JUSTICE DUFFY, Ailsa (Alisa) DUFFY J Auckland High Court Judge
Professional Data
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| Postion & Titles: |
QC |
| Judge of: |
High Court, Auckland, appointed 2007 |
Previously well-connected to various government and bureaucratic functionaries |
| Specializations and Professional Interests: |
Worked as a 'go-go' dancer in the 1970's at the old Monaco Club in Auckland. Justice Duffy is a woman who knows how to 'work' a room. See reported decisions (below). Areas of professed legal specialisation include Civil litigation, intellectual property, health and medical, property, public law, Treaty of Waitangi, Trusts, Fisheries, Insolvency and human rights. |
| Professional Comments: |
Justice Ailsa Duffy plays both sides of the fence effectively. Duffy J is well connected and knows how to work the system extremely well, particularly one dominated by old men.
Justice Duffy's judicial appointment was preceeded by a two year stint where Duffy J acted as
Judicial Conduct Commissioner's Ian Haynes 'independent' expert adviser. In this capacity, Ailsa Duffy was expected to confirm various formal complaints of judicial misconduct held no merit. The JCC would then report that he had sought 'independent' advice and this advice told him there was no merit to the complaint. Ingenious really. JCC could not be held accountable because he truly relied on 'expert advice' in finding no judicial misconduct occurred. AND the 'expert advisor' (Duffy) could not be held accountable because she had no fiduciary responsibility to the Crown or Parliament. One hand legally washes the other.
Ailsa Duffy was paid extremely well and proved herself an exemplary performer in this role. It is widely accepted that her own judicial appointment was because she saved a large portion of the NZ judiciary from scandal or embarassment (of which her own murky background only helps). |
| Background / Education: |
Justice Duffy graduated from Auckland Girls Grammar School and obtained a LLB and then LLM (Hons) from Auckland University.
In the 1970's Justice Duffy worked as a go-go dancer at the old Monaco Club in Auckland. Justice Duffy practised predominantly as a barrister from 1980-1988 when she joined the Crown Law Office. Justice Duffy returned to the independent bar in 1996 and was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1998.
Justice Duffy also served as the Chair of the Ministerial Committee of Inquiry into the Under-reporting of Cervical Smear Abnormalities in the Gisborne region.
Admitted as Barrister and Solicitor of the High Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria, Australia in 1986. LLM (Hons) Master of Laws with Honours, Auckland University in 1995
[Unpublished LLM thesis "Constraints on the Use and Disclosure of Confidential Information Held by the Crown"]. |
| Degrees: |
LLB, Auckland Univeristy 1977, LLM (Hon.), Auckland University 1995 |
| Admitted to the Bar: |
1979 |
| Company Involvements: |
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Personal Data |
| Born: |
1956 |
Sex: |
Female |
| Married: |
19 |
Children: |
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| Interesting Relationships and Coincidences: |
Her past close relationship with the
Judicial Conduct Commissioner of New Zealand virtually guarantees her immunity unless she whips out a gun and shoots someone in her Courtroom before two rolling cameras. |
| Miscellaneous: |
Comes to the Bench as an 'Old Girl' who desperately wants to be an 'Old Boy'. Too soon to tell whether Duffy J will rise to the noble calling she has been given, but most legal insiders doubt whether this leopard is capable of changing her spots. The conventional wisdom says the fulfilling of such reasonably high expectations is inversely proportional to the free reign NZ judges are typically given. |
REPORTED DECISIONS
Harvey Corporation v Baker [2002] 2 NZLR 213 (Commercial Law, Fair Trading Act 1986)
Official Assignee v Chief-Executive of the Ministry of Fisheries [2002] 2 NZLR 722 (judicial review Fisheries Act 1996)
Proceedings Commissioner v Ali Hatem [1999] 1 NZLR 305 (Partnership Act 1908)
Director of Social Welfare v Disputes Tribunal (1998) 12 PRNZ 639 HC (jurisdiction for judicial review of Disputes Tribunal decision
Peters v Davison (No 3) (1998) 18 NZTC 14, 027 (Judicial review taxation commissions of inquiry)
Rawlinson v Rice (1998) 12 PRNZ 639 (admissibility of reasons for judgment in another proceeding)
Rawlinson v Rice [1998] 1 NZLR 454(ruling on the nature of public officer)
Rawlinson v Rice [1997] 2 NZLR 651 (Strike out misfeasance in public office)
Sigma Agencies Ltd v Collector of Customs (Northern Region) [1997] 1NZLR 467 (statutory appeal Customs Act 1966 re customs valuation)
Cashmere Pacific Ltd v New Zealand Dairy Board [1996] 1 NZLR 218 HC ( s 62 Companies Act 1955, negligence)
Re Collier (A Bankrupt) [1996] 2 NZLR 438 CA (R46 costs awards to lay litigants).
Cooper v Attorney-General [1996] 3 NZLR 480 (judicial review) privative clause judicial review s282GA Fisheries Act (1983)
Davidson v Ross [1996] 3 NZLR 340 (statutory immunity Children & Young Persons and Their Families Act 1990)
Natural Selection Clothing Ltd v Commissioner of Trademarks [1996] 2 NZLR 148 CA (judicial review of Commissioner of Trademarks)
Gazley v Attorney-General (1995) 8 PRNZ 313 CA (Declaratory judgment Law Practitioners Act)
TV3 Network Services Ltd v Broadcasting Standards Authority [1995] 2 NZLR 720 (privacy principles Broadcasting Act)
Attorney-General v Davidson [1994] 3 NZLR 143 CA (Official Information Act 1982 statutory immunity)
Childs v Hillock [1994] 2 NZLR 65 CA(medical negligence, Accident Compensation legislation)
Talley's Fisheries Ltd v Minister of Immigration (1994) 7 PRNZ 469 HC (r 78 and joinder of parties)
Attorney-General v Hill (1993) 7 PRNZ 20 HC (vexatious litigant Judicature Act 1908)
Childs v Hillock [1993] NZAR 249 HC, (1993) 7 PRNZ 16 (strike out)
Southern Ocean Trawlers Ltd v Director-General of Agriculture & Fisheries [1993] 2 NZLR 53 CA (Strike out, judicial review s 28Z Fisheries Act 1983)
Dentice v Valuers-Registration Board [1992] 1 NZLR 720 HC (Common law absolute immunity of witnesses)
Re Watson (1992) 6 NZCLC 68,181 HC (Declaratory judgment on meaning of s 65 Corporations (Investigations and Management) Act 1989)
Donovan v Graham (1991) 4 PRNZ 311 HC (admissibility of affidavit)
Collector of Customs v Graham [1990] 1 NZLR 615 HC (judicial review, requirements of record of proceedings)
Northern Roller Mill Co Ltd v Commerce Commission [1990] NZAR 112 HC (s 20 Acts Interpretation Act)
Commerce Commission v Fletcher Challenge Ltd [1989] 2 NZLR 554 HC
(ss 2,47,48,50,51,66,67,84,85 and 89 Commerce Act 1986)
Commerce Commission v Fletcher Challenge (No1) (1989) 2 PRNZ 1 HC (Admissibility of documents)
Commerce Commission v Fletcher Challenge (No2) (1989) 2 PRNZ 5 HC (answers to interrogatories: leave to file during trial)
Commerce Commission v Fletcher Challenge (No3) (1989) 2 PRNZ 10 HC (R490 High Court Rules: nonsuit application)
Commerce Commission v Fletcher Challenge (No4) (1989) 2 PRNZ 15 HC (discovery: waiver legal privilege)
R v Murphy (1988) 3 CRNZ 342 HC (admissibility of confession)
T v Attorney-General (1988) 4 NZFLR 582 HC (Breach of confidence, privacy)
R v Misitea [1987] 2 NZLR 257 CA (Criminal appeal against conviction and sentence)
Chiu v Richardson [1983] NZLR 513 CA (judicial review Immigration Act 1964)
JUSTICE ENQUIRY EXPOSES BUREAUCRAT PULLING STRINGS
20 November 2009
Increasingly New Zealanders consider access to justice is based on who you are rather than the law. Now, an internal Ministry of Justice document has come to light which seems to support that view.
It started with environmentalist Bruce Stuart-Menteath filing a formal complaint against Provision Security Ltd over an alleged altercation while determining population levels of the spotted kiwi near a Solid Energy coal-mining facility in March 2007. That complaint was dismissed by "Registrar" Gary Harrison last year after he moved the date of hearing up a day at the last minute and Stuart-Menteath failed to attend.
Mr Harrison, a practising barrister in Auckland, has judicial powers over actions of Private Investigators and Security Guards under the Private Investigators and Security Guards Act 1974. He is perhaps better known as a founding director of 'Judge incubator' Shortland Chambers and assisting counsel in the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Mt Erebus Air Crash.
Stuart-Menteath lodged a complaint to the Ministry of Justice against Registrar Harrison. This complaint alleged that under s56 of the Act, Harrison was required to give 14 days notice of any change to a hearing date.
After lodging his complaint against Harrison, Stuart-Menteath received a letter from then-Associate Minister of Justice Clayton Cosgrove informing him his complaint had been rejected. Cosgrove's rejection was ambiguous other than to state
"Mr Harrison... strongly rebuts your claims."
Stuart Menteath responded with an OIA request seeking the documents and correspondence the Associate Justice Minister relied upon in rejecting his complaint. In reply the Minister admitted to three documents but only released two: namely his request of Mr Harrison for a response to the complaint, and Mr Harrison's six page reply which began with
"To reply in detail to a letter of such complexity would be impracticable,". The Associate Minister claimed legal privilege on the third document, which was not identified. He expressed his decision that public interest of such disclosure was "on balance" not justified.
It turns out the third document was a 5 September 2008 letter from Ministry of Justice Chief Counsel Jeff Orr to Associate Justice Minister Cosgrove. Mr Orr has achieved relative infamy as the lawyer who claimed Judges make up their own rules and are not accountable to Parliament - or anyone.
Kiwisfirst has obtained a copy of this 5 September memo from Mr Orr to Mr Cosgrove. The letter appeals to the Minister to sign an "attached" letter rejecting Mr Stuart-Menteath's complaint. From its content, it appears that Mr Cosgrove's rejection letter to Stuart-Menteath was the unadulterated attachment written and fed to him by Mr Orr. Surprisingly, that rejection letter ignored the straightforward evidence to the contrary and advised that the conflict turned on the credibility of Stuart-Menteath and the Old-Boy Harrison, decreeing Harrison was the obvious winner.
Considering the rules and evidence were too clear to be ignored, Stuart-Menteath filed application in the High Court of Christchurch for judicial review of Registrar Harrison's decision in his complaint against Provision Security Ltd. That matter was heard on 28 July 2009. Noting Mr Stuart-Menteath's "stubbornness and practicality" in his submissions, Judge Fogarty quashed both decisions rendered against him by Mr Harrison. Fogarty J concluded
"Accordingly, the outcome of this case is that the plaintiff's complaint still stands. The Registrar will need to set a new time and place for hearing of the complaint."
With this history between the two men, it is questionable whether Stuart-Menteath will fare any better before Mr Harrison in the second round. BACK TO FRONT PAGE
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