The following applies to Real Property Act dealings, Water Access Licence dealings and the General Register.
On 23 February 2022, amendments were made to the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) relating to execution requirements for companies. These include permitting the execution and witnessing of documents and deeds by electronic means. For further information, please refer to Division 1 of Part 1.2AA and sections 126 to 129 of the Corporations Act 2001.
The corporate collective investment vehicle (CCIV) regime commenced on 1 July 2022. For further information, refer to Chapter 8B of the Corporations Act 2001.
A company may execute a dealing or other instrument without using a common seal. In that case, the dealing or instrument must be signed by:
- 2 directors of the company; or
- a director and a company secretary of the company; or
- for a proprietary company that has a sole director - that director, if:
- the director is also the sole company secretary; or
- the company does not have a company secretary (and the execution is on or after 23 February 2022).
See section 127(2) Corporations Act 2001.
NOTE: A CCIV must execute documents through its corporate director. A CCIV may execute a dealing or other instrument without using a common seal in accordance with section 127(1) Corporations Act 2001 if it is signed by 2 directors of the corporate director of the CCIV; or a director and a company secretary of the corporate director of the CCIV. For more information, see section 1223(1) Corporations Act 2001.
The name and capacity of the authorised officers must be stated. Where the company has a sole director who is also the company secretary, both capacities must be stated. See section 127(1) Corporations Act 2001. The assumption of proper execution as set out in section 129(5) Corporations Act 2001 applies.
NOTE: Other forms of execution may exist (see section 127(4) of the Corporations Act 2001). A company’s Constitution, Articles of Association, or the replaceable rules (as applicable) may set out the manner in which the company can execute a dealing or other instrument. The relevant dealing or instrument should state the authority on which the company relies. In this instance, the assumption of proper execution as set out in section 129(5) Corporations Act 2001 does not apply.
Staff processing information
If doubt exists regarding the authority to execute the document must be referred to Legal through the Senior Dealing Examiner.
Publish date: October 2023