Section 44 of Advocates Act CAP 16: Chief Justice may make orders prescribing remuneration

    

(1) The Council of the Society may make recommendation to the Chief Justice on all matters relating to the remuneration of advocates, and the Chief Justice, having considered the same, may by order, prescribe and regulate in such manner as he thinks fit the remuneration of advocates in respect of all professional business, whether contentious or non-contentious.
(2) An order made under this section in respect of non-contentious business may, as regards the mode of remuneration, prescribe that it shall be according to a scale of rates of commission or percentage, varying or not in different classes of business or by a gross sum, or by a fixed sum for each document prepared or perused, without regard to length, or in any other mode, or partly in one mode or partly in another, and may regulate the amount of remuneration with reference to all or any of the following, among other, considerations, that is to say—
(a) the position of the party for whom the advocate is concerned in the business, that is, whether as vendor or purchaser, lessor or lessee, mortgagor or mortgagee, and the like;
(b) the place where, and the circumstances in which, the business or any part thereof is transacted;
(c) the amount of the capital money or rent to which the business relates;
(d) the skill, labour and responsibility involved therein on the part of the advocate;
(e) the number and importance of the documents prepared or perused, without regard to length.
(3) An order made under this section may authorize and regulate—
(a) the taking by an advocate from his client of security for payment of
any remuneration to be ascertained by taxation or otherwise, which may become due to him under any such order; and (b) the allowance of interest.
(4) So long as an order made under this section in respect of non-contentious business is in operation, taxation of bills of costs of advocates in respect of noncontentious business shall, subject to section 45, be regulated by that order.


Disclaimer: This document is not to be taken as legal advise.

Enhance Your Research with Bookmarks and Annotations

Here's how you can use these features:

  • To bookmark this page, click the "Bookmark this Page" button below the document title.
  • To add an annotation, highlight text in the document and select "Add Annotation" from the toolbar that appears.
  • These features are great for organizing your research and keeping track of key information.
  • You can view and manage your bookmarks and annotations on your Bookmarks and Annotations page.

Cited By:



More Sections