From:                                                       Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>

Sent:                                                         Wednesday 30 August 2023 07:21

To:                                                            Neil Foster; obligations@uwo.ca

Subject:                                                   Re: No judicial immunity for inferior court, false imprisonment

 

Thanks Neil. As you say, this is a pretty egregious case. We had a somewhat comparable incident in our Family Court a few years ago, where a paralegal was imprisoned for innocently putting documents in the wrong court bundle:

 

 

It is not the first incident of judicial overreach on the family jurisdiction here either. I suspect some judge's patience has worn thin, especially given that (here until recently) family courts operated essentially in secret. 

 

Matthew Hoyle

Barrister

One Essex Court

 

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From: Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au>
Sent: Wednesday, August 30, 2023 6:55:32 AM
To: obligations@uwo.ca <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: ODG: No judicial immunity for inferior court, false imprisonment

 

Dear Colleagues;

While only a first instance decision, the judgment in Stradford (a pseudonym) v Judge Vasta [2023] FCA 1020  https://www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au/judgments/Judgments/fca/single/2023/2023fca1020 is worthy of noting. A litigant in family law proceedings, appearing before Judge Vasta in the Federal Circuit Court of Australia, was summarily imprisoned for about 8 days by the judge in circumstances later found on appeal to have been a serious miscarriage of justice and misuse of judicial power. Mr Stradford (a pseudonym as all litigants in the family law jurisdiction are entitled to anonymity) then sued Judge Vasta for false imprisonment and collateral abuse of power. I have been telling students the claim was unlikely to succeed due the doctrine of judicial immunity. Wigney J in the Federal Court explains why I was wrong (at least until the case goes on appeal!)

In brief, his Honour holds that the doctrine of judicial immunity only applies to superior courts, and the FCC is an inferior court (there is a comment on the status of the FCC in Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs v AAM17 (2021) 272 CLR 329; [2021] HCA 6 at [26]). (For colleagues outside Australia, the FCC was created as a lower tier federal court with jurisdiction in minor family law matters and other federal areas.) Wigney J reviews cases from the UK and Australia going back many years, notes that there are inconsistencies in the decisions, but in the end concludes that this is the common law of Australia (and for some reason judges of the FCC do not have any specific statutory protection, though one might guess that this was because it was assumed they would be covered by a common law immunity.)

His Honour also considers in some detail which of the police and security guards who actually effected Mr Stradford’s imprisonment might have been immune from suit, and concludes that neither the court security guards who first placed him in custody, or the Queensland police officers who kept him for another week, enjoyed any immunity. The result of that finding is that the Commonwealth and the State of Queensland were vicariously liable for torts committed by those persons.

Judge Vasta was held not to be liable for collateral abuse of power, but he was liable for false imprisonment, and the security guards and police were also liable (as none of these persons could refer to a valid order of a superior court justifying their actions.) Large orders of damages were made: a total of $259,450 against the Judge and the governments for compensatory and aggravated damages (and interest), and $50,000 against Judge Vasta personally by way of exemplary damages. An astonishing case in many ways, but in response to some pretty egregious behaviour by the judge. Still, I have little doubt there are various points which will be appealed.

Regards

Neil

 

 

 

NEIL FOSTER

Associate Professor, Newcastle School of Law and Justice

College of Human and Social Futures

 

T: +61 2 49217430

E: neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au

 

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Blog: https://lawandreligionaustralia.blog

 

 

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