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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 14 June 2016
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
CIV-2015-404-2366 [2016] NZHC 1149
BETWEEN
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THE INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF
NEW ZEALAND LIMITED Plaintiff
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AND
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THE NEW ZEALAND QUALIFICATION AUTHORITY Defendant
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Hearing:
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On the papers
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Appearances:
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B O'Callahan and M Chen for plaintiff
R Scott and M Cavanaugh for defendant
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Judgment:
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31 May 2016
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JUDGMENT OF LANG J [on costs]
This judgment was delivered by me on 31 May 2016 at 10.30 am, pursuant to
Rule 11.5 of the High Court Rules.
Registrar/Deputy Registrar
Date...............
THE INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF NEW ZEALAND LTD v THE NEW ZEALAND QUALIFICATION AUTHORITY [2016] NZHC 1149 [31 May 2016]
[1] On 12 April 2016 I issued a judgment in which I granted the application by the International Academy of New Zealand Limited (the Academy) for judicial review of the process that the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (the Authority) adopted in relation to the preparation of a final report dated 2 October 2015.1 I set the report aside by consent because the Authority acknowledged that there were shortcomings on the review process that led to the report being issued. I then made
ancillary directions designed to ensure that the Authority continued with the
review process in a timely fashion.
[2] The parties have been unable to reach agreement regarding costs.
For that reason I am therefore required to determine that
issue.
The arguments
[3] The Academy contends that it is the successful party in that it
obtained the orders that it sought. It therefore seeks
costs on a category 2B
basis in respect of all steps taken in the proceeding.
[4] The Authority accepts that the Academy should receive an award of
costs in relation to the commencement of the proceeding.
It points out,
however, that the Academy did not obtain the remedy it originally sought. It
had originally endeavoured to persuade
the Court that the 2014 review process
should not continue through to completion. It abandoned that stance during the
course of
the hearing. For that reason the Authority contends that costs should
lie where they fall in relation to all steps taken after the
filing of the
statement of defence. Alternatively, the Authority contends that the Court
should exercise its discretion
to award the Academy “a modest
proportion of its costs” after the commencement of the
proceeding.
Decision
[5] I accept that the Academy did not succeed with a major plank of its
original case in that it failed to persuade the Court
that it should order the
2014 review
1 The International Academy of New Zealand Ltd v The New Zealand Qualification Authority
process to be abandoned in its entirety. I also consider, however, that the
Authority failed in relation to one of its major arguments.
This flows from the
fact that the Court made remedial orders that were significantly broader in
scope than those sought by the Authority.
That issue also needs to be factored
into the equation.
[6] I consider the competing positions are best addressed by an award of costs in favour of the Academy calculated at 80 per cent of the costs payable on a category
2B basis in respect of all steps taken after the filing of the statement of defence in which the Authority acknowledged that errors in the process had occurred. The Academy is entitled to costs on a category 2B basis in respect of all steps taken prior to that point. I make an order accordingly. The Academy is also entitled to its
reasonable disbursements as fixed by the
Registrar.
Lang J
Solicitors:
Kirkland Morrison O’Callahan & Ho, Auckland
McElroys, Auckland
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2016/1149.html