Speech by the Minister for Justice & Equality, Ms Frances Fitzgerald T.D. – Court of Appeal Bill 2014, Second Stage, Dáil Éireann
1st July 2014 - Ken Gaughran
Deputies will recall that the Programme for Government indicated that the
necessary steps to create a permanent Court of Appeal would be taken during
the lifetime of the Government. On foot of that commitment, a Referendum
was held on 4 October 2013 and the proposal to establish a Court of Appeal
was agreed to by the people. During the course of the Referendum campaign
it was made clear that, if the proposal was agreed, the Government would
move expeditiously to enact the implementation legislation for the new
court. Section 5 of the Bill provides that the Government shall appoint a
day to be the establishment day for the purposes of the Act, and I envisage
that the Court will be operational by autumn 2014, which is the start of
the new legal term.
Given the technical nature of the general Scheme of the Bill, it was not
considered suitable for pre-legislative scrutiny. However, the Scheme was
made available to the Committee on Justice, Defence and Equality so as to
facilitate that Committee in providing any views which it deemed
appropriate.
Under our Constitution the judicial power is one of the three fundamental
pillars upon which the institutions of our State rest. Our courts have a
pivotal role in this society. This derives from the fact that the
establishment and maintenance of an independent courts system is a critical
element in upholding the regime of checks and balances which is a
fundamental attribute of the doctrine of the separation of powers. That
separation of powers protects citizens against the potential abuse of
public power, and also promotes the smooth and efficient functioning of the
State. In this context the courts have a particularly significant
responsibility in terms of interpreting and applying the law to disputes
between individuals and the State as well as to disputes which are wholly
private in nature. They provide the ultimate forum in which such disputes
can be resolved.
A properly functioning courts system provides certainty for the parties in
individual cases and, where appropriate, offers a public explanation of the
law to those who are not involved in the case in question. It helps to
provide a legal framework within which individuals and businesses can
arrange their affairs with a degree of confidence and security. In the
commercial sphere in particular legal certainty is essential and helps to
underpin the confidence that commercial entities must have that they are
acting in a lawful manner, and that their actions will not attract
unwarranted legal criticism or challenge. Legal certainty simplifies the
commercial decision-making process, and allows for the clear and considered
assessment of the advantages or disadvantages of a proposed course of
action. The relative relevance of security against abuse of power, speedy
and efficient dispute resolution, and legal certainty varies from case to
case – however, it cannot be denied that in all scenarios a properly
resourced and efficiently running courts system is essential.
The case for the establishment of a Court of Appeal has been well
documented. The previous Government established a Working Group on a Court
of Appeal in 2006. The Group, which published its Report in August 2009,
was chaired by the current Chief Justice Mrs. Susan Denham, and comprised
members of the judiciary, representatives of the Bar Council and the Law
Society, and senior officials from the Attorney General’s Office, the
Department of the Taoiseach and my own Department. The Report included a
comprehensive analysis of the situation then prevailing in the Supreme
Court, both in terms of the cases coming before that Court and the length
of time it took for such cases to be brought to a conclusion. It also
reviewed the position in other common law countries where the existence of
an intermediate Court of Appeal is the norm and set out a path towards
possible reform. The reform proposals were favoured by those who engaged
in the consultation process on the issue. They will also ensure that the
Supreme Court will only hear cases that merit its attention, and make
certain that there is coherence to our courts architecture which does not
exist currently.
It is worth recalling that there has been a continuing growth in High Court
litigation, which has seen the number of High Court judges increase from 7
in 1961 to 36 today. By contrast, in the same period the increase in the
number of Supreme Court judges has been from 5 to 10, following the
appointment of two additional Supreme Court judges in October 2013. This
has enabled the Supreme Court to sit in two panels on a continuing basis
which has certainly assisted in the rate of disposal of cases. However,
the backlog that has accumulated in the Supreme Court over the past number
of years requires a more fundamental reform to bring about a more efficient
appeal system.
There is no point in having a situation where any gains in terms of High
Court efficiency are being lost at appeal stage because there is only one
court to which an appeal may lie. The absence of a Court of Appeal has led
to a huge volume of cases being referred to the Supreme Court compared to
other similar common law jurisdictions. In consequence a considerable
proportion of Supreme Court time is being spent in correcting errors of law
rather than in developing the law in a reasoned fashion.
As the volume, duration and complexity of appeals continues to grow, the
Supreme Court’s caseload is becoming increasingly unsustainable. Cases
are taking longer to hear with the average waiting time for cases to be
heard currently of the order of 48 months. That means that, in the
absence of a Court of Appeal, someone lodging an appeal with the Supreme
Court today might not have their case decided before 2018. Even cases with
a priority listing are taking up to 11 months to come to hearing.
Litigants have a right to a fair and speedy trial. As well as being a
matter of natural justice, this right is recognised in Article 6 of the
European Convention on Human Rights. Indeed, it will be recalled that
Ireland has already had to pay compensation to individuals who have
successfully taken cases to the European Court of Human Rights in relation
to delay.
Apart from the impact on individual litigants, the delays being experienced
have economic consequences which may influence external investment
decisions and act as a barrier to growth. They also have implications for
our ability to honour international obligations which may give rise to
reputational damage and to financial penalties. Today’s international
business world works best where the law is clear, where the judiciary is
independent, and where those who find themselves either asserting their
rights or defending their actions before the courts can expect to have a
final determination without undue delay. If all other things are equal,
international investors will favour a country with an efficient and
effective legal system which is capable of dealing with the administration
of justice in a reasonable timescale over a country without such a system.
Before I turn to the Bill which is before the House today, I would like to
pay tribute to my predecessor as Minister for Justice and Equality, Alan
Shatter, who did a great deal of valuable work in steering both the
Constitutional Referendum and later this Bill to the point which we have
reached today.
The establishment of the Court of Appeal requires the enactment of an
“implementation” Bill which will provide for the establishment of the Court
itself, the appointment of judges, their remuneration, and a number of
other issues. The Court of Appeal Bill is technical in nature and contains
a large number of provisions aimed at amending existing legislation in
order to accommodate the new Court within the architecture of the existing
courts structure. Given that the policy in this area was essentially
“fixed” by last year’s Referendum, the Bill itself does not give rise to
significant policy issues. However, it addresses important legal
considerations as to how best to reflect the constitutional provisions
which relate to the new Court and which regulate the relationship between
it and the Supreme Court.
In the normal course, it would be usual to go through the Bill on a section
by section basis, explaining each section. However, in this instance,
given the nature of the Bill which is before the House, I propose to focus
first of all on a specific number of topics and then I will deal with
other, stand alone issues at the end of this speech.
Section 6 of the Bill provides for the establishment of a Court of Appeal
in accordance with the terms of Article 34A of the Constitution and the
appointment to that Court of a President and 9 ordinary judges. Section 13
sets out the remuneration of the President and ordinary judges of the Court
of Appeal. In this regard, following consultation with my colleague the
Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, it has been agreed that the
President of the Court of Appeal shall be paid €200,000 per annum, and that
the salary of an ordinary judges of that Court shall be €177,803 per annum.
Those figures have regard to the revised rates of judicial pay which were
set by the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform in June 2013
following on from the enactment of the Financial Emergency Measures in the
Public Interest Act 2013, and the reductions applied by virtue of that Act
to judges’ pay on foot of the Twenty-Ninth amendment to the Constitution
concerning judicial remuneration which was approved in 2011. The rates of
remuneration envisaged also have regard to the rates which are paid at
present to the Chief Justice and ordinary judges of the Supreme Court, and
to the President of the High Court and to ordinary judges of that Court.
In relation to pensions, the legislation recognises the fact that for any
serving judges who may be appointed to the Court of Appeal, and who were
appointed to judicial office prior to I January 2013, it will be necessary
to maintain the existing pension provisions which are complex and spread
over a number of Acts. This is provided for in sections 14, 15 and 16 of
the Bill. For serving judges appointed on or after 1 January 2013, or for
appointees who are not serving judges, the Single Public Service Pension
Scheme will apply, and no special provision is required in this Bill in
respect of such persons
Section 17 provides that, in the main, the age of retirement of a judge of
the Court of Appeal shall be 70 years. This Section also specifies that,
as an exception to the general rule, a judge of the Court of Appeal who is
already a judge of another court and who is entitled to retire at age 72,
shall continue to be entitled to retire at that age.
In relation to the appointment of judges to the Court of Appeal, Deputies
will recall that the Government has announced Mr Justice Seán Ryan as
President-Designate of that Court. The tenure of a President of the Court
of Appeal will be for a period of 7 years, as is the case with other
presiding judges. Sections 10 and 11 make the necessary amendments to
provide that the Judicial Appointments Advisory Board will have a role as
regards the appointment of ordinary judges of the Court of Appeal except of
course in relation to serving judges who do not go through the JAAB
process.
On a more general note, Deputies will be aware that a major review of the
judicial appointments process is underway, to ensure that it reflects
current best practice, that it is open, transparent and accountable and
that it promotes diversity while also protecting the independence of our
judiciary. My Department is currently examining submissions which have
been received, and I am most anxious that, if reforms are to be made, they
derive from a considered consultative process including public debate. To
give Deputies a flavour of the submissions, the most significant theme
emerging is the need to make the Judicial Appointments Advisory Board more
central to the process, and by the same token to make the process less
political. I envisage that I will be in a position to bring proposals for
reform to the Government later this year.
Following the current practice, provision is made in section 6 for the
Chief Justice and President of the High Court to be ex-officio additional
judges of the Court of Appeal. That section also provides that the
President of the Court of Appeal shall be ex-officio an additional judge of
the other Superior Courts. Furthermore, ordinary judges of the Supreme
Court or the High Court may sit as additional judges of the Court of Appeal
when, because of illness or for other reasons, there are insufficient
judges available to transact the business of the Court of Appeal. In this
regard analogous provisions are to be found in section 31 with regard to
the High Court, and section 42 which concerns the Supreme Court.
Section 8 of the Bill sets out the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal
which of course flows directly from the Constitution itself. The Courts
(Supplemental Provisions) Act is amended by the insertion of a new section
7A which provides that the Court of Appeal shall be a superior court of
record. In broad terms the Court of Appeal will have the jurisdiction
which, immediately before the establishment day, was vested in or capable
of being exercised by, the Supreme Court, the Court of Criminal Appeal and
the Courts-Martial Appeal Court. The Court of Appeal may sit in divisions
of three judges, which divisions may sit simultaneously. The Section also
provides that interlocutory applications may be heard either by the
President of the Court of Appeal sitting alone, or by another judge sitting
alone who has been nominated for that purpose.
There are certain provisions towards the end of the Bill which also have a
jurisdictional import. Section 68 deals by way of general amendment with
the numerous references which at present exist in a variety of enactments
in relation to appeals to the Supreme Court, including proceedings by way
of cases stated to that Court. For ease of reference Schedule 2 deals with
those Acts where consequential textual amendments are required.
Section 69 contains a provision in respect of decisions of the High Court
in respect of which further appeal is possible in certain circumstances.
This provision, which is general in nature, is to the effect that where
there is a limitation in legislation on an appeal from the High Court to
the Supreme Court, the limitation shall be read as being without prejudice
to the provisions of Article 34.5.4 of the Constitution to the effect that
the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction from decisions of the
High Court in exceptional circumstances. A similar provision in respect
of decisions of the High Court which are final and not subject to further
appeal is to be found in section 70. A further related provision is set
out in section 9 of the Bill which amends the Courts (Supplemental
Provisions) Act 1961 by inserting a new section 7B. That section 7B
provides that the Court of Appeal may, in certain circumstances, stay
proceedings before it in respect of an appeal from a decision of the High
Court. The purpose of this would be to enable the applicant to apply to
the Supreme Court for leave to appeal the decision of the High Court under
Article 34.5.4 of the Constitution
An issue which obviously arises on the establishment of the Court of Appeal
is how to deal with appeals to the Supreme Court which have not yet been
heard at the time the new Court is established. Essentially what is
envisaged is that the Chief Justice may, if satisfied that it is in the
interests of the administration of justice and the efficient determination
of appeals to do so, and with the concurrence of the other judges of the
Supreme Court, give a direction that appeals falling within a certain class
of appeal which are pending before the Supreme Court shall be heard and
determined by the Court of Appeal. On application by any of the parties to
an appeal, the Supreme Court may, if it is satisfied that it is just to do
so, cancel or vary the effect of that direction insofar as it relates to
that appeal. Specific provision is not made in this Bill, given the
detailed arrangements which are set out in the Thirty-third Amendment of
the Constitution (Court of Appeal) Act 2013.
As a consequence of the establishment of the Court of Appeal, both the
Court of Criminal Appeal and the Courts-Martial Appeal Court will be
abolished. Section 8 amends the Courts Supplemental (Provisions Act) 1961
to provide that, subject to the transitional provisions to which I shall
return shortly, the jurisdiction of the Court of Criminal Appeal and the
Courts-Martial Appeal Court shall be vested in the Court of Appeal.
Section 67 repeals a number of relevant provisions which touch upon those
courts while section 72 puts in place transitional arrangements for cases
which are in being before those courts on the day of the establishment of
the Court of Appeal. Essentially what is envisaged here is that where an
appeal to either the Court of Criminal Appeal or the Courts-Martial Appeal
Court has been initiated and heard, either in full or in part by either of
those Courts, that those courts will retain their appellate jurisdiction in
relation to the case in question.
The establishment of the Court of Appeal requires certain adaptations in
both the civil and criminal legal aid regime and these are to be found in
sections 44 and 51 respectively. Associated provisions which have a
bearing on the courts-martial appeal legal aid regime are to be found in
sections 47 and 48 of this Bill.
Deputies will be aware that the Court of Criminal Appeal currently sits on
an ad hoc basis, relying on a combination of Supreme Court and High Court
judges. Approximately 570 cases are currently lodged before that Court.
While Section 18 provides that it shall be the function of the President of
the Court of Appeal to arrange the distribution and allocation of the
business of the Court, and to arrange the divisions which are referred to
in section 8, I anticipate that the Court of Appeal will have a dedicated
criminal panel, at least in the initial stages, until such time as the
current backlog of cases before the Court of Criminal Appeal has been
addressed. Section 8 provides for a single judgment rule in criminal
appeal cases heard by the Court of Appeal, as is the practice in both the
Court of Criminal Appeal and the Special Criminal Court at the moment.
It is not every day that we move to establish a new court and, in
recognition of the fact that some issues in the future may require
attention, Section 3 gives a broad power to make Regulations to deal with
unanticipated difficulties which might arise in bringing provisions of the
Act or of specified Articles of the Constitution into operation. The
provision applies for a two year period and, if any Regulations need to be
made under the section, they will be subject to an approval resolution by
each House of the Oireachtas. While a provision of this nature is not
commonplace it is not without precedent and a similar provision can, for
instance, be found in the Local Government Reform Act 2014.
Deputies may also be interested in more mundane matters concerning where
the new Court of Appeal will sit. Appeals in civil matters will be heard
by the Court sitting in the Four Courts campus, while sittings relating to
criminal matters will be heard in the Criminal Courts of Justice. The
Office of the Registrar of the Court of Appeal and its staff will be
located in Áras Uí Dhálaigh, which building is part of the Four Courts
complex.
The creation of the Court of Appeal provides an opportunity for the courts
and the Courts Service to explore new ways of doing business. In
particular, it presents an opportunity for reform of some of the practices
and procedures which are currently in place in the Supreme Court, and the
putting in place of appropriate case management structures in both the
Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal. I want to place on record my own
and the Government’s appreciation of the leadership provided by Chief
Justice Denham both in relation to this project and in her management of
the Supreme Court list.
While case management in the Supreme Court is currently conducted on a
non-statutory basis, I consider it appropriate that statutory backing be
provided to underpin the reforms which I know the judiciary are keen to
embark upon. Therefore I will be moving an amendment at Committee Stage
which will provide that the Chief Justice and the President of the Court of
Appeal, as appropriate, may issue practice directions in relation to
appeals or applications made to those Courts. It is envisaged that such
practice directions may relate to both civil and criminal proceedings.
Turning now to some of the other provisions of the Bill, the precedence of
the judges of the new court vis-a-vis the judges of the existing courts is
set out in Section 27. Section 19 concerns the President or ordinary judge
of the Court of Appeal travelling with, and sitting as part of, the High
Court on Circuit. Section 20 provides for the making of Rules of Court in
respect of the Court of Appeal, while sections 23 and 24 provide for the
establishment of the Office of Registrar of the Court of Appeal, the
appointment of the Registrar of that Court, and the appointment of deputies
for the Registrar of the Court of Appeal. The provisions relating to that
Office mirror those which apply to the Supreme Court.
Part 3 of the Bill contains amendments to a range of Acts to take account
of the establishment of the Court of Appeal. For example, section 39
amends the Seanad Electoral (Panel Members) Act 1947 to allow a judge of
the Court of Appeal to be Chairman of the Appeal Board which hears appeals
from decisions of the Seanad returning officer under that Act. A further
example relates to section 49, which amends the Ethics in Public Office Act
1995 to allow a judge or former judge of the Court of Appeal to be
appointed Chairperson of the Standards in Public Office Commission.
Provision is also made to put in place the arrangements necessary should a
Chairperson of the Commission, who is a judge of the Court of Appeal, be
temporarily unable to act, and for the continuation in office as
Chairperson of a person who ceases to be a judge of the Court of Appeal and
who is not appointed to another judicial office.
In conclusion, this Bill provides for the establishment of the Court of
Appeal in accordance with the terms of Article 34A of the Constitution.
Furthermore, important legal considerations as to how best to reflect the
constitutional provisions which relate to the new Court, and which regulate
the relationship between it and the Supreme Court, are set out in the Bill.
I am of the view that a modern and complex society such as our own, which
has undergone, and indeed continues to undergo, rapid change places many
demands on our legal structures and it is right that those structures
should be examined and, if necessary, reformed to reflect the changing face
of society. In this instance the establishment of the Court of Appeal
will address many of the challenges and demands which face our court system
and should result in a more positive experience than heretofore for all
those who interact with it.
I look forward to hearing the views of Deputies on the proposals contained
in this Bill and I commend this Bill to the House.
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