Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Judicial shockers ... The justice business ... Appeal admonitions ... Sore bottoms for those lower down the chain of command ... Nationwide lapses ... Perfection proves elusive ... Latest from Ginger Snatch ... Read more ...

Politics Media Law Society


Journalism's new poster boy ... Our Julian's long and winding road … Legal quagmire … Espionage Act versus prior restraint of the press … The born-again "journalist" who hates journalism … Establishing a treacherous precedent … Not letting shortcomings swamp the positives ... Read on ... 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

It's too late for the thylacine ... Procrustes closely analyses recent Justinian reports ... The Ippster and Stella Liebeck ... Tort law reform that went beyond the Pale ... In Tassie, no one is allowed to speak for the forests ... Standing up against State rule of the trees ... Where's Syd Shea when you need him? ... Read more ... 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Vic's Bar ... Oral history ... Jeff Sher and his famous cases ... More >>

Justinian's Bloggers

Courtroom capers ... Federal Court's digital hiccups ... Principal Registrar in home run ... Pronunciation requirements for names and pre-nominate ... Elocution audit ... Common law shuffle in New South Wales ... Vicki Mole reports ... Read more ... 

"I think it's madness to change it. If you walked into a McDonald's hamburger restaurant and they started serving you seafood, you'd be very confused if you were a customer."

Newington College old boy Peter Thomas arguing against the school admitting female students ... Reported in Guardian Australia, June 21, 2024 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

The election season ... The case for compulsory voting ... Pity the Brits, French and Americans where politicians have to "get out the vote" ... Nathan Twibill on the advantages of the "median voter" strategy ... Vote early, vote often ... Read more ... 


Justinian's archive

Self-promotion ... Academics scramble to peddle influence with High Court judges ... Government seeks new role for s.18C ... Twenty-one years later, the cheque arrives ... Would you eat at a cafe owned by a Cabinet minister? ... From Justinian's Archive, October 27, 2014 ... Read more ... 


 

 

« Crime scenes | Main | That sinking feeling »
Wednesday
Aug032011

Silence is leaden

ACT damages verdict at least two-and-a-half years overdue ... No response from Canberra bar or Supremes to counsel's multiple notices under delayed judgment protocol ... Writ of mandamus heading to the High Court 

There is more troubling news from the bush capital. 

The reserved judgment protocol between bar and bench in the ACT appears to have broken an axel. 

The normal arrangement is that after three months without a judgment the prez of the local Bar 'n' Grill, on the prompting of counsel in the case, writes to the chief justice to ask what's up. 

The CJ then has a quiet word to the judge and is supposed to elicit a likely date for delivery of the judgment. 

Lawyers for a plaintiff in a case before Justice Richard Refshauge, which commenced three-and-a-half years ago, have sent five notices to the ACT bar under the protocol seeking an indication of a delivery date. 

So far there has been no reply from the bar, the CJ or the judge. 

The case simply requires an assessment of damages for the victim of a rear-end motor vehicle accident. 

Liability is not an issue. 

Allowing a reasonable six months for delivery of the verdict from the time the hearing concluded means the judgment has been dragging the chain for more than 30 months. 

Despite the five notices to the ACT bar for a nudge from the CJ, silence has prevailed. 

In the meantime, the plaintiff's depression and general aggravation gets no better. 

So upsetting is the situation that counsel's advice has been sought about going down the road with a writ of mandamus to the High Court. 

*   *   *

It's not as though Refshauge is lazy or incompetent. It seems the problem is he has difficulty arriving at a decision and he's bogged down with reserved judgments. 

One solicitor says he has five commercial matters waiting for over 18-months for a judgment from Roughshagger.  

It was curious to see Canberra bar bigwig John Purnell complaining about court delays in a recent instalment of the bar's spruik-sheet.  

He said silken ones visiting the ACT find the case backlog "unbelievable". 

Fair enough. But it seems clear that the bar's management of the reserved judgment protocol also requires the application of a bit of ginger. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.