Having been involved in something that required this recently, I thought other KBers might find the information useful.
The best reference is this NZ Police web page: How to serve a Trespass Notice. Now I know it might rankle some KBers who consider Police the "opposition", but they've got good info here.
At that page you'll find info about how to serve someone with a trespass notice, and a template in RTF, Word 95, and OpenDocument format that you can simply print out and fill in (it lists an HTML version as well, but that appears to be broken).
What surprised me about this is that you don't need a lawyer, or pay some fee down at the district court. Just fill in the forms, and serve them on the person you want to keep away, and that's it.
Now, serving them is the important part. The police page says:
So do it yourself, or pay a document server to do it. Amusingly, if someone thinks they're being clever by refusing to accept the document, you can just put it down in front of them:It is recommended that the Trespass Notice be served personally on the individual concerned rather than by registered post. This should minimise later disputes over whether the person was aware of the notice.
So tell them it's a trespass notice for them, and leave it on the ground at their feet.It says personally serving a Trespass Notice may be effected "by leaving the document with the person to be served, or, if that person does not accept it, by putting it down in that person's presence and bringing it to that person's attention."
If you're concerned about the physical confrontation (and let's be honest, some people are scary), and too cheap to pay a document server, you can send it by registered mail. But get it right - the Trespass Act 1980 says:
So sending it to someone's workplace instead would be a FAIL. Worth keeping that in mind.A warning under section 3 or section 4 of this Act shall be given to the individual person concerned either orally, or by notice in writing delivered to him or sent to him by post in a registered letter at his usual place of abode in New Zealand.
Hope someone finds that useful. As I said, check out the Police page mentioned above, or the actual Trespass Act itself - it's surprisingly brief for an Act of Parliament.
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