Thursday, February 04, 2016

HI TECH, M’LORD: Lord President Lord Carloway sets out vision for digital courts and redesign of Scotland’s “Victorian” justice system for the 21st Century

Lord Carloway - Scots law to be more digital than Victorian. SCOTLAND’S top judge, Lord President Lord Carloway has set out his plans for a technologically advanced digital view of justice in Scotland.

Addressing the Law Society of Scotland’s Council late last week, Friday 29 January 2016, the Lord President spoke of his vision for courtrooms ‘fit for the 21st century - echoing earlier calls for reform in 2009 by his predecessor Lord Brian Gill (73) - who branded Scotland’s justice system as “Victorian” and unfit for purpose.

Speaking in his introduction, Lord Carloway said: “Over the next 5 years plans will be developed which will see the court room, and its ancillary offices, redesigned in light of modern ideas and technology.  It will be changed from its current Victorian form into something fit for the 21st century.  The direction of travel may differ between the civil and criminal processes, but there will be themes common to both.  In all of this, a particularly important factor is your, the practitioner’s, attitude to the proposed modernisation; the view that you have about the efficiency and effectiveness of the current systems.”

Lord Carloway continued: “Do you see the civil courts as modern institutions which adequately deal with the disputes commonly arising in today’s Scotland?  Do you consider that the criminal courts are producing fair trials which properly balance the rights of the accused with those of others?  If the answer to each question is “well maybe not entirely”, the next question is what is to be done about it.”

An earlier attempt to reform Scotland’s antiquated civil justice system – Lord Brian Gill’s Scottish Civil Courts Review, ended in watered down ‘tinkering around the edges’ after Gill’s initial proposals had been put through the Taylor Review and then further diluted by the legal profession & Scottish Government.

Coincidentally, on the same day Lord Carloway addressed the Law Society’s Council with his plans to shake up Scotland’s justice system, three appeal judges dealt the new Lord President a blow on a headline rape trial, heard by Lord Carloway in 2014.

Lord Eassie, sitting with Lady Clark of Calton and Lady Smith, issued an opinion in the high profile case, quashing the convictions of Andrew Clark - who was jailed for eight years for raping two women and sexually abusing two others in Glasgow, Clydebank and Dumbarton between 2001 and 2012

In the appeal opinion, available on the Scottish Courts & Tribunals website HERE, the appeal judges stated Lord Carloway had misdirected the jury in the rape trial, finding “.. We consider that counsel for the appellant was correct in stating that this instruction to the jury did not constitute an entirely correct statement of the law.  While a witness may be cross‑examined as to credit in respect of a prior inconsistent statement, we do not consider that it is admissible to lead evidence of a prior extra judicial consistent statement or statements in order to bolster the witness’ evidence.”

Lord Eassie wrote: "In these circumstances we have come to the conclusion that the jury were misdirected on a matter which was central to the position of the defence at trial and that we are unable to say that no miscarriage of justice may have occurred.” "We shall therefore allow the appeal against conviction."

Lord Eassie wrote that he and his fellow judges now wanted to be addressed by lawyers about what Clark's new sentence should be.

Now, Lord Carloway – who served as Lord Justice Clerk under previous Lord President Lord Gill - is to be asked to give evidence to the Scottish Parliament’s Public Petitions Committee in connection with three year probe on proposals to require judges to register their interests, in which a publicly available register will contain information on judges backgrounds, their personal wealth, undeclared earnings, business & family connections inside & outside of the legal profession, offshore investments, hospitality, details on recusals and other information routinely lodged in registers of interest across all walks of public life in the UK and around the world.

The proposal to require judges to declare their interests enjoys cross party support, and is widely backed by MSPs who debated the proposals in the Scottish Parliament’s main chamber on 9 October 2014 - reported in full with video footage of MSPs and Scottish Ministers here: Debating the Judges.

Lord Carloway’s speech on digital justice and reforming Scotland's “Victorian” courts is reproduced below, in full:

Over the next 5 years plans will be developed which will see the court room, and its ancillary offices, redesigned in light of modern ideas and technology.  It will be changed from its current Victorian form into something fit for the 21st century.  The direction of travel may differ between the civil and criminal processes, but there will be themes common to both.  In all of this, a particularly important factor is your, the practitioner’s, attitude to the proposed modernisation; the view that you have about the efficiency and effectiveness of the current systems.

Do you see the civil courts as modern institutions which adequately deal with the disputes commonly arising in today’s Scotland?  Do you consider that the criminal courts are producing fair trials which properly balance the rights of the accused with those of others?  If the answer to each question is “well maybe not entirely”, the next question is what is to be done about it.

I have a number of ideas.  These may occasionally be expressions of my own personal utopia, but generally they are conclusions based upon considered, albeit inevitably incomplete, research by others.  Many of the central changes require primary legislation.  Their introduction will not therefore be my decision.  All I can do is recommend. The proposals will then go forward for deliberation in the public forum and democratic determination.  I remain, however, convinced of their ultimate utility.

Civil Procedure: I have said elsewhere that “Court reform is never complete.  Our courts must be ready to adapt and respond to progressions and innovations in society ... with a modern outlook but ... reflecting upon historical experience”[1].  The last major reforms before the Gill Review were in the first quarter of the 19th century.  We now need to capture the benefits which 200 years of technological advances have given us.  We certainly have not done so yet.

Over a year ago, Lady Dorrian cited Ofcom research which found that we are now in an era in which we spend more time using technology devices than sleeping[2].  She observed:

“If people and businesses communicate instantly by email, Skype or Facebook, they will expect public services to do likewise.  They will increasingly fail to understand, or have sympathy with, any system that still relies on extensive documentation, sent by post, and by the requirement to appear in person for the handling of routine matters”.

The Gill Report has a chapter devoted to the use of IT in the civil courts.  It cites the Government’s policy commitment to increase the use of IT in the public sector[3].  I too have previously called for “clear sky thinking” on the use of IT in Scottish courts in the interests of justice, given the particular advances in the last twenty years or so[4].  We now need to make concrete progress in the harnessing of new devices to reconfigure our practices and procedures in a radical way.

The electronic process: The Gill report noted that a paperless litigation system had been all but achieved in several jurisdictions[5]. Such systems typically produce a number of advantages: the facility to lodge documents electronically; the supersession of paper processes with electronic document management systems; the introduction of electronic case files incorporating legal databases and other research tools; the use of routine correspondence with the court by email; the conduct of procedural hearings by video conference; the taking of evidence by video link; the display of documents and other materials on screen; the digital recording of oral evidence; and the electronic issue of court orders[6].   In due course, the one which deserves most attention, and which may be the most challenging, is the digital recording of testimony.

Drawing upon the experiences of other jurisdictions, the Gill report identified a number of significant advantages of using this technology, including: reduced waiting and travelling time; the overcoming of the tyranny of distance[7]; a stricter adherence to time estimates and hearing start times; the involvement of principal solicitors with full instructions; reduction of expense; and generally increased accessibility of the civil justice system, particularly for private individuals, firms and smaller corporate litigants[8].

In Scotland, there was widespread take up some time ago, in commercial causes at Glasgow Sheriff Court, of case management conferences by telephone[9], The Inner House put a bit of a damper on this in couple of cases some seven years ago[10]. This caused some retrenchment, but the idea is still a good one. The desirability of conducting procedural hearings by conference call, preferably on video, will depend upon the facts and circumstances of each case.  As the European Court of Human Rights has explained[11], a distinction can be drawn between these cases where the hearing involves a decision on the merits, and procedural hearings, such as case management diets.  The Convention right to a public hearing does not carry with it a requirement that every procedural hearing needs to be in open court. Procedural hearings do not involve the determination of civil rights or obligations[12].  There ought to be no difficulty in principle with procedural hearings being conducted by means of telephone or video conferencing, provided certain safeguards are in place.

The electronic process for use in the Court of Session and the sheriff courts is in the late stages of development by the Scottish Courts and Tribunal Service.  It may be ready for piloting as early as the Summer.  It is envisaged that this system will have all the advantages envisaged in the Gill report.  In time, it is anticipated that the system will be expanded to facilitate the taking and hearing of evidence by recorded video.

Modes of Proof: Our system of proof is founded upon the primacy of oral testimony, that is, an account given upon oath from the witnesses in court.  The apparent reason is, as the editor of Dickson put it at the end of the 19th century “that an examination and cross-examination in open Court, under the solemn sanction of an oath, are the best means of securing truth and detecting falsehood”[13].  Certainly, the perceived significance of a witness answering for his or her testimony at the Great Day of Judgment, as the original form of oath prescribed[14], was considerable in these God fearing days.

This mode of inquiry, or truth finding, is inherited from the Victorian age and earlier, when there was a need for litigants, their representatives and witnesses, to appear before the courts at a specific cited time and place.  Those considerations are losing relevance today, when information can be assembled and presented in recorded form using modern technology.  Yet, the rules on the admissibility of evidence, other than the formal removal of the prohibition on hearsay, remain substantially similar to those set out in 1887 by Dickson[15].  Many forms of what should be admissible evidence of fact today – video recordings of witness accounts, for example – would have been beyond the then realms of contemplation.  Although it may be competent to use these as evidence, that does not routinely occur. In our age of technology, we must seize the moment and hold that, in the future, evidence might be presented to the court in a quite different, more advanced manner, than the appearance of the witness at court.

Today, what a person says can be recorded electronically and accurately at any time in audio and video format.  Events can be caught, contemporaneously, on CCTV or on portable devices.  In the ascertainment of fact, the question then is: which is more likely to be true: a record of an event as caught on camera and a video recorded statement made by a witness in the minutes or hours immediately following an event; or the oral testimony of a witness at a proof months or perhaps years later?  Why should it not be the norm, employing a procedure akin to a commission[16], for all evidence to be taken, in advance, in the form of a video recordings of witnesses’ accounts or of the relevant event or thing?  Our system has long recognised the competency of taking the evidence of a witness, which is in danger of being lost, to lie in retentis or the evidence of a witness who will be unavailable for the proof diet[17].  Provided that there is suitable oversight of the procedure and the witness can be, if judicially deemed necessary, cross-examined, this material should in principle be admissible as the primary method of proof of fact[18].

The task of evaluating credibility and reliability would, where required, remain with the judge.   If the final hearing proceeds, the video recordings can be submitted to the judge who will have examined all of the evidence in advance.  Excepting cases with special features, the diet would be restricted to oral submissions.  The judge, having had the opportunity to digest the evidence in advance, would be in a better, more informed position to engage with these submissions.  The diet itself would be much shorter, reducing expense and waiting times in other cases, thereby increasing the general accessibility of the civil courts. 

This process would offer the additional benefit that witnesses could provide their testimony at a time and place convenient to themselves, as well as the parties’ representatives, and the court.  Once the evidence has been heard and recorded, parties would have an opportunity to consider the advantages or otherwise of proceeding any further.  In this way, the reform might serve a dual function as a dispute resolution procedure whereby parties could evaluate the merits of their respective cases at a much earlier stage, without incurring the risk and expense of proceeding to the conventional final diet.

Article 6 confers, in civil cases, the right to a fair trial.  There is no breach of that essential guarantee inherent in these proposals.  There would be sufficient safeguards.  Even in criminal matters, the European Court has held that Article 6(3)(d), which contains the accused’s right to examine or have examined witnesses against him, is not absolute.  It does not entail a right to cross-examine every, or indeed, any witness in the conventional domestic sense in open court.[19]  There must, of course, be an opportunity to pose questions to a party or a witness, but that is the extent of the Convention entitlement.  The proposed new procedure would need to guarantee an opportunity to ask questions of a witness and, where appropriate, use cross examination as a forensic technique.

It is unlikely that the civil justice system, or the parties, can afford to have the luxury of the long proof, other than in the most exceptional of circumstances.  Restrictions in oral examination and cross-examination, along the chess game model, may have to be considered in the not too distant future.  The days of the lengthy proof may soon be over.  Such diets are time consuming, expensive and unnecessary.  They do not operate in the matter best suited to the ascertainment of truth.  They are not consistent with modern ideas of justice.

Appropriate level: Significant structural changes to our civil court system are underway.  The essential consideration is the promotion of justice, more particularly access to justice, through the quality and efficiency of our courts.  The objective is “rationalisation”; improved organisation, not only of the court structure, but also in the allocation of cases to be heard.  Cases must be given, but given only, the appropriate level of scrutiny.  They must be determined in accordance with our principles of law and justice but, in the promotion of justice for all, they must also be determined expeditiously and affordably.

Suffice it to say, the devolution of a large chunk of civil first instance business from the Court of Session to the Sheriff Courts by virtue of the increased privative limit is the headline reform, or was the main concern of the Bar and certain agents based in Edinburgh.  It may promote local justice, but the new All Scotland Sheriff Personal Injuries Court is likely to process most of the devolved work

One consequence will be that the Court of Session will be appropriately placed to function, as it should, as the supreme civil court in Scotland.  An increasing volume of public, and public interest litigation, important and developing areas of jurisprudence, is anticipated, especially as more reserved matters are devolved to Holyrood.  It is important that the Court of Session is in a position to deal with the new business promptly and effectively.   Although it is beyond the scope of this address, the affordability of litigation is a crucial consideration underlying the reforms.  Increased efficiency and cost-effectiveness will be achieved from the allocation to, and hearing of cases before, courts commensurate with their nature and subject-matter.

Leave provisions: The right of appeal to the Sheriff Principal against all final judgments and those involving for example interim interdicts and decrees, and that traditional staple, the refusal of the reponing note, is preserved[20].  Otherwise, leave from the sheriff is required to take matters further[21].  Whether an appeal will be heard before one or three Appeal Sheriffs is for determination by the Sheriff Appeal Court[22], as is whether it may be leap frogged, where an appeal raises a complex or novel point of law[23]. 

Appeals against a decision constituting a final judgment to the Court of Session from the Sheriff Appeal Court may be taken only with leave granted by the Sheriff Appeal Court, which failing the Court of Session, but only if the appeal raises an important point of principle or practice or there is some other compelling reason for the Court of Session to hear the appeal[24].  Thus, appeals from decisions of fact or discretionary determinations taken in the sheriff court are now unlikely to reach the Inner House.  Those that do must have a wider procedural or practical significance.  This test is intended to cause a significant drop in the number of unmeritorious appeals reaching the Divisions, often presented without the benefit of professional legal advice.

The automatic right of appeal from the Court of Session to the United Kingdom Supreme Court has ceased to exist.  The substitution of the new sections 40 and 40A of the Court of Session Act 1988[25] brings Scotland into line with the other UK legal systems in civil appeals at least in so far as final judgments are concerned.  Leave to appeal must be sought from the Inner House.  Permission will be granted only if “the appeal raises an arguable point of law of general importance which ought to be considered by the Supreme Court”[26].  Such a test is already familiar from recent cases, notably Lord Reed’s dictum in Uprichard v Scottish Ministers[27].  The timing of applications continues to be relevant.[28]

Criminal Law: I turn briefly to criminal law; briefly because, first, I have largely covered most of what I want to say in this field in relation to the use of pre-recorded testimony; secondly, I have spoken on this topic frequently; and, thirdly, very shortly, I hope that the Scottish Courts and Tribunal Service will publish its Evidence and Procedure Report; a culmination of an examination of the solemn and summary criminal systems with conclusions on the best way forward.  This is not specifically designed to save money. The proposals have not been costed.  It is an attempt to improve our fundamental way in which we ascertain fact, or, more accurately, truth, in criminal trials.

The problems within the summary criminal system were highlighted recently in the Audit Scotland Report, with its pointed statistics on the number of prosecutions mounted, trials fixed and trials conducted. The pace of change in society threatens to leave criminal procedure behind.  There requires to be a significant re-design of summary criminal procedure to take full advantage of the new technologies which are available. Along the lines which I have already mentioned in the civil context, work must be undertaken to develop the detailed requirements of a Digital Evidence Vault which can store and manage evidence and other information relevant to individual criminal cases.  The numbers of witnesses who require to attend court must be radically reduced.  There requires to be a more streamlined, digitally enabled justice system which enables cases to be managed judicially and administratively prior to trial so that personal appearances of accused and representatives are reduced to a minimum. Pleas of guilty should be capable of being submitted easily, at any time, on-line. Trials must only be fixed when the parties are ready to engage in that process.

Advanced systems must be introduced to deal properly, that is fairly, with cases involving children and vulnerable witnesses. It must be presumed that in such cases the evidence in chief and cross must be in pre-trial recorded form The court has already recommended a system whereby, in cases where there has been a Joint Investigative Interview, there ought to facilities to hold any cross-examination at any point after the service of the petition or complaint. Improvements in the training of those conducting JIIs must be made.  Advocates or solicitors engaged in the examination or cross-examination of children must prove that they have the proper skills to do so. Their work must be closely supervised by the court.

The Bowen Reforms, which introduce the High Court system of procedure into the sheriff courts, notably in connection with the fixing of trials, must be properly and effectively implemented. As I have recently made clear in the Practice Note, the First Diet in solemn cases must normally be regarded as the end point in preparing for a case and not its starting gun. The courts must deal with all preliminary points in advance of trial at diets having sufficient allocated time. The jury trial diet must be regarded as a precious resource, not to be interfered with.

Conclusion: Much of this will be achieved in our professional lives, provided that we do not take a cantankerous and obstructive approach to it. Ultimately, it is much better that we have a legal profession that enjoys working in a civil or criminal justice system which works fairly and efficiently; not one which may be seen by some as failing in certain areas. It is my hope that you will all engage in this process so we can have a system in which, when the questions I asked at the beginning of this talk are asked, we can say “well, just about”.

Lord Carloway, Lord President, 29 January 2016

Civil Courts Review : Scots Justice still “Victorian” years after judge called for reforms:

The Scottish Civil Courts Review of 2009 authored by then Lord Justice Clerk, Lord Brian Gill, castigated Scotland’s Civil Justice System as being Victorian, costly, and unfit for purpose, yet years on from the review, little of the proposed reforms have been implemented due to pressure from vested interests in the legal world, and a lack of political will to deliver access to justice to all Scots.

The Civil Courts Review can be viewed online here : Scottish Civil Courts Review Synopsis, Scottish Civil Courts Review Vol1 Chapters 1-9 & Scottish Civil Courts Review Vol2 Chapters 10-15

In a speech to the Law Society of Scotland’s 60 year anniversary conference several years ago, reproduced in full here Lord Gill 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."

Previous articles on the Civil Courts Review and reforms of Scotland's antiquated civil justice system can be found on Diary of Injustice here: Scottish Civil Courts Review.

16 comments:

  1. So in other words we have been here before and we will be here again.

    Carloway said himself - vested interests of lawyers halt reform so no need to look any further than the Law Society of Scotland - the same people he gave the speech to.

    We'll see if he means really means business..

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  2. I see you slipped it in about Carloway getting a ticking off from his own judges.On the same day he gave the Law Society speech.More than a coincidence surely?

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  3. Carloway said more or less the same Gill said seven years ago so don't expect any change soon as in the next 500 years or so.

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  4. LOL!The Lord likes HiTec running shoes!
    Seriously when are these reforms ever going to hit the courts!What a joke!

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  5. Astounding Scotland's top judge appears not to know the law - at least according to the appeal judges.

    And why no shrieks and howls from the Scottish Government and Justice Minister over the quashed rape convictions?

    "the appeal judges stated Lord Carloway had misdirected the jury in the rape trial, finding “.. We consider that counsel for the appellant was correct in stating that this instruction to the jury did not constitute an entirely correct statement of the law. While a witness may be cross‑examined as to credit in respect of a prior inconsistent statement, we do not consider that it is admissible to lead evidence of a prior extra judicial consistent statement or statements in order to bolster the witness’ evidence.”

    Shocking, particularly as the same Lord Carloway warned lawyers last year about their questioning of victims of sex crimes -

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-33823225

    Lord Carloway warns lawyers over sex crime victim questioning

    7 August 2015

    A senior Scottish judge has warned lawyers over the questioning of alleged sex crime victims in high court trials.

    The Lord Justice Clerk, Lord Carloway, said he was concerned that some counsel were not respecting the rights of sexual assault complainers.

    Lord Carloway warned advocates that judges could stop them from indulging in "protracted or vexatious questioning" of alleged victims.

    The warning came in a judgement issued at the Court of Criminal Appeal.

    It referred to a rape case from last year in which defence advocate Brian McConnachie QC was representing Duncan Begg.

    After a trial, Begg was jailed for eight years for raping and assaulting two women in northern Scotland during the 1990s.

    Mr McConnachie had started his cross examination of one of the women who was raped by Begg with the question: "You are a wicked, deceitful, malicious, vindictive, liar?"

    Lord Carloway said that he felt that this style of questioning did not respect the rights of the victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

    He said: "Cross examination opened with a direct salvo rather than a question, presumably designed to destabilise the witness."

    The judge said it was important that a trial judge had the power "to control the nature and scope of questioning".

    In his appeal court judgement, Lord Carloway refused Begg's appeal, ruling that his conviction was safe.

    He also criticised the style of questioning of the woman, who was described in the judgement as being "vulnerable".

    Lord Carloway said the woman spent three days giving evidence in the trial.

    He said both "the manner and length of examination and cross examination give cause for concern".

    The judge added defence lawyers must be able to test a witness's evidence through proper and focused cross examination, but that did not extend to insulting or intimidating a witness.

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  6. Not lacking any detail as usual.
    So,more of the same then?

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  7. Conclusion: Much of this will be achieved in our professional lives, provided that we do not take a cantankerous and obstructive approach to it. Ultimately, it is much better that we have a legal profession that enjoys working in a civil or criminal justice system which works fairly and efficiently; not one which may be seen by some as failing in certain areas. It is my hope that you will all engage in this process so we can have a system in which, when the questions I asked at the beginning of this talk are asked, we can say “well, just about”.

    Anyone willing to bet on this?

    "provided that we do not take a cantankerous and obstructive approach to it"

    How is this going to happen when the Law Society run the show and block anything that is going to impact on their members profits and legal aid leeching??

    Lord Carloway has much to do if he is going to make serious change not like the talk talk of Gill which led to the same queues in court today as in 2009 2001 1990 1980 etc

    He might start by firing a lot of the dead wood around him and hangers on who dine out on the qt with the same legal aid leeches who opposed the removal of corroboration.

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  8. Same day of the speech the appeal judges find their boss misdirected a jury - not a coincidence.Need I say more?

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  9. Lord Carloway is the new Dr Who? haha good one Peter!

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  10. All fluff I fear.

    No change is good for the legal fraternity, this being the reason the legal system of Scotland is so "Victorian",dear Lord President.

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  11. Same old same old and both as worthless as the paper written on.

    Now that you have been writing about justice for over ten years (congratulations by the way) you must have seen heard or written about every trick in the legal establishment's book by now.

    Thanks to you we know a hell of a lot more about lawyers and their brethren than without you.Fact.

    Keep up the good work.

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  12. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander..

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  13. and what of your petition? Given what Carloway has said about reforming courts and justice is there any room for transparency of judicial interest?

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  14. @ 5 February 2016 at 03:00

    Thanks.

    Knowledge is free, and the public have a right to know.

    @ 5 February 2016 at 15:56

    The current Lord President is no different from the last.

    Predictably, transparency on judicial interests is not up his street, just the usual PR on reforming courts and the justice system.

    I imagine the same claims in the same speeches were made 400 years ago.

    Updates on the petition will follow soon.

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  15. Yes! You will have more access to justice from 1574 said an earlier Lord President!and in the last few centuries his colleagues in the legal profession have pillaged and plundered Scots for their assets and got away with it.

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  16. If you read the opinion in Clark v HMA properly Lord Eassie Lady Clark of Calton and Lady Smith basically said their new boss does not know the law.

    Not a description one expects to hear of a nation's "top judge" - especially given positions on corroboration and his recent appearance before Holyrood's Justice Committee.

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