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Hong v Auckland Standards Committee no. 5 [2020] NZHC 1572 (3 July 2020)

Last Updated: 1 October 2020


IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TĀMAKI MAKAURAU ROHE
CIV-2019-404-2236 CIV-2020-404-11
[2020] NZHC 1572
UNDER
the Lawyers and Conveyancers Act 2006
IN THE MATTER
of an appeal against a Misconduct Liability decision of the Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal
BETWEEN
BOON GUNN HONG
Appellant
AND
AUCKLAND STANDARDS COMMITTEE NO. 5
Respondent
Hearing:
On the papers
Appearances:
Appellant in person
P Collins for the Respondent
Judgment:
3 July 2020


JUDGMENT OF GAULT J

(Leave to appeal)



This judgment was delivered by me on 3 July 2020 at 4:00 pm pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules 2016.

Registrar/Deputy Registrar

..........................................



Parties / Solicitors:

The Appellant

Mr P Collins, Barrister, Auckland

Mr J Kleinbaum (respondent’s instructing solicitor), New Zealand Law Society, Auckland



HONG v AUCKLAND STANDARDS COMMITTEE NO. 5 [2020] NZHC 1572 [3 July 2020]

Leave to appeal

254 Appeal to Court of Appeal on question of law

(1) Any party to an appeal under section 253(1) who is dissatisfied with any determination of the High Court in the proceedings as being erroneous in point of law may, with the leave of that court, or, if the High Court refuses leave, with the leave of the Court of Appeal, appeal to the Court of Appeal against the determination; and section 56 of the Senior Courts Act 2016 applies to any such appeal.

(2) In determining whether to grant leave to appeal under this section, the Court of Appeal must have regard to whether the question of law involved in the appeal is one that, by reason of its general or public importance or for any other reason, ought to be submitted to the Court of Appeal for its decision.

...

The appeal must raise some question of law or fact capable of bona fide and serious argument in a case involving some interest, public or private, of sufficient importance to outweigh the cost and delay of the further appeal.

1 Hong v Auckland Standards Committee No. 5 [2020] NZHC 744.

2 Auckland Standards Committee 5 v Hong [2019] NZLCDT 28 and [2019] NZLCDT 40.

  1. Sisson v Standards Committee (2) of the Canterbury Westland Branch of the New Zealand Law Society Complaints Service Standards Committee [2014] NZHC 223 at [11]; Deliu v National Standards Committee [2015] NZHC 67 at [17]; Deliu v National Standards Committee of the New Zealand Law Society [2015] NZCA 399 at [18]; Morahan v Wellington Standards Committee 2 [2018] NZHC 1583 at [13]- [14]; Deliu v National Standards Committee and Auckland Standards Committee 1 of New Zealand Law Society [2018] NZHC 2873 at [11]; and J v Auckland Standards Committee 1 [2018] NZHC 789 at [2]- [3].
  2. Waller v Hider [1997] NZCA 221; [1998] 1 NZLR 412 (CA) at 413; Snee v Snee [1999] NZCA 252; (1999) 13 PRNZ 609 (CA) at [22]; and Downer Construction (New Zealand) Ltd v Silverfield Developments Ltd [2007] NZCA 355, [2008] 2 NZLR 591 at [30]- [31].

Questions of law

(a) In the course of a general trust account audit review, is the inspectorate empowered by the Act and the Lawyers and Conveyancers Act (Trust Account) Regulations 2008 (the Regulations) to require production of non-trust account records or documents of clients from a lawyer when the clients have refused to grant consent and had instructed the appellant not to release their files (other than trust account records)?

(b) Is it lawfully correct for the lawyer who had relied on the literal meaning of the Regulations in his decision to abide by his clients’ instructions not to release the files, undertaken a thorough search of judicial decisions affecting the interpretation of the Regulations and found none that is relevant, and not finding any, had decided that he must abide by his clients’ instructions due to the strict duty of confidence owed to his clients as their lawyer and had decided best to seek a judicial determination for a clear ruling thereon, to be held as having misconducted himself pursuant to s 7 of the Act?

(c) As a corollary, is it proper and satisfactory for a lawyer who has come to the view that the inspectorate is not so empowered to require

  1. Deliu v National Standards Committee [2015] NZHC 67 at [18]; Deliu v National Standards Committee of the New Zealand Law Society [2015] NZCA 399 at [18(c)]; and Morahan v Wellington Standards Committee 2 [2018] NZHC 1583 at [10].
production of clients’ non-trust account records as legislated, to go against the clients’ instructions notwithstanding that there is a requirement under the Regulations that requires the inspectorate to keep all such information as provided confidential but the prerogative right whether to trust them rests with the affected clients?

(d) Is the three months’ suspension and the Tribunal’s order requiring the appellant to apply for consent to practise again, under the undisputed circumstances, fair and reasonable in accordance with the objectives and purposes of the Act and judicial principles and precedents on such when it had been a clear ruling the appellant sought and will abide by?

(e) Is the costs award erroneous when, by the literal interpretation of the Act and Regulations, the inspectorate is only entitled to trust account records and as such, this challenge by the appellant is a test case?

Trust account records





6 Hong v Auckland Standards Committee No. 5 [2020] NZHC 744 at [48]- [53].

Misconduct








  1. Hong v Auckland Standards Committee No. 5 [2020] NZHC 744 at [64], having put aside Mr Hong’s subsequent conduct at the Tribunal hearing.

8 At [48] and [54].

9 Keene v Legal Complaints Review Officer [2019] NZCA 559.

10 At [85] and [90].

11 At [87] and [89].

Penalty and costs

Importance or other reason










Gault J









12 Hong v Auckland Standards Committee No. 5 [2020] NZHC 744 at [23]- [24].


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