Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Holloway v Attorney General

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Decided
  
12 December 1994

End date
  
December 12, 1994

Citation(s)
  
[1994] 2 ERNZ 528

Holloway v Attorney-General

Full case name
  
Holloway v Attorney-General

Judge(s) sitting
  
Richardson J, Hardie Boys J, McKay J

Ruling court
  
Court of Appeal of New Zealand

Holloway v Attorney-General [1994] 2 ERNZ 528 is a case frequently cited in New Zealand regarding unilateral contracts.

Contents

Background

Until the late 1980s, in an effort to reduce a shortage of school teachers in New Zealand, the Ministry of Education stated that people who competed a teachers course at university, upon graduation, would be employed for 2 years as a teacher by the ministry.

However, with declining numbers of students, and a substantial budget deficit, the government ceased this guarantee of employment, and when Ms Hollaway graduated as a teacher she was not offered the promised employment.

Not happy with this, Holloway sued the Ministry of Education in the Employment Court.

Held

The Court of Appeal ruled that the Ministry of Education's statements of "will be appointed [as a teacher]" was a unilateral contract, thus there was a legally binding obligation to employ Ms Holloway.

Footnote: Although Holloway won the battle of whether there was a legally binding employment contract, she at the same time lost the war, as the Court of Appeal ruled that the Employment Court had no jurisdiction to hear such a case in the first place, leaving Holloway having to refile her claim via the District Court instead.

References

Holloway v Attorney-General Wikipedia