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ATTACHMENT ORDERS

1 • ♦ EMPLOYEES OF CROWN EXEMPT LEGAL ACTION URGED The difficulties of being unable to enforce against the Crown a section of the Destitute Persons Act authorising the issue of attachment orders, because it was exempted from its provisions, were discussed at a meeting of the Canterbury branch of the New Zealand Society for the Protection of Women and Children. In a letter to the society. Mr Barrer (honorary solicitor) explained that when any maintenance order had been made, the magistrate concerned could, by a provision in the act, make an attachment order for an employer of the defendant against whom the maintenance order was made. This section, however, did not bind the Crown. Employees on Government relief schemes and public works, who were usually the most flagrant defaulters in these affairs, were not liable to have deductions made from their wages. The Domestic Proceedings Act, 1939, gave power to the Governor-General, by Order-in-Council, to declare that the Crown was bound by these orders, and it was desirable that some action should be directed in this way. The meeting agreed to recommend that the legal machinery for the issue of attachment orders to employees of the Crown should be invoked. Mr Barrer also referred to a section of the Domestic Proceedings Act, 1939, providing for every information in an offence against the terms of the Destitute Persons Act to be heard by a magistrate sitting at the Court nearest the place where the defendant lived or carried ,on business. This altered the previous rule enabling the information to he dealt with at the Court where the order was made, the letter continued. It was evident that this provision, while seeming to be in accordance with civil practice, in fact provided a husband with an easy refuge. By changing his abode frequently he could appear before magistrates in different parts of New Zealand, who had not the benefit of hearing the earlier history of the case and did not know what weight could be attached to the excuses the defaulter might be advancing for nonpayment. In nearly all cases of this kind it was necessary to employ a distant solicitor or maintenance officer who perhaps knew nothing of the facts of the case. The effect of the rule was to allow husbands, who wished to avoid their orders, almost unlimited licence for doing so. Addresses were given at the meeting by Bishop Brodie and Mr R. TwynehaThe officers elected last year were reappointed.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19410429.2.27

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23315, 29 April 1941, Page 5

Word Count
413

ATTACHMENT ORDERS Press, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23315, 29 April 1941, Page 5

ATTACHMENT ORDERS Press, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23315, 29 April 1941, Page 5