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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ellis v The Law Society [2008] EWHC 561 (Admin) (23 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/561.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 561 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
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EDWARD ELLIS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE LAW SOCIETY |
Respondent |
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Iain Miller (instructed by Bevan Brittan) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11th March 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Leveson :
The Background
"The decision to make consumer complaints a legal process was not reasonable by objective standards. This whole regime is to be dismantled. ... A significant number of people know that legal proceedings are in progress that will reverse the loss of chance precedent and dismantle consumer complaints legal processes. .... Loss of chance and the consumer complaints regime for legal services were designed to deter the provision of legal services. It was part of the centralisation of political control. The rejection of the European Constitution has terminated the process of centralisation. The executive authorities introduced extradition arrangements to oppress resisters to the European Constitution. Judges and politicians are now faced without the constitution and clear evidence that they conspired to force it on the people without consent. They had set up and tested the processing of political prisoners. The people found out. I have taken an initiative for the people. The process is under my control. The people can try by jury cases of corruption by the executive in which judges are implicated..."
1.1 He has failed to promptly comply with a direction made by the Office pursuant to section 37A and Schedule 1A of the Solicitors Act 1974 (as amended).
1.2 He has failed to reply promptly substantively and with relevance to Law Society correspondence, and
1.3 Has directed correspondence in inappropriate and/or offensive terms to the Law Society and/or a complainant and/or third parties, and
1.4 He has written correspondence in terms that are derogatory of others including member of the judiciary.
"The rejection of the European Constitution has terminated the process of centralisation. The executive authorities introduced extradition arrangement to oppress resisters to the European Constitution. Judges and politicians are now faced without the constitution and clear evidence that they conspired to force it on the people without consent. They had set up and tested the processing of political prisoners. The people found out. I have taken an initiative for the people. The process is under my control. The people can try by jury cases of corruption by the executive in which judges are implicated. The people have given the judiciary the choice of facing the jury trials or surrendering voluntarily to the people. .... Last year I commenced judicial review proceedings against the Law Society. It was an opportunity for the judiciary to volunteer to deal with the issues. The[y] refused. The President of the Law Society was given the opportunity to deal with the issues. He did not do so. ... I will be making a decision about the future of the Law Society. The staff have a chance to influence that decision. The regulations are irrelevant now. The staff can make decisions that are reasonable by objective standards."
"I regret to say that Mr Ellis' documents are as partisan and immoderate as can ever have emanated from a legal practitioner for use in these courts. They are in part incoherent and they contain a great deal that is irrelevant. It is plain from any reading of them that what excites Mr Ellis is the Extradition Act 2003 itself, which he describes in his latest skeleton argument as "a total abdication of responsibility for the individual by all authority. It amounts to a policy of 'hand over the body to a foreign power with no questions asked'". There and elsewhere, and for the brief time for which we allowed him to seek a right to make submissions today, he repeatedly attacks the Act, the Government and Parliament for having enacted it, and, on a wholesale basis, the judiciary. It is his opinion that there is called into question the fitness to sit of every single judge in this jurisdiction for as long as this Act remains on the statute book. In addressing us briefly, he used expressions such as "across the country we are outraged" and "it brings into question the integrity of the judiciary as a whole" -- the "it" there referred to, as I understand it, is the willingness of courts to operate the 2003 Act."
The Tribunal Hearing
"The Tribunal had formed the view that while the allegations which had been found proved against the Respondent were not such that it would normally consider a penalty which rendered a solicitor unable to continue in practice, nevertheless it was the appropriate penalty in the Respondent's case. The Tribunal viewed particularly seriously the Respondent's inappropriate and offensive remarks to a number of persons, including members of the judiciary, which, the Tribunal believed, brought the profession into disrepute. It was apparent from what the Respondent had said to the Tribunal today that he holds to these views even now and is continuing to make wholly inappropriate and deeply offensive remarks to and about those involved in the legal system and judicial processes. The Tribunal can see no foundation for these remarks. In these circumstances, the Tribunal has concluded that the only appropriate penalty must be suspension indefinitely from practice."
The Appeal
"The British, Dutch and other executive authorities conspired to pervert the course of justice to achieve inequity, governance delivered by the European Constitution. They did so by suppressing evidence that made viable the Europe Enquiry policy of Europe united with equity governance. The British procured from the Dutch an offer to extradite and [sic] Englishman, and maliciously prosecute him and a Dutchman on condition that the British collaborated in suppression of the evidence that disproved the prosecution case. The British accepted. Many English judges participated in the process."
"There are various other improprieties alleged. In fact there were proceedings before the Divisional Court where Mr Ellis represented an individual who was to be extradited to Holland. Perhaps I can indicate the flavour of some of the interrogatories that he is seeking. One of the questions is: "Do you acknowledge that the offence of causing offence breaches the rules of natural justice?" Also, "Do you acknowledge that Kay LJ and Newman J and Tuckey LJ and other judges, Crown prosecutors, the Met Police Chief Constable, other officers and the Force solicitor, customs officers and the prosecutor, other officers and the legal representatives of the Law Society perverted the course of justice?" There are many paragraphs of questions like that. That gives the flavour of this completely hopeless, nonsensical and abusive application which should never have troubled the court."
The Hearing of the Appeal
"The issue is the integrity of the processes. The grievance we, the people, have is that we have no opportunity to test evidence. The cases in which testing evidence is most important is when we find office, particularly high office, used to pervert the course of justice. So far as I am concerned the function of a lawyer is to discover the truth and reason to an objective standard."
"The Law Society encourages people to make complaints that it is not reasonable to make at all and ignores everything that is relevant for reasoning to an objective standard. When the Law Society disciplined me for proving perjury they were saying my client had no right to representation in court to expose the truth which means that the powers of the Law Society are used to pervert the course of justice. I wanted the right to argue in court about unfairness of the processes the Law Society manage and unfairness of the Law Society having the power to enforce decisions before they have been subjected to something in the form of judicial processes.
Conclusions
"...to maintain the reputation of the solicitors' profession as one in which every member, of whatever standing, may be trusted to the ends of the earth. .... A profession's most valuable asset is its collective reputation and the confidence which that inspires."
Mr Justice Lloyd Jones: