This page is about a bill. That means that it's not the law yet, but some people want it to be the law. It could change quickly, and some of the information is just a draft.

Valuers Bill

Miscellaneous - Miscellaneous provisions

110: Certificate by Registrar to be evidence

You could also call this:

"A certificate from the Registrar is proof of something until proven wrong."

Illustration for Valuers Bill

If someone gets a certificate from the Registrar, it is proof of certain things. You can trust this certificate until someone proves it is wrong. The certificate can say things like if a person is registered as a valuer or not. The certificate can also say if a person has a special certificate to practise as a valuer. It can tell you things about what is written in the register. You can use the certificate to find out about things the Board has done. The Registrar's certificate is a good way to know these things are true. You can rely on it to be correct. This is what the proposed law says about the Registrar's certificate.

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View the original legislation for this page at https://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1986/0120/latest/link.aspx?id=LMS617032.


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Part 4Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous provisions

110Certificate by Registrar to be evidence

  1. A certificate purporting to be signed by the Registrar in relation to 1 or more matters referred to in subsection (2) is, until the contrary is proved, sufficient evidence of those matters specified in the certificate.

  2. The matters are as follows:

  3. that a person was or was not registered as a valuer under this Act at any time or during any period specified in the certificate:
    1. that a person held or did not hold an annual practising certificate under subpart 1 of Part 2 at any time or during any period specified in the certificate:
      1. matters relating to any entry in the register:
        1. matters relating to any act or proceeding of the Board.