Goodbye job applications, hello dream career
Seize control of your career and design the future you deserve with LW career

Green light for wills, POA documents to be executed electronically in Victoria

Wills and power of attorney documents are now permitted to be executed electronically in Victoria, after the state government made temporary changes brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic permanent.

user iconEmma Musgrave 25 March 2021 Politics
POA documents to be executed electronically in Vic
expand image

As reported by Lawyers Weekly’s sister brand, The Adviser, the Victorian government has passed legislation that will allow mortgage documents, deeds, wills and powers of attorney to be executed electronically.  

The passage of the laws has made permanent temporary changes that were introduced during the COVID-19 crisis, which allowed for documents to be signed electronically and remotely to adhere to social distancing restrictions introduced by the federal government.

Last week, the Victorian government passed the Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Bill 2021.

The bill provides for electronic signing and remote witnessing of legal documents in Victoria by amending the Electronic Transactions (Victoria) Act 2000.

Commenting on the legislation, DocuSign vice-president and deputy general counsel Doug Luftman said: “COVID-19 has highlighted the essential need to be able to sign important documents electronically from nearly anywhere, at any time. DocuSign congratulates the Victorian Government for modernising their laws for the digital age by allowing deeds, wills, power of attorney and mortgage documents to be executed electronically.

Mr Luftman noted this is an important step in the government’s digital transformation journey, with the changes set to enable businesses, consumers, and lawyers to save significant costs and time in the preparation and signing of documents, particularly in rural and regional areas.   

As we have seen with important interim digital measures over the last year, businesses and their employees have been able to sign electronic documents in minutes, rather than days, while saving on costs such as paper, printing and storing documents. Such considerable paper reduction also has positive environmental impact, he said.

We encourage other state and territory governments to follow Victoria’s lead and reform their electronic signature laws so that we can have a single national process that ensures accessibility, ease and secure transacting for all Australians.”

Emma Musgrave

Emma Musgrave

Emma Musgrave (née Ryan) is the managing editor, professional services at Momentum Media.

Emma has worked for Momentum Media since 2015, including five years spent as the editor of the company's legal brand - Lawyers Weekly. Throughout her time at Momentum, she has been responsible for breaking some of the biggest stories in corporate Australia. In addition, she has produced exclusive multimedia and event content related to the company's respective brands and audiences. 

Prior to joining Momentum Media, Emma worked in breakfast radio, delivering news to the Central West region of NSW, before taking on a radio journalist role at Southern Cross Austereo, based in Townsville, North Queensland.

She holds a Bachelor of Communications (Journalism) degree from Charles Sturt University. 

Email Emma on: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

You need to be a member to post comments. Become a member for free today!