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Pages in category "High Court of New Zealand cases" ... Hopkinson v Police; Hughes v Huppert; J. ... NZI Insurance New Zealand Ltd v Auckland District Court; O.
Brooker v Police; Wholesale Distributors Ltd v Gibbons Holdings Ltd; Commerce Commission v Fonterra Co-Operative Group Ltd; Larsen v Rick Dees Ltd; Maruha Corp and Maruha (NZ) Ltd v Amaltal Corp Ltd; Jiang v R; Arbuthnot v Chief Executive of the Department of Work and Income; Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind v Auckland City Council
The District Court of New Zealand (Māori: Te Kōti ā Rohe) (formerly the district courts before 2016) is the primary court of first instance of New Zealand. There are 59 District Court locations throughout New Zealand (as of 2017). [2] The court hears civil claims of up to $350,000 and most criminal cases. [3]
New Zealand police have charged a 34-year-old man with burglary and arson and said he is due to appear in Auckland District Court on Monday. It was unclear whether the incident was connected to ...
The suspects were identified as a 34-year-old man charged with Patel's murder and aggravated robbery, and a 42-year-old man charged with robbery in relation to the incident. The two suspects appeared in the Auckland District Court where the murder suspect was granted interim name suppression. [17]
The Court of Appeal deals with civil and criminal appeals from matters heard in the High Court, and serious criminal charges from the District Court. Matters appealed to the High Court from the District Court and certain tribunals can be taken to the Court of Appeal with leave, if a second appeal is warranted. The court may also grant leave to ...
A pre-sentence report submitted to the court noted that Samsudeen "had the means and motivation to commit violence in the community" and his risk of reoffending was also considered high. [38] On 16 July 2021, Samsudeen was released on bail by an Auckland District Court judge and was to be monitored by the Special Tactics Group. [30]
A High Court Judge may direct that a serious category 2 and 3 "protocol" offence, such as aggravated wounding with intent, kidnapping or sexual violation of a child, be transferred from the District Court to the High Court for hearing. [5] Most cases are heard before a Judge and jury, but may sometimes be heard before a Judge alone.