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The Court of Appeal was established in 1965, replacing the former appellate Full Court of the New South Wales Supreme Court, [2] and commenced operations on 1 January 1966 with the appointment of the President, Sir Gordon Wallace, and six Judges of Appeal, Bernard Sugerman, Charles McLelland, Cyril Walsh, Kenneth Jacobs, Kenneth Asprey and John Holmes Dashwood.
Of the thousands of judgments delivered each year by the Supreme Court of New South Wales (including the Court of Appeal and Court of Criminal Appeal) only a fraction are selected for reporting. [1] Every report contains a headnote drafted by a practising barrister or solicitor, reviewed by an Assistant Editor and approved by the relevant court.
New South Wales Law Reports: 1901-1950: via AustLII: Law Reports (NSW) LR (NSW) 1856–1900: via AustLII: Weekly Notes (New South Wales) WN (NSW) 1884–1987: Neutral citation: NSWSC: 1995-caselaw.nsw.gov.au AustLII. BarNet JADE. Decisions of judges sitting alone NSWCA: 1988 - caselaw.nsw.gov.au AustLII. BarNet JADE. Court of Appeal: NSWCCA ...
Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of NSW; Court: High Court of Australia: Decided: 11 May 1982: Citations [1982] HCA 24, (1982) 149 CLR 337: Case history; Appealed from: New South Wales Court of Appeal: Subsequent actions [1982] HCA 51, (1982) 150 CLR 29: Case opinions (5:0) There was no implied term dealing with restraint by ...
The harshest criticism directed at the judgment of the Court of Appeal of New South Wales was for having dealt with the restitution issue at all. The High Court considered that it was procedurally unfair to have made unjust enrichment an aspect of the ultimate decision, when neither party had been invited to make submissions on that issue.
The Court of Appeal delivered a unanimous judgment, dismissing the appeal. They found that Burger King had no right to terminate the contract, whether under clause 15.1(d) of the agreement, or under general principles of contract law, and further found that Burger King had breached an implied term of good faith.
It was therefore appropriate to set aside the order of the District Court dismissing the appellant's appeal, and order the Court to determine her appeal according to law." - Gordon, Edelman, Steward and Gleeson JJ. The majority then ordered that Stanley's appeal to the NSW District Court be heard and determined according to law.
Acting Judge of the District Court of NSW (1990–1991) Assistant Commissioner Independent Commission Against Corruption (1991–1992) Judge of the Federal Court (1993–1996) President of the Court of Appeal (2013–2019) Appointed Governor of NSW [33] Paul Stein AM: 8 April 1997: 11 April 2003: 6 years, 3 days: Roger Giles: 11 June 1998: 23 ...