A freelance photographer who captured the Carterton balloon crash tragedy has continued his legal fight to stop the photos being released to the public.
Earlier this year, during the inquest at the Wellington District Court into the deaths of 11 people in the January 2012 balloon crash, Coroner Peter Ryan approved TVNZ's application to publish some of Geoff Walker's photographs.
Walker took the case to the High Court at Wellington for a judicial review of the coroner's decision.
At today's hearing his lawyer Mary Scholtens QC said the coroner had failed to properly take into consideration Walker's copyright over the photos.
The case should be returned to the coroner to apply those copyright tests, she said.
Mr Walker's particular concern was not just a one-off broadcast of the photographs, but if they were to be loaded onto TVNZ's website, they would be "lost to him forever", she said.
Mr Walker had made his photographs available to police for crash investigation purposes.
TVNZ lawyer Jack Hodder QC said one of the purposes of the coronial regime was to extract information from past fatalities in order for them to be avoided in the future.
"It's an exercise taken in the public interest."
Photographs used as evidence in judicial hearings would not infringe on copyright and neither would reporting on that evidence, Mr Hodder said.
The coroner came to the view that the photos would assist in the reporting of the proceedings, he said.
TVNZ had narrowed the scope of the photos down to four -- of the balloon taking off, touching the wire, catching fire and falling to the ground.
None of the photos showed bodies.
They did not want to show pictures that would be disturbing or breached anyone's privacy, Mr Hodder said.
Some of the families of the balloon victims had earlier expressed their support for the photos to be released as a warning to others about ballooning.
Justice Alan MacKenzie reserved his decision.
- additional reporting Wairarapa Times Age