'Waiting in the Wings': The Suspension of Queensland Lawyers
‘WAITING IN THE WINGS’: THE
SUSPENSION OF QUEENSLAND
LAWYERS
LINDA HALLER*
I
INTRODUCTION
The Queensland Government has recently announced plans to drastically alter the legal
framework for the regulation of lawyers in Queensland.1 These proposed changes are
largely in response to complaints about ‘Caesar judging Caesar’ which arose from a
series of stories in the Brisbane Courier Mail.2 Whilst much of this media attention
focused on the Queensland Law Society’s initial handling of complaints, very little
study has been done of how well ‘Caesar’ judged those matters which did reach a
formal disciplinary hearing. This article attempts to inform that debate, by looking
closely at cases in which a lawyer has been suspended, rather than struck off or fined.
Disciplinary suspensions are worthy of study for two reasons. Firstly, the imposition of
a suspension may not adequately protect the public. Secondly, even if it is argued that
the real purpose of lawyer discipline is to legitimate the privileged position of lawyers,
then suspension orders are not an effective vehicle for such a purpose. Suspensions send
ambiguous messages to the public. One may expect that, whilst a legal profession
seeking legitimacy may downplay the general level of misconduct within its ranks,
some infrequent but harsh ‘show trials’ may be used to enhance the legitimation
exercise by permanently casting miscreants out of the profession.
But when a practitioner is not struck off but merely suspended from practice for a
certain period, she remains part of the profession, with the attendant risk that her
presence, ‘waiting in the wings’ of the profession, will continue to taint the image of
that profession. While professional discipline is designed to protect the public and
whilst the conduct of this practitioner has been found to be serious enough to question
her fitness to practise, the public in this case has not been protected at all costs. Instead,
a compromise has been struck. The individual practitioner will be given an opportunity
to redeem herself. Inevitably this will be seen by the public as exposing them to some
risk, certainly more risk than had the practitioner been simply struck from the roll.
*
1
2
BA LLB (Monash) LLM (Queensland), Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Victoria,
Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Queensland, Lecturer, TC Beirne School of Law, University of
Queensland. My thanks to Reid Mortensen for comments on an earlier draft and Heather Green for
expert statistical support.
Rod Welford, Attorney-General (Queensland), ‘Government Establishes New Legal Profession
Watchdog’ (Press Release, 6 May 2003).
Ibid. Welford’s press release acknowledged the contribution of the newspaper in exposing
deficiencies in the system of lawyer regulation.
1
HALLER
(2003)
This article documents the law in relation to disciplinary suspensions and compares the
law with the actual use of suspensions in disciplinary proceedings against Queensland
lawyers. It then attempts to offer reasons for apparent disparities between law and
practice. The article concludes with a discussion of the implications of these findings
for theories about the role of professional discipline.
II
CASE LAW
A Limited Role for Suspensions
Particularly since the early 1980s, the High Court as well as the Supreme Courts of New
South Wales and Queensland, have restricted the circumstances in which the court
considers a suspension to be an appropriate manner in which to dispose of disciplinary
proceedings.
The leading case on the issue of suspensions was a decision of the High Court in Ziems
v The Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of NSW3 in which the High Court was
required to determine whether a barrister should be disbarred as a consequence of his
conviction for manslaughter following a motor vehicle accident. The court had some
concern about the conduct of the manslaughter trial of Ziems and divided on whether
the conviction itself automatically proved that Ziems was unfit to practise.
Dixon CJ thought that the conviction spoke for itself and made Ziems unfit to practise.4
His Honour then dealt with the issue of particular interest here, namely, whether it was
more appropriate to suspend or to strike Ziems from the roll of barristers. His Honour
thought that it would be preferable in most such cases to strike the practitioner from the
roll, allowing him to seek readmission at a later time. At the readmission hearing, the
applicant could ‘offer positive evidence of the grounds upon which he then claims to be
re-admitted.'5 McTiernan J was of a similar view to Dixon CJ, referring to the
opportunity to re-apply for admission once Ziems’ 'good fame and worthiness to be a
barrister have been re-established.'6
However, the majority thought that Ziems was in fact fit to practise, despite the
conviction. Fullagar J believed that, because of a grave misdirection by the trial judge at
the manslaughter hearing, the court was entitled to look behind his conviction in
determining whether or not Ziems was fit to practise. His Honour felt that it was
'impossible to say that the conviction justifies a finding that the appellant is not a fit and
proper person to practise at the Bar'.7 The natural conclusion from this was that the
barrister's right to practise should be left intact.8
3
4
5
6
7
8
(1957) 97 CLR 279.
Ibid 285-6.
Ibid 286.
Ibid 287.
Ibid 296.
Ibid.
2
Vol 3 No 2 (QUTLJJ)
‘Waiting in the Wings’: The Suspension
of Queensland Lawyers
But the majority was also aware of the 'incongruity' of a person, while he or she is
serving a prison sentence, being held out to the public as fit to practise as a barrister.9
Fullagar J therefore agreed to an order for suspension. 10 Kitto J agreed that Ziems was
fit to practise and like Fullagar J, expressed some disquiet about the justification for a
suspension order. He commented:
If it were not that the members of the Court who think with me that he should not be
disbarred are in favour of the proposed suspension, I should be against it. If the
appellant's conviction and imprisonment are held not to disqualify him from the Bar, it
seems to me, with respect, that logically that should be the end of the case. There can be
no question of imposing a punishment additional to the imprisonment, and as far as I can
see there is no purpose to be served by adding a de jure suspension to the de facto
suspension which the appellant's incarceration produces while it lasts. However, even if I
am right in thinking that suspension is inappropriate, it can do no harm, and I am
prepared to assent to it so that an order may be made.11
Taylor J was more confident in his view that, despite the fact that Ziems was in fact fit
to practise, he should not be able to hold himself out as permitted to practise while
serving a prison sentence for such a serious offence as manslaughter. 12 Instead Taylor J
thought that he should be suspended for the period of his imprisonment. The court went
(...truncated)