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14/03/13

GOVT 3067
Caribbean Court of Justice (on exam)
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The agreement establishing the CCJ came into force on 23 rd July 2003,
CCJ idea dates back to the early 1960s in the West Indian Federation ,

however never came to fruition


CCJ is a hybrid institution and has two parts:
i. a municipal court of last resort
ii. Exclusive jurisdiction in respect of the interpretation and application of the

Treaty of Chaguaramas
The CCJ discharges the functions of an international tribunal applying rules of
international law in respect of the interpretation and application of the treaty.

Functions like the European Court of Justice.


The exercise of tis appellate jurisdiction, the CCJ hears appeals from common
law courts within the jurisdiction of parties to the Agreement Establishing the

CCJ, and is the highest munipal court in the region


Members signing on to the establishment of the CCJ agreements to

implement decisions of the CCJ


The CCJ is intended to be such an authoritative institution to pronounce the

rights and obligations established by CSME


Only Barbados, Belize and Guyana have replaced the JCPC (Judicial

Committee of the Privy Council) appellate jurisdiction


Two jurisdiction:
i.
Its original jurisdiction
ii.
its appellate jurisdiction

Reasons to remove the Privy Council


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Era of colonialization came to an end and the JCPC is not needed by

Sovereign states
1931 the Statue of Westminster allowed for overseas territories to abolish the

JCPC as the final court of appeal


If the Privy Council is so respectable and impartial in its decisions, why did

the rest of the Commonwealth nations eliminate its jurisdiction?


Argued that JCPC applied law uniformly across the empire
According to Isaac Hyatali, the countries that abolished the jurisdiction of
the court did so because it would be offensive to their sovereignty as
independent nations to have a foreign tribunal as their final court of appeal

It is a compromise of sovereignty to leave that decision to a court which is


part of the former colonial hierarchy, a court in the appointment of whose

members we have no say Hyatali


First, however, the jurisdiction of the JCPC must be discussed in order to
understand its limitations. The PC has limited jurisdiction and it only functions

as a Court of Appeal in a very restricted sense.


People who allege the importance of the Court, often give it more credit than
what it deserves when determining the appropriate jurisdictions in Common

Law cases
Appeals to the Privy Council lie at the discretion of the local court in civil
proceedings where the matter at hand is one of great general public
importance or otherwise ought to be submitted to her Majesty in Council for

decision
Therefore some appeals from the Caribbean can be dismissed not because

they arent substantive but they fall outside the PC jurisdiction


The jurisdiction the PC bounds its ruling according to the precedents
established by the House of Lords. The jurisdictions of the PV can be evidence
of the lack of understand of the Caribbean dynamics, like is the case with the

death penalty.
Case between Government of Antigua and Barbuda where the PC gave a

radio licence to a radio company without the Governments approval


Argument that the PC applies better rules to the death penalty and fear that

CCJ would become a hanging court


How can judges sitting thousands of miles away that do not grasp the
dynamics of Caribbean social, political and economic life make decisions

about the Caribbean?


The retention of the PC demonstrates the dependency situation where local

people are not good


Also argues that since the judges are foreign the changes for bribes and

corruption are reduced


PC has upheld the decisions of Caribbean judges 63% of the time
The PC has also asked to be replaced as the final court of appeal

Problems facing the CCJ


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Confidence in decisions it will render


CCJ structure suggests that it lacks foresight to see that Haiti and Suriname
would become full members of CARICOM and also foresee that possibility that
in the distant future Venezuela may also become a member of CARICOM

The court is designed for a purely Anglophone CARICOM. The CCJ is

incongruous with the legal system of Suriname and Haiti


Selection of judges does not have enough randomness, which is important to
give the appearance of fairness. Most judges will come from the Anglophone

Caribbean or the larger Caribbean countries. Excludes Haiti and Suriname.


The need for constitutional amendments is an obstacle to the establishing the

CCJ as the final court of appeal


In all of these countries a constitution amendment requires a special majority
in their parliaments and in the others a constitutional amendments also

requires a referendum.
T&T and Jamaica as major CARICOM players not making the court operations

has ramifications to give it a legal identity


An argument has been made claiming that the money spent on a CCJ can be

used to better local courts


Caribbean countries do not want to up their sovereignty to the CCJ (ironically

they prefer to give it up to PC)


Some countries do not see it as a priority

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