Registrar

Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Adequate Facilities - 07.05.2009 KARADŽIĆ Radovan
(IT-95-5/18-AR73.2)

10. The Appeals Chamber recalls that it is well established that in undertaking a first judicial review of an administrative decision, the Trial Chamber, Appeals Chamber or President, as the case may be, must apply the standard set out in the Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision.[1] The Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision first considered the nature of a judicial review of an administrative decision:

A judicial review of such an administrative decision is not a rehearing. Nor is it an appeal, or in any way similar to the review which a Chamber may undertake of its own judgment in accordance with Rule 119 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence. A judicial review of an administrative decision made by the Registrar in relation to legal aid is concerned initially with the propriety of the procedure by which [the] Registrar reached the particular decision and the manner in which he reached it.[2]

With this approach in mind, the Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision then set out that an administrative decision by the Registrar will be quashed if the decision-maker:

(a) failed to comply with the legal requirements of the Directive, or

(b) failed to observe any basic rules of natural justice or to act with procedural fairness towards the person affected by the decision, or

(c) took into account irrelevant material or failed to take into account relevant material, or

(d) reached a conclusion which no sensible person who has properly applied his mind to the issue could have reached (the “unreasonableness” test).[3]

The Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision also specified that “[t]hese issues may in the particular case involve, at least in part, a consideration of the sufficiency of the material before the Registrar, but (in the absence of established unreasonableness) there can be no interference with the margin of appreciation of the facts or merits of that case to which the maker of such an administrative decision is entitled”.[4] Finally, in the review, the party contesting the administrative decision bears the onus of persuasion and must show that (a) an error of the nature described has occurred, and (b) that such error has significantly affected the impugned decision to his detriment.[5]

 

[1] See Prosecutor v. Veselin [ljivančanin, Case No. IT-95-13/l-PT, Decision on Assignment of Defence Counsel, 20 August 2003, para. 22; Prosecutor v. Momčilo Krajšnik, Case No. IT-00-39-PT, Decision on the Defence’s Motion for an Order Setting Aside the Registrar’s Decision Declaring Momčilo Krajšnik Partially Indigent for Legal Aid Purposes, 20 January 2004, para. 16; Prosecutor v. Mile Mrkšić, Case No. IT-95-13/1-PT, Decision on Defence Request for Review of the Registrar’s Decision on Partial Indigence of Mile Mrkšić, 9 March 2004, p. 3; Prosecutor v. Mile Mrkšić, Miroslav Radić and Veselin [ljivančanin, Case No. IT-95-13/1-PT, Decision on Appointment of Co-Counsel for Mrkšić, 7 October 2005, para. 9.

[2] Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision [Prosecutor v. Miroslav Kvočka, Mlado Radić, Zoran Zigić and Dragoljub Prcać, Case No. IT-98-30-1/A, Decision on Review of Registrar’s Decision, 7 February 2003], para. 13.

[3] Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision, para. 13.

[4] Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision, para. 13. See also Prosecutor v. Ferdinand Nahimana, Jean-Bosco Barayagwiza and Hassan Ngeze, Case No. ICTR-99-52-A, Decision on Appellant Jean-Bosco Barayagwiza’s Motion Contesting the Decision of the President Refusing to Review and Reverse the Decision of the Registrar Relating to the Withdrawal of Co-Counsel, 23 November 2006 (“Nahimana et al. Appeal Decision”), para. 9.

[5] Kvočka et al. Appeal Decision, para. 14. See also Nahimana et al. Appeal Decision, para. 9; Prosecutor v. Vidoje Blagojević and Dragan Jokić, Case No. IT-02-60-T, Decision on Independent Counsel for Vidoje Blagojević’s Motion to Instruct the Registrar to Appoint New Lead and Co-Counsel, 3 July 2003 (“Blagojević Trial Decision”), para. 116.

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Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Indigence - 24.06.2016 KARADŽIĆ Radovan
(MICT-13-55-A)

Page 3:

RECALLING that judicial review of an administrative decision made by the Registrar in relation to legal aid is concerned initially with the propriety of the procedure by which the decision was made and that the decision may be quashed if the Registrar: (i) has failed to comply with the relevant legal requirements; (ii) failed to observe any basic rules of natural justice or to act with procedural fairness towards the person affected by the decision; (iii) took into account irrelevant material or failed to take into account relevant material; or (iv) reached a conclusion which no sensible person who has properly applied his mind to the issue could have reached;[1]

RECALLING FURTHER that the party contesting the administrative decision bears the onus to show an error in the decision and that the error has significantly affected the decision to his detriment;[2]

[1] See The Prosecutor v. Pauline Nyiramasuhuko et al., Case No. ICTR-98-42-A, Decision on Ntahobali’s Request for Review of Registrar’s Decisions, 21 February 2014 (confidential and ex parte), public redacted version issued on 23 May 2016 (“Nyiramasuhuko et al. Decision”), para. 16; Karadžić ICTY Appeals Chamber Decision of 25 July 2014 [Prosecutor v. Radovan Karadžić, Case No. IT-95-5-5/18-AR73.13, Decision on Appeal from Decision on Indigence, 25 July 2014 (confidential and ex parte), public redacted version issued on 2 December 2014], para. 4; Prosecutor v. Jadranko Prlić et al., Public Redacted Version of the 25 July 2013 Decision on Slobodan Praljka’s Motion for Review of the Registrar’s Decision on Means, 28 August 2013 (“Prlić et al. Decision”), paras. 6, 30; Prosecutor v. Zdravko Tolimir, Case No. IT-05-88/2-AR73.2, Decision on Zdravko Tolimir’s Appeal Against the Decision of Trial Chamber II on the Registrar’s Decision Concerning Legal Aid, 12 November 2009 (confidential and ex parte), public redacted version filed on 28 February 2013 (“Tolimir Decision”), para. 8; Prosecutor v. Miroslav Kvočka et al., Case No. IT-98-30/1-A, Decision on Review of Registrar’s Decision to Withdraw Legal Aid from Zoran Žigić, 7 February 2003 (“Kvočka et al. Decision”), para. 13.

[2] Tolimir Decision, para. 9 and references cited therein.

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Other instruments MICT Directive on the Assignment of Defence Counsel