Lord President of the Federal Court

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Lord President of the Federal Court of Malaysia was formerly the title of the head of the judiciary in Malaysia, from the formation of Malaysia in 1963 until 1994.

The Lord President was head of the highest court in the federation after the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Below him were the Chief Justices of the High Courts of Malaya, Borneo, and, until 1965, Singapore.

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[edit] History

The first Lord President of Malaysia was Tun Sir James Thomson, previously Chief Justice of Malaya, and a Scotsman. It is after the Scottish office of Lord President of the Court of Session that the office was named.

When the right of appeal to the Privy Council was abolished in 1985, the Federal Court was renamed the Supreme Court and the title of the office became Lord President of the Supreme Court of Malaysia.

[edit] The 1988 constitutional crisis

In 1988, Lord President Tun Salleh Abas was brought before a tribunal convened by the Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohammad on the grounds of misconduct. The Supreme Court in the years leading up to 1988 had been fiercely independent and increasingly active, and was at the time due to hear an appeal to determine the future of the ruling party UMNO, which had been declared an illegal society by the High Court of Malaya on the grounds of procedural irregularity. As a result of criticisms of the judiciary made by the Prime Minister, a letter of protest was written by Tun Salleh to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on behalf of the judiciary. This letter was later used as grounds for the convening of the tribunal.

When the Supreme Court granted an injunction prohibiting the tribunal as constituted from hearing the misconduct allegations, five Supreme Court Justices were suspended (and two were subsequently removed), and the injunction overturned. The tribunal later removed Tun Salleh from the office of Lord President, in which office he was succeeded by the then-Chief Justice of Malaya, Tun Hamid Omar, who had been the chairman of the tribunal.

The 1988 constitutional crisis was widely considered to be the greatest blow to judicial independence in Malaysian history, and at the time led to the Bar Council of Malaysia refusing to recognise the new Lord President. Around the same time, the Federal Constitution was amended to disvest the courts of the "judicial power of the Federation", granting them instead such judicial powers as Parliament might grant them.

[edit] Renaming of the office

In 1994, in a move regarded as a further downgrading of the judiciary, the office of Lord President was renamed "Chief Justice of Malaysia", and the offices of Chief Justice of Malaya and Chief Justice of Borneo renamed "Chief Judge of Malaya" and "Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak" respectively. The Supreme Court was again renamed the Federal Court.

[edit] List of Lord Presidents of Malaysia

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Tun Mohd Salleh Abas & K. Das (1989), May Day for Justice: the Lord President's Version, Kuala Lumpur: Magnus Book. ISBN 983-9631-00-4