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Mason v Triezenberg [2021] NZCA 131 (23 April 2021)
Last Updated: 28 April 2021
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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BETWEEN
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ALEXANDER CHARLES MASON Appellant
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AND
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VICKI ANN TRIEZENBERG AND PAUL MORLEY DODD Respondents
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Court:
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Miller, Brewer and Dunningham JJ
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Counsel:
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G J Thwaite for Appellant VTM Bruton QC and J P Cundy for
Respondents
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Judgment: (On the papers)
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23 April 2021 at 10.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
A The
application for leave to adduce further evidence is declined.
- The
respondents are entitled to costs as for a standard application on a band A
basis, plus usual
disbursements.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Miller J)
- [1] This
judgment relates to an application for leave to adduce further evidence on an
appeal from a judgment of Fitzgerald J, in
which the Judge removed Mr Mason as a
trustee of two family trusts and refused to remove his
co-trustees.[1] The appeal itself was
set down to be heard on 24 March 2021, but Miller J adjourned it because it
appeared that the application
for further evidence might require the respondents
to respond in detail and the Court to undertake an extensive enquiry into
contested
facts.
- [2] Mr Mason
wishes to adduce two affidavits of his own. The first, dated 28 August 2020, is
allegedly relevant to the question whether
the respondents are suitable
trustees. He complains that he is subject to orders for payment of costs and
the trustees have refused
to give him money to pay them. He says he is at risk
of bankruptcy.
- [3] We accept
that to some extent this evidence appears to be fresh in that it relates to
exchanges about costs since the High Court
judgment, but in order to evaluate
the claim that the respondents’ behaviour shows they are not suitable
trustees it would
be necessary to traverse a great deal of factual material,
effectively as a court of first instance. Nor are we persuaded that the
evidence is of such direct relevance that it must be admitted in the interests
of justice. The principal question on appeal is whether
Mr Mason himself was
properly removed as a trustee of family trusts which he had settled. The
question whether the respondents ought
to have been removed will turn on issues
discussed at some length in the judgment below. It is by no means obvious that
the respondents
refused him money to pay some of these costs, all of which were
properly awarded against him, or that it was an error on their part
to refuse to
pay costs he had needlessly incurred. To the extent that Mr Mason does have a
complaint about post-trial conduct, it
can be the subject of a separate
application for a direction that he be paid from trust funds, to the extent he
has not been. We
note that the respondents assert through counsel that Mr Mason
has now paid some of the costs and is no longer at risk of bankruptcy.
- [4] The second
affidavit, dated 22 December 2020, evidently seeks to relitigate issues which
were resolved in the Family Court and
High Court. The argument appears to be
that the Judge was wrong to find that a doctor at Middlemore Hospital lawfully
issued a certificate
activating an enduring power of attorney for Mr
Mason’s wife on 10 August 2015. It is far from clear that, if correct,
this
evidence would have any bearing on the decisions that are the subject of
the appeal. It was common ground in the High Court that
Mrs Mason, who suffers
from dementia, had to be removed as a trustee. Nor is the evidence fresh; Mr
Mason could have led evidence
in the High Court about validity of the
certificate, if it were relevant.
- [5] It is
regrettable that Mr Mason should have pursued these unnecessary applications.
They are declined. The respondents are entitled
to costs as for a standard
application on a band A basis, plus usual
disbursements.
Solicitors:
Lee Salmon Long,
Auckland for Respondents
[1] Triezenberg v Mason
[2019] NZHC 14.
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