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  1. Inspector General of Intelligence and Security: Position description [pdf, 50 KB]

    ...entities to respond to imminent threat • a permission to access restricted information in relation to a person held by the Inland Revenue, Secretary of Education, or Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, Marriages and Relationships, and driver licence photographic images stored under the Land Transport Act • approvals granted to the intelligence and security agencies to obtain business records from business agencies and of a direction by the Director-General of an intelligence and...

  2. Inspector General of Intelligence and Security PD [pdf, 50 KB]

    ...entities to respond to imminent threat • a permission to access restricted information in relation to a person held by the Inland Revenue, Secretary of Education, or Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, Marriages and Relationships, and driver licence photographic images stored under the Land Transport Act • approvals granted to the intelligence and security agencies to obtain business records from business agencies and of a direction by the Director-General of an intelligence and...

  3. 2021 NZPSPLA 030.pdf [pdf, 95 KB]

    ...covertly attaching the tracking device to the Audi without Ms W’s consent. As Mr T has contravened a regulation made under the Act, he is guilty of misconduct. [18] Misconduct is a discretionary ground for cancellation of a certificate or licence. Section 81(1)(c) of the Act says that instead of cancellation I can make other orders including suspending a certificate, ordering the certificate holder to undertake further training, impose conditions on the certificate holder, repr...

  4. NM v BU Ltd [2021] NZDT 1580 (24 June 2021) [pdf, 210 KB]

    ...parked his car at 1.30pm to attend the gym for an hour. He says the [business] (CT) was not open so his parking did not cause any loss or damage. 4. The parking area is private property but because it is for commercial purpose there is a general licence for the public to use the parking area but subject to the rules imposed by the lawful owners, which would include the lessee’s that are paying for those parking spaces. BU Ltd provided a copy of instructions it received from the lawful...

  5. BG v NU [2023] NZDT 337 (12 July 2023) [pdf, 182 KB]

    ...heard in contract in the Disputes Tribunal. 3. At that time BG agreed to purchase and finance a vehicle in her name that NU could use so long as he made the finance payments on time and in full. The intention was that NU would get his restricted licence and once the car was paid off in full, ownership would be transferred to him. The car is owned and always has been owned by BG alone. 4. The parties’ relationship ended around July 2022 and a further written agreement was entered...

  6. EG v KI [2023] NZDT 247 (12 June 2023) [pdf, 109 KB]

    ...in which EG agreed to certain trees being trimmed to improve KI’s view. However, as this was verbal, and in EG’s view related only to specific trees close to the boundary, it was not possible for KI to prove that the conversation had given him licence to trim any trees further down the bank. 7. KI recalled EG helping with the removal of branches, and not disputing the work being done. However, I was unable to make a finding that EG acquiesced, watched, or was there, when the work...

  7. ET v TM [2023] NZDT 453 (21 August 2023) [pdf, 178 KB]

    ...account, he provided a photograph of ET heading northwards towards [Street 1] north exit after the collision, suggesting that she had already passed the [Street 1] south exit. He also noted that she was driving without a supervisor on a learner’s licence (which she admitted), and said she seemed to be intoxicated. 8. I find both accounts to be plausible and consistent with the damage to both cars. Although ET’s claim to be heading home adds some credibility to her account, and TM’s...

  8. IM v X Ltd [2024] NZDT 402 (17 June 2024) [pdf, 175 KB]

    ...pointed out that even if it hired a security officer for every building, the building in question has six levels and is open to the public, and thieves can just hide when a security officer is close by. CCTV cameras provide an overview, and there is a licence plate recognition camera at the entrance so that the police can be notified of vehicles of interest. The offender was captured on a CCTV camera by IM’s car, but was not identifiable. X Ltd said it has been working with the police an...

  9. 2024 NZPSPLA 094.pdf [pdf, 126 KB]

    ...Authority as previously outlined. Has Mr Taulanga breached the Act? [8] As established in the CIPU report, QSL, and Mr Taulanga have breached section 23(1)(g) and 23(2)(b) of the Act by carrying on a business as a crowd controller without a licence at Calendar Girls venues located in Auckland, Christchurch and at the Love Shack Bar, Auckland between 18 May 2022 to 23 October 2023. [9] Further, Mr. Taulanga breached section 45(2) of the Act by engaging uncertified persons to act a...

  10. KS v B Ltd [2024] NZDT 540 (10 July 2024) [pdf, 92 KB]

    ...[Business 1] and the tow authority required under the Land Transport Rule Operator Licensing 2017 Rule 81001. [7] I understand that the applicant does not consider this to be the case and accept that she did not deliberately breach the terms of her licence to park on this private land, but applying the test of a usually observant driver, as I am required to do, I am persuaded that a reasonable observant driver would have seen and understood the terms under which the parking was offered. T...