Otago Daily Times

Judge forced to step aside from case

- ROB KIDD Court reporter rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

A JUDGE has been forced to withdraw from a domesticvi­olence case because his wife had regular coffee dates with ones of the parties involved.

The judge — referred to in documents as ‘‘Judge A’’ — refused to stand aside from the Dunedin Family Court matter in which a local lawyer (‘‘Ms P’’) had applied for a protection order against her expartner (‘‘Mr Q’’).

The judge said the lawyer knew his wife ‘‘only in the remotest sense’’ and that any conversati­ons the pair had shared had not been divulged to him.

The fact he was not Dunedinbas­ed meant Ms P would not regularly be appearing before him, which he claimed lent weight to his opinion he should arbitrate the hearing.

But the High Court disagreed. Justice Warwick Gendall sided with Ms P, whose appeal was heard before him earlier this month.

‘‘This case in the Family Court involves what are generally difficult and sensitive allegation­s of domestic violence.

‘‘Factual matters and issues of credibilit­y are critical in hearings of this kind. Impression­s of impartiali­ty are particular­ly important,’’ he said.

‘‘There is a real possibilit­y that, in the eyes of a fairminded and fully informed observer, the Judge might not be seen to be impartial in reaching a decision in this case.’’

Ms P, a ‘‘litigation lawyer’’ practising in Dunedin, said she had previously appeared before Judge A in a profession­al capacity in both the District and Family Courts.

And the link ran deeper.

Her daughter was friends with Judge A’s daughter and Ms P knew the judge’s wife from pickups and dropoffs at school.

The pair had ‘‘regular coffee dates’’ with other mothers, the court heard, and the lawyer had shared intimate details of her breakup with Mr Q.

‘‘Judge A noted that he had no knowledge of any conversati­ons Ms P had had with his wife.

‘‘If they had discussed any sensitive informatio­n, he said that his wife would have never passed it on to him,’’ the judgement said.

‘‘He considered that Ms P was not in a different category to anyone else who appeared before him.’’

Counsel Len Andersen said it was ‘‘concerning’’ the judge appeared to have already made adverse findings against his client before the hearing had begun.

While Justice Gendall said the issue was ‘‘finely balanced’’, he granted the appeal.

‘‘Unlike the conclusion reached by Judge A as to his previous interactio­ns with Ms P, I am of the view that these interactio­ns, coupled with her past profession­al contacts with him as a lawyer, place her in a different category than others who appear before him as litigants in this difficult and highly charged area of alleged domestic violence.’’

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