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Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Act 1920

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Changes over time for: Section 3

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Version Superseded: 27/09/1999

Status:

Point in time view as at 19/06/1997. This version of this provision has been superseded. Help about Status

Changes to legislation:

Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Act 1920, Section 3 is up to date with all changes known to be in force on or before 21 November 2024. There are changes that may be brought into force at a future date. Changes that have been made appear in the content and are referenced with annotations. Help about Changes to Legislation

3 Power to make provisional orders of maintenance against persons resident in His Majesty’s dominions outside the United Kingdom. U.K.

(1)Where an application is made to a court of summary jurisdiction in England or Ireland for a maintenance order against any person, and it is proved that that person is resident in a part of His Majesty’s dominions outside the United Kingdom to which this Act extends, the court may, in the absence of that person, if after hearing the evidence it is satisfied of the justice of the application, make any such order as it might have made if [F1that person had been resident in England and Wales, had received reasonable notice of the date of the hearing of the application and] had failed to appear at the hearing, but in such case the order shall be provisional only, and shall have no effect unless and until confirmed by competent court in such part of His Majesty’s dominions as aforesaid.

(2)The evidence of any witness who is examined on any such application shall be put into writing, and such deposition shall be read over to and signed by him.

(3)Where such an order is made, the court shall send to the Secretary of State for transmission to the governor of the part of His Majesty’s dominions in which the person against whom the order is made is alleged to reside the depositions so taken and a certified copy of the order, together with a statement of the grounds on which the making of the order might have been opposed if the person against whom the order is made had been [F2resident in England and Wales, had received reasonable notice of the date of the hearing] and had appeared at the hearing, and such information as the court possesses for facilitating the identification of that person, and ascertaining his whereabouts.

(4)Where any such provisional order has come before a court in a part of His Majesty’s dominions outside the United Kingdom to which this Act extends for confirmation, and the order has by that court been remitted to the court of summary jurisdiction which made the order for the purpose of taking further evidence, that court or any other court of summary jurisdiction [F3appointed for the same commission area (within the meaning of [F4the Justices of the Peace Act 1997])] shall, after giving the prescribed notice, proceed to take the evidence in like manner and subject to the like conditions as the evidence in support of the original application.

If upon the hearing of such evidence it appears to the court that the order ought not to have been made, the court may [F5revoke] the order, but in any other case the depositions shall be sent to the Secretary of State and dealt with in like manner as the original depositions.

(5)The confirmation of an order made under this section shall not affect any power of a court of summary jurisdiction to vary or [F6revoke] that order: Provided that on the making of a varying or [F7revoking] order the court shall send a certified copy thereof to the Secretary of State for transmission to the governor of the part of His Majesty’s dominions in which the original order was confirmed, and that in the case of an order varying the original order the order shall not have any effect unless and until confirmed in like manner as the original order.

(6)The applicant shall have the same right of appeal, if any, against a refusal to make a provisional order as he would have had against a refusal to make the order had [F8the person against whom the order is sought to be made been resident in England and Wales and received reasonable notice of the date of the hearing of the application].

[F9(7)Where subsection (1) of section 60 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 (revocation, variation etc. of orders for periodical payment) applies in relation to an order made under this section which has been confirmed, that subsection shall have effect as if for the words “by order on complaint,” there were substituted “on an application being made, by order”.

(8)In this section “revoke” includes discharge.]

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