Bank of New Zealand v Greenwood

Bank of New Zealand v Greenwood [1984] 1 NZLR 525 is a cited case in New Zealand regarding land based nuisance claims in tort.[1]

Bank of New Zealand v Greenwood
CourtHigh Court of New Zealand
Full case nameBank of New Zealand v Greenwood
Citation(s)[1984] 1 NZLR 525
Transcript(s)High Court judgment
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingHardie Boys J
Keywords
negligence

Background edit

Reflection of sunlight from Greenwood's architecturally designed glass veranda caused discomfort to people working in the Bank of New Zealand building opposite it. Greenwood refused to take steps to rectify this, as they claimed that sunlight was not an actionable claim in nuisance.

Held edit

The court ruled that the reflection of sunlight is an actionable claim in nuisance, but instead of making Greenwood remove the offending veranda which would have cost $20,000, it ordered that Greenwood pay for the installation of blinds at the BNZ building.

References edit

  1. ^ McLay, Geoff (2003). Butterworths Student Companion Torts (4th ed.). LexisNexis. ISBN 0-408-71686-X.