Senior Courts Act 2016

Supreme Court - Leave to appeal

75: No direct appeal from court other than Court of Appeal unless exceptional circumstances established

You could also call this:

"You can't appeal straight to the Supreme Court unless it's really necessary and special circumstances apply."

Illustration for Senior Courts Act 2016

You can't appeal directly to the Supreme Court from most New Zealand courts. The Supreme Court will only hear your appeal if it's necessary for justice and there are exceptional circumstances. You must meet these conditions to appeal directly to the Supreme Court, unless the appeal comes from the Court of Appeal.

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View the original legislation for this page at https://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1986/0120/latest/link.aspx?id=DLM5759414.

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74: Criteria for leave to appeal, or

"When You Can Ask the Supreme Court to Hear Your Appeal"


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76: Applications for leave, or

"Asking to appeal to the Supreme Court: how to apply and what happens next"

Part 4Supreme Court
Leave to appeal

75No direct appeal from court other than Court of Appeal unless exceptional circumstances established

  1. The Supreme Court must not give leave to appeal directly to it against a decision made, a conviction entered, or a sentence imposed in a proceeding in a New Zealand court other than the Court of Appeal unless the court is satisfied,—

  2. in accordance with section 74, that it is necessary in the interests of justice for the court to hear and determine the appeal; and
    1. that there are exceptional circumstances that justify taking the proposed appeal directly to the court.
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