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Fiji Sessional Legislation |
FIJI ISLANDS
FIJI ISLANDS GOVERNMENT GAZETTE SUPPLEMENT
No 1
Friday 6th January 2006
[LEGAL NOTICE N0.
1]
LEGAL PRACTITIONERS (TEMPORARY ADMISSION) RULES 2006
TABLE OF CONTENTS
RULE
1.
Citation and interpretations
2.
Petition for admission
3. Application
for reduction of time
4. Particulars
of petition
5. Service on
society
6. Notice of
petition
7. Representation and
responsibility
8. Objection by the
Chief Registrar or the Society
9.
Hearing of the objection
10. Extension
of time
11.
Exemption
12. Registrar's powers &
duties
13.
Fees
14. Consequential
amendments
-------------------------------
LEGAL
PRACTITIONERS ACT 1997
(ACT No. 19 of
1997)
LEGAL PRACTITIONERS (TEMPORARY ADMISSION) RULES 2006
IN
exercise of the powers conferred on me by section 41 of the Legal Practitioners
Act 1997, I make the following Rules-
Citation and interpretation
1.-(1) These Rules may be
cited as the Legal Practitioners (Temporary Admission) Rules,
2006.
(2) In these Rules, unless
the context otherwise requires-
"Act" means the Legal Practitioners Act 1997;
"petition" means a petition for temporary admission under section 39 of the Act;
"society" means the Fiji Law Society.
Petition for temporary admission
2. A petition must be
filed with the Chief Registrar not less than 21 clear days before the date which
the petitioner wishes to be
admitted and to practice in Fiji, unless the Chief
Registrar, for a special reason, allows a shorter period.
Application for reduction of tune
3. If reduction of the 21
days period is sought, application for the reduction must be in the petition and
the petition must set out
the circumstances in which the application is made and
the grounds for it.
Particulars of petition
4.-(1) Every petition must
be in Form 2 set out in the First Schedule of the Legal Practitioner (Admission)
Rules, 2000, unless otherwise
approved by the Chief
Registrar.
(2) The petition
must-
(a) fully disclose the requirements set out under section 39(1) of the Act;
(b) specify the cause or matter with respect to which the admission is being sought; and
(c) be verified by affidavit or statutory declaration.
(3)
There must be filed with the petition a copy of it and copies of the documents
accompanying it or referred to in it.
Service on Society
5. Within 2 working days
of the filing of the petition, the petitioner or his representative must forward
a copy of the petition and
documents accompanying it or referred to in it, to
the Secretary of the Society.
Notice of petition
6. The Chief Registrar is
not required to publish a petition for temporary admission.
Representation and responsibility
7.-(1) All petitions must
be filed by a resident legal practitioner or a locally registered law firm and
no petition shall be filed
in
person.
(2)
The legal practitioner or law firm, being the representative of the petitioner,
has a duty to assist the Court in all aspects
of the
application.
(3) Unless there is
an objection against a petition, the petitioner or his representative are not
required to appear before the Chief
Justice for the consideration of the
petition.
(4) After the petition
has been granted, the local practitioner or law firm shall be responsible for
the petitioner's conduct during
the period of admission.
Objection by the Chief Registrar or the Society
8.-(1) If the Chief
Registrar or the Society wishes to show cause why a petition should not be
granted, the Chief Registrar or the
Secretary of the Society may file a notice
of objection setting out the grounds of the objection and must send a copy of
the notice
to the petitioner.
(2)
The Chief Registrar or the Society, as the case may be, must file and serve the
notice of objection within 7 days, after the service
of the
petition.
Hearing of the objection
9.-(1) If an objection is
filed under Rule 8(1), the Chief Registrar or the Society, as the case may be,
and the petitioner, are entitled
to appear and be heard before the Chief
Justice.
(2) The Chief Registrar
shall set a date for the parties to appear and be heard before the Chief
Justice, no later than 2 clear working
days before the expiry of the 21 days
provided under Rule 2(1).
(3) An
objection will not be heard unless the supporting documents are lodged with the
Chief Registrar not less than 4 clear days
before the
hearing.
(4) If an objector fails
to file supporting documents within the specified time, the objection is deemed
to have been abandoned when
such specified time expires.
Time extension
10. The Chief Registrar
may, for special reasons, extend any period of time specified in these
Rules.
Exemptions
11. Applications for
temporary admission are exempted from the requirements stipulated under section
35 of the Act.
Registrar's powers & duties
12. The powers and duties
of the Chief Registrar under these Rules are exercisable subject to any specific
or general directions of
the Chief Justice.
Fees
13. The petition for
temporary admission fees referred to in the
Second
Schedule of the Legal Practitioners
(Admission) Rules, 2000, are payable to the Chief Registrar in respect of the
admission proceedings.
Consequential amendments
14.-(1) Rule 4 of the
Legal Practitioners (Admission) Rules 2000 is
repealed.
(2) Any petition for
temporary admission filed under the Legal Practitioners (Admission) Rules, 2000,
before the commencement of these
Rules, continues as if these Rules had not been
made.
Dated at
Suva this 16th day of December 2005.
D.
V. FATIAKI
Chief
Justice
--------------------------------
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