Lord Brian Gill, author of Civil Courts Review is Scotland’s new top judge. LORD BRIAN GILL, who as Lord Justice Clerk, authored the highly critical CIVIL COURTS REVIEW report of 2009 which condemned Scotland’s Civil justice system as a “Victorian model that had survived by means of periodic piecemeal reforms” has been appointed today as Scotland’s new Lord President, replacing the retiring Lord Hamilton who has held the position since December 2005. The news of Lord Gill’s appointment has been widely welcomed by campaigners for reform of Scotland’s antiquated & ailing courts & justice system which the new Lord President has previously said ‘fails litigants & fails society’.
The announcement of Lord Gill’s appointment was made earlier this morning by First Minister Alex Salmond, who issued a statement welcoming the appointment by Her Majesty the Queen of The Rt Hon Lord Gill as Scotland’s new Lord President. Lord Gill replaces the Rt Hon Lord Hamilton who retires on 8 June.
Mr Salmond commented that Lord Gill was an outstanding individual who would lead Scotland’s judiciary with independence and integrity and had a clear vision for the continued modernisation of the Scottish courts. Mr Salmond said : "I warmly welcome the appointment of The Rt Hon Lord Gill as Scotland’s new Lord President. His commitment to reform and modernisation is clear and under his leadership I am confident there will be substantial improvements to the justice system. He is an individual of great stature and integrity and in leading Scotland’s judiciary will enjoy the respect and confidence of those around him."
The First Minister continued : "I would also like to take the opportunity to thank Lord Hamilton for his leadership over the last few years in establishing the new role of the Lord President and the new governance arrangements for the Scottish Court Service. The changes introduced by the Judiciary and Courts (Scotland) Act were of considerable constitutional significance, and their successful introduction will stand as a testament to his period in office."
Lord Gill is Scotland's longest serving judge. He is a graduate of the Universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh and lectured in the Faculty of Law of Edinburgh University before being admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1967. He was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 1981. He is a member of the English Bar (Lincoln’s Inn, 1991; Bencher 2002); an advocate depute 1977-1979; Standing Junior Counsel to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (1974-1977), the Home Office (1979-1981) and the Scottish Education Department (1979-1981); and Deputy Chairman of the Copyright Tribunal (1989-1994).
He was appointed a Judge in 1994 and Lord Justice Clerk in 2001. Lord Gill is Chairman of the Lands Valuation Appeal Court and was Chairman of the Scottish Law Commission from 1996 to 2001. In 2008, he was appointed by the UK and Scottish Governments to Chair the Public Inquiry into the fatal explosion in 2004 at the ICL factory in Glasgow. Lord Gill was also Chairman of the Scottish Civil Courts Review (2007-2009). He is Chairman of the Council of the Royal School of Church Music and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and a Fellow of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. In 2011, Lord Gill was awarded a Papal Knighthood of the Order of St Gregory the Great.
The salary of the Lord President is £214,165 per annum and the salary of a Senator is £172,753 per annum.
The Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland was established by Ministers in 2002 and it became an independent advisory non-departmental public body on June 1, 2009. The Board has statutory responsibilities under the Judiciary and Courts (Scotland) Act 2008. The Board's role is to recommend for appointment to the office of judge, sheriff principal, sheriff and part-time sheriff. The First Minister retains the statutory responsibility for making nominations to Her Majesty the Queen. The First Minister is required by statute to consult the Lord President of the Court of Session before making his nomination to Her Majesty.
The process of selection for the Lord President is set out in the Judiciary and Courts (Scotland) Act 2008 ("the 2008 Act"). In line with those provisions the First Minister established a panel of 4 people and invited them to recommend individuals suitable for appointment. The panel was chaired by Sir Muir Russell (Chair of the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland) and also comprised the Rt Hon Lord Hardie and the Hon Lady Dorrian (senators of the Court of Session) and Professor Coyle (a lay member of the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland).
OUTGOING LORD PRESIDENT LORD HAMILTON :
Scotland’s outgoing Lord President. Lord Hamilton’s term as Lord President has seen some change in the courts system, and also conflict with the Crown Office’s persistent court failures where, in the case of the collapse of the World’s End murder trial World’s End murder trial, Lord Hamilton accused the then Lord Advocate Elish Angiolini (nee McPhilomy) of undermining the independence of Scotland’s judiciary after she addressed the Scottish Parliament stating she was disappointed with the trial judge Lord Clarke’s ruling there was insufficient evidence for the jury to convict and threw the case out. The rift over the World’s End case between Lord Hamilton & the now former Lord Advocate Angiolini, who among her now many roles acts as a Ministerial complaints adviser to Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond, was reported by Scottish Law Reporter HERE.
Among other developments, including the publication of judge’s expenses after Diary of Injustice gained sight of judicial expenses claims via Freedom of Information legislation, Lord Hamilton also oversaw the introduction of McKenzie Friends to Scotland’s courts system, although the implementation and the mass of rules, including a ban on any remuneration paid to those acting as McKenzie Friends in Scotland has somewhat limited their effectiveness. Coverage of issues involving the outgoing Lord President Lord Hamilton can be viewed HERE
SCOTS JUDGE DISATTISFIED WITH VICTORIAN JUSTICE & COURTS SYSTEM
The Lord Justice Clerk, Lord Gill, author of the Civil Courts Review. The Lord Justice Clerk, Lord Gill, in his speech to the Law Society of Scotland’s 60 year anniversary conference in 2009, reproduced in full here said : “The civil justice system in Scotland is a Victorian model that had survived by means of periodic piecemeal reforms. But in substance its structure and procedures are those of a century and a half ago. It is failing the litigant and it is failing society. It is essential that we should have a system that has disputes resolved at a judicial level that is appropriate to their degree of importance and that disputes should be dealt with expeditiously and efficiently and without unnecessary or unreasonable cost. That means that the judicial structure should be based on a proper hierarchy of courts and that the procedures should be appropriate to the nature and the importance of the case, in terms of time and cost. Scottish civil justice fails on all of these counts. Its delays are notorious. It costs deter litigants whose claims may be well-founded. Its procedures cause frustration and obstruct rather than facilitate the achievement of justice."
Readers can download the Civil Courts Review report in pdf format, from the Scottish Courts Website at the following links : Volume 1 Chapter 1 - 9 (Covers McKenzie Friends, procedures, advice etc, 2.99Mb) Volume 2 Chapter 10 - 15 (Covers mainly the issue of Class (multi party) actions etc, 2.16Mb) Synopsis (215Kb)
Diary of Injustice coverage of the Civil Courts Review from its publication to the present, and the pace of reforms to civil justice in Scotland can be found here : Civil Courts Review - The story so far
Yes,hopefully there will now be some changes for the better.
ReplyDelete“Victorian model that had survived by means of periodic piecemeal reforms” You said it Lord Gill, now you can carry out your reforms as old Arthur is moving on. We will watch this space.
ReplyDeleteA step in the right direction.However I'll hold off rejoicing until we see some action on the Civil Courts Review and his criticisms of the justice system.
ReplyDeleteForgot all about that spat between Hamilton & Angiolini so thanks for reminding
ReplyDeleteHe may well be a reforming judge but he will only be allowed to go so far before the legal establishment clamp down.Why do you think we have a victorian justice system?because the lawyers and courts want to keep it unaccountable remote exclusive and expensive.
ReplyDeleteIt's not a justice system we have in Scotland more of a joke system both civil and criminal.
Will he do anything about those judges you exposed who all have criminal records and benefits cheating?
ReplyDeleteAbout time someone did something!
Look on the bright side - if he does nothing and simply plays the same broken record of what he himself calls a "Victorian" justice system you can write about it show just how badly all the judges let us down.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Lord Gill.Now comes the hard part..being the boss and being responsible for the rest of the gang's actions.
ReplyDeleteVictorian, a time when the privilidged were exonerated for their crimes because they controlled everything. They still do, it is called self regulation a doctrine that is a crime against their clients. Will the new man be able to nail the Penman's, Mill's, Lockharts, O'Donnells?
ReplyDeleteThese four should be expunged from the legal profession for their criminallity.
Poor wee Eck,he sounds so desperate in the press release for some attention but we all know it's the judges who appoint their own and fm is just a overweight puppet.at least the right one got the job though!
ReplyDeleteYes Peter its good of you to remind us just what an appalling period we have just went through in Scots Law.Will the next few years be any different?Alas only if someone with a pro consumer and less lawyer loving personality takes the reigns.
ReplyDeleteAlso,must agree it was nice of you to get that one in about Hamilton chastising Angiolini!
Keep up the good work!
Good riddance to Lord Hamilton who spent much of his time treading water and shoring up the unaccountability of the legal profession in Scotland including the judiciary.
ReplyDeleteLord Gill has shown himself to be honest, courageous and with a sincere desire to uphold and improve the reputation of his subject - but will the glove puppets of the Law Society in the Scottish Parliament listen to any recommendations he makes?
ReplyDeleteThe new Lord President has a lot of work to do if we are to get out of the banana republic style justice system since Lockerbie cover up
ReplyDeleteI wonder what words were exchanged when you first published the judges expenses claims?
ReplyDeleteThey must have been furious with you!
What a joke?
ReplyDeleteOn the day Lord Gill is announced to be taking over as Lord Preident, Colin Boyd, the former Lord Advocate before Elish Angiolini who had to resign in disgrace has been appointed a Judge?
Colin Boyd was at the centre of the despicable bogus prosecution of Magrahi?
You can see this appointment as a Bold Step by those in control of Scotland that there is to be NO investigation by Police & No Public Enquiry into this Injustice, otherwise Mr Boyd (now as a Judge) would be at risk of being jailed for defeating the ends of Justice?
One step forward and ten steps back?
On the face of it, is the appointment of Lord Gill just smoke and mirrors, so that the perception of the Scottish Public is changed to think that things are going to change.....when in reality the opposite is the truth?
Well it's good to see some good news coming from Scotland's courts considering all the things this blogger's investigations have revealed.
ReplyDeletePerhaps now Lord Gill will clean up the judiciary too and get rid of those who cow tow to the Crown Office and help to fit people up on the weakest of evidence (a good portion of it created to fit people up for headline grabbing convictions)
Scots justice - the shame of the world
Is Lord Gill the listening type?Are we ever going to get some real reforms of the justice system in Scotland?
ReplyDeleteColin Boyd's appointment to the bench is clearly Lord Hamilton's parting 'gift' to the people of Scotland.
ReplyDeleteInformative interview with Hamilton in the hootsmon on Monday,you will laugh at how it ends..
ReplyDeletehttp://www.scotsman.com/the-scotsman/scotland/lord-hamilton-faces-up-to-life-beyond-court-1-2336532
And when he gives up the key to the newly refurbished Lord President’s office on Friday, what long-postponed ambitions will he have a chance to pursue?
“I am on the supplementary bench for the UK Supreme Court so may be called there from time to time. But I will be taking a holiday. And I have been taking piano lessons recently so there will be time to practise. The faster pieces are still rather slow when I play them,” he said.
Lord Hamilton confesses that his practice preferences have been Beethoven sonatas. Sonata Number 26 is nicknamed Les Adieux. Farewells, but not goodbye.
Instead of playing piano he should have been doing something about his Glasgow judge who specialises in taking bungs from gangsters and well known drug dealers.Anyway where the hell are the newspapers because everyone knows this knob has been knocking back the brown envelopes for years!
ReplyDeleteHope is the feeling that the situation you are in is not premanent. Are you giving clients hope New Lord President. I hope so.
ReplyDeleteLord Hamilton Beethoven was a genuis but so was Chopin and he was the greater virtuoso. I am glad you have gone but as far as the reforms are concerned I will not count my chickens before they are hatched. In this legal debate the politicians and self regulators hold all of the cards which up till now they have used in their favour. Fortunately Peter and his colleagues will keep us informed. I hope the new man will overhaul the anachronism that is the Scottish justice system.
Let's hope Lord Gill's postbag fills up with those demanding to know when he is going to make good the eurgently needed reforms his committee identified some 2 years ago - and were recognized and complained of for many years before that by the Public.
ReplyDeletePossibly good, but the caution of your previous comentators is appropriate and born of prior experience.
ReplyDeleteThe big test will be:- having Chaired the Review, and recommended a speaking role for 'McKenzie Friends' AND THE PARLIAMENT HAVING PASSED THE ENABLING LEGISLATION (which Lord President Hamilton has done nothing to implement) - will the new Lord President Gill create and pass the rules which give effect to that enabling legislation in practice? And if so, how soon? Will he do anything to end the closed shop?
Well done Peter, keep going.
A concerned Scot.