Supreme Court case information

Listed below are the substantive Supreme Court cases for the year along with appeals still to be determined or cases awaiting hearing. 

Information giving an overview of the case is included along with media releases and links to judgments being appealed when available.

All 2024 - 2014 Supreme Court cases dismissed or deemed to be dismissed where a notice of abandonment was received can be found here.

Transcripts for cases heard before the Supreme Court are included provided they are not suppressed. Transcripts from pre-trial hearings are not published until the final disposition of trial. These are unedited transcripts and they are not a formal record of the Court’s proceedings. The Ministry of Justice does not accept responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of any material and recommends that users exercise their own skill and care with respect to its use.

8 November 2024

Case information summary 2024 (as at 8 November 2024) –  Cases where leave granted (126 KB)
Case information summary 2024 (as at 8 November 2024)  – Cases where leave to appeal decision not yet made (PDF, 116 KB)

All years

Case name
Y v The Attorney-General
Case number
SC 128/2016
Summary
Civil appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in declining to grant name suppression for proposed witnesses in a case concerning historic sexual abuse allegations. [2016] NZCA 474   CA271/2015
Result
A The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
B We make no award of costs. 7 March 2017
High Court decision
Not publicly available
Leave judgment - leave dismissed
Judgment appealed from
Case name
F v The Queen
Case number
SC 129/2016
Summary
Criminal Appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in finding the jury verdicts were reasonable – Whether the Court of Appeal took the correct approach to an automatism disorder – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in finding that there was no juror impartiality. [2016] NZCA 180 CA705/2015
Result
The application for an extension of time to apply for leave to appeal is dismissed.  
17 March 2017
Leave judgment - leave dismissed
Case name
Gary Owen Burgess v Malley & Co
Case number
SC 130/2016
Summary
Civil Appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in declining to review the Registrar’s decision to decline to dispense with security for costs.  [2016] NZCA 484   CA251/2016
Result
A The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
B The applicant must pay costs of $2,500 to the respondents.
16 February 2017
Leave judgment - leave dismissed
Judgment appealed from

Burgess v Malley & Co [2016] NZCA 484 not available

Case name
Affco New Zealand Limited v New Zealand Meat Workers and related Trades Union Incorporated and Ors
Case number
SC 131/2016
Summary
Civil Appeal – Employment Relations Act 2000 – Whether Court of Appeal erred in finding concession by counsel – Whether Court of Appeal erred in finding applicant’s conduct defeated existing rights of employees – Whether Court of Appeal erred in its interpretation of s 82 of the Employment Relations Act.   [2016] NZCA 482   CA700/2015
Result
A Leave to appeal is granted (AFFCO New Zealand Ltd v New Zealand Meat Workers and Related Trades Union Inc and Ors [2016] NZCA 482).
B The approved question is whether the Court of Appeal was correct to find that a breach of s 82 of the Employment Relations Act 2000 had occurred when the applicant required seasonal workers to enter into new individual employment agreements before commencing work for the 2015/2016 season.
9 March 2017
____________________
A The appeal is dismissed.
B The appellant must pay the first respondent costs of $35,000 plus reasonable disbursements.  We certify for two counsel.
7 September 2017
Case name
W v The Queen
Case number
SC 132/2016
Summary
Order prohibiting publication of the judgment and any part of the proceedings (including the result) in news media or on the internet or other publicly available database until final disposition of trial.  Publication in law report or law digest permitted.                       [2016] NZHC 2401    CRI 2016-087-000335
Result
Judgment released.
Order prohibiting publication of the judgment or any part of the proceedings (including the result) in the news media or on the internet or other publicly available database until final disposition of the trial. Publication in a law report or law digest permitted.                                              
30 November 2016
SC judgment
not publicly available
Judgment appealed from
not publicly available
Case name
Derek Lester King v The Queen
Case number
SC 133/2016
Summary
Criminal appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred by declining to grant further adjournment in the appeal against conviction and sentence.  [2015] NZCA 506   CA7/2013
Result
A notice of abandonment having been lodged, the application is deemed dismissed.
10 April 2017
Case name
Todd Aaron Marteley v The Queen
Case number
SC 134/2016
Summary
Criminal Appeal – Whether the applicant was prevented by counsel error from vacating his guilty plea – Whether the Court of Appeal took insufficient time to consider the applicant’s appeal against sentence.[2016] NZCA 480   CA509/2011
Result
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed. 
13 March 2017
___________
The application for recall is dismissed.
16 May 2017
_______________
The application for recall is dismissed.
8 June 2017
Case name
Eric Meserve Houghton v Timothy Ernest Corbett Saunders, Samuel John Magill, John Michael Feeney, Craig Edgeworth Horrocks, Peter David Hunter, Peter Thomas and Joan Withers, and Credit Suisse Private Equity Inc, and Credit Suisse First Boston Asian Me
Case number
SC 135/2016
Summary
Civil Appeal – Securities Act 1978 – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in its interpretation and application of the Securities Act 1978, ss 2, 55 and 56 – Whether the Court of Appeal findings preclude Fair Trading Act 1986 claims.  [2016] NZCA 493   CA578/2014
Result
A  The appeal in relation to the fourth and fifth respondents is dismissed.
B  The appeal in relation to the first, second and third respondents is allowed to the limited extent described below.
C  The Court of Appeal’s finding that the forecast of revenue for the financial year ended 30 June 2004 (the untrue statement) was, at the time of allotment of the shares offered for subscription in the Feltex prospectus, an untrue statement for the purposes of s 56 of the Securities Act 1978, is upheld.
D  The Court of Appeal’s findings that the untrue statement did not give rise to liability under s 56 of the Securities Act 1978 and was not in breach of s 9 of the Fair Trading Act 1986 are set aside.
E  We find that the untrue statement was in breach of s 9 of the Fair Trading Act 1986.
F  The questions of whether plaintiffs represented by the appellant: (i) invested on the faith of the prospectus in terms of s 56 of the Securities Act 1978 and, if so; (ii) suffered any loss by reason of the untrue statement in terms of s 56 of the Securities Act 1978 and, if so, the quantum of such loss; and (iii) are entitled to any remedy under the Fair Trading Act 1986 are left for resolution by the High Court at the stage 2 hearing.
G  In all other respects, the appeal in relation to the first to third respondents is dismissed.
H  Costs in this Court and the Courts below are reserved. Submissions on costs should be filed and served according to the following timetable: (i) Appellant: 20 working days after the date of this judgment. (ii) First to third respondents: 10 working days after the appellant’s submissions are filed. (iii) Fourth and fifth respondents: 10 working days after the first to third respondents’ submissions are filed. (iv) Appellant in reply: 10 working days after the fourth and fifth respondents’ submissions are filed.
15 August 2018
_________________________________
A The first to third respondents must pay the appellant costs of $30,000 plus usual disbursements.
B Costs in the High Court should be reconsidered by that Court in light of this Court’s judgment in Houghton v Saunders [2018] NZSC 74 and this judgment.
C Costs in the Court of Appeal should be determined in light of this Court’ s judgment in Houghton v Saunders [2018] NZSC 74 and this judgment if the agreement between the parties as to costs in that Court expressly or impliedly allows for such a determination to occur.
22 November 2018
Case name
Glenn Roderick Holland v Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections
Case number
SC 136/2016
Summary
Criminal Appeal – Parole Act 2002, pt 1A – Extended supervision order – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in its interpretation of the Parole Act 2002 – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in its assessment of the gravity of the offending – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in holding that the length of the extended supervision order was proportionate to the risk posed by the defendant.   [2016] NZCA 504   CA119/2016
Result
A The application for leave to appeal is granted in part (Holland v Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections [2016] NZCA 504).B The approved questions are:
(a) Whether offences against the Films, Videos and Publications Classification Act 1993 set out in s 107B(3) of the Parole Act 2002 are relevant only to eligibility for an extended supervision order; and
(b) If they are only relevant to eligibility, whether the extended supervision order should have been made.
C The application for leave to appeal is otherwise dismissed.
8 June 2017
__________________
The appeal is dismissed                                                                    
27 October 2017
Case name
Amanda Adele White and Anne Leoline Emily Freeman v Christopher Maurice Lynch and Stuart Gordon Spence
Case number
SC 137/2016
Summary
Civil Appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in refusing to grant an extension of time to file case on appeal – Whether the Court of Appeal erred in refusing application to debar counsel. [2016] NZCA 513  CA740/2015
Result
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.                                
16 February 2017
________________
A The application to recall the judgment is dismissed.
B We direct the Registrar not to accept any further applications by the applicants in respect of their dispute with the respondents.
16 March 2017