LEGAL PROFESSION UNIFORM LAW APPLICATION BILL 2013 – Delivered in Parl 19th Feb 2014
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — I too rise to speak on the Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Bill 2013. In so doing I have to declare an interest: like so many before me, I am a lawyer, and I am in possession of a current practising certificate, so to some extent the changes proposed will have an impact on me.
The bill proposes to bring the Victorian legal profession into a regulatory scheme which matches that of New South Wales. It intends that other states should also adopt the same regulations. In passing, I have to say that I am somewhat disappointed about the increasing erosion of consensus around the move towards uniformity in this profession and in a broader sense that is occurring in national forums. It is a matter for some concern.
I am a great believer in states’ rights. I believe that when it comes to the delivery of services the states perform a critical role. However, our federation is based on one vital and inalienable fact — that is, that we do so much better when we act as a nation with a common set of laws. Initially the attraction of federation was that we saw ourselves as a commonwealth — as a community whose interests were best served by a common purpose. This was largely borne out of an economic sense that our interests were best served by removing the duplicity and the overbearing nature of state excises and tariffs as borders were crossed.
Citizens who saw themselves as being part of the one nation were ultimately being charged in the process for effectively participating in the national economy, so a true nation was formed.
However, increasingly what we are seeing, and with some disappointment, is that when states have an opportunity to do away with unnecessary duplication but matters that are properly within the preserve of a state or states are not offered up for the national good and we do not get consistency, we are all the poorer for it. In saying that I believe that this initiative, with Victoria and New South Wales working together, in many ways demonstrates that there is still some way to go to bring about commonality of purpose for laws of this nature. The codification principally of state areas and activities into a single purpose and the regulation of professions would be of great advantage to the community. We are in favour of harmonising Victorian professional regulations with those in other states.
The old adage that compromise is the best and cheapest lawyer is probably an adage that should inspire the states to recognise that coming to some understanding around these things is a critically important initiative.
There have been a series of previous legislative efforts that have brought us to this point. The first effort in regard to uniform laws for the legal profession occurred under the Labor governments in Victoria and New South Wales. Through the wonderful work of the previous Attorney-General, the Honourable Rob Hulls, the former member for Niddrie, the Victorian Labor government was leading a movement towards national agreement. Getting that consensus between the states on this type of legislation has been tough, and nobody shirks from the obvious statement that getting states to agree to operate in community and with a common purpose is a difficult task.
Losing that common purpose demeans the quality of our legislation and in many ways places an impost upon the practice of the profession and also the certainty with which the community views the laws it is bound by and indeed the capacity for lawyers to act in a way that is seen as being consistent across jurisdictions.
Jurisdictions other than New South Wales and Victoria have all dropped out of the national scheme, starting with Queensland in 2012. This is bitterly disappointing. While the government will no doubt be trying to convince, cajole or impress upon those other states the need to come back to the purpose of uniform regulation, I think it is appropriate that Victoria and New South Wales work in harmony. After all, we are the two largest states in terms of both population and our substantial involvement in our economic wellbeing.
I would hazard a guess that the proportion of lawyers in New South Wales and Victoria — just looking around this Parliament, if it is any evidence of the fact — would be the two highest amongst the states.
I observe that you cannot get too many lawyers. They are wonderful; they add greatly to colour and texture. I recall that in Henry VI, Part 2 there is the famous quote:
- The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.
Let us take some comfort in the fact that the lawyers had good lawyers and that that never transpired, because as we know from Measure for Measure, good counsellors lack no clients.
When it comes to good counsel, the good counsel we give to other states — can I call them the mendicant states in this respect — is that uniform laws are critical to the wellbeing of this profession and the confidence in which the profession is held.
The current bill has been drafted in a short time frame, and there are some concerns we have with respect to consultation, particularly around consumers of legal services. We would like to have seen legal costs addressed more substantially in the bill. Costs often form the content of substantial complaints regarding the legal profession, and it is important that the rights of consumers in this area should come to the fore. Under the bill the legal services commissioner will be able to make binding rulings on costs disputes, leaving consumers effectively without recourse if they feel badly done by. Additionally the threshold amount of costs for disclosure is left to the profession itself to decide.
Transparency is an important matter in the context in which the profession will be able to rely on the consistency of this bill and its uniform application across the two larger states. The great disappointment is that costs disclosure requirements have not been recognised for the importance they have in protecting consumer interests. They should not really be left — dare I say it — to lawyers to charge as they see fit. The costs provisions of the bill and the decision to rush the bill through without proper consultation are disappointments, but ultimately this is a valuable advance forward and should not be in any niggardly way demeaned.
The bill excludes the new authorities from several forms of oversight, including of the Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities. This is yet another illustration of the government’s consistent opposition to openness and accountability as a framework within which both that charter and the accountability of lawyers with respect to charging should be looked at. The government has not made Victorians aware of how much the scheme will cost, and that is a substantial point.
We know that the Law Institute of Victoria has said that it lacks the funds to help contribute to the reforms, and the government says that the scheme will be paid for out of the Public Purpose Fund. Victoria Legal Aid is already in the middle of a crisis in funding, and the decision of the government to pay for its scheme by dipping into the same fund will in my view do nothing, to improve the situation.
The bill goes some way towards achieving uniformity and any step in that direction in areas where there is duplication of regulation simply for its own purpose or simply for parochial objectives is a good thing. It advances us in the right direction, and I support it.