The Lawless Period
Anguilla was first settled by runaway English
indentured servants from Barbados and small farmers from St Kitts escaping the
heavy tobacco taxes, imposed there to build the forts for defence against the
French. An English historian, writing in
1707, described the settlers of Anguilla this way,[1]
Their business . . . was to plant corn,
and breed tame cattle,[2]
for which purpose they brought stock with them.
They were poor and continue so to this day, being perhaps the laziest
creatures in the world. Some people have
gone from Barbados, and the other English Charibbee Islands, thither; and there they live like the first race of
men, without government or religion, having no minister nor governor, no magistrates,
no law, and no property worth keeping.
If a French author is to be believed, . . . ’The island is not thought
worth the trouble of defending or cultivating it’.
What was patently unfair about this description
of the early Anguillians was the accusation that the people were lazy. From the earliest days, to be lazy in
Anguilla was to die from starvation and want.
Regular periods of drought; frequent hurricanes; a thin, poor and
unproductive soil; and the devastations brought by the wars between the English
and the French combined to impoverish the people. Only the keeping of small stock such as
goats, and the growing of such tough crops as maize, sweet potatoes, and pigeon
peas could ensure the survival of the people.
The risky enterprises of privateering during times of war, and the
continuous smuggling among neighbouring islands, brought into the island a
limited amount of coin. No one could
prosper, far less grow rich, in such adverse conditions.
In 1666, some sixteen years after
settlement, the leading members of the isolated, ignored and impoverished
Anguillian settlers formed themselves into a self-appointed Council and elected
their own deputy governor.[3] The power this Council exercised was not
sanctioned by any local or regional statute or other law. In every other Leeward Island, Royal Patents
were sent out from London for the establishment of a deputy governor and an
island Council. In Anguilla by contrast,
unique in the West Indies, for nearly 175 years after the island’s settlement
in 1650, there was no lawfully constituted Council to govern the affairs of
Anguilla. The Anguilla Council was
self-appointed and was merely tolerated by the colonial authorities in Antigua. The Governor-in-Chief invariably confirmed
the local appointee, and never interfered in the affairs of the Anguilla Council,
as he frequently did in the more prosperous and consequential colonies of Antigua,
St Kitts, Nevis, and Montserrat. He touched
on Anguillian affairs only when there was an appeal from a decision of the Anguilla
Council, which he would pass on to the Secretary of State in London for a
ruling, since he exercised very limited authority over the Anguilla Council. The result was that, throughout this early
period, the common Anguillian man and woman endured the unregulated government
of their Council without the benefit of any real supervision by the colonial
authorities.
In consequence, the official view for its
first 175 years of the government of Anguilla, if colonial officials ever took
the time to think of the government of Anguilla, was that the people were not governed
by law. In 1724, the Governor-in-Chief
wrote[4]
of the deputy governor of Anguilla, “If
his cudgel happens to be one whit less than a sturdy subject's, then good
night, Governor.” Indeed, it was
only in 1819 that the Governor-in-Chief in Antigua visited Anguilla and issued[5]
formal patents to the deputy governor and the members of his Council. This was the first and last time that
Anguilla had a legally constituted government, until the British appointed an
Anguilla Council under the Anguilla Administration Order of 1971.[6]
Not only was there no constitution or law
under which a Council could be appointed in Anguilla. There was no legislature in Anguilla or
elsewhere to enact statutes under which the people could be governed. Under the colonial regime of the day, no law
enacted in any other colony could be extended to Anguilla. The truth is that Anguilla was too poor, and
of no consequence to the colonial authorities, since it contributed nothing to
the Crown, to merit any expenditure of time or money on its administration. The result was that up until the year 1825,
the Anguilla Council, in effect, acted as the executive, legislative and
judicial branches of the government of Anguilla, without any formal
constitutional or statutory authority.[7]
On his one and only visit to the island
in 1819, referred to earlier, newly installed Governor-in-Chief, Charles Maxwell, pointed out to deputy
governor William Richardson and his
Council the disadvantage of their existing without any form of
legislature. As the minute of his
statement to them records, he said that,
It is much to be regretted as a British
Colony, that this island should have been so long, and is, without a
Legislative Body, constitutionally established, for the purpose of enacting
good and wholesome laws for the good Government thereof; that by reason of which the Registration of
slaves, so urgently required by His Majesty’s Government, could not be
effectually carried into execution, for the want of an Act of the island to
coerce the enforcement of the same, the neglect of which may by its
consequence, affect the dearest interest of the Colony in its most vital part,
if delayed much longer. The only remedy
for obviating this defect would be for the inhabitants to Petition His Royal
Highness, the Prince Regent, praying that he would be graciously pleased to
grant them a Charter of Constitutions which, when prepared and sent to me, I
shall transmit the same to His Royal Highness with a recommendation of it from myself.
However, the islanders did not succeed in
submitting a draft Constitution for Anguilla, and attempts to provide a
legislature for Anguilla were overtaken by certain events occurring in 1825. The result was that none of the Leeward
Islands laws passed for the registration of slaves and the amelioration of
slavery were enacted for the benefit of the people of Anguilla.
The 1825 Absorption
into St Kitts
In the year 1825, prolonged drought;
regular hurricanes; and the long wars with the USA and France, which ended only
in 1815, combined to bring the hitherto self-perpetuating Anguillian Council to
its knees. The British blockade of trade
with the enemy during the preceding 30 years devastated the vital Anguillian privateering
and smuggling industries, while the alternating periods of droughts and
hurricanes destroyed the homes, small-stock and crops of the islanders. The law suits in the island’s unofficial
courts after 1780, traces of which have survived in the archives, demonstrate
in a practical way just how the economy had collapsed. For one thing, the sums being sued for
declined from hundreds of pounds before the American Revolution of 1776 to just
a few shillings and pence in the fifty years before Anguilla was joined to St
Kitts.
Their economy having collapsed, the
Anguillians submitted to pressure from London to be governed by St Kitts. London’s main interest, as is evidenced in
the correspondence of the Secretary of State with the Governor-in-Chief in Antigua
in the early part of the 19th Century, was to have some form of law-making
power in Anguilla that would apply law, particularly the slavery amelioration
laws and the coming Abolition of Slavery Act, to the Anguillians.[8]
In that year, 1825, the St Kitts Legislative
Assembly under pressure from London passed the Anguilla Act to provide
for the Anguillians to elect one member to attend the St Kitts Legislative Assembly.[9] From that year, laws made in St Kitts applied
to Anguilla. In this way, the Slavery
Abolition Act of St Kitts in the year 1834 was effective to bring an end to
slavery in Anguilla. From 1825 Anguilla also
began to share the judiciary of St Kitts.
The Chief Justice would visit Anguilla at intervals to conduct the civil
and criminal court sitting. All previous
trials between 1650 and 1825 had been completely unauthorised by any enactment
or other formal law or legal system.
The First Courthouse
The first official Courthouse on Anguilla
appears to have been deputy governor Benjamin
Gumbs’ house[10]
on the top of Crocus Hill, turned over to public use after his death. There is no surviving record of how this came
to be. The little complex of out-buildings
around the main house served as the Customs House, Post Office and Police
Station. It was the administrative
centre of the island, approached from South Hill and North Hill villages and
the west via the public footpaths from North Hill, down into Katouche Valley
and up the public path where the road leading to the Masara Resort now
runs. It was ideally located, as the
port of entry of Crocus Bay was at the foot of the hill to the west, while the
main town of The Valley lay immediately to the east. When the Chief Justice visited Anguilla from
St Kitts, the main building of the complex served to house the visiting court. For at least the first 50 years after 1825,
the visiting Chief Justices complain to the Secretary of State that, as there
was no guest-house in Anguilla, they were forced to spend their nights on board
ship in the harbour. There was no point
in his complaining to the authorities in St Kitts as the St Kitts Council had
made it clear to the Secretary of State from the start that they would only
accept responsibility for making laws for Anguilla on condition that not one
penny for the island’s support was required from St Kitts.
After 1825, presiding at the sitting of
the Court of Kings Bench to hear civil and criminal cases in Anguilla was Robert Williams Pickwood, CJ of St
Kitts and Anguilla. Sitting with him on
the bench at the Courthouse were two Assistant Justices, who acted as assessors
of the facts.[11] A minute of their proceedings for several
years is preserved in the records of the court held in the Archives in
Basseterre, St Kitts. Additionally, because
Justice Pickwood was unusually liberal for his day, the detailed proceedings of
some of his Anguilla trials have been preserved in the British National
Archives. This happened because the
planters of St Kitts and Anguilla, who conspired to have him sanctioned by the
Secretary of State and suspended as Chief Justice, prepared transcripts of some
of those trials, together with affidavits commenting on them, and sent them to
London as evidence of his unlawfully siding with the slaves against their
owners. These transcripts, and the
complaints by the Anguillian planters against Justice Pickwood, provide
revealing glimpses into social life in Anguilla in the first half of the 19th
Century.
One was the 9 October 1832 trial of the
island doctor and elected representative to the St Kitts-Anguilla Legislative
Assembly for Anguilla, the Hon Benjamin
Gumbs-Hodge, for the offence of assaulting the slave woman Charlotte and marooning her on Dog
Island. The indictment found by the
Grand Jury was to the effect that,[12]
Benjamin Gumbs Hodge of the Road Division
on the island aforesaid, Practitioner in Medicine, on the first day of March in
the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty six with force and
arms at the Road Division aforesaid in the island aforesaid, in and upon one
Charlotte, a slave, in the peace of God and of our Lord the King then and there
being did make an assault on her the said Charlotte did then and there beat,
bruise and ill-treat and did then and there unlawfully, injuriously and against
the will of the said Charlotte and without any legal warrant or authority in
that behalf, seize, take and drag and forcibly carry the said Charlotte from
the Road Division aforesaid in the island aforesaid across the sea to a certain
place called Dog Island and her, the said Charlotte, in the said place called
Dog Island did unlawfully and injuriously keep and detain against the will of
the said Charlotte for a long space of time to wit, for the space of three
weeks then next following, and other injuries to the said Charlotte then and
there did to the damage of the said Charlotte and against the peace of our Lord
the King.
The court records indicate that the
witnesses bound over to give evidence were Charlotte
Filipasso, Richard Roberts, and
the Hon RW Pickwood himself. Prosecuting was Charles Thompson, Attorney-General of St Kitts and Anguilla. Mr
Woodcock, a barrister of St Kitts appeared for the defence.
As the Accused was about to be arraigned,
Mr Woodcock moved that he objected
to the Chief Justice both sitting in judgment at the trial and being a witness
at the trial. The minute records that
the Chief Justice explained that the law of criminal procedure at that time was
that a trial that was not presided over by the Chief Justice was void. Besides, he would not permit an accused
person to select who he thought should be or not be his judge, as this would
betray the important trust confided in the bench. Also, he explained, the two Assistant
Justices or assessors who sat with him had explained that they were completely
incapable of conducting a criminal trial without his assistance, and if he
recused himself they must do the same.
Mr Woodcock protested that he had
recently seen a case in ‘Fortescue’s Reports’ which was clear authority for the
proposition that a judge could not also be a witness in the case he was
trying. However, the Chief Justice was
adamant that the procedure he proposed to follow was perfectly in order, and he
dismissed the motion.
The accused was accordingly arraigned and
the jury of Anguillian planters and dignitaries duly sworn to hear the evidence. The witnesses proceeded to testify and be
cross-examined, after which the jurors of Anguillian planters and merchants not
surprisingly returned a verdict of not guilty.
The various affidavits sworn in the
subsequent complaints to the Secretary of State against Chief Justice Pickering
requesting his removal from the position of Chief Justice flesh out the details
of this extraordinary incident. It
appears, reading between the lines, that in 1826 the Chief Justice was sailing his
sloop from his estate on the north-west coast of St Kitts to hold one of the
first Assizes in Anguilla under the new regime.
To arrive at the port of Road Bay, he had to sail past the small
Anguillian Cay known as Dog Island.
The Honourable Peter Lake was then the owner of the Road Plantation and one of the
leading citizens of Anguilla. He appears
to have been smitten by the beauty of his slave Charlotte. He brazenly
conducted an affair with her that soon came to the knowledge of his wife. Mrs
Lake, with the cunning of a woman scorned, hit upon a device to get rid of Charlotte. She secretly cut up her own clothes and linen
and torched them in her yard in the absence of her husband, falsely placing the
blame on Charlotte. At Charlotte’s subsequent trial for malicious
damage, Mrs Lake gave false evidence to the Magistrates that she had observed Charlotte
committing the act.
Charlotte’s protestations of innocence
could not prevail against her white accuser.
She was convicted of the arson, and sentenced to be marooned on Dog
Island for a month, as punishment. The
Magistrates had given Dr Benjamin
Gumbs-Hodge responsibility for carrying out the sentence. Now, Dog Island was, and is, a tiny, barren
Cay, with just a shed and a shallow well on it for the use of the shepherds
placed there to keep an eye on the goats and other small stock that it was home
to. And then, as now, marooning was and
always has been an illegal punishment, not sanctioned in any legal text.
As Chief Justice Pickering sailed past
Dog Island on his way to Road Bay, whom should he spy but the beautiful Charlotte,
illegally marooned on the Cay in punishment.
On his arrival in Crocus Bay, accompanied by Charlotte, he had the
Attorney-General bring charges against the man who had forcibly placed her on
Dog Island.
The records of the subsequent impeachment
proceedings against the Chief Justice preserved in the Public Records Office at
Kew Gardens reveal what happened next. The
Chief Justice could find no free Anguillian who would testify at the
trial. Blazing with fury, he did what no
judge, hopefully, would do today. He took
off his wig from his head, slipped out of his judicial gown, stepped down from
the bench upon which he sat with the two Assistant Justices, and entered into
the witness box to testify. When he had
finished giving his eye-witness evidence, he put back on his wig and gown and
resumed his seat. As we know, the jury
found in favour of their colleague and friend and dismissed the case. But, Anguilla thereby became the first colony
in the British Empire that I am aware of where the Chief Justice acted not only
as judge but also as principal witness in the prosecution of an offender at the
Assizes.
After 1825, Anguilla’s legal and judicial
system evolved in tandem with that of St Kitts, and the colony was now
officially titled “St Christopher and Anguilla.” In 1882, when the Council and Assembly of
Nevis were dissolved, and Nevis joined to create a three-island colony, it was,
from then until 1967, officially known as the “Colony of St Christopher and
Nevis”. The name of Anguilla was
dropped. So, for example, Anguillian car
licence plates prior to the Anguilla Revolution of 1967 began with the prefix
“CN”, standing for St Christopher and Nevis.
After the Revolution, one of the first actions of Ronald Webster’s Peacekeeping Committee was to replace the licence
plate letters “CN” with the letter “A” for Anguilla.
The old Courthouse with its out-buildings
stood from the mid-1700s, when it was first built, until 1955, when Hurricane Alice
hit the island. The hurricane completely
destroyed the wooden structure, leaving only the stone foundations
remaining. The masonry basement,
including the cellar which served as the prison cell while court was in
session, can still be seen there. The
ruins are overshadowed by two large, ugly, black Rubbermaid water storage tanks
and two equally large and ugly radio aerials raised in the Courthouse
yard. Goats, mimosa trees and strangler
fig compete to see which can be first to totally destroy the abandoned remains.
With the passing of the Slavery
Abolition Act of 1834, Special Magistrates appointed by St Kitts were
stationed in Anguilla to oversee the Apprenticeship Period, 1834-1838. After 1838, and until 1882, the Magistrates of
Anguilla were usually professional lawyers who were appointed as Stipendiary
Magistrates, meaning they got paid. The
first on record was Thomas Egar (who
served 1835-1841).[13] He was followed by other qualified lawyers
who doubled as the St Kitts-appointed local administrator for Anguilla. The most famous and long-lasting was Robert William M Pickwood (1842-1862), Chief
Justice Pickwood’s son. He was so
dedicated to Anguilla and so well-respected that, when he died in St Martin,
the funeral that the French gave him was described in the official
correspondence as almost a state funeral.
Sometimes, disreputable St Kitts civil
servants were dispatched to Anguilla to serve as Magistrate and President of
the Vestry, mainly it seems, to get them out of the way of the St Kitts administration. One such was George Alsbury (1863-1864), the roguish clerk to the Basseterre
Magistrates Court and public printer of Basseterre. He was first appointed as the customs officer
of Anguilla and then later as Magistrate.[14] We do not know for certain what his alleged
offences were, but as he was a customs officer, it is not difficult to guess.
From 1882, the Magistrate of Anguilla was
replaced by an administrator from St Kitts, called the Warden, whose duties
included sitting as Magistrate. These St
Kitts administrators were often the physician, primarily assigned to look after
the health of the islanders. Vincent F Byron, late father of the
President of the CCJ, the Rt Hon Sir
Dennis Byron, was the last Warden sent to Anguilla, and he left the island
with the outbreak of the 1967 Revolution.
Wallace Rey’s
Courthouse
It was only in the year 1964, under Mr
Byron’s administration, that the St Kitts government replaced the old,
destroyed Courthouse, lost fourteen years previously. Local Anguillian builder, Wallace Rey, was appointed to head
Anguilla’s public works after he retired from the US Air Force Base in Antigua
where he had found employment at the start of World War II. Wallace Rey designed and built the new court
building. Its magnificent,
reinforced-concrete transverse arches that reach up from the foundations and go
up and over the roof to descend on the other side made it one of the most
imposing structures at the time on the island.
Its design reflects that of St Mary’s Anglican Church, which he also designed
and built around the same time.
In the intervening years 1950-1964, after
Hurricane Alice destroyed Governor Benjamin Gumbs’ old building, temporary
quarters in a private home now replaced with a modern concrete structure
occupied by NAGICO across from the High School, served as the courthouse. Wallace
Rey’s 1964 building functioned at first only as the courthouse. Later, it was to become the home of the
Anguilla House of Assembly, the Court of Appeal, the High Court, the
Magistrates Court, and the Juvenile Court.
These all shared the one-room premises without difficulty since when the
Court of Appeal visited no other court sat.
When the High Court sat, there was no Magistrate’s Court, as the Magistrate
doubled as Registrar of the Supreme Court.
This was the system in place which I met when I was appointed Magistrate
of Anguilla in August 1976. At that time
and for the next several years, the only lawyers in the public service were the
Attorney-General and the Magistrate. As
for Wallace Rey’s building in which I served as Magistrate and Registrar, it is
no longer a court house. It presently
serves as the offices of the Statistics Department.
The short-lived West Indies Federation
broke up in 1961 when Jamaica chose to go into independence rather than stay tied
to the smaller islands. Trinidad and
Barbados left shortly after, and the Federation was dissolved. By the year 1967, the individual colonies of
the Leeward and Windward Islands were themselves headed to independence. They first entered into the intermediate status of ‘Associated Statehoodship’ with Great
Britain. The old, separate Supreme
Courts of the Leeward Islands and that of the Windward Islands, re-established
after the collapse of the Federation in 1961, were merged into the new ‘West
Indies Associated States Supreme Court’.
The West Indies Associated
States Supreme Court was established by the Courts Order of 1967. This court had a short life-span in
Anguilla. Almost immediately, Anguilla
was in rebellion against its continued enforced union with St Kitts and
Nevis. The Anguillians refused to be made
ready for independence, tied permanently to St Kitts and Nevis. The Anguilla Revolution of 1967 was to be the
first successful armed revolt in the British West Indies.[15] The thirteen members of the St Kitts police
force manning the Valley Police Station were packed onto a LIAT airplane and
shipped back to Basseterre. The visiting
St Kitts judge was jeered out of his courthouse and chased down the runway
until he boarded a waiting flight to take him back to St Kitts. In 1967, the revolutionary Anguilla Peacekeeping
Committee appointed the social welfare officer, Raphael Lake, to be Magistrate and he functioned in that office until
he was replaced by the British administration after their invasion of the
island in 1969 at the invitation of the St Kitts government.
In 1971, the British Parliament passed
the Anguilla Act, which permitted Britain to separately administer the
Anguillian part of the ‘Associated State of St Kitts, Nevis and Anguilla’ while
they attempted to negotiate a settlement between the administrations in
Basseterre and The Valley. Between 1971
and 1982, Britain selected and paid for a Magistrate, a High Court Judge, and
three Judges of the Court of Appeal. By
agreement with the governments of St Kitts and Anguilla, these appointments were
rubber stamped by the Judicial and Legal Services Commission of the West Indies
Associated States Supreme Court. Appeals
from the Court of Appeal of Anguilla lay to the Privy Council. At least one appeal, that involving the Junks
Hole Estate dispute, went all the way to the Privy Council in the years before
Anguilla re-joined the West Indian judicial family.
In 1980, the People’s Action Movement
party gained power in St Kitts by defeating the Labour Party in general
elections. The administration of the new
St Kitts-Nevis premier, Dr Kennedy
Simmons, negotiated with Britain for independence. The British agreed, on condition that St
Kitts let Anguilla go on its own. St
Kitts-Nevis agreed, and Anguilla was brought under full colonial rule by the Anguilla
Act 1980 of the UK Parliament.
By the year 1982, the West Indies Associated
States Supreme Court came to be known as the ‘Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court’
(the ECSC). This name-change was made to
give recognition to the demise of the Associated States, and their replacement
by independent Commonwealth Caribbean Countries throughout the region. The Robert
Bradshaw regime had previously vetoed Anguilla’s participation in any
regional institutions, including the Court.
The new St Kitts government of Dr
Kennedy Simmonds relented, and Anguilla began to join the various regional
bodies. In 1982, the Anguilla Assembly
passed the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Anguilla) Act, and Anguilla re-entered
the fold of the regional judiciary. From
that time, the Magistrates of Anguilla have been appointed by the governor
after consultation with the Judicial and Legal Services Commission.
Monica
Joseph of Grenada (1982-1983)
was our first regionally appointed High Court Judge. She visited Anguilla from time to time from
St Kitts to do the occasional criminal case or civil case that awaited the
attention of a High Court Judge. Her
jurisdiction was somewhat reduced, since most felonies and misdemeanours had previously
in the year 1978 been made triable summarily by the Magistrate, due precisely to
the lack of a resident judge. To this
day, the Anguilla Magistrate’s Court has one of the most extensive
jurisdictions in the Leeward Islands both civilly and criminally. Justice Joseph was always pleased when she
was presented with a pair of white gloves at the opening of the Criminal
Assizes, as an indication that there were no criminal cases on the list to be
dealt with. That ceremony,
unfortunately, did not persist for long.
Dame
Monica Joseph,
as she now is, was succeeded by a number of judges, including John Roberts QC of Sierra Leone and
London; Sylvia Bertrand of Dominica
and the BVI; Lloyd Williams of
Jamaica and St Kitts (1991); and Neville
Smith of the Bahamas and St Kitts (ca1992-1996), all of whom visited Anguilla
occasionally from their assigned jurisdiction.
Adrian
Saunders of St Vincent
(1996-2000), subsequently of the Court of Appeal and later of the Caribbean
Court of Justice, was the first ECSC High Court judge who actually lived in
Anguilla. He was followed by Ola Mae Edwards of Jamaica (2002-2003),
subsequently Justice of the Court of Appeal; Janice George-Creque, later Pereira,
of Virgin Gorda (2003-1009), subsequently a Justice of Appeal and later Chief
Justice of the ECSC; Louise Blenman
of Guyana (2009-2012), subsequently a Justice of Appeal; and, now, Cheryl Mathurin of St Lucia (2013 –
present).
The
New Courthouse
By the late 1990s, a dramatic increase in
judicial activity in Anguilla meant that Wallace Rey’s old courthouse was no
longer adequate to serve as a multi-purpose building. The tourism industry had fuelled an enormous
growth in the economy, and crime and litigation had mushroomed. With British financial assistance, a new
building was constructed at the eastern end of the government secretariat,
adjacent to the former National Bank of Anguilla. The plans were drawn by architect David Kenworthy and approved by a Committee
of the bar and the Anguilla judiciary headed by Justice Adrian Saunders. The
new building now consists of three separate chambers. They are the Magistrate’s Court, the High
Court, and the House of Assembly. This three
rooms structure will serve Anguilla for the foreseeable future, but inevitably,
in time, it will come to seem out-dated and in need of replacement.
Access to the laws of a country is
essential for its good governance. Not
just lawyers need to know the law, everyone does. The old saying, which we still apply to our
citizens when they inadvertently breach a law, is that ignorance of the law is
no excuse. In most of the countries of
the West Indies, all of the laws are available on a free government website
online both to read and to download.
Anyone can go to the Government of Antigua and Barbuda website[16] and access any of the
laws of that country. Of course, if you
desire to purchase the entire collection of the Laws of Antigua and Barbuda in
book form, you will have to pay. However,
digital or soft copies of the laws are freely available to all.
This has not been so in Anguilla since
the year 2000, when we published our new edition of the laws of Anguilla. We are now prohibited from accessing the
collected statutes that apply to us unless we pay several thousand EC dollars
to purchase a set. If I purchase a set
of the laws from the A-G’s Chambers, I commit an offence if I share one of them
with you on paper or by email. According
to the warning at the foot of each statute, I can be sued for breach of
copyright. If I do take a chance, and
illegally share with you a digital copy of one of the laws of Anguilla, you
will receive it in a format that is not searchable, and incapable of being
printed. I am informed that the only
legal way to acquire a copy of an individual law of Anguilla is to purchase it
for a minimum of US$25.00 from the A-G’s Chambers.
Even Government Departments are without
access to the laws of Anguilla. When, up
to a year ago, I provided a legal aid clinic out of one of the Departments of Government,
I enquired after one of the statutes I needed to advise a client on. The response I got was that no one in the
Department had access to the statute in question. Since the Department was required to find the
sum of US$1,500.00 to purchase a set of the laws, and could not afford the
price, the Department had no copies of the laws of Anguilla. I was given to understand that the same
applies to many other Departments of the Anguilla public service.
The settlement of Anguilla, we have seen,
started as a sanctuary for tax refugees.
Resistance to paying taxes is embedded deep in the culture of Anguilla. To encourage us to pay our rates, or property
tax, Government has found it necessary to introduce a 20% remission as a reward,
if we pay our assessment at any time within the year it is due. The culture of tax avoidance is so deeply ingrained,
that we have established a financial services industry which provides services
to the tax refugees of the world.
Among our first industries, we have seen,
were those of smuggling and privateering.
Three hundred and fifty years later, the police seem ineffective in the
face of growing imports of illegal drugs, guns and foreign sex workers. The ancient industry of smuggling continues
today, save that the illicit trafficking is in many times more dangerous
commodities, and produces more pathetic victims.
Is it only me who sees the irony in the
Anguillian authorities setting up a legal system that conceals the laws of
Anguilla from her citizens, save for those who are very rich? It seems anomalous that the authorities deliberately
withhold our statutes from us. The right
thing is to make all our laws searchable online and printable without cost. Payment should be demanded only for the paper
and CD versions of the statutes.
We boast that Anguillians are intrepid entrepreneurs. But, should we continue to permit our young
men to start up “Sports Bars” for the exploitative employment of immigrant
women on short-term “tourist visas”?
Illegal Santo Domingo lottery tickets are openly but illegally sold at
every street corner shop or bar. The
“numbers” racket operates brazenly in several outlets in every village. The police must know about all of this, but
appear ineffective in shutting it down.
If this situation continues unchecked,
the risk is that Anguilla will be known as a country of smugglers, human traffickers,
and drugs dealers, a people who know no law.
So, what’s new about that, you may ask?
A
speech prepared at the request of the Anguilla Bar Association Council for
delivery at a special sitting of the Court in Anguilla at a ceremony to mark
the 50th anniversary of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, but which was
never delivered due to cancellation of the event as a result of Hurricane Irma.
[1] John
Oldmixon, The British Empire in America (1708), Vol 2, p.264.
[2] The term ‘cattle’ at the time included
pigs, sheep and goats. It was probably
this last which the settlers brought to the island.
[3] Abraham Howell, Anguilla’s first deputy
governor, in a patent preserved in the Anguilla Archives stored at the Court
House, describes himself as having been elected as deputy governor in the year
1666.
[4] CO.152/14:
Governor-in-Chief John Hart to the Committee for Trade and Foreign Plantations.
[5] Anguilla Council Minutes, 1819-1841, St
Kitts Archives, photographed and transcribed by Martha Burrows and Heather
Nielsen.
[6] For some years after absorption by St Kitts
in 1825, the St Kitts-Anguilla Legislative Assembly introduced a form of local
government under the provisions of the Vestry Act, but its power was
very limited. Its meetings were chaired
by the Magistrate.
[8] See for example the various correspondence
and dispatches at CO.407/1 between Lord Bathurst and Governor-in-Chief Maxwell
on the need for Anguilla to have laws.
[9] CO.240/16, at folio 315: Act No 198. An
Act to Authorise the Freeholders of the Island of Anguilla to Send a
Representative to the House of Assembly in the Island of St Kitts (usually
referred to as the “Anguilla Act”.
[10] Its dimensions are so modest that one has
difficulty referring to it as his ‘Estate Great House’.
[11] CO.240/17, folio 1. The law which enabled
this sitting was entitled, Act No 1: An Act for Establishing Courts and
Settling Due Methods for the Administration of Justice in the Island of
Anguilla.
[12] Anguilla Court Records 1827-1845, located in
the St Kitts Archives, Basseterre, photographed and transcribed by Martha
Burrows and Heather Nielsen.
[15] Not emulated elsewhere in the British West
Indies until the Grenada Revolution of 13 March 1979 brought Maurice Bishop’s
New Jewel Party to power.