Look at the very first sentence here.....
In the [broken link removed] yesterday, the MD of Scotchstone Capital tried to represent the company in an action against the state.
In other words, a man who is not a legal professional wants to represent a company (who has the status of another person) not in the Small Claims Court, not in the District Court, not in the Circuit Court but in the High Court against the state itself. Any sensible judge would say that that man could not possibly have the requisite skills and knowledge to represent the company as well as the compnay could and should be represented.
Not sure what the dead horse is.
Some of us are trying to drag a legal profession dead horse from the 18th century into the 21st century which just does not want to change its practices and policies and is supported by some of our outdated laws and ideas. As the Supreme Court has upheld this nonsense, then the underlying constitution needs to be changed.
The owners or directors of a company should be able to represent it in all its activities. It should not be restricted.
While it is usual to engage solicitors to deal with conveyancing issues, it is not actually required by law.But and with no disrespect, this point is not persuasive. Regarding contracts prepared for the purchase of real property, the officers of the company sign the documentation prepared for them by solicitors. They only act with full legal capacity in specific instances.
The distinction is not absolute. A company must have officers, and they hold office because of the existence of the company. In certain senses, the officers are the eyes, ears, hands, and intellect of the company, which can do nothing without them.With regard to the statement "It isn't really consistent to rule that for some purposes the officers are the company and for other purposes they are not" I say that for no purposes are the officers the company. The officers are only ever part of the company. There is a difference between the officers and the company itself.
If I, as an individual, wished to argue my own case in the High Court, I have that right. A judge might say that I could not have the requisite skills and knowledge to do so, but that does not remove my right.Look at the very first sentence here.....
In the [broken link removed] yesterday, the MD of Scotchstone Capital tried to represent the company in an action against the state.
In other words, a man who is not a legal professional wants to represent a company (who has the status of another person) not in the Small Claims Court, not in the District Court, not in the Circuit Court but in the High Court against the state itself. Any sensible judge would say that that man could not possibly have the requisite skills and knowledge to represent the company as well as the compnay could and should be represented.
We are discussing a general principle here, and a general principle should not be decided on the difficulty or likelihood of a body winning a particular case.Their cause of action is "challenging the recapitalisation on grounds including that it unlawfully imposes an unacceptable €2.7 billion burden on Irish and other EU taxpayers". At first instance this seems a battle of David versus Goliath. By that I mean that the plaintiff would have a very difficult battle on his hands to win. No wonder no solicitor would agree to a no win no fee agreement. They would have little hope of getting paid.
If you are determined that a director should be able to legally represent his own company (in certain limited ways) you may yet be successful in persuading me to your way of thinking, but certainly not on the merits of this case.
That is quite an alarming suggestion - that the pursuit of justice should be limited by the funds available to the plaintiff.Patrick McCann SC, for the Minister, said it appeared Scotchstone, while suffering an unrealised loss of €200,000, still had funds in securities of some €100,000 and it could hire lawyers if it “cut its cloth to suit its measure”.
Any sensible judge would say that that man could not possibly have the requisite skills and knowledge to represent the company as well as the compnay could and should be represented.
That is quite an alarming suggestion - that the pursuit of justice should be limited by the funds available to the plaintiff.
I beg to differ, it is entirely possible that the man knows the company inside out and knows all the details of the case and would represent it better than a barrister who has many cases.
Scotchstone has a very good case. Option 1) is illegal. Option 2) is not possible as it does not have the money
I know the law gives a company a separate identity, but I don't think that discussion should be arrested because of that. The capacities of a body corporate differ from those of an individual - for example, a company can not hold a driving licence.... But with no disrespect, the matter here is not about the right of an individual to represent himself. The matter here is about the right of an individual to represent somebody else. The company is legally “somebody else”....
How do you know they have a very good case?
.
As I see it, Scotchstone and it's directors are looking for a free bet... have their day in court and if they lose nothing is lost.
That company has duties, obligations and responsibilities to people other than its director and professional legal representation must be provided to ensure those duties, obligations and responsibilities are fulfilled.
“If I, as an individual, wished to argue my own case in the High Court, I have that right. A judge might say that I could not have the requisite skills and knowledge to do so, but that does not remove my right”.
I fully agree with you. But with no disrespect, the matter here is not about the right of an individual to represent himself. The matter here is about the right of an individual to represent somebody else. The company is legally “somebody else”. You don’t have a right to represent somebody else. You may actually have all the ability in the world to represent somebody else, but you don’t have that right. The court won’t allow a lay person to represent somebody else, and the court is correct. The court is insisting that, at a minimum it must be a legal professional that represents that other person. The action of the court sounds sensible to me.
I have made a few posts on this thread, so I’ll finish with the following. I understand the frustration of a company director chasing debt and being confronted with high legal costs in order to chase those debts. If the company director cannot recuperate those debts because of high legal costs justice has not been served. Time and time again I have spoken to people who are owed thousands of Euros and are unable to recuperate the debt. In fairness it is a problem area and does need legal reform or at least review. I understand the sense of frustration being increased because the director thinks he is capable of representing the company in what may in reality be a straightforward matter.
It has been suggested that in order to improve the situation an officer of the company should be able to represent that company in court. But to allow a lay person to represent a company doesn’t seem to me to be the correct avenue to take to achieve the necessary reform. And certainly in the Scotchstone case, the refusal to allow a lay person to represent the company in the High Court was correct. It was not the place for a lay person to try to do his best. That company has duties, obligations and responsibilities to people other than its director and professional legal representation must be provided to ensure those duties, obligations and responsibilities are fulfilled. This issue goes to the very core concepts of what a company is, the concept of a company being a separate legal identity. The judge had no choice in this matter. Any other decision would have meant that one of the most fundamental foundations of the legal concept of a company would be undermined. I am in support of a review of the debt collection laws, but I am against the director’s attempt to represent the company in the Scotchstone case. It just seems utterly reckless to me.
I was in the district court a few weeks back (having a minor case struck out). I sat there for 4 hours watching proceedings, waiting for the case I was concerned with to be called.
I was staggered by the ineptitude of the majority of the lawyers who faced the judge. In many cases he had to prompt them to ask for documents, forms etc to be filled in/submitted.
Instead of a sweeping generalisation can you give us a concrete example of one case and what forms/documents were missing?
No, it was all gigbberish to me
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