Dehn v Attorney-General

Dehn v Attorney-General CA180/88 [1989] NZCA 57; [1989] 1 NZLR 320 is a cited case in New Zealand regarding trespass and the implied licence to enter a property.[1]

Dehn v Attorney-General
CourtCourt of Appeal of New Zealand
Full case nameJanice Dehn, Harrison & Dehn v Attorney-General
Decided14 April 1989
CitationCA180/88 [1989] NZCA 57; [1989] 1 NZLR 320
TranscriptCourt of Appeal judgment
Court membership
Judges sittingCooke J, Richardson J, Somers J
Keywords
negligence

Background

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One night Dehn phoned her sister in Auckland suggesting that their mother and her grandchildren were now dead. Not surprisingly, the sister rang the Police to do a welfare check at their Christchurch residence.

The police soon discovered that the mother was very much still alive. So much so, that she even joined Dehn in taunting the attending police officers with comments such as "Nazi's" and "Gestapo".

They later sued the police for trespass and assault. The court awarded the nominal damages of $1 for the trespass, and nothing for assault, as due to ACC law, damages for assault can only be awarded if the conduct merits exemplary damages.

The Dehn's appealed.

Held

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The court confirmed that this case did not merit exemplary damages.

References

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