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Smith v Prison Director at Rolleston Prison [2024] NZCA 163 (16 May 2024)

Last Updated: 20 May 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND

I TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
CA528/2022
[2024] NZCA 163



BETWEEN

PHILIP JOHN SMITH
Appellant


AND

PRISON DIRECTOR AT ROLLESTON PRISON
Respondent

Hearing:

10 April 2024

Court:

Mallon, Thomas and Wylie JJ

Counsel:

Appellant in person
P J Gunn and S Cvitanovich for Respondent

Judgment:

16 May 2024 at 12 pm


JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

  1. The respondent is given leave to adduce in evidence rule PR/001 made on 1 October 2021 by the Prison Director at Auckland Prison under s 33(1) of the Corrections Act 2004.
  2. The appeal is dismissed.
  1. The appellant is to pay costs to the respondent in the sum of $1,000.

____________________________________________________________________

REASONS OF THE COURT

(Given by Wylie J)

Table of Contents


Para No
Introduction
Factual background
Mr Smith
The Kia Marama Unit
The Totara Unit
Rule PR/004
Te Piriti Unit
The High Court judgment
Additional evidence
The submissions
Mr Smith
The Director
Analysis
Section 33
The statutory context — is the rule consistent with the Act?
Is the rule inconsistent with other legislation?
Does the rule impose an unlawful blanket prohibition?
Is the rule discriminatory and inconsistent with the NZBORA?
Does the treatment afforded to prisoner who go into the Kia Marama and Totara Units have a discriminatory impact?
Is the rule inconsistent with New Zealand’s international obligations?
Section 5 of the NZBORA
Costs
Result

Introduction

Factual background

Mr Smith

The Kia Marama Unit

The Totara Unit

Rule PR/004

Southern Region Rolleston Prison PRISON RULE

Reference: PR / 004 Date: 29.9.21

Sexual Activity

For the management of the prison and for the conduct and safe custody of the prisoners, I make the following rule pursuant to section 33(1) of the Corrections Act 2004:

Prisoners in Kia Marama or Totara Special Treatment Units must not participate in sexual activity, or encourage, pressure or threaten other prisoners to participate in sexual activity.

Any prisoner breaching this rule commits an offence against discipline pursuant to section 128(1)(a) of the Corrections Act 2004 and may on conviction of such a breach be subject to any penalty imposed pursuant to section 133 or section 137 of the Corrections Act 2004.

[Signed]

Michael Howson Prison Director Rolleston Prison

Sexual Involvement between Residents:

Individuals who enter treatment here almost always have problems surrounding their sexuality and/or how they manage sexual feelings and urges. Your main purpose in being here is, among others, to gain control over your sexual behaviour and to learn ways of appropriately meeting your needs. Any sexual related behaviour between residents is viewed as problematic because it reflects actions similar to offending related behaviour and serves to avoid directly dealing with treatment issues, and is unacceptable. Residents who pressure or “pester” other residents to engage in sexual activity may be dismissed from the programme. Because the STU treatment and community of change environment aims to help those who come to Kia Marama to develop better judgement about the differences between affectionate and sexual behaviours, it is unacceptable to use expressions of physical affection that are outside of what would be considered socially acceptable. ...

The booklet goes to on to invite participants experiencing difficulty relating to living at Kia Marama, to raise the issue with the Residential Manager, the Principal Corrections Manager, Unit staff or their therapist.

Southern Region Rolleston Prison PRISON RULES

Date: 29.9.21

For the management of the prison and for the conduct and safe custody of the prisoners, I make the following rules pursuant to section 33(1) of the Corrections Act 2004:

Sparring and types of physical activity (PR / 001)

Tampering (PR / 002)

Sexual activity (PR / 004)

Prisoners who breach these rules commit an offence against discipline pursuant to section 128(1)(a) of the Corrections Act 2004 and may on conviction of such a breach be subject to any penalty imposed pursuant to section 133 or section 137 of the Corrections Act 2004.

All other rules are revoked.

[Signed]

Michael Howson Prison Director Rolleston Prison

Te Piriti Unit

The High Court decision

Additional evidence

The submissions

Mr Smith

The Director

Analysis

Section 33

33 Manager may make rules for prison

(1) The chief executive may, subject to subsection (6), authorise the manager of a corrections prison to make rules that the manager considers appropriate for the management of the prison and for the conduct and safe custody of the prisoners.

The statutory context — is the rule consistent with the Act?

(a) Ensure that prisoners participating in the therapeutic programmes have the best opportunity to do so in an appropriate learning environment without disturbance. It was the Director’s view that sexual activity between prisoners can create a distraction from the programmes offered. Relationships can break down and what starts as a consensual relationship can quickly turn into alleged sexual assault, which is damaging not only to the dynamic of the Units and to the various treatment groups operating within those Units, but also to the therapeutic community and friendships within the wider prison.

(b) Manage the risk that individual prisoners might further offend within the Units. The Director was aware that more vulnerable or younger prisoners can be preyed on by others. Inter alia, the rule was intended to reduce the risk of intimidation and/or pressure being placed on prisoners while they are undertaking the rehabilitative programmes on offer which are designed to address their risks of further sexual offending. The rule endeavours to mitigate the risk that prisoners in the Units pose to themselves and to others.

(a) the corrections system must ensure the fair treatment of persons under control or supervision by, inter alia, providing them with information about the rules that affect them;[42]

(b) sentences and orders should not be administered more restrictively than is reasonably necessary to ensure the maintenance of the law and the safety of the public, corrections staff and persons under control or supervision;[43] and

(c) offenders must, so far as is reasonable and practicable, be given access to activities that can contribute to their rehabilitation and reintegration into the community.[44]

Is the rule inconsistent with other legislation?

Does the rule impose an unlawful blanket prohibition?

Is the rule discriminatory and inconsistent with the NZBORA?

19 Freedom from discrimination

(1) Everyone has the right to freedom from discrimination on the grounds of discrimination in the Human Rights Act 1993.

As can be seen, s 19 is linked to the grounds of discrimination prohibited by the HRA.[47] The section cannot be relied on if the ground of discrimination is not listed as a ground of discrimination in the HRA.[48]

21 Prohibited grounds of discrimination

(1) For the purposes of this Act, the prohibited grounds of discrimination are—

...

(m) sexual orientation, which means a heterosexual, homosexual, lesbian, or bisexual orientation.

As the learned authors of The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act: A Commentary observe, sexual orientation is exhaustively defined in s 21(1)(m).[49] They comment that the definition “may perhaps” include being transsexual (or more properly transgender).[50] Notwithstanding that Mr Smith’s submissions referred, on occasion, to transgender prisoners, we do not need to resolve this issue. It was not argued before us, and it is better left to an appropriate case where it is in issue.

(a) The first step is to ask whether there is differential treatment or effects as between persons or groups in analogous or comparable situations on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination. The Court noted that any claim to discrimination involves comparison between the treatment to which the complainant (or the group of which he or she is a member) is subjected and the treatment to which some other person (or group of persons) is subjected.[53]

(b) The second step is to ask whether the differential treatment has a discriminatory impact.[54] A discriminatory impact arises if the differential treatment on a prohibited ground imposes a material disadvantage on the person or group differentiated against.[55]

(c) If discrimination is found, then consideration needs to be given to s 5 of the NZBORA,[56] which recognises that the rights and freedoms set out in the NZBORA are not necessarily absolute. They “may be subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society”.[57]

... in a practical sense [the rule] only applies to prisoners with an orientation that is homosexual, lesbian, or bisexual, who choose to exercise their free choice to withdraw their voluntary consent to agree to the programme retention criteria. ...

Does the treatment afforded to prisoners who go into the Kia Marama and Totara Units have a discriminatory impact?

Is the rule inconsistent with New Zealand’s international obligations?

(a) Principle 2 in the Yogyakarta Principles, which addresses rights to equality and non-discrimination, and requires that States repeal criminal and other legal provisions that prohibit, or are, in effect, employed to prohibit consensual sexual activity among people of the same sex who are over the age of consent; and

(b) Principle 33 in the Yogyakarta Principles Plus 10, which records that everyone has the right to be free from criminalisation and any form of sanction arising directly or indirectly from that person’s actual or perceived sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression or sex characteristics.

Section 5 of the NZBORA

5 Justified limitations

Subject to section 4, the rights and freedoms contained in this Bill of Rights may be subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

(a) that the Court ascertain the intended meaning of the rule;

(b) that the Court ascertain whether that meaning is inconsistent with a relevant right or freedom;

(c) if any inconsistency is found, that the Court ascertain whether the inconsistency is nevertheless a justified limit in terms of s 5;

(d) if the inconsistency is a justified limit, the inconsistency is legitimised and the intended meaning prevails;

(e) if the intended meaning of the rule represents an unjustified limit under s 5, the Court must examine the words in question again under s 6 of the NZBORA, to see if it is reasonably possible for a meaning consistent, or less inconsistent, with the relevant right or freedom to be found in them. If so, that meaning must be adopted;

(f) if it is not reasonably possible to find a consistent, or less inconsistent, meaning, s 4 of the NZBORA mandates that the rule’s intended meaning be adopted.

Costs

Result





Solicitors:
Te Tari Ture o te Karauna | Crown Law Office, Wellington for Respondent


[1] Smith v Prison Director at Rolleston Prison [2022] NZHC 2366, [2023] 2 NZLR 365 [High Court judgment].

[2] See [50], [92] and [95].

[3] At [83].

[4] At [96].

[5] R v Smith HC Wellington T23/96, 16 August 1996, aff’d R v Smith CA 114/02, 4 August 2003.

[6] R v Smith HC Wellington S23/96, 15 April 1996.

[7] R v Smith [2016] NZDC 13828; aff’d Smith v R [2020] NZCA 499, [2021] 3 NZLR 324.

[8] Emphasis in original.

[9] Corrections Act 2004, s 128(1)(a).

[10] Sections 134 and 137.

[11] Section 135.

[12] Sections 133 and 137.

[13] High Court judgment, above n 1, at [38]–[39].

[14] At [40].

[15] At [41]–[43].

[16] At [48]–[49].

[17] At [50].

[18] At [47]. The Yogyakarta Principles and the subsequent Yogyakarta Principles Plus 10 (jointly, the Principles) set out human rights in relation to sexual orientation and gender identity. They were the outcome of an international meeting of human rights groups at Yogyakarta in Indonesia. The initial Principles are dated 2007. The subsequent principles are dated November 2017. See below at [89]–[93].

[19] At [51]–[52].

[20] At [53]–[54].

[21] At [56]–[63].

[22] At [65].

[23] At [83].

[24] At [88] and [91].

[25] At [92].

[26] At [93]–[94].

[27] At [95].

[28] At [96].

[29] At [97].

[30] R v Hansen [2007] NZSC 7, [2007] 3 NZLR 1.

[31] High Court judgment, above n 1, at [98]–[112].

[32] At [112].

[33] At [113].

[34] Ministry of Health v Atkinson [2012] NZCA 184, [2012] 3 NZLR 456.

[35] R v Hansen, above n 30.

[36] See High Court judgment, above n 1, at [50]–[65].

[37] Taunoa v Attorney-General [2007] NZSC 70, [2008] 1 NZLR 429 at [97] per Elias CJ; and see Attorney‑General v Smith [2018] NZCA 24, [2018] 2 NZLR 899 at [47].

[38] Corrections Act, s 33(5).

[39] Taylor v Manager of Auckland Prison [2012] NZHC 3591 at [11]–[12].

[40] Corrections Act, s 5(1)(a).

[41] Section 5(1)(c).

[42] Section 6(1)(f).

[43] Section 6(1)(g).

[44] Section 6(1)(h).

[45] See High Court judgment, above n 1, at [83].

[46] Corrections Act, s 33(5).

[47] See Human Rights Act 1993, s 21.

[48] R v King [2008] NZCA 79, [2008] 2 NZLR 460 at [36] per Robertson J.

[49] Andrew Butler and Petra Butler The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act: A Commentary (2nd ed, LexisNexis, Wellington, 2015) at [17.8.37].

[50] At [17.8.37].

[51] Ministry of Health v Atkinson, above n 34. The Court distinguished an earlier decision of this Court dealing with s 19 and discrimination, Quilter v Attorney-General [1997] NZCA 207; [1998] 1 NZLR 523 (CA), at [127].

[52] Ministry of Health v Atkinson, above n 34, at [109].

[53] At [55] and [60]; and see Butler and Butler, above n 49, at [17.10.1]–[17.10.2].

[54] Ministry of Health v Atkinson, above n 34, at [55].

[55] At [109].

[56] At [75].

[57] New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, s 5.

[58] Hutchinson v BC (Ministry of Health) (2004) BCHRT 58 at [100]; aff’d R v Hutchinson 2004 BCSC 1536, (2004) 261 DLR (4th) 171. Hutchinson v BC discussed in Ministry of Health v Atkinson, above n 34, at [69]; and applied in Attorney-General v IDEA Services Ltd [2012] NZHC 3229, [2013] 2 NZLR 512 at [139].

[59] Air New Zealand Ltd v McAlister [2009] NZSC 78, [2010] 1 NZLR 153 at [34] per Elias CJ, Blanchard and Wilson JJ.

[60] Northern Regional Health Authority v Human Rights Commission [1998] 2 NZLR 218 (HC) at 236.

[61] Butler and Butler, above n 49, at [17.12.1].

[62] Ngaronoa v Attorney-General; Taylor v Attorney-General [2017] NZCA 351, [2017] 3 NZLR 643 at [140].

[63] The information booklet is provided by the Department of Corrections to prisoners contemplating going into the Te Piriti Unit: discussed above at [32]–[33].

[64] High Court judgment, above n 1, at [92].

[65] Sonia Onufer Corrêa and Vitit Muntarbhorn (co-chairpersons) The Yogyakarta Principles: Principles on the Application of International Human Rights Law in relation to Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (March 2007) at 34.

[66] High Court judgment, above n 1, at [47].

[67] At [52].

[68] At [52].

[69] At [53].

[70] New Zealand Air Line Pilots’ Association Inc v Attorney-General [1997] 3 NZLR 269 (CA) at 280–281.

[71] High Court judgment, above n 1, at [52].

[72] R v Hansen, above n 30.

[73] At [100] per Tipping J, [202] per McGrath J and [281] per Anderson J. The minority agreed that the reversal of the onus of proof was inconsistent with the right to be presumed innocent: at [7] per Elias CJ and [63] per Blanchard J

[74] At [127] and [149] per Tipping J, [234] and [260] per McGrath J and [281] per Anderson J.

[75] At [90] and [166]–[167] per Tipping J, [257] and [261] per McGrath J and [290] per Anderson J.

[76] At [92] per Tipping J.

[77] At [123] per Tipping J.

[78] See above at [24].

[79] See Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, s 36(3)(a).

[80] Corrections Act, s 136.


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