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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 9 December 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WHANGAREI REGISTRY
CRI-2014-488-000044 [2014] NZHC 3076
BETWEEN
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TROY DANIEL ELLIS
Appellant
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AND
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NEW ZEALAND POLICE Respondent
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Hearing:
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3 December 2014
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Appearances:
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No appearance by Appellant
M A Jarman-Taylor for the Respondent
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Judgment:
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3 December 2014
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ORAL JUDGMENT OF VENNING
J
Solicitors: Crown Solicitor, Whangarei
Copy To: Appellant
ELLIS v NEW ZEALAND POLICE [2014] NZHC 3076 [3 December 2014]
[1] Following a defended hearing in the District Court at Whangarei Troy Ellis was convicted on one charge of driving a motor vehicle while impaired and with blood containing evidence of the use of cannabis. Judge D J McDonald subsequently fined him $250, Court costs $130, analyst’s fees $752.63 and disqualified him from holding or obtaining a driver’s licence for six months from
23 October 2014.
[2] Mr Ellis represented himself before the District Court and filed an
appeal on his own behalf. The appeal was stated to be
against
sentence.
[3] No submissions have been filed on behalf of Mr Ellis in support of
the appeal and when the matter was called this afternoon
there was no appearance
by or on behalf of Mr Ellis.
[4] The notice of the date of the hearing of this appeal was sent to Mr
Ellis at the address he recorded as his address on the
notice of general
appeal.
[5] As there is no appearance in support of the appeal it could be
dismissed for want of prosecution. However, in preparation
for the appeal I
reviewed the appeal file and I am satisfied that on its merits there is no
substance to the appeal against sentence
and indeed, for that matter, of any
prospect of an appeal against conviction succeeding.
[6] The Judge in a carefully considered reserved decision correctly
identified the elements of the offending, rehearsed and
considered the evidence
relating to those elements, and found each of the elements proved beyond
reasonable doubt. In those circumstances
a conviction was
inevitable.
[7] The sentence imposed, bearing in mind the maximum penalty available
for offending of this nature, was towards the lower
end of the scale and the
period of disqualification is the minimum period prescribed by law.
[8] In the circumstances the appeal is dismissed on its
merits.
Venning J
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2014/3076.html