REALWorld Law

Construction

General construction law

What are the main sources of law that govern and regulate contracts for the design or carrying out of building works?

Australia

Australia

Australia is a ‘common law’ jurisdiction. This means that Australian law is derived both from ‘statute’ (Acts and legislative instruments of the Australian and State and Territory Parliaments made in accordance with Australia’s Constitution) and ‘common law’ (the decisions of the Australian Courts and tribunals, also known as ‘case law’).

In Australia, the areas of law which are relevant to building works are as follows:

  1. Contract law – the law that governs agreements and arrangements between parties.
  2. Law of tort – the law that addresses, and provides remedies for, civil wrongs not arising out of contractual obligations.
  3. Legislation – various statutes and subordinate legislation (regulations, orders, etc) which govern the carrying out of construction operations and the delivery of infrastructure.
  4. Breach of statutory duty – failure to carry out duties or to fulfil obligations imposed by legislation. For example, an injured person may be able to make a civil claim if it has suffered injury as a result of the breach (unless specifically excluded in the statute itself).
  5. Law of restitution – the area of law concerned with the award of remedies which have one common function: to deprive the defendant of a gain, rather than to compensate the claimant for loss suffered.