Judges' ages threaten court cases
The Federal Court was scrambling
yesterday to adjourn and reassign cases scheduled to be heard by
a 77-year-old deputy judge after a Toronto lawyer challenged his
age.
NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE
PHOTO
Lawyer Rocco Galati
talks to the media after leaving the court house in this 2006 file
photo.
By: Nicholas Keung
immigration REPORTER,
Published on Thu Aug 20 2009
The Federal Court was scrambling yesterday to adjourn and
reassign cases scheduled to be heard by a 77-year-old deputy
judge after a Toronto lawyer challenged his age.
By law, federal judges cannot serve on the bench past 75, an
argument raised by constitutional lawyer Rocco Galati this week
involving two separate immigration cases presided over by Deputy
Judge Louis Tannenbaum.
The two cases were adjourned on Tuesday, immediately
prompting a flurry of emails and calls in legal circles and
casting doubt on the validity of numerous other federal court
decisions made by other sitting judges over 75. At least 11 of
Tannenbaum's cases have been adjourned and rescheduled this
week.
Currently, six of the seven federal deputy judges – all
retired judges on pension but appointed and paid per diem for
their wealth of experience – are older than 75. Both the Federal
Courts Act and the Judges Act disallow a superior justice to sit
past age 75.
Ontario scrapped mandatory retirement in 2006, but provincial
court judges still must retire by age 75.
"This has the potential to cripple the court because the
court has already been stretched to the limit in its ability to
hear cases," said Toronto immigration lawyer Guidy Mamann. "At
75, it allows them (the judges) a graceful exit. It is a
question of energy and competencies to hear all these cases."
This latest turn of events not only affects immigration and
refugee cases but all federal court matters such as trademark
litigations and lawsuits against the federal governments, said
Mamann, adding that this precedent could open the door for
counsel to challenge the authority of any judge past the
statutory retirement age in upcoming hearings or previous
decisions.
But the over-age judges have their champions.
Age discrimination is the final frontier, said lawyer Susan
Eng, vice-president of advocacy for the Canadian Association of
Retired Persons (CARP), which opposes mandatory retirement at
any age.
"You should judge people based on their competency," she
said. "It's legitimate to ask people to have cognitive ability
when they are doing a job that requires absolute clarity. But
you judge on the basis of the individual competency, not on some
arbitrary age."
Age alone can't predict how individuals perform, said Dr.
Michael Gordon, one of Canada's longest practising
geriatricians, with 38 years of experience.
"We trade off our ability to manipulate knowledge with our
experience," said the 68-year-old doctor, who works at Toronto's
Baycrest centre for geriatric health and teaches medicine at the
University of Toronto. "Obviously, experience goes a long way."
There is no age limit for practising medicine, Gordon noted.
However, when doctors turn 70, they are assessed for competency
every five years, a practice that could be adopted for judges,
he suggested.
According to the Federal Court, in 2008, the deputy judges
carried about 5 per cent of the overall caseload.
On Tuesday, Galati wrote to Chief Justice Allan Lutfy
requesting a new judge be assigned because Tannenbaum "would not
be vested with the requisite jurisdiction" to hear the case.
"Many people wouldn't know whether their judges were over 75
or not. They don't go and check their bios," Galati said
yesterday.
In an order issued yesterday, Lutfy instructed both the
applicant and respondent, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, to
file motions and a notice of constitutional questions, if any,
concerning the jurisdiction of a deputy judge over the age of
75. The case will be heard Sept. 30.
With files from Laurie Monsebraaten
Source Toronto Star
Commentary,
Again the Tononto Star
excells at publishing stories that other media does not want to
publish
and that speaks volume
about government intimidation.
Rocco Galaati is an
example of what is missing from the legal profession, ethics and
guts.