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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 22 October 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND TIMARU REGISTRY
CIV-2014-476-000016 [2014] NZHC 2381
BETWEEN
|
ALPINE ENERGY LIMITED
Appellant
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AND
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KEVIN MURRAY WATERS Respondent
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Hearing:
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29 September 2014 (By way of telephone conference)
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Appearances:
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A Keir for Appellant
Respondent In Person
Dr MSR Palmer for the Intervener Human Rights Commission
K Evans for Privacy Commissioner
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Judgment:
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29 September 2014
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JUDGMENT OF GENDALL J
[1] Before the Court is an application by the appellant Alpine Energy
Limited to reconstitute the present appeal against
a decision of the Human
Rights Review Tribunal as an application for judicial review.
[2] This has proved necessary because the present appeal before this Court (which is to be heard on Friday next, 3 October 2014) is an interlocutory decision of the Human Rights Review Tribunal which in terms of s 123 of the Human Rights Act
1993 it seems is not jurisdictionally open to appeal to this
Court.
[3] On this aspect, in A-G v Child Poverty Action Group Incorporated1 Ronald
Young J confirmed that the wording of s 123 of the Human Rights Act 1993 does
not allow for an appeal from a ruling on an interlocutory
matter.
1 A-G v Child Poverty Action Group Incorporated (HC) Wellington 17 May 2006, CIV-2005-485-
2140.
[4] Before me today there seemed to be a broad measure of agreement
between the parties that, so far as this jurisdictional
point was concerned,
there was a strong argument that an interlocutory decision of the Tribunal such
as the one before the Court
here was not subject to an appeal.
[5] Notwithstanding this, in a later decision of this Court, A-G v
Human Rights Review Tribunal and Child Poverty Action Group
Incorporated,2 Miller J concluded that, notwithstanding the
sections of s 123, it was appropriate for this Court to consider by way of
judicial review
decisions on interlocutory applications made by the Human Rights
Review Tribunal and notwithstanding that no formal appeal might
lie.
[6] This conclusion it seems to me was probably reached on the basis of
balance of convenience considerations, and both the
need for there to be an
appropriate appeal type remedy in these interlocutory situations and also to
enable such matters to be properly
reconsidered where appropriate.
[7] On these aspects I agree with the reasoning of Miller J in the
Attorney- General decision that judicial review does lie in a case such
as the present.
[8] It is my view that the appropriate way forward in this case is for
the present (rather late) application from the appellant
to have this proceeding
reconstituted as an application for judicial review to be granted. This will
enable the substantive hearing
of arguments of the parties to proceed at the
scheduled hearing date on Friday next, 3 October 2014.
[9] For these reasons I now make the following orders:
(a) the purported appeal by the appellant in this proceeding is now
constituted as an application for judicial
review.;
(b)
the appellant by 5 p.m. on 30 September 2014 is to file and serve on all
parties to this proceeding an amended pleading
by way of statement of
claim; and
(c) the substantive hearing of this matter in the High Court at Timaru
on
3 October 2014 will proceed on the basis that this is now a judicial review
application.
...................................................
Gendall J
Solicitors:
Young Hunter, Christchurch
Matthew Palmer, Wellington
Office of the Privacy Commissioner, Wellington
Copy to Respondent
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2014/2381.html