Two months ago, the Canadian Bar Association’s access to justice
committee released a summary of a report that frankly discusses the
“abysmal state of access to justice in Canada” and the “pain caused by
inadequate access and the huge discrepancies between the promise of
justice and the lived reality of barriers and impediments.”
While
“inaccessible justice costs us all,” the harshest consequences fall on
the poor, the report notes. It concludes that the “civil justice system
is badly broken.”
None of this is news. We see it in the huge
numbers of self-represented litigants in every court. We’ve heard
similar refrains for the past 20 years with senior lawyers and judges
lamenting the sad state of access to justice every year. In 2008, Chief
Justice Warren Winkler told us “we are now dealing with a civil justice
system that fails to be accessible to many, and upon which pressures
continue to mount. The number of people who cannot afford a lawyer, and
who are forced to represent themselves in important legal proceedings
has ballooned in the last 10 years. Chief among the reasons for this
development is the cost of litigation. Even people of ordinary means can
no longer afford to pay a lawyer to see a case through to the end.”
So
I have to agree with the CBA report that “tinkering is insufficient.”
It’s time for big, bold thinking. But what does the CBA report
contemplate? The proposals to build “a bridge to equal justice” cover
the integration of law as a life-skills course in schools; the creation
of legal capabilities training modules to deal with life transitions;
legal health checklists to “create awareness of common legal problems”;
using technology to improve access to justice and reinvent the delivery
of legal services; and reforming the courts to provide “active case
management, judicial dispute resolution, specialization, court
simplification, and active adjudication models.”
Other proposals
relate to reforms to the provision of legal services and legal expense
insurance; more funding for publicly funded legal aid; and integrating
access to justice issues into law school education.
Regrettably,
there’s nothing big or bold in these ideas. They may result in a better
class of self-represented litigants, but is that what we want? And do we
really want to encourage legal expense insurance, which will add a
layer of overhead and profit for providers with the potential for
disputes between insurers and their customers that could result in more
legal disputes?
The real problem lies in the lack of competent
legal services at a reasonable cost. The chief problem lies in the
affordability of legal services. But the CBA proposals seem to have
little to do with lowering the price of legal services.
The keys
to better access to justice lie in reducing the role of lawyers and at
the same time decreasing their fees. Such a move would require
sacrifices by lawyers and that’s something the CBA report doesn’t seem
to contemplate.
If we want to cut fees, we should be discussing
how to reduce the monopoly enjoyed by lawyers. This is a line of
thinking broached in 2010 by then-B.C. chief justice Lance Finch. To
reduce the effects of the monopoly enjoyed by lawyers and drive down
costs, he suggested increasing the supply of practitioners by enrolling
more students in law schools, decreasing articling periods, and
qualifying more people to practise. In a similar vein, we should be
considering the expansion of the role of non-lawyers, including
paralegals, into areas they currently can’t practise in.
We need
to look at the adversarial system to determine which disputes don’t
necessarily require lawyers. For example, is it really necessary to have
lawyers represent clients in most employment cases? Could an enhanced
labour relations board not resolve many employment law disputes without
the input of lawyers? These are the sorts of tough questions we need to
ask.
We need to examine each area of the law to determine options
for reform with the goal of providing better access to justice and
reducing the role of lawyers. For example, why do so many accident
victims require a lawyer to assist with the collection of no-fault
accident benefits? How can we modify the law so that insurance companies
will have to provide contractually required benefits without forcing
accident victims to retain a lawyer?
In any efforts to ameliorate
the problem, we must remember that the legal system should benefit
society and not just lawyers, judges, and big business.
Source: lawtimesnews.com Monday, 28 October 2013 08:01 | Written By Alan Shanoff
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your comments.
Canadian Insurance News does not endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that we have the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever.