โ† Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Chief Justice Marston Gibson
Chief Justice Marston Gibson

On June 19, 2004, Chief Justice Marston Gibson weighed in on the dispute that BU has been covering for some time. That of the Constitution vs the Legal Profession Act Cap 370A. BU has obtained a letter from the CJ to Mr Barry Gale QC, the president of the Bar Associationย  โ€“ see letter sent by the CJ to Barry Gale.

The history of the Constitution and the Legal Profession Act goes back to the very beginning of the Act and the formation of the BA. The BAโ€™s first president, Mr Jack Dear QC (later Sir John Dear) realising that the Act was fatally flawed and would not stand up to a constitutional challenge, declined to challenge attorneys who opted not to join the BA, most notably Mr Bobby Clarke, who has never been a member of the BA and between whom and Jack Dear, there was no love lost. If anything there was a mutual and well-known animosity. Successive presidents of the BA have also declined to involve themselves in a face-to-face fight against the Constitution, until the advent of Mr Leslie Haynes.

Chief Justice Douglas refused to involve himself, as did Chief Justice Williams and BU has already published the minutes of the BA in which a consultation between the Registrar, Simmons CJ and Simmons CJโ€™s then prospective son-in-law and BA president Wilfred Abrahams (now Senator Abrahams) in which the advice of Simmons CJ was to, in effect, left it lone โ€“ see Tales From The Courts &ndash XII;Barbados Bar Membership Revisited โ€“ Registrar and Sir David Simmons, Wilfred Abrahams Exposed

In order to practice law in Barbados, it is necessary to satisfy the Government, not the Courts, that you have the required qualifications, whereupon you pay your fees for a practice certificate that is issued by the Government, not by the Courts. That done, you have the right to practice. The determination of whether or not an attorney has the right to practice is a matter for GOVERNMENT, not the CJ.

The Constitution of Barbados, Chapter III PROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS OF THE INDIVIDUAL Section 21, specifically confers the right of association and assembly, OR NOT, except in specific cases, all of which involve matters of defence, public safety, public order, public morality or public health; or that is reasonably required for the purpose of protecting the rights or freedoms of other persons; or that imposes restrictions upon public officers or members of a disciplined force. Attorneys do not come under any of those classifications.

In which case, the BA is a trade union and the right to opt out of membership of the BA is a fundamental human right given under the Constitution that cannot be overset by any other legislation.

In pursuance of its report into this issue and the letter from the CJ, BU has taken advice from two senior judges within the Commonwealth who are authorities on constitutional law. These, having expressed their astonishment and dismay at the CJโ€™s letter, have posed two questions in relation to the CJโ€™s letter and BU now passes these on.

  1. On what authority does the CJ think he can revoke and nullify an attorneyโ€™s practice certificate?
  2. In as much as a ruling on the matter requires a declaration from the Court, such a declaration can only come as a result of proceedings in court in which there is an applicant (the BA) and defendant(s) the dissenting attorneys. Has any such proceeding been brought?

If the CJ does not have the authority to revoke the practice certificates of attorneys and no proceeding has been brought, then the CJ has acted extra judicially and outside of the scope of his authority. Worse still, as he is CJ, he has rendered it impossible for any member of the judiciary to hear such a case, because of prejudice. Worst of all, he has denied the Constitution.

We all know that the Constitution was changed to allow Marston Gibson to take on the job of CJ. However, the changes to the Constitution that would give legitimacy to his latest faux pas would put Barbados at odds with the dictates of the United Nations in respect of the fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual and cause considerable international censure and concern.

It is well known that the CJ has failed to obtain any support from the members of the Bench and support organisations, because he has shown no competence or understanding of the job he was hired to do, which is NOT to be an adornment on the cocktail circuit, as he seems to think. The only decision the CJ, the head of the judiciary, has given in his years in office has been to read a decision written by Williams AJ (retโ€™d). The CJ is yet to deliver a single decision under his own authorship. Instead, this head of the judiciary occupies his few judicial hours dealing with bail applications which, apparently, prevents him from responding in public to the concerns raised recently by the DPP, amongst others. He has seemingly decided that the role of CJ should be that of a glorified magistrate.

His letter to Barry Gale must be seen, therefore, as being political and not judicial and an attempt to garner support from those licensed legal practitioners who have chosen to be members of the BA (which is their right under the Constitution, in the same way that it is the right of other licensed legal practitioners NOT to be members of what is in effect a trade union).

Therefore, by acting extra-judicially, the CJ has conducted himself in a manner that constitutes gross misconduct and that brings the judicial system into disrepute.

Bajans of all walks of life have long been aware that the CJ has exhibited a total lack of competence and has no clue what his job is, or should be. It is time he went, which was not going to be so straightforward, until now. Now, the PM has all the grounds he could possibly need to either demand a resignation or to start the process of dismissal of Marston Gibson. And as Barbadosโ€™ foreign investment continues to decline to the extreme prejudice of the country and its peoples, we call on the Prime Minister to invoke the very Constitution that the CJ has decided to ignore (or doesnโ€™t understand) and get rid of this blot on our justice system.


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

138 responses to “Tales from the Courts – Has Chief Justice Gibson Brought the JUSTICE System into DISREPUTE? XXI”

  1. jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    jeff Cumberbatch

    Amused,

    I do not know, with respect, what was the learning in your days of studying law, but as Ross says above, it is NOT that Britain does not have a Constitution, its just that it is not to be found in a single written document as Barbados’ is, for instance.

    Why else would the Prime Minister in Britain be the leader of the party that secures the majority of the seats in general elections? There is no statute that covers this, it is purely a matter of constitutional convention.

  2. St George's Dragon Avatar
    St George’s Dragon

    @ Bush Tea
    I may be wrong but I thought Bizzy’s new man was running the whole of Williams Industries, not just electrical.
    Also, the waste to energy plant is Cahill, although Bizzy may well have I finger in that pie, I suppose.


  3. @DD

    One has to assume the government did its due diligence. Bear in mind Cahill brought partners to the meeting who have good brand name e.g. Westinghouse.


  4. What government do what due diligence what, when did the DLP/BLP governments of Barbados ever do any diligence, they are just lucky that all of them have not been hauled off in handcuffs to serve quality prison time in one of the metropolis’ YET……..it’s not too late though.


  5. @David

    “One has to assume the government did its due diligence.”

    Please keep posting the JOKES, they make my day.


  6. I am quite happy to see that one or more of the politicians are monitoring BU and i managed to hit a NERVE……lol


  7. @ St George Dragon
    You are likely correct….Bizzy’s man may be running Berger King also…. ๐Ÿ™‚
    …besides…you know that Bushie likes to talk a lotta shiite too….
    a habit picked up from Hants after he (Hants) has had two drinks…..


  8. I agree with those who say that Corruption reigns in Barbados.
    However, I want to draw attention to
    Two things that are happening in Barbados ,of course, among other things, that are impacting Barbados negatively.
    1 . The elevation of women to positions of authority in Barbados
    2. The idea that someone with a degree can go into a job where experience is necessary and because that having earn a degree , they become super human , they are to bypass everybody else and just assume positions where they lack the practical everyday experience. Having a degree is all that matters. This is causing real problems in both the private and public sector because such persons look to lord over others and they can hardly do the job in a lot of cases

    Its about money

    It is interesting that most of these people are women
    Some women use whatever means necessary to get a degree
    The question often asked is -where are the men ?
    Men seem to be outnumbered in many social activities and at institutions of learning -(tertiary) Are they pushed out ?


  9. @Well, well. You really mean to make me work. Okay. You have raised some points, mostly valid. The points I either disagree with or have no knowledge of are:

    โ€œโ€ฆโ€ฆcause he himself is/was no betterโ€ฆfrom what i am hearing from those concernedโ€ฆ.โ€ I have no knowledge of that.

    โ€œโ€ฆ.the island is too small to be adjourning cases for 3, 4, 6 and 8 monthsโ€ฆ.โ€ I think you mean years. If you donโ€™t, you should.

    Paragraph 3. Accept that a change in the Constitution requires a 2/3rds majority, which the Government does not have. Also, I recommend that you read the Constitution and, having done so, you may agree with me that it really does not need to be changed. The Constitution is designed to protect the country and the rights and freedoms of its people and to rank as superior to any laws, especially those by which these may be threatened. Now, the Legal Professions Act can easily be changed by simple majority of just one, or two in the case of the present government. Also, while the CCJ can certainly rule on the interpretation of the Constitution, it cannot change it. Also, I will need to read the Treaty of Chaguramas in detail to see if there are grounds for an original application to the CCJ in this case, as I am satisfied that no judge in Barbados can now try the case, due to the CJโ€™s letter.

    I disagree with you on the subject of Michelle Weekes. She was an obvious, and expected, choice and one, moreover, who enjoys the respect of most members of the legal profession, with one glaring exception who has voiced his disapproval on BU, for reasons passing my understanding, but which sound suspiciously like sour grapes either on his personal behalf or that of a disappointed friend. Also, how does anyone actually know that she is the PMโ€™s girlfriend? I certainly do not know it and there is little that escapes my attention in Barbados and that certainly would not. But whether she is or not makes, to my mind, no differenceโ€ฆ..she was the obvious choice and now we wait to see if she will fulfil the promise she has shown in the past. I do not accept that Weekes Jโ€™s appointment has caused discomfort to members of the Benchโ€ฆ..sitting members of the Bench, that is, as opposed to a former Chief Justice with whom she did not see eye to eye, and rightly, and who seems to hallucinate that he is still CJ, poor old soul. But if it has caused discomfort to any members of the Bench, we have to consider that it may be through fear that her efficiency and timeliness will make them look bad.

    Other than those points, I agree with you and, tempted though I am, I will leave Mr Skinner to answer your questions to him. I am agog to see his reply.

    @Pachamama | July 11, 2014 at 2:58 PM | Have to agree with you, but have a reservation/disagreement on the statement about lawyers deciding matters outside of the courts. My mentor stressed two things to me. First is that if you cannot manage to reach an out-of-court settlement that your client is content with, it is not your finest hour. The second is not relevant here. Counsel cannot discuss a case with the judge in the absence of opposing counsel. In effect, this is precisely what the CJ has done here.


  10. Amuse,

    I would vehemently disagree with you on the point which you have made regarding the amendment to the Barbados. Now, that I have resided in America close to some thirty years and have had the opportunity to read and understand the American Constitution in it entirety, I cannot possible see how the Barbados Constitution does not need any changes. Amuse, any constitution ought and must be able to evolve to reflict some aspect of the period which we’re are living in, and the American Constitution has done this throughout its existence. I could point to many examples, where the American Constitution was wrong and it amended that wrong to make things right: slavery, women suffrage, minors rights, Abortion are but a few examples. So don’t tell me that the Barbadian Constitution need no such changes!


  11. @Amused July 11, 2014 at 9:06 AM “As for Marston Gibson himself, I enthusiastically (and wrongly) espoused his appointment. I repeat yet again that I was wrong to do so… but the person has certainly abundantly proved to be a disaster”

    I TOLD YOU SO.

    But you did not listen to me, because I am only a

    Simple SImon


  12. @Dompey July 11, 2014 at 10:07 AM “Simple Simon I am sorry if the Barbadian Constitution is written in stone because this obviously signal little or not change to the existing system. A Constitution ought and must be designed on the process of growth and not the state of being, you and your antiquated thinking friends expect it to be.”

    Dear Dompey: I’ve never responded to you because I realize that you are an idiot.

    David I am sorry for calling one of your customers an idiot.

    Dear Dompey: There is a process for changing Barbados’s Constitution. Ya jest can’t get p in the morning and change de ting just so.

    The ten commandments written in stone too and I don’t hear you complaining about them


  13. @Jason Price July 11, 2014 at 8:24 PM “Two things that are happening in Barbados ,of course, among other things, that are impacting Barbados negatively. The elevation of women to positions of authority in Barbados”

    Dear David: Are we getting two idiots fr one price today?

    First Dompey

    Now Jason Price


  14. Amused

    OK…you mean me. How HOW can you, the ass-licker extraordinaire, NOT take the view you do? But I will restate the case…

    Someone who is reckoned to be the g/f of the PM is made a judge. On the face of it, the appointment is tainted. The only question is whether the judge can be seen to be at the top of her game so that the appointment is totally justified on merit. If the answer to that is ‘yes” – fine. As I said then – even PM’s and attorneys are entitled to fall in love and not have it held against them.

    But knowing the way of the world on BU – that the appointment was not the subject of comment from and within the “family’ (gawd) I find totally incredible.

    For you to suggest I am self-interested is a willful and deflective slight – but then I suppose you’re still smarting that you forgot your constitutional law. Poor thing.

    Now one other thing – apropos of the Gibson letter you are repeatedly puling yourself up by the bootstraps. My view is that you are totally WRONG and instead of asserting as fact that which is yet to be proved – and which you have failed to prove – the more modest approach might just be to say that what you are saying is an opinion only. Is that beyond you? Of course I do realize it would run counter to the post – and despite all the posturing between yourself as Tweedledum and David as Tweedledee, the fact is that your withered hand lies behind it. “I must go and earn some money”…gee what a joker.

    Wiliam skinner

    Your repeated reference to origin is totally misplaced and a mere deflection. On the whole, however, I agree with you that the CJ has not done any obvious harm to the system. You can’t harm something if you are only tangentally a part of it. The response to Gale is, however, encouraging in this respect. It certainly beats silly letters written to the gallery wittering about grasping lawyers which, at the time, the BU family and poor Amused were so excited about and when for them then all things seemed possible with this man at the helm. They were wrong then and they are wrong now.


  15. Here is an interesting observation by the Chief Justice made in 2011:

    Chief Justice sees need for techonolgy

    Posted by TrakkerNews on October 28, 2011 in Barbados, News | Bridgetown.

    Chief Justice of Barbados Marson Gibson, says technology must be  embraced if the court system  in Barbados is to deliver justice in a speedy manner.

    Chief Justice Gibson is also encouraging  the use of computers by magistrates for more efficient communication.

    "In an era where people tweet and email, magistrates should not be hobbled by this lack of technology especially as it impacts on the sentencing," Gibson said.

    Delivering the Fifth Distinguished Alumni Lecture on the topic Crime and Justice In 21st Century Barbados: New Challenges, New Responses at the Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies.

    Gibson said " My real plea is for the entire court system to start thinking seriously that technology is not our enemy, it is our friend".

    http://www.caribbeantrakker.com/2011/10/chief-justice-sees-need-for-techonolgy/#.U8DOP23lSdA


  16. About the issue of Alair โ€˜โ€™mooningโ€™โ€™ Justice Dr. Sonia Richards didnโ€™t the Chief Just promise to look into the matter? BU is not aware of a position taken by him. What BU would ask the CJ is why does he not use his office to ensure the matter which provoked Alair to show his botsy at Richards is dealt with. Both Dottin and Hinds have left the force BUT the case which challenges the promotions of several officers continue to impact the ability of the Commissioner of police to marshall his forces, he is on record expressing displeasure about it.

    BU is about delivering justice as the measure of the CJโ€™s competence, so far a big fail.


  17. We consider that everybody in any position in Barbados is at best mediocre and/or failing, if the general trajectory of the society can be used as a benchmark. To us this is culturally bound. Meaning when all the institutions in the country are not doing well and have not been so doing for a long time surely no one man or woman can hardly be expected to exceed expectations. Mediocrity becomes the new national password. In those circumstances we fail to see the utility of pointing at any one perceived failure. ‘It’s the system stupid”


  18. @ Amused
    Unlike some, we hold you in high regard. We believe that you are genuinely well-intentioned. But to suggest that there are not all kinds of interactions between parties may reflect well on the standards we would wish were in place in all ‘professions’, but our experience teaches us that that lofty standard is NOT strictly observed, as a practical matter.


  19. @Pacha

    And how does one go about changing the system? Gibson was one of the people selected from outside the inner circle to bring change. The system will change when men in Gibson’s position show extrodinary leadership. And for the record BU supported his appointmemt.


  20. @ David
    It certainly cannot be done in a piecemeal fashion! All kinds of people come talking about ‘change’ or that mantel is imposed on situations. They hardly talk about transformation. For centuries policemen in Barbados have been beating working class people and denying us our rights once in their custody. And all the CJs this country has ever had would have known or should have known this. That status quo still remains 50 years after independence and everybody in the criminal justice system known about these illegal beatings and torture to force confessions. Now, if such a glaring mal-administration of ‘justice’ cannot be changed in Barbados what else could be? But even if that could be changed and all other things remain equal it would make no real difference to the society. We need to go deeper and wider than the crucifixion of any one person. It maybe better to crucify them all!


  21. Simple Simon

    What has the Ten Commandments to do with the point I was try to driving through your very hard skull? The Ten Commandments are absolute divine directives, which many theologians past and present have argued are still applicable to our modern life. And it is senseless on your part to compare the divine law with the civil law, when in essence, the civil law, especially in the Western societies, derived it sense of morality from the Divine. Simple, what an appropriate name for you, are you cognizant of the fact that the entire concept of Western jurisprudence is predicated upon the biblical concepts of a eye for an eye, and tooth for a tooth? And to further inform you thinking if I may apply such a definition to what you’re trying to do here: the followers of the Hebrew Scriptures live by Commandments, laws, ordinances, statutes and testimonies brother, and not just the lone Ten Commandments.


  22. @Pacha

    When BU posts about the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Prime Minister and his cohorts etc, do you offer the same view? No, the CJ is a good POSITION because delivering JUSTICE now, today, is a priority.


  23. no body can changed this system…by nature barbadians are stiffed neck self centred people,,,When CJ Gibson had decided to take this post,,,somebody should have warned him that the link of protectionism is hardened anyone who dare tries to get in the way of movement would be destroyed,,,,,,the case against cj marston gibson is one being manufactured as many in the judicial system even though they outwardly decries the ineptness and incompetence of those who dwell in the system ..feel completely at home in living within such an enviroment. where everyone can make their own rules,,,, as for marston gibson,,,,,,he now is being demonize as being as intruder ,having no knoweldge or understanding barbadians or in the case of the judicial system..barbarism..


  24. Pachamama

    Now, you’re beginning to talk nonsense because throughout the world, police have been and continues to victimizing working class people. Pach, can you with any degree of honesty, point to any society in the world today where police haven’t prey upon the poor and marginalized elements? It continues to happen in the world’s most progressive democracy and at a time when it ought not happen one would have thought. So let’s not use the Royal Barbados Police Force as a case study to validate your half – baked argument Pach.


  25. @Pacha

    A big problem we have in Barbados is the extent to which we personalize issues. Gibson was appointed by government I.e. Governor General with consent by the Prime Minister, he gave us his vision when he accepted the position which meant – we hope – he had a realistic expectation of achieving. If fir whatever reason he has been encountering roadblocks – unjustly so – he owes it to himself professionally and morally to apprise Bajans of his situation. Individuals in the private sector resign everyday if they are not able to achieve personal goals, the ambitious ones anyway.

    Finally, to the political partisans who are sure to raise their talking heads, when BU was sending flack the way of former CJ David Simmons what was your view at the time? We have reached a point where our leaders have to be held accountable by the citizenry, blindly following the chief is over.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  26. @ David
    Seems to us that the present CJ has come in for a disproportionate amount of our ire. But if you are right that we cuss them all, and we agree, what then is wrong with going to crux of the matter with a more general critique? How are our general positions so different? Why is transformation so necessary in the justice system and not for the people who enable them and does this not go the underlying system as a whole?


  27. @Pacha

    We have to learn to run and chew gum at the same time. Critique by all means but there is nothing to suggest we have to do so at the general level only because as you know, individuals ultimately have to drive the change to the system.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  28. @David

    We wish you well with that. Now pray tell, how could your change somebody like Dompey, without intervention? LOL


  29. @Pacha

    Those we dwell on the fringe will always be with us, it serves to remind us that this is an imperfect world.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  30. Pachamama

    Would agree that some of the working class people needed to be beaten by the police and especially, those elements from the trouble spots in Barbados? I would go on the record by saying the during my association with the Royal Barbados Police Force: I have witnessed quite a few people who had gotten their tail cut in my presence, but I can unequivocally, assure you that these weren’t honest working class people. And more often than not, the majority of the people who had gotten their ass cut in my presence were out of controll rebellious Barbadian youth from the Bush Hall, Silver Sand, New Orleans and surrounding city localities. Now, I am not saying what some members of the RBPF did was Right but it surely kept Barbados safe in the 70’s and well throughout the 1980’s. Where is Lion Man? Oh! he is resting with the Lord I would hope!


  31. @ David

    When you seek to transform a system you got to do more than walk and chew gum. The danger we face is to be too focus on the personality cultism, negative or positive, which passes for what it has never been – genuine transformation!


  32. @ David
    See wha uh tell yuh! What manner of man is this Dompey. He has made our point for us! LOL


  33. @Pacha

    Who can disagree with your last comment? Our ability to reinvent our society sees a path back to holding individuals accountable and nurturing an environment that will motivate those with the talent to make change. What we have in Barbados is an absence of real leadership therefore the chronic negativity to which you refer. We have to hold key figureheads to account and CJ Gibson is one of these people.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  34. @David
    Of course we do not only have the evidence given by our own Dompey. We have the great Jonny Cheltenham who said publicly that more than 90% of the cases brought by the police were base on confessions, as the only evidence. We can easily assumed, no pun intended, that some portion of these were forced physically. But this has always been backward. The new and evolving methodology is to unfairly use psychological tricks to get the same results.


  35. Pachamama, correct me if I am wrong but somehow the idea cross my mind that you’re what the contemporary philosophers would call an Utopian- Ideologue. Google the definition and then tell me if I should ready my bed from Black Rock?


  36. @Pacha

    The issue about the beating recently is a case where angry citizens in a neighborhood transformed to a garrison mentality to confront the police. There is a social dynamic taking place on the island which is leading to nothing positive and so far there is a worrying lack of intellectual capital being allocated to the matter.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  37. @ David
    Your last comment represents your better voice!


  38. @ David
    People like Dompey would have done untold damage to the country by illegally beating people in custody and the system knowing about it for centuries and doing nothing. The response and circumstances you cited must now mean to the likes of Dompey and his ilk that more and bigger guns are now to be introduced into these conflicts, we guess. So the nation is to be at war with itself.

    David, are you following the events in T&T where the military has intervened to defend their members from gang violence? The region ill! We are heading down a very slippery slope.


  39. @Pacha

    The big three in the English Caribbean are leading the way and gives small states like Barbados an opportunity of looking in the reverse mirror. If there was ever a time when the urgency of now must take root we are here.

    On Saturday, 12 July 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  40. Pachamana

    You ought to really thank the men and women of the Royal Barbados Police Force both past and present for their service to Barbados. Because these men and women who wore and continues to wear the uniform, have ignored their medical necessities, wives and children cats and dogs to ensure the public safety in Barbados. (I am speaking from firsthand knowledge) So with that being said: itโ€™s only when youโ€™re around these courageous and valiant crime- fighters, that youโ€™re cognizant of the important contribution their have made to the betterment of Barbadian society. And like any organization there will always be the bad apples Pach. So try using the education the taxpayers of Barbados have afforded in a more productive way, before you start to run off at the mouth about a topic you obviously have little or not understanding of. Because youโ€™re in no position to moralize on the way in which these crime- fighters have conducted themselves in the pursuit of their job. Until you put on the uniform of course. And lastly, your analysis of the RBPF, itโ€™s kinda like a man who has never been married, but somehow he has the audacity impudicity to counsel a married man on his marriage. Pach, I often say that theory and speculation can get you but so far….


  41. Pachamana

    A word of guidance: it is important that you try your very best to see the positive rather than the negative in any given issue and the order in the disorder, no matter have minimum it may appear because right now, youโ€™re beginning to appear as though youโ€™re the eternal- pessimist. Now, donโ€™t take my word for it, but it certainly appears as though you and Bush Tea are cut from the same fabric. Join at the hip as the Americans would say. You follow what I driving at brother? If you want to be respected on the blog, try being a little more balanced in your analysis.


  42. Amused……I will take all that you have said under advisement and hope Ms. Weekes makes a difference in the current trend among some of the Judges, i am trying not to paint all with the lazy brush, but it’s getting difficult.

    Hopefully when all the Judges return from one month’s vacation in August at taxpayer’s expense, they will do so with the intent of clearing their dockets of these decades (in some cases) old cases.

    How can the Judges in good conscience accept such fantastic salaries with the perks of a free vehicle, not sure about the housing arrangements, not to mention the status that comes with these positions and all at taxpayer’s expense and then don’t do the work that is expected/required of them, it’s troubling.

    Right now i know of people with serious injuries some that are life threatening and who are waiting on these personal injury cases for closure so that they can get the required treatment that can keep them out of wheelchairs or save their lives, when Judges decide to continuously and for years adjourn cases that will decide if a person lives or dies they cross a line…….not only the plaintiffs are affected but also lawyers will eventually be unable function effectively for their clients because they cannot find closure. The insurance companies are the ones benefiting from this type of Judge’s behavior that has and is ruining many lives, I hope not all Judges are doing this but I hear otherwise………all those cases affect someone regardless how frivolous or serious. To think that no one in the governments or CJ’s office have thought it necessary to reverse the trend is disgusting and reeks of the stink stench of politics.


  43. @ Well Well,

    The entire system needs modernisation and Management.

    There is a need for trained managers to coordinate and schedule the cases using scheduling software that is customised to suit the needs of the court system.

    Up until recently I worked for a company that employed over 500 people and they used custom scheduling software to schedule an average of 1500 projects per month.

    Competence or laziness of judges is a separate issue to which I cannot speak.


  44. Hants……..I don’t even know how to answer you, it’s not like the employees in the judiciary have never scheduled cases before but somehow with the new court their system of scheduling has gotten worse, just ask the frustrated lawyers….I bet you even with a new scheduling system they will find a way to screw it up, most often the problems lie in the attitudes.

    Regarding the Judges and their reluctance to bring cases to closure, i know for a fact that insurance companies like to nitpick just so they don’t have to pay out claims and their lawyers would forever hold up and prolong the process, but in saying that, that in now way excuses the Judges from the continuous adjournments, there comes a time when Judges tell lawyers ENOUGH……just let’s wrap the case up and the lawyers have no recourse other than to comply instead of coming up with some useless excuse to prolong the agony of a case going into another decade……but these Judges in Barbados apparently have no problem with that, they help the damn lawyers prolong the cases for years totally unresolved and in an attempt to further frustrate the parties involved, I am told they are trying to assign cases to respective Judges and that Judge is supposed to see the assigned case to it’s completion, but for some reason that is also not working….so go figure..

    In my opinion, the Judges need to get all those old cases they have 1 year and older resolved so they can start with a fresh slate, but if they continue to adjourn cases for decades, the court system is lost and no investor would even want to hear the name Barbados ever again.


  45. would like to introduce the next CJ of Barbados,,the one person who have all the answers to barbados justice dysfunctional judicial system ,,the one person more knowledgeable.than the encyclopedia Britannica,,and one who would be present at every cock fight and lick mout show,,,,,,, the most intellectual dishonest nincoompoop WeLL<, WELL,,,


  46. The only decision the CJ, the head of the judiciary, has given in his years in office has been to read a decision written by Williams AJ (retโ€™d). The CJ is yet to deliver a single decision under his own authorship. Instead, this head of the judiciary occupies his few judicial hours dealing with bail applications which, apparently, prevents him from responding in public to the concerns raised recently by the DPP, amongst others. He has seemingly decided that the role of CJ should be that of a glorified magistrate.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Just asking a stupid question but how can this statement on which the attack on the CJ is based possibly be true and the list of published decisions available on the internet says otherwise?

    As a novice and pretty ignorant of the workings of the court perhaps I am guilty of the error but it would seem as though David should be apologizing to the Honourable gentleman for getting his facts so screwed up!!

    I have heard, but I don’t know if it is true that all of the decisions are not published on the website so there could very well be more.

    http://www.lawcourts.gov.bb/Lawlibrary/Courts.asp?Crt=Court of Appeal&CrtYear=2011

    5/9/2014 Levere King v Lester Massiah [Unreported]C.A. B’dos Civil Appeal No 4 of 2010;2014-05-09
    Gibson CJ, Moore, Mason JJA

    10/4/2013 Joyce Griffith v Phillip Nicholls [Unreported]C.A B’dos Civil Appeal No 22 of 2009;2013-10-04
    Gibson CJ, Mason, Burgess JJA

    10/23/2013 E. Pihl & Sons A/S (Denmark) v. Brondum A/S (Denmark)[Unreported]C.A. B’dos Civil Appeal No 24 of 2012; 2013-10-23
    Gibson CJ, Burgess, Goodridge JJA

    10/23/2013 Cellate Caribbean Limited et al v Harlequin Property (SVG) Limited [Unreported]C.A. B’dos Civil Appeal No 3 of 2011; 2013-10-23
    Gibson, CJ, Moore, Burgess JJA

    10/4/2013 Jeffrey Ray Burton et al v The Queen [Unreported] C.A B’dos Criminal Appeal Suit Nos. 1 & 4 of 2011; 2013-10-04
    Gibson CJ, Moore, Mason JJA

    10/4/2013 Jeffrey Ray Burton etal v The Queen [Unreported] C.A. B’dos Criminal Appeal Nos. 1 and 4 of 2011;2013-10-04
    Gibson CJ, Moore, Mason JJA

    2/20/2012 Transport Board and Jonathan Boyce v Dennis Penniston[Unreported] C.A. B’dos Civil Appeal No. 9 of 2010; 2012-02-20
    Gibson CJ, Mason, Burgess JJA

    11/28/2012 Carl Norman Corbin v Commissione of Police [Unreported] C.A. B’dos Court of Appeal Magisterial Suit No. 5 of 2011; 2012-11-28
    Gibson, CJ, Moore, Burgess JJA


  47. @John. Did the CJ write the decisions? I think you will find he did not. No need for BU to retract. Did he even read the decisions, or did the person who wrote them? Check your facts. He merely chaired the panel.

    @David. I see from today’s Nation that the BA is likely going to instruct the CJ’s new BF, Barry, to sue the CJ. So it cannot be discounted that the CJ acted extra judicially in attempting to usurp the authority of the executive in order to drum up votes to vote “no” to suing him.

    Now, how much further does the CJ need to bring the courts into disrepute before Freundel takes action to remove him? And Freundel is the only person who can take that action.

    So, Prime Minister, what are you going to do? You have to do something!!!!! No option of sitting on the fence this time. After all, Prime Minister, it was you who said in relation to the justice system, “Those who have ears to hear, let them hear.” Well, PM, Barbados has ears to hear…….AND WE ARE WAITING!!!!!


  48. @Amused

    With the Courts in dire traits given a heavy case backlog one is correct to assume a priority of the CJ would be to call the Judicial Council to order. Is our expectation resonable or can this be contrued as an attack on Gibson. Yes it is an attack on his competence.


  49. Amuse

    It seems insane to vest an unilateral authority in one man in an instance such as this. I know little about the Common Law or was it the Roman Law of which the Constitution of Barbados was written?

    That the problem with the judicial system in Barbados, the PM is given the unilateral authory to remove the CJ in instances of misconduct or willful incompetence, rather than the House or the Senate, which is often the case in America.


  50. It would not be hard to understand the CJ reluctance to having those meetings,,, where he might have concluded that such meeting were non productive and a waste of time….,,,,, now the bar association is crying foul ….but the answer might lie in the fact that such meetings which were meant to produce positive have over the years fallen short on the goals which were ironed out in the meetings and specifically intended to make positive changes ..and for one reason or another …were not channeled in the directions intended to deliver easement within all areas of the judicial system ..as the continuance of doing business as usual were prioritized on every one’s agenda, ,in the case of Too many chiefs vs too little Indians….

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading