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(Trinidad Express) – President of the Caribbean Court of Justice Michael de la Bastide issued a statement on Tuesday reprimanding one of his own judges.

The former chief justice of Trinidad and Tobago placed an advertisement in the Express in which he chastised CCJ Judge David Hayton for the comments he made in an article headlined, ‘Speed up wheels of justice’, published in the last issue of the Sunday Express.

Justice Hayton, the only non-Caribbean judge on the CCJ, “was arguably the leading authority in the UK and Europe on the law of trusts” before he was appointed to the regional tribunal in 2005, according to the CCJ’s own website.

In his statement about Justice Hayton’s “inappropriate and improper” comments about political and constitutional issues, Justice de la Bastide stated: “…I wish to make it absolutely clear that this court espouses the well-established and long-standing rule that judges do not publicly comment or express views on political issues or personalities or on the merits and demerits of constitutional provisions except to the extent that they find it appropriate or necessary to do so in judgments they deliver.”

Justice de la Bastide, who is also chairman of the Regional Judicial and Legal Services Commission, which selected Justice Hayton for the post, continued: “It is particularly important that this rule be respected by judges in relation to the host country in which their seat is located. In so far as [Justice] Hayton’s comments breach this rule, they were inappropriate and improper, and I have communicated this to Justice Hayton.”

Approached outside the Immigration Department on Frederick Street, Justice de La Bastide, who was accompanied by the CCJ’s protocol and information officer Dr Michael Lilla, joked: “Oh, you’re the person who led my judge astray.”

Asked if Justice Hayton would be fired, Justice de la Bastide responded: “I don’t think so.” However, on the matter of disciplining the former professor of law at King’s College in London, Justice de la Bastide nodded in agreement that Hayton had been severely reprimanded and replied, “Yes, as you saw today”, and hurried into a waiting vehicle.  When the Express contacted the CCJ Office on Tuesday, Justice Hayton’s secretary said he was in a meeting. Another judge, Jacob Wit, declined to comment. His secretary relayed his message: “He says the statement speaks for itself.”

Attorney General John Jeremie said: “[Justice Hayton] has certainly stepped beyond the boundaries of ordinary judicial criticism and in a forum which is not appropriate. I know that as we speak that efforts are being made to find a resolution to that issue and I would prefer to say no more on that for the time being.”

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  1. Andy UNITED STATES says:

    Now this is some hypocrisy that should not go unnoticed. Even if the CCJ “espouses the well-established and long-standing rule that judges do not publicly comment or express views on political issues or personalities or on the merits and demerits of constitutional provisions except to the extent that they find it appropriate or necessary to do so in judgments they deliver,” and Judge Hayton broke that unwritten rule, what the Chief Justice did when he took out a newspaper ad to admonish Judge Hayton also broke the same rule by publicly commenting or expressing a view on a PERSONALITY -namely Judge Hayton. He should have called Judge Hayton into his ‘chambers’ and quietly admonished him. Other than that, Judge Hayton is not stupid to go public demanding a speeding up of the wheels of justice. This seems to be a problem throughout the Caribbean, but very much so in Guyana. Didn’t the Guyana Government recently pass legislation seeking to fire judges who take too long to bring closure to cases on appeal? Rather than taking umbrage, the President of the CCJ should covertly pressure the judiciaries through the Caribbean to truly speed up the wheels of justice.

  2. Latchman Kissoon BARBADOS says:

    Justice David Hayton should have learnt by now that freedom of speech and association is not something Caribbean people could shout about. Feedom of speech YES freegom after speech NO
    Why should he tell the world that That C.C. J. judges can play tennis and sit under the shady trees all day and their tenure is guara

    nteed with one hundred million U.S dollars. You have to learn from our people David stifle the truth stifle the truth and enjoy the sunshine and doubles You brought dignity to the court
    Latchman Kissoon



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