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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Daniel v Attorney General (Trinidad and Tobago) [2011] UKPC 31 (9 August 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2011/31.html Cite as: [2011] UKPC 31 |
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[2011] UKPC 31
Privy Council Appeal No 0101 of 2010
JUDGMENT
Electra Daniel Administrator for the estate of George Daniel (deceased) (Appellant) v The Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
before
Lord Brown
Lord Wilson
Sir David Keene
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Brown
ON
9 August 2011
Heard on 21 June 2011
Appellant Sir Fenton Ramsahoye SC Anand Beharrylal (Instructed by Bankside Commercial Ltd) |
Respondent Peter Knox QC (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
LORD BROWN :
"(a) the right of the individual to life, liberty, security of the person and enjoyment of property and the right not to be deprived thereof except by due process of law;
(d) the right of the individual to equality of treatment from any public authority in the exercise of any functions;
(g) freedom of movement;"
"26 . . . It is unacceptable that our physically impaired citizens, more so those who are wheelchair bound, must suffer the inconvenience and indignity of being wheeled into the Hall of Justice in so roundabout a manner [ie through the underground car park].
27 Our Constitution mandates that they be treated in a far more civil and dignified manner. It is in the Hall of Justice that our citizenry come to pursue and enforce their rights. Physical access to it is an important part of their right to the protection of the law and ultimately to due process. They must be able to pursue their remedies and to witness proceedings, the latter of which is an important part of the legal process. It allows the litigant and the public the opportunity to view and to assess the fairness of the legal process. Without actual physical access to witness the process, credibility of the legal system will be undermined. Such access must be readily available to all. It is not sufficient that one's attorney can access it. The physically impaired must themselves have easy and direct access to the Hall of Justice to personally pursue the upholding of their rights and to witness proceedings if they so choose. 'Liberty' requires that they have that option. A lack of unimpeded access can act as a disincentive to the legitimate pursuit of one's legal rights. Such access may be to able-bodied persons so routine as to seem trivial but for persons who are physically impaired such physical access is neither trivial nor routine. It can be a daily challenge. But such access is a right not an option and is indelibly part of due process of law.
28 I accept that there are very significant challenges posed to the modification of courtrooms of the Hall of Justice so as to accommodate wheelchair bound members of our society in jury boxes of the courts of the Hall of Justice and to allow them to serve as jurors. But I certainly do not accept that ramps or even elevators to allow for the public conveyance of motorised or manually operated wheelchairs could not already have been constructed at the entrance of the Hall of Justice on Knox or Abercromby Streets. It is quite unacceptable that even a timeframe for such a construction has not yet been set. It is not that we do not possess the resources.
29 I shall grant the applicant a declaration that the non-provision by the State of direct public wheelchair access through the public entrance to the Hall of Justice, Knox Street, Port of Spain, is a breach of the applicant's right to liberty under section 4(a) of the Constitution. Pursuant to the provisions of section 14, I shall direct that the State take such immediate steps as are necessary to provide within 18 months, direct access through the public entrance of the Hall of Justice, Knox Street, Port of Spain, to the applicant and other members of the physically challenged who are wheelchair-bound. The defendant shall pay the claimant's costs certified fit for two junior counsel."
These paragraphs, it will readily be seen, contain a resounding endorsement of the rights of the disabled, a clear recognition that these rights were violated in breach of the appellant's article 4(a) right to liberty by the failure to provide proper public access to the courts, and appropriate declaratory relief together with a direction to provide such access within 18 months.
"The appellant will be content with the additional declarations sought to vindicate his constitutional rights without any award of damages on the facts of this case. This is not, however, a bar to the court awarding vindicatory damages of its own motion."
"We have reached a decision on the preliminary point, and that is, that the appeal ought not to be heard, for the following reasons: We feel that the relief granted by judge below afford adequate vindication of the appellant's constitutional right. And this would be so, even if the facts complained of constituted a concurrent breach of Sections 4 (D) and (G) of the Constitution, a finding that we are not prepared to make at this stage.
The substance of his complaint, is a denial of the access to the Hall of Justice, for the purpose of participating fully in the administration of justice, as any other citizen would be entitled to, and to follow the progress of any matters in which he might be concerned. There is no assertion that the other rights in respect of which he seeks declarations differ in content, and to that extent, as between the parties to this action, tis appeal is academic. See in this regard The Queen v Ex parte Salem, 199 – 1991 (1) appeal cases 450, and in particular the passage at 457, which is quoted in the case of Bob and Moses v Manning, CA No. 97/02, which has been cited before the Court in written submissions.
Additionally, we see no compelling reason why, in the public interest, the content of the rights under Sections 4(D) and (G) of the Constitution need to be explored in this case. There's no claim for damages here or below, and, in any event, we are of the view that any vindication of rights, whether by damages or declaratory relief, should respond to the facts proven or accepted to constitute the breach, and impact thereof, and not as a result of the number of categories into which they can be fitted. In all the circumstances, therefore, the appeal is dismissed."