Lavery v The Director of Public Prosecutions [2020] IEHC 150 (26 February 2020)
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THE HIGH COURT
JUDICIAL REVIEW
[2020] IEHC 150
[2016 No. 228 JR]
BETWEEN
JOSEPH LAVERY
APPLICANT
AND
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
RESPONDENT
(NO. 4)
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Richard Humphreys delivered on the 26th day of February,
2020
1. The applicant over a period of the last decade has been involved in a dozen sets of
proceedings mainly revolving around his complaints against Gardaí together with knock-
on complaints against judges and other public authorities with whom he has come into
contact. Those cases, many of which have given rise to written judgments, have been as
follows:
(i). Lavery v. McBride [2012 No. 746 JR] (see Lavery v. McBride [2016] IESCDET 132;
Lavery v. McBride [2018] IEHC 299 (Unreported, High Court, 30th April, 2018));
(ii). Lavery v. McBride [2013 No. 682 JR];
(iii). Lavery v. McBride [2014 No. 301 JR];
(iv). Lavery v. McBride [2015 No. 4819 P];
(v). Lavery v. D.P.P. [2015 No. 619 JR] (see Lavery v. D.P.P. (No. 1) [2016] IEHC 866
(Unreported, High Court, 21st December, 2016); Lavery v. D.P.P. (No. 3)
(vi). Lavery v. D.P.P. [2016 No. 228 JR] (see Lavery v. D.P.P. (No. 2) [2016] IEHC 322
(Unreported, High Court, 15th June, 2016));
(vii). Lavery v. A Judge of the District Court [2016 No. 346 JR];
(viii). Lavery v. Faughnan [2015 No. 37 JR] (see Lavery v. Faughnan [2017] IEHC 661
(Unreported, High Court, 1st November, 2017));
(ix). Lavery v. G.S.O.C. [2017 No. 39 JR];
(x). Lavery v. McLoughlin [2018 No. 5 JR];
(xi). Lavery v. McLoughlin [2018 No. 53 JR]; and
(xii). Lavery v. McLoughlin [2019 No. 20 IA] (see Lavery v. McLoughlin [2019] IEHC 190
(Unreported, High Court, 15th March, 2019)).
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2. The applicant was made the subject of an Isaac Wunder order on 4th July, 2016 in Lavery
v. D.P.P. [2016 No. 228 JR]. In accordance with that order, he now applies for permission
to issue an application which is set out in an unstamped draft ex parte docket dated 24th
February, 2020 and entitled in the 2016 No. 228 JR proceedings. That ex parte docket
claims, as substantive relief to be obtained ex parte, orders placing two judges of the
District Court in contempt and an order for expenses relating to the motion, as well as
other relief.
3. The applicant moves on foot of an affidavit sworn on 24th February, 2020, although the
name of the practicing solicitor who took the affidavit is unhelpfully totally illegible. The
affidavit complains that criminal proceedings against the applicant were adjourned in May,
2016 and February, 2017, notwithstanding a stay granted by the High Court. Had the
proceedings been substantively determined rather than adjourned, that might have given
rise to grounds for complaint, if complaint had been made in a timely manner, although
not a complaint as to contempt. However, all that happened here was that the
proceedings were adjourned. That is not a breach of a stay, but even if it was, contempt
against the judges would not be the appropriate remedy; and whatever remedy was
sought, one would have to move in a timely manner, which is not the case here.
4. Representative of the scandalous tenor of the complaint made is that at para. 4 of the
affidavit, Mr. Lavery avers that “District Judge James Faughnan laughed introducing
Justice Humphreys’ aforementioned orders and referred to them as rubbish”.
5. There are a number of independent reasons why this application must fail:
(i). it is scandalous and vexatious, thereby reinforcing the case for the Isaac Wunder
order; indeed the oral submissions made in support of it were very much in that
vein, if not in fact considerably more so;
(ii). the proposed application discloses no statable ground for relief and certainly not the
relief actually sought;
(iii). the application was not made in a timely manner; and
(iv). even if there was some point here, which there isn’t, the remedy sought is not relief
that can be obtained ex parte and, thus, the procedure adopted by way of looking
for substantive relief (as opposed to leave to seek such relief) by ex parte docket is
inappropriate.
Order
6. Accordingly, the order will be to refuse permission to apply pursuant to the Isaac Wunder
order on foot of the proposed ex parte docket.
Result: Permission to apply pursuant to Isaac Wunder order refused
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