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Ding v James [2022] NZCA 56 (14 March 2022)
Last Updated: 22 March 2022
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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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CAOPING DING First Applicant
BARRY BAI Second
Applicant
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AND
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THOMAS EDMUND WILLIAM JAMES First Respondent
KEATON PRONK,
IAIN MCLENNAN AND MCDONALD VAGUE LIMITED Second Respondents
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Court:
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Brown and Courtney JJ
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Counsel:
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Applicants in Person B M K Pamatatau for First Respondent B L
Martelli for Second Respondents
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Judgment: (On the papers)
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14 March 2022 at 3.00 pm
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JUDGMENT OF THE
COURT
(Recall)
The application for recall is
dismissed.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Brown J)
- [1] In a
judgment delivered on 3 November 2021, the Court declined an application for
leave to appeal under s 56(5) of the Senior
Courts Act 2016 from the refusal by
the High Court[1] to add Ms Ding as a
party to liquidation proceedings concerning NZSouthpole Team
Ltd.[2]
- [2] Ms Ding
initially filed a document, dated 27 December 2021, entitled “Memorandum
for applicants requesting correction of
accidental slip”. A further
expanded version dated 20 January 2022 was filed subsequently. The
respondents’ memoranda
in opposition treated Ms Ding’s memoranda at
face value as applications under the slip rule. However, although the
documents’
descriptions appeared to invoke the slip rule, in substance
they sought a direction for a recall of the November judgment.
- [3] As the
Supreme Court recently stated in S (SC39/2017) v
R[3] the general rule is that a
judgment, once delivered, must stand for better or worse, subject to appeal.
A decision to recall will
only be made in exceptional circumstances. It
will be appropriate where some procedural or substantive error has occurred
which
would result in a miscarriage of
justice.[4]
- [4] It is
difficult to discern from Ms Ding’s ten-page memorandum of
20 January 2022 the precise basis upon which a recall of
the judgment
is sought. The document makes extensive criticisms of the liquidators and
revisits the argument made below on the substantive
interlocutory application
that the interests of justice would be served by joining Ms Ding as a party to
the liquidation proceedings.
- [5] However we
are unable to identify any asserted error in the reasoning of our s 56(5)
leave judgment, let alone one of such significance
that it would warrant a
recall direction.
- [6] Consequently
the application for recall is dismissed. There is no order for
costs.
Solicitors:
Alden Ho, Auckland for First
Respondent
HC Legal Limited, Auckland for Second Respondents
[1] James v NZSouthpole Team
Ltd (in liq) [2021] NZHC 657 at [61] and [104].
[2] Ding v James [2021]
NZCA 578.
[3] S (SC39/2017) v R
[2022] NZSC 7.
[4] At [3].
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZCA/2022/56.html