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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Kavanagh v. Legal Aid Board [2001] IEHC 149 (24th October, 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2001/149.html Cite as: [2001] IEHC 149 |
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1. The
first named Respondent (hereinafter referred to as “the Board”) is
established under Section 3 of the Civil Legal Aid Act, 1995. The principal
function of the Board is described in Section 5 (1) of the Act as being ....
2. On
the 23rd September 1997 the Applicant applied to the Board for legal aid in
connection with an application for Judicial Separation. By letter of the same
date the Board indicated that, on account of the demand for legal services in
the Tallaght Law Centre, it was not in a position even to process her
application at that time. It was not until almost twenty months later, in May,
1999 that her application was processed and granted.
3. In
the meantime, in October 1997 the Applicant completed an application for legal
services in connection with another matter and was given an appointment with a
Solicitor under the Board’s Private Practitioners Scheme. The same was
operated by the Board in respect of certain proceedings in the District Court
whereby legal services were provided through private Solicitors who were not
employees of the Board. In April, 1998 a further similar application was made.
Both applications were granted.
4. While
awaiting the outcome of her application for legal aid in relation to the
Judicial Separation Proceedings the Applicant was forced to leave the family
home because of a violent incident. While this appears to be factually correct
I do not see any connection between the Applicant being forced to leave her
home and the delay in the Judicial Separation Proceedings as legal aid was
available to her under the Private Practitioner Scheme hereinbefore referred to.
5. It
seems that, as a matter of fact, what was suffered by the Applicant by the
delay in the processing of her application for legal aid in connection with the
Judicial Separation Proceedings was the ordinary inconvenience caused by any
such delay, namely not having such an important matter dealt with promptly and
not having her affairs settled.
6. Judicial
Separation Proceedings were duly instituted on behalf of the Applicant and she
was granted a Barring Order therein. The second period of delay complained to
relates to the period between July, 1999 and April, 2000. The Applicant
complains that she received only one communication from the Board during that
period. The proceedings in this case were instituted on the 7th April, 2000
and the Applicant’s Judicial Separation Proceedings have since been
brought to a conclusion.
7. In
these proceedings the Applicant seeks various declarations to the effect that
the Respondent was obliged to consider her Application for legal aid within a
reasonable time, to the effect that the representation to which she was
entitled should include all such assistance as is usually given by a Solicitor
or Barrister in connection with proceedings for Judicial Separation, that she
enjoyed the same rights and privileges arising from her relationship with the
Solicitor provided to her by the Board as she would have enjoyed had she been
in a position to engage the services of a Solicitor in private practice, that
the Board was obliged to prosecute her proceedings with reasonable expedition
and that it was obliged to answer her reasonable request for information in
relation thereto and that the Board has failed to prosecute her proceedings for
Judicial Separation with a reasonable expedition and has failed to answer such
reasonable requests.
8. The
Applicant further seeks an Order for Mandamus directing the Board to prosecute
the Applicant’s proceedings for Judicial Separation with reasonable
expedition and to answer her reasonable request for information in relation to
the same and an Order for Mandamus directing the second and third named
Respondents to provide to the Board sufficient resources to enable it to comply
with the obligations above referred to.
9. It
is argued on behalf of the Respondents that the proceedings are now moot. In
particular, it has been submitted that the Applicant cannot obtain the Orders
for Mandamus referred to as the proceedings for Legal Separation have now been
concluded. I agree and it is no longer contended on behalf of the Applicant
that there should be an Order or Orders of Mandamus.
10. I
am satisfied that, apart from the possible question of damages, whether or not
any or all of the Orders sought in these proceedings are made will not effect
the Applicant and, to that extent, the proceedings are moot.
11. The
claim for damages, however, remains and by reason thereof, I must proceed to
consider what I understand to be the substantive issue in this case.
12. The
grounds upon which relief is sought in these proceedings are entirely based
upon an alleged breach of statutory duty. No question arises as to any rights
to which the Applicant may be entitled by virtue of the Constitution or by any
international convention. The claim is solely based upon rights and duties
arising from the Legal Aid Act, 1995.
15. The
Board makes the case that “resources” means not just financial
resources but other resources such as the availability of personnel. The
uncontroverted evidence is that the Board's said resources were limited and
stretched most particularly at times material to these proceedings by reason of
a number of factors including the introduction of Divorce in our jurisdiction.
16. It
is argued on behalf of the Applicant that legal aid has the meaning ascribed to
it by Section 27 of the Act and that once the Applicant is entitled to legal
aid she is entitled thereto without the qualification and, in particular,
without the qualification of the same being within the resources of the
Applicant.
17. I
am satisfied that the language of Section 5 (1) quoted above is plain and
obvious and requires no special interpretation. The Board shall provide,
within its resources and subject to other provisions of the Act legal aid to
persons who satisfy the requirements of the Act. The words simply mean that
legal aid shall be provided within the Board's resources and I am fully
satisfied on the basis of the Affidavits (and it seems to me that there is no
controversy on this aspect of the matter) that that is precisely what the Board
did in this case. The Board had a method of dealing with cases in a certain
order of priority and within that scheme the Applicant was given equal
treatment to all other Applicants.