International Academy of New Zealand v New Zealand Qualification Authority

Case

[2016] NZHC 1702

26 July 2016

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV-2015-404-2366 [2016] NZHC 1702

BETWEEN

THE INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF

NEW ZEALAND Plaintiff

AND

THE NEW ZEALAND QUALIFICATION AUTHORITY Defendant

Hearing: 26 July 2016

Appearances:

B OʼCallaghan and M Chen for plaintiff
R Scott and M Cavanaugh for Defendant

Judgment:

26 July 2016

JUDGMENT OF LANG J

[on application for interim relief pending appeal]

This judgment was delivered by me on 26 July 2016 at 12.30 pm, pursuant to Rule 11.5 of the High Court Rules.

Registrar/Deputy Registrar

Date……………

INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF NEW ZEALAND v THE NEW ZEALAND QUALIFICATION AUTHORITY [2016] NZHC 1702 [26 July 2016]

[1]      On 12 April 2016 I delivered a judgment in this proceeding in which I upheld an application for review by the International Academy of New Zealand Limited (the Academy)  of  decisions  made  by  the  New  Zealand  Qualification Authority  (the Authority).1    The Academy has now appealed to the Court of Appeal against my direction that the Authority should continue with the process to produce a new 2014

EER report.  The Court of Appeal has placed the appeal on the fast track and it will be heard on 8 September 2016.

[2]      The Academy now applies for interim relief under r 12.3(b) of the Court of Appeal (Civil) Rules 2005 (the Rules).  It asks the Court to make an order that the Authority should not continue with the process necessary to produce the 2014 EER report pending determination of the appeal.

Relevant principles

[3]      As filed, I consider that the application is in fact an application under r

12.3(a) of the Rules for stay of execution of the judgment pending appeal.

[4]      Counsel for the Authority has referred me to Keung v GBR Investments, in which the Court of Appeal identified factors likely to be relevant to the exercise of the discretion to stay execution of a judgment.2   The Court is required to balance the successful litigant’s rights to the fruits of the judgment against the need to preserve the position in case the appeal is successful.3    Factors that may be relevant in this context are:

(a)       Whether the appeal may be rendered nugatory by the lack of a stay. (b)        The bona fides of the applicant as to the prosecution of the appeal.

(c)       Whether the successful party will be injuriously affected by the stay.

1      The International Academy of New Zealand Ltd v The New Zealand Qualification Authority

[2016] NZHC 640.

2      Keung v GBR Investments [2010] NZCA 396, [2012] NZAR 17 at [11].

3      Dymocks Franchise Systems (NSW) Pty Ltd v Bilgola Enterprises Ltd (1999) 3 PRNZ 48 (HC) at

[9].

(d)      The effect on third parties.

(e)       The novelty and importance of questions involved. (f) The public interest in the proceeding; and

(g)      The overall balance of convenience.

[5]      In addition the Court may take into account the apparent strength of the appeal.

Events since the judgment

[6]      Following delivery of my judgment the Authority has sought to carry out the directions  contained  within  it.  It  appointed  a  new  review  team  and  provided Academy with a copy of its new draft report on 8 July 2016.

[7]      The  Academy  raises  a  number  of  concerns  regarding  the  process  the Authority has used to produce its current draft report.  It is also concerned that the Authority gave it just ten days to comment on that document.  The Academy says this was manifestly inadequate to enable it to give proper consideration to the draft report given the fact that it relates to 2014, but relies on material gathered in 2016. For that reason the Academy originally proposed not to make any comment in relation  to  the  draft  report.    Rather,  it  intended  to  ask  for  the  report  to  be reconsidered once the Authority had issued the draft report in its present form as a final report.  When it filed the present application the Academy anticipated that this would occur on or about 22 July 2016.

[8]     The Academy would then have ten days within which to apply for reconsideration of the report.   It anticipated that the Authority might reject this request.   It also anticipated that the Authority would then move immediately to publish the final report without further amendment.  The Academy says it would be significantly prejudiced by this because the report would be in the public arena in circumstances where its  appeal had not been heard and it  has had  an  adequate opportunity to respond to draft versions of the report.

[9]      Matters  have  moved  on  since  the Academy  filed  the  present  application because the parties are now in discussions regarding the period the Academy should have to provide submissions in respect of the draft report.   Those discussions are ongoing, and are likely to mean that there is little prospect the report will reach the reconsideration stage before the appeal is heard.   The Academy nevertheless maintains its application for stay of the judgment because the costs it will incur if the report process is required to continue will be wasted if its appeal is successful.

Decision

[10]     I accept that the Academy is prosecuting its appeal on a bona fides basis. This is demonstrated by the fact that it has agreed to have the appeal placed on the fast track and a fixture has been allocated.  I therefore do not consider the Academy is using the appeal process to further delay production of the 2014 report.   I also acknowledge that any continuation of the production of the report will result in the Academy incurring further costs that will be wasted if its appeal is successful.

[11]     Although, strictly speaking, the Authority would not be injuriously affected by an order halting the process, I consider it to be in the public interest that the process of producing the 2014 report should continue without further delay.   It is unlikely that a decision would be released by the Court of Appeal before the end of September.   A stay of execution would therefore require the report process to be halted for two to three months in circumstances where there has already been considerable delay in producing the report.   I do not consider it unreasonable to require the Academy to provide its response to the draft report even though the cost of doing so may ultimately be wasted if the appeal is successful.   Furthermore, although I acknowledge the arguments to be made in support of the appeal, I do not consider them to be sufficiently compelling to outweigh the public interest in continuing with the process of completing the 2014 report in an expeditious yet fair manner.

[12]     I  have  therefore  concluded  that  the  production  of  the  report  should  be permitted to continue notwithstanding the imminence of the appeal.   As a backstop position, however, that process is not to continue further if the Authority refuses to

permit the new draft report to be subject to the reconsideration process.   The process should stop at that point, and await the outcome of the appeal.  To avoid confusion, this direction should not be taken as preventing the Academy from taking such steps as it might consider necessary to challenge any decision by the Authority not to permit the final report from being subject to the reconsideration process.

[13]     The conclusion I have reached will enable the process of producing the 2014 report to continue further whilst at the same time preserving the Academy’s position in relation to the appeal and publication of the final report.

Orders

[14] The application for stay is granted to the extent set out at [12] above.

Costs

[15]     Both parties have succeeded to some extent and they are endeavouring to work co-operatively regarding the new draft report.   For that reason my tentative view is that costs in relation to the present application should lie where they fall.  If either party disagrees, brief memoranda can be filed addressing the issue of costs and I will determine it on the papers.

Leave reserved

[16]     Leave  continues  to  be  reserved  to  both  parties  in  terms  of  [54]  of  my substantive judgment.  This would permit them to seek further directions in the event that they cannot reach agreement regarding the time that should be given to the

Academy to respond to the new draft report.

Lang J

Solicitors:

Kirkland Morrison O’Callahan & Ho, Auckland

McElroys, Auckland

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Cases Citing This Decision

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Cases Cited

2

Statutory Material Cited

1

Keung v GBR Investment Ltd [2010] NZCA 396