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Speeches
INTERNATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION
HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTE
CONFERENCE HONG KONG 12-14 JUNE 1998
INDEPENDENCE OF THE JUDICIARY -
BASIC PRINCIPLE, NEW CHALLENGES
The Hon Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
1
A FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHT
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
("ICCPR") states the fundamental rights that
belong to human beings everywhere. Amongst the rights stated
are those in the section which contains "Procedural Guarantees
in Civil and Criminal Trials"
2 . Article 14.1 says,
relevantly:
"All persons shall be equal before the courts and tribunals.
In the determination of any criminal charge against him, or
of his rights and obligations in a suit at law, everyone shall
be entitled to a fair and public hearing by a competent, independent
and impartial tribunal established by law".
This cardinal provision is derived from earlier statements
of universal principles 3
. It draws upon the historical experience of many lands. It
is impossible to ensure the rule of law, upon which other
human rights depend, without providing independent courts
and tribunals to resolve, in the language of the ICCPR, competently,
independently and impartially, disputes both of a criminal
and civil character. The alternative to the rule of law is
the rule of power, which is typically arbitrary, self-interested
and subject to influences which may have nothing to do with
the applicable law or the factual merits of the dispute. Without
the rule of law and the assurance that comes from independent
decision-makers, it is obvious that equality before the law
will not exist. Uniformity, consistency and certainly in decisions,
will be accidental. The achievement of a manifestly disinterested
and impartial application of legal rules will not be a feature
of such a society 4
.
The constitutional provision of a judicial branch of government,
and the formal assurance that it is separate and independent
of the other branches, represents the main way by which most
states seek to comply with the principles contained in the
foregoing provision of the ICCPR. The judicial branch does
not, typically, include all those who, in a given society,
make decisions by applying pre-existing law to proved facts.
Nowadays, there are many tribunals, statutory decision-makers
and others who have that responsibility
5 . Nevertheless, a constitutional
statement guaranteeing the independence of the judiciary is
a good start. Symbolically, it involves an endorsement of
the principles and makes departures from them more difficult
because they will need to be more public.
Total separation of the judicial power is not possible in
the real world. In many countries, the Executive Government
appoints judges. The legislature provides for their salaries
and pensions. It funds the activities of the courts. To give
content to the provisions of Art 14.1 ICCPR, it is therefore
necessary to go beyond the letter of a written constitution.
It is essential to breathe life into the sparse language of
the ICCPR. This requires a reflection upon the constitutional
struggles, past and present, by which people everywhere have
been seeking to attain the kind of human right to which Art
14.1 gives expression. It is not necessary to be a sophisticated
investor in Hong Kong or a world-weary lawyer in Australia
or the United States, to realise how important it is that
a conflict, serious enough to come to formal decision-making
in a court, should be resolved by a decision-maker who is
"competent, independent and impartial". Even a person
living in a most primitive society will aspire to that objective
when confronted with the need to approach a decision-maker.
A judge without independence is a charade wrapped in a farce
inside an oppression.
The conventions which must supplement textual assertions
of judicial independence reach deep into the history of each
people and each legal system. In the countries of the common
law, judicial independence received important constitutional
reinforcement when King James II of England was driven from
the Kingdom in the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688.
His successors, William and Mary, were only accepted by the
people on condition, amongst other things, that they promised
to respect the tenure of the judges essential to their true
independence of mind and of action
6 . The principle, and
the way it was achieved by revolution, ensured that for England,
brutal intimidation of the judiciary would not again occur.
Other, more subtle means might be tried by successive Executives
and legislatures to attempt to influence judges and affect
the outcome of their deliberations. But at least for the superior
judiciary of England, the threat of dismissal because the
Crown did not like a particular outcome, was lifted. This
revolutionary achievement was to become a model which was
eventually extended to the constitutions of all other countries
of the common law. It provides the formal assurance in those
countries of the type of judicial independence for which Article
14.1 ICCPR stands 7
.
At first, the English were somewhat reluctant to share the
prize of judicial independence with their colonies. The Declaration
of Independence of the United States of America, for example,
listed as one of the grievances of the American colonists
against King George III that 8
:
"He has made judges dependent on his Will alone, for
the Tenure of their Offices, and the Amount and Payment of
their Salaries".
It was this experience that led James Madison, in drafting
the amendments to the United States Constitution, which became
the Bill of Rights of that country, to assert
9 :
"[I]ndependent tribunals of justice will consider themselves
in a peculiar manner the guardians of these rights; they will
be an impenetrable bulwark against every assumption of power
in the legislature or executive; they will be naturally led
to resist every encroachment upon rights expressly stipulated
for in the Constitution by the Declaration of Rights".
Bad experiences led to an emerging conviction in many countries
that guarantees had to be provided against the kind of governmental
action that would diminish the independence of the courts:
the dismissal or suspension of judges who delivered unpalatable
decisions; putting out to pasture judges who had a record
of reversing government action; leaving unfilled judicial
vacancies so that courts could not properly perform their
functions; selecting weak, incompetent, corrupt and partial
appointees to sit in the judicial seat; lopping the pensions,
salaries and other benefits so as to intimidate judges and
to divert them from the lawful, honest and principled actions
required by the proper discharge of their functions.
Although there have certainly been cases of judicial weakness,
partiality, cowardice and corruption (symbolised most vividly
by Judge Roland Freisler who did Hitler's bidding) there have
been many more cases of judicial integrity, courage and principled
conduct. The real test comes when judges are led by their
understanding of the law, the findings on the facts and the
pull of conscience to a decision which is contrary to what
the other branches of government or other powerful interests
in society want. Something different from what "the home
crowd" wants 10
. That is when judicial independence is put to the test.
In the United States, in recent times, the Supreme Court
has twice, and unanimously, rejected an argument, advanced
by the President, of great political importance to the most
powerful office-holder of the nation. In United States
v Nixon 11
, the Court in July 1974 upheld a subpoena issued by
a United States District judge, the Hon John Sirica, directing
President Nixon to produce, for use in a criminal proceeding,
tape recordings and documents recording conversations in the
White House between Nixon and his advisers. The Supreme Court
included four Nixon appointees, including Chief Justice Burger
who wrote the Court's decision. The Court unanimously declared
the law. It affirmed the subpoena. The President obeyed. He
then promptly resigned from office.
More recently, in Clinton v Jones
12 , President
Clinton claimed immunity until the expiry of his term as President
from proceedings in court brought against him by Ms Paula
Jones. Unanimously, the Supreme Court dismissed his petition.
It was held that it would be an abuse of discretion for the
District Court to defer the trial because in doing so, it
would fail to take into account the interests of the individual
citizen to bring her case to trial which could be held without
impinging on the President's conduct of his office. In many
countries of the world, such strong and independent judicial
decisions could not be made in the face of powerful opposition
from government or other formidable interests.
Yet many countries record similar examples where the great
and powerful, the opinionated and the wealthy have been subjected
by judicial decision to the rule of law expounded in independent
courts. In my own country, the High Court of Australia has
repeatedly, over the past century, held the balance fixed
by law, upheld the Constitution and defended fundamental principles
against the wishes of elected governments and Parliaments.
In 1948 it struck down the nationalisation of the private
banks 13
. In 1951, it declared unconstitutional an attempt to dissolve
the communist party and to deprive communists of basic rights
14
. In 1992 it overturned much earlier law to uphold the rights
of Australia's indigenous people in their land
15 . In 1996 it held
that such rights were not necessarily extinguished by the
grant of pastoral leases which cover about half of the land
of the Australian continent 16
. Decisions of this kind would be unlikely in a society where
judicial independence was not guaranteed by the letter of
the Constitution and not upheld by political convention, respected
and obeyed even by powerful interests and supported by the
people. These are the objectives to which Art 14.1 ICCPR point
the entire international community.
COMMENTARY ON ARTICLE 14.1
Article 14.1 of the ICCPR provides institutional guarantees
to secure the human rights contained within it. Professor
Manfred Nowak 17
comments that the apparent intention of the Article is to
extend the protection granted beyond the "formally"
(and nationally) defined term "court":
"On the one hand it is not enough for the national
legislature to designate an authority as a court if this does
not correspond to Art 14(1)'s requirements of independence
and impartiality. On the other hand administrative authorities
that are largely independent and free of directives may, under
certain circumstances, satisfy the requirements of a tribunal
pursuant to Art 14".
Explaining the tripartite requirements of the Article, Professor
Nowak emphasises that the conditions expressed are "to
ensure that the jurisdictional power of a tribunal is determined
generally and independent of the given case". The requirement
of independence:
"relates primarily to the executive but also to a lesser
extent to the legislative branch of the State. Judges or other
members of a tribunal need not necessarily be appointed for
life or be unimpeachable, but they must be appointed or elected
for a longer period of time (at least several years) and may
not be subject to directives or in some other manner dependent
on other State organs in the exercise of their office. In
particular, this independence is not always assured with military
courts, revolutionary tribunals and similar special courts.
However, the criterion of independence goes beyond mere separation
of State powers and is to ensure that tribunals are not overly
influenced by powerful social groups. In certain cases, this
may also lead to a duty on State Parties to undertake positive
measures to ensure this guarantee against excessive influence
by the media, industry, political parties, etc".
Many countries will be able to point to municipal decisions
of their courts in which the principle of the manifest independence
and impartiality of the courts and tribunals have been explored:
perhaps against a background of alleged bias by a judicial
officer; perhaps against evidence of apparent attempts by
the media or other powerful interests to sway particular decisions
in favour of one party or another
18 . Different countries
exhibit different conceptions of the law of contempt and in
particular in relation to the media which necessarily play
a part in the attainment of other human rights mentioned in
the ICCPR 19
.
Most of the cases coming before the United Nations Human
Rights Committee, the European Court of Human Rights or national
courts in relation to the guarantee of judicial independence
and impartiality have concerned problems of perceived bias
on the part of a member of a court or tribunal. Thus in
Karttunen v Finland 20
, the author of the communication to the Human Rights
Committee claimed violation of Art 14 in that the Court included
a lay participant connected with the complainant who had brought
proceedings against the applicant. Finland conceded that the
proceedings did not meet the requirements of Art 14.1. However,
it suggested that the actual decision of the Tribunal was
not influenced. The Committee upheld the need for manifest
independence of the parties and unquestionable impartiality.
It directed Finland to provide the complainant with an effective
remedy for the violation of the ICCPR.
Several cases concerning the need to ensure judicial independence
from the parties have been decided by the European Court of
Human Rights 21
. In doing so, that Court has sometimes disturbed long settled
practices in civil law countries by which district prosecutors
can occasionally act as magistrates and also order the detention
of criminal defendants. The Court has held that in this judicial
capacity such prosecutors have to be, and to appear to be,
completely independent of those involved in the initiation
of criminal proceedings.
The cases coming before international tribunals illustrate
the variety of municipal arrangements which exist to which
the universal statements of human rights principle must be
applied. That variety is global. It is evident throughout
Asia because of different legal traditions, colonial experience
and legislative adaptation of the competing European models
on offer. Because there is a growing body of jurisprudence
collecting around the provisions of the ICCPR (and equivalent
texts) and because in the case of many states adverse determinations
of breaches of the ICCPR oblige corrective measures to bring
municipal law into conformity, it is inevitable that the influence
of the ICCPR will expand and increase. I believe that it is
likely, in the years ahead, to affect the construction of
ambiguous provisions of national constitutions
22 , municipal statutory
provisions 23
and areas of the common law in need of development and re-exposition
24
.
I turn now to some special issues affecting judicial independence
which require the vigilant attention of judges, lawyers and
indeed all citizens. The generalities of Art 14.1 of the ICCPR
must ultimately be considered in the context of real challenges
to judicial independence. These vary in time and place. But
they certainly exist and they need to be exposed by those
who know the history of earlier threats to judicial independence
and why its preservation is important for the practical defence
of all other human rights.
SPECIAL ISSUES
Judicial appointments :
In many states, the threat to judicial independence will
not lie in direct confrontation between other branches of
government and other powerful interests (on the one hand)
and the judiciary (on the other). There are countries of the
world where judges and lawyers are intimidated, oppressed
and prevented from performing the duties necessary to their
offices and even killed for doing their duty. Those in doubt
should read the Annual Reports of the Centre for the Independence
of Judges and Lawyers established by the International Commission
of Jurists, titled Attacks on Justice. Those reports
collect, and annually review, the case studies which are assembled
in Geneva relating to attacks on judges and lawyers. Those
attacks can range from brutal intimidation and murder to much
more subtle and insidious interventions by the state and other
powerful interests designed to reduce the independence of
mind and action of the members of courts and other tribunals.
In many jurisdictions, the problems will be less those of
brutal intimidation and more those involving departure from
proper principle. Take for example the question of the term
of appointment of judges and those performing quasi-judicial
office. As Professor Nowak has acknowledged, life tenure is
not a prerequisite to the kind of judicial independence of
which the ICCPR is speaking. In Australia, federal judges
were originally held 25
, like those of the United States, to be entitled under the
Constitution to appointment for life. This created certain
inconvenience. It was repaired by one of the few formal constitutional
amendments carried by referendum in Australia
26 . This provides that
judges of the highest court must retire at the age of 70.
Parliament may provide a retirement age for other federal
judges. Judges of the State courts in Australia generally
have no precisely equivalent constitutional protection. Their
protections lie in statutory provisions (most of which may
be amended by ordinary legislation) and longstanding convention
and practice.
In recent years, to clear backlogs in state courts, governments
of different political persuasions in the Australian States,
have resorted to the appointment of many acting judges. Busy
legal practitioners and sometimes academics or retired judges
agree to offer their services, in effect, part-time. Such
appointments have practical advantages. Nobody doubts the
integrity of the legal practitioners who have accepted appointment.
But they run into serious problems of principle. The past
Chief Justice of Australia (Sir Gerard Brennan) noted shortly
before his retirement that "judicial independence is
at risk when future appointment or security of tenure is within
the gift of the Executive"
27 .
The practice of appointing acting judges, instead of supplementing
the permanent establishment of the judiciary, has been condemned
by professional bodies in Australia
28 . One recent Australian
report stated 29
:
"Acting judges whose reappointment or permanent appointment
is at the discretion of the ... Attorney-General and Cabinet
clearly lack judicial independence in the accepted sense".
This is a further illustration of the dichotomy between
actual diminution of independence in the subjective
sense and the appearance of loss of independence, by application
of an objective criterion. Most of the lawyers who
accept part-time or temporary judicial appointment in the
Australian States would not be influenced in their decisions
by the lack of guaranteed tenure. They have busy practices,
universities or judicial pensions to return to. But what of
the lawyer who would welcome a permanent appointment? What
of the problem of such a lawyer faced with a decision which
might be very upsetting to government, unpopular with the
media or disturbing to some powerful body with influence?
Anecdotal stories soon spread about the "form" of
acting judges which may harm their chances of permanent appointment
in a way that is unjust. Such psychological pressures, however
subtle, should not be imposed on decision-makers. They should
be free from inducements and protected by tenure which is
the fundamental guarantee of real independence. Whilst the
objective of governments to clear backlogs in court lists
is admirable, the growing tendency, at least in Australia,
to attack the problem by the use of part-time and acting judicial
appointees is undesirable. It diverts attention from ensuring
that the regular judicial establishment is kept at a level
which can discharge the work of the judicial branch of government.
In the United States the basic problem is the same but its
immediate manifestation is different. Serious delays in the
appointment of federal judges have been criticised by Chief
Justice Renhquist in the Annual Report on the Judiciary
30
. In jurisdictions where legislative approval of judicial
appointments or numbers is required, there seems to be an
increasing tendency to introduce political bargaining, horse
trading and consequent delays 31
. One feature of independence of courts and tribunals in today's
world is an assurance that their essential personnel will
enjoy appointment for a period sufficient to remove the distracting
concern about reappointment and future livelihood. Furthermore,
the courts or tribunals concerned need to be kept in sufficient
resources, human and financial, to ensure that they can perform
their essential functions at an appropriate level of competence
and with an independence of government that is missing where
the judiciary is constantly beholden, for its very survival
and effectiveness, to inadequate handouts and short-term appointments.
Judicial accountability :
A constant problem is that of reconciling the sometimes
conflicting demands of judicial independence and tenure with
the demands of accountability and essential levels of judicial
competence.
The old belief that the judiciary was beyond criticism,
both as to its work and personnel, has given way, in many
countries, to a serious desire, not least from the judiciary
itself, to ensure that appropriate levels of performance are
reached, that continuing education outside the courtroom is
accepted, that minimum standards of diligence, competence
and ethical conduct are upheld and that all of this is demonstrated
to the community whom the judges serve. The Chief Justice
of New Zealand (Sir Thomas Eichelbaum) has written about the
delicate balance between accountability and independence in
judicial office 32
:
"The imperative of judicial independence means that,
although publicly funded, the judiciary cannot be directed
by or held to account by a Minister in the same way as other
public officials. Judicial independence does not mean, however,
that the judiciary is free from the requirement to be accountable.
Judges are held to account by the appellate system, whereby
judicial decisions can be reviewed and corrected, and by the
openness of the judicial system, which exposes Judges to public
scrutiny, of which there is plenty. ... In the current climate
a much greater emphasis is placed on the accountability of
public institutions for managing scarce resources in a prudent
and careful manner. The New Zealand judiciary, like its counterparts
in other countries, recognises the importance of efficiency
and value for money in the operation of the Courts and of
providing assurance of this to the community".
As indications of appropriate accountability consistent
with independence, it is possible to point in many countries
to the detailed reports that are now given by the judiciary
to the Executive and the legislature which must raise taxes
from the people to fund the courts. It may also be seen in
the much greater involvement of the judiciary today, than
was formerly the case, in continuing formal education and
in bodies concerned with judicial administration. In many
jurisdictions, institutions have been established, in which
complaints about the judiciary can be investigated and, where
proved, dealt within ways short of constitutional removal
33
. Constitutional machinery for the removal of a judge who
is proved guilty of serious misconduct or incapacity will
often be inappropriate, and for that reason ineffective, in
the case of the judge who is simply rude, repeatedly guilty
of unjustifiable discrimination, keeping inappropriate company,
sleeping on the bench, given to indulgence in alcohol, lateness
and chronic delay in the provision of reasons.
The problem which the judiciary, and the community, face
in such cases of judicial default is a difficult one. How
can the independence of the institution be safeguarded without
tolerating a performance of a highly skilled and important
public function which falls short of the appropriate standard?
The danger of a too easy and intrusive system of discipline
for judges is that judges will be made constant targets by
disgruntled litigants, professional rivals, media editorialists
who thirst for simple (and generally more punitive) solutions
to every problem, and politicians or others on the make? Recently
in New York a State district judge, Judge Duckman, was removed
from office by a 7 to 4 ruling of the Commission on Judicial
Conduct of the State's highest court, the Court of Appeals.
The majority concluded that the judge had shown a "bullying"
bias against prosecutors and made disparaging or inappropriate
remarks against African-Americans and women coming before
his court. The judge, at last report, was appealing
34 . The mother of a
young woman who was killed after the judge allowed the person
to go free who killed her daughter, loudly applauded the Commission's
decision. But the judge's representative claimed that the
complaints against him were merely the result of a political
campaign by the State Governor, embarked upon for his own
political reasons. A dissentient on the Commission, Judge
William Thompson, was reported as saying "a jurist who
has sat on over 50,000 cases should not be removed for misconduct
in only 19 cases" 35
. No self-interest on the part of Judge Duckman was contended
nor any corruption in the accepted sense.
Somehow, judicial conduct commissions have to operate in
a context which respects the variability of appointees and
the need to defend judges from litigant, political, media
and other pressure which would diminish the capacity of the
institution as a whole to perform its function with courage,
resolution and true independence
36 .
Independence from each other :
One aspect of judicial independence which is often overlooked
is that judges must also be independent from each other. A
proper system of judicial administration will provide for
presiding judges and court officials to organise the business
of the members of courts and tribunals efficiently, economically
and justly as between different members. But in the performance
of the central role of decision-making, a member of a court
or tribunal will not be independent if he or she can be directed
by a superior colleague on how to decide a matter. Nor will
the judge enjoy independence of mind if he or she can be effectively
removed from the performance of the judicial function by the
simple expedient of rostering the judge off work. If that
were to become common, the court or tribunal in question would
not be constituted in accordance with law. The formal procedures
for discipline and removal from office would then be set at
naught.
An interesting case illustrating this lastmentioned principle
came before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on
appeal from the Court of Appeal of Trinidad and Tobago. Justice
Richard Crane, a judge of the High Court of that country,
was directed by the Chief Justice not to sit. This direction
followed the receipt of complaints about the judge. The Chief
Justice declined to include him in a roster of judges to sit
in the following Term. Later, a Judicial and Legal Service
Commission, of which the Chief Justice was an ex officio
member, agreed with that decision. Without notice to
the judge, the Commission met to consider steps for his formal
removal. Action was taken by Justice Crane for judicial review
in the courts. The Privy Council, upholding a decision of
the majority of the Court of Appeal of Trinidad and Tobago,
concluded that the Chief Justice had no power to suspend or
remove the judge from office except by the procedure provided
by the Constitution. The Chief Justice's power to organise
the procedure and sittings of the courts did not run so far.
Excluding Justice Crane from participation in the roster was
not the kind of administrative arrangement which was within
the Chief Justice's legal competence. It was an unconstitutional
suspension of a judge from judicial office which was unlawful
37
. The Privy Council acknowledged that sometimes it would be
necessary to move with speed in cases of allegations of misconduct.
But an individual judge was in "a particularly vulnerable
position both for the present and for the future if suspicion
of the kind referred to is raised without foundation"
38
. The judge whose duty was to accord fairness was also entitled
to have fairness accorded to him in such a circumstance.
The case involving Justice Crane is a strong decision and
one which reminds readers of the lonely individuality of each
judicial decision-maker. In collegiate courts, it is necessary
and efficient to share the workload and to exchange ideas
and opinions. But even there, respect must always be paid
to the right of each judge to decide matters according to
that judge's conscience and understanding of the facts and
law. Court officials and presiding justices cannot invade
that space which is essential to true judicial independence.
This is often misunderstood by the media, by government officials
used to directions from superiors and by the public. When
I was President of a Court of Appeal, I was often amused by
the assumption of my power to direct my colleagues and to
"pull them into line". Lawyers know that it does
not happen like that. Judges know that it never should.
Judicial remuneration :
Another issue of judicial independence which needs constant
vigilance relates to salary, pensions and other benefits of
office. Many municipal constitutions expressly state that
there may be no diminution in the remuneration of judges during
their judicial service 39
. But sometimes, as in Australia and Canada, such provisions
apply only to federal, or federally appointed, judges. Thus
in Canada, a number of cases have lately come before the Supreme
Court dealing with complaints by Provincial court judges about
erosion of their benefits, working conditions and status
40 . In a recent case,
the Supreme Court of Canada accepted that a Province was free
to raise, freeze or reduce judicial salaries of Provincial
judges, as well as other forms of their compensation, so long
as they did not fall below a minimum acceptable level. But
the Supreme Court held that a Province could not do this unless
the proposed changes were first considered by an "independent,
effective and objective Commission" whose report, and
any governmental departure from it, was publicly disclosed
and able to be justified by government in a court of law.
Drawing upon section 11(d) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms which guarantees an accused person
the right to be tried by an independent and impartial judge
(in much the same terms as Art 14.1 ICCPR) the Supreme Court
of Canada held that it was impermissible for Provincial judges
to negotiate with Provincial authorities about the terms of
their compensation, although Chief Judges could address such
issues in public fora and in communication with governmental
officials. With true independence, one judge of the Supreme
Court of Canada (Justice La Forest) dissented strongly from
the notion that there was a constitutionally entrenched role
for Judicial Compensation Commissions
41 .
In Australia, the recent introduction of a surcharge tax
on superannuation has had differential consequences upon federal
judges appointed before a given date, and those appointed
thereafter; upon State judges and Supreme Court masters; and
some territory judges and magistrates
42 . According to news
reports, the Association of Australian Magistrates has claimed
that the failure to exempt those magistrates already appointed
from the superannuation surcharge has effectively reduced
their remuneration contrary to principles of income security
for judicial officers during their tenure. I must make no
comment lest the matter should proceed to litigation. The
recent decisions in Canada illustrate the way in which questions
of this kind can come before constitutional courts. In the
Judges Case 43
in 1937, the Privy Council rejected a contention that
judges could not sit in such matters because they necessarily
had a personal interest. The Privy Council upheld the view
that judges, in that case of a Canadian court, although "in
an embarrassing position" were "bound to act
ex necessitate " 44
.
Vulnerable tribunals :
In some jurisdictions, where the independence of the official
judiciary, at least in the higher courts, has been strictly
observed, it is tribunals and lower courts that occasionally
find themselves vulnerable to governmental and legislative
action inimical to independence of the kind of which Art 14.1
of the ICCPR is speaking. The problem has come about because
of the appointment, in recent years, of large numbers of court-like
bodies, tribunals and office-holders to perform functions
having similarities to those of the courts. A question is
presented as to whether such bodies are within the assurance
of Article 14.1 ICCPR which refers not only to "courts"
but also, by juxtaposition, to "tribunals" concerned
in deciding a "suit at law". Thus, in New Zealand,
Residential Tenancy Tribunals have been established to take
over from the traditional courts the resolution of disputes
between landlords and tenants. The object of this innovation
was to provide a readily accessible, speedy and inexpensive
way of solving such cases. In 1996 the Tribunals heard more
than 22,000 applications. They have 38 members, two-thirds
of them legally qualified. They sit part-time, as required,
in 40 courthouses throughout New Zealand. Are they entitled
to the same protections as Art 14.1 promises?
In Australia, there have been some rather unfortunate cases
where decision-making bodies, federal and state, some of which
were not strictly "courts" have been abolished.
Some of the members have not then been reappointed to the
successor bodies 45
. The former Chief Justice of Australia, Sir Anthony Mason,
in a paper "The Appointment and Removal of Judges"
46
deals with the special problem of tribunals by acknowledging
the way in which international statements, including that
in the ICCPR, address the "essentiality of judicial independence"
for decision-makers and not their formal titles or the names
of the bodies on which they serve
47 :
"The vast range of administrative tribunals, the wide
variations in the functions which they discharge and the issues
which they are called upon to decide make it impossible to
apply to all tribunals standing outside the orthodox court
system the regime which ought to govern the appointment and
removal of judges. It is simply not possible to equate the
appointment of members of all tribunals to the appointment
of judges of courts, though an equation might be found to
exist in those respects between members of some tribunals
and judges of some courts. .. Unless we put in place provisions
which preserve the independence of magistrates and members
of tribunals we run the risk that interference with the independence
of magistrates and tribunal members will eventually contribute
to the erosion of the concept of judicial independence as
it applies to judges. The central element of judicial independence
is the freedom of the judge to hear and decide cases without
interference and uninfluenced by an outsider - be it government,
pressure group or anyone else. The purpose of that independence,
it should be emphasised, is to serve as a protection of and
privilege of the people, not of the judges".
This too presents a tricky problem. Legislatures should
have the power, at least at the lower level of courts and
tribunals, to reconstitute and reorganise the work of such
bodies in accordance with the changing theories and practices
of judicial administration. But where government may be, potentially,
a party to litigation (as is always the case in tribunals
dealing with social security claimants, refugees and migration
disputes) it is inimical to the idea of independence enshrined
in Art 14.1 ICCPR that such decision-makers should have constantly
to look over their shoulders at the likelihood of reappointment
or the risks of termination. It is easy to say that appointment
and reappointment to such bodies should be "rational,
merit-based and transparent"
48 . However, the closer
the involvement of the decision-maker in the review of government
and official decisions, the more intolerable is the thought
that, after a short time, such decision-maker will be subject
to reappointment or termination influenced by the opinions
of the very persons who had been under that decision-maker's
scrutiny.
In Australia, at this time, proposals are being made in
a number of jurisdictions to reorganise administrative tribunals:
abolishing those that already exist and replacing them with
new and different bodies. The reasons commonly given are that
such reorganisation is needed to secure greater efficiency.
Experience from the past teaches the need for vigilance in
cases of this kind. Governments and legislatures, which are
directly accountable to taxpayers, have a right to change
courts and tribunals that are not constitutionally entrenched.
But taking advantage of such changes to diminish the independence
of formal decision-making, to remove those deemed troublesome
and to send a signal of their vulnerability to those newly
appointed or reappointed, is a matter that deserves close
attention. The response of the judiciary and of the legal
profession should be measured against the touchstone of Art
14.1 49
.
THE BIG CHALLENGE: DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Much of what I have said has addressed the problems of developed
societies with long traditions of judicial independence and
strong laws and a strong culture supporting the principles
in Art 14.1. Other countries, as we know, have much more basic
problems. In my service for the United Nations in Cambodia,
I saw the difficulty of securing independence of the judiciary
in a society that had been shattered by revolution, invasion,
genocide, further invasion and civil war. The problems are
endemic. Lack of trained personnel. Inadequate payment. A
tradition from colonial times of dialogue about cases with
the Ministry of Justice. Apparently pre-determined outcomes
to trials 50
. A lack of constitutional structures to appoint a new higher
judiciary, independent of government. Where judges have, exceptionally,
reached decisions inimical to government, they have reportedly
been suspended by order of the Minister of Justice
51 .
My successor as Special Representative for Human Rights
(Ambassador Thomas Hammarberg) has emphasised, as I did, the
central importance of an independent judiciary to the restoration
of human rights in Cambodia 52
. But it will not happen overnight. It will not happen without
support of the government and people of Cambodia. And it will
not happen without a lot of assistance from lawyers in more
fortunate lands. I imagine that some of these observations
might be extended to other countries in the region. They might
extend to the courts of China outside the Hong Kong SAR. The
recent announcement of the new President of the Supreme People's
Court, Mr Xiao Yang, that in future courts in China will be
open to the public and to the media is to be welcomed
53 . Scrutiny and true
accountability to the public and to informed critics will
enhance the demands for judicial independence. Departures
from independence will become more obvious. Notorious cases
will raise public demand that will ultimately have to be satisfied
by increasingly educated citizens aware of fundamental rights,
including that in Art 14.1. I pay tribute to the sharp-eyed
monitors of judicial independence - the UN Special Rapporteur
on the Independence of the Judiciary (Dato' Param Cumaraswamy);
the CIJL of the International Commission of Jurists; The Human
Rights Institute of the IBA; Amnesty International; Lawasia
and the Asian Human Rights Commission based in Hong Kong.
CONCLUSIONS
Article 14.1 ICCPR speaks to all states and individuals
everywhere. It propounds not merely an aspiration but a principle
of international human rights law. It is a principle which
can never be taken for granted. Powerful enemies who would
derogate from the independence of courts and tribunals are
never far away. It is the nature of the work of courts and
tribunals to leave many who come before them unhappy with
their results. I have mentioned some of the admirable decisions
by which the rule of law has been upheld by courts in countries
blessed by independent decision-makers acting according to
law. I have listed some of the modern ways in which judicial
independence can be endangered and diminished. But the chief
challenge lies in developing countries where derogation from
this fundamental principle is endemic, often serious, and
apparently intractable. Article 14.1 ICCPR states the standard.
In our countries we must seek to uphold that standard and
be alert wherever it is endangered.
A special obligation to defend judicial independence falls
on judges and lawyers not because of self-interest but because
they are aware of the history and purpose of judicial independence
and the myriad of ways by which it can be attacked by powerful
interests, public and private. In recent times attacks by
governments and politicians who should know better, spurred
on by a media avid for entertainment and conflict and by powerful
sectors in society unused to being thwarted, have become much
more vocal than they were in earlier times
54 The chief challenge
is to spread the influence of Art 14.1 to those countries
which have never really enjoyed a culture of competent, independent
and impartial tribunals established by law. That is a challenge
to which the International Bar Association and the International
Commission of Jurists should jointly commit themselves.
| 1 |
President of the International Commission
of Jurists. Formerly Special Representative of the Secretary-General
of the United Nations for Human Rights in Cambodia. Justice
of the High Court of Australia. Personal views. |
| 2 |
ICCPR, Art 14. |
| 3 |
For example Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
Art 10. |
| 4 |
K Ryan, "Judges, Courts and Tribunals", Paper
presented at the Australian Judicial Conference Symposium
on Judicial Independence and the Rule of Law at the Turn
of the Century, Australian National University, Canberra,
2 November 1996. |
| 5 |
P Skinner, "Judicial Independence and Residential
Tenancy Tribunals" (1998) 7 J Judicial Admin
(Aust) 130. |
| 6 |
Act of Settlement, 1701 (GB). F W Maitland,
The Constitutional History of England, 1950,
283-284; D L Keir, The Constitutional History of Modern
Britain, 1960, 267. |
| 7 |
In Australia, the guarantee is contained in Chapter
III of the Australian Constitution ("the judicature").
Section 71 vests the judicial power in nominated courts.
Section 72 provides for judicial appointment, tenure and
remuneration. It controls removal and forbids diminution
in remuneration during continuance in office. |
| 8 |
Declaration of Independence of the United States of
America, 4 July 1776. |
| 9 |
J Madison cited R Bader-Ginsburg, "Remarks on
Judicial Independence", Hawaii State Bar, 3 February
1998, to be published Australian Law Journal,
forthcoming, manuscript pp 20-21. |
| 10 |
Ginsburg, above n 8, p 1. |
| 11 |
418 US 683 (1974). |
| 12 |
137 LEd 2d 945 (1998). |
| 13 |
Bank of New South Wales v The Commonwealth
(1948) 76 CLR 1. |
| 14 |
Australian Communist Party v The Commonwealth
(1951) 83 CLR 1. |
| 15 |
Mabo v Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1.
|
| 16 |
Wik Peoples v Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1.
|
| 17 |
M Nowak, UN Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
- ICCPR Commentary , Engel, 1993, 233 at 244-246.
|
| 18 |
See eg Gallagher v Durack (1983) 152 CLR 238;
Hinch v Attorney-General (Vic) (1987) 164 CLR
15. |
| 19 |
For example freedom of expression. See Article 19 ICCPR.
See Nowak above n 16 at 335ff. |
| 20 |
UN Doc CCPR/C/46/D/387/1989 (1992) digested in F F
Mubtin et al, International Human Rights Law and Practice,
Cases Treaties and Materials, Kluwer, 1997, 527.
|
| 21 |
See eg Huber v Switzerland 188 UER Ct HR (series
A) (1990). |
| 22 |
Newcrest Mining v The Commonwealth (1991)
71 ALJR 1346 at 1423; 147 ALR 42 at 147; Kartinyeri
v The Commonwealth [1998] HCA 22 at 163. |
| 23 |
Young v Registrar, Court of Appeal [No 3]
(1993) 32 NSWLR 262 (CA). |
| 24 |
Mabo v Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1
at 42 per Brennan J. |
| 25 |
In Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia v
A W Alexander Ltd (1918) 25 CLR 434. |
| 26 |
Constitution Alteration (Retirement of Judges) 1977
(No 83 of 1977). |
| 27 |
F G Brennan, "The State of the Judicature"
(1998) 72 Australian Law Journal at 34-35. |
| 28 |
For example the International Commission of Jurists,
Australian Section (NSW Branch), Report on Acting
NSW District Court Judges , unpublished, April 1998
|
| 29 |
Ibid. The Supreme Court of Norway has recently
upheld a challenge to the validity of a decision of the
Borgarting High Court of Appeal which included a temporary
judge (subsequently appointed permanently by royal decree).
See Jens Viktor Plahte v The State (1996/97)
Vol V CIJL Yearbook (ICJ) 154. |
| 30 |
Report on the State of the Judiciary (US), 1997 noted
New York Times, 1 January 1998 at A13. |
| 31 |
In for example the case of the withdrawal of State
Judge Federico Massiah-Jackson from consideration for
appointment to the United States District Court. See
Washington Post 17 March 1998 at A19. |
| 32 |
T Eichelbaum, Report on the New Zealand Judiciary,
1995, Wellington, December 1995 at 2 noted Skinner
above n 4 at 132. |
| 33 |
In one Australian jurisdiction, namely New South Wales,
a Judicial Commission has been established with one function
being the receipt and determination of complaints against
judicial officers. See Judicial Officers Act
1986 (NSW), Pt 6. |
| 34 |
Reported New York Times, 25 October 1997 at
B1. |
| 35 |
Ibid, at B3. For a recent illustration of
the departure of an English judge (Harman J) see F Gibb
and K Knight, "Fast Exit for the Slowest Judge"
(London), The Times, 14 February 1998, 2 and
Editorial, 14 February 1998 at 23. |
| 36 |
For expression of concern that the Canadian Judicial
Council had developed "inappropriate procedures"
for disciplining judges, see I Greene, C Baar and P McCormick,
"Law, courts and democracy in Canada" (1997)
152 International Social Science Journal 227
at 229. |
| 37 |
Rees v Crane [1994] 2 AC 173. |
| 38 |
Ibid, at 194 per Lord Slynn of Hadley. |
| 39 |
Australian Constitution, s 72(iii) ["shall receive
shall remuneration as the Parliament may fix; but the
remuneration shall not be diminished during their continuance
in office"]. |
| 40 |
R v Valente [1985] 2 SCR 673; (1985) 24 DLR
(4th) 161. |
| 41 |
Reference re Public Sector Pay Reduction Act
(PEI), s 10; Reference re Provincial Court Act
(PEI); R v Campbell; R v Ekmecic; R v Wickman; Manitoba
Provincial Judges' Assn v Manitoba (Minister of Justice)
[1997] 3 SCR 3; (1997) 150 DRL (4th) 577 (SCC) ("Provincial
Court Judges' Case"). See also J S Ziegel, "The
Supreme Court Radicalises Judicial Compensation",
[1998] 9:2 Constitutional FORUM, 31. |
| 42 |
R Campbell, "ACT Magistrates' Super Surcharge
to Stay", Canberra Times, 16 April 1998
1; Editorial "Magistrates' Super Ruling is Wrong",
Canberra Times, 16 April 1998 at 8; "Warning
as tax slug hits judges", West Australian,
6 June 1998 at 8, reports the warning of Chief Justice
David Malcolm of Western Australia that new superannuation
tax would make it harder to recruit judicial officers.
|
| 43 |
[1937] 2 DLR 209 at 210 affirming [1936] 4 DLR 134
(Sask CA). |
| 44 |
Ziegel above n 39 at 41. |
| 45 |
M D Kirby, "Abolition of Courts and Non-Reappointment
of Judicial Officers" (1995) 12 Aust Bar Rev
181. See also S Zeitz, "Security of Tenure and
Judicial Independence" (1998) 7 J of Judicial
Admin (Aust) 159. The author refers to the Report
of the Joint Select Committee on Tenure of Appointees
to Commonwealth Tribunals (1989) of the Australian Parliament.
Ibid at 174-5. |
| 46 |
A F Mason, "The Appointment and Removal of Judges"
in Cunningham (ed) Fragile Bastion - Judicial Independence
in the Nineties and Beyond, Judicial Commission of
NSW, Sydney, 1997, 32. |
| 47 |
Mason, above n 44, cited in Skinner above n 4 at 134.
|
| 48 |
Australia, Administrative Review Council, Better
Decisions: Review of Commonwealth Merits Review Tribunals,
Report No 39, AGPS, Canberra, 1995 at 70-72. |
| 49 |
"Lawyers query move to merge tribunals",
Courier Mail , 10 June 1998 at 8. |
| 50 |
B Fernando and T Wickremasingh, "An Absence of
Genuine Courts - A Fundamental Obstacle to Democracy in
Cambodia" in Asia Human Rights Commission, Human
Rights Solidarity, December 1997, vol 7 no 7 at 11.
Cf R Reynolds, "Dicey in Cambodia or Droit Administratif
Meets the Common Law" (1998) 72 Australian Law
Journal 204. At 209 the author states that constitutional
separation of powers for the judiciary fits uncomfortably
with the Cambodian tradition of petitions to the King
for the remedy of perceived wrongs and injustices. Power
rather than reason, influence rather than law, are seen
as the sources of official remedies. Doubtless this is
true in many societies like that of Cambodia. |
| 51 |
"Three Appeal Court Judges Suspended" in
Human Rights Solidarity, January 1998, Vol 8
No 1, 13. |
| 52 |
Report of the Special Representative on Human Rights
in Cambodia to the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights, March 1998, Geneva. See "Military, judiciary
at top of UN envoy's concerns", Phnom Penh Post,
4 April 1998, at 9. |
| 53 |
"China opens its courts to public scrutiny",
reported Sydney Morning Herald, 18 April 1998
at 1, 23. |
| 54 |
See for example the Judicial Reform Bill 1998
(US) which provides that United States federal judges
may not - except under limited circumstances - (1) require
state or local government to impose a tax to meet the
terms of a judicial order; (2) enjoin enforcement of a
state law passed by ballot initiative; and (3) sit in
civil rights cases if objected to on a first peremptory
strike by a litigant. See Washington Post 22
August 1998 at A22. The United States Justice Department
and the Judicial Conference have objected to the Bill.
|
|