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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 12 February 2016
This case has been anonymized
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND ROTORUA REGISTRY
CRI 2009-463-94
CRI
2009-463-95
BETWEEN M
Appellant
AND NEW ZEALAND POLICE Respondent
Hearing: 8 December 2009
Appearances: Appellant in person
Sarah-Louise Wootton for Respondent
Judgment: 8 December 2009
JUDGMENT OF HARRISON J
In accordance with R11.5 I direct that the Registrar endorse this judgment with the delivery time of
4:30 pm on 8 December 2009
SOLICITORS
Gordon Pilditch (Rotorua) for Respondent
(copy to Appellant in person)
M V POLICE HC ROT CRI 2009-463-94 8 December 2009
Introduction
[1] Mr M appeals against his convictions in the District Court at
Rotorua on two charges of trespass and three of being a
parent of two children
who failed to attend Murupara primary school without good reason.
Facts
[2] The material facts are not in dispute. On 15 July 2008 Mr M was
served with a trespass notice by a police officer.
The police were acting as
agent with delegated authority from the lawful occupiers of Kaingaroa forest.
The notice directed Mr
M to stay off all Kaingaroa forest land for a period of
two years.
[3] On 15 January 2009 Mr M was located at Railway Road in
the Kaingaroa forest in breach of the trespass notice.
When questioned by a
police officer, Mr M claimed that, first, he was not the person named in the
notice and, second, he was
not trespassing as he was rightfully there. He
claimed Tangata Whenua rights. On 12 March 2009 Mr M again entered the forest
in breach of the trespass notice.
[4] The police charged Mr M with the offence of trespassing
and subsequently with being a parent or caregiver of
two children who failed to
attend Murupara school without good reason for a minimum four hour period or
more.
District Court
[5] Mr M refused to acknowledge the District Court when he appeared.
He maintained his claim to be a sovereign being over
whom the Court had no
jurisdiction. Pleas of not guilty were entered on his behalf.
[6] Mr M did not dispute the factual elements of the charges at the defended hearing. Instead he gave evidence by reading out a lengthy affidavit or
declaration which had been sworn previously. It is unnecessary to recite its
contents. They occupy 11 uninterrupted pages of the
evidential
transcript.
[7] Judge McGuire, relying on authority in this Court, dismissed Mr M
's denial of the District Court's jurisdiction. The
Judge found that he had
breached the trespass notice on both occasions: ss 4(4) and 11(2) Trespass Act
1980.
[8] At a separate hearing that day the Judge also heard unchallenged
evidence from officers from the Ministry of Education and
CYFS in support of the
charges of breaches of s 25(1) Education Act 1989. Again he dismissed
Mr M 's sovereignty defence.
[9] Judge McGuire entered convictions on all five
charges.
Decision
[10] Today Mr M has repeated the same arguments which he advanced
before Judge McGuire in support of his appeal against conviction.
The affidavit
is comprehensive and covers a wide range of legal territory, both
statutory and common law. It is not
easy to discern a coherent legal argument
but its essence, which Mr M confirmed in oral argument, is that he is a
sovereign being
who is subject to higher laws than those administered by this
Court. He does not recognise this Court's jurisdiction.
[11] Mr M 's submission ranged over arguments with which this and other
Courts are well familiar. At its core is an assertion
of sovereignty. As Ms
Wootton points out for the Crown, the law is settled by the Court of Appeal, by
which the District Court and
this Court are bound. It is sufficient for these
purposes to refer only to R v Brown [2007] NZCA 5 at [7]:
This challenge to sovereignty has frequently been raised by Maori in recent cases in the High Court and this court. This court has repeatedly said it is not an issue which can be addressed and resolved by the courts: see, by way of example, R v Knowles CA146/98 12 October 1998, R v Mitchell CA68/04
23 August 2004, and R v Harawira CA180/05 1 August 2005. As was said in all those cases, the issues which Mr Brown seeks to raise are matters 'for
public and political processes and not for judicial ones'.
[12] It is well settled, as Ms Wootton submits, that acts of Parliament, which create the criminal law and confer criminal jurisdiction and powers on the Courts, derive their authority from Parliament's exercise of its legislative powers, as conferred by the Constitution Act 1852 (UK) and its successor, the Constitution Act
1986: see R v Knowles CA146/98 12 October 1998 at p2:
In any event, the 1852 Act, including s 71, was repealed by the Constitution
Act 1986. Since 1947, with the adoption of the Statute
of Westminster 1931 and
the amendments to the 1852 Act, further elaborated in 1973, the New
Zealand Parliament has had
full power to make laws, as s 15(1) of the
Constitution Act says.
[13] However, I must say this. I have heard the sovereignty argument, or
variants of it, on a number of different occasions.
I have not heard anybody
present it with more clarity and force than Mr M . I also appreciated his
respect for the competing
argument.
[14] Mr M did not address argument against his sentence on the trespass
convictions of 100 hours community work and the fines
of $250 imposed together
with Court costs of $130 on the three Education Act charges.
[15] Mr M 's appeals against conviction and sentence are
dismissed.
Rhys Harrison J
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