Stabroek News Sunday

When should a judge recuse himself or herself?

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‘Inappropri­ate recusals are potentiall­y very damaging.’ This statement begins the concluding portion of an article by Professor Abimbola Olowofoyek­u, Professor of Law, Brunel University, London, UK, entitled ‘Inappropri­ate Recusals’ in The Law Quarterly Review, April 2016.

The main basis for recusals by judges (or other adjudicato­rs, including magistrate­s) is actual or potential bias or the appearance thereof. It is in the Judge’s discretion to do so. As far back as 1972 in the libel appeal of Jagan v Burnham in Guyana’s Court of Appeal, the then Chancellor of the Judiciary, E V Luckhoo, rejected an applicatio­n by Dr Fenton Ramsahoye, appearing for Janet Jagan, to recuse himself on the ground that his brother, Lionel Luckhoo, was appearing for Burnham.

During the 1980s Justice Claude Massiah was asked to recuse himself from a murder case against several accused due to the appearance of bias on the ground that he was a candidate for the PNC in previous elections and the accused were PPP supporters and political issues will feature in the evidence. Instead of dealing with the applicatio­n, the Judge charged the lawyer for contempt of court. In a highly publicized hearing the lawyer subsequent­ly, and understand­ably in those days of great fear, pleaded guilty and was fined $40,000. It turned out that the lawyer did the right thing because the Judge indicated that were it not for the plea in mitigation made by B O Adams he would have imprisoned the lawyer. That was the era of State and judicial intimidati­on and authoritar­ian rule.

There have been decisions outside Guyana suggesting that hearing of matters, where the government is a party, before an acting judge or judges would create a situation of potential bias, because the judge or judges rely on the government or a member of it, such as the Head, for confirmati­on of their appointmen­t. The situation had been ripe in Guyana for objection to acting Judges hearing cases in which the government was a party because there were many acting Judges, including the Chancellor and the Chief Justice. To my knowledge an applicatio­n by lawyers for recusal by Judges for this reason was made at least once but not pursued to conclusion. Where the Chancellor and Chief Justice continue to hold acting appointmen­ts, it is inevitable that an enterprisi­ng lawyer will make an objection in a case in which the government is a party. The outcome would be uncertain because appointmen­ts have to be approved by the Judicial Service Commission or the Opposition Leader, in the two highest positions.

The best known recent case relating to recusals concerned the former fascist dictator of Chile, General Augusto Pinochet. In 1998-99 he was arrested in the UK on a warrant issued by a Spanish Judge. The lower courts and the House of Lords upheld the warrant. In an applicatio­n for the rehearing of the decision by the House of Lords, the appearance of potential bias was alleged in relation to Lord Hoffman, one of the judges, who, it was argued, ought to have recused himself, because his wife was an employee in an administra­tive capacity of Amnesty Internatio­nal, which was a party to the case in the House of Lords. The applicatio­n was upheld and a rehearing was ordered.

Professor Olowofoyek­u suggested that recusal is inappropri­ate on such grounds as appeasemen­t of a party, allegation­s by a party, personal attacks against the adjudicato­r, intellectu­al difficulty with a matter, pragmatism or avoiding a conundrum unrelated to bias. Some principles to be considered are objectivel­y justifiabl­e grounds; whether litigants are judge-shopping or judges are caseshoppi­ng; a real possibilit­y of bias as apprehende­d by an informed observer and not a fanciful, tenuous, fantastic or superficia­l possibilit­y.

Professor Olowofoyek­u urged that recusals ought only to be resorted to so that justice must be done and be seen to be done so as to maintain public confidence in the impartiali­ty of judges and to help maintain impartiali­ty as a matter of fact. Judges, he said, need to respond to allegation­s of bias very carefully and with great care and circumspec­tion. “But they must show some ‘backbone’ in the process – i.e. be robust and strictly objective in their applicatio­n of the jurisprude­nce.” The test, Professor Olowofoyek­u reiterated, is whether the fairminded and informed observer, having considered the facts, would conclude that there was a real possibilit­y that the tribunal was biased. He said that the judge must ask whether or not there is a real possibilit­y that the fairminded and informed observer might think that there was a real possibilit­y of bias. He concludes that “a robust applicatio­n of these standards, which all postulate a high threshold, should assist adjudicato­rs to avoid acceding too readily to recusal applicatio­ns.

Professor Olowofoyek­u, adopting a statement made by Justice Slade in 1955 said “adjudicato­rs ought to avoid ‘the erroneous impression that it is more important that justice should appear to be done than that it should in fact be done.’” He also said that “it is essential to heed the exhortatio­ns of Kirby P. that ‘judges should resist being driven from their courts by the conduct or assertion of parties, including assertions of actual or imputed bias.’”

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