
Justice Centre | 19 Aitken Street
DX SX10088 | Wellington
T 04 918 8800 |
F 04 918 8820
[email address] | www.justice.govt.nz
8 December 2025
Bernadette Edwards
[FYI request #32838 email]
Our ref: OIA 127741
Tēnā koe Bernadette
Official Information Act request: Procedure for vehicle seizure
Thank you for your email of 13 November 2025 to the Ministry of Justice (the Ministry),
requesting information about the procedure when a vehicle is seized. Specifically, you
requested:
Seized vehicle for unpaid fines what is the procedure / steps that must be taken
before and after a vehicle has been seized that the ministry of justice is required to
follow is it the same for all or different for some
Your request has been referred to me for a response, as it falls within my responsibilities
as Group Manager, National Service Delivery, and is being managed in accordance with the
provisions of the Official Information Act 1982 (the Act).
I am refusing your request under section 18(d) of the Act, as the information you have
requested is publicly available. For information on the steps taken by bailiffs before, during
and after a vehicle seizure, please see the publicly available Bailiff Standard Operating
Procedures here
OIA-117594.pdf. Bailiffs follow these Operating Procedures when carrying
out warrants to seize issued by the Court.
Please note it is important that the Ministry remains separate from the judiciary to ensure
that judicial decisions can be made independently, without interference. Any decisions made
before and after a warrant to seize are made in accordance with the Summary Proceedings
Act 1957.
Warrants to seize are just one enforcement option that the Court can take for people and
organisations who don’t pay their fines on time. Further information on enforcement options
can be found here:
Fines enforcement | New Zealand Ministry of Justice.
Please note that this response, with your personal details removed, may be published on the
Ministry website at:
Official Information Act responses | New Zealand Ministry of Justice.

If you are not satisfied with this response, you have the right to make a complaint to the
Ombudsman under section 28 of the Act. The Office of the Ombudsman may be contacted
by phone on: 0800 802 602, by email at: [email address], or via the
webform:
Make a complaint (for members of the public) | Ombudsman New Zealand.
Nāku noa, nā
Tracey Baguley
Group Manager, National Service Delivery