The transtasman league board will then handle the hearings process and the handing down of any sanctions.
While the league has always had the power to impose sanctions against players in breach of the code of conduct, they recognised they needed to improve the system and provide clearer guidelines around how complaints should be reviewed, and if necessary, escalated.
The poor disciplinary framework came to a head last year after a couple of heated games over successive weekends reignited the physicality debate in netball.
Irene van Dyk landed herself in hot water after accusing the West Coast Fever defence of being "dirty" and the officials of allowing them to "get away with murder" in a bitter post-match interview following the Magic's round three loss in Perth.
Furious at having her team's tactics called into question and marring a brilliant win, Fever coach Norma Plummer then fired back, blasting van Dyk, then-Magic coach Noeline Taurua, the Pulse's Donna Wilkins and Katrina Grant and pretty much anyone else that had ever worn the Silver Ferns dress.
Both incidents were reviewed by the league office, with van Dyk escaping with a warning.
ANZ Championship officials refused to reveal whether Plummer, who also accused league bosses of sticking with the controversial one and a half round draw structure for the sole benefit of the Kiwi franchises, was sanctioned for her comments.
At the time the furore erupted, the transtasman league office had already launched a review of its disciplinary procedures.
Crook said that the new measures were not a knee-jerk reaction to last year's physicality debate, which cast netball into unfamiliar territory at the top of the sporting news agenda, but part of the competition's on-going efforts to adapt to a rapidly evolving sport.
He said a judicial system was not something that was given much consideration when the transtasman league was established in 2008.
"I don't think it was overlooked, but the competition is developing at a rapid rate and the professionalism at which we need to operate is greater than what it even was last year or the year before," said Crook.
"It was one of those things that, seven years in, it needed to be updated to come in line with how other professional sports operate."
ANZ Championship bosses are looking at other ways they can improve the league, with the shape and timing of the competition a particular focus. Moving the competition to the summer months is one of the more significant changes that has been mooted but the likelihood of that occurring is slim.
Crook also confirmed a move to a full two-round draw is "unlikely to happen any time soon", with organisers instead looking at ways to extend the play-offs format.
After some dreadful performances by New Zealand sides in the opening round, this weekend will see two intriguing all-Kiwi clashes.
The Pulse take on the Steel in Wellington today, while the Mystics are set to meet the Magic on Monday night - a match that will pit five players against their former teams.
The Tactix, well-beaten by the Magic in the first match of the season, face title favourites the NSW Swifts in Christchurch tomorrow.