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| COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT IS ILLEGAL 
 
 
 Public Interest in Private Bodies: FINNIGAN v NZRFU
 Background
 Maori players always excluded from All Black tours to South Africa(1928, 1949)
 Apartheid system in South Africa from 1948
 1960 “No Maoris No Tour” campaign but NZRFU continued policy of excluding Maori
 United Nations sanctions against SA
 1973 Labour Government called off tour SA tour to NZ
 1977 Commonwealth Gleneagles agreement: Govt’s to discourage sporting contacts with SA
 1981 SA Tour in NZ
 1981 NZRFU invited SA to tour NZ
 PM Muldoon ‘discouraged’ but refused to intervene, election bonus
 Country & families divided
 Legal challenges failed
 Mass disobedience, riots , arrests: 300,000 protested
 1985 proposed NZ tour to SA
 Invitation for All Blacks to tour SA
 1985 Timeline
 17 April NZRFU accepted invitation to SA
 20 May case lodged in High Court
 10 June Cassey J --- motion to strike out. Plaintiffs had no standing & NZRFU has power to decide
 21 June Court of Appeal: NZRFU has power to decide, but Plaintiffs had standing to challenge the lawfulness of decision.
 8 July High Court hearing of case began
 11 July Plaintiffs sought interim injunction to stop tour
 13 July Casey J granted injunction
 15 July NZRFU announced tour postponed
 17 July All Blacks due to leave on tour
 Legal Standing
 Only people with special interest affected by decision can challenge NZFRU decision
 Finnigan & Recorden (lawyers) active members of Auckland rugby clubs
 Not “mere busybodies” or mischief makers
 No implied contract between Plaintiffs and NZRFU
 But Plaintiffs linked to Union by chain of contracts
 Genuine interest in whether NZRGU acted against objects of ‘promoting, fostering, developing game of rugby’.
 Court of Appeal Considers:
 Plaintiffs may be the only people who can argue that NZFRU acted unconstitutionally, aside from action of affiliated union or general meeting.
 NZRFU technically a private sports body
 But decisions have analogies with public law
 Take ‘judicial notice’ that significant number of NZers for & against tour
 Affects international standing of NZ
 In 1981 the courts applied law impartially
 Must do so now in assessing NZRFU decision
 High Court Decisions
 Plaintiffs had strong prime facie case that tour not promote NZFRU’s objects
 Arguable that NZFRU shut eyes to impact
 Potent factor was public & national interest
 Clear govt & Parl. Message
 Risk of violence & bloodshed
 So must ensure NZRFU decision arrived at legally
 Public law analogy
 Higher obligation on NZRGU
 Decision important to rugby & to NZ
 Cooke suggests special area where boundary between public&private is not realistic
 NZRFU must show more than good faith
 Must show duty of care appropriate to statutory body that exercises powers which affect legal rights or legitimate public expectations.
 Must be reasonably & honestly considering interests of NZ rugby
 
 
 
 
 
 The Balance of Powers & the Enactment of Law
 Constitutional Act :
 •        Sets out some basic institutions of NZ legal system
 •        Removes residual power of English Parliament to legislate for NZ
 •        The impetus for the Act
 Branches of Government:
 •        Different parts have different roles
 •        Sovereign / Governor General
 •        Executive
 •        Legislature(Parliament)
 •        Judiciary ( Courts)
 Separation of powers:
         Begins with 1688 Glorious Revolution
         Basic idea: concentration of power in single institution is dangerous
         An ideal, associated with Montesquieu and Locke
         NZ: not complete separation of powers
         Compare other systems, e.g. US
 Legislative Process
         Refer diagram
         Where do ideas for new law come from?
         Government of the day
         Coalition agreements
         Other government MPs
         Committees
         Other relevant governmental bodies (government departments; Law Commission; Royal Commissions
         Individuals
 Pre-introduction
         Development of policy
         Consultation
         Vetting for compliance with Bill of Rights (1990)
         Get on legislative programme (decided by Cabinet Legislation Committee)
         Drafting: usually Parliament Counsel Office
         Checking: Legislation Advisory Committee
         Decision whether to introduce bill
 Introduction
         Rules governing procedure of Parliament = Standing Orders
         Well established procedures (see p 71)
         First reading
         Select committee
         Second reading
         Committee of whole house
         Third reading
         Vote
         Assent
 
 
 
 
 
 The Executive vs the Courts: Fitzgerald vs Muldoon
 Parliamentary Sovereignty/Supremacy:
 It means that the legal power of Parliament is unlimited. There is no higher law-making authority.
 Whatever the theoretical extent of Parliament’s power, in fact it is restrained from abusing that power by the weight of public opinion, particularly as felt by politicians through elections, as well as by international obligations and constitutional conventions
 Parliamentary supremacy was effectively wielded by the Cabinet----The Executive.
 The Executive branch of government must act in accordance with the law. In a fundamental manner, the judicial branch of our government does control actions of the Executive.
 
 Under our constitutional arrangements, the general understanding is that a court cannot strike dow an enacted rule, however bad. There must be rules, but the quality and content of the rules, at least of those made by the Legislature, are determined by the political process.
 
 Unlike United States and Canada which is federal system, NZ would require the court, to act as umpire between a federal government on the one hand and state governments on the other. The basic legal rule of our constitution is that Parliament is supreme. When it passes legislation, that is the law. There is no higher law. For these reasons the courts in our system of government do not often have the opportunity of deciding cases that involve the fundamental relationships between the elements of our government.
 Cases: in 1976, Fitzgerald vs Muldoon
 It demonstrated that the courts can be bold in checking the excesses of executive power.
 In the broadest sense, the case of Fitzgerald vs Muldoon demonstrates, perhaps more than any case ever decided in NZ, the division of governmental powers between the three great components of the constitution: Parliament, the Executive, and the Judiciary. Each has its role to play. To preserve balance in the system, the activities of each in relation to the others must remain within proper boundaries. In the final analysis, the courts will say what those boundaries are.
 
 The Bill of Rights 1688: ‘that the pretended power of suspending of laws or the execution of laws by regal authority without consent of Parliament is illegal’.
 
 Problem to think about: Should the executive have the power to suspend law?
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