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Cullum v Barfoot [2021] NZCA 53 (10 March 2021)
Last Updated: 16 March 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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KATHRYN CULLUM Applicant
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AND
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KIRI BARFOOT Respondent
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Counsel:
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Applicant in person M Singh for Respondent
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Judgment: (On the papers)
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10 March 2021 at 11.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF MILLER J
(Review of Registrar’s
Decision)
The application for review is declined. The
application for special leave to appeal is rejected for
filing.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS
- [1] This
judgment responds to Ms Cullum’s application for review of a
Registrar’s decision declining to waive payment
of a filing fee on an
application for special leave to appeal.
- [2] The sole
issue is whether the proceeding is being commenced to determine a question
of law which is of significant interest to
the public or a substantial section
of it.
- [3] The
Registrar reasoned that:
You seek special leave to appeal the
decision of Powell J on 22 October 2020. That decision struck out your
proceeding as an abuse
of process and awarded scale costs against you. It
involved an exercise of discretion, pursuant to the Court’s inherent
jurisdiction
and rule 14.1 of the High Court Rules, after consideration of the
particular facts. The proceeding that was struck out was an application
for
leave to appeal a decision of the District Court. That District Court
decision quashed the Tenancy Tribunal finding that the
landlord’s
90-day notice was retaliatory, and dismissed your appeal against Ms Barfoot (as
she was not the landlord) and against
the order that you pay rent arrears. It
seems to me that this tenancy appeal turned on its particular facts. I
accordingly share
Powell J’s view that “I cannot see on what basis
the decision involves a question of law, let alone one that because
of its
general or public importance or for any other reasons ought to be submitted to
the Court of Appeal for decision.”
(Footnote omitted.)
- [4] In her
review application Ms Cullum accuses the Court of corruption and of perverting
the course of justice, stating that the
Court of Appeal is declining her leave
because the Registrar believes her case is “abusive”. (The
Registrar had advised
that the papers could be returned for their abusive
content but did not actually do so.) She maintains that the outcomes below are
the result of misconduct by various judicial officers. She also asserts that
what she describes as the great New Zealand housing
emergency is the greatest
public interest topic in the country, citing among other things plummeting birth
rates, child poverty,
property market greed, homelessness and “Generation
Rent permanent entrapment”.
- [5] I agree with
the Registrar’s characterisation of the proceeding. It involves a tenancy
dispute which turned on its particular
facts. Ms Cullum complained about the
state of the premises and allegedly above-market rent, seeking to hold
the landlord’s
agent responsible, and the landlord’s agent
claimed for unpaid rent. The tenancy was terminated by order of the Tenancy
Tribunal
when she refused to recommence rent payments pending consideration of
her claim for damages. An appeal to the District Court
failed.[1] Powell J found no question
of law in her proposed appeals to the High Court and this
Court.[2]
- [6] The
application for special leave to appeal to this Court does not raise any genuine
question of law, let alone one that merits this Court’s
consideration. I observe that the principal relief sought is that the agent (a
real estate firm) should
somehow be made accountable for property market greed
and the housing crisis. The genuine public interest topics to which Ms Cullum
points are neither questions of law nor justiciable; they are political and
social questions which are the responsibility of the
other branches of
government.
- [7] The papers
filed by Ms Cullum in this Court are remarkable for their sustained and graphic
invective against those with whom she
disagrees or of whose lifestyle she
disapproves. She is entitled to criticise judicial officers, and even to accuse
them of misconduct
in the conduct of her proceeding, but she cannot accuse them
of corruption merely because she disagrees with their decisions, or
speculate on
their sexual orientation (as she has done with the Registrar), or depict them as
mokomokai, or characterise them as
whores or mongrels, or liken their work to
the murder of Jewish children in the Holocaust. Nor can she include in a court
filing
her views about the promiscuity, sexual orientation, religious
beliefs, femininity or dress sense of others with whom she disagrees.
In my
opinion the Registrar was wrong to accept her papers for filing. They ought to
have been rejected under r 5A(1)(b) of the
Court of Appeal (Civil) Rules
2005 on the ground that they contain plainly abusive material. I include in
this the application for
special leave and a misconceived 21 February 2021
application for “stay”, as well as her apparent request for the case
to be heard by Kós P or Winkelmann CJ dated 4 March 2021.
- [8] The
application for review of the Registrar’s decision is declined. I further
direct under r 6(3) of the Court of Appeal
(Civil) Rules that the application
for special leave is to be rejected for filing, bringing this proceeding (and
all its subsidiary
applications and requests for directions) to an end. Ms
Cullum has the right to seek to re-file an application for special leave
after
removing all abusive material, but she should assume that absent some entirely
new and legally meritorious ground she will
not be granted a waiver of the
filing fee on public interest grounds.
Solicitors:
Glaister Ennor, Auckland for Respondent
[1] Barfoot & Thompson Ltd
v Cullum [2020] NZDC 12161.
[2] Cullum v Barfoot [2020]
NZHC 2777; and Cullum v Barfoot [2020] NZHC 3507.
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