Jamaica Gleaner

Two-year wait for a judge’s signature

- Livern Barrett Senior Staff Reporter livern.barrett@gleanerjm.com

DONAVAN MCGANN was convinced, t wo years ago, that he was close to the $5-million payout he was awarded in his lawsuit that had crawled through Jamaica’s notoriousl­y slow court system for five years.

Supreme Court judge Justice Vinnette Graham-Allen had ordered the payment to the elderly unemployed security guard in a ruling that was handed down on November 18, 2019, according to court documents reviewed by The Sunday Gleaner.

The assessment of damages hearing to determine the award was postponed three times before Graham-Allen in 2018 and once in 2017, the records show.

McGann, 66, filed the lawsuit in 2014 against the owners of a minibus that he claimed knocked him from his bicycle along Spanish Town Road near the Hagley Park Road intersecti­on in 2010, causing life-altering injuries.

A default judgment was entered in the case on March 23, 2016 after the owners of the vehicle, listed in court documents as Dorrell and Andrea Francis, failed to acknowledg­e receipt of the lawsuit or file a defence.

According t o McGann, his attorneys explained that Graham-Allen was required to sign the order she made before it could be served on the Francises, as well as the company that insured the minibus.

“That’s all it needed … for her to sign the judgment and give it to the lawyers,” he said during an interview with The Sunday Gleaner last Wednesday.

“So, I was saying to myself within three months the insurance company will have enough time to look at it and then now I would give it another month.”

But what McGann could not imagine is that it would take almost two years for Graham-Allen to affix her signature to the document, tacking on another 23 months to a case that did not involve a trial.

CASE FILE WITH PRESIDING JUDGE

McGann produced letters his attorneys wrote to the Supreme Court Registrar – the latest in April this year – about the delays, but said court staff indicated that the case file was with Graham-Allen, who was presiding over trials in the Criminal Division of the High Court.

“Now I’m beginning to wonder what is really happening, is the justice system fair?” he said. The Sunday Gleaner submitted questions about the case to the Court Administra­tion Division (CAD) last Monday.

Kadiesh Fletcher, acting director of client services, communicat­ion and informatio­n at CAD, responded on Wednesday confirming that Graham-Allen signed the order on Tuesday, “November 9” this year.

There was no explanatio­n for the delay.

McGann confirmed on Friday that the signed order was now with his attorneys.

Though elated that GrahamAlle­n had finally signed the order, he said the damage has already been done.

The 66-year-old walks with a cane and has a pin in his left leg that was inserted by doctors while he was hospitalis­ed with a broken femur for two months after the accident.

“The cost of the pin was $148,000,” he recounted.

But the financial hit, McGann said, has been far more punishing.

The former security guard claimed that he was dismissed by his employers in 2015 after the injuries from the mishap worsened and doctors concluded that he could no longer perform his duties.

He has not been able to find employment since.

“Devastatin­g! All me bills dem gone skyrocket. Not even sky-high like skyrocket,” McGann declared.

“If a never fi the aid a me sister maybe me woulda dead already or gone a prison.”

One of the most pressing issues for the senior citizen is to repair the leaking roof of his south St Andrew home.

To have it done properly is projected to cost between $600,000 and $700,000 based on the last estimate, he said.

“If me did get the money in a dem time deh it woulda cost me $200,000 fi do it,” he said, referring to the previous estimate.

In the meantime, the elderly man said “a patch me haffi patch it up”.

“Now and again me buy a one zinc and patch it up and dem thing deh,” he stressed.

 ?? ?? The assessment of damages hearing to determine the award for Donavan McGann was postponed three times before Supreme Court judge Justice Vinnette Graham-Allen in 2018 and once in 2017, the records show.
The assessment of damages hearing to determine the award for Donavan McGann was postponed three times before Supreme Court judge Justice Vinnette Graham-Allen in 2018 and once in 2017, the records show.

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