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Greenwood, Justice Andrew --- "Remarks of Justice Greenwood on the occasion of the ceremonial sitting of the Full Court of the Federal Court to mark the appointment of new senior counsel." (FCA) [2009] FedJSchol 42
Remarks of Justice Greenwood on the occasion of the
ceremonial sitting of the Full Court of the Federal Court
to mark the
appointment of new senior counsel
(Mr Glen Rice SC;
Mr Michael Byrne SC; and
Mr Alexander Horneman-Wren
SC)
Thursday, 17 December 2009
at 9.45am
- The
tradition in England has been that on the appointment of silk, the appointee
processes in turn to each of the courts that are
sitting, announces his or her
appointment and makes their bow.
- Since
the year 2000 the practice in Queensland has been that in addition to Senior
Counsel announcing their appointment before the
Supreme Court, Senior Counsel
have announced their appointment before a Full Bench of the Federal Court of
Australia, convened for
that purpose.
- This
practice has much to commend it not only because of the important distribution
of powers contained in our Constitution but also because this Court exercises
the judicial power of the Commonwealth of Australia, our national polity, and
the thing that
ultimately makes us, first and foremost, Australians.
- Announcements
are also made to Full Courts of the Federal Court in Sydney and in Melbourne by
Senior Counsel appointed in those States.
- On
behalf of the Federal Court of Australia, I congratulate each of you upon your
appointment and wish you well in your future practice
at the Inner Bar, or, put
historically, “within the Bar”. In doing so, I speak particularly
on behalf of the Judges
who are present in Court this morning, and on behalf of
Justice Spender who is presiding at a native title determination application
outside Brisbane and Justice Dowsett who cannot be present today. I also extend
the congratulations of Chief Justice Black and the
entire cohort of Judges of
this Court nationally.
- Mr
Rice, you are well known for your role within the office of the Commonwealth
Director of Public Prosecutions and your extensive
experience in the prosecution
of federal offences. Today, we are sitting in Court 3 due to the
renovations to Court 1 to incorporate
state of the art jury facilities in
light of the enactment of the Federal Court of Australia (Criminal
Jurisdiction) Act 2009 which commenced on 4 December 2009 conferring
jurisdiction to hear and determine the prosecution of indictable offences
against
particular provisions of the Trade Practices Act
1974.[1]
- Mr
Rice, perhaps we may see more of you.
- Mr
Byrne, you are well known for the role you have discharged as Assistant Director
of Public Prosecutions and as a Crown Prosecutor.
In that role, you have shown
significant leadership in the supervision, management, training and motivation
of a multi-disciplinary
team of up to 88 staff members drawn from
professional and administrative backgrounds.
- Mr
Horneman-Wren, you are well known to this Court in federal jurisdiction work and
particularly in relation to your work in the Industrial
Division of the Court.
- We
congratulate each of you on your appointment.
- I
mentioned earlier the historical reference to practice as Silk “within the
Bar”. Although the historical origin of
the institution of Silk is not an
analysis for this morning, there are two early aspects of the institution that
have enduring importance
at the centre of modern Australian society for these
reasons.
- As
Sir Victor Windeyer and Mr Bernard Kelly have
observed[2], the term
“barrister” may have derived from a reference to the barrae
or benches on which the members of the Inns sat during
moots[3]. The term
“barrister” became associated with the bar of the courts to
which Counsel came to plead the causes of their clients. The call to the bar
may have originally meant the admission
of qualified students to a position in
the hall of the Inns immediately below the
benches[4].
- In
any event, in early court rooms, part of the floor was railed off by a bar.
Within the bar, members of the Court sat upon their
bench. Outside the bar,
members of the public gathered. All persons having business before the court
approached the bar and they
and their advocates stood at the bar rail and were
heard from there.
- Sergeants
and Kings and Queens Counsel however were heard from within the bar and had a
right to be heard inside the bar in recognition
of their standing, learning and
position as leaders of informed thought in the law. Other barristers stood
outside or beyond the
bar.
- There
is however something much more fundamental to our democracy about the notion of
the bar at court. The great constitutional
struggle in England against the
Stuarts was not, as some commentators think, about the separation of powers, but
rather the supremacy of Parliament, in all things: fought for by
Cromwell and finally established by the Bill of
Rights[5] and the Act of
Settlement[6] arising
out of the revolution of 1688. The bar of the Parliament is the symbol of that
supremacy and independence. Some may plead
a case to Parliament by standing at
the bar of Parliament. The bar of the Court, now represented by tables,
represents the independence
of the courts, which in their most fundamental role,
stand between the citizen and the executive.
- As
the Hon. Murray Gleeson has observed, the provisions of the Act of Settlement
guaranteeing the independence of the Judges from
the executive and removal only
by an address by both Houses were adopted by the Act of Settlement Parliament to
secure the independence
of the Parliament itself by removing the threat
to the independence of the Judges arising out of appointments made simply
“during the King’s pleasure”.
- Interestingly
enough, one final legacy of these constitutional events was the passage of an
Act for the union of England and
Scotland[7]. Article IV
provides that from and after the union subjects shall have full “freedom
and intercourse of trade and navigation
to and from any port or place”
within the United Kingdom. That article is the source of s 92 of the
Australian Constitution.
- Does
any of this matter today?
- Your
appointments as Senior Counsel are a central part of the vitality of the Rule of
Law characterised by representative and responsible
democracy, a written
Constitution incorporating a distribution of power and a separation of powers, a
free press, an independent judiciary and a profession of advocates
led by senior
men and women, Senior Counsel, who understand the vital role the Bar plays in
the preservation of the Rule of Law and
who lead the profession with courage,
integrity, intellectual honesty, application and humility, bounded by a
recognition that the
privileges conferred by your appointment impose even
greater responsibilities of leadership than those you have experienced to now.
- The
second matter is this.
- The
institution of Senior Counsel has in recent years been under significant attack.
However, society values learning, wisdom, insight
and the importance of
education and looks to leaders in many walks of life. For a long time, the
monasteries were centres of learning
and in more modern times the universities
have assumed that role. Leaders of the Academy profess expertise in many
disciplines and some become emeritus professors. In the humanities, which most
closely have a sympathy of interest
with the legal discipline, the Academy of
the Humanities and the Academy of the Social Sciences appoint
Fellows. So too does the Academy of Sciences. Aboriginal communities
look to their elders for learning, leadership and decision-making and the wider
community looks to its elders,
most recently demonstrated in Andrew
Denton’s series of interviews under the title Elders, for
leadership, learning and inspiration.
- It
is right and proper that the profession of advocates should identify the leaders
of this profession.
- These
appointments will no doubt present you with opportunities to advance your own
interests in many ways. That is entirely understandable.
The virtue of the
institution and its capacity to endure however will be measured by your
contribution to the public interest ultimately
served in maintaining a
disciplined, professional, well educated cohort of advocates who assist the
Court in the timely and efficient
disposition of controversies confronting our
citizens.
- In
that regard, your hard work, wisdom, learning, judgement, professional
mentoring, work with the Bar Association in helping to bring
out the best in
others and the general discharge of these wider responsibilities that go with
leadership of such an important profession,
will if undertaken properly, advance
the interests of the community and give you enormous personal satisfaction.
- I
also congratulate your families on the great sacrifices they have made in
helping you to achieve this appointment.
- Some
aspects of the following remarks concerning the “stress of work that
weighed upon the upper ranks of the Bar” from
an account given in London
in 1731, may analogically resonate in your and your families’ experience,
to date. The author of
the commentary said this:
... Their
business engrosses every minute of their time but it must be confessed they
labour very hard, are forced to be up early
and late, and to try their
constitutions to the utmost in the service of their clients. They are in court
most days and then back
in Chambers pursuing the pressure of briefs except when
attending hearings either at the Lord Chancellor’s or Master of the
Rolls
‘til 8 or 9 in the evening. Even then, the work of the day was not over.
It was usual for clients or solicitors to
consult with their counsel at this
late hour, after which the exhausted barrister was permitted to retire to rest,
unless he had
some great brief on hand which required special
attention.[8]
27. Again, I congratulate each of you on your appointment.
[1] Sections 44ZZRF
and 44ZRG
[2] Lectures on
Legal History, W. J. V. Windeyer, 2nd Ed., Law Book
Company of Australasia Pty Ltd, 1957; A Short History of the English Bar, Mr
Bernard W. Kelly, Swan Sonnenschein &
Co., 1908; see also: Pageantry of the
Law, Mr James Derriman, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1955; The Rule of Law, Saunders
Le Roy, Federation
Press 2003; Due Process of Law, Rodney Mott, The
Bobbs-Merrill Company, Publishers, 1926; The Ultimate Rule of Law, David Beatty,
Oxford University Press, 2004; Hortensius The Advocate, An Historical Essay on
the Office and Duties of an Advocate, William Forsyth,
Frederick D. Linn &
Company, 1882
[3] However, the
word “barra” was not the usual Latin word for bench or form. The
correct word was
“bancus”.
[4]
Windeyer at p 141.
[5] 1 Will. and Mar.
Sess. 2, Cap. 2, 1689; see also Select Statutes Case and Documents edited by C.
Grant Robertson, Methuen &
Co. Ltd, 4th Ed.,
1923
[6] 12 and 13
Will. III, Cap. 2,
1701
[7] 5 Anne,
Cap. 11, 1706
[8] A
Short History of the English Bar (supra) at p 75-77
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