Carmarthenshire's
councillors have now been provided with a further bundle of legal documentation
for their reading pleasure ahead of the 27 February extraordinary meeting. Mrs
Linda Rees Jones, who sent the latest package out, notes sympathetically that
"some members will find the documentation complex". That is a kind
way of referring to the literacy and comprehension skills of some of our
elected representatives, including several on the Executive Board.
Fortunately
the reports are all written in plain and relatively simple language without
recourse to legal mumbo jumbo, and with any luck the public should soon be able
to have a look. Included in it is a response from the auditor to a letter
written by the council in November 2013, although for some reason the council's
letter is not among the documents released.
The star
exhibit is the report Mrs Rees Jones produced for the Executive Board when it
approved the libel indemnity in January 2012.
A great deal
of the legal argument both here, and in the advice produced by Mr Timothy Kerr
QC almost two years later, hangs on a single sentence in the so-called
Explanatory Notes to the Welsh Government's 2006 Order dealing with indemnities
for members and officers in local government.
The Order
makes it very clear that indemnities may not be granted to help officers and
members bring actions for defamation, although they may be indemnified to
defend actions brought against them.
However, the
accompanying Explanatory Notes contain the following line:
"These
powers are in addition to any existing powers that such relevant authorities
may have".
Is a
prohibition on indemnifying an action for defamation an additional power? Most people would probably think that being
told you may not do something does not really qualify as a new power.
Mrs Rees
Jones in her report brushes all caution to the wind. What this really means,
she says is:
Welsh Government Guidance issued in
conjunction with the 2006 Order states that any powers to grant an indemnity under the 1972 Act
(ie. the s. 111 power) are not removed by the 2006 Order.
It does no
such thing, and to say so is utterly misleading. The report was, in words used
in a different context,
"sexed up".
The other
little problem with all of this is the legal status of Explanatory Notes. 22
months after Mrs Rees Jones put pen to paper, the council's QC, Mr Timothy
Kerr, noted that the House of Lords had taken a pretty dim view of the legal
value of explanatory notes. But that was for Acts of Parliament, Mr Kerr says, and
explanatory notes to Orders are much more important.
It is
certainly an argument, but it does not seem to have been tested in a court of
law before. Even if the argument were to be tested, it is hard to see how an
Order banning the use of indemnities to bring libel actions could be seen as
conferring a new power on councils.
What we are
left with is a rather shaky interpretation of a single line in some explanatory
notes to an Order which may or may not have legal validity. As the auditor
pointed out in his response, it would be very strange for the Welsh Government
to produce a piece of legislation accompanied by a set of Explanatory Notes
which rendered the Order defunct.
In her report
Mrs Rees Jones tells councillors that she is liaising with the WAO, although
the report does not reveal that a few days before the report was presented, the
WAO made it clear that they thought the council was on thin ice.
In case there
are any lingering doubts, the Board is told that "Specialist Libel
Counsel" thought Mr James had a good chance of success. What is not
spelled out is that Specialist Libel Counsel was Mr James's own barrister, and
that the "seriously defamatory" statements were not much more than a
reference to Pinocchio and the use of the words "slush fund" to
describe the council's unique libel indemnity arrangements.
Perhaps most
worryingly of all, you would have thought, Mrs Rees Jones tells the Board that
the council does not know whether Jacqui Thompson had the financial means to
meet any costs and damages.
There is also
nothing in the report which says that the indemnity should live on indefinitely
and be used to fight any future appeals. Neither does it set any limits on how
much may be spent, although Mrs Rees Jones notes helpfully that costs could be
in the region of £100,000.
So there we
have it:
- A report
which claims unequivocally and wrongly that the explanatory notes to the 2006 Order
do not remove existing powers to grant indemnities;
- A report which does not say what the WAO's
opinion was, even though the WAO's opinion had been received before the report
went to the Board;
- A report
which cites expert opinion without disclosing that the source of the opinion
was the barrister acting for Mr James;
- And finally a report which gave the green
light to a potentially very costly court action without establishing whether
Jacqui Thompson had the means to pay.
Not included
in any of the documentation released so far, and unlikely to be released, is information
relating to the negotiations to secure an out of court settlement which went on
until shortly before the trial started. It is understood that this
would show that Mr James was determined to go to court come what may.
If this
reminds you of Tony Blair's dodgy dossier which was used to justify the war on
Iraq in 2003, you may well be right.
7 comments:
And no mention of the advice from James Goudie QC, which was the only advice obtained and paid for by the Council, and which flagged up warnings that the Executive Board should have been made aware of.
Here's James Gouide QC's advice:-
http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCwQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fnewsroom.carmarthenshire.gov.uk%2Fmedia%2F33892%2Fjames-goudie-advice.pdf&ei=-pn7UuWqM6K07QaHpoHQCg&usg=AFQjCNFKqnluph92tJNfjKMzzAN9QAs9uw&bvm=bv.61190604,d.ZGU
Y Cneifiwr said, "Mrs Linda Rees Jones, who sent the latest package out, notes sympathetically that "some members will find the documentation complex". That is a kind way of referring to the literacy and comprehension skills of some of our elected representatives, including several on the Executive Board."
I would concur with that point of view, especially the Exec Board member who frequently comments in the Journal. Last week there was a photo of him standing in a grave yard.
Freedom of Information requests citing public interest should be winging their way surely?
With the latest news on BBC Wales Today that the Police will investigate, is Mr Madge now going to suspend the Chief Exec?
The advice mentions “senior officers” being defamed, not just one of them – who are the others. With absolutely no law degree at all, I could almost certainly have written this advice based on stuff available on the internet. I wonder how much he charged?
Well done, good observations Cneifiwr. Keep it up Mr Bloggy!
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