Attorney-at-law and opposition senator Faris Al-Rawi's defence of his dual role in the defamation case against Opposition Leader Dr Keith Rowley differs from the legal opinions of senior attorneys in this matter.Former chief justice Sat Sharma and Martin Daly SC have both said that Mr Al-Rawi was wrong to act as instructing attorney and witness in the case–and their views appear to be in line with the Code of Ethics in the Legal Profession Act Chapter 90:03.
The Act, which regulates the professional practice, etiquette, conduct and discipline of attorneys, states that an attorney-at-law should not appear as a witness for his own client. The practice is for an instructing attorney to go into the witness box only for procedural matters, or the service of a document.If it concerns other matters–as is the case with Mr Al-Rawi who was filed a lengthy witness statement in the case–it would be preferable for the instructing attorney to withdraw as a witness in the case.
This interpretation of the Act is reinforced by the ruling of Justice Vashiest Kokaram who said an "attorney cannot be a witness in the same matter." In his 2012 judgement in the matter of Hosein Construction vs 3G Technologies Justice Kokaram said:
"It is objectionable for the instructing attorney to give evidence while being an attorney on record for this party. It is a breach of rule to defy the code of ethics."
Asked for his opinion recently, Justice Sharma did not mince words.He said that what Al-Rawi did was unethical, and was made worse by his insistence that he was doing nothing illegal. Another former chief justice, who did not go on record, offered a similar view.That body of legal opinion is further bolstered by the analysis offered Mr Daly who, after being shown Mr Al Rawi's 12-page witness statement, said it was completely at odds with the professional independence of an instructing attorney.
His immediate reaction was: "Mr Al-Rawi would be well advised to consider taking himself off the record in the matter." Mr Al-Rawi has now agreed to do that but the issue is still alive. The only way he could have avoided that, as a potential witness in the case, was not to join Dr Rowley's legal team in the first place.
As it is, damage has been done. Dr Rowley and his team say that Mr Al-Rawi's removal was purely in the interest of transparency, but it seems that they cannot shake off the perception that they are responding to political pressure. Both men have been in a very uncomfortable spotlight since Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar raised the issue at the UNC public meeting just over a week ago.The issue has become yet another dark cloud hovering over this defamation lawsuit and all the other issues emanating from the section 34 revelations.