The Scotsman

Courts ‘must catch up with England’

● Call for greater remote working to ensure civil justice system can function

- By CHRIS MCCALL chris.mccall@scotsman.com

The court service in Scotland must “catch up” with the system in England to ensure civil justice can still function during lockdown, leading legal figures have said.

Non-urgent disputes have continued to be heard down south thanks to greater use of video conferenci­ng facilities andonlines­haringofca­sefiles, but advocates have warned the civil system north of the Border has almost ground to a halt in recent weeks as the country battles the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service (SCTS) said yesterday it was “keen to look at how business can be advanced through paper submission­s, the creation of digital bundles and the use of remote telephone conferenci­ng”.

Civil business in the Sheriff Courts is currently limited to urgent and necessary cases during the lockdown period, but the SCTS said it would announce later this week whether priority areas in the Outer House of the Court of Session could restart using video conferenci­ng facilities.

Eoghainn Maclean, a leading commercial litigator based in Glasgow, told The Scotsman said that greater resources were required to ensure the wheels of justice could continue to turn during lockdown.

“There is a concern among advocates and solicitors in Scotland that access to justice is becoming a mirage,” he said.

“The legal profession, working with the courts, needs to work to ensure hearings can be done remotely - whether by telephone or video conferenci­ng.

“Courts exist to resole disputes.”

He continued: “There is enthusiasm to catch up with what’s going on in England.

“The position here, since March 17, is that justice outside of the urgent has stalled.”

Roddy Dunlop QC, vice-dean of the Faculty of Advocates, last week wrote to justice secretary Humza Yousaf to urge him to reconsider the “mothballin­g” of civil business, amid fears that the financial futures of some law firms was being jeopardise­d.

“The prevailing mothballin­g approach is putting the financial futures of firms of solicitors and members of Faculty at real risk,” he said.

“In Scotland, the stated position of SCTS is that all nonurgent business is stalled. In England and Wales, the express position is quite to the contrary: namely that they are putting in place arrangemen­ts to continue as many hearings as possible remotely.”

In a statement yesterday, SCTS chief executive Eric Mcqueen said: “The Faculty of Advocates and the Law Society are rightly both challengin­g and collaborat­ive in helping to find solutions.

“The measures we are putting in place this week are a big step forward, however, while we remain in lock down, any steps must be proportion­ate to the requiremen­t to protect public health.

“My priorities remain protecting our staff, the judiciary and wider courts and tribunal users, while maintainin­g public confidence that the essential justice services we are responsibl­e for can continue.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: The operation of the courts is a matter for the independen­t SCTS, who have our full support as they deal with the unique operationa­l challenges and social impacts of Covid-19.

“While the priority has to be the continuati­on of essential business, we are encouragin­g the efforts to restart more routine business where it can be done safely.”

 ??  ?? 0 Video conferenci­ng technology can be used
0 Video conferenci­ng technology can be used

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