Eligible applicants receive
legal aid through the provision of the
services of a solicitor and, if necessary,
a barrister in court proceedings to ensure
that a person who has reasonable grounds
for pursuing or defending a legal action
is not prevented from doing so by lack
of means. Publicly funded legal aid services
are provided through the Legal Aid Department
and the Duty Lawyer Service.
Legal Aid Department
The Legal Aid Department
provides legal aid services to any person
in Hong Kong, resident or non-resident,
who satisfies the criteria for legal aid.
Ordinary Legal Aid
Scheme for Civil Cases
The Ordinary Legal Aid
Scheme is available for representation
in civil proceedings in the District Court,
Court of First Instance, Court of Appeal
and Court of Final Appeal covering proceedings
relating to major areas of the livelihood
of the community at large, including family
and matrimonial disputes, personal injury
claims, employment disputes, disputes
related to landed properties, contractual
disputes, immigration matters and professional
negligence claims.
An applicant must pass
the means and merits tests to qualify
for legal aid. For the means test, the
applicant must show that his financial
resources, the aggregate of his annual
disposable income and total disposable
capital after deduction of certain statutory
allowances, do not exceed $155,800. The
Director of Legal Aid may waive the upper
financial limit in meritorious cases where
a breach of the Hong Kong Bill of Rights
Ordinance or an inconsistency with the
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights as applied to Hong Kong are at
issue. For the merits test, the applicant
must satisfy the Director of Legal Aid
that he has reasonable grounds for bringing
or defending the civil proceedings. An
aided person may be required to pay a
contribution depending on his financial
resources and is required to pay costs
if property is recovered or preserved
on his behalf in the proceedings.
An applicant who is
refused civil legal aid may appeal to
the Registrar of the High Court, or in
Court of Final Appeal cases, a Review
Committee. The decision of the Registrar
or the Review Committee is final.
During the year, 16 806
applications for legal aid were received,
and legal aid was granted to 8 656
applicants. The Legal Aid Department's
expenditure on civil cases was $281 million,
and $646 million was recovered for the
aided persons.
Supplementary Legal
Aid Scheme
This scheme provides
legal assistance to applicants whose financial
resources exceed the ceiling stipulated
in the Ordinary Legal Aid Scheme but do
not exceed $432,900. Under this scheme,
legal aid is available for cases involving
personal injury or death as well as medical,
dental or legal professional negligence,
where the claim for damages is likely
to exceed $60,000. The scheme also covers
claims under the Employees' Compensation
Ordinance irrespective of the amount of
the claim.
The scheme is self-financing
and funded by contributions paid by aided
persons and a percentage deducted from
damages or compensation recovered on their
behalf. In 2005, 158 applications for
legal aid were received and legal aid
was granted to 85 applicants. Expenditure
was $9.7 million, and $51 million was
recovered on behalf of the aided persons.
Legal Aid in Criminal
Cases
In criminal cases, legal
aid is available for representation in
proceedings in the Court of First Instance
and the District Court, in committal proceedings
in the Magistrates' Courts, in appeals
from the Magistrates' Courts, and in appeals
to the Court of Appeal and the Court of
Final Appeal.
Legal aid is granted
to applicants who pass the means test
and if the Director of Legal Aid is satisfied
that it is in the interests of justice
for legal aid to be granted. The Director
of Legal Aid has the discretion to grant
legal aid in a criminal case even if the
applicant's financial resources exceed
the financial eligibility limit if he
is satisfied that it is desirable in the
interests of justice to do so, subject
to payment of a contribution. There is
no provision for appeal against the Director
of Legal Aid's refusal to grant legal
aid in criminal cases on the grounds of
means or merit, except for appeals to
the Court of Final Appeal. An applicant
who is refused legal aid on the grounds
of merit may apply to a judge for legal
aid to be granted to him, provided that
he passes the means test. Applicants charged
with or convicted of murder, treason or
piracy with violence, may apply to a judge
not only for legal aid for the trial and
appeal, but also for exemption from the
means test or payment of a contribution.
Appeals against refusal
of legal aid for appeals to the Court
of Final Appeal are heard by a Review
Committee chaired by the Registrar of
the High Court and comprising a barrister
appointed by the Chairman of the Hong
Kong Bar Association and a solicitor appointed
by the President of the Law Society of
Hong Kong. During the year, 4 162 applications
for criminal legal aid were received and
legal aid was granted to 2 666 applicants.
Total expenditure on criminal cases was
$92.4 million.
Duty Lawyer Service
The Duty Lawyer Service
operates the Legal Advice Scheme, the
Duty Lawyer Scheme, the Legal Representation
Scheme for Children/Juveniles Involved
in Care or Protection Proceedings and
the Tel-Law Scheme. It is subvented by
the Government but independently administered
by the legal profession of Hong Kong.
The Hong Kong Bar Association and the
Law Society of Hong Kong each nominates
four members to sit on the council of
the service, which manages and administers
its operations. Three lay members also
sit on the council.
The Legal Advice Scheme
provides free advice to members of the
public without means testing, at nine
advice centres located in the District
Offices. Members of the public can make
appointments to see volunteer lawyers
through one of the 29 referral agencies
(with over 153 branches), which include
all District Offices, Caritas Services
Centres and the Social Welfare Department.
A total of 6 407 people were given
legal advice during the year by 926 volunteer
lawyers participating in the scheme.
The Duty Lawyer Scheme
provides legal representation to virtually
all defendants who are charged in the
magistracies. To be eligible for legal
representation under the scheme, an applicant's
gross annual income must not exceed $116,880.
However, the Administrator of the Duty
Lawyer Service has a discretion to grant
legal representation to defendants whose
gross annual income exceeds this limit,
if it is considered to be in the interests
of justice to do so. Applicants are also
subject to a merits test. The prime consideration
is whether the defendant is in jeopardy
of losing his liberty or whether a substantial
question of law is involved.
The scheme assigns barristers
and solicitors to advise defendants facing
extradition and to represent persons who
are at risk of criminal prosecution as
a result of giving incriminating evidence
in Coroner's inquests. They are also assigned
to represent hawkers at the hearing of
their appeals to the Municipal Services
Appeals Board.
In 2005, 1 472
barristers and solicitors were on the
duty lawyer panel and 42 577 persons
were represented under the Duty Lawyer
Scheme.
Legal representation
is also offered to children/juveniles
in care or protection proceedings who
are deprived or at risk of being deprived
of their liberty under the Protection
of Children and Juveniles Ordinance. In
2005, 526 children/juveniles were represented
under this Scheme (including 433 new cases
and 93 cases carried forward from 2004).
The Tel-Law Scheme offers
taped legal information to the public
in Cantonese, Putonghua and English. The
tapes cover various aspects of law including
matrimonial, landlord and tenant, criminal,
financial, employment, environmental and
administrative law. They are updated regularly
and new tapes are added when new subjects
are identified as being of interest to
the public. During the year, 78 topics
were available and 36 551 calls were
received.
Legal Aid Services
Council
The Legal Aid Services
Council is an independent statutory body
established to advise the Chief Executive
of the HKSAR on legal aid policies. It
also supervises the provision of legal
aid services by the Legal Aid Department
without interfering with its day-to-day
operation. Chaired by a non-official who
is not in the legal profession, the council
includes lawyers, lay members and the
Director of Legal Aid. During the year,
it continued to conduct reviews of legal
aid issues and of the services provided
by the Legal Aid Department. It also operates
a scheme under which a legal aid applicant
seeking to appeal to the Court of Final
Appeal may apply for a counsel's certificate
for a review of the Director of Legal
Aid's refusal to grant legal aid on the
grounds of merit.
The council also supported
the Legal Aid Department's pilot scheme
on legal aid for mediation of legally
aided matrimonial cases and commissioned
a consultancy to study the ways other
common law jurisdictions control costs
in legal aid practice and monitor the
progress of cases. The council is in the
course of producing a document, 'Legal
Aid in Hong Kong'.
The Official Solicitor
The Director of Legal
Aid was appointed the Official Solicitor
under the Official Solicitor Ordinance
which took effect on August 1, 1991.
The Official Solicitor's
main duties are to act as guardian ad
litem, or next friend, in legal proceedings
for persons under disability of age or
mental capacity, as representative of
deceased persons' estates for the purpose
of legal proceedings, as Official Trustee
and Judicial Trustee, to act as committee
of the estate of mentally incapacitated
persons, to represent any party in care
or protection proceedings and to act on
behalf of a person committed to prison
for contempt who is unable or unwilling
to apply on his own behalf for release.
The Official Solicitor's
caseload for 2004-2005 was 329, an increase
of 13 per cent over the previous financial
year. |