The Public Defender Act was passed in Jamaica in 1999, coming into effect April 16, 2000, repealing the Ombudsman Act and replacing the Office of the Parlimentary Ombudsman with the Office of the Public Defender with additional jurisdiction to investigate circumstances where it is alleged that a person's Constitutional rights have been violated.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Public Law Syllabus: Office of the Public Defender
The Public Defender Act was passed in Jamaica in 1999, coming into effect April 16, 2000, repealing the Ombudsman Act and replacing the Office of the Parlimentary Ombudsman with the Office of the Public Defender with additional jurisdiction to investigate circumstances where it is alleged that a person's Constitutional rights have been violated.
Monday, May 7, 2007
Public Law Syllabus : An in depth look at Hinds & Others v R
Read David Rowe's article, "Trial by Jury- Right or Privilege" for a discussion of Hinds v R.
The Act purported to establish a new court called the Gun Court. The court was empowered to sit in three Divisions, namely a Resident Magistrate’s Division, a Full Court Division and a Circuit Court Division. One or other of these Divisions was empowered to try certain kinds of offences which, prior to the coming into force of the Act were cognizable only in a Resident Magistrates Court or in a Circuit Court of the Supreme Court of Jamaica.
The Review Board was to consist of five persons of whom the Chairman was to be a judge or a former Supreme Court or Court of Appeal Judge. None of the other members of the Board was a member of the Judiciary. They were to be the Director of Prisons, the Chief Medical Officer, a nominee of the Jamaica Council of Churches and a person qualified in psychiatry nominated by the Prime Minister after consultation with the Leader of the Opposition. Thus the majority of persons on the Review Board did not consist of persons appointed in the manner laid down in Chapter VII of the Constitution for persons entitled to exercise Judicial powers.
In substance therefore, the power to determine the length of any custodial sentence imposed for an offence under s. 20 of the Firearms Act 1967 was removed from the Judicature and vested in a body of persons not qualified under the Constitution to exercise judicial powers. The only function left to the Gun Court itself in relation to the length of the custodial sentence was the right to make recommendations for the consideration of the Review Board. Even though the Review Board was obliged to take the recommendations into consideration, it was not obliged to follow it. The power of decision rested with the Review Board alone.
Hinds and others were convicted in the Resident Magistrate’s Division of the Gun Court and sentenced to detention during the Governor General’s pleasure. They appealed to the Court of Appeal against conviction and sentence on the grounds, inter alia, that the provisions of the Act under which they had been tried and sentenced were in conflict with the Constitution of Jamaica and therefore void.
Held :
1. The provisions of the Act which provided for the establishment of a Full Court Division consisting of three Resident Magistrates were in conflict with the Constitution of Jamaica and, therefore, void since their practical consequence was to give to a court composed of members of the lower judiciary jurisdiction to try and to punish by penalties, extending in the case of some offences to imprisonment for like, all criminal offences, however grave, apart from murder or treason, committed by any person who had also committed an offence under s. 20 of the Firearms Act 1967.
2. The general rule in s. 20 (3) of the Constitution that trials should be held in public entrenches a previously existing common law rule. The rule however, was subject to the exceptions laid down in s. 20(4) and the exception applicable in this case was that which permitted persons other than the legal representatives of the parties to be excluded from the proceedings in the interests of public safety and public order. The Gun Court Act required all cases to be heard in camera. Parliament is vested with power under section 48(1) of the Constitution to make laws for the peace, order and good government of Jamaica.
3. Even though the Constitution does not expressly provide for Separation of Powers of the Executive, Legislature and Judicature, it is necessary by implication that the basic principle of separation of powers will apply to the exercise of their respective functions by these three organs of government. Thus even though the Constitution does not contain any express prohibition upon the exercise of legislation powers by the Executive or of judicial powers by either the Executive or Legislature, the doctrine of separation of powers sill applies.
It is a well established rule of construction applicable to constitutional instruments such as the Jamaican Constitution that the absence of express words to that effect does not prevent the legislature, the executive and the judicial powers of the state being exercisable exclusively by the Legislature, by the Executive and by the Judicature respectively.
The Parliament of Jamaica cannot, consistently with the separation of powers transfer from the judiciary to any executive body whose members are not appointed under Chapter VII of the Constitution a discretion to determine the severity of the punishment to be inflicted upon an individual member of a class of offenders.
The power conferred upon the Parliament to make laws for the peace, order and good government of Jamaica enables it not only to define what conduct shall constitute a criminal offence but also to prescribe the punishment to be inflicted on those persons who have been found guilty of that conduct by an independent and impartial court established by law. The carrying out of the punishment where it involves a deprivation of personal liberty is a function of the executive power; and subject to any restrictions imposed by a law, it lies within the power of the executive to regulate the conditions under which the punishment is carried out.
In the exercise of its legislative power, Parliament may, if it thinks fit, prescribe a fixed punishment to be inflicted upon all offenders found guilty of the defined offence – as, for example, capital punishment for the crime of murder. Or it may prescribe a range of punishments up to a maximum severity, either with or without a minimum, leaving it to the court by which the individual is tried to determine what punishment falling within the range prescribed by Parliament is appropriate in the particular circumstances of his case.
Thus Parliament in exercise of its legislative power may make a law imposing limits upon the discretion of the judges who preside over the courts by whom offences against that law are tried to inflict on an individual offender a custodial sentence the length of which reflects the judge’s own assessment of the gravity of the offender’s conduct in the particular circumstance of his case. What Parliament cannot do, consistently with the separation of powers is to transfer from the judiciary to any executive body whose members are not appointed under Chapter VII of the Constitution, a discretion to determine the severity of the punishment to be inflicted upon an individual member of a class of offenders.
Even though the Review Board would, no doubt, have acted in good faith, impartially and responsibly, a breach of a constitutional restriction is not excused by good intentions with which the legislative power has been exceeded by the particular law.
It is implicit in the very structure of a constitution on the Westminster Model that judicial power, however it be distributed from time to time between various courts, is to continue to be vested in persons appointed to hold judicial office in the manner and on the terms laid down in the Constitution. This was upheld in Liyanage v R [1966] 1 All E.R..650.
It followed that the provisions of the Act relating to the mandatory sentence of detention during the Governor General’s pleasure and to the Review Board were a law made after the coming into force of the Constitution which was inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution relating to separation of powers and were void by virtue of s. 2 of the Constitution.
Sunday, May 6, 2007
Public Law Syllabus: The Jury system
Note the exemptions set out in Schedule A of the Act. Schedule A is found on page 28 of the Act.
Section 31 deals with the required number of jurors for criminal matters.
Section 31 also sets out what is to be done where a juror dies or is discharged in the course of a criminal trial.
Section 32 deals with the required number of jurors for civil matters and what is to be done where a juror dies or is discharged in the course of a civil trial.
Section 34 deals with the appointment of and duties of the Foreman of the Jury.
Saturday, May 5, 2007
Public Law syllabus : Appointment and removal of Judges under the Constitution
1. Here is the Jamaican Constitution. It may also be found here.
2. Chapter 7 of the Constitution concerns the Judiciary :
- Section 98 speaks to the appointment of Judges to the Supreme Court
- Section 100 (1) -(10) contains information about the removal of judges of the Supreme Court.
- Section 106 speaks to the circumstances under which and the means by which a Judge of the Court of Appeal may be removed from office.
3. The Judicature (Supreme Court) Act in section 6 (2) states :
No person shall be appointed to be a Judge of the Supreme Court unless he is a
member of the Bar of Jamaica, England, Northern Ireland or Scotland-
(a) of at least ten years standing; or
(b) such number of years standing as added to a period during which he has held the office of a Resident Magistrate in Jamaica prior to his becoming a member of such Bar amounts to not less than ten years.
4. The Judicature (Appellate Jurisdiction) Act in section 4(1) states :
A person shall not be appointed to be a Judge of the Court unless he is a member of the Bar of Jamaica, England, Scotland or Northern Ireland –
(a) of at least ten years standing; or
(b) who holds or has held office as a Judge of a court having unlimited jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the Commonwealth or a court having
jurisdiction in appeals from any such court.
Friday, May 4, 2007
Public Law Syllabus: The Public Service Commission
Section 125 (4) states that where a reference is made to the Privy Council under the provisions of subsection (3) of this section, the Privy Council shall consider the case and shall advise the Governor General what action should be taken in respect of the officer, and the GovernorGeneral shall then act in accordance with such advice.
- Dress code
- Substance abuse
- Standard of behaviour & Service standards
- Political Activity
- Absence from duty
- Conduct which is a conflict of interest
- The acceptance of gifts
- Engagement in Private Work
- Confidentiality
Chapter 10 deals with rules governing disciplinary procedure.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Public Law Syllabus: Locus Standi
". . . the applicant has to show that he is a person aggrieved. In otherwords, he has to show he is one who is wrongly deprived of or refused something to which he is legally entitled or upon whom a legal burden is cast, and not merely one who is dissatisfied with an act or decision".
by The Hon. Mr. Justice Benjamin J Odoki - Chief Justice of Uganda (at page 20 of the Journal)
Wednesday, May 2, 2007
Public Law Syllabus: Entrenched provisions explained
Two cases which address the issue of entrenchment are Hinds v R and the case of Independent Jamaica Council for Human Rights Ltd & Others v Attorney General & Another .
- Section 2 which establishes that (subject to sections 49 & 50 of the Constitution) where any other law is inconsistent with the Constitution, the Constitution shall prevail and the other law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, shall be void.
- Section 34 which establishes the Parliament and states that it shall which shall consist of Her Majesty, a Senate and a House of Representatives.
- Section 35 and section 36 which deal with the Senate and the House of Representatives respectively.
- Section 39 which sets out the Qualification for membership of Senate and House of Representatives.
- Section 63 (2) which states that Sessions of Parliament shall be held at such times so that a period of six months shall not intervene between the last sitting of Parliament in one session and the first sitting thereof in the next session.
- Section 64 (2), (3), (5) which deal with Prorogation and dissolution of Parliament.
- Section 68(1) which establishes that the executive authority of Jamaica is vested in Her Majesty.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Public Law Syllabus : Supremacy of the Constitution
Subject to the provisions of sections 49 and 50 of this Constitution, if any other law is inconsistent with this Constitution, this Constitution shall prevail and the other law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.
- The Pratt and Morgan case : Earl Pratt & Ivan Morgan v The A.G. & Anor.
- The Neville Lewis case : Neville Lewis et al v A.G. & Anor.
- Lambert Watson v The Queen : The issue to be decided in this case was whether the mandatory death sentence imposed on capital murder under the Offences against the Person Act cases was unconstitutional.
On 30 September 2004 the Governor-General of Jamaica, acting under section 60 of the Constitution, gave his assent to three bills, the broad effect of which was to abolish the right of appeal to Her Majesty in Council and to substitute a right of appeal to a new regional court of final appeal, the Caribbean Court of Justice (“the CCJ”). The key question in this appeal is whether the procedure adopted in enacting that legislation complied with the requirements laid down in the Constitution.
The judgment of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council declared the Caribbean Court of Justice Act 2004 along with the Caribbean Court of Justice (Constitutional Amendment) Act 2004 and the Judicature (Appellate Jurisdiction) Act 2004 unconstitutional and void.