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Understanding your right to a McKenzie Firend's help as a self-represented Party Apr 4, 2009 <a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures.html#procedures56.html"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">[exit briefing]</span></a> <div class="centerline"><span class="phvr8t-x-x-200">McKenzie friends</span></div> <!--l. 4--><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120">Right to have an assistant sitting with you</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">. These notes explain what "McKenzie friends" are and what</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">is their legal basis. They should not normally be needed, but may be worth taking to court if you are</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">representing yourself and plan to use a McKenzie friend, in case your right to have one is challenged by</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">the court.</span> <!--l. 9--></p><p class="indent"> </p><hr> <div class="centerline"><span class="phvb8t-x-x-170">Background: what are McKenzie friends?</span></div> <!--l. 11--><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">If you are a defendant and are representing yourself in court (i.e.</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> you are not using a solicitor to represent</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">you), you are entitled to have someone sit next to you. She can take notes, offer advice (in whispers) and</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">prompt you to ask particular questions</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> etc, but cannot address the court directly. She is usually called a</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">"McKenzie friend."</span> <!--l. 18--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">Many people don't use McKenzie friends, and they are not meant to be a substitute for a solicitor.</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">They are really just a fancy name for an assistant or friend to sit with you.</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures57.html" id="procedures57.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">But a McKenzie friend</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> is very useful if you have not been in court before and need that bit of extra</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">confidence or help. Also, even if you are confident about your defence, the McKenzie friend</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> can help by</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">taking notes, freeing you to concentrate on your own case.</span> <!--l. 26--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">In order to use a McKenzie friend, you simply tell the clerk at the start of the trial (when you are</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">asked to sit in the dock or at the front of the courtroom, separate from the rest of the public</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">or your supporters), that you are not represented by a solicitor, and would like to have an</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">assistant to help you with taking notes and occasional advice. It should be as straightforward as</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">that - in particular, there is normally no need to mention the term "McKenzie friend" or to</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">justify your desire to have an assistant by complicated legal argument. (See also the end of this</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">briefing.)</span> <!--l. 35--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The right to have McKenzie friends is now well established, in England at least, and you</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">should not be prevented from having one. However, it is still possible that a court may try to</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">refuse to allow you to have a McKenzie friend</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> sit with you, in which case you will have to be</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">prepared to argue why you should be allowed one. The rest of these notes may be useful for</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">this.</span> </p><div class="centerline"><span class="phvb8t-x-x-170">The legal basis of McKenzie friends</span></div> <!--l. 41--><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">McKenzie friends have no official legal status: they have no </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">particular </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">right to sit next to you in court, and</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">the name is not an official one. But </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">you</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, as a defendant, have a right to whatever assistance may be</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">reasonably required, and that's the basis for allowing the McKenzie friend. The name comes from the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">particular case which established this right (see below).</span> <!--l. 48--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">Two cases are involved. The first is </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">McKenzie v McKenzie, 1970</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, which was a divorce case, in which</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">the court of appeal ruled that the husband (who did not have legal aid and was representing himself)</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">should have been allowed to have someone sit next to him to give him advice and take notes</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> etc. The</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">second case is </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">R v Leicester City Justices et al, ex parte Barrow et al, 1991</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, which was a poll tax case, in</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">which the defendants had wanted a friend to sit with them and help them in the same sort of</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">way.</span> <!--l. 56--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">If you need to argue your rights for a McKenzie friend, you need to know not just the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">titles of these two cases (as above, in italics), but also the reference to their reports in the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">law journals. </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">McKenzie v McKenzie </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">is </span><span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120">[1970] 3 W.L.R.</span><span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120"> 472</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, which you would read out in</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">court as "year 1970, volume 3, Weekly Law Reports, page 472." </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">R v Leicester City Justices </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">is</span> <span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120">[1991] 3 W.L.R.</span><span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120"> 368</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, which you read out as "year 1991, volume 3, Weekly Law Reports, page</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">368."</span> </p><p class="leftline"><span class="phvb8t-x-x-140">The </span><span class="phvro8t-x-x-140">McKenzie v McKenzie </span><span class="phvb8t-x-x-140">case</span> <!--l. 64--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">This was a divorce case. The husband had been initially legally aided, but by the time the case came to</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">trial, he was no longer on legal aid, and had therefore decided to represent himself. At the start of</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">the trial, a young Australian barrister (Mr Hanger) had wanted to assist Mr McKenzie for</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">free.</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures58.html" id="procedures58.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The judge then said that the barrister could take no part in the proceedings, so he left the court and</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">did not reappear.</span> <!--l. 74--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The court of appeal ruled that the judge got it wrong, because "Mr Hanger was not there to take part</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">in the proceedings in any sort of way. He was merely there to prompt and to make suggestions to the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">husband. . . " (Lord Justice Davies, at page 474G). The point was frequently made in the judgment that it</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">was a very long and complex case, and that much of the evidence was barely audible, with various</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">language and communication difficulties involved.</span> <!--l. 81--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The conclusion of all three judges in the appeal court was that Mr Hanger (the McKenzie</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">friend) should have been allowed to remain, to "sit quietly beside the husband and give him</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">from time to time some quiet advice or prompting" (Lord Justice Sachs, at page 477H). The</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">judgment also quotes (approvingly) the comment made in an earlier case, </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">Collier v Hicks,</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">1831</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">:</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures59.html" id="procedures59.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <!--l. 89--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">Any person, whether he be a professional man or not, may attend as a friend</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">of either party, may take notes, may quietly make suggestions, and give</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">advice. </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">(Lord Tenterden CJ, in </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">Collier v Hicks</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">, page 669)</span> <!--l. 91--></p><p class="noindent"> </p><p class="leftline"><span class="phvb8t-x-x-140">The </span><span class="phvro8t-x-x-140">R v Leicester City Justices </span><span class="phvb8t-x-x-140">case</span> <!--l. 93--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">This was a case about non-payment of poll tax.</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures60.html" id="procedures60.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">Leicester City Council had taken Mr and Mrs Barrow to court for non-payment, and wanted to get a</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">'liability order' against them.</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures61.html" id="procedures61.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">When their case came to court (Leicester City magistrates' court), the Barrows wanted to have the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">help of Robert John, to act as a McKenzie friend. The magistrates ruled that, because it was a</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">straightforward case, they did not require a McKenzie friend, and they would not be allowed one. This</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">decision was upheld on appeal to the Divisional Court, but overturned by the Court of Appeal. This is the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">judgment of the Court of Appeal.</span> <!--l. 109--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The magistrates had believed, on the advice of their clerk,</span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures62.html" id="procedures62.html"><sup><span class="ptmr8t-">[</span><span class="cmmi-12x-x-83">note</span><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span></sup></a> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">that they had discretion about whether to allow a McKenzie friend. Because of disruption of the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">court earlier in the day (as part of the anti-poll tax campaigning), they had cleared the public gallery, so</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">that only the Barrows, a solicitor acting for the Barrows (Ms Jones), the prosecution and official members</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">of the press were allowed in the court. Ms Jones only stayed in court to ask that Robert John be allowed in</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">to help the Barrows with their case, and she referred the magistrates to the </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">McKenzie v McKenzie </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">case.</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">But they turned her down, at which she withdrew from the case (she was not representing</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">the Barrows for the rest of the hearing), and the council got their liability order against the</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">Barrows.</span> <!--l. 123--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The Court of Appeal ruled against the magistrates, and basically established a right to have a</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">McKenzie friend, unless the need to maintain order and do justice dictates otherwise. Here are some</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">relevant quotations from the judgment:</span> <!--l. 128--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">[The applicants] have a right to be heard in their own defence. Fairness, which is fundamental to</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">all court proceedings, dictates that they shall be given all reasonable facilities for exercisting this</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">right and, in case of doubt, they should be given the benefit of that doubt for courts must not only</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">act fairly, but be seen to act fairly. </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">(Lord Donaldson of Lymington MR, at page 376A)</span> <!--l. 133--></p><p class="noindent"> <!--l. 136--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">A party to proceedings has a right to present his own case and in so doing to arm</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">himself with such assistance as he thinks appropriate, subject to the right of the court to</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">intervene. </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">(Lord Donaldson, page 379A)</span> <!--l. 139--></p><p class="noindent"> <!--l. 142--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">In my opinion there are in general no grounds for objecting to a litigant in person being</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">accompanied by an assistant, who will sit beside him, take notes and advise sotto voce on the</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">conduct of his case. </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">(Staughton LJ, page 380E–F)</span> <!--l. 145--></p><p class="noindent"> <!--l. 147--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The last quote above is followed by comments on situations in which an assistant could properly be</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">refused: if security demanded it (in certain criminal cases), or if the McKenzie friend</span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> is disorderly or is</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">disrupting the court.</span> </p><p class="leftline"><span class="phvb8t-x-x-140">Call her an "assistant," not a "McKenzie friend."</span> <!--l. 152--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">The </span><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">R v Leicester City Justices </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">judgment also disapproves of the term "McKenzie friend," for the good</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">reason that it suggests some special legal status. The point is repeatedly made that the assistant is merely</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">there to help the defendant, and has no special legal status. Equally, there is normally no reason to refuse</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">to allow her to be there, or even to formally apply to the court for their permission to allow</span> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">her:</span> <!--l. 161--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">The title "McKenzie friend" suggests a status and a mystique which are not justified. In my view it</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">would be better not used in the future, and that the person should be referred to simply as an</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">assistant or a friend. I also consider that there should be no need, in the ordinary way, for an</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">application to be made to the court for a litigant in person to have an assistant. It should be</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">sufficient for the litigant (or his opponent) merely to introduce the person by name, and say that</span> <span class="ptmri8t-x-x-120">he is present as an assistant. </span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">(Staughton LJ, page 381H–382A)</span> <!--l. 168--></p><p class="noindent"> <!--l. 170--></p><hr> <!--l. 170--><p class="noindent">©<span class="ptmr8t-"> Copyright 2001, Andrew Gray</span> <!--l. 170--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-">What, "copyright"! Isn't copyright evil? [ </span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures63.html" id="procedures63.html"><span class="ptmr8t-">You better read these notes</span></a><span class="ptmr8t-">]</span> <!--l. 170--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-">This briefing was written by me (with or without help from others) for Trident Ploughshares, but may be used freely and</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">copied/distributed by others. In order to guarantee this freedom, the briefing is copyrighted and licensed under the GNU Free</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">Documentation License (formal license statement follows).</span> <!--l. 170--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmr8t-">Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled </span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/fdl.txt"><span class="ptmr8t-">"GNU Free</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">Documentation License."</span></a> <!--l. 170--></p><p class="indent"> <span class="ptmri8t-">I am not a lawyer. </span><span class="ptmr8t-">The briefing is not guaranteed in any way, and is </span><span class="ptmb8t-">not a substitute for proper legal advice</span><span class="ptmr8t-">. Feedback</span> <span class="ptmr8t-">and corrections are very welcome, phone 0845 4588 368, email </span><a href="mailto:andrew@andrewgray.uklinux.net"><span class="ptmr8t-">andrew@andrewgray.uklinux.net</span></a><span class="ptmr8t-">.</span> </p><p class="rightline"><span class="ptmri8t-">Andrew Gray, TP legal support (England & Wales)</span> <!--l. 170--></p><p class="indent"> </p><hr> <!--l. 170--><p class="noindent"><span class="ptmb8t-x-x-120">This briefing was last revised: 11/12/2001</span> <!--l. 173--></p><p class="noindent"><span class="cmtt-10">(See the </span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures66.html" id="procedures66.html"><span class="cmtt-10">changelog and authorship page</span></a><span class="cmtt-10"> for revision details.)</span> <!--l. 23--></p><p class="noindent"><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/procedures.html#procedures56.html"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">[exit briefing]</span></a><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> </span><a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/mckenzie.tex"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">[Source </span><span class="TEX"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">T</span><span class="E"><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">E</span></span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">X</span></span><span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120"> file]</span></a> <!--l. 23--></p><p class="indent"> <a href="http://www.andrewgray.uklinux.net/legalsupport/index.html"> <span class="ptmr8t-x-x-120">[TP legal support (England & Wales) home page] </span></a> </p> [back to articles] |