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Editor: I. Mallikarjuna Sharma Volume 11: 15-31 March 2015 No. 5-6

Martyrs memorial special issue of 15-31 March 2015 paying tributes to Bhagat Singh and other comrades.

Martyrs memorial special issue of 15-31 March 2015 paying tributes to Bhagat Singh and other comrades.

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(20<strong>15</strong>) 1 LAW Quake Outcasts v. Minister for Canterbury Earthquake Recovery [NZ-SC: Eliyas CJ] F-197<br />

the possible sequencing of repairs and<br />

reconstruction. To the extent that the decisions<br />

made in June 20<strong>11</strong> in fact accomplished the<br />

establishment of such areas and the location of<br />

infrastructure and set priorities for rebuilding and<br />

repair, the opportunity for community<br />

participation in the critical decisions was<br />

overtaken.<br />

[286] Such considerations may well be fatal to<br />

the exercise of other powers under the Act. It may<br />

be, for example, that the powers conferred on the<br />

Minister under s 27 could not be lawfully<br />

exercised without prior adoption of a Recovery<br />

Strategy or at the very least the adoption of a<br />

Recovery Plan (which could be on a directed<br />

truncated procedure, while subject to later<br />

adjustment to conform with a Recovery Strategy<br />

subsequently adopted). 292 In the case of a<br />

voluntary sale and purchase, however, I think it is<br />

open to the chief executive to adopt the criteria<br />

on which such offers are made, in compliance<br />

with s 10 but without there being in place an<br />

overarching Recovery Strategy or Recovery Plan<br />

adopted under the Act. As already indicated,<br />

compliance with s 10 may require some<br />

consideration of the consequences and the<br />

absence of opportunity to have them addressed in<br />

a Recovery Strategy and Recovery Plans.<br />

[287] The Act sets up a framework under which<br />

the effort of responding to the damage caused to<br />

property and people by the earthquakes can be<br />

coordinated. The offers of purchase might well<br />

have been made under an overarching Recovery<br />

Strategy adopted by the processes under the Act.<br />

But that sequence was not provided for explicitly<br />

in the legislation. I consider it too great a stretch to<br />

say that the use of s 53 requires prior adoption of a<br />

Recovery Strategy or Plan. Quite apart from the<br />

delay that may have been entailed, the<br />

consequences for land use and regulation of such<br />

plans would have impacted on existing use rights<br />

and may well have had consequences for insurance<br />

obligations which would have been difficult to<br />

predict with confidence. Adherence to the scheme<br />

292 Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Act, s 18.<br />

and purpose of the Act in exercise of powers<br />

under s 53 is I think sufficiently ensured by s 10.<br />

[288] I consider that the chief executive was<br />

entitled to identify the properties in respect of<br />

which offers were to be made on the basis of the<br />

expert advice accepted by the Government as to<br />

the areas likely to be unsuitable for reinstatement<br />

within the medium term. In the absence of the<br />

adoption of a Recovery Strategy or Recovery<br />

Plans, that identification had no legal consequence<br />

for the status of the land and its use. It may well<br />

be that the purpose and scheme of the Act means<br />

that powers of the Minister or chief executive<br />

under it which alter rights and obligations cannot<br />

lawfully be used without first adopting a<br />

Recovery Strategy or Recovery Plan. But I do not<br />

consider that is the case with s 53. I would<br />

therefore decline to make the declaration sought by the<br />

appellants and would dismiss their appeal on the second<br />

ground also.<br />

* * *<br />

AN APPEAL<br />

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139<br />

Law Animated World, <strong>15</strong>-<strong>31</strong> <strong>March</strong> 20<strong>15</strong>

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