The Northern Ireland decision Galo v Bombardier Aerospace UK is a groundbreaking one for the treatment of disabled people in court – but is it going to be followed elsewhere in the UK?

Disabled people will remember December 2016 well. Judgment in the seminal case of Galo v Bombardier Aerospace UK [2016] NICA 25 was given by Morgan LCJ, Gillen LJ and Wetherup LJ and is now to be taken as expressing the law in Northern Ireland – disabled people are to be protected in domestic law against breaches of their rights under article 13 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability, in that they can expect effective access to justice on an equal basis with others including provision of appropriate procedural adjustments by the courts and other bodies involved in their cases in order to facilitate their role as direct and indirect participants in all legal proceedings.

Courts and tribunals can have regard to guidance published in the Equal Treatment Bench Book (“ETBB”), published by the Judicial College, considering how best to accommodate disabled people in courts or tribunal process.

The ETBB points out the need for evidence either from the disabled person themselves or, in an appropriate case, expert evidence before the judge can consider reasonable adjustments to the court process. In Galo the Court of Appeal recognised the benefits of the ETBB’s “ground rules hearing” – a preliminary hearing that the court or tribunal will adopt tailored to circumstances of the particular litigant. It is a groundbreaking case as anyone who has dealt with the needs of the disabled litigants in criminal, civil, family, employment or welfare benefits courts will attest to.

But the judgment in Galo did more than that. “We have formed the clear impression that the ETBB does not appear to be part of the culture of these hearings. That is a circumstance which must fundamentally change with a structural correction to ensure that this situation does not recur.” The problem, so the Lords Justices of Northern Ireland said, “highlights, perhaps, the need for there to be better training of both judiciary and the legal profession in the needs of the disabled”.

Such a warning about the conduct of judges and legal practitioners in Northern Ireland could be expected to find resonance with the Court of Appeal in England & Wales – but clearly the fact that a ground rules hearing is not routinely offered to disabled people does not appear to trouble the Lords Justices. In two “Galo”-like cases they have refused even leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal. One wonders what is going on in the minds of the judges if they will not hear these cases in full knowledge that their brother judges had made such comments about the judiciary and legal practitioners in the parallel jurisdiction of Northern Ireland.

It is notable that the Galo judgment was taken up by the Equality & Human Rights Commission in its report to the International Commission on Rights of People with Disabilities (sent up by UNCRPD itself) over the UK’s compliance with the UNCRPD. It pointed out that the court in Northern Ireland had formed the clear impression that the ETBB did not form a part of the culture of these hearings. Clearly the committee was itself concerned, and in its questions to the UK Government, of 20 April 2017, it asked what steps the Government had taken to access justice through speedy, effective and efficient procedures, to ensure that no costs are incurred by disabled people that would not be incurred by others, and what training the judiciary had over the provision of reasonable accommodation to disabled people for accessing the justice system. It will be interesting how the Government responds to such requests for information.

It matters for Scottish disabled people which way the courts within the Scottish jurisdiction will interpret the law over this area. Is the Equal Treatment Bench Book going to be seen as an effective resource for judges determining disabled people's rights to a fair hearing, or just a bit of leather bound show to impress the international committee but failing to impact the day-to-day culture of Scottish courts?

 


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The Author
John Horan, Cloisters Chambers, London John Horan is speaking on this topic at the Scottish Parliament on Wednesday 21 June 2017, 6pm-8pm, in Committee Room 2. The event, Human Rights and Discrimination Law Post-Brexit, hosted by the Ethnic Minorities Law Centre and sponsored by Anas Sarwar MSP, will discuss the political and legal implications of the UK leaving the EU, with a focus on human rights and discrimination law. Mr Horan will give a presentation on his efforts to link the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, article 13 (access to justice and duties on judges), the ETBB and common law. To book your place at this free event please register your details using this link or email [email protected] with your name, the name of your organisation and contact number.
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