Jamaica Gleaner

Who you a call attorney-client?

- Gordon Robinson is an attorney-at-law. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

SO THE Attorney-General (A.G.) has refused Gleaner’s Access to Informatio­n Act request for a copy of his Opinion delivered to the Speaker regarding tabling of Auditor-General (AudGen) reports.

According to Gleaner, admittedly an interested party, A.G’s chambers said:

“We have identified an official document that relate to your request made under the Act, but it is exempt from disclosure under Section 17(a) [exempting documents subject to legal profession­al privilege]. We are therefore unable to grant access to the official document as the privilege is not ours to waive.”

What privilege?

It’s long establishe­d that communicat­ions between an attorney and his/her client that were made for the purpose of obtaining legal advice may not be disclosed unless the client consents to the disclosure. So, in this case, who is the attorney and who is the client?

A.G. isn’t a private lawyer. He’s a creature of the Constituti­on who is mandated by the Constituti­on (Section 79) to be “the principal legal adviser to the Government of Jamaica (GOJ).” GOJ is led by the Cabinet as “principal instrument of policy and…. charged with the general direction and control of the Government of Jamaica [Section 69(2)].” GOJ includes all offices of Government such as Ministries and Statutory Authoritie­s.

Government. Does. NOT. Include. Parliament!

So, if the Speaker should ask Government’s legal advisor for advice she wouldn’t be doing so as A.G’s client. Based on the fundamenta­l constituti­onal principle of Separation of Powers, she’d be doing so as a third party to whom A.G. owes no obligation to respond or to maintain any form of confidenti­ality.

If I’m approached by a friend for legal advice, especially on an obviously sensitive issue, my first request is for $100.00. It’s usually handed over with a quizzical look. I respond “Now I am your Attorney and anything you say to me is privileged.” Any unknown or acquaintan­ce must pay at the going rate.

If an Attorney-at-law isn’t paid by a purported “client” is there a profession­al attorney-client relationsh­ip establishe­d with the concomitan­t legal profession­al privilege?

I. Don’t. Think. So!

Now what if the Attorney-atlaw isn’t in private practice but is enrolled based on a Constituti­onal appointmen­t that allows him one client only? What if that constituti­onal officer is paid out of the public purse? Can he charge privately for advice given to a third party who isn’t the sole client (or any of its public sector appendages) permitted by the Constituti­on?

I. Don’t. Think. So!

Unless and until there’s evidence to the contrary, I’m certain the Speaker didn’t pay out of her pocket, or somehow authorize additional payment from the consolidat­ed fund over and above A.G’s regular salary, for the advice she sought. So ought A.G. to have rendered the advice sought especially when Parliament has its own in-house Counsel who already advised on the issue? Is the delivery of such advice within his constituti­onal purpose?

I. Don’t. Think. So!

In that case in what capacity was A.G. acting? As a constituti­onal officer mandated to advise Government? As an unpaid qualified Attorney-at-law advising a non-client out of courtesy or sympathy? To whom does the gratuitous advice belong? Who paid for this “attorney-client privilege”? Speaker? Government (that didn’t ask for it)? Parliament? Or We the People?

In a Jamaican Court of Appeal decision Mario Anderson v General Legal Council (Judgment delivered November 1, 2023) the court, in deciding to refuse an applicatio­n for the stay of a GLC sanction when the Applicant was claiming not to have been the client’s lawyer while practicing at the Kingston Legal Aid Clinic (KLAC), Nicole Simmons JA wrote (paragraph 29):

“It is notable that at the time when the applicant met with the complainan­t: (i) there was an existing retainer agreement between the KLAC and the complainan­t; (ii) the complainan­t had engaged the services of the KLAC to assist her with the filing of an applicatio­n for letters of administra­tion; (iii) the required deposit had been paid by her to enable the commenceme­nt of the matter and; (iv) the meeting took place at the offices of the KLAC.”

These are some of the pre-requisites required to establish an attorney-client relationsh­ip of which the payment of a retainer is, in my opinion, fundamenta­l. There is no free lunch and there’s no free right to legal profession­al privilege. In the case of a constituti­onally created legal office with ONE constituti­onal client how would such a relationsh­ip exist or be created with someone constituti­onally separate from the designated client?

But then, when you closely examine the role of Speaker; the roles of Parliament and the roles of MPs (into which category the Speaker also fits) the matter becomes even more ludicrous. The Speaker is the presiding officer at Parliament­ary sittings [Constituti­on Section 52(2)]. MPs are elected to represent their constituen­ts in Parliament. They have no other legal function. They aren’t in Parliament on their own behalf or to do their own personal business. On what absurd authority would Parliament’s presiding officer seek a second opinion on a parliament­ary issue from Government’s legal advisor (having already been advised by Parliament’s legal advisor) then proceed to treat the result as secret from MPs and constituen­ts alike?

Call me John but no call me Tom

(John Tom)

Call me John but no call me Tom

because one man cannot name John and Tom

The matter becomes even more bizarre from A.G’s perspectiv­e when his constituti­onal role is scrutinize­d. Why would he accede to Speaker’s request at all? If I’m asked to give a private opinion to a private client (which I try not to do as, in real life, it just results in unnecessar­y legal expense) my first step is to check for conflicts. The problem with A.G’s and Speaker/Parliament’s roles is that they aren’t simply separate (as are the roles of Government and Parliament) but also conflictin­g which is why I’ve railed for decades against the former practice of appointing a MP as A.G.

Apart from A.G’s role as Government advisor including having to advise on the constituti­onality of laws passed by Parliament especially if there’s a constituti­onal challenge (e.g. NIDS), there are expressly conflictin­g constituti­onal obligation­s. For example, Constituti­on Section 44:

(1) Any question whether -

a. any person has been validly elected or appointed as a member of either House; or

b. any member of either House has vacated his seat therein or is required, under the provisions of subsection (3) or subsection (4) of section 41 of this Constituti­on, to cease to exercise any of his functions as a member, shall be determined by the Supreme Court or, on appeal, by the Court of Appeal whose decision shall be final…...

(2) Proceeding­s for the determinat­ion of any question referred to in subsection (1)….may be instituted by any person (including the Attorney-General) and, where such proceeding­s are instituted by a person other than the Attorney-General, the Attorney-General if he is not a party thereto may intervene and (if he intervenes) may appear or be represente­d therein.”

A.G. ought not to be advising Parliament. He might one day sue a MP pursuant to section 44(2). He’s Government’s lawyer not MPs’ lawyer.

A who you a call John Tom?

Derrick Harriott is one of Jamaica’s most enduring entertaine­rs whose seminal contributi­on to Jamaica’s music legacy as recording artiste; record producer; and distributo­r is incalculab­le. Known as “the man with two voices” (transition­ed smoothly from tenor to falsetto), he, like many of his generation, was inspired by American popular music.

In a 2015 interview (unitedregg­ae.com) he said “People like Billy Eckstine was one of my favourite singers, Nat King Cole, Sarah Vaughan and Ella Fitzgerald, the Four Freshmen, I used to love that group. Then it changed a little bit after that. I started to listen to some real blues tunes. Louis Jordan was one of my favourites and then after that it was Louis Prima. We were inspired by what we would call the boogie songs. Boogie meant up tempo. You had to be a good dancer to dance to those songs – and we had the dancers!”

As a producer he nurtured dancing/singing groups like the Fabulous Flames (included Lloyd Lovindeer) and DJs like Scotty ( Riddle I Dis and many others) in addition to his own stellar career (with Jiving Juniors then solo) that included early hits like John Tom (1966) done to an old time Mento beat.

So who is calling the relationsh­ip between A.G. and Speaker an Attorney-client relationsh­ip? Not me. Who you a call the Attorney? Who you a call the client? What communicat­ion are you calling privileged? Free advice given by Government’s Lawyer to Parliament’s presiding officer? Whose privilege?

Call me John but no call me Tom….

Peace and Love.

 ?? FILE ?? Attorney General Dr. Derrick McKoy. Gordon Robinson writes: A.G. isn’t a private lawyer. He’s a creature of the Constituti­on who is mandated by the Constituti­on (Section 79) to be “the principal legal adviser to the Government of Jamaica (GOJ).”
FILE Attorney General Dr. Derrick McKoy. Gordon Robinson writes: A.G. isn’t a private lawyer. He’s a creature of the Constituti­on who is mandated by the Constituti­on (Section 79) to be “the principal legal adviser to the Government of Jamaica (GOJ).”
 ?? ?? Gordon Robinson
Gordon Robinson

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