AustLII [Home] [Databases] [WorldLII] [Search] [Feedback]

Federal Judicial Scholarship

You are here:  AustLII >> Databases >> Federal Judicial Scholarship >> 2007 >> [2007] FedJSchol 9

[Database Search] [Name Search] [Recent Articles] [Noteup] [Download] [Help]

French, Justice Robert --- "Judicial professional development - cultural awareness or knowing something about everything" (FCA) [2007] FedJSchol 9

Speeches

District and County Court Judges Conference, Fremantle

Judicial Professional Development - Cultural Awareness or Knowing Something About Everything

Justice RS French

27 June – 1 July 2007


1 Among the papers with which you have been supplied for this conference there is the usual collection of glossy brochures.  One is entitled “Experience Perth - a Holiday Planner for 2007”.  Another is entitled “Winter Escapes - The Ultimate Guide to Taking a Break Close to Home”.  There is a 13th Edition of the “Fremantle Book” and a photocopy of an article in the Weekend Australian about West Australian winery restaurants.  Nestled modestly in this shiny eye candy are two brochures of the National Judicial College of Australia .  One sets out a “National Curriculum for Professional Development for Australian Judicial Officers”. The other is a “Standard” endorsed by Heads of Jurisdiction and various organisations of judges and magistrates throughout Australia .  These brochures offer a convenient summary of the rationale, coverage and standards of professional development programs supported by the National Judicial College for judicial officers in Australia .

2 The College is of course not the only supplier of such programs in Australia .  Nor, as I want to emphasise, are formal judicial programs the only source of continuing professional development for judges.  There are programs conducted by courts, sometimes in conjunction with the practicing profession and sometimes with legal academics to keep judges up to date in areas of substantive law and developments in procedure.  In my own Court we have judges’ meetings twice a year, generally preceded by at least one full day seminar on matters of substantive law or procedure.  One of our judges, Heerey J, a member of the frighteningly named “Efficiency Working Party”, is planning a hypothetical centred on an imaginary piece of complex litigation which will precede our next judges’ meeting and be designed to raise a variety of issues such as excessive discovery, overlong cross-examination, fractious litigants and difficult to structure judgments.  It will be a way in which our judges can exchange ideas based on their own experiences for dealing with the sorts of issues that arise in such cases. Less formally we are in the process of devising a judges’ chat room on our intranet which can become a clearing house for exchange of ideas nationally, particularly in relation to procedural and case management matters. 

3 It is a theme of this presentation that ongoing judicial professional development is not limited to matters of law and procedure.  It encompasses formal and informal mechanisms for widening or deepening the knowledge of judges in areas outside the law that are relevant to their work.  As an example of a substantial initiative outside areas of law and procedure my own Court will be hosting a conference in October in Sydney on the topic “Genes to Proteins – Proteomics in the Courts”.  A similar conference entitled “Genetics in the Courtroom” was hosted in 2003 and presented by the Einstein Institute for Science, Health and Courts, which is a Washington DC based institute for judicial education in the sciences.  The proposed 2007 conference will use Australian resources.  It will cover new discoveries in proteomics, new technologies and methodologies, proteomics in plants and agriculture, genetic and environmental interactions and patent claims in this area.  There will be hypotheticals with imaginary court scenarios, including the use of expert witnesses. 

4 Not all ongoing judicial professional development has to involve a lot of resources or organisation.  It can be done at a collegial level through informal discussions and interactions with both the profession and academia.  One of my favourite ways of doing this is the twilight seminar.  Judges, practitioners and academics interested in a particular topic related to their area of work meet for a few drinks after work around a conference table while one of them presents an informal paper.  The seminar generally runs from 5.30 to about 7pm.  An important element of its organisation is to give everyone a glass of wine before it starts to loosen their tongues and enhance discussion.

5 At a somewhat more ambitious level there are, in my opinion, opportunities for short term exchange of judges between State and Territory jurisdictions with a view to creating amongst all judges a common sense of membership of a national judiciary and providing opportunities through interaction with colleagues in other jurisdictions for deepening their knowledge and experience.  In 2005 I presented a paper at the National Colloquium of the Judicial Conference of Australia on the topic of judicial exchange.  For my troubles I was asked to go to the further trouble of devising a draft protocol between heads of jurisdiction for short term judicial exchange.  A Steering Committee has been set up and a draft protocol, after some delay, has been prepared and submitted to members of the Steering Committee.  It tries to set a framework within which any two or more courts can make an arrangement for judicial exchange.  It is designed to build in flexibility and to allow for judicial exchange for professional development purposes and also for the purpose of assisting a host court to deal with a spiking workload or to reduce a backlog of cases.  It would accommodate horizontal exchange arrangements between courts of the States and Territories, District and/or County Courts and Magistrates Courts.  The objectives of such exchanges, as set out in the draft protocol are:

            1.         To promote the exchange of knowledge in matters of law and practice so that Australian courts and judges may learn in a practical way from each other’s experience.

            2.         To promote innovation and best practice throughout Australia in the administration of justice while maintaining the identity and distinctive culture of each of the courts;

            3.         To assist in the ongoing professional development of judges in their knowledge of the substantive law and in the efficient and economic administration of justice.

            4.         To create a mechanism for effective allocation of judicial resources across jurisdictions in response to short term imbalances of needs and resources.

            5.         To reduce the need for courts to rely upon acting short term appointments of persons not otherwise the holders of fulltime judicial appointments.

            6.         To foster an acceptance that all Australian judges, whether they be members of State, Territory or Federal Courts, are part of a national Australian judiciary.

            7.         To make judicial appointment to any of Australia ’s courts more attractive to qualified candidates for appointment.    

6 Once the members of the Steering Committee have had an opportunity to give feedback on the protocol, the revised draft will be submitted to the Judicial Conference of Australia Council for its consideration with a view to it recommending acceptance by the Council of Chief Justices. 

7 What is important is that courts are supportive of continuing professional development on all of these fronts.  It is not only important to the quality of judging, it is also important to the quality of a judge’s work life and, in my opinion, to morale and efficiency.   

8 Against the general background of the variety of ways in which judicial professional development can occur, I would like to talk about the concept of cultural awareness for judges, but in the broadest sense, of our general knowledge of the society whose laws we administer.  That extends to a knowledge of the history and workings of our public and private institutions.  It involves an awareness of the extent and nature of social and cultural diversity.  It involves an awareness of our cultural heritage, of popular culture and of the scientific and technological world view and methods of our times.  There are many important matters of professional development including maintaining a general familiarity with the substantive and procedural law, how to manage cases and to control a court and how to write clear and lucid judgments.   It is our knowledge of our own culture which is indispensable to good quality decision-making and a rich overlap between life and work.

9 It is fashionable in debate about contemporary social issues to speak of an “elephant in the room”.  This is a metaphor for a large, obvious and potentially troublesome question which is fundamental to the debate and which nobody wants to acknowledge.  The “elephant in the room” in discussion about professional development for judges is the question “What is it that judges do?”.  That is a question on which so much academic ink has been spilt and so many forests felled, that its further discussion requires carbon offsets.  I drove from Perth to Fremantle to be at this conference today and I drove here in a Prius. This qualifies me to give some, albeit only brief consideration, to the hard question at the threshold of our topic.  One  short apparently trite answer to the question is that judges hear and decide cases.  Actually it is not as trite as it looks. Hearing and deciding is a function sometimes split, at least in part, between judge and jury.  If I may digress, there are other ways in which it can be split.  In a fictitious State a long way from here, there were once two judges, Judge Short and Judge Tall.  I have changed their heights to protect their identities.  Judge Short would leave no one in doubt about his views well before a case was concluded.  Judge Tall, on the other hand,  would allow his judgment to mature for a very considerable period after the case was heard before delivering it.  So it was said, unkindly at a robust Bar Association roast, that Judge Short decided cases without hearing them while Judge Tall heard cases without deciding them. 

10 That judges hear and decide cases tells us only part of the story.  The important part is found in the mental processes that lead to judgment.  Let me take the simple case of a judge sitting alone as trier of fact and law. 

11 The legal education to which many of us were exposed took, as its point of departure, a simple process of judicial reasoning.  The relevant rules of law to be applied are identified.  Facts are found.  The rules of law are applied to the facts as found.  A conclusion follows which is expressed by way of a declaration or a distribution of rights or liabilities including, in criminal cases, the imposition of penalties.    This process is adequate to decide cases which concern factual questions and the application of laws expressed in words which bear their ordinary English meaning and require straightforward factual findings.  The simple model, however, offers only a small safe harbour.  Beyond that safe harbour there is an ocean of statutory and judge-made laws which involve normative and purposive judgments.  Indeed they may be called micro-legislative.

12 Laws which use normative or purposive language do not have any precise meaning waiting to be applied to a factual situation.  An example with which everyone is familiar is the idea of reasonableness, described by Sir Victor Windeyer as “… a concept deeply rooted in the common law” Reasonableness, unconscionableness, good faith, foreseeability and many other words of similar character are applied by judges every day.  They confer functions on the courts rather than simply identifying rules to be applied to facts.  The functions they conferred were described by the late Professor Julius Stone thus:

When courts are required to apply such standards as fairness, reasonableness and non-arbitrariness, conscionableness, clean hands, just cause or excuse, sufficient cause, due care, adequacy or hardship, then judgment cannot turn on logical formulation and deduction but must include a decision as to what justice requires in the context of the instant case.  This is recognised, indeed as to many equitable standards, and also as to such notorious common law standards as “reasonableness”.  They are predicated on fact-value complexes not on mere facts.  

The more we look to the law in our jurisdictions, the more examples we can find of cases in which we are either called upon to apply such standards ourselves or to direct juries on how to apply them.

13 In carrying out these functions of evaluative or purposive judgments the judge needs to be informed by at least a general knowledge of contemporary culture in all its complexity, including scientific method. In particular cases the court will require the assistance of expert evidence on technical, scientific, medical or psychological questions.  But relevant background knowledge can facilitate the judge’s understanding of such evidence and his or her ability to evaluate it.  It may also improve the capacity of a judge sitting with a jury to communicate with the jury about such matters and properly to relate them to the legal issues in a case.  The already difficult process of making purposive or evaluative decisions about issues outside ordinary experience will be made more difficult without some relevant background.  The broadening and deepening of our cultural awareness in this wide sense is a part of judicial professional development.  It is perhaps helpful to refer to some concrete examples.

14 One of the most ordinary of legal words is the word “ordinary”.  It lies at the heart of the concept of provocation.  Under the Western Australian Criminal Code, provocation is any wrongful act or insult of such a nature as to be likely, when done to an ordinary person, to deprive him or her of the power of self control. In standard directions it is acknowledged that conduct which might not be insulting or hurtful to one person, might be extremely so to another because of that person’s age, sex, race, ethnicity, physical features, personal attributes, personal relationships or past history.

15 It may be that there are particular characteristics of a person relevant to provocation which are outside the life experience of many judges.  Take so called “battered wife syndrome” which was considered by the High Court in Osland v R (1998) 197 CLR 316.  At trial, evidence was led without objection from a psychologist about characteristic patterns of behaviour in relationships involving physical, psychological or sexual abuse and the characteristic reactions of women in such relationships.  In discussing the admissibility of such evidence and its relevance to the defence of provocation, Gaudron and Gummow JJ said (at [55]):

Quite apart from reactions bearing on the truthfulness of an accused person’s account of an abusive relationship, the ordinary person is not likely to be aware of the heightened arousal or awareness of danger which may be experienced by battered women.  And that is a matter that may bear directly on the defence of provocation.  An act “which might not be insulting or hurtful to one person might be extremely so to another because of that person’s  … personal relationships or past history”,[]  including, of course, a history of abuse by the deceased.  It does not require expert evidence for a jury to understand that some slight insult may, in context, constitute “the last straw”, a consideration addressed in the summing up in this case.  However, there may be cases in which a matter of apparently slight significance is properly to be regarded as evidence of provocation when considered in light of expert evidence as to the battered woman’s heightened arousal or awareness of danger.  And evidence of that may also be relevant to the gravity of the provocation, as may the history of the abusive relationship.

16 There is always a risk that evidence of that kind heard for the first time may not be fully understood by judge or jury or may not be adequately explained to the jury.  It is quite appropriate as an aspect of the professional development of judges in jurisdictions where such questions may arise to be informed or to acquire through their own reading an awareness of the existence of the relevant body of psychological knowledge and its general content.  That awareness is not a substitute for expert evidence where expert evidence is necessary.  It facilitates the understanding of such evidence and the way in which it should inform the making of the essentially normative judgment about the reaction of an ordinary person in extraordinary circumstances. 

17 The normative character of the judgment required in applying the provocation defence was indicated by the High Court in Stingel v The Queen [1990] HCA 61; (1990) 171 CLR 312 when it described the purpose of the ordinary person test (at 327):

…to provide an objective and uniform standard of the minimum powers of self-control which must be observed before one enters the area in which provocation can reduce what would otherwise be murder to manslaughter.  While personal characteristics or attributes of the particular accused may be taken into account for the purpose of understanding the implications and assessing the gravity of the wrongful act or insult, the ultimate question posed by the threshold objective test … relates to the possible effect of the wrongful act or insult, so understood and assessed, upon the power of self-control of a truly hypothetical “ordinary person”.

18 In Green v The Queen (1997) 191 CLR 334 the question was whether the accused’s personal history which included knowledge of his own father’s sexual abuse of his sisters, was able to be taken into account in determining whether homosexual advances made to him could constitute provocation.  While there was no suggestion in that case that the issue required the aid of expert evidence, the fact situation and background of the accused would fall well beyond the experience of most, if not all, judges.  The normative construction of the hypothetical “ordinary person” in such a case might well be assisted by some general background knowledge about the emotional and psychological impact of a history of intrafamilial  child abuse.

19 On a somewhat wider canvas similar issues arise in relation to particular cultures within our society.  It has been accepted for some years that cultural awareness training of judicial officers in relation to Aboriginal people is a useful means of equipping those officers to better decide cases and better deal with Aboriginal witnesses and parties.

20 The great impetus for such training came from Recommendation 96 on the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody 1990-2000.  Recommendation 96 provided:

That judicial officers and persons who work in the court service and in the probation and parole services whose duties bring them into contact with Aboriginal people be encouraged to participate in an appropriate training and development program, designed to explain contemporary Aboriginal society, customs and traditions.  Such programs should emphasise the historical and social factors which contribute to the disadvantaged position of many Aboriginal people today and to the nature of relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities today.  The Commission further recommends that such persons should wherever possible participate in discussion with members of the Aboriginal community in an informal way in order to improve cross-cultural understanding.

21 In implementing that proposal the Commonwealth Attorney-General entered into an agreement with the Australian Institute of Judicial Administration (AIJA) under which it received funding to facilitate the delivery of cultural awareness programs to the judiciary.  A National Aboriginal Cultural Awareness Committee of the AIJA was formed and initially convened by Justice Paul Seaman.  The Committee continues in existence today under the name National Indigenous Cultural Awareness Committee, now convened by Judge Mary Ann Yeats of the District Court of Western Australia.  During its existence the Committee has been responsible for approving funding for Aboriginal cultural awareness programs conducted with judicial officers throughout Australia .  In that aspect of its activities it has now been superseded by the creation of a National Indigenous Justice Issues Committee as a Committee of the National Judicial College.  The College has been provided with funding of $500,000 from the Commonwealth over a period of four years for the purpose of cultural awareness programs.  The object of the Committee is to prepare a curriculum setting a framework within which State and Territory based committees can formulate proposals for funding for activities within those States or Territories.  A draft curriculum has been prepared and is being circulated to State committees through their Chief Justices.

22 The National Cultural Awareness Committee has also developed an Aboriginal Benchbook for Western Australian courts which was launched in July 2000.  The Benchbook is presently being revised and updated.   

23 Aboriginal people may appear before the courts in criminal matters as the accused, as witnesses or as convicted persons subject to sentencing.  Cultural awareness training does not provide an alternative to evidence.  Rather it better equips the judicial officer to understand the significance of particular evidence or the way in which it is given.  This is relevant not only to trials but also to the sentencing process.

24 Cultural awareness training may also cover ethnic minorities. An understanding of the recent history of the country of origin of such persons and the nature of their family structures and relationships can be used to better understand their evidence and their behaviours in both civil and criminal proceedings.  My own experience and that of many Federal Court judges, is that the problem of understanding evidence and submissions and of communicating with litigants is particularly acute in the case of unrepresented, non-English speakers who can only communicate through an interpreter.  We have had direct experience of this kind of case in judicial review applications by asylum seekers.  While a funded legal assistance scheme of sorts, using migration agents, has been made available to asylum seekers up to the level of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT), such funding does not exist in relation to judicial review challenges to the decision of the RRT.  Typically, the route followed by a person seeking a protection visa begins with a refusal by a delegate of the Minister.  Administrative review is then sought before the RRT.  If that application fails there is then an application for judicial review to the Federal Magistrates Court or to the Federal Court.  Judicial review is only available for jurisdictional error.  Broadly speaking that may be characterised as an error which results in the impugned decision being treated as beyond power.  If the original judicial review application is heard before a federal judge, it may then be appealed to a Full Court by either the Minister or the applicant.  The ultimate resort is special leave to appeal to the High Court.  Generally speaking, legal representation is only available on a pro bono basis in the judicial review phase of that process.  In dealing with such cases it has frequently been necessary for judges of the Court to endeavour to explain the limitations of the process in plain English through an interpreter to an asylum seeker to whom our judicial and broader culture is quite alien.  I had had the advantage of five years as President of the National Native Title Tribunal in the course of which I learnt by painful trial and error some of the techniques of speaking in plain, rather than what is sometimes called High English.  That requires communication in terms, which as far as possible, do not take for granted background knowledge by the other person of legal concepts.  In my opinion there is much to be said for communication training for judges in this area.  I note that the National Curriculum includes a module which covers communication in court, interpreters in court and equality and diversity.

25 Beyond the challenges of cultural diversity the development of an understanding of the world view and methods of science and technology is indispensable to a proper appreciation of expert evidence which appears so much more frequently in both civil and criminal courts today.  Normative judgments of reasonableness and the like which turn in part upon issues of scientific or technical fact are likely to be enhanced by at least a background understanding of scientific method and basic scientific literacy.  For judges hearing medical negligence cases which may turn on expert evidence relating to the reasonableness of certain procedures or investigations, a background knowledge of medical techniques could well be helpful in better understanding the evidence and in assessing the reasonableness of the defendant. 

26 Intellectual property law involves evaluative and purposive assessments of claimed advances in science and technology.  For a patent to be valid the invention it claims must involve an inventive step when compared with the prior art base.  Section 7(2)of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) has the effect that a claimed invention lacks an inventive step if “the invention would have been obvious to a person skilled in the relevant art in the light of the common general knowledge as it existed in the patent area before the priority date of the relevant claim”.  The judgment to be made by the Court is what would have been obvious to a hypothetical non-inventive worker in the field in the light of common general knowledge at the time of the alleged invention.  To make it more difficult, particularly in the biotechnology area, the hypothetical skilled but unimaginative worker would probably have a PhD.  The problem is nicely illustrated by the challenge to the validity of the Viagra patent in the Full Court of the Federal Court in 2005.  The search for a treatment for male erectile dysfunction involved finding a drug which would promote relaxation of smooth muscle cells in the penis without relaxing smooth muscle cells elsewhere in the body, such as the lung or heart or retinal tissue, and killing the patient or making him go blind.  Getting in the way of muscle relaxation in the penile tissue of men suffering from erectile dysfunction was a chemical known as Phosphodiesterase 5.  The highest point of relevant knowledge prior to discovery of the development of Viagra involved an experiment in which strips of penile tissue had been taken from 21 men who had been treated by prosthesis for impotence.  These strips were mounted in organ bath chambers with fine wires attached to them and connected to equipment which would measure their relaxation in response to various chemicals to which they were exposed.  It was found that the addition of a particular kind of inhibitor augmented relaxant responses which were elicited by electrical field stimulation.  The electrical field stimulation was a surrogate for the arousal process.  The question was whether the publication of the article describing this experiment made the development of Viagra an obvious or routine step. 

27 In the event the Full Court found that the development was not obvious and that the patent could not be invalidated on that basis.  One of the claims was invalidated on another basis to do with the width of the claim.  In that case we came to the scientific background cold.  We were provided by counsel with scientific primers and given Power Point presentations.  The scientific primers were by way of background reading which enabled us to better understand the evidence at trial.  Here we were applying a broad evaluative judgment of obviousness by reference to a hypothetical person into a complex chronology of scientific development.  Quite apart from the assistance which we were given by counsel in acquiring a background understanding, a general appreciation of scientific method and the ability to read at least the summary and conclusions in scientific papers was of great assistance in better appreciating the evidence in that case.

28 There are many scientific technical and medical questions with which judges of the District Court and County Courts are confronted in their day to day work.  There seems to be an increased emphasis on forensic scientific evidence.  This emphasis and the so-called CSI expectations of juries require a strong appreciation by judges of the benefits and the limitations of scientific evidence.  That appreciation is also necessary in the application of the kinds of broad evaluative and purposive judgments which much judicial decision-making now requires.  That appreciation may be acquired to some extent through repeatedly hearing experts testifying about such matters.  But that process tends to be episodic and confined by the issues in particular cases.  It is not a substitute for general background awareness of the relevant areas of science, technology, medicine, psychiatry and the social sciences relevant to the work of the courts. Professional development requires development in this area as an aspect of wider cultural awareness.  There is a variety of ways of doing that.  Not all of them require significant resources or organisation.  What all of them do offer is a considerable enrichment in the quality of our work and our lives.       



   French RS, Judicial Exchange: Debalkanising the Courts (2006) 15 Journal of Judicial Administration 142

   Giris Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1969] HCA 5; (1969) 119 CLR 365 at 383

   Stone J, Legal Systems and Lawyers Reasonings (Maitland, 1968) at 263-264

   Form of Direction on Provocation used by Miller J in the Supreme Court of Western Australia

   Citing Masciantonio v The Queen  [1995] HCA 67; (1995) 183 CLR 58 at 67

  Pfizer Overseas Pharmaceuticals v Eli Lilly & Co [2005] FCAFC 224; (2005) 225 ALR 416


AustLII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/FedJSchol/2007/9.html