determine an alternative registration period for the

renewal of the registration of a business name to an entity if:

(a) the entity is a company; and

(b) the alternative registration period would align the day on

which the registration period for the registration of the

business name to the company would expire with the

company’s review date, as defined for the purposes of the

Corporations Act 2001.

(5) ASIC may determine an alternative registration period for the

renewal of the registration of a business name (the renewed

business name) to an entity if:

(a) another business name (the other business name) is

registered to the entity; and

(b) the alternative registration period would align the day on

which the registration period for the registration of the

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Renewing the registration of a business name Part 6

Section 55

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 55

renewed business name to the entity would expire with the

day on which the registration period for the registration of the

other business name to the entity would expire.

(6) A determination under subsection (4) or (5) must be in writing, but

is not a legislative instrument.

(7) However, an alternative registration period must be:

(a) if the registration period would otherwise have been 1 year—

of no more than 18 months; and

(b) if the registration period would otherwise have been 3

years—of no more than 3 years and 6 months.

(8) An entity may:

(a) renew the registration of a business name to the entity under

subsection (1); or

(b) make an application under subsection (2);

no earlier than 2 months before the expiry of the registration period

for the business name.

(9) The period of registration on renewal begins immediately after the

end of the immediately preceding registration period.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 7 Review

Section 56

56 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 7—Review

56 Reviewable decisions

A decision specified in an item in column 1 of the table, made

under a provision specified in that item in column 2 of the table, is

reviewable on the application of an entity specified in that item in

column 3 of the table.

Reviewable decisions

Item Column 1

Decision

Column 2

Provision

Column 3

Who may seek review

1 Registration of a business

name to an entity

Section 24 an entity in relation to

whom there is a real

risk of substantial

detriment because of

the registration of the

business name

2 Refusal to register a business

name to an entity

Section 24 the entity

3 Refusal to determine that a

business name of a kind that

is undesirable is available to

an entity

Subsection 27(2) the entity

4 Revocation of determination

that a business name of a kind

that is undesirable is available

to an entity

Subsection 27(2) the entity

5 Determination that a word or

expression specified in the

determination is restricted in

relation to a specified entity

or specified business unless a

condition or conditions

specified in the determination

are met

Subsection 28(2) (a) where an entity is

specified—that

entity; and

(b) where a business is

specified—the

entity carrying on

that business

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Review Part 7

Section 56

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 57

Reviewable decisions

Item Column 1

Decision

Column 2

Provision

Column 3

Who may seek review

6 Determination of a longer

review period (priority of an

entity’s application for

registration)

Subsection 29(5) any entity that, but for

the determination,

would have priority

over a name that is

identical, or nearly

identical to the name to

which the

determination relates

7 Refusal to determine a longer

review period (priority of an

entity’s application for

registration)

Subsection 29(5) the entity

8 Refusal to determine that an

entity that would otherwise

be disqualified is not to be

disqualified

Subsection 32(3) the entity

9 Refusal to determine an

alternative registration period

in relation to the registration

of a business name to an

entity

Subsection 33(3) or

(4)

the entity

10 Revocation of a

determination of an

alternative registration period

in relation to the registration

of a business name to an

entity

Subsection 33(3) or

(4)

the entity

11 Deletion, refusal to include,

correction or annotation of

information in relation to a

business name on the

Business Names Register

Subsection 37(6) or

(7)

the entity to whom the

business name is

registered

12 Refusal to enter an entity’s

name on the Business Names

Register as a notified

successor in relation to a

Subsection 40(5) the entity

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 7 Review

Section 57

58 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Reviewable decisions

Item Column 1

Decision

Column 2

Provision

Column 3

Who may seek review

business name

13 Cancellation of the

registration of a business

name to an entity

Section 43, 47 or 48 the entity

14 Refusal to determine a longer

review period (holding

business name after

registration to an entity

cancelled)

Subsection 54(3) the entity

15 Revocation of a

determination of an

alternative registration period

in relation to the renewal of

the registration of a business

name to an entity

Subsection 55(4) or

(5)

the entity

16 Refusal to decide that it is

appropriate to excise details

in relation to an entity from

disclosure

Subsection 60(6) the entity

17 Refusal to receive a

document submitted by an

entity

Subsection 69(1) or

(5)

the entity

57 Internal review of certain decisions

(1) If a reviewable decision is made by ASIC other than as a delegate

of the Minister, an entity on whose application the decision is

reviewable may lodge an application with ASIC (the review body)

for review of the decision.

(2) If a reviewable decision is made by an ASIC member or staff

member as a delegate of the Minister, an entity on whose

application the decision is reviewable may lodge an application

with the Minister (the review body) for review of the decision.

(3) An application for review of a decision:

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Review Part 7

Section 57

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 59

(a) must set out the reasons for making the application; and

(b) must be in the prescribed form; and

(c) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

(4) An application for review of a decision must be lodged:

(a) in the case of a decision of the kind specified in item 1 of the

table in section 56—within 15 months after the day on which

the business name is registered to the entity; or

(b) in any other case—within 28 days after the entity is notified

of the decision.

(5) Despite subsection (4), an application for review of a decision may

be lodged within such longer period as the review body allows.

(6) After an application for review of a decision is lodged with a

review body, the review body must review the decision and:

(a) affirm the decision under review; or

(b) vary the decision under review; or

(c) set aside the decision under review and make a decision in

substitution for it.

(7) A decision of the review body under subsection (6) takes effect:

(a) on a day, provided in the decision, that is after the decision is

made; or

(b) if a day is not so provided—on the day on which the decision

is made.

(8) If the review body has not decided an application by an entity for

review of a decision:

(a) where the review body is ASIC—within 28 days after the

application is lodged; and

(b) where the review body is the Minister—within 60 days after

the application is lodged;

the entity may, at any time, give the review body written notice

that the entity wishes to treat the decision as having been affirmed.

(9) For the purposes of section 58, if an entity gives notice under

subsection (8), the review body is taken to have refused the entity’s

application on the day on which the notice is given.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 7 Review

Section 58

60 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

58 Administrative review of certain decisions

(1) An application may be made to the Administrative Appeals

Tribunal for review of a decision made or taken to have been made

by ASIC or the Minister under section 57.

(2) The application may be made by any entity that could have lodged

an application under subsection 57(1) in relation to the decision in

relation to which the decision under section 57 was made or taken

to have been made.

(3) An application may be made to the Administrative Appeals

Tribunal for review of one of the following decisions made

personally by the Minister:

(a) a refusal to determine under subsection 27(2) that a business

name of a kind that is undesirable is available to an entity;

(b) the revocation of a determination made under subsection

27(2) that a business name of a kind that is undesirable is

available to an entity;

(c) a determination made under subsection 28(2) that a word or

expression specified in the determination is restricted in

relation to a specified entity or specified business unless a

condition or conditions specified in the determination are

met.

(4) The application may be made by:

(a) in the case of a decision mentioned in paragraph (3)(a) or

(b)—the entity referred to in that paragraph; and

(b) in the case of a determination mentioned in paragraph (3)(c)

in relation to a specified entity—that entity; and

(c) in the case of a determination mentioned in paragraph (3)(c)

in relation to a specified business—the entity carrying on the

business specified.

59 Payment of registration fee if business name to be registered as

result of review

(1) This section applies if, as a result of a review of a decision carried

out under section 57 or 58 or by a court, a decision is made (the

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Review Part 7

Section 59

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 61

review decision) that a business name is to be registered to an

entity.

(2) The entity must pay the registration fee.

(3) The registration fee is payable at the end of a period of 5 business

days beginning on the day on which the entity is notified of the

review decision.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 8 Accessing the Business Names Register

Section 60

62 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

Part 8—Accessing the Business Names Register

60 Access to certain information in the Business Names Register by

request

(1) A person may lodge an application with ASIC for a copy of:

(a) the entry in the Business Names Register relating to a

particular business name; or

(b) the entries in the Business Names Register relating to a

particular entity.

(2) The application:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner; and

(c) must be accompanied by the application fee.

(3) If a person lodges an application under subsection (1), ASIC must

give the person a copy of the entry or entries sought.

(4) However, before a copy of an entry is given to a person, ASIC

must excise from it:

(a) any detail which under the regulations made under

subsection (5) is to be excised; and

(b) any detail that ASIC is prohibited from disclosing under

subsection (6).

(5) The regulations may provide that details of a kind specified in the

regulations are to be excised from a copy of an entry before it is

given to any person, or any person of a prescribed class.

(6) If:

(a) a person lodges with ASIC an application for a detail in

relation to a business name or the person not to be disclosed;

and

(b) ASIC is satisfied that it is not appropriate to disclose the

detail;

ASIC must not disclose the detail under this section.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Accessing the Business Names Register Part 8

Section 61

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 63

(7) An application mentioned in paragraph (6)(a):

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

61 Certain information to be publicly available

In addition to providing copies under section 60, ASIC must make

publicly available on the internet or otherwise free of charge any

details of a kind prescribed by the regulations.

62 Certain information to be made available to government bodies

(1) In addition to providing copies under section 60 and making details

publicly available under section 61, ASIC must make available

details of a kind prescribed by the regulations:

(a) to a government body, if the body has requested ASIC to

make the information available for one or more of the

following the purposes:

(i) the enforcement of the criminal law;

(ii) the enforcement of a law imposing a pecuniary penalty;

(iii) the protection of the public revenue;

(iv) the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of that body in relation to consumer

protection;

(v) the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of that body in relation to anti-discrimination;

(vi) the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of that body in relation to workers’

compensation;

(vii) the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of that body in relation to insolvency or

bankruptcy;

(viii) the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of that body in relation to licences;

(ix) maintaining a notified State/Territory register; and

(b) to an intelligence or security agency, if the agency has

requested ASIC to provide the information for the purposes

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 8 Accessing the Business Names Register

Section 62

64 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

of the exercise of the powers or the performance of the

functions of the agency in relation to intelligence or security.

(2) The details must be made available electronically and without

charge.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Administration Part 9

Section 63

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 65

Part 9—Administration

63 ASIC’s functions and powers

(1) ASIC has the functions and powers conferred on it by or under this

Act and the Transitional Act.

(2) ASIC has power to do whatever is necessary for or in connection

with, or reasonably incidental to, the performance of its functions

under this Act and the Transitional Act.

(3) Subject to the ASIC Act, ASIC has the general administration of

this Act and the Transitional Act.

64 Directions by Minister

(1) The Minister may give ASIC a written direction about policies it

should pursue, or priorities it should follow, in performing or

exercising any of its functions or powers under this Act or the

Transitional Act. The direction is not a legislative instrument.

(2) The Minister must not give a direction under subsection (1) unless

he or she has:

(a) notified ASIC in writing that he or she is considering giving

the direction; and

(b) given the Chairperson of ASIC an adequate opportunity to

discuss with the Minister the need for the proposed direction.

(3) The Minister must not give a direction under subsection (1) about a

particular case.

(4) ASIC must comply with a direction under subsection (1).

(5) The Minister must cause a copy of an instrument under

subsection (1):

(a) to be published in the Gazette within 21 days after the

instrument is made; and

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 9 Administration

Section 65

66 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(b) to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15

sitting days of that House after the publication;

but failure of the Minister to do so does not affect the instrument’s

validity.

65 Arrangements with States and Territories

(1) ASIC may, with the consent of the Minister, enter into an

agreement or arrangement with a State or Territory for the

performance of functions or the exercise of powers by ASIC as an

agent of the State or Territory.

(2) ASIC has such functions and powers as are referred to it in such an

agreement or arrangement. However, ASIC is not under a duty to

perform such functions or exercise such powers.

(3) ASIC is not subject to any directions of the Minister in relation to:

(a) entering into an agreement or arrangement under

subsection (1); or

(b) performing functions or exercising powers referred to in

subsection (2).

66 ASIC may arrange for use of computer programs to make

decisions

(1) ASIC may arrange for the use, under ASIC’s control, of computer

programs for any purposes for which ASIC may make decisions

under this Act or the Transitional Act, other than a decision under

subsection 57(6) of this Act or subitem 28(6) of Schedule 1 to the

Transitional Act.

(2) A decision made by the operation of a computer program under an

arrangement made under subsection (1) is taken to be a decision

made by ASIC.

67 Forms for documents to be lodged with ASIC

(1) A document that this Act or the Transitional Act requires to be

lodged with ASIC in a prescribed form must:

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Administration Part 9

Section 68

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 67

(a) if a form for the document is prescribed in the regulations

made under that Act:

(i) be in the prescribed form; and

(ii) include the information, statements, explanations or

other matters required by the form; and

(iii) be accompanied by any other material required by the

form; or

(b) if a form for the document is not prescribed in the regulations

made under that Act but ASIC has approved a form for the

document:

(i) be in the approved form; and

(ii) include the information, statements, explanations or

other matters required by the form; and

(iii) be accompanied by any other material required by the

form.

(2) A reference in this Act or the Transitional Act to a document that

has been lodged (being a document to which subsection (1)

applies), includes, unless a contrary intention appears, a reference

to any other material lodged with the document as required by the

relevant form.

(3) If:

(a) this Act or the Transitional Act requires a document to be

lodged with ASIC in a prescribed form; and

(b) a provision of this Act or the Transitional Act either

specifies, or provides for regulations to specify, information,

statements, explanations or other matters that must be

included in the document, or other material that must

accompany the document;

that provision is not taken to exclude or limit the operation of

subsection (1) in relation to the prescribed form (and so the

prescribed form may also require information etc. to be included in

the form or material to accompany the form).

68 Manner in which documents to be lodged with ASIC

A document that this Act or the Transitional Act requires to be

lodged with ASIC in a prescribed manner must:

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Part 9 Administration

Section 69

68 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(a) if a manner in which the document is to be lodged is

prescribed in the regulations made under that Act—be lodged

in the prescribed manner; and

(b) if a manner in which the document is to be lodged is not

prescribed in the regulations under that Act but ASIC has

approved a manner for lodging the document—be lodged in

the approved manner.

69 ASIC may refuse to receive document etc.

ASIC may refuse to receive document etc.

(1) If ASIC considers that a document submitted to ASIC under this

Act or the Transitional Act:

(a) contains matter that, in a material particular, is false or

misleading in the form or context in which it is included; or

(b) is incomplete; or

(c) is to be lodged in a prescribed form or in a prescribed manner

under this Act or the Transitional Act and is not submitted in

that form or manner; or

(d) otherwise contravenes this Act or the Transitional Act; or

(e) contains an error, alteration or erasure;

ASIC may refuse to receive the document and may make a request

under subsection (2).

Note: The effect of ASIC refusing to receive the document is that the document is not lodged with ASIC (see subsection (6)).

(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), ASIC may request:

(a) that the document be appropriately amended or completed

and resubmitted; or

(b) that a fresh document be submitted in its place; or

(c) if the document is incomplete—that a supplementary

document in the prescribed form be lodged.

Notice to provide further document or information

(3) ASIC may give a written notice to an entity that submits a

document (the first document) under this Act or the Transitional

Act, requiring the entity to:

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Administration Part 9

Section 70

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 69

(a) give to ASIC any other document; or

(b) give to ASIC any information;

that ASIC considers necessary in order to form an opinion as to

whether it may refuse to receive the first document.

Notice must specify day by which entity must comply

(4) The notice must specify the day by which the entity must comply

with the notice (which must be a reasonable period after the notice

is given). ASIC may specify a later day by giving a written notice

to the entity.

Requirement to comply with notice

(5) If the entity does not comply with the notice within the time

specified in the notice, ASIC may refuse the first document.

Consequences of refusal to receive

(6) If ASIC refuses to receive a document, it is taken never to have

been lodged with ASIC.

70 Fees are payable to ASIC on behalf of the Commonwealth

Fees are payable to ASIC on behalf of the Commonwealth.

71 When is an application fee fully paid?

ASIC may, by legislative instrument, determine the circumstances

in which fees are taken to be fully paid.

72 Waiver and refund of fees

Nothing in this Act, the Transitional Act or the Business Names

Registration (Fees) Act 2011 prevents ASIC, on behalf of the

Commonwealth, from:

(a) waiving or reducing, in a particular case or in particular

classes of cases, fees that would otherwise be payable; or

(b) refunding, in whole or in part, in a particular case or in

particular classes of cases, fees.

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126

Part 9 Administration

Section 73

70 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

73 Address for receipt of notices

If a business name is registered to an entity, a notice under this Act

and the Transitional Act may be given to the entity by:

(a) leaving it at, or sending it by pre-paid post to, the address

shown in the Business Names Register as the address for

service; or

(b) if there is an email address on the Business Names Register

for the entity, and the entity has given its consent to the use

of that address in receipt of notices—sending it to that email

address.

74 ASIC may destroy or dispose of certain documents

ASIC may destroy or otherwise dispose of any document that is

lodged with ASIC under this Act or the Transitional Act, or

otherwise given to ASIC under this Act or the Transitional Act, if:

(a) ASIC considers that it is no longer necessary or desirable to

retain it; and

(b) either of the following apply:

(i) it has been in ASIC’s possession for the period

prescribed by the regulations;

(ii) an electronic copy of the document is retained by ASIC.

75 ASIC may issue formal warning

If ASIC has reasonable grounds to believe that an entity has

contravened a provision of this Act, ASIC may, by written notice

given to the entity:

(a) inform the entity of that fact; and

(b) warn the entity of the action that may be taken by ASIC

under this Act in response to the contravention.

76 Interaction with Australian Business Register

(1) ASIC may disclose information to the Registrar of the Australian

Business Register for the purposes of:

(a) identifying business names registered to an entity on the

Business Names Register; and

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Administration Part 9

Section 77

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 71

(b) ensuring consistency between that Australian Business

Register and the Business Names Register in details

registered on those registers.

(2) ASIC may record and use information disclosed to ASIC by the

Registrar of the Australian Business Register for the purposes of

ensuring consistency between the Australian Business Register and

the Business Names Register in details registered on those

registers.

77 Protection of confidentiality of information

(1) A person who obtains information in the course of performing

functions or exercising powers under this Act or the Transitional

Act must not:

(a) make a record of the information; or

(b) use the information; or

(c) disclose the information.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 1 year.

(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:

(a) the information is recorded, used or disclosed for the

purposes of performing functions or exercising powers under

this Act or the Transitional Act; or

(b) the information is recorded, used or disclosed in accordance

with a provision of this Act or the Transitional Act; or

(c) the information is recorded, used or disclosed with the

consent of the entity that provided the information; or

(d) the information is given to a court or tribunal.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (2): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

(3) A person commits an offence if:

(a) information is made available to a government body or to an

intelligence or security agency under section 62; and

(b) a person obtains the information in the course of performing

functions or exercising powers for the body or agency; and

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Section 78

72 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(c) the person would not have had access to the information if it

had not been made available to the body or agency under

section 62; and

(d) the person records, uses or discloses the information for a

purpose other than that for which it was made available; and

(e) the person is reckless as to whether the purpose for which the

information is recorded, used or disclosed is that for which it

was made available.

Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.

Note: Where a fault element for a physical element of an offence is not stated, see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code for the appropriate fault element.

(4) Subsection (3) does not apply if:

(a) the person discloses the information to another person; and

(b) the disclosure is reasonably necessary for:

(i) the enforcement of the criminal law; or

(ii) the enforcement of a law imposing a pecuniary penalty;

or

(iii) the protection of the public revenue.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (4): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

(5) Subsections (1) and (3) are not intended to have an operation that

would infringe an implied constitutional immunity of a

referring/adopting State.

78 Liability for damages

None of the following:

(a) the Minister;

(b) ASIC;

(c) a member of ASIC;

(d) a staff member or a person who is, or is a member of, an

ASIC delegate or is authorised to perform or exercise a

function or power of, or on behalf of, ASIC;

(e) an APS employee or an officer or employee of an authority

of the Commonwealth, whose services are made available to

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Section 79

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 73

ASIC in connection with the performance or exercise of any

of its functions or powers;

is liable to an action or other proceeding for damages for or in

relation to an act done or omitted to be done in good faith in

performance or purported performance of any function, or in

exercise or purported exercise of any power, conferred or

expressed to be conferred by or under this Act or the Transitional

Act.

79 Delegation

(1) ASIC may, by writing under its common seal, delegate all or any

of its functions and powers under the following provisions to an

ASIC member or a staff member who is an SES employee or an

acting SES employee:

(a) section 37 (requesting information and correcting the

register);

(b) subsection 41(1) (giving notice requiring entity to lodge

information);

(c) subsection 47(1) (cancellation for not carrying on a business).

(2) ASIC may, by writing under its common seal, delegate any or all

of its functions and powers under this Act or the Transitional Act,

other than the functions and powers under the following

provisions, to a staff member who has the expertise appropriate to

the function or power delegated:

(a) the provisions mentioned in subsection (1);

(b) subsection 41(2) (application to Federal Court to obtain

information);

(c) subsection 65(1) (arrangements with States and Territories).

(3) In the performance of a function, or the exercise of a power,

delegated under this section, the delegate must comply with any

directions by ASIC.

80 Minister may delegate prescribed functions and powers under

this Act

(1) The Minister may, by signed instrument, delegate to:

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(a) an ASIC member; or

(b) a staff member who is an SES employee or an acting SES

employee;

such of the Minister’s functions and powers under this Act or the

Transitional Act as are prescribed.

(2) In performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation,

the delegate must comply with any directions of the Minister.

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Section 81

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 75

Part 10—General

81 Application of this Act to partnerships

(1) An obligation that would otherwise be imposed on a partnership

under this Act or the Transitional Act is imposed on each partner,

but may be discharged by any of the partners.

(2) If this Act or the Transitional Act would otherwise require or

permit something to be done by a partnership, the thing may be

done by one or more of the partners on behalf of the partnership.

(3) An offence against this Act or the Transitional Act that would

otherwise be committed by the partnership is taken to have been

committed by each partner.

(4) A partner does not commit an offence because of subsection (3) if

the partner:

(a) does not know of the circumstances that constitute the

contravention of the provision concerned; or

(b) knows of those circumstances but takes all reasonable steps

to correct the contravention as soon as possible after the

partner becomes aware of those circumstances.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (4): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

82 Principal contact of a partnership

(1) A notice, signed by all the partners in a partnership, may be lodged

with ASIC, nominating a person as the principal contact for the

partnership for the purposes of this Act and the Transitional Act.

(2) If a person is nominated as the principal contact for a partnership

for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional Act, that person is

taken to be the agent of the partnership for the purposes of that Act,

until the nomination is withdrawn.

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(3) Subsection (2) is not affected by a change in the composition of the

partnership.

(4) A notice, signed by all the partners in a partnership, may be lodged

with ASIC, withdrawing the nomination of a person as principal

contact for the partnership for the purposes of this Act or the

Transitional Act.

(5) A notice under this section:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

83 Application of this Act to unincorporated associations and bodies

(1) An obligation that would otherwise be imposed on an

unincorporated association or body under this Act or the

Transitional Act is imposed on each member of the committee of

management of the association or body, but may be discharged by

any of the members of the committee.

(2) If this Act or the Transitional Act would otherwise require or

permit something to be done by an unincorporated association or

body, the thing may be done by one or more of the members of the

committee of management of the association or body on behalf of

the association or body.

(3) An offence against this Act or the Transitional Act that would

otherwise be committed by the association or body is taken to have

been committed by each member of the committee of management

of the association or body.

(4) A member of the committee of management of the association or

body does not commit an offence because of subsection (3) if the

member:

(a) does not know of the circumstances that constitute the

contravention of the provision concerned; or

(b) knows of those circumstances but takes all reasonable steps

to correct the contravention as soon as possible after the

member becomes aware of those circumstances.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (4): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

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84 Principal contact of an unincorporated association or body

(1) A notice, signed by all the members of the committee of

management of an unincorporated association or body, may be

lodged with ASIC, nominating a person as the principal contact for

the association or body for the purposes of this Act or the

Transitional Act.

(2) If a person is nominated as principal contact for an unincorporated

association or body for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional

Act, that person is taken to be the agent of the association or body

for the purposes of that Act, until the nomination is withdrawn.

(3) Subsection (2) is not affected by:

(a) a change in the membership of the association or body; or

(b) a change in the membership of the committee of management

of the association or body.

(4) A notice, signed by all the members of the committee of

management of an unincorporated association or body, may be

lodged with ASIC, withdrawing the nomination of a person as the

principal contact for the association or body for the purposes of

this Act or the Transitional Act.

(5) A notice under this section:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

85 Application of this Act to a trust with 2 or more trustees

(1) This section applies where a trust has 2 or more trustees.

(2) An obligation that would otherwise be imposed on the trust by this

Act or the Transitional Act is imposed on each trustee instead, but

may be discharged by any of the trustees.

(3) If this Act or the Transitional Act would otherwise require or

permit something to be done by the trust, the thing may be done by

one or more of the trustees on behalf of the trust.

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(4) An offence against this Act or the Transitional Act that would

otherwise be committed by the trust is taken to have been

committed by each trustee.

(5) A trustee does not commit an offence because of subsection (4) if

the trustee:

(a) does not know of the circumstances that constitute the

contravention of the provision concerned; or

(b) knows of those circumstances but takes all reasonable steps

to correct the contravention as soon as possible after the

trustee becomes aware of those circumstances.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (5): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

86 Principal contact of a trust

(1) This section applies where a trust has 2 or more trustees.

(2) A notice, signed by all the trustees of a trust, may be lodged with

ASIC, nominating a person as the principal contact for the trustees

for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional Act.

(3) If a person is nominated as the principal contact for the trustees of

a trust for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional Act, that

person is taken to be the agent of the trustees in relation to the trust

for the purposes of that Act, until the nomination is withdrawn.

(4) Subsection (3) is not affected by a change in the trustees of the

trust.

(5) A notice, signed by all the trustees of a trust, may be lodged with

ASIC, withdrawing the nomination of a person as principal contact

for the trustees in relation to the trust, for the purposes of this Act

or the Transitional Act.

(6) A notice under this section:

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

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Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 79

87 Joint ventures

Application

(1) This section applies if:

(a) 2 or more entities (the joint venture entities) have entered

into a contractual arrangement under which they carry on, or

intend to carry on, a business jointly under a business name;

and

(b) the entities do not form another entity to do so.

Subject to this section, the joint venture entities are together treated

as a single entity (the joint venture) for the purposes of this Act

and the Transitional Act.

Treat joint venture in the same way as an entity

(2) An obligation that would otherwise be imposed on the joint venture

under this Act or the Transitional Act is imposed on each joint

venture entity, but may be discharged by any of the joint venture

entities.

(3) If this Act or the Transitional Act would otherwise require or

permit something to be done by the joint venture, the thing may be

done by one or more of the joint venture entities on behalf of all of

the joint venture entities.

(4) An offence against this Act or the Transitional Act that would

otherwise be committed by the joint venture is taken to have been

committed by each joint venture entity.

(5) A joint venture entity does not commit an offence because of

subsection (4) if the joint venture entity:

(a) does not know of the circumstances that constitute the

contravention of the provision concerned; or

(b) knows of those circumstances but takes all reasonable steps

to correct the contravention as soon as possible after the joint

venture entity becomes aware of those circumstances.

Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (5): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.

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Principal contact of joint venture

(6) A notice, signed by all the joint venture entities, may be lodged

with ASIC, nominating a person as the principal contact for the

joint venture for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional Act.

(7) If a person is nominated as the principal contact for the joint

venture for the purposes of this Act or the Transitional Act, that

person is taken to be the agent of the joint venture entities for the

purposes of this Act and the Transitional Act, until the nomination

is withdrawn.

(8) A notice, signed by all the joint venture entities, may be lodged

with ASIC, withdrawing the nomination of a person as principal

contact for the joint venture for the purposes of this Act or the

Transitional Act.

(9) A notice under subsection (6) or (8):

(a) must be in the prescribed form; and

(b) must be lodged in the prescribed manner.

ABN numbers

(10) An application for registration of a business name to the joint

venture must include the ABNs of each of the joint venture entities,

or, if an application for an ABN for a joint venture entity is

pending, a statement to that effect and the reference number for the

ABN application.

(11) ASIC must not register the business name to the joint venture

unless each of the joint venture entities has an ABN.

(12) To avoid doubt, the priority of a joint venture over a business name

is not affected by the fact that an ABN application by any joint

venture entity is pending.

(13) Otherwise, a reference in this Act to the ABN of an entity means,

in the case of a joint venture, the ABN of each of the joint venture

entities.

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Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 81

Death of a joint venture entity

(14) If a joint venture entity who is an individual dies:

(a) the business name continues to be registered to the joint

venture; and

(b) sections 39 and 40 otherwise apply in relation to the joint

venture entity in the same way as they apply in relation to an

individual to whom a business name is registered.

88 Application in the Territories of Christmas Island and Cocos

(Keeling) Islands

(1) This section applies if, because Australia is not defined to include

the Territory of Christmas Island or the Territory of Cocos

(Keeling) Islands in the A New Tax System (Australian Business

Number) Act 1999 (the ABN Act), an entity is not entitled to have

an ABN.

(2) If an activity, or a series of activities, done by the entity would be a

business (as defined in section 4) if Australia were defined for the

purposes of the ABN Act as including the Territory of Christmas

Island or the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands, the activity or

series of activities is a business for the purposes of this Act.

(3) An application for registration of a business name to the entity

need not include an ABN for the entity or a statement that an

application for an ABN is pending.

(4) ASIC may register the business name to the entity even though the

entity does not have an ABN, and ASIC need not include details of

an ABN for the entity on the Business Names Register.

89 Entities that have ceased to exist

If, under this Act, notice must or may be given to an entity that no

longer exists, notice is taken to be given to the entity if it is given

to a person, or a person of a class, prescribed by the regulations for

the purposes of this section, to be the relevant person, or class of

persons, for an entity of that kind.

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82 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

90 Regulations

The Governor-General may make regulations prescribing matters:

(a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or

(b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or

giving effect to this Act.

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Notified State/Territory registers Schedule 1

Section 1

Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011 83

Schedule 1—Notified State/Territory registers Note: See section 6.

1 New South Wales

Each of the following registers of New South Wales is specified:

(a) the Register of Co-operatives established under the

Co-operatives Act 1992 of New South Wales;

(b) the Register of Incorporated Associations established under

the Associations Incorporation Act 2009 of New South

Wales;

(c) the Register of Limited and Incorporated Limited

Partnerships established under the Partnership Act 1892 of

New South Wales;

(d) the register of co-operative housing societies and

Starr-Bowkett societies established under the Co-operative

Housing and Starr-Bowkett Societies Act 1998 of New South

Wales;

(e) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (d), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

2 Victoria

Each of the following registers of Victoria is specified:

(a) the Register of Co-operatives established under the

Co-operatives Act 1996 of Victoria;

(b) the register of incorporated associations established under the

Associations Incorporation Act 1981 of Victoria;

(c) the Register of Incorporated Limited Partnerships established

under the Partnership Act 1958 of Victoria;

(d) the Register of Limited Partnerships established under the

Partnership Act 1958 of Victoria;

(e) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (d), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

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84 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

3 Queensland

Each of the following registers of Queensland is specified:

(a) the register of incorporated associations established under the

Associations Incorporation Act 1981 of Queensland;

(b) the register of cooperatives, foreign cooperatives and

cooperative charges established under the Cooperatives Act

1997 of Queensland;

(c) the register of incorporated limited partnerships established

under the Partnership Act 1891 of Queensland;

(d) the register of the current addresses of incorporated church

entities (other than the Corporation of the Bishops) that the

Corporation of the Bishops is obliged to keep under the

Roman Catholic Church (Incorporation of Church Entities)

Act 1994 of Queensland;

(e) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (d), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

4 Western Australia

Each of the following registers of Western Australia is specified:

(a) the register of co-operatives established under the

Co-operatives Act 2009 of Western Australia;

(b) the register of foreign co-operatives established under the

Co-operatives Act 2009 of Western Australia;

(c) the register of associations incorporated by the issue of a

certificate of incorporation under the Associations

Incorporation Act 1987 of Western Australia;

(d) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (c), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

5 South Australia

Each of the following registers of South Australia is specified:

(a) the register of incorporated co-operatives continued in

existence under the Co-operatives Act 1997 of South

Australia;

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(b) the register of incorporated associations established under the

Associations Incorporation Act 1985 of South Australia;

(c) the Register of Limited Partnerships and Incorporated

Limited Partnerships established under the Partnership Act

1891 of South Australia;

(d) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (c), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

6 Tasmania

Each of the following registers of Tasmania is specified:

(a) the Register of Cooperatives established under the

Cooperatives Act 1999 of Tasmania;

(b) the register of associations incorporated by the issue of a

certificate of incorporation under the Associations

Incorporation Act 1964 of Tasmania;

(c) the Register of Limited Partnerships and Incorporated

Limited Partnerships established under Partnership Act 1891

of Tasmania;

(d) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (c), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

7 Australian Capital Territory

Each of the following registers of the Australian Capital Territory

is specified:

(a) the cooperatives register established under the Cooperatives

Act 2002 of the Australian Capital Territory;

(b) the register of associations incorporated by the issue of a

certificate of incorporation under the Associations

Incorporation Act 1991 of the Australian Capital Territory;

(c) the register of incorporated limited partnerships established

under the Partnership Act 1963 of the Australian Capital

Territory;

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86 Business Names Registration Act 2011 No. 126, 2011

(d) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) to (c), established in substitution for a register

mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

8 Northern Territory

Each of the following registers of the Northern Territory is

specified:

(a) the Register of Co-operatives established under the

Co-operatives Act of the Northern Territory;

(b) the register of associations incorporated by the issue of a

certificate of incorporation under the Associations Act of the

Northern Territory;

(c) any register of the same kind as a register mentioned in

paragraphs (a) and (b), established in substitution for a

register mentioned in one of those paragraphs.

[Minister’s second reading speech made in—

House of Representatives on 17 August 2011

Senate on 14 September 2011]

(153/11)

ComLaw Authoritative Act C2011A00126


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