The fight to remove Justice Chairmaine Pemberton from the Judicial and Legal Services Commission (JLSC) is creating a war of words between the United National Congress leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar and the Office of the President, with the former suggesting a hold be put on Perberton’s appointment for now.
In a series of correspondence between the two offices between February 25 and March 13, 2019, Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar and President Paula-Mae Weekes seemed to butt heads over the President’s intention to re-appoint Pemberton to the JLSC.
In the final letter dated March 13, Persad-Bissessar references the first letter dated February 25, in which the President indicated she was seeking to fix the error made in appointing Pemberton in the first place.
Last month, UNC senator Gerald Ramdeen asked Weekes to reconsider the appointment of Pemberton to the JLSC after the Privy Council ruled former President Anthony Carmona made an error in appointing her in the first place. Members of the JLSC are appointed by the president and Pemberton was appointed to the JLSC in 2017.
Weekes admitted then that there was an error in the appointment after UNC activist Devant Maharaj questioned the appointment. Maharaj’s concerns about Pemberton’s appointment stemmed from her promotion to the appellate court ahead of other senior High Court judges. The concern was also compounded by Pemberton’s quick appointment to the JLSC. Maharaj filed the lawsuit following the fiasco involving the JLSC’s appointment of former chief magistrate Marcia Ayers-Caesar. He applied for an injunction in a final effort to block the swearing-in of two new judges, Jacqueline Wilson and Kathy-Ann Waterman.
The JLSC is chaired by Chief Justice Ivor Archie and in 2017 included attorney Ernest H Koylass, head of the Public Service Commission Maureen Manchouck, Nicole Beaubrun-Toby and Pemberton. According to Gazette No 105, dated October 3, 2017, Pemberton was appointed to the JLSC on September 19, 2017, under section 110 (3) (b) of the Constitution.
But the Privy Council, in its ruling, declared that there cannot be appointments to the JLSC, under section 110(3) (b), of either serving judges or former judges in retirement and that the commission must comprise five members.
The President’s reference to section 110 (3) (a) is crucial because according to the Constitution, JLSC members appointed under that section may be “one from among persons who hold or have held office as a judge of a Court having unlimited jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the Commonwealth or a Court having jurisdiction in appeal from any such Court.” This would clearly allow for Pemberton or any other judge’s appointment.
The President’s explanation therefore implies that Pemberton’s appointment was intended to be under 110 (3) (a), the section under which her appointment was considered by the PM and Opposition leader, as per the letters of consultation issued to them and not under 110 (3) (b), which the Privy Council’s ruling speaks to. That would mean that reference to section 110 (3) (b) of the Constitution in the instrument of appointment was an “error” and section 110 (3) (a) should have been referenced in the document instead.
Since then, however, the Opposition has kept the heat on the President’s Office over the JLSC appointments.
In a letter to Persad-Bissessar in March, Weekes “respectfully refused” the requests made by the Opposition that she reveal which judges made the short-list for the JLSC selection and were bypassed in favour of Pemberton and whether there were any complaints about Chief Justice Archie.
“In my view, it serves no useful purpose and, given the recent leaks of correspondence between our offices in a particular daily newspaper, it might serve only to embarrass unnecessarily those who were not put forward. Of course, I am always open to suggestions from your good self for appointees, either before or after consultation,” Weekes explained.
On the second issue of whether there have been any complaints to the Chief Justice or the JLSC about the conduct of Pemberton, Weekes advised Persad-Bissessar to make her enquiry directly of the CJ or the JLSC as this would be the proper course.
In response, however, Persad-Bissessar said she understood the process to mean that Weekes was “correcting an oversight and rectifying an error in Justice Pemberton’s instrument of appointment as opposed to giving fresh consideration to the appointment of a suitably qualified and appropriate candidate to fill a vacancy on the JLSC.”
Persad-Bissessar said she was “consequently prepared to accept that your Excellency has, by sheer coincidence, selected the same candidate (Justice Pemberton) who was illegally appointed to the JLSC by her predecessor President Carmona, and is therefore now recommending the said person (Justice Pemberton), to fill the very vacancy created by her (Justice Pemberton’s) illegal appointment.”
“I am also prepared to accept that Your Excellency remains genuinely receptive to suasion on this appointment and that Justice Pemberton’s appointment is not a foregone conclusion,” Persad-Bissessar said.
Persad-Bissessar also referenced another letter from the President, dated March 1, 2019, in which Weekes indicated her office was open to Persad-Bissessar proposing “alternative candidates” for consideration for the JLSC but directed her to contact judges and do its own due diligence.
Persad-Bissessar dismissed that suggestion and instead called on the President to hold her hand on any re-appointment to the JLSC until another investigation exercise of proposed candidates was completed.