BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Keady v. Garda Commissioner [1991] IESC 4 (26th November, 1991) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1991/4.html Cite as: [1991] IESC 4 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
2. The
issue, therefore, is whether or not the procedure under the 1971 Regulations,
made pursuant to the Police Forces Amalgamation Act 1925, is the administration
of justice or,
à
propos
Article 37 of the Constitution, is the exercise of functions and powers of a
judicial nature, and, if so, whether such functions and powers are limited
within the meaning of Article 37.
3. The
constitutional prescript is that justice shall be administered by judges
appointed in the manner provided by the Constitution.
4. The
meaning of these terms or the breadth of their application have been examined
in a series of decisions of our courts: see
Lynham
v Butler (No.2)
[1933] IR 74;
Halpin
v Attorney General
[1936]
IR 226;
State
(McKay) v Cork Circuit Judge
[1937] IR 650;
Fisher
v Irish Land Commission
[1948] IR 3;
Crowley
v Irish Land Commission
[1951] IR 250;
Foley
v Irish Land Commission
[1952] IR 118;
Cowan
v Attorney General
[1961] IR 411;
Deaton
v Attorney General
[1963] IR 170;
State
(Shanahan) v Attorney General
[1964] IR 239;
In
re Solicitors' Act 1954
[1960] IR 239 and
McDonald
v Bord na gCon (No.2)
[1965] IR 217.
6. The
controversies which fall to it for determination may be divided into two
classes, criminal and civil. In relation to the former class of controversy,
the judicial power is exercised in determining the guilt or innocence of
persons charged with offences against the State itself and in determining the
punishments to be inflicted upon persons found guilty of offences charged
against them, which punishments it then becomes the obligation of the executive
department of government to carry into effect. In relation to justiciable
controversies of the civil class, the judicial power is exercised in
determining in a final manner, by definitive adjudication according to law,
rights or obligations in dispute between citizen and citizen, or between
citizens and the State, or between any parties whoever they may be and in
binding the parties by such determination which will be enforced if necessary
with the authority of the State. Its characteristic public good in its civil
aspect is finality and authority, the decisive ending of disputes and quarrels,
and the avoidance of private methods of violence in asserting or resisting
claims alleged or denied. It follows from its nature as I have described it
that the exercise of the judicial power, which is coercive and must frequently
act against the will of one of the parties to enforce its decision adverse to
that party, requires of necessity that the judicial department of government
have compulsive authority over persons as, for instance, it must have authority
to compel appearance of the party before it, to compel the attendance of
witnesses, to order the execution of its judgments against persons and property.
7. I
have certainly no intention of rushing in where so many eminent jurists have
feared to tread, and attempting a definition of judicial power; but it does
seem to me that there can be gleaned from the authorities certain essential
elements of that power. It would appear that they include (1) the right to
decide as between parties disputed issues of law or fact, either of a civil or
criminal nature or both; (2) the right by such decision to determine what are
the legal rights of the parties as to the matters in dispute; (3) the right, by
calling in aid the executive power of the State, to compel the attendance of
the necessary parties and witnesses; (4) the right to give effect to and
enforce such decision, again by calling in aid the executive power of the
State. Any tribunal which has and exercises such rights and powers seems to me
to be exercising the judicial power of the State.
9. In
this connection there is a passage (at p. 263) in
In
re Solicitors' Act 1954
[ 1960] IR 239 which is of particular significance:
10. That
the trial of criminal matters and ‘offences’ is an administration
of justice is clear from Article 38 which, by way of exception, authorises, in
particular cases, the trial of offences by special courts and military
tribunals. A characteristic feature of criminal matters is the infliction of
penalties, a consideration which gives weight to the submission that a tribunal
which is authorised to inflict a penalty, especially a severe penalty, even in
cases where the offence is not strictly criminal, should be regarded as
administering justice.
11. In
the judgment of this Court in
McDonald,
without citing any prior authority, Walsh J stated at 244:
12. Accepting
the characteristic features of a judicial body set out by Kenny J these
investigating authorities do not satisfy any of those requirements. In
particular it is to be noted that the investigating authorities do not
themselves by virtue of anything in ss. 43 or 44 affect any right or impose any
penalty or liability on anybody. So far as the board is concerned in the
exercise of its powers under s. 47 or the club in the exercise of its powers
under the section, they are not constituted judicial bodies or do not exercise
powers of a judicial nature as they would only satisfy one of the tests
referred to.
13. The
latter observation would appear to require that to qualify as being the
administration of justice, each of the five
McDonald
tests must be satisfied. The procedure under review fails the first test: there
is no dispute or controversy as to the existence of legal rights or violation
of the law, if violation of the law means criminal offence; tests numbers 2, 3
and 4 appear to identify it as such.
14. It
was scarcely intended by Kenny J or by this Court to exclude from the
qualifying criteria such matters as were identified by Kennedy CJ in
Lynham-
authority to compel appearance of a party before it, to compel the attendance
of witnesses, to order the execution of its judgments against persons and
property.
15. I
share the reluctance of Davitt P in Shanahan to attempt a definition of
judicial power; it is easier, if intellectually less satisfying, to say in a
given instance whether or not the procedure is an exercise of such power,
rather than to identify a comprehensive check-list for that purpose. The
requirement to act judicially is not a badge of such power.
16. Mr
Hogan has referred to a decision of this Court (Finlay CJ, Griffin and McCarthy
JJ) in
K.
v An Bord Altranais
[1990] 2 IR 396, a case arising under s. 38 of the Nurses Act 1985, where, at
403, the Chief Justice said:
17. I
have, accordingly, carefully considered as to whether the view reached by me at
that time [the decisions in
Re
M., a doctor
[1984] IR 479 and
M.
v Medical Council
[1984] IR 485], was correct, and having done so, I am satisfied that it was.
The essence of the procedure contained in this Act for the regulation of the
registration and disciplining of members of the nursing profession is that it
is in the court, namely, the High Court, that the decision effective to lead to
an erasure or suspension of the operation of registration must be made. The
necessity for that procedure to vest that power unequivocally in the court, in
my view, arises from the constitutional frailty that would attach to the
delegation of any such power to a body which was not a court established under
the Constitution, having regard to the decision of the former Supreme Court in
In
re Solicitors' Act
1954 [1960] IR 239.
18. In
order for the court to be the effective decision-making tribunal leading to a
conclusion that the name of a person should be erased from the register or the
operation of registration should be suspended, it is, in my view, essential
that having regard to the particular facts and issues arising in any case it is
the court who should make the vital decisions.
19. It
is sought to apply the inferential reasoning from the cases under the Nurses
Act and the Medical Practitioners Act to the instant case. It follows, it is
said, from the extension of In re Solicitors Act 1954.
20. A
feature of the
Solicitors
Act
case, not to be found here or in cases under the Medical Practitioners Act or
the Nurses' Act, or if there were such, under the Dentists Act 1985, and
identified by Kenny J in
McDonald's
case
is test number 5- the role of the courts as a matter of history in the
supervision and disciplining of solicitors. There is no such history in the
other cases although that circumstance does not appear to have been addressed
in those to which I have referred. All of them are, however, cases in which the
right of the individual to work in an occupation for which he has been trained
over a period of years and achieved an expertise and certified qualification.
If he loses that certificate and holds himself out as being so qualified, he
commits a criminal offence. The position concerning the holder of a statutory
office in the Garda Síochána, from garda to commissioner, is
different. Each is appointed to the statutory position, the commissioner,
deputy commissioner, assistant commissioners and surgeon being appointed by the
government, and all other officers and men (including women pursuant to s. 1 of
the Garda Síochána Act 1958) appointed by the commissioner. Each
is required to take the oath or make the declaration required by law. The first
category named may at any time be removed from office by the government; the
second category may be dismissed by the commissioner in accordance with
regulations such as have been enforced in this case. In
Garvey
v Ireland
[1981] IR 75, this Court, affirming McWilliam J, held that the commissioner
could not be lawfully dismissed without being given the opportunity of
answering the reasons alleged to justify his removal from office. McWilliam J
had held that the relationship of master and servant existed between the
government and the commissioner. This view was not upheld. O'Higgins CJ, at p.
95, expressed the view that the subsection created a statutory office and that,
on appointment, the commissioner became the holder of that office. The then
Chief Justice examined the nature of the office of commissioner and, in doing
so, cited a number of statutes of the Oireachtas of Saorstát
Éireann where offices to be held merely at pleasure were created, so as
to distinguish them from the office of commissioner, although, in the result it
would appear that the rights of the holder of the office in the event of the
government proposing to remove him would be the same. O'Higgins CJ added, at p.
97:
21. It
seems clear to me that the government in this regard has the widest possible
discretion as to the reasons or grounds upon which it may decide to act. The
only qualification must be that the reason or ground cannot be one which would
be prohibited by the Constitution. Subject to this, the government has the
right and the responsibility to decide for what reasons the power to remove the
Commissioner of the Garda Síochána should be exercised.
22. I
have read the judgment about to be read by O'Flaherty J and I refer, in
particular, to that part in which he comments upon the role of the commissioner
in the maintenance of discipline. I agree with what he says.
23. In
the case of an office or other position created by statute and held pursuant to
statute, in my view the principles stated in
In
re Solicitors' Act 1954
are not to be extended, if they are to be extended at all, so as to embrace the
statutory framework which deals with the creation of and appointment to a
particular position or rank and not to the wider factor of being qualified to
work for gain in a restricted occupation as well, in appropriate cases, as
being qualified to hold a particular position or rank. No challenge was made on
any ground of inconsistency with the Constitution. It is difficult to see how
such could be made against the Act of 1925 since it created the position from
which the plaintiff was dismissed.
25. This
is an appeal brought by the plaintiff from the judgment and order of the High
Court (Costello J) of 1 December 1988 dismissing the plaintiff's claim that the
Garda Síochána (Discipline) Regulations 1971 (SI No.316 of 1971),
are unconstitutional or that an inquiry instituted under them was invalid.
26. The
plaintiff at all material times was a member of the Garda
Síochána stationed at Tralee, County Kerry. On 16 March 1983 the
plaintiff was served with a number of summonses alleging the obtaining of
public funds by false pretences between March 1978 and May 1980. He was charged
before the local district court and returned for trial but when the matter came
on for hearing on 21 January 1986 the Director of Public Prosecutions entered a
nolle
prosequi
on the indictment that had been filed.
27. On
27 February 1986 the plaintiff was told that a superintendent of the garda had
been appointed as investigating officer pursuant to the provisions of
regulation 8 of the Garda Síochána (Discipline) Regulations 1971
to inquire into alleged breaches of discipline by the plaintiff which were in
relation to the same matters that had formed the basis for the allegations of
criminal conduct but were now framed as breaches of discipline,
viz,
the making of false and misleading entries in a 'night duty book' and it was
alleged that they amounted to falsehood or prevarication within the meaning of
the breach of discipline described at reference no.5 in the schedule to the
regulations.
28. Thereafter
the commissioner caused an inquiry to be held and appointed three garda
officers to conduct it. The inquiry duly took place on dates in the months of
November and December 1986 and the plaintiff was found to be in breach of
discipline in respect of fifteen incidents.
29. On
9 March 1987 Deputy Commissioner Doherty, acting for the commissioner, made a
decision to dismiss the plaintiff from the force which decision was
communicated to him on 16 March 1987.
30. By
order of the learned President made on 3 June 1987 the plaintiff was given
leave to apply for an order of
certiorari,
an injunction and a declaration by way of application for judicial review in
respect of the decision to dismiss him and the President directed that the
application should be made by way of originating plenary summons.
32. The
fourth ground was not pursued either in the High Court or before this Court
presumably having regard to s. 8(2) of the Police Forces Amalgamation Act 1925
and the Minister for Justice's powers under that provision. With regard to the
other three grounds the learned High Court judge concluded that the plaintiff
had not made out a case of invalidity under any of the headings.
33. The
arguments addressed to us were substantially the same as those that had been
advanced before the learned High Court judge. The submission made under the
first heading was that the breaches of discipline alleged constituted 'criminal
matters' and, therefore, that they were not matters that could properly be
dealt with before a tribunal such as the inquiry in question.
34. This
is a similar argument to that advanced before a divisional court in the case of
State
(Murray) v McRann
[1979] IR 133. I respectfully follow the reasoning of the Chief Justice, then
President of the High Court, giving the judgment with which the other members
of the court concurred when he said at p. 135:
35. A
crime or criminal charge must be defined, as it was in
Deaton
v Attorney General
[1963] IR 170 as an offence against the State itself or as a public offence. A
criminal matter within the meaning of Article 37 can be construed as a
procedure associated with the prosecution of a person for a crime. It may be
the preliminary investigation of such a charge, it may be the trial itself, it
could be an appeal from the trial or, presumably, an application for bail
pending trial or appeal. The essential ingredient of a criminal matter must be
its association with the determination of the question as to whether a crime
against the State or against the public has been committed.
36. The
reference in Article 37 of the Constitution excepting 'criminal matters' must
mean that there can be no trial of a person on a criminal charge save as
provided for in Article 38. This cannot be held to exclude allegations of
criminal conduct in other circumstances. Clearly many cases taken in the courts
on the civil side may involve allegations of criminality: allegations of
dangerous driving, fraud and perjury are random examples. There is no
constitutional basis for saying that such allegations cannot be aired before
administrative tribunals or before inquiries which have a statutory basis or at
other domestic tribunals or inquiries.
37. With
regard to the second ground, which was put forward as an alternative to the
submissions made under the first heading, this involves the proper
interpretation of the breach of discipline described at reference no.16 in the
schedule to the regulations: 'Criminal conduct, that is to say, conduct
constituting an offence in respect of which there is a conviction by a court.'
It is submitted that the breaches of discipline alleged in this case
constituted 'criminal conduct' and since there had been no conviction (indeed
no trial) they could not come within reference no.16 and if they were not to be
dealt with under reference no.16 they could not be dealt with under any other
reference number in the schedule. I believe that the breach of discipline
described at reference no.16 is separate and distinct from each of the other
breaches of discipline described at the other reference numbers and, therefore,
where there is conduct with a criminal connotation involved the inquiry is not
precluded from dealing with it under any relevant reference number simply
because the matter has not been dealt with in a court. It is right to say that
the argument that because criminal proceedings were instituted originally
against the plaintiff and afterwards were not proceeded with and that this
operated as some form of estoppel was not explored at all before us.
38. With
regard to the third ground advanced, this, in effect seeks to expand the scope
of the judgment of this Court in
In
re Solicitors' Act 1954
[1960] IR 239 to members of the Garda Síochána. Central to the
Solicitors' Act 1954 decision was the fact that historically the act of
striking solicitors off the roll was always reserved to judges. As the court
observed at p. 275:
39. It
is necessary for the proper administration of justice that the courts should be
served by legal practitioners of high integrity and...
40. It
seems to the court that the power to strike a solicitor off the roll is, when
exercised, an administration of justice, both because the infliction of such a
severe penalty on a citizen is a matter which calls for the exercise of the
judicial power of the State and because to entrust such a power to persons
other than judges is to interfere with the necessities of the proper
administration of justice.
41. Earlier
in the court's judgment it made clear that it was not dealing with a domestic
tribunal with a jurisdiction based solely on contract (at p. 264).
42. It
seems clear, therefore, that the case of solicitors must be regarded as
exceptional and, perhaps, anomalous and owes a great deal to the historic fact
that judges always were responsible for the decision to strike solicitors off
the roll.
43. In
contrast, the Garda Síochána is a force which consists of members
each of whom on appointment undertakes the duty of preserving the peace and
preventing crime. The members comprise a disciplined force who are subject to
the authority of the commissioner in whom the general direction and control of
the force is vested: s. 8 Police Forces Amalgamation Act 1925. Membership of
that force carries rights and privileges not possessed by other citizens; it
also involves onerous duties not shared by others. The force could not properly
carry out its essential function of preserving law and order unless there was
an entitlement in the commissioner to enforce discipline which necessarily
involves the ultimate sanction of dismissal from the force for sufficiently
grave breaches of discipline. As McCarthy J said, in the context of an
application for judicial review in relation to the actual operation of the
regulations, in his judgment in
Stoker
v Doherty
[1991]
1 IR 23, 30:
44. The
consideration of such matters as to whether or not a particular incident
amounts to conduct prejudicial to discipline or likely to bring discredit on
the force is peculiarly appropriate for determination by the gardaí
themselves; so also is the assessment of the penalty appropriate to any such
breach or breaches
46. This
case must be contrasted not only with the decision in the
Solicitors'
Act
case but also with the court's decision in
K.
v An Bord Altranais
[1990] 2 IR 396 where, at 403, the Chief Justice in the course of his judgment
(with which Griffin and McCarthy JJ concurred) said:
47. The
essence of the procedure contained in [the Nurses Act 1985] for the regulation
of the registration and disciplining of members of the nursing profession is
that it is in the court, namely the High Court, that the decision effective to
lead to an erasure or suspension of the operation of registration must be made.
The necessity for that procedure to vest that power unequivocally in the
courts, in my view arises from the constitutional frailty that would attach to
the delegation of any such power to a body which was not a court established
under the Constitution having regard to the decision of the former Supreme
Court in
In
re Solicitors' Act
[1960] IR 239.
48. The
arguments advanced on behalf of the plaintiff had two prongs. In the first
place, it was submitted that the inquiry held constituted an administration of
justice and this should be reserved solely for the courts; and secondly, it was
said that the powers capable of being exercised by the inquiry could not be
regarded as 'limited functions and powers of a judicial nature' as provided for
in Article 37 of the Constitution.
49. The
main question that must be confronted, therefore, is: did the operation of the
inquiry constitute an administration of justice?
50. In
turn it is possible to isolate two essential ingredients from these
characteristics and they are that there has to be a
contest
between parties
together with the infliction of some form of liability or penalty on one of the
parties. Here, while undoubtedly there was the infliction of a penalty -and a
severe one -the other essential ingredient is not present, This was not a
contest between parties; it was, as its name says, an inquiry .
51. I
conclude with the learned trial judge, therefore, that the inquiry under the
1971 Regulations [incidentally no longer extant: see, now: Garda
Síochána (Discipline) Regulations (SI No.94 of 1989)] had to be
conducted in a fair and just manner but that it did not involve either any
trespass on the judicial domain or the exercise of judicial functions. It is
right to emphasise, too, that the correct operation of domestic tribunals and
inquiries such as the one here impugned has been delineated in many cases such
as
McDonald
v Bord na gCon
[1965] IR 217;
East
Donegal Co-operative Livestock Marts Ltd v Attorney General
[1970]
IR 317;
In
re Haughey
[1971) IR 217;
Kiely
v Minister for Social Welfare
[1977] IR 267 and
O'Keeffe
v An Bord Pleanála
[1992] ILRM 237.
52. This
line of authority establishes that there is now in place a well charted system
of administrative law which requires decision-makers to render justice in the
cases brought before them and sets out the procedures that should be followed,
which procedures will vary from case to case and from one type of tribunal to
another and which, of course, are subject to judicial review. Similarly, the
rules of evidence may not necessarily be applied with the same strictness as in
a court of law provided that the decision-making body keeps in the forefront of
its deliberations the necessity to come to a correct and just verdict having
regard to the complaints that have to be investigated; the determination to be
made and the consequences such determination may have for the party or parties
appearing before it.
53. Having
regard to my conclusion that this inquiry did not constitute a judicial body
such as is envisaged by Article 37 it would obviously be inappropriate to enter
into a consideration of the concept of 'limited functions and powers' which
was the other subhead of the plaintiff's argument on this aspect of the case.