Judges Flashcards
What is the fundamental principle of the judiciary in the rule of law. (link to separation of powers)
The Independence of the JUDICIARY is a fundamental principle of the Rule of Law.
Who is head of the judiciary?
The Lord Chief Justice
Which act established the Supreme Court and which court did it replace?
The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 – replaced the House of Lords with the Supreme Court
How does the creation of the Supreme Court help with the separation of powers?
It separates the UK senior judges and the upper House of Parliament
Under the Lord Chief Justice comes the Superior judges, can you name them?
Superior Judges include:
1. Justices of the Supreme Court.
2. Lord Justices of Appeal
3. High Court Judges
Under the Superior Judges comes the inferior judges, can you name them?
Inferior judges for both Crown and County Court include:
1. Circuit judges
2. District judges
3. Recorders (part-time)
Inferior judges For Magistrates Court:
1. District judges
What is the role of the Lord Chancellor?
Head of the Ministry for Justice
Responsible for Legal Aid, the Law Commission, and the courts system.
Does the Lord Chancellor have to be a lawyer or have a legal background?
No. They can be drawn from a background other than law
(S2 constitutional Reform Act 2005)
Chris Grayling became the first non-lawyer in 400 years to hold this post.
How did the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 change the role of the lord chancellor?
The Lord Chancellor NO LONGER:
Sits as a judge in the House of Lords
Heads the Judiciary
Takes a role in the judicial appointments process
Required to be a member of the House of Lords
Automatically becomes a speaker of the House of the Lords.
Who is the current Lord Chancellor?
Alexander John Gervase Chalk KC is a British politician and barrister serving as Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice since April 2023.
JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS PROCESS - describe the process before the Constitutional Reform Act 2005
OLD PROCEDURE
Lord Chancellor took a central role in appointments
Secret soundings – the old appointments process whereby information on a potential judge would be gathered over time from barristers and judges
No advertisements for judicial appointments
Secretive – eligibility to become a judge was based on numbers of year of rights of audience
JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS PROCESS - describe the process after the Constitutional Reform Act 2005
NEW PROCEDURE
Constitutional Reform Act 2005
Established the Judicial Appointments Commission.
Judicial Appointments Commission now has 14 members these are 5 lay, 5 judges, 2 legal professionals a lay magistrate and a tribunal member appointed by the king on the recommendation of the Law Commission.
The Commission is not involved in appointing judges to the Supreme Court
Tribunals Courts and
Enforcement Act: 2007
Eligibility to become a judge is based on the number of year post qualification experience
What is the Judicial Appointments Commission made up of?
There are 15 members of the Commission;
membership of the Commission is drawn from the judiciary, the legal profession, non-legally qualified judicial officer holders and the public.
The Judicial Appointments Commission recommends five judicial qualities for a good judge:
- Intellectual capacity
- Integrity, independence of mind, sound judgment, decisiveness, objectivity and willingness to learn
- Ability to understand and deal fairly
- Authority and communication skills
- Efficiency
How are judges appointments from a wide range of backgrounds encouraged?
Appointments are now made solely on merit and posts are widely advertised to encourage a wide range of candidates to apply.
The amount of time that a candidate has to have worked in the law has been reduced to increase the pool of potential candidates and to encourage applications from solicitors, barristers and tribunal judges.
What is the role of a judge?
The role of judges is to apply the law as stated by Parliament in an independent manner. Parliament is the supreme law maker and so courts cannot question the law, merely interpret it.