Access to judgments

On 20 November 2012 Lord Neuberger, President of the Supreme Court, delivered the First Annual BAILII Lecture, entitled “No Judgment – No Justice” in which he dealt with three important aspects of improving access to justice through improved access to judgments: their clarity, free dissemination and enhancement.

His intro para is worth quoting here in full, not least because of its clever play on the J words:

Judgments are the means through which the judges address the litigants and the public at large, and explain their reasons for reaching their conclusions. Judges are required to exercise judgement – and it is clear that without such judgement we would not have a justice system worthy of the name – and they give their individual judgement expression through their Judgments. Without judgement there would be no justice. And without Judgments there would be no justice, because judicial decisions, at least in civil and family law, without reasons are certainly not justice: indeed, they are scarcely decisions at all. It is therefore an absolute necessity that Judgments are readily accessible. Such accessibility is part and parcel of what it means for us to ensure that justice is seen to be done, to borrow from Lord Hewart CJ’s famous phrase.

Ready accessibility requires that judgments be clear and well reported.

He had two “small” and two “more controversial” proposals for improving clarity in judgments:

1) each judgment should have an introductory, summary paragraph

2) judges should provide a guide to the structure and contents of longer judgments

3) judgments should be shorter

4) single judgments should be compulsory.

He then discussed the “two types of law reporting”:

On the one hand there is what can be described as Judgment-dissemination: providing the public with easy and full access to all Judgments. This is what Bailii does and does so very well. And then there is what can be described as Judgment-enhancement: classic and scholarly law reporting. This is what is done so well by, pre-eminently [ICLR and LexisNexis All ER] ”¦ of particular importance because of the role it plays in developing the corpus of law. This is especially true of the common law, which is of course judge-made law.

The great benefits of the traditional law reports, he said, are reliability, accuracy and also selection.

He bemoaned the decline of court reporting by the media and suggested that “few if any legal bloggers report from court as well or as fully as press reporters once did”.

He also saw a downside to efficient (electronic) judgment dissemination: the cost of legal advice and representation will go up if advisers have to trawl through BAILII and other websites to make sure they have left no stone unturned.

Is judgment dissemination a threat to the survival of judgment enhancement? No, he said; the two are complementary.

And how could BAILII be improved? He wondered if it is worth judges adopting the practice of producing “starred” determinations, identifying whether a judgment is important or not.

There is much to agree with here, but I can’t help feeling his comments on law reporting relate to a different era, long, long ago when we had Web 1.0.

Does BAILII just disseminate judgments or does it also enhance them (or shall we say, add value)? Certainly the latter. There is more to BAILII than finding cases by searching or browsing. For example, it cross links to referenced cases and legislation and finds cases by parallel proprietary citations; and updates of the basic meta data can be pulled in by subscribing to its RSS feeds.

BAILII could easily do more to enhance judgments. Reference was made to BAILII’s collaboration with the ICLR which amounts to cross links between the two sites: BAILII judgments include a link to relevant ICLR summaries (WLR Daily Law Notes and ICLR subscribers can link directly from the neutral citations to the judgment on BAILII (see ). (Incidentally, BAILII has also started adding links from UKSC judgments to the press summaries on the UKSC site – a modest suggestion made by Lord Neuberger.)

Is this, as ICLR suggest, “a small link for a mouse but a giant leap forward for BAILII and ICLR”? Anyone familiar with Web 2.0 (as we used to call it), will feel these facilities are rather tame.

Clearly there are things holding BAILII back. Its budget is inadequate; but also it is dependent on the goodwill of the legal establishment. So, that it does not compete with law reporting is a deliberate choice.

There’s no doubt that if we all had open access to court judgments then creativity would be unleashed. I’m sensitive to BAILII’s arguments and have been sceptical of the give-us-the-data-and-we’ll-organise-the-world crowd, but there’s no doubt you can add a lot of value by mining the data. See what AustLII does with Lawcite; and check out the fancy analysis on JustCite.

Of course “scholarly law reporting” enhances judgments considerably and is crucial in developing the law, but Lord Neuberger is outdated in his views on alternative law reporting. There are indeed legal bloggers who report “as well and as fully as press reporters once did”. In his own back yard he has UKSC Blog which provides timely summaries and analyses of UKSC judgments; and there are several other specialist blogs like UK Human Rights Blog and Nearly Legal on housing law that report fully and comprehensively on judgments in their respective areas. They do not do so as formally as ICLR, or perhaps other present or bygone press reporters, but one cannot dismiss them; indeed we should embrace them as providing better access to law!

See also the report of the lecture from Paul Magrath of ICLR.

Nick Holmes is joint editor of the Newsletter. He blogs at Binary Law. A fuller version of this article is on his blog.

Email nickholmes@infolaw.co.uk. Twitter @nickholmes.

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