A brief history of legal aid

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By Jordan Briggs on

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Oxford University law graduate Jordan Briggs considers how we got to a point where the civil legal aid system is ‘running on an empty tank’

Last Friday, the Bar Council released a Civil Legal Aid Report. The civil legal aid system, it states, is “running on an empty tank”, sustained only by “the goodwill of the legal profession”. The report details lawyers’ deteriorating physical and mental health, very few incentives for debt-ridden law graduates to join the profession, and a system becoming ever-more inefficient and alienating. It concludes by “pleading for the basics”: that lawyers are “paid and supported to do their jobs”.

How on earth did we get here? By tracing the history of legal aid through five phases, this article will provide the answer. The source of my information, unless otherwise stated, is here.

Phase 1: The early years

We begin in the 1940s. Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949 established the United Kingdom’s first state-funded legal aid system. While the 1949 Act was principally directed toward making divorce more accessible, its scope was almost unlimited. Aid could be sought for nearly any criminal or civil matter (exempting only libel and defamation) and could be paid to anyone of “small or moderate means”. Indeed, 80% of the population were eligible. Administered by the Law Society on behalf of the state, legal aid was free to the destitute but, for those who could pay, contributions were calculated on a sliding scale.

The 1950s and 1960s affected little change. Overall expenditure was low. Most legal aid was spent on family law. Social welfare law barely featured. Criminal legal aid increased a little after 1964, when dispensation to defendants in the magistrates’ court became more common. But, overall, expenditure was modest.

Phase 2: Increasing dispensation

The 1970s changed a great deal. Before this, legal aid expenditure was low largely because, for disadvantaged people, it was difficult to access appropriate lawyers. Deprived areas housed few legal practices, and even fewer lawyers practised in areas most relevant to the needy (e.g. housing and social welfare).

This all changed when, on 17 July 1970, the first Law Centre opened in North Kensington. It began advising pro bono on criminal, housing and other matters. Its influence was such that, by the end of the decade, 26 similar centres had been established. Naturally, as access to justice increased, so too did the dispensation of legal aid. Similarly, dispensation increased after 1973 when, under the new ‘Green Form Scheme’, solicitors began quickly and simply providing legally-aided advice to individuals with meagre incomes. Throughout these changes, eligibility remained relatively stable. In 1979, 79% of the population could claim (only one percentage point lower than in 1947).

In the 1980s, legal aid became a matter of political concern. By 1986, net legal aid expenditure was £342 million per year. There were two notable causes of the rising expenditure, in addition to the greater access to justice. First, solicitors’ social welfare work was increasing (in 1976 there were 27,000 social welfare claims; by 1986, the number was 172,000). Second, tightening of asylum law caused a surge in immigration disputes, resolution of which (predictably) required legally-aided litigation.

The first ever cuts to legal aid came in 1986. By adjusting the formula by which disposable income was calculated, eligibility for civil legal aid was reduced from 79% to 63%. In addition, those who were eligible were now required to contribute more money towards their legal fees. This is important: even those who remained eligible in principle might reasonably choose not to claim, given the unaffordability of the contributions. Administration of aid also moved, from the Law Society to a new ‘Legal Aid Board’.

Phase 3: Frantic cost-cutting efforts

Throughout the 1990s, expenditure continued to rise. By 1995, the annual cost was £1.4 billion. Most expensive was civil legal aid (£675 million), followed by its criminal counterpart (£530 million). A flurry of cost-cutting initiatives followed. We will consider three.

First, eligibility was progressively tightened. Eligibility fell to 53% (1993), then to 47% (1995). Finally, in 1997, Lord Irvine proposed that most civil cases be entirely removed from the scope of legal aid. Their resolution would instead be privatised and subject to ‘Conditional Fee Arrangements’ (i.e. lawyers paid only if their client wins).

Second, also in 1997, Tony Blair’s New Labour government attempted to reform provision of legally-aided service. Delivering on a manifesto promise, an ambitious, joined-up network of providers was envisaged: professional lawyers, the not-for-profit advice sector and local authorities would work together, delivering bespoke services to match the unique needs of each community. Sadly, this so-called ‘Community Legal Service’ was doomed. The project imploded within eight years, owing to a leadership vacuum, absence of accountability and lack of any common interest.

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Third, and most strikingly, the Access to Justice Act 1999 was passed. Aid administration was transferred from the Legal Aid Board to a new ‘Legal Services Commission’. The scope of legal aid was narrowed: assistance was now unavailable for, inter alia, will-making, trust law, most personal injury and business law. A ‘quality mark’ system replaced the Green Form scheme: any firm wishing to provide legally-aided services now had to prove their advice centre was sufficiently effective and efficient. Devastatingly, a hard cap was imposed on civil legal aid expenditure, incentivising ever thriftier dispensation.

Phase 4: Crisis

The new millennium dawned on an emerging crisis. By 2007 only 27% of the population were eligible for legal aid. Consequentially, most private firms had abandoned legally-aided work. To assist, innovative legal-advice structures were trialled — like CLACs (‘Community Legal Advice Centres’ providing bespoke advice in urban areas) and CLANs (Community Legal Advice Networks’ advising larger geographical areas). These, too, failed. Local authorities were unwilling to fund them.

Meanwhile, criminal expenditure soared. By 2006, Crown Court (and higher) cases were consuming almost one third of the total budget. Privatisation ensued. A ‘Criminal Defence Service’ was established, discharging defence work on fixed-price contracts. However, government was divided over how best to tender these contracts. Resentment grew internally, and between the Ministry of Justice and the Legal Services Commission.

Attempting to ameliorate the situation, in 2006, Lord Carter delivered a report on how to sustainably deliver legal aid. Its solutions, affected in 2007, involved introducing fixed-fees for all criminal and civil work. Criminal lawyers’ pay fell strikingly, both in the magistrates’ court (by 16%) and the Crown (by 20%).

And yet, the worst was yet to come. As the decade concluded, the incumbent coalition government devised plans to reduce legal aid expenditure by £350 million. Here begins the darkest period in our history.

Phase 5: Unprecedented constriction

Our sole focus is Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (LASPO). LASPO throttled the scope, eligibility for and payment of legal aid.

As regards scope, LASPO introduced the remarkable presumption that no legal aid would ever be available, unless expressly provided for in statute. Broadly speaking, only seven classes of case are within scope (environmental law; asylum; neonatal clinical negligence; mental health law; child welfare; eviction; most judicial reviews). Everywhere else, legal aid is unavailable (e.g. social welfare law; employment; most private family law; medical negligence; most education law).

As regards eligibility, even if one’s case is within scope, one now must be practically destitute to qualify for legal aid. There are two thresholds. (1) Capital assets: one must have less than £8,000 in capital assets (i.e. money, assets and (some) interests in land, possessed either by you or your partner) and also earn less than £2,657 per month and also possess less than £733 disposable monthly income. While the latter two conditions fall away if the claimant receives a ‘passporting benefit’ (e.g. Income Support; Universal Credit) these benefits, too, have become increasingly difficult to secure. (2) Merits: One’s case must have more than 50% chance of success and the benefits of receiving legal aid must outweigh its financial cost. Failure on any ground disqualifies the claimant for legal aid.

Finally, payment rates themselves have reduced. Civil lawyers sustained fee cuts of 10% across-the-board. ‘Fee enhancements’ (which ordinarily lift fees to reflect, for example, the complexity of a case) are now capped. Criminal lawyers’ wounds are harder to quantify. While, in 2014, criminal solicitors’ and barristers’ fees were markedly cut (by, respectively 8.5% and 6%) the harshest damage has been done to graduated fee arrangements. Reportedly, there has been an 80% reduction in some fees under those schemes, as compared with the pre-2018 position. Expert witnesses, too, have suffered a 20% reduction in remuneration across all civil and criminal work (excepting neural-experts, who have sustained a 10% cut).

Conclusion: ‘An empty tank’

For access to justice to mean anything, individuals must be able to vindicate their legal entitlements. Courts must be open, litigation must be affordable and lawyers must be available.

LASPO could not be further from what was envisaged under the Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949. Restrictions on the scope of and eligibility for legal aid has rendered justice all-but inaccessible for society’s most vulnerable. Even when aid is available in principle, any lawyer who attends to one’s case will be underpaid, overburdened and exhausted.

The publicly-funded legal sector may soon entirely break down. Ambiguity surrounds only what will give first: the sector, its lawyers, or the vulnerable people whom the system was designed to serve.

Jordan Briggs graduated in law from the University of Oxford and began an LLM at the LSE in September. He is an aspiring barrister.

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2 Comments

Saara

And the inevitable outcome of the total inaccessibility of justice for the poor is that society’s most vulnerable members, ie the poor and the disabled, now get abused everywhere from the medical field to organizations claiming to exist to help them. They know that the poor can do nothing as they cannot access justice.

The abuse that I have personally experienced, especially and very markedly so within the NHS, has been downright shocking. I am being denied treatment for a very serious condition, this refusal to provide surgery is leaving me severely disabled. As is well known by now, the complaints process within the NHS is useless to say the least as it always, without exception, results in the complaint either being ignored or, if the complainant continues to pursue the complaint, false claims of a very serious nature being made about the complainant in order to hide the corruption within the NHS. They know that the complainant is unable to defend him/herself, they know that anyone using the NHS is by definition not wealthy so they know that patients can do nothing.

Same with the social system, benefits being the most noteable one. Benefit sanctions are a daily occurrence, leaving the most vulnerable to starve and freeze. Claims for disability routinely get denied.

Social landlords refuse to carry out repairs and if tenants complain, they get abused – I have experienced such shocking abuse such as not only the landlord demanding to be let in on an almost daily basis, but then demanding that I show them the inside of my wardrobes and cupboards and, when refusing to do so, agents from the landlord just ripping doors open! Attempts to stop them resulted in false allegations of me allegedly having been “abusive and aggressive” and “growing drugs in my wardrobes” as well as threats! I have been lied to no end, tricked, psychologically manipulated. Complaints got ignored, then I got confronted with lies that I had “never made a formal complaint”, then when I disproved this claim, more false allegations against me.They know that the poor can do nothing, being unable to access justice, and that all so-called complaints procedures exist in name only.

And this fact that legal aid has been done away with (except for immigration cases) has also led to the most vulnerable members of society not only getting their basic rights denied because they cannot defend themselves, but it has also led to a shocking increase of direct abuse against the poor, the disabled or otherwise vulnerable, from those in power. Whether it’s medical staff in the NHS, benefits workers, so-called “advise lines” (that do anything but provide useful advise) – the abuse that now gets directly meted out against vulnerable people (by direct I mean personal abuse, independent of the refusal to provide basic services/medical treatment) has dramatically increased to the astonishing extent that it is now impossible for a poor person to speak to anyone in power without getting confronted with insults, threats, getting screamed at, getting lied to, getting fobbed off, getting forced to do things they physically cannot do (eg the disabled), getting physically assaulted, getting phones slammed down on them, and – worst of all – getting falsely accused of the very things that they have suffered at the hands of those in power (abuse, aggression and violence)!

Those in power know that the poor can do nothing, do not get believed or taken serious, have nobody to stand up for them and cannot turn anywhere else.

Thousands of suicides occur each year due to this harrowing abuse and I have personally experienced such an astonishing amount of said abuse that it would fill a book – and I constantly come across thousands of reports of a very similar nature (so similar in fact that it feels like déja vu to read them) from many others who are also either poor, disabled, or in any other way vulnerable.

The disadvantaged cannot expect even the most basic of human respect and indeed those in power take a very perverted pleasure in abusing those that cannot defend themselves. I have been abused while lying in an ambulance – and a complaint resulted in the ambulance crew claiming I had allegedly “attacked them and been running around screaming obscenities”. I was severely disabled and unable to walk or even just sit up! A man reported his 99 year old grandmother with a broken back having been forced to sit in a chair in hospital, when she screamed in pain, nurses claimed she had “sworn at them and been aggressive and abusive” and told the man to “make sure this would not happen again “!

If anyone thinks, well there is the Ombudsman (eg Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman, Housing Ombudsman etc) – as pointed out above, all such organizations exist in name only. When contacting the Ombudsman I also encountered shocking abuse and a total refusal to take my cases on, and I hear the same from everybody else who has had dealings with them.

The same goes for the Citizens Advise Bureau, who are staffed by extremely unwilling – and incompetent – abusive rejects that take a perverted pleasure in abusing those desperately seeking help. The CAB is in fact now being called the “poor man’s solicitor” – but try asking them for help, you will soon see that they are nothing but a front for abuse against those that cannot defend themselves. I have personally observed CAB workers keeping the phones off the hook all day so that nobody can get through and spend the day chatting to each other while claiming they are “so busy and inundated with calls”. On the rare occasion that one gets through, one gets forced to declare extremely private details, only to then get fobbed off and abused.

The reason for this shocking amount of abuse towards those that cannot defend themselves is simply due to the fact that the abusers know that the vulnerable cannot defend themselves, having no access to justice now due to the removal of legal aid for all cases except immigration. They know there is absolutely nothing that a poor person can do, being totally unable to access legal advise or bring a court case. They know that all so-called “advise lines” are scams themselves. They know that eventually even the strongest of people will crack and jump off the nearest bridge or in front of a train, unable to stand the constant and relentless abuse and inability to defend themselves.

One wonders whether legal aid was done away with for just this purpose!

Anonymous

HI Saara
I am really sorry to hear of your experiences and I agree that the system is hopeless and fails everyone. Unfortunately immigration cases are also out of scope – only asylum, separated child and trafficking cases are automatically in scope of legal aid. Although there is a system for asking for ‘Exceptional Case Funding’ for any particular case, the pay is so bad that there is very little capacity in the immigration advice sector for taking such cases on.
Many people want advice on claims against state institutions in some form or other (though housing provision is largely privatised now). It has repeatedly been pointed out that better quality legislation and more professional administration of all systems would reduce legal aid costs dramatically.

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