My response to RNZ's Nine To Noon story about regulating lay employment advocates, and what the Joyce costs judgment actually did (and did not) decide.
We represent employee and employer clients in the Employment Court. Employment Court representation, unlike the Employment Relations Authority, requires significant knowledge and experience to manage cases successfully. We are expert advocates in the Employment Court.
The Employment Court is a specialist court that deals with serious employment disputes. Most commonly, it hears challenges to Employment Relations Authority (ERA) determinations. It can also hear other proceedings directly, including strike and lockout disputes, judicial review in limited situations, and urgent applications such as interim injunctions.
Unlike the ERA, the Employment Court process is more formal and procedure driven. The quality of pleadings, evidence, and case management can decide the outcome. If you are heading toward the Employment Court, strategy and execution matter: what you file, how you frame issues, how you prove facts, and how you control risk and cost.
Employment Court proceedings often arise in one of these ways:
People often misunderstand what a "challenge" is. A challenge is not always a normal appeal.
Each case differs, but a typical pathway includes:
The Court expects parties to comply with timetables and procedural requirements. Sloppy pleadings and late evidence create avoidable risk. In Employment Court litigation, "process problems" are not a side issue - they can decide the case.
Strong Court representation is not just arguing at hearing. It is building a defensible case from the ground up:
Employment Court involvement can arise for employees where:
Employers most often face Employment Court risk when:
If you are within the challenge period, or you have been served with Employment Court documents, move quickly. The fastest way to start is to send us your timeline, the ERA determination (if relevant), and the key documents.
Employee Case Form Employer defence and advice Quick Contact
Employment Court litigation can become expensive fast. Even if you "win", recovery of actual legal spend can be uncertain and often does not equal what you paid. Good strategy includes costs control and settlement leverage, not just legal argument.
Costs guidanceMy response to RNZ's Nine To Noon story about regulating lay employment advocates, and what the Joyce costs judgment actually did (and did not) decide.
Employment Court of New Zealand explained in plain English: what it does, how it differs from the Employment Relations Authority (ERA), what a challenge is, key timeframes, and practical preparation tips - including what happens during a hearing.
The Law Association (formerly Auckland District Law Society ADLS) called for employment advocates to be excluded from the Employment Court. This page explains why that would harm access to justice and why new advocate regulation is not justified.
An Unless order, if granted, gives a party one last opportunity to remedy their breach.