Greer v Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections HC Ak CIV 2010-485-000098

Case

[2010] NZHC 92

27 January 2010

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND

WELLINGTON REGISTRY

CIV-2010-485-000098

BETWEEN  ALAN IVO GREER

Applicant

ANDCHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS Respondent

Hearing:         27 January 2010

Counsel:         Applicant in Person

V E Casey for Respondent

Judgment:      27 January 2010

ORAL JUDGMENT OF RONALD YOUNG J

[1]      The applicant (Mr Greer) seeks a writ of habeas corpus.   Mr Greer says his

remand in custody by a District Court Judge was unlawful.

[2]      In  Mr  Greer’s  proceedings,  the  respondent  is  described  as  District  Court Judge.  That is not correct.  The respondent is the person in whose custody Mr Greer resides.   That is the Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections.   Mr Greer’s proceedings  will  therefore  be  amended  to  describe  the  respondent  as  the  Chief Executive of the Department of Corrections.

[3]      On 6 January 2010, Mr Greer was released on parole after a substantial term

of  imprisonment.   The  Department  of  Corrections  considered  Mr Greer  had  not complied with his conditions of parole. They charged him with an offence pursuant

to s 71 of the Parole Act 2002 of breach of the  Parole  Board’s release conditions.

Mr Greer was summonsed to appear at the Masterton District Court on  21 January

ALAN IVO GREER V CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS HC WN CIV-

2010-485-000098  27 January 2010

2010.  Mr Greer appeared in Court on that date to answer his summons.  He entered

a plea of not guilty and elected trial by jury.   In a Memorandum filed in support of

his application, Mr Greer claims that the “Probation Services” sought conditions of bail  for  his  remand.      Mr Greer  objected  to  the  conditions  of  bail  sought  by Corrections.  He sought a remand at large.  Mr Greer said that he had told the Court that he would not comply with bail conditions.  Ultimately, the District Court Judge presiding remanded Mr Greer in custody,  adjourning the proceedings to 10 February 2010.

[4]      The  Department  of  Corrections  has  produced  the  warrant  of  commitment relating to Mr Greer dated 21 January 2010 signed by the District Court Judge.

[5]      Mr Greer’s  complaints  are  that  the  Department  of  Corrections  should  not have sought conditions of bail and the Judge was wrong to indicate support for such conditions.   He says further he should not  have  been remanded in custody and, in any event,  the  warrant  of  commitment  is  unlawful  because  it  was  for  greater  than eight days without his consent, in breach of statutory provisions.

[6]      Mr Greer faces the predicament of s 14(2)(b) of the Habeas Corpus Act 2001.

It provides that in considering such an application a Judge is not entitled to call into question a ruling as to bail by a Court of competent jurisdiction.

[7]      This challenge to a remand in custody is a challenge to a ruling as to bail (see

s 7(5) and s 28 of the Bail Act 2000 and Taylor v Superintendent of the Waikato Bay

of Plenty Regional Prison [2002] NZAR 425).

[8]      The District Court was a  Court  of  competent  jurisdiction  and  the  District

Court Judge had jurisdiction to remand Mr Greer in custody pursuant to ss 46 and 47

of the Summary Proceedings Act 1957.  Section 46 also entitled the Judge to remand Mr Greer  for  more  than  eight  days  in  custody  without  his  consent.   Mr Greer  can challenge  the  remand  in  custody  by  an  appeal  to  the  High  Court,  or  a  further application  for  bail  in  the  District  Court. Mr Greer  will  also,  however,  need  to understand that whilst he can make submissions on bail and on the conditions to be

imposed on bail, he cannot decide the case himself.   I am satisfied that there is no

jurisdiction to grant this application.  The application will be dismissed.

Ronald Young J

Solicitors:

A I Greer, Rimutaka Prison, PO Box 47-901, Upper Hutt
Crown Law, PO Box 2858, Wellington email:  victoria[email protected]

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