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Media
Release from the Family Law Section
Family
Court not biased, say lawyers
Despite
the very vocal claims of some disgruntled men, the Family Court
is not biased, say family law specialists who regularly practise
in the court.
Wellington lawyer
Simon Maude, speaking as Deputy Chair of the Family Law Section
of the New Zealand Law Society, which represents over 700 family
lawyers around New Zealand, says:
"We represent
men and children as well as women so we have no interest in favouring
one group over another, and our experience is that there is no gender
bias in the court. If there was, we would be speaking out about
it as it would be disadvantaging our clients.
"The only bias,
if it can be called that, is the one set in legislation which requires
the court to make the interests of the child paramount and, in our
experience, that is what Family Court Judges do.
"We are very
disturbed by the current campaign to disparage the whole Family
Court system. The hard evidence indicates that the Family Court
is working for the vast majority of people who use it.
"The claim that
the Family Court is adversarial in nature and therefore causing
parents to fight simply doesn’t stand up. It ignores the fact that
the Family Court is not just about an actual court hearing. Its
processes include counselling and mediation with the assistance
of judges, and over 90% of all cases are solved through these processes.
"Very few cases
– perhaps only about 3% - actually go to a court hearing and those
cases are the ones where the parents can’t agree – that is why they
ask the court to sort it out, and it is quite wrong to blame the
court for that already-existing conflict.
"As so few cases
actually go to a court hearing, people may not realise that where
there is a conflict that can’t be resolved, the children have their
own lawyer. It is not a case of just the two parents fighting it
out, and the judge deciding for one or the other. The judge has
to decide on the basis of what is best for the children and if that
was not being done, as lawyers for those children we would not be
supporting the system.
"The Family
Court is subject to the same judicial standards as any other court.
Its judges have to provide reasoned written decisions which may
be published and which can be appealed to the High Court – tellingly,
very few are.
"Of course there
will always be some litigants who feel unfairly treated but comments
arising out of individual grievances don’t reflect the vast majority
of cases.
"And they don’t
reflect the experience of lawyers representing men, women and children
in the court every day."
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