Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003
Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003
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Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003
Version as at 1 July 2025

Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003
(SR 2003/359)
Silvia Cartwright, Governor-General
Order in Council
At Wellington this 8th day of December 2003
Present:
Her Excellency the Governor-General in Council
Note
The Parliamentary Counsel Office has made editorial and format changes to this version using the powers under subpart 2 of Part 3 of the Legislation Act 2019.
Note 4 at the end of this version provides a list of the amendments included in it.
These regulations are administered by the Ministry of Justice.
Pursuant to section 39(1) of the Supreme Court Act 2003, Her Excellency the Governor-General, acting on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council, makes the following regulations.
Contents
Regulations
1 Title
These regulations are the Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003.
2 Commencement
These regulations come into force on 1 January 2004.
3 Interpretation
In these regulations, unless the context otherwise requires,—
Act means the Supreme Court Act 2003
appeal includes, except in items 1, 3, and 4 of the Schedule, an application for leave to appeal
court means the Supreme Court of New Zealand
Registrar means the Registrar of the court, and includes a Deputy Registrar of the court.
Regulation 3 appeal: amended, on 1 July 2013, by regulation 4 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/223).
4 Fees of court
(1)
The fees specified in the Schedule are payable, and must be taken by the Registrar, in appeals to the court in respect of the matters specified in that schedule.
(2)
All fees must be prepaid.
(3)
Subclause (2) is subject to regulations 5 and 6.
5 Power to waive fees
(1)
A person (the applicant) otherwise responsible for the payment of a fee required in connection with an appeal or an intended appeal may apply to the Registrar for a waiver of the fee.
(2)
The Registrar may waive the fee payable by the applicant if satisfied,—
(a)
on the basis of one of the criteria specified in subclause (3), that the applicant is unable to pay the fee; or
(b)
that the appeal,—
(i)
on the basis of one of the criteria specified in subclause (4), concerns a matter of genuine public interest; and
(ii)
is unlikely to be commenced or continued unless the fee is waived.
(3)
For the purposes of these regulations, an applicant is unable to pay the fee sought to be waived if—
(a)
the applicant has been granted legal aid in respect of the matter for which the fee is payable; or
(b)
the applicant has not been granted legal aid in respect of the matter for which the fee is payable and the applicant—
(i)
is dependent for the payment of his or her living expenses on a specified benefit (as defined in section 198(3) of the Social Security Act 2018) that is jobseeker support, sole parent support, a supported living payment, or an emergency benefit; or
(ii)
is wholly dependent for the payment of his or her living expenses on New Zealand superannuation under the New Zealand Superannuation and Retirement Income Act 2001 or a veteran’s pension under the Veterans’ Support Act 2014; or
(iii)
would otherwise suffer undue financial hardship if he or she paid the fee.
(4)
For the purposes of these regulations, an appeal that concerns a matter of genuine public interest is—
(a)
an appeal that has been or is intended to be commenced to determine a question of law that is of significant interest to the public or to a substantial section of the public; or
(b)
an appeal that—
(i)
raises issues of significant interest to the public or to a substantial section of the public; and
(ii)
is against a judgment, decree, or order given or made in a proceeding commenced by an organisation that, by its governing enactment, constitution, or rules, is expressly or by necessary implication required to promote matters in the public interest.
(5)
An application under subclause (1) must be made in a form approved for the purpose by the Secretary for Justice unless, in a particular case, the Registrar considers that an application in that form is not necessary.
Regulation 5(3): substituted, on 1 July 2004, by regulation 3 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2004 (SR 2004/170).
Regulation 5(3)(b)(i): amended, on 26 November 2018, by section 459 of the Social Security Act 2018 (2018 No 32).
Regulation 5(3)(b)(ii): amended, on 7 December 2014, by section 278 of the Veterans’ Support Act 2014 (2014 No 56).
Regulation 5(3)(b)(ii): amended, on 21 April 2005, by section 9(2) of the New Zealand Superannuation and Retirement Income Amendment Act 2005 (2005 No 42).
6 Payment of fee may be postponed pending determination of application for waiver or review
(1)
The Registrar may, on application by a person who is awaiting the determination of an application under regulation 5(1) or section 40 of the Act, postpone the payment of the fee to which the application relates until the date on which the person is notified of the determination.
(2)
The Registrar may exercise the power under subclause (1) if satisfied that the person awaiting the determination of his or her application would be prejudiced if the matter to which the fee relates did not proceed before the determination.
(3)
An application under subclause (1) must be made in a form approved for the purpose by the Secretary for Justice unless, in a particular case, the Registrar considers that an application in that form is not necessary.
7 Recovery of postponed fee
(1)
This regulation applies to a fee (the fee) that has been postponed under regulation 6.
(2)
If the effect of a determination under regulation 5 or section 40 of the Act is that the fee is not to be waived, the fee—
(a)
must be paid, without delay, to the Registrar; and
(b)
is recoverable as a debt due to the Crown in any court of competent jurisdiction.
(3)
Following a determination that has the effect referred to in subclause (2), the person responsible for paying the fee may not take a step in the appeal to which the fee relates unless the fee is paid.
(4)
This regulation has effect subject to regulation 6 during any period that the question of the waiver of the fee is the subject of a pending application under section 40 of the Act.
8 Power to refund fees
(1)
The Registrar may, on application made to him or her, refund a fee that has already been paid if satisfied that—
(a)
no application, under regulation 5, for a waiver of the fee was made; and
(b)
the fee would have been waived, in accordance with regulation 5, had that application been made; and
(c)
the criteria that would have justified that waiver still apply at the date of the application for the refund.
(2)
An application under subclause (1) must be made in a form approved for the purpose by the Secretary for Justice unless, in a particular case, the Registrar considers that an application in that form is not necessary.
9 GST included
The fees prescribed by these regulations include goods and services tax.
10 Appeals to which regulations do not apply
These regulations do not apply to—
(a)
criminal appeals; or
(b)
civil appeals under the Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act 2009; or
(c)
appeals under the Bail Act 2000; or
(d)
appeals under the Harmful Digital Communications Act 2015.
Regulation 10: replaced, on 1 July 2013, by regulation 5 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/223).
Regulation 10(c): replaced, on 21 November 2016, by regulation 4 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2016 (LI 2016/231).
Regulation 10(d): inserted, on 21 November 2016, by regulation 4 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2016 (LI 2016/231).
11 Transitional provision
In respect of proceedings commenced before 1 July 2013,—
(a)
these regulations as in force immediately before 1 July 2013 apply in respect of any step taken before that date; and
(b)
these regulations as in force on and from 1 July 2013 apply in respect of any step taken on or after that date.
Regulation 11: inserted, on 1 July 2013, by regulation 5 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/223).
Schedule Fees payable in respect of appeals to court
Schedule: replaced, on 1 July 2024, by regulation 4 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2024 (SL 2024/99).
| Category | Item | Matter for which fee is payable | Fee ($) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Filing fees | 1 | Filing an application for leave to appeal | 1,482 | |||
| 2 | Filing an interlocutory application,— | |||||
(a)in the case of an application for a review of a Registrar’s decision |
no fee | |||||
(b)in any other case |
539 | |||||
| Scheduling | 3 | Scheduling the hearing date for an appeal and hearing an appeal for the first day | 1,347 | |||
| Hearings | 4 | Hearing an appeal, for each half-day or part of a half-day after the first day | 674 | |||
| Administrative fees | 5 | Sealing an order or a judgment and providing, at the same time, any duplicate or certified copy of that order or judgment | 67 | |||
| 6 | Copying a judgment,— | |||||
(a)for the first copy that is provided to a party to the proceeding or that party’s counsel |
no fee | |||||
(b)where paragraph (a) does not apply |
40 | |||||
| 7 | Copying any document (other than a judgment),— | |||||
(a)for the first copy of any part or parts of the court file, or any document relating to the appeal, that is provided to a party to the proceeding or that party’s counsel |
no fee | |||||
(b)where paragraph (a) does not apply,— |
||||||
(i)for each black and white page |
0.30 | |||||
(ii)for each colour page |
0.50 | |||||
(iii)for documents in electronic form |
actual and reasonable costs | |||||
Schedule: amended, on 1 July 2025, by section 4 of the Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2025 (2025/113).
Diane Morcom,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Issued under the authority of the Legislation Act 2019.
Date of notification in Gazette: 11 December 2003.
Notes
1 General
This is a consolidation of the Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003 that incorporates the amendments made to the legislation so that it shows the law as at its stated date.
2 Legal status
A consolidation is taken to correctly state, as at its stated date, the law enacted or made by the legislation consolidated and by the amendments. This presumption applies unless the contrary is shown.
Section 78 of the Legislation Act 2019 provides that this consolidation, published as an electronic version, is an official version. A printed version of legislation that is produced directly from this official electronic version is also an official version.
3 Editorial and format changes
The Parliamentary Counsel Office makes editorial and format changes to consolidations using the powers under subpart 2 of Part 3 of the Legislation Act 2019. See also PCO editorial conventions for consolidations.
4 Amendments incorporated in this consolidation
Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2025 (SL 2025/113)
Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2024 (SL 2024/99)
Social Security Act 2018 (2018 No 32): section 459
Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2016 (LI 2016/231)
Veterans’ Support Act 2014 (2014 No 56): section 278
Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/223)
New Zealand Superannuation and Retirement Income Amendment Act 2005 (2005 No 42): section 9(2)
Supreme Court Fees Amendment Regulations 2004 (SR 2004/170)
"Related Legislation
"Related Legislation
"Related Legislation
Versions
Supreme Court Fees Regulations 2003
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