Legal Project Management Plan & Checklist
Use this plan when your client has received a Notice to Contribute for fencing work from their neighbour and wants to respond, dispute, or minimise their contribution. Open this file as soon as the notice is received - the client has only 30 days to respond and the proposing owner must file a QCAT application within two months of serving the notice or it lapses. The plan is designed for the adjoining owner's solicitor (the respondent in fencing proceedings). Verify current guidelines on the official Queensland Legislation.
Jurisdiction: Queensland. Disputes are heard by the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT) as minor civil disputes. Free mediation is available through Queensland Dispute Resolution Centres (phone 1800 017 288) before QCAT proceedings are commenced. Three forks are available: (1) NSW fork under the Dividing Fences Act 1991 (NSW) with jurisdiction; (2) Early Agreement fork for matters resolved by written fencing agreement without tribunal proceedings; (3) Boundary Dispute fork where the legal boundary is contested and a survey is required.
Use this fork when the adjoining owner disputes the location of the legal boundary on which the proposed fence is to be constructed. The boundary may be uncertain because boundary pegs are missing, the existing fence is in the wrong location, the property is irregular in shape, or a survey has not been done in many years. A boundary dispute fundamentally undermines the validity of the fencing notice because the proposing owner cannot specify the correct fence line without knowing the boundary. Verify current guidelines on the official Queensland Legislation. Access services via the Queensland Courts.
Use this fork when your client is in New South Wales and has received a fencing notice from their neighbour under the Dividing Fences Act 1991 (NSW). The adjoining owner has received a proposal to carry out fencing work and contribute to the cost, and wants to respond, dispute, or minimise their contribution. Verify current guidelines on the official NSW Legislation. Access services via the NSW Courts.
Use this fork when the adjoining owner has received a Notice to Contribute and the parties reach agreement on fence type, cost, and contribution without progressing to QCAT proceedings. This is the most cost-effective pathway and should be pursued in all matters where the proposing owner is willing to negotiate. Verify current guidelines on the official Queensland Legislation.
The Process at a Glance: The practitioner executes a retainer, conducts a conflict check, and receives the client's instructions at the first appointment. The Notice to Contribute (Form 2 for standard work or Form 1 for urgent work) is audited for formal compliance - checking that it includes at least one written quote, correct property details, and that service was valid. A title search is obtained for both properties to verify the boundary line and ownership; if the boundary is disputed, a licensed surveyor may be required. The land type is confirmed under the Act to identify the applicable sufficient dividing fence standard. Counter-quotes for a standard sufficient fence are obtained. A written response is served on the proposing owner within 30 days, either agreeing, counter-proposing, or objecting. If agreement is reached, a written fencing agreement is executed. Free mediation through a Queensland Dispute Resolution Centre is attempted if the dispute continues. If QCAT proceedings are filed by the proposing owner, a defence is prepared, a compulsory conference is attended, and the matter is presented at a final hearing. After the hearing, the QCAT order is reviewed, any required contribution is arranged, and the file is closed.
Key Legislation and Case Law: Neighbourhood Disputes (Dividing Fences and Trees) Act 2011 (QLD) - s18 (land type definitions: residential, agricultural, pastoral, prescribed rural); s19 (definition of a sufficient dividing fence and the standard required for each land type); s22 (contribution rules: 50/50 for a sufficient fence; if the proposing owner wants a higher standard, the adjoining owner is only liable for 50% of the cost of the sufficient fence and the proposing owner bears the additional cost); s24 (lessee liability: where the land is leased, the lessee may have fencing obligations under the lease); s28 (urgent fencing work - Form 1 with shortened timeframes). Neighbourhood Disputes (Dividing Fences and Trees) Regulation 2014 (QLD) - prescribed fence forms. Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2009 (QLD) - QCAT jurisdiction for minor civil disputes; the proposing owner must file within two months of serving the notice or the notice lapses. QCAT is generally a bear-your-own-costs jurisdiction. Appeal: 28-day appeal period from the date of a QCAT order.
* Disclaimer: We're nobody's lawyer, because we aren't lawyers. You are, so you know better than to take legal advice from an app. We also aren't accountants or dog trainers - just digital spirit guides taking zero liability for any of this. This site exists to gather the collective knowledge of practitioners like you. Verify everything and submit your feedback on the Neighbourhood Disputes: Dividing Fences (Adjoining Owner) matter plan to improve the playbook. THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE, it's a request for input.
This legal matter plan provides a structured workflow for REAL_ESTATE cases, outlining the standard DISPUTE_LITIGATION process. Utilize these tracking templates to manage your legal cases efficiently.
Execute the costs agreement and retainer, complete identity verification, record the notice service date and all critical deadlines, and open the matter file in the PMS.
Verify all prerequisite documentation has been obtained, cross-reference against the statutory requirements for this matter type, and confirm compliance with practice direction protocols.
Audit the Form 2 (or Form 1) notice for compliance and validity, verify the boundary via title search, determine the sufficient fence standard under s19 for the applicable land type (s18), source counter-quotes, and formulate a defence strategy.
Prepare the relevant forms and supporting materials required under the applicable legislation, ensuring all mandatory fields are completed and all attachments are properly certified.
Draft and dispatch formal correspondence addressing the procedural requirements at this stage, including any required notices, requests for information, or proposals for resolution.
Coordinate the collection and review of all financial documentation required for disclosure, including statements, valuations, and supporting schedules as mandated by the rules.
Sufficient fence standard (s19): For residential land, a sufficient dividing fence is typically 0.5m-1.8m in height, constructed of timber palings, Colorbond steel, or chain wire.
Contribution cap (s22): The adjoining owner is only liable for 50% of the cost of a sufficient fence, NOT 50% of a higher standard fence. The proposing owner bears the difference for any upgrade they elect.
Dividing Fences Act 1991 (NSW) comparison: Under s7, contribution is based on the cost of a sufficient dividing fence, on a similar 50/50 basis. NCAT has jurisdiction under s14 of the NSW Act to hear fencing disputes between adjoining owners.
Serve a written response within 30 days (agreeing, counter-proposing, or objecting), and participate in free DRC mediation to seek a compromise. If agreement is reached, execute a written fencing agreement.
Conduct a thorough review of all filed materials to ensure compliance with court requirements, verify service obligations have been met, and prepare for the next procedural milestone.
Assess the strategic considerations for interim applications, prepare supporting evidence, and draft the necessary documentation for urgent or time-sensitive relief sought.
Verify all prerequisite documentation has been obtained, cross-reference against the statutory requirements for this matter type, and confirm compliance with practice direction protocols.