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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> General Legal Council ex parte Whitter v. Frankson (Jamaica) [2006] UKPC 42 (27 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2006/42.html Cite as: [2006] 1 WLR 2803, [2006] WLR 2803, [2006] UKPC 42 |
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General Legal Council ex parte Whitter v. Frankson (Jamaica) [2006] UKPC 42 (27 July 2006)
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JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
Delivered the 27th July 2006
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Lord Hoffmann
Lord Scott of Foscote
Lord Rodger of Earlsferry
Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe
Lord Mance
[Delivered by Lord Hoffmann]
"(1) Any person alleging himself aggrieved by an act of professional misconduct (including any default) committed by an attorney may apply to the Committee to require the attorney to answer allegations contained in an affidavit made by such person, and the Registrar or any member of the Council may make a like application to the Committee in respect of allegations concerning any of the following acts committed by an attorney, that is to say - (a) any misconduct in a professional respect…"
"That case I think was decided on the special ground that the enactment which the Court was then considering was one of a series of enactments which made a distinction between a man's signing by himself and signing by an agent, and it was therefore considered that where signature by an agent was not mentioned the Act required signature by the man himself. That may be quite right, but in the present case the enactment we have to construe is not one of a series of enactments some of which refer to signature by an agent, and I think it would be wrong to hold that an enactment simply referring to signature is not satisfied by signature by means of an agent."
" 'There are…two exceptions to the general rule that a person may do by means of an agent whatever he has power to do himself…' [One] is…where statute requires the evidence of a signature of the principal. The second exception is… that a party cannot do by an attorney some act the competency to do which arises by virtue of some duty of a personal nature requiring skill or discretion for its exercise. It might be thought that the obligation to swear a verifying affidavit which requires the deposing party to apply his mind to matters which are or should be within his own knowledge (and, amongst other things, to make the very important statement on oath that there are not and have not been in his possession, custody or power any documents relevant to the action apart from those which are disclosed) is a clear example of a duty of a personal nature requiring skill or discretion for its exercise."
"14(1) The Disciplinary Committee may from time to time make rules for regulating the presentation, hearing and determination of applications to the Committee under this Act.
(2) Until varied or revoked by rules made by the Committee pursuant to subsection (1) the rules contained in the Fourth Schedule shall be in force."