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Disclosure

Full and Frank Disclosure in Family Law Matters

When a relationship ends, each party has a legal duty to give full and frank disclosure of their financial circumstances. The courts rely on accurate information to achieve a just outcome, and they will not tolerate hidden assets, understated liabilities or patchy paperwork.

Take the Next Step

The sooner you get expert advice, the smoother your property or maintenance matter will run, and the less it will cost overall. Call Stanley & Co Lawyers on 08 7001 6135 today to book your complimentary 30-minute, no-obligation consultation with an experienced Family Lawyer. We will make sure your disclosure is complete, protect you from hidden surprises and position you for the best possible outcome.

Protect your future and act now.

Helpful Questions & Answers

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Where Does the Duty Come From?

Although the obligation is spelt out in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Family Law) Rules 2021, the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) shows how disclosure underpins fair decisions:

  • Section 79 requires the Court to alter property interests only if it is just and equitable - something it cannot do without reliable figures.
  • Section 75(2) lists the financial factors that must be considered when fixing spousal maintenance; again, honest disclosure is vital.
  • Section 79A(1)(a) allows the Court to set aside a property order if there has been a miscarriage of justice caused by suppression of evidence or giving false evidence.
  • Section 90K(1)(a) & (e) empowers the Court to invalidate a binding financial agreement if a party failed to disclose material matters or engaged in fraudulent conduct.
  • Section 117 lets the Court order a defaulting party to pay the other side’s legal costs. Non-disclosure is a classic reason for an indemnity costs order.

Together, these provisions confirm that disclosure is not voluntary etiquette, it is a statutory imperative.

What Must I Disclose?

You must provide every document or piece of information that shows:

  • Current assets and liabilities – property valuations, mortgage statements, bank and credit-card statements, shareholdings, cryptocurrency wallets, motor vehicles, superannuation balances.
  • Income and resources  – payslips, tax returns, trust distributions, bonuses, fringe benefits, rental income, options or pending inheritances.
  • Financial dealings over the past three years – asset transfers, gifts, loans to family companies, redraws on lines of credit.
  • Business interests – partnership agreements, company constitutions, BAS statements, management accounts and depreciation schedules.

A helpful rule of thumb: if the document alters or evidences your financial position, disclose it.

When and How do I Disclose?
  1. Early – disclosure should begin before any court application, continue through negotiations and be updated whenever circumstances change.
  2. In writing – supply clear copies (scanned pdfs are fine) and keep a list of what you have handed over.
  3. Formally if required – once proceedings start you will need to file a Financial Statement under the Court Rules.

Timely and organised disclosure not only complies with the law but also narrows the issues and reduces costs.

What Happens if I do not Comply?

Failing to disclose, or worse deliberately hiding the truth, can backfire dramatically:

  • Adverse inferences – the Court may assume the undisclosed asset exists and award a larger share to the innocent party.
  • Set-aside orders – even years later, a property settlement or financial agreement can be overturned under s 79A or s 90K, reopening the entire dispute.
  • Cost penalties – s 117 allows the Court to make you pay the other side’s solicitor-client costs, wiping out any tactical gain.
  • Contempt or criminal action – swearing a false affidavit is perjury; hiding assets to defeat a claim may amount to fraud.

In short, non-disclosure is a high-risk strategy with no upside.

How Stanley & Co Lawyers Can Help

Our specialist family-law team will:

  • Audit your documentsand package them so they meet the Rules first time.
  • Identify missing material in the other party’s disclosure and issue targeted requests.
  • Work with valuers and forensic accountants to trace complex structures and overseas holdings.
  • Negotiate from strength—thorough disclosure often prompts early, favourable settlement.
  • Protect you in court if the other side plays hide-and-seek with the truth.

27

Combined Years Of Experience

Both Rich and Amra were excellent to deal with having used them both on separate occasions. I was extremely happy with the two seperate outcomes I was looking for. Excellent service, no fuss straight down the line attitude is what made them my number one firm to go to with such complex cases. Extremely recommended.
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