Overview Flashcards

(49 cards)

1
Q

What is the definition of Tikanga?

A

The first law of New Zealand
Values, customs, practices that operate within te ao Maori
Emphasis on the relationships between people and relationships to the land

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2
Q

Specialist courts are important and needed because…

A
  • The issues raised in certain legal areas may be similar, or unique to the field, and create high volumes of cases
  • A body of specialist judges can deal with the issues more quickly; and perhaps more consistently and accurately
  • A legal area may require specialist expertise or knowledge
    Examples: tribunal court, family court, environment court, māori land court
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3
Q

Ngati apa - timeline of the foreshore and seabed case.

A
  • Ngāti Apa and others bring a case to the māori land court - and they win
  • The government appeals to the high court (and wins)
  • Ngāti Apa appeal to the court of Appeal and WIN!
  • The government responds with a policy and then a bill.
  • The Waitangi tribunal declares that the governments policy is inconsistent with the Treaty of Waitangi.
  • Foreshore and seabed act 2004 gets passed.
  • Eventually we had a change of government, new govt created a new policy to replace the ‘Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004’ which was Marine and Coastal Area Act 2011
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4
Q

Common law explained.

A

We can talk about common law as the law from the courts, vs legislation as law of Parliament. We can also talk about it as being a common law system.
Common laws difference is the courts play a central role in deciding what the law is, and in developing the law.

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5
Q

How did New Zealand get its first parliament?

A

NZ Constitution Act 1852 - Legislation passed by English government for NZ.
It set up an elected body that was called the General Assembly.
Only had power to make laws for peace, order, good government in NZ but couldn’t be repugnant to the law of England.

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6
Q

Describe the similarities between our legal system and Englands.

A

Same institutions:
- courts and parliament
- similar court hierarchy
- Westminster democracies
Methods of lawmaking are the same:
- Lawmaking by elected legislature
- Trial by jury in the courts
- Precedent based decision making through the court (rather than reliance on a comprehensive written code - as in civil law systems)
- Royal assent on our legislation.

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7
Q

Explain ways our legal system now differs from Englands.

A
  • Aspects of our legal system are simpler e.g. we don’t have a separate court of Equity
    ○ We never had a separate court in NZ (could go to one court) better for litigants in our legal system
  • From 1986, our Parliament has total sovereignty over making its own laws - the English parliament cannot do so even if we wanted it to
  • Unlike England we have a unicameral legislature (house of representatives) (England has a bicameral arrangement)
  • We never adopted the strong distinction between barrister/solicitor = more flexibility in our legal profession.
  • Our criminal law is codified (Crimes Act 1961)
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8
Q

5 ways our legal system is unique for NZ context.

A
  • The Waitangi Tribunal investigates breaches of te Tiriti o Waitangi / the Treaty of Waitangi
  • Some English cases are still applied by our courts, others are not.
    ○ We can draw on England but only for when necessary to use decide of we want to apply their English case or use a different rule
  • Our courts draw on tikanga māori
  • We have a raft of legislation that is unique to us / parliament has passed heaps of legislation passed that’s unique for us
    for example, the accident compensation legislation, which means tort law plays a reduced role in our legal system compared with the UK and other common law systems.
  • Te ao Marama (culturally appropriate way to address criminals in NZ)
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9
Q

Why is Tikanga relevant today?

A

Te Tiriti - respecting Tikanga is essential to honouring the treatys principles
Legal system - Tikanga is increasingly being recognised in NZ’s legal system. Tikanga also was the first law of NZ.
People - Using Tikanga supports a more equal society between Māori and Pākeha in NZ
Common law - Tikanga is relevant in developing the common law in NZ.

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10
Q

What are NZ’s 3 authoritative sources of law?

A
  • Legislation
  • Common law
  • Tikanga Māori
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11
Q

What is the Legislatures function?

A

Make legislation, represent voters, debates the law.
Function is law-making and also provides a forum for the scrutiny of government.

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12
Q

What is the Executives function?

A

Formulates policies, enforces the law, administers the law.
Function is to formulate policies to go before parliament, execute and administer Parliaments laws.

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13
Q

What is the Judiciaries function?

A

Makes precedent, interprets the law, reviews executive actions.
Interpret and apply legislation and common law principles, resolve disputes brought before them and holds the government to account by scrutinizing government action (judicial review).

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14
Q

What is delegated legislation?

A

It is “regulations” or “bylaws” that are made by the Executive - it is given the power to do so by the Legislature.

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15
Q

Why do we have/need delegated legislation?

A

Delegated legislation is often less important than statutes or very technical in nature and is better left to experts rather than generalists who sit in Parliament.
- E.g. a local bylaw is a form of delegated legislation made by city and district councils with expert knowledge on their local areas.
Parliament does not have time to pass the huge quantity of delegated legislation.

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16
Q

Why is ‘judicial independence’ important?

A
  • The independence of the judiciary is crucial to maintaining fairness and impartiality in the application of the law.
  • This principle ensures that the judiciary is free from interference by the executive or the legislature, also they are appointed via an independent, apolitical process.
  • Judges make decisions based on the law and legal precedent, not on political pressure.
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17
Q

What sections of the Constitution Act 1986 ensure judicial independence?

A

Section 23 protects judges from government dismissal (except on the grounds of “misbehaviour” or “incapacity” etc).
Section 24 prevents the government from reducing a judges salary while in office.
These protect the judge who delivers a decision unfavourable to the government.

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18
Q

Why is the work of the legislature important to us?

A
  • They represent voters (us)
  • The decisions they make affect us as the legislation they produce we have to abide by.
  • ## Holds the government accountable through scrutinising government actions and policies. Ensures the government acts in public interest.
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19
Q

Why is the work of the Executive important to us?

A
  • Enforce the laws and make sure that they are carried out effectively
  • oversee the functioning of key public services (healthcare, education, transport, social welfare)
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20
Q

Why is the work of the Judiciary important to us?

A
  • Checks on the executive and legislature through judicial review
  • Help maintain social order
    + determine criminal responsibility
    + resolve civil disputes between individuals
  • Help constrain government power
21
Q

Relationship between Judiciary + Executive

A

In judicial review proceedings, courts scrutinise executive action.
- delegated legislation can be challenged under the process of judicial review.
The executive administers laws, while the judiciary reviews executive decisions to ensure they are lawful. The executive appoints judges, but cannot interfere with their decisions.

22
Q

Relationship between Judiciary + Legislature

A

The judiciary resolves disputes by applying Acts of Parliament – and will often need to interpret exactly what an Act means.
- Sometimes legislation is vague or ambiguous, in ways that require judicial interpretation.
The judiciary interprets laws made by Parliament, ensuring they are applied fairly. Parliament can pass new laws in response to judicial interpretations, but cannot influence judicial rulings in individual cases.

23
Q

Relationship between Executive + Legislature

A

Members of the Legislature hold the Executive to account by asking questions in Parliament.
The executive might, when administering legislation, soften or shape its impact.
The legislature passes laws and holds the executive accountable for its actions. The executive implements laws and proposes new legislation.

24
Q

What are 4 principles that underpin the interactions between the 3 branches of government?

A
  • separation of powers
  • checks and balances
  • accountability
  • independence of judiciary
25
How could Te Tiriti fit in our current legal system?
1 Solution - a Tricameral Government an Iwi/Hapū assembly (the rangatiratanga sphere) the Crown in Parliament (the kāwanatanga sphere) a joint deliberative body (the relational sphere) This guarantees Maori rangatiratanga to work alongside what we understand as the current government, while still providing a forum for these authorities to interact/deliberate together. -A solution that guarantees Maori rangatiratanga is important as it was guaranteed to chiefs in Article 1 of Te Tiriti. -However, in Te Tiriti Maori recognise a Pakeha role and interest in Aotearoa from 1840 while still maintaining rangatiratanga, so recognising both spheres as well as creating a space for them to interact is the best roadmap for constitutional justice for te ao Maori. This would lead to a system that maintains the existing structure of our Westminster democracy while also recognising values like whanaungatanga, the value of relationships, that exist in Tikanga -The relationship between the three spheres embodies whanaungatanga
26
How do we learn about Tikanga?
- With cultural awareness - With knowledge of colonisation and its impacts on tikanga
27
What Act was passed that emphasised NZ had inherited all the laws of England?
the English Laws Act 1858. Passed by NZ Parliament.
28
What is a Westminster democracy?
It is a system of government characterised by a ceremonial head of state, a Prime Minister, a Cabinet of 'responsible ministers' and a representative, democratically elected legislature.
29
How did common law develop? How does it continue to develop?
William conquers England (came from France) when king he operated control over the whole land - directed courts to all apply law consistently - a consistent form of law Henry II continues the tradition - very strong central rule / nationalised customs (law that is consistent/common - hence common law). - Writ system applied in precedent In the Courts, if a judge modifies or ignores the precedent, then a new precedent will effectively be created. This is how the common law develops.
30
What did King Henry II introduce?
- the Writ system - Trial by Jury (was already in place but king Henry furthered it)
31
Why is R v Symonds 1847 significant?
It is a New Zealand case affirming the English common law (as a body of law) is now in NZ and will be applied through our courts. All the people who brought it here thought it was a good system of law - bring certainty of rules, everyone would know what the law was, and we would sweep aside the laws of natives and this would be the law that operates.
32
What confirmed that English common law is the law operating in NZ?
The English Laws Act 1858. Yes whole body of English law has come and it has been imported to NZ. Confirming that English common law is the law operating in NZ.
33
What is the Magna Carta 1215?
The king rules in consultation with others - King and his government are not above the law. Nobles got annoyed cause king taxed people a lot of money so he could use the money to wage wars. They made an agreement - called magna Carta.
34
How does the Magna Carta apply in NZ?
New Zealand's Parliament adopted the Magna Carta's ideals of individual liberty and freedom, and the constraint of power.
35
Using the Magna Carta, what did Judges and lawyers find the beginnings of?
- Trial by jury - The principle of 'no punishment without law' - The equity of all before the law
36
How did England get parliament?
- De Montfort set up a parliament - he was a baron who waged war against king and he won (after winning set up parliament) - Designed to be a representative body - would rep the commoners but he lost the support of the Barons (noble people - didn’t want commoners involved) - He is killed and his parliament dies away. - Idea picked up again by King Edward - Adopts De Montford's idea - Creates model parliament with both nobles and commoners - Introduces some reforms. This is the parliament subsequent parliaments will follow. - King Charles I - parliament tries to constrain with the petition of right - Doesn’t like it and he dissolves parliament (rules alone 11 years) - Civil war - parliament and kings army (King James loses) - No king in England - operates like a republic - Parliament appoints its own monarch - William of Orange and Mary - Sovereign but have to accept principles
37
What is the Bill of Rights 1688?
Parliament appoints its own monarch - William of Orange and Mary Sovereign but have to accept principles. (Bill of Rights) - Parliament must meet frequently - Must be able to speak freely - Parliament makes law not the King
38
Judicial independence is very important, what else is important for judges?
Judicial impartiality. Judges must not decide cases in which they, as individuals, have a direct interest.
39
Why are our courts structured in a hierarchy?
- Provides for a system of appeals - Helps determine which cases are binding on other courts (makes the law more efficient and accessible) - Enables the division of judicial workload
40
Should our judiciary be more representative?
It currently is not representative in terms of ethnicity, gender or socio-economic backgrounds. Yes it should, someone from a privileged background may not understand the plight of someone from a very deprived background, Māori may feel misunderstood having to face a non-māori judge.
41
Describe NZ courts hierarchy.
- Supreme Court - Court of Appeal - High Court - District Court - Disputes Tribunal Branches from Court of Appeal: - Māori Appellate Court (appeal to COA) - Māori Land Court - Employment Court (appeal to COA) - Employment Relations Authority
42
What does the Constitution Act 1986 say about Parliament?
Section 14(1) - There shall be a Parliament, which shall consist of the Sovereign (Governor-general) and the House of Representatives. Section 15(1) - Parliament continues to have full power to make new laws.
43
How is Parliaments lawmaking a democratic process?
- Bills are debated by MP's, who we elect - Multiple debates occur, enabling close scrutiny - The public can share their views at select committee
44
What is the Waitangi Tribunal?
A standing (permanent) commission of inquiry tasked with determining whether the Crown actions or omissions are in breach of Treaty principles.
45
What was the result of Ngāti apa?
The courts had the ability to declare that Māori customary rights in the foreshore and seabed still existed. The court of appeal confirmed that the Crown had radical title, BUT this was subject to any existing native title in the land.
46
What is radical title?
- Underlying radical right a sovereign has over their sovereign land (Sovereign property rights after you acquire sovereignty) - Can get it by discovery, cession or conquering.
47
What are customary rights?
- When a state gains sovereignty of another state, indigenous customary rights don’t immediately extinguish. - Exclusive, full and undisturbed possession of the land - Common law - Has to be lawfully extinguished or it will continue
48
How did the British and Māori see the signing of Te Tiriti?
British saw it as a session of sovereignty on the part of Māori. Māori saw it as a commitment to an ongoing governing partnership and a guarantee of their property rights.
49
Why is the ability to appeal important?
- Sometimes the law is unclear. - The appeal system allows senior courts to double check what lower courts have done. Which is especially important when you're dealing with rights.