Western Australia · Wheatbelt Region
Getting proper legal advice shouldn’t depend on how close you live to a capital city. For people in the Wheatbelt — whether you’re in Northam, Merredin, Narrogin or a smaller farming community hours from Perth — access to a specialist professional negligence lawyer has, until now, often meant a long drive and an appointment with whoever happened to be available rather than whoever was actually qualified.
Fair Go Australia works with clients across the Wheatbelt entirely remotely. No travel required. No office visits. A specialist professional negligence lawyer handles your case from first contact through to resolution — and you pay nothing unless your claim succeeds.
Professional negligence happens when someone you trusted to do their job properly — a solicitor, accountant, doctor, financial advisor, or any other qualified professional — falls short of the standard their profession demands, and that failure costs you something real.
In rural and regional areas, the consequences of professional failure can be harder to absorb. There are fewer professionals to turn to for a second opinion. Communities are smaller, which can make an already uncomfortable situation feel more complicated. And the types of harm that tend to arise in agricultural and regional settings — missed deadlines on a rural property transaction, an agronomist’s bad advice that ruins a season’s crop, a farm succession plan that creates a tax disaster — often involve substantial financial loss that can take years to surface.
None of that changes the law. Where a professional has breached the standard of care owed to you and that breach has caused measurable loss, you may have a viable claim — regardless of your postcode.
Professional negligence takes many forms. In the Wheatbelt, the professionals people deal with most regularly tend to be tied to the region’s agricultural economy, local health services, and property transactions. The following are the most common claim types we handle for clients in this area.
If your situation doesn’t fit neatly into one of these categories, contact us anyway. Professional negligence covers a broad range of professions and circumstances, and we’ll assess your situation without cost or obligation.
In Western Australia, professional negligence claims are governed primarily by the Civil Liability Act 2002 (WA). The Act sets out how courts assess whether a professional has fallen below the required standard — and what compensation a claimant may be entitled to recover.
To establish a professional negligence claim, four things generally need to be present:
The High Court’s decision in Rogers v Whitaker (1992) 175 CLR 479 remains a key reference point on how the standard of care is assessed in Australian professional negligence cases. Courts look at what a reasonable practitioner in the same field would have done — not what this particular practitioner intended.
Legal practitioners in Western Australia are regulated by the Law Society of Western Australia. For claims that proceed to litigation, the Supreme Court of Western Australia is the relevant superior court for substantial professional negligence matters.
Under the Limitation Act 2005 (WA), the general limitation period for professional negligence claims is six years from the date the cause of action arose. For personal injury claims arising from professional negligence, a shorter three-year period applies, running from the date you became aware — or should reasonably have become aware — of the negligence.
The discovery rule matters here. In the Wheatbelt, professional failures in financial advice or accounting can take years to manifest. An accountant’s error in a farm succession plan may not become apparent until the ATO issues a notice or a property transfer triggers unexpected tax. The clock starts ticking from the point you knew, or reasonably ought to have known, that something had gone wrong — but it is unforgiving once it does.
Act before time runs out.
In Western Australia, professional negligence claims must generally be commenced within 6 years (or 3 years for personal injury claims) from the date you became aware — or should reasonably have become aware — of the negligence. Under the Limitation Act 2005 (WA), missing this deadline can permanently extinguish your right to claim. If you are unsure whether your limitation period is still open, contact our team for a free assessment as soon as possible.
For many people in the Wheatbelt, the practical question isn’t whether they have a claim — it’s how they’re supposed to pursue one when the nearest specialist legal firm is two to four hours away. The honest answer is that it doesn’t need to be that complicated.
Fair Go Australia handles all initial consultations and case evaluations remotely. Most of our clients in regional and rural areas never need to travel. We work by phone, video call, and email — whatever suits you — and the quality of advice and representation you receive is no different from what a client in Perth CBD would get.
You don’t pay anything upfront. If your claim doesn’t succeed, you owe us nothing. We carry the financial risk because people who have already been harmed by a professional shouldn’t have to pay again just to find out where they stand.
You don’t need to have everything figured out before you contact us. Most people who call us aren’t sure whether what happened to them amounts to a legal claim — that’s exactly what the free evaluation is for.
There is no obligation, no cost, and everything you tell us is completely confidential. We respond to all enquiries within one business day.
We respond to all enquiries within 1 business day.
Yes. Your location has no bearing on the strength or viability of a professional negligence claim. The law in Western Australia applies equally to people in the Wheatbelt as it does to people in Perth. Fair Go Australia works with clients across regional and rural WA entirely remotely — you don’t need to travel, and there is no disadvantage to being outside the capital. View our WA professional negligence hub for more information.
Generally, six years from the date the cause of action arose for most claims, and three years for personal injury claims. Time runs from the date you knew — or reasonably should have known — about the negligence, not necessarily when it occurred. Mistakes in financial advice or accounting can take years to surface, which is why the discovery rule under the Limitation Act 2005 (WA) exists. If you’re not sure whether your time is still open, get advice promptly — the cost of missing the deadline is permanent.
Nothing upfront. We work entirely on a no-win, no-fee basis. Your initial case evaluation is free and carries no obligation. If your claim proceeds and succeeds, our fees are deducted from the compensation recovered. If the claim doesn’t succeed, you pay nothing.
No. Everything is handled remotely. Initial consultations happen by phone or video call, documents are exchanged digitally, and you won’t be asked to travel to a physical office at any stage. We handle professional negligence claims for clients across the Wheatbelt and throughout regional WA without requiring a single in-person visit. Start with a free case evaluation today.