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Speaker's Corner: Watt deserves praise for clarity

Lawyers are often criticized for being incomprehensible. Judges, if anything, are usually said to be even harder to understand.

Many a law student and lawyer have struggled to identify what exactly a court meant in its reasons for judgment. I have read trial decisions of cases I’ve argued and been unsure if my client won or lost.

Yet a senior Ontario judge is being criticized in the media for writing too clearly.

David Tanovich, a well-respected legal academic, is quoted in The Globe and Mail as saying of Justice David Watt of the Court of Appeal for Ontario “is out of control.

I am frankly surprised that no one on the court — including the chief justice — has said anything to him. I would not be surprised if there is not a judicial council complaint if he continues.”

Tanovich also said the criminal law is no place for lively writing that “serves to sensationalize and desensitize tragic facts and serious social issues.”

In a letter to the editor, Tanovich clarified his position. He said his real concern was to ensure that “the very personal facts about real people, accused and victim, and about tragic and serious issues are treated in legal judgments with respect and dignity.”

I disagree with these and other criticisms. Watt’s language is clear, direct, and easy to understand. It often deals with dreadful things, but being plain-spoken is a good thing.

Using direct and clear language doesn’t denigrate anyone. Indeed, obfuscation suggests the reader can’t handle the reality.

Consider two recent excerpts from Watt’s decisions. “On a cold weekend in late January 2000, the lengthy but brittle relationship among Michael Luciano, Colleen Richardson-Luciano, and James Cooper ended. Abruptly and violently. First, in Woodbridge.

Then, in Egmondville. Two deaths. Colleen Richardson-Luciano died first. In Woodbridge. Stabbed to death. A day later, James Cooper died in Egmondville. By asphyxia from strangulation,” he wrote in R. v. Luciano.

“Explosions damage and destroy things. Sometimes, their victims are people. Like here. An explosion damaged and destroyed several buildings. Hurt some people too. And killed others. The explosion was preventable,” he wrote in Ontario (Labour) v. Enbridge Gas Distribution Inc.

The language is clear, direct, and easy to understand. I agree that in dealing with victims’ families, it’s important to use tact and sometimes avoid using blunt language. But Watt is writing for judges, lawyers, and the public, all of whom deserve to be told clearly what the law is.

As U.S. judge Billings Learned Hand said in 1916, “The language of the law must not be foreign to the ears of those who are to obey it.”
Watt deserves praise for writing clearly.

James Morton is a Toronto lawyer and past president of the Ontario Bar Association. He also teaches evidence at Osgoode Hall Law School.

Comments  

 
0 # Mark Persaud 2011-03-28 19:47
"Out of control" is a very uncivil, unprofessional and unfair way to describe one of the finest trial judges in Canada. As Justice Watt is not able to respond to this public criticism, it is incumbent that members of the legal profession respond. Thank you James Morton for doing just that.
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0 # John Lefurgey 2011-03-28 20:21
I agree. Clarity is a rare commodity. Justice Watt now writes clear concise jedgments that are a vast improvement over the lengthy judgments he wrote in his early days as a judge. He has improved with age and is now a pleasure to read.

You know what he means, even if you don't agree with him. This should not be discouraged.
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0 # W. Brian Smith, QC 2011-03-30 08:12
Excellant article. I too agree that plain understandable language is necessary and in my experience David Watt does it well. We can all learn from his style!
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0 # brian francis 2011-03-30 12:50
Watt is great but Quinn is no slouch in terms of introducing a compelling yarn - ooops - I mean decision. Check out this ONCA decision released today:

2011-03-28 Blais v. Toronto Area Transit Operating Authority, 2011 ONSC 1880 (CanLII)
[1] Some actions proceed more slowly than others.

[2] Here, the lawyers for the plaintiff have prosecuted this action with the enthusiasm of invitees at a tax audit. A straightforward slip-and-fall injury in 1997, where the statement of claim was issued in 1998, finds the parties, by 2010, still trapped in examinations for discovery. How can this happen? How can this possibly happen? How? It will be seen that, among other things, the plaintiff elected trial by letter.
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