Comparison between Matrimonial Property Act 1976 regime and De Facto
Relationships (Property) Bill regime
This table outlines the main features of the Matrimonial Property Act (as amended
by the Amendment Bill) and, by way of comparison, the proposed statutory property
regime for de facto relationships.
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Matrimonial Property Act
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De Facto Property Regime
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Definition of property to be shared
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Matrimonial property includes the family home and chattels,
property owned jointly by the spouses and property acquired after marriage
other than by inheritance or gift. |
Relationship property includes the same kinds of property that
would be matrimonial property if the partners were married. |
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Main rules about sharing
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General rule is that all matrimonial property will be
split 50/50. |
- 50/50 split rule only applies to the family home and chattels.
- The rest of the relationship property is divided in accordance with
contributions to the relationship
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Family home and chattels
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Equal sharing of the family home and chattels can be set aside
if there are extraordinary circumstances which make equal sharing repugnant
to justice. The "repugnant to justice" test is not easy to
satisfy. Where equal sharing is displaced, division is on the basis of
contribution to the marriage partnership. |
Equal sharing of family home and chattels can be set aside if
it would cause serious injustice. The "serious injustice"
test is easier to satisfy than "repugnant to justice". |
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Other matrimonial /relationship property
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Equal sharing of other matrimonial property can be set
aside if the contribution of one spouse has been clearly greater than the
other. Where equal sharing is displaced, division is on the basis of
contribution to the marriage partnership. |
Equal sharing does not apply to all other relationship property
which is divided in accordance with contributions to the relationship. |
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When property rights take effect
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Couples have rights under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976
from the time of marriage except that the sharing rules are modified in some
cases for marriages of less than 3 years’ duration. |
Couples have no rights under the de facto regime until they
have lived in a de facto relationship for 3 years or more, except in very
limited circumstances (see below). |
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Relationships of short duration
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Where the couple has been married for less than 3 years, the
equal sharing of the family home and chattels can be set aside in certain
circumstances (eg where the family home was owned by one spouse at the date of
the marriage). In that case, the home and chattels are divided on the basis of
contribution. |
For de facto relationships of less than 3 years’ duration, if
the couple have a child or if one of the partners has made a substantial
contribution to the relationship, the Court has a discretion to divide the
relationship property on the basis of contribution if not doing so would
result in serious injustice. |
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Contracting out
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The spouses can contract out of the Matrimonial Property Act
1976. |
The partners can contract out of the de facto property regime. |
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Application
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The Act applies on the breakdown of a marriage or where one
spouse dies. |
The regime applies where a de facto relationship breaks down or
one partner dies. |
Note that the Matrimonial Property Amendment Bill does not alter the basic
division rules in the 1976 Act, although it does extend those rules to apply on the
death of a spouse. |