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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 20 October 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND TIMARU REGISTRY
CIV 2014-476-69 [2014] NZHC 2449
BETWEEN
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GABRIELLE PAULETTE MATHIESEN
First Applicant
GORDON WALLACE CAMERON MCNAB and GABRIELLE PAULETTE MATHIESEN, being the
Trustees of the Sweet Pea Family Trust
Second Applicants
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AND
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JAN HENRIK MATHIESEN Respondent
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Hearing:
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On the papers
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Judgment:
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6 October 2014
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JUDGMENT OF MACKENZIE J
I direct that the delivery time of this judgment is
4.15 pm on the 6th day of October 2014.
Copies to: G P Mathiesen, First Applicant
G W C McNab, Second Applicant
J H Mathiesen, Respondent
MATHIESEN v MATHIESEN [2014] NZHC 2449 [6 October 2014]
[1] At the hearing of the purported contempt proceedings on 15
September 2014, Mr McNab made reference to an application for
habeas corpus.
The relevance of that was unclear to me, and the topic was not pursued.
Subsequent to the hearing, the plaintiffs
filed, on 25 September, a document
headed “Application for habeas corpus”. The essence of the
application is said to
be:
... to determine, whether or not being adjudicated bankrupt under the
provisions of Insolvency Act 2006 and its companion-piece the
Insolvency
(Cross-border) Act 2006 has become a “detention” for the purposes of
the law in respect of Habeas Corpus,
in the context of the Imperial Laws
Application Act 1988 following on the Constitution Act 1986.
[2] This application was referred to me. On 3 October 2014, Mr McNab
sent an email to the Registrar, which has also been referred
to me. In it he
says:
... we have no objection for our application being initially considered on
the papers, but, it cannot be disposed of without hearing,
by reason of its
complexity from both a technical and an evidential perspective ...
[3] Section 9(3) of the Habeas Corpus Act 2001 (the Act) requires
that the Registrar must allocate a date for hearing
of applications under that
Act within three working days.
[4] I direct that the Registrar is not to allocate a hearing
date. While the application is entitled a habeas
corpus application, it does
not fall within the scope of the Act. Section 6 of the Act provides the
statutory basis for such an
application. It must be “an application to
challenge the legality of a person’s detention”.
[5] Mrs Mathiesen, to whom the application relates, is not under any
form of detention. The proposition sought to be advanced
is that the
restrictions which are imposed by an adjudication in bankruptcy constitutes a
detention. That is not a tenable or arguable
proposition. There is no basis
upon which I could properly direct that a hearing be held to consider that
submission.
[6] A purported application for habeas corpus, based on similar
grounds, was dealt with on the papers by Whata J on 22 November
2013.1
In that minute he said:
1 An application for Habeas Corpus by G W C McNab and A S Bird HC Timaru CIV-2013-476-
310, 22 November 2013.
[5] I have endeavoured the best I can to understand the basis for the
application for writs of habeas corpus. The allegations
are framed in such a
way as to be largely difficult to comprehend but in short seem to be claiming
that the bankruptcies were not
valid and that the consequences of those
bankruptcies for them are restraints on their liberty from which they should be
freed.
[6] Whatever the validity of the claims made, a writ of habeas corpus
must relate to a “detention”. I do not consider
that the bankruptcy
amounts to the type of “detention” contemplated either at common law
or for the purposes of the
Habeas Corpus Act 2001. Furthermore, I
consider the application to be spurious and fundamentally defective. It is
simply
a collateral challenge to the adjudications of bankruptcy, and an
abuse of process.
[7] On that basis, while I have considered the documents, they are not
to be accepted by the Registry.
[7] A further application for habeas corpus was made, again based on Mrs Mathiesen’s status as an undischarged bankrupt. It was also dealt with, also on the papers by Mander J in a minute dated 28 February 2014.2 He refused the
application. He said:3
An application for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus is not the
appropriate procedure to consider the legitimacy of the bankruptcy
adjudication.
[8] The proposition asserted by this application and the
earlier applications, namely that the making of an order for
adjudication
amounts to a detention, is not arguable. The applicants have been clearly told
that on two occasions, and I say it
again. This application is not an
application to which the Act applies, and the Act has no application to
it.
[9] The application is dismissed.
[10] Under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court, I direct that no
further papers purporting to be an application by or on behalf
of Mrs Mathiesen
for a writ of habeas corpus, asserting her status as an undischarged bankrupt as
a detention, in whatever form that
assertion may be made, are to be accepted for
filing.
“A D MacKenzie J”
2 McNab v Matthews HC Timaru CIV-2014-476-11, 28 February 2014.
3 At [2].
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