Cremation Act 1929

Reprint 6: The Act as at 27 October 2017


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Reprinted under the Reprints Act 1984 as

at 27 October 2017

Cremation Act 1929

Contents

1.Short title1

2.Terms used1

3.Cremation without licence prohibited2

4.Issue of licences2

5.Portion of cemetery may be set aside as site for crematorium4

6.Site of crematorium not included in cemetery deemed to be cemetery for certain purposes5

7.Disposal of ashes otherwise than by burial on site of crematorium5

8.Appointment of medical referees6

8A.Permits7

8B.Permit to cremate still‑born child9

9.Permit to be sufficient authority to cremate body9

10.Medical referee not to issue permit improperly; and no person to cremate body without permit10

12.Interested persons not to give certificates10

13.Cremation not permitted if objected to by deceased’s spouse, de facto partner or next of kin, unless directed by will or other writing signed by deceased10

14.Attorney General or coroner may forbid cremation11

15.Offences11

16.Revocation of licences12

17.Regulations12

Notes

Compilation table14

Provisions that have not come into operation16

Defined terms

 

 

Crest

Reprinted under the Reprints Act 1984 as

at 27 October 2017

Cremation Act 1929

An Act to regulate cremation.

1.Short title

This Act may be cited as the Cremation Act 1929 1.

2.Terms used

In this Act, subject to the context —

administration includes probate of the will and letters of administration of the estate of a deceased person;

administrator includes executor and any person who, by law or practice, has the best right to apply for administration, and any person having the lawful custody of the body of a deceased person;

Board has the meaning given to it in section 3 of the Cemeteries Act 1986;

body, dead human body or human body means the body of a deceased person and includes the body of an infant of not less than 7 months gestation that was still‑born;

cemetery means land declared by the Governor to be a cemetery, under the Cemeteries Act 1986 and so far as the context allows, includes a disused burial ground and a closed cemetery;

Chief Health Officer has the meaning given in the Public Health Act 2016 section 4(1);

coroner means a coroner within the meaning of the Coroners Act 1996 or within the meaning of any other law of another State or Territory;

crematorium means any building, place, or premises designed for the purpose of the cremation of dead human bodies;

licensed means licensed under this Act; and

licensees means the holders of a licence under this Act;

medical practitioner means a person registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (Western Australia) in the medical profession.

[Section 2 amended by No. 80 of 1953 s. 3; No. 2 of 1968 s. 2; No. 28 of 1984 s. 11; No. 103 of 1986 s. 2; No. 2 of 1996 s. 61; No. 22 of 2008 Sch. 3 cl. 13; No. 35 of 2010 s. 52; No. 19 of 2016 s. 122.]

3.Cremation without licence prohibited

(1)No person shall cremate or be party or privy to the cremation of any human body elsewhere than in a licensed crematorium.

(2)Nothing in this section prevents the dead body of any person of Asiatic race being cremated in accordance with the religion to which the deceased belonged, subject, always, to such regulations as may be prescribed in regard thereto.

[Section 3 amended by No. 19 of 2010 s. 51.]

4.Issue of licences

(1A)In subsection (1)(b) —

association means an association incorporated, or taken to be incorporated, under the Associations Incorporation Act 2015.

(1)The Governor may, subject to this Act, grant a licence to use and conduct a specified crematorium to any of the following bodies, namely —

(a)the Board or controlling authority of any cemetery;

(b)any association established and constituted in connection with the cremation of dead human bodies, and holding a certificate under the hand of the Chief Health Officer that such association is an association to which the provisions of this section may reasonably be extended.

(2)Applicants for a licence under this Act must satisfy the Governor by statutory declaration or otherwise —

(a)that they have sufficient authority to use the site or proposed site;

(b)that they have erected and provided on the site in accordance with the regulations and to the satisfaction of the Chief Health Officer, such building, fittings, works, and apparatus as are necessary for the inoffensive, decent, and effective cremation of dead human bodies, or, in case the crematorium is not already established, that the Chief Health Officer has approved of the plans and specifications of the proposed building, fittings, works, and apparatus;

(c)that notice of intention to apply for the licence has been given by advertisement, at least once in each of the 8 successive weeks immediately preceding the date of the application, in a public newspaper circulating in the city, town, or place within which the crematorium is erected or proposed to be erected, and that by such advertisement it was announced that objections to the granting of the licence might be lodged with the Chief Health Officer;

(d)that where an objection to the granting of the licence has been lodged with the Chief Health Officer, the Chief Health Officer has over‑ruled the objection.

(3)No licence granted for or in respect of any crematorium not already established shall have any validity or effect unless and until the Chief Health Officer shall certify (within one year from the granting of the licence) that the necessary building, fittings, works, and apparatus have been erected and installed in accordance with the approved plans and specifications, and that the relative regulations have been complied with.

[Section 4 amended by No. 8 of 1935 s. 2; No. 80 of 1953 s. 4; No. 28 of 1984 s. 13; No. 103 of 1986 s. 5; No. 30 of 2015 s. 213; No. 19 of 2016 s. 125.]

5.Portion of cemetery may be set aside as site for crematorium

(1)It shall be lawful for the Board or controlling authority of any cemetery holding a licence under section 4 to define and set aside any portion of such cemetery as a site for a crematorium.

(2)Where any portion of a cemetery has been defined and set aside as aforesaid, then, notwithstanding any Act or law to the contrary, the following provisions shall apply —

(a)the portion of the cemetery so defined and set aside may be used only for the erection of a crematorium thereon, and for the burial of the ashes of dead human bodies cremated in such crematorium, and the Board or controlling authority may prohibit the burial in such portion of the cemetery aforesaid of any dead human bodies which have not been so cremated;

(b)the Board or controlling authority of the cemetery, instead of themselves using and conducting a crematorium in such portion of the cemetery, may grant a permit for such period, and upon and subject to such conditions as they may think fit, to any association holding a licence under section 4, to erect a crematorium upon the portion of the cemetery aforesaid, and to use and conduct such crematorium thereon, and to use such portion of the cemetery for the burial of the ashes of dead human bodies which have been cremated in such crematorium.

(3)Where the Board or controlling authority of a cemetery have granted to an association a permit as provided for in subsection (2), such association shall, during the continuance of such permit, be deemed to be a trustee of that portion of the cemetery to which such permit applies, and, in relation thereto, to have all the rights, powers, and authorities of the trustees of a cemetery in accordance with the laws for the time being in force and relating to public cemeteries, and the portion of the cemetery to which such permit applies shall to all intents and purposes be deemed to be a public cemetery, save and except that only the ashes of the dead human bodies after cremation shall be buried therein, unless the association otherwise determines.

[Section 5 amended by No. 103 of 1986 s. 5.]

6.Site of crematorium not included in cemetery deemed to be cemetery for certain purposes

Where an association holding a licence under section 4 is using and conducting a crematorium on land held by such association for the purpose, and which is not part of a public cemetery, it shall be lawful for the association to use such portions of the said land as it thinks fit for the burial of the ashes of dead human bodies after cremation, and, in relation to such land, the association shall have all the rights, powers, and authorities of the Board of a public cemetery in accordance with laws for the time being in force and relating to public cemeteries, and the said land shall to all intents and purposes be deemed to be a public cemetery, save and except that only the ashes of dead human bodies after cremation shall be buried therein, unless the association otherwise determines.

[Section 6 amended by No. 103 of 1986 s. 5.]

7.Disposal of ashes otherwise than by burial on site of crematorium

(1)Where any dead human body has been cremated in a crematorium, and the person who obtained the permit required by this Act for the cremation of such body desires to dispose of the ashes of such body after cremation otherwise than by burial upon the site of the crematorium, it shall be lawful for the Board or controlling authority of the cemetery, or the association in whose crematorium the body was cremated, to deliver the said ashes to the said person for removal from the crematorium.

(2)Subject to subsection (1), the ashes of a dead human body after cremation shall not be removed from the crematorium in which such body was cremated, except for the purpose of burial in the site of the crematorium.

[Section 7 amended by No. 80 of 1953 s. 5; No. 35 of 1967 s. 2; No. 10 of 1983 s. 5.]

8.Appointment of medical referees

(1)The Governor may from time to time —

(a)appoint for the purposes of this Act, one or more medical practitioners to be a medical referee;

(b)cancel an appointment so made.

(2)Where an application in the prescribed form for a permit for the cremation of a dead human body, is made by a person to a medical referee, if he is satisfied that the applicant is an administrator or other duly authorised person to hold the permit, he shall subject to the provisions of this Act, grant the permit.

(3A)An application for a permit may be made by —

(a)an administrator; or

(b)a person acting with the written authority of and on behalf of the administrator; or

(c)a person who satisfies a medical referee that no application for a permit is to be made by the administrator of the deceased person in respect of whom the application is made, and who shows to the medical referee a satisfactory reason why the application is not made by an administrator, and that he is a proper person to make the application.

(3B)Where the application for a permit is not made by an administrator, the person making the application shall —

(a)make a statutory declaration in the prescribed form setting out the grounds upon which he claims authority to make the application; and

(b)supply such further information with relation to the application as the medical referee may require.

(4A)A person who applies for a permit shall pay the prescribed fee to the medical referee issuing the permit.

(4B)The medical referee is entitled to retain the prescribed fee for his own use.

(5)Where it appears to a medical referee that the death of the person in respect of whose body the application for the permit is made, whether the cause of death is shown on the death certificate of that person or not, is due to violence or unnatural causes, or if there are in his opinion suspicious circumstances surrounding the death, the medical referee shall refuse the application and report the refusal and the reason for the refusal to the coroner residing nearest to the place where the body is lying.

(6)Where, except as provided in the last preceding subsection, a medical referee refuses to issue a permit, the applicant may apply to the State Administrative Tribunal for a review of the decision of the medical referee.

[Section 8 inserted by No. 80 of 1953 s. 6; amended by No. 28 of 1984 s. 13; No. 55 of 2004 s. 212; No. 19 of 2010 s. 51.]

8A.Permits

A medical referee shall not issue a permit for the cremation of the body of a deceased person —

(a)unless a certificate of cause of death has been provided under section 44 of the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1998 in relation to the deceased person;

(aa)where the deceased person died in a place outside the State, unless a certificate of cause of death has been provided under the law of the place in relation to the deceased person;

(b)where the deceased person has left a written direction that his body is not to be cremated, except where the Chief Health Officer orders the body to be cremated, pursuant to powers conferred upon him under the Health (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1911 or the Public Health Act 2016;

(c)unless he is satisfied that the applicant for the permit is entitled or authorised to make the application;

(d)unless he is satisfied that the fact and cause of death of the deceased person are definitely ascertained;

(e)where the permit is in the first instance refused by him under the provisions of section 8(5), unless and until he receives from a coroner a certificate in the prescribed form authorising him to grant the permit;

(f)where the coroner has signified his intention to investigate the death of the deceased person unless and until the coroner gives a certificate in the prescribed form authorising him to grant the permit;

(g)where the medical practitioner who gives the certificate referred to in paragraph (a) is —

(i)the parent child brother or sister of the deceased person or is the uncle aunt niece or nephew of the deceased person;

(ii)in partnership with the medical referee;

(iii)the medical referee to whom the application for the permit is made.

[Section 8A inserted by No. 80 of 1953 s. 7; amended by No. 28 of 1984 s. 13; No. 2 of 1996 s. 61; No. 40 of 1998 s. 9(a); No. 19 of 2016 s. 123, 125 and 285(1).]

8B.Permit to cremate still‑born child

Notwithstanding the provisions of section 8A where an application for a permit for the cremation of the remains of a still‑born child is made to the medical referee he may issue the permit if —

(a)a medical practitioner other than himself who was in attendance at the birth of the child certifies in writing that —

(i)the remains are those of a still‑born child;

(ii)the remains are not required to be submitted to post‑mortem examination in accordance with the provisions of the Health (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1911;

or

(b)he is satisfied after making such enquiries as he considers necessary that —

(i)the child, whose remains are the subject of the application, was in fact still‑born;

(ii)there is in his opinion no reason for further examination and that the remains are not required to be submitted to post‑mortem examination in accordance with the provisions of the Health (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1911.

[Section 8B inserted by No. 80 of 1953 s. 8; amended by No. 19 of 2016 s. 124.]

9.Permit to be sufficient authority to cremate body

Subject to this Act a permit lawfully granted under this Act shall be sufficient authority for the cremation of the body referred to therein by any licensees, or any person employed by them, at the crematorium specified in their licence.

10.Medical referee not to issue permit improperly; and no person to cremate body without permit

No medical referee shall issue any permit without having first received the proper certificate or certificates or otherwise in contravention of section 8, and no person shall cremate or permit the cremation of any human body without first having received the necessary permit.

[Section 10 amended by No. 80 of 1953 s. 9.]

[11.Deleted by No. 40 of 1998 s. 9(b).]

12.Interested persons not to give certificates

No person who knows that, under the terms of any policy of life assurance, will, settlement, or statute or otherwise howsoever, he is entitled, or will become entitled, by reason or in consequence of the death of another person, to any real or personal property, shall give or sign any certificate concerning the death of such other person for any of the purposes of this Act.

13.Cremation not permitted if objected to by deceased’s spouse, de facto partner or next of kin, unless directed by will or other writing signed by deceased

(1)Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, no person shall cremate, or apply for or grant any permit for the cremation of, the body of any deceased person if he knows that a person who was married to, or in a de facto relationship with, the deceased immediately before the death of the deceased, or any person who is next of kin of the deceased has objected in writing to the body being cremated, unless the deceased shall, by his will or any codicil or any memorandum or writing signed by him and attested, have directed or expressed a desire that his body is to be cremated.

(2)It shall be the duty of the administrator of a deceased person to use all reasonable endeavours to have the direction or desire contained or expressed in such will, codicil, memorandum, or writing carried into effect.

[Section 13 amended by No. 10 of 1998 s. 25; No. 3 of 2002 s. 33.]

14.Attorney General or coroner may forbid cremation

The Attorney General or any coroner may, in any case in which there shall appear to be reasonable cause for preventing the cremation of the body or any part of the body of any deceased person, issue an order in writing under his hand forbidding the cremation of such body, either absolutely or until the viscera or any other organs have been removed from the body and lodged or deposited in such place and custody as may be specified in the order, and any such order shall be binding on every person to whose knowledge it shall come, and no such person shall do any act in contravention thereof.

[Section 14 amended by No. 59 of 2004 s. 141.]

15.Offences

(1)Any person contravening by act or omission any provision of this Act shall be deemed to have committed an offence, and shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding $400 or to imprisonment for not exceeding one year.

(2)Any attempt to commit an offence against this Act shall be an offence punishable as if the offence had been committed.

(3)Any person who is party or privy to any offence may be proceeded against and shall be punishable as if he had committed the offence.

(4)If any offence against this Act is committed by any employee or agent of any licensees at or in the vicinity of the crematorium of such licensees, then each of the licensees, as well as such employee or agent, shall be guilty of the offence, but it shall be a defence for such licensee to prove that no act or neglect on his part facilitated or was contributory to the commission of the offence.

(5)This section does not apply to offences against the regulations.

[Section 15 amended by No. 113 of 1965 s. 8.]

16.Revocation of licences

(1)The Governor may by order revoke any licence —

(a)if any of the licensees shall have been convicted of any offence against this Act and sentenced to imprisonment, or fined $100 or more;

(b)if the crematorium shall have become unfit for the inoffensive, decent, and effective cremation of bodies, and a certificate to that effect shall have been signed by the Chief Health Officer;

(c)if the licensees have lost the right to occupy the site of the crematorium,

and thereupon the licence shall become null and void.

(2)No order revoking any licence on the ground mentioned in subsection (1)(a) or (b) shall be made more than 3 months after the date of the conviction or of the Chief Health Officer’s certificate, as the case may be.

[Section 16 amended by No. 113 of 1965 s. 8; No. 28 of 1984 s. 12 and 13; No. 19 of 2010 s. 51; No. 19 of 2016 s. 125.]

17.Regulations

(1)The Governor may make regulations for —

(a)to approve of sites for the erection of any crematorium, and requiring that proper plans and specifications of all buildings, fittings, works and apparatus to be used for a crematorium shall be first submitted to and approved by the Chief Health Officer, and providing for all such buildings, fittings, works and apparatus to be erected, completed and maintained to the satisfaction of the Chief Health Officer, and to prohibit the erection on any site not approved as aforesaid, or the use of any such buildings, fittings, works or apparatus not erected or completed or maintained to the satisfaction of the Chief Health Officer;

(b)prescribing the form of licences, permits, and other documents to be issued under this Act, and in what manner and form applications therefor shall be made;

(c)conferring on the Board or controlling authority of any cemetery power to obtain and exercise licences under this Act, and providing for the devolution of licences on the successors in office of the licensees;

(d)the granting of authority in such manner at such specified times or places, or the withholding of any such authority to exercise any rites or ceremonies recognised by or peculiar to any race or sect or community in connection with cremation;

(e)prescribing the maximum fees and charges which shall be chargeable by licensees for services performed by them by virtue of their licences;

(e1)prescribing the duties and obligations of medical referees and the fees to be paid to them for a permit for the cremation of a dead human body;

(f)prescribing and ordering any other matter or thing whatsoever which it may be necessary or convenient to prescribe or order for the purpose of carrying this Act into effect or achieving the objects thereof.

(2)The regulations may prescribe penalties not exceeding $20 in respect of any contravention of any of the regulations.

[Section 17 amended by No. 80 of 1953 s. 11; No. 113 of 1965 s. 8; No. 28 of 1984 s. 13; No. 103 of 1986 s. 5; No. 19 of 2016 s. 125.]

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Notes

1This reprint is a compilation as at 27 October 2017 of the Cremation Act 1929 and includes the amendments made by the other written laws referred to in the following table 1a, 2. The table also contains information about any reprint.

Compilation table

Short title

Number and year

Assent

Commencement

Cremation Act 1929

22 of 1929
(20 Geo. V No. 20)

11 Dec 1929

11 Dec 1929

Cremation Act Amendment Act 1935

8 of 1935
(26 Geo. V No. 8)

5 Oct 1935

5 Oct 1935

Reprint of the Cremation Act 1929 in Vol. 2 of Reprinted Acts (includes amendments listed above)

Cremation Act Amendment Act 1953

80 of 1953
(2 Eliz. II No. 80)

18 Jan 1954

6 Sep 1954 (see s. 2 and Gazette 20 Aug 1954 p. 1429)

Reprint of the Cremation Act 1929 approved 23 Apr 1963 in Vol. 18 of Reprinted Acts (includes amendments listed above)

Decimal Currency Act 1965

113 of 1965

21 Dec 1965

Act other than s. 4-9: 21 Dec 1965 (see s. 2(1));
s 4-9: 14 Feb 1966 (see s. 2(2))

Cremation Act Amendment Act 1967

35 of 1967

21 Nov 1967

21 Nov 1967

Cremation Act Amendment Act 1968

2 of 1968

26 Sep 1968

26 Sep 1968

Reprint of the Cremation Act 1929 approved 8 Apr 1971 (includes amendments listed above)

Health Legislation Amendment Act 1984 Pt. IV

28 of 1984

31 May 1984

1 Jul 1984 (see s. 2 and Gazette 15 Jun 1984 p. 1629)

Cremation Amendment Act 1986

103 of 1986

12 Dec 1986

1 Jul 1987 (see s. 3 and Gazette 12 Jun 1987 p. 2319)

Coroners Act 1996 s. 61

2 of 1996

24 May 1996

7 Apr 1997 (see s. 2 and Gazette 18 Mar 1997 p. 1529)

Statutes (Repeals and Minor Amendments) Act (No. 2) 1998 s. 25

10 of 1998

30 Apr 1998

30 Apr 1998 (see s. 2(1))

Acts Repeal and Amendment (Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration) Act 1998 s. 9

40 of 1998

30 Oct 1998

14 Apr 1999 (see s. 2 and Gazette 9 Apr 1999 p. 1433)

Reprint of the Cremation Act 1929 as at 16 Feb 2001 (includes amendments listed above)

Acts Amendment (Lesbian and Gay Law Reform) Act 2002 Pt. 6

3 of 2002

17 Apr 2002

21 Sep 2002 (see s. 2 and Gazette 20 Sep 2002 p. 4693)

Courts Legislation Amendment and Repeal Act 2004 s. 141

59 of 2004

23 Nov 2004

1 May 2005 (see s. 2 and Gazette 31 Dec 2004 p. 7128)

State Administrative Tribunal (Conferral of Jurisdiction) Amendment and Repeal Act 2004 Pt. 2 Div. 32 3

55 of 2004

24 Nov 2004

1 Jan 2005 (see s. 2 and Gazette 31 Dec 2004 p. 7130)

Medical Practitioners Act 2008 Sch. 3 cl. 13

22 of 2008

27 May 2008

1 Dec 2008 (see s. 2 and Gazette 25 Nov 2008 p. 4989)

Reprint 5: The Cremation Act 1929 as at 4 Jul 2008 (includes amendments listed above except those in the Medical Practitioners Act 2008)

Standardisation of Formatting Act 2010 s. 51

19 of 2010

28 Jun 2010

11 Sep 2010 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 10 Sep 2010 p. 4341)

Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (WA) Act 2010 Pt. 5 Div. 14

35 of 2010

30 Aug 2010

18 Oct 2010 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 1 Oct 2010 p. 5075-6)

Associations Incorporation Act 2015 s. 213

30 of 2015

2 Nov 2015

1 Jul 2016 (see s. 2(b) and Gazette 24 Jun 2016 p. 2291-2)

Public Health (Consequential Provisions) Act 2016

19 of 2016

25 Jul 2016

Pt. 3 Div. 9: 24 Jan 2017 (see s. 2(1)(c) and Gazette 10 Jan 2017 p. 165);
Pt. 5 Div. 4 (s. 284 and 285(1): 20 Sep 2017 (see s. 2(1)(c) and Gazette 19 Sep 2017 p. 4880)

Reprint 6: The Cremation Act 1929 as at 27 Oct 2017 (includes amendments listed above)

1aOn the date as at which this reprint was prepared, provisions referred to in the following table had not come into operation and were therefore not included in this reprint. For the text of the provisions see the endnotes referred to in the table.

Provisions that have not come into operation

Short title

Number and year

Assent

Commencement

Public Health (Consequential Provisions) Act 2016 s. 285(2) 4

19 of 2016

25 Jul 2016

To be proclaimed (see s. 2(1)(c))

2The renumbering of sections effected in the 1943 reprint (in Volume 2 of the Reprinted Acts of the Parliament of Western Australia) and subsequent reprints has been retained. References to the original numbering are contained in the 1943 reprint.

3The State Administrative Tribunal (Conferral of Jurisdiction) Amendment and Repeal Act 2004 Pt. 5, the State Administrative Tribunal Act 2004 s. 167 and 169, and the State Administrative Tribunal Regulations 2004 r. 28 and 42 deal with certain transitional issues some of which may be relevant for this Act.

4On the date as at which this reprint was prepared, the Public Health (Consequential Provisions) Act 2016 s. 285(2) had not come into operation. It reads as follows:

 

285.Section 8A amended

(2)In section 8A(b) delete “Health (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1911 or the”.

 

 

 

Defined terms

 

[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]

Defined termProvision(s)

administration2

administrator2

association4(1A)

Board2

body2

cemetery2

Chief Health Officer2

coroner2

crematorium2

dead human body2

human body2

licensed2

licensees2

medical practitioner2

 

 

By Authority: KEVIN J. McRAE, Government Printer