Bâtonnier
In some legal systems, the bâtonnier is the head of the legal profession (the bar).
Jersey[]
In Jersey, the Bâtonnier is head of the profession of advocate.[1] The role includes administering the legal aid system for the island (the day-to-day administration is carried out by an Acting Bâtonnier, while the Bâtonnier decides appeals against the decision of the Acting Bâtonnier).[2][3] The Bâtonnier formerly had a role in dealing with disciplinary matters involving advocates,[4] but that role was removed in 2005.[5]
France[]
This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (December 2009) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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In France, the role is primus inter pares (first among equals).
Election and function[]
Elected by the members of the bar for a term of two years, the Bâtonnier is the spokesman for lawyers registered in his bar.
But in addition, it has a real function of arbitration between lawyers and a function as mediator when a dispute arises between a lawyer and his client. He is also the one who appoints lawyers for the court. The successor of the Bâtonnier is elected before the end of the term of the latter. For one year, the designated Bâtonnier can increase his competence on various issues that he will have to address upon his entry into service.
Etymological origin[]
The location of the Sainte-Chapelle on the île de la Cité in Paris was in the 10th century a chapel dedicated to Saint Nicholas, who is one of the patron saints of lawyers. It was famously the site for the annual reopening of the parlement of Paris. The members gathered there to form the brotherhood of Saint-Nicolas, which was both a corporation and a religious order. The elected Chief of this brotherhood, at first called the prior, carried the banner of the order suspended from a pole or baston, during processions.
This banner was sometimes decorated with a representation of St. Nicholas or St. Yves (another patron saint of lawyers). An order of 23 October 1274 recognized lawyers as members of a constituent body in Parliament, bound by professional secrecy.[6]
In 1690, the Dictionnaire universel des sciences et des arts [7] stated that the bastonnier (or the bastonniere) is "he or she who carries for a while the baston of a brotherhood, and who carries it or follows it in processions. In terms of the Palace of Justice, it is a former lawyer chosen annually according to the order of the Tableau, to be the head of the community of lawyers and prosecutors, to be the master of their Chapel and their brotherhood, and preside over the tribunal that they hold for maintaining the discipline of the Palace and its regulations. He also manages the commission of inquiry of lower judges during their ban. "
References[]
- ^ "Advocate Susan Pearmain appointed as Bâtonnier in Jersey". Appleby Global. 3 June 2011. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ^ "Legal Aid in Jersey". Acting Bâtonnier. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ^ "Legal aid". Citizens Advice Bureau. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ^ See, for example: The Representation of the Bâtonnier In The Matter Of a Complaint against an Advocate of the Royal Court, 2003 JRC 77 (Royal Court of Jersey 12 May 2003).
- ^ See article 18(6) of "The Law Society of Jersey Law 2005". jerseylaw.je. 1 January 2011. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ^ Delachenal, Histoire des avocats au Parlement de Paris. 1300-1600[permanent dead link]
- ^ Dictionnaire Universel des Sciences et des Arts
- Jersey law
- French law
- Lawyers by type
- Bar associations
- Barristers and advocates