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Page V Acc 251 2003 Ai 308 02 s101 19998 act, all necessary info

#1 Guest_Read Me_*

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Posted 06 January 2006 - 03:23 PM

IN THE DISTRICT COURT
HELD AT WELLINGTON

Decision No. 251 /2003


UNDER
The Accident Insurance Act 1998

AND
IN THE MATTER
of an appeal pursuant to
Section 152 of the Act

BETWEEN
EDWARD PAGE of Hamilton
Appellant
(Appeal No. Al 308/02)


AND

ACCIDENT COMPENSATION
CORPORATION a body corporate
duly constituted under the provisions
of the said Act
Respondent

HEARING at HUNTLY on 23 September 2003

APPEARANCES/COUNSEL
Mr D J Heperi for appellant
Ms A S Moodie for respondent

RESERVED JUDGMENT OF JUDGE J D HOLE

[1] The issue to be determined by this appeal is the date the respondent
received all information necessary to enable it to calculate and make a
payment of compensation, This arises as a result of a consideration of the
provisions of s 101 of the Accident Insurance Act 1998; the relevant portion
of which reads:

Attached File(s)


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#2 User is offline   flowers 

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Posted 07 January 2006 - 03:32 PM

There seems to be no problem with his reasoning here.
Pity most of the judges refrain from commenting too much on the basis of their reasoning. Or god forbid comment scathingly about corporations that use such blatantly fraudulent processes to disenable claimants rights and theit disputes resolution process that endorses those same illegallities.
Perhaps a recomendation that the fraud squad look at the circumstances of ACC's actions in this instance would not have been remiss.
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#3 User is offline   fairgo 

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Posted 07 January 2006 - 04:09 PM

I like the part "ACC holds the purse stings..... etc" How true that section is!
Like water, be gentle and strong. Be gentle enough to follow the natural paths of the earth, and strong enough to rise up and reshape the world
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#4 User is offline   doppelganger 

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Posted 07 January 2006 - 04:12 PM

yes just how many times do the staff go out of there way to deliberately make a disentitlement only fo the levy payers to foot the bill

I think that with some good input a few case managers might might just look at a court appearance under this section

Offences and penalties generally

308.Offence to mislead Corporation—

(1)A person commits an offence who, for the purpose described in subsection (2) or with the result described in subsection (3),—

(a)makes any statement knowing it to be false in any material particular; or

(b)wilfully does or says anything, or omits to do or say anything, for the purpose of misleading or attempting to mislead the Corporation or any other person concerned in the administration of this Act.

(2)The purpose is—

(a)for that person to receive or continue to receive any payment or entitlement; or

(b)for another person to receive or continue to receive any payment or entitlement.

(3)The result is—

(a)that that person receives or continues to receive any payment or entitlement, whether or not entitled to it under this Act; or

(b)that another person receives or continues to receive any payment or entitlement, whether or not entitled to it under this Act.

(4)A person who commits an offence against this section is liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 months or a fine not exceeding $5,000.

thinking the delay in the Vocational Rehabilitation could be classed as supplying compensation that a claimant is not entitled to.
placing claimants into work or work trails that cause the condition to deteriorate is another way to extend an entitlement.
In regard to your wish to attend Polytech, which you advise you could only do with financial assistance; we regret that we are unable to assist in your situation as if you wish to improve your employment possibilities beyond pre-accident level, this must be considered your personal choice and responsibility. Case manager Mr D. J. Lamond 26 May 1988

"If the right to be heard is to be a real right which is worth anything, it must carry with it a right in the accused man to know the case which is made against him. He must know what evidence has been given and what statements have been made affecting him and then he must be given a fair opportunity to correct or contradict them. .... It follows, of course that the judge or whoever has to adjudicate must not hear evidence or receive representations from one side behind the back of others.The court will not require whether the evidence or representations did work to his prejudice. Sufficient that they might do so. The court will not go into the likelihood ofprejudice. The risk of it is enough."Lord Denning [1962] A.C. at page 337.

In Escoigne Properties Ltd v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1958] AC 549 Lord Denning said at pp 566:
"Thus one of the best ways, I find, ofunderstanding a statute is to take some specific which, by common consent, are intended to be covered by it. I can say at once: "Yes, that is the sort ofthing Parliament intended to "cover". The reason is not far to seek. When the draftsman is drawing the Act, he has in mind particular instances which he wishes to cover. He frames aformula which he hopes will embrace them all with precision. But the formula is as unintelligible as a mathematical formula to anyone except experts: and even then they have to know what the symbols mean. To make it intelligible, you must know the sort of thing that Parliament had in mind. So you have resort to particular instances to gather the meaning. "
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#5 User is offline   hukildaspida 

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Posted 21 June 2012 - 07:05 PM

From the decision posted in post #1

Take note
http://www.acc.co.nz In house & contracted Legal teams and comply with the Law and intent of ACC.

You will be made ACCountable from what you have sown.


[20] The section recognises that, in dealing with claims, the respondent is
in a position of power as it holds the purse strings: a claimant is in a much
less powerful position because, first, he does not have the money; and,
secondly, he is usually in some form of incapacitated condition, which may
reduce his bargaining ability.

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#6 User is offline   hukildaspida 

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Posted 09 July 2012 - 10:54 PM

Does anyone know the exact part of the most recent http://www.acc.co.nz ACC Act this is now under?

If you would be so kind to put the link up.

Thanks


View Posthukildaspida, on 21 June 2012 - 07:05 PM, said:

From the decision posted in post #1

Take note
http://www.acc.co.nz In house & contracted Legal teams and comply with the Law and intent of ACC.

You will be made ACCountable from what you have sown.


[20] The section recognises that, in dealing with claims, the respondent is
in a position of power as it holds the purse strings: a claimant is in a much
less powerful position because, first, he does not have the money; and,
secondly, he is usually in some form of incapacitated condition, which may
reduce his bargaining ability.


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