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Canterbury Law Review |
Last Updated: 29 April 2013
BOOK REVIEW
RICK BIGWOOD (EDITOR) THE PERMANENT NEW ZEALAND COURT OF
APPEAL ESSAYS ON THE FIRST 50 YEARS
Hart Publishing, Oxford and
Portland, Oregon, 2009, 404pp, rrp $194
Reviewed by Associate Professor
Ursula Cheer, School of Law, University of Canterbury
This extensive collection of essays put together by the prolific and seasoned
legal editor, Rick Bigwood, is a rich retrospective
of the Court's
jurisprudence, and includes abundant statistics, legal, theoretical and
historical analysis, the odd biographical
snapshot of some of the judges, and
one or two photos. In its black dust jacket emblazoned with a silver fern, the
book rather disconcertingly
reminded me of All Black regalia. Still, I can
report that this is a game in 9 chapters and legal discourse is the winner on
the
day. The book arose from a day-long conference held by the Legal Research
Foundation in March 2008. The Foundation deliberately chose
legal academics in
the main to present papers. This has produced a set of essays of some depth but
considerable variety, and means
the volume repays a steady read.
Being
empirically inclined, I turned first to the back of the book, where past
President, Sir Ivor Richardson, treats the reader to
a glance at an insider's
scrapbook. Chapter 9 is made up of diverse materials relating to the Court,
including an historical outline,
a discussion of procedures and pattern of
citation, decision output together with appeal and workload statistics, and
accompanying
tables and graphs. There are broad comparisons with overseas
jurisdictions, for example, the Court stood out in allowing approximately
50% of
civil and criminal appeals, while overseas appeal bodies were not as
even-handed. Sir Ivor concludes that the Court has truly
become an indigenous
but open-minded body. Although some of the other chapters belie this view in
certain areas, it seems a sustainable
overall conclusion. Conclusions from the
statistics are harder to generalise about — for example, Sir Ivor
hesitates to suggest
why the current clerks he asked to list the most
significant decisions of the Court generally chose differently from members of
the
judiciary and the senior bar. However, the former President is keen to
promote further empirical research and so the chapter also
contains a very clear
suggestion for a citation project which would make an excellent proposal for
some enterprising legal researcher.
I did wonder why Chapter 9 was not placed
at the start of the book, as seems its natural place. However, on finishing it,
I could
see that perhaps the numerous tables and other accompanying data were
better placed at the end as Appendices. In any event, Emeritus
Professor Jim
Evans leads off the book with his partially empirical study of precedent in the
permanent Court of Appeal. This chapter
also comes with two appendices: one is a
table of the outcome of reviews since 1986, and the other deals with the
increase in the
length of judgments. Apart from this, the chapter is an analysis
of how the Court took unto itself greater freedoms in terms of precedent;
freedom from being bound by the House of Lords and the Privy Council, and
finally, freedom from its own decisions. Evans identifies
this as a sea-change
which was inevitable historically, but which has resulted in an unprincipled
approach to use of overseas authority.
In rejecting a view of the Court as
having a conscious law-reforming role, the analysis is essentially a
conservative one. Evans
also sees the developing Bill of Rights jurisprudence as
destructive of stare decis in encouraging searches of overseas cases and
reports. He seeks the wraithes of certainty and predictability, and is
uncomfortable with the 'difficult choices between values'
which necessarily
accompany nascent human rights law. Although Evans expresses less concern in
relation to the overruling of the
Court's own decisions, he again rejects any
perceived reforming zeal, dislikes clever avoidance of precedent by, for
example, arguing
by analogy with statute, and would only have cases overruled if
they are not only wrong but also cause harm. This harm requirement
is itself
apparently incapable of clear definition, and Evans acknowledges it is not a
simple concept. Thus broad social harm will
do, as well as occasional injustice
or inconsistency with general principle. This does not appear to deliver any
greater certainty.
Readers of this chapter will find they either agree with
Professor Evans or not. Nonetheless, the essay is useful in questioning
our
notions about precedent, and in testing the 'factors' which tend to be used by
the Court when applying precedent against a number
of conservative assertions
about certainty and predictability.
These two empirical studies bookend a
variety of other essays about the Court of Appeal. These include quite detailed,
micro-analyses
of specialised areas of the law, such as the piece by Professor
Stephen Todd on accident compensation and tort litigation in New
Zealand. As
Todd points out, New Zealand's ACC regime is unique in the world, and in that
sense, the decisions of the Court about
its various and endless statutory
manifestations are also unique. Although the chapter concludes that the Court of
Appeal will continue
to play a central role in this area of the law, it appears
to be largely at the mercy of whatever the government of the day thinks
about
the scheme, in terms of the actual questions it will be called upon to decide.
For that reason, it is probably sensible for
the focus of this chapter to be on
particular self-contained issues arising under the current scheme, such as
definitional problems
relating to injury, and the place of exemplary
damages.
Professor Philip Joseph also presents a fairly specialised analysis
of the Court's role in the development of administrative law,
as do Professor
Peter Watts in relation to company law and Dr Julie Maxton in a short chapter on
aspects of equity in commercial
dealings. The latter two use a close analysis of
chosen cases, while the chapter on administrative law tends to interrogate the
dicta
of individual judges. Joseph concludes that while the Court of Appeal has
tended to follow the United Kingdom rather than lead, its
method of application
has been original and compelling. Maxton focuses on three rather disparate
issues in which she considers the
Court has played a significant role —
the elasticity of the fiduciary principle, developments in relation to causation
and
remedies, and third parties and their role in fiduciary breach. The chapter
comes to a slightly abrupt halt, without any overall
conclusion. Readers will be
conscious that Watts has made his topic fit the brief, in that he is forced to
admit the comprehensive
1993 companies legislation removed much of the impact of
previously important decisions of the Court in this area. Nonetheless, within
these confines, Watts presents an engaging discussion of cases which continue to
have international impact, and of Court of Appeal
decisions that went on to the
Privy Council, which then stole the thunder of the New Zealand court. He
scatters throughout interesting
anecdotal titbits, such as that Henry J who sat
in Welsh v Nilsson was not a permanent member of the Court, but was
nearly permanent in other ways, dying in 2007 aged 105.
The three essays
remaining I found the most accessible and compelling, though this of course
simply reflects my own inclinations.
These pieces do not hesitate to offer
constructive critical analysis. Professor Tony Smith discusses the criminal
appeal work of
the Court, in a chapter that is part historical, part empirical
and part comparative with the United Kingdom. He concludes that apart
from the
question of a need to reintroduce a leave to appeal requirement, and the
increasing prominence of miscarriage of justice
applications, the original
objectives of having a permanent court — heightened expertise, speed,
greater uniformity, harmony
and certainty, have been met. He does, however,
suggest that unmeritorious appeals are diverting resources in the system, and
could
be weeded out by a legislated leave to appeal regime which would not
breach the BORA or international obligations so long as it allowed
for full
consideration of the nature of the case. Using his experience in advocating for
a new body to deal with miscarriages of
justice in the United Kingdom, Smith
also suggests a Criminal Cases Review Commission might be a good idea here, even
though it can
be seen as a concession that the judicial process is not
infallible, and is therefore something of a sensitive issue. He points out
that
ordinary, rather than high profile, cases, convinced him in the UK.
In
Chapter Eight, Associate Professor Richard Boast openly takes a largely
historical approach to what he describes as three clear
phases in the legal
relationship between Maori and the Crown. These he identifies as investigation
by the Maori Land Court of matters
of title, pronouncements by the Court of
Appeal on the interpretation of statutory references to the Treaty of Waitangi,
and the
current period of direct settlement between Maori and Crown in which,
apart from the momentous Foreshore and Seabed decision known
as Ngati Apa,
it appears the Court has largely ceased to engage on these issues. After
Ngati Apa, Boast suggests, it is clear that native title is recognised in
New Zealand common law, which represents a significant shift in stance,
attitude, and legal style and culture. Since it came from the Court of Appeal,
he regrets the Court's apparent withdrawal from this
arena and expresses the
hope that it will continue to play an important role of some kind in the future.
While settlements are negotiated
directly, this seems unlikely.
The chapter
by co-authors, Professors Mark Henaghan and Nicola Peart, has the challenging
title, 'The Elusiveness of Equality' and
deals with 50 years of relationship
property appeals. Here, the authors develop a clear and attractive thesis that
suggests the Court
has had to be prodded by Parliament to develop the law and
that we have lagged behind the United Kingdom as well when dealing with
the
assessment of the contributions made to a marriage by a principal earner as
compared to those made by the primary homemaker.
The authors deftly use case law
to demonstrate that the Court has been prepared to forge ahead in defining
relationship property
reasonably broadly, but not in the area of recognising
equal contributions where these are non-pecuniary. This is a well-presented
and
convincing polemic which concludes with a challenge to the Court that equality
still remains elusive for primary home-makers.
The book will appeal to
academics and those with a particular interest in the Court of Appeal, but it
also has valuable general appeal
as a resource document in terms of the
empirical data contained not only in the first and last chapters, but also found
in other
contributions. Smith, Joseph and Watts all burst into empiricism at
various junctures. The LexisNexis and Westlaw search engines
mean that reviews
of the law can now go beyond case analysis and speculation, although it is
important to acknowledge the limitations
of such exercises. The other valuable
feature of the essays as resource material is the historical material.
The
best essays here are those which offer a mix of detailed contextual analysis and
broad longitudinal conclusions about the work
of the Court. It is too easy to
get mired in annual reviews in our areas of expertise and not see the bigger
picture. However, although
the topics generally are well chosen and presented,
perhaps it would have added to the depth of coverage, if there had been an
analysis
of the rights jurisprudence of the Court. Although the BORA was enacted
in 1990, some time into the 50 years of the permanent Court,
it was nearly
twenty years old at the time these articles were written. What is more, the
Court of course made pronouncements on
rights before passage of that Act. It
would have been useful and stimulating to see a review of pre- and post-BORA
jurisprudence.
This might also have given us some clues about what will, I am
sure, become a growth area for the Court of Appeal in the future.
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