The title of senior counsel or state counsel (post-nominal letters: SC) is given to a senior lawyer in some countries that were formerly part of the British Empire. "Senior Counsel" is used in current or former Commonwealth countries or jurisdictions that have chosen to change the title "King's Counsel" to a name without monarchical connotations, usually related to the British monarch that is no longer head of state, such that reference to the King is no longer appropriate. Examples of jurisdictions that have made the change because of the latter reason include Mauritius, Zambia, India (senior advocate), Hong Kong, Ireland, South Africa, Kenya, Malawi, Singapore, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago. Jurisdictions that have retained the monarch as head of state, but have nonetheless opted for the new title include some states and territories of Australia, as well as Belize.[1]
Just as a junior counsel is "called to the [Outer] Bar", a Senior Counsel is, in some jurisdictions, said to be "called to the Inner Bar". Senior Counsel may informally style themselves as silks, like their British counterparts. This is the case in Ireland, Australia, Hong Kong, and South Africa.
Dress
In Hong Kong, every Senior Counsel must wear a black robe and silk gown together with a wig when appearing in open court.[2] In Ireland, Senior Counsel wear a silk gown which differs from that of a Junior Counsel; the wig is optional.
Australia
The rank of Senior Counsel has also been introduced in most states and territories of Australia, even though the King remains head of state. Between 1993 and 2008 all Australian jurisdictions except the Northern Territory replaced the title of Queen's Counsel with that of Senior Counsel. However, in 2013 Queensland restored the rank of Queen's Counsel and there was talk of other Australian states following suit.[3] On 3 February 2014, the Victorian Attorney-General announced that the rank of Queen's Counsel would shortly be reinstated in the State of Victoria, with existing and future Senior Counsel having the option to apply to be issued with letters patent appointing them as Queen's Counsel;[4] some 89% of barristers entitled to be called Senior Counsel were reported to have applied for letters patent to become Queen's Counsel.[5]
On 18 February 2019, the South Australian Government restored the rank of Queen's Counsel.[6]
The formal difference appears to be that KCs receive a warrant signed by the relevant state governor, who is the formal viceregal representative of the sovereign in the Australian states, whereas SCs receive a certificate issued by the relevant bar association or bureaucracy such as by the judicature of the state supreme court as the case may be.[citation needed]
The title of Senior Counsel has replaced that of Queen's Counsel in Barbados, which became a republic on 30 November 2021.
Those who were appointed as Q.C. are now free to change their postnominal letters to K.C., due to the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the accession of King Charles III to the British throne. They are not required to become S.C.s. For example, Dame Sandra Mason, who was appointed as Q.C. is now free to change to K.C., even though she is the first President of Barbados.
All new appointments will be as S.C. only.
Belize
Senior Counsel is appointed in Belize, even though King Charles III is King of Belize.
King's Counsel from England or other senior counsel from other jurisdictions is not accorded any precedence if they are admitted generally in Hong Kong. However, visiting King's Counsel from another jurisdiction who have been admitted for a specific case are entitled to use the title, and to be accorded the status, of Senior Counsel for the purposes of those proceedings.[9]
Bangladesh
India
A member of the bar could be designated as a Senior Advocate upon a selection process that employs various criteria for designation. The said designation happens by the Supreme Court directly, or through the concerned state High Court. In August 2018 the Supreme Court issued guidelines to regulate the conferment of designation of Senior Advocate.[10] Senior advocates' gowns have a flap at the back to distinguish them from junior counsels.
The title "K.C." continued to be used by many Senior Counsel, both those created before July 1924 and those after.[13] Sir John L. Esmonde complained that wartime censors had changed "K.C." to "S.C." in a press release about a 1943 election candidate; they regarded "K.C." as pro-British and thus violating Irish neutrality.[23] In 1949, shortly before the coming into force of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948, which created the Republic of Ireland and broke the final link with the British Crown, Frank Aiken asked John A. Costello during Taoiseach's questions "whether, in view of the fact that certain members of the Inner Bar who received their patents as senior counsel continue to describe themselves as king's counsel, he will introduce a bill entitled an act to declare that the description of a senior counsel shall be senior counsel"; Costello said he had "no intention of wasting public time and money" on the idea.[24] As late as the 1960s, R.G.L. Leonard (made KC before 1922) was described in the official Irish law reports as "Queen's Counsel",[25] reflecting the British change from King to Queen in 1952.
The Legal Services Regulation Act 2015 provides for the Legal Services Regulatory Authority (LSRA) to establish an Advisory Committee on the grant of Patents of Precedence. The committee comprises the Chief Justice, the Presidents of the Court of Appeal and High Court, the Attorney General, heads of the Bar Council and Law Society of Ireland, and a lay member appointed by the Minister for Justice. The relevant part of the 2015 act was commenced in 2019. It allows the bestowal of the title "Senior Counsel" on solicitors. The LSRA advisory committee replaces an earlier advisory committee which had no statutory basis, and no solicitor or lay member.[22] The 2015 Act also specifies the criteria for both solicitors and barristers:[26]
(a) has, in his or her practice as a legal practitioner, displayed—
(i) a degree of competence and a degree of probity appropriate to and consistent with the grant to him or her of a Patent,
(ii) professional independence, and
(iii) one or more of the following:
(I) a proven capacity for excellence in the practice of advocacy;
(II) a proven capacity for excellence in the practice of specialist litigation; or
(III) specialist knowledge of an area of law;
(b) is suitable on grounds of character and temperament;
(c) is in possession of a tax clearance certificate that is in force;
(d) is otherwise suitable to be granted a Patent.
It is still the government which grants the patent of privilege and the Chief Justice of Ireland who calls patentees to the Inner Bar.[22] As of 2020[update], there were about 325 SCs among about 2,300 barristers registered with the Bar Council of Ireland.[27] On 1 September 2020 the cabinet approved the first batch of 37 recommendations of the LSRA advisory committee. These were appointed senior counsel the following day, including the first 17 (out of 60 applicants) solicitors.[28]
In Northern Ireland, the designation King's Counsel (KC) or Queen's Counsel (QC) has continued since 1921, as in the rest of the United Kingdom. In 1983 Richard Ferguson, former head of the Northern Ireland bar, was called to the Inner Bar in Dublin, becoming the first to be simultaneously QC and SC.[29] Conversely, the first SC to become QC was Paddy MacEntee in 1985.[29]
New Zealand
The title "Senior Counsel" was briefly established in New Zealand from 2007 until 2009. It was abolished by the following government in favour of restoring the title of Queen's Counsel on the basis of the respect felt accorded to those appointed Queen's Counsel. Those appointed as Senior Counsel were given the option of becoming Queen's Counsel or remaining as Senior Counsel.
Singapore
"Senior Counsel" is used in the law of Singapore.[30] There is no independent bar in Singapore and senior counsel practice as members of law firms. Prior to independence, select members were given the title of King's Counsel or Queen's Counsel.
South Africa
"Senior Counsel" (in AfrikaansSenior Advokaat) replaced QC in South Africa after the Union became a republic on 31 May 1961, with appointments being made by the state president until 1994, when the office was succeeded by that of president. A judge in the High Court in the province of Gauteng ruled that under the 1993 constitution, the president did not have the power to grant Senior Counsel status.[31] This judgment has been overturned by the Supreme Court of Appeal and also the Constitutional Court. See Advocate § South Africa.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, the position of senior counsel (lowercase) is used to denote an experienced solicitor (who need not be an advocate), who is not on the path to partnership. This position is therefore analogous to the American title of counsel and is not directly comparable to the position of King's Counsel/Senior Counsel, which is held by barristers.
^
The official Irish equivalent of "senior counsel" is abhcóide sinsir since 1949,[14][15] though the previous standard abhcóide sinsearach remains common.[15][16][17] There is no Irish abbreviation equivalent to "SC".[17]
^ abThis view was subsequently rejected by the Supreme Court of Ireland in 1972 and 1988 rulings that the 1922 constitution had abolished the royal prerogative; these decisions, in turn, have been criticised by jurists.[18]
de Bhaldraithe, Tomás, ed. (1959). "counsel". English–Irish Dictionary. Retrieved 8 April 2020 – via teanglann.ie.
^ ab"Senior Counsel". téarma.ie: The National Terminology Database for Irish. Foras na Gaeilge. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
^"Courts of Justice Act 1936 Part VI". Acts of the Oireachtas (in Irish and English). Oireachtas. s. 67(5). Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. [English] of whom one shall be a member of the Senior Bar and the other shall be a member of the Junior Bar / [Irish] beidh duine den bheirt sin ina Abhcóide Sinsearach agus an duine eile ina Abhcóide Sóisearach
^ ab"Abhcóidí". Citizens Information (in Irish). Citizens Information Board. 8 August 2023. Retrieved 16 April 2024. Féadfaidh Abhcóide Sinsearach na litreacha SC a bheith i ndiaidh a n-ainm.
^Executive Powers (Consequential Provisions) Act 1937, s. 2: Transfer of certain powers, etc., to the Executive Council (No. 20 of 1937, s. 2). Enacted on 8 June 1937. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 16 April 2020.
^"Current Events; Patents of Precedence". The Irish Jurist. V (1): 1. 1939. JSTOR44506045.
^"About Us". Law Library. Bar Council of Ireland. Retrieved 1 July 2020. The Bar of Ireland ... has a current membership of approximately 2,300 practising barristers ... There is approximately 325 senior counsel in Ireland