A Commercial Contract, as required by the ‘Corporations Act’, 2001
Where does the Corporations Act require a 'commercial contract' in this circumstance or any other? It's a huge act.
‘ASIC Act’, 2001, at sections 12CA ‘Unconscionable Conduct’ and, Section 12DA, ‘Misleading and Deceptive Conduct’,
The ASIC Act sections pertain to 'unconscionable conduct and consumer protection in relation to financial services'. Both sections 12CA and 12DA specifically relate to the provision of "financial services" (which is defined in section 12BAB and does not appear to relate to your circumstances).
Evidence must be produced that the City of Gold Coast (Inc.) can provide certified documents the entity is currently a Department of the State of Queensland (Inc.), and can provide the entity is a true ‘Local Government’, and The entity the City of Gold Coast (Inc.) operates under the Commonwealth Constitution Act, 1900 (Cth), the foundation law for the Commonwealth of Australia, as verified by the Australian Electoral Commission – National Referendum, held on the 6th November, 1999, in the overwhelming majority of Queenslanders and Australians in each and every Australian State, voted to defeat the Republic question, and reaffirmed the system of law remain under the Constitutional Monarchy, and any purported Authority of the entity known as the ‘City of Gold Coast’ (Inc.), comes under and relies and depends upon a Constitutional Act that has been ‘Royally Assented’ by ‘Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, Her Heirs and Successors’.
- There's no '(Inc.)' to any of these. Queensland's local governments are statutorily-created perpetual bodies corporate specifically created under the Local Government Act. They are not a 'Department of the State of Queensland'. Queensland's state and local governments are very different animals. Per section 4 and Schedule 1 of the Local Government Regulation, the correct name is either 'Council of the City of Gold Coast' or 'Gold Coast City Council'. No Inc.
- The Corporations Act does not apply to local government entities. See for example: section 57A (meaning of corporation - which provides that a 'public authority' is not a corporation) and section 66A (a body corporate is an exempt body where it is not a company registered under the Corporations Act and it is incorporated by a state law). The Council was created pursuant to the Local Government Act (i.e. incorporated by a state law), and is a public authority.
- The State of Queensland is not a body corporate. The 'Queensland Government' was created by the Constitution Act 1867, following on from being a colony split off from New South Wales in 1859 by way of Letters Patent given by Queen Victoria.
- The comments about the Commonwealth Constitution are back to front. The Commonwealth was created after the states (clause 3 of the Constitution) - the Commonwealth Constitution was passed by Royal Assent on 9 July 1900. The creation of Queensland predates that by just over 40 years. Both Queensland and the Commonwealth of Australia were via the operation of the constitutional monarchy; both by Queen Victoria - who ruled from 1837 to 1901 (Queen Elizabeth II was born in 1926 and became Monarch in 1953).
- Local government is not a power ceded to the Commonwealth Parliament. Sections 107 and 108 of the Commonwealth Constitution specifically provide that every power of the states (unless exclusively vested or withdrawn) continues, every law in force continues, and the state has the power to alter or repeal. Since 'local government' is not a reserved power for the Commonwealth pursuant to section 51 it resides in the State of Queensland - hence the Local Government Act.
So, sorry to tell you but your whole premise here is wrong.