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4 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology 1 (1971)

handle is hein.journals/anzjc4 and id is 1 raw text is: 








AUST. & N.Z. JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY   (March, 1971): 4, 1


                    EDITORIAL

Family Courts
TODAY   the proper function of the court is being questioned on more than
one ground. For many years now the Children's or Juvenile Court has adopt-
ed a rather different procedure from that of the adult court; the procedure
being less legalistic and rather more concerned  with the ultimate re-
habilitation of the delinquent. It has been suggested that Juvenile Courts
should cease to be  essentially a court, but rather a family council or
family tribunal' Again, in the adult jurisdiction it has been proposed
that divorce should be taken away from the rigid adversary system practised
in our  present courts. Recently a  Senior Lecturer  in Law  at  Monash
University (Mr. H. A. Finlay) has been reported as saying2, Family courts
would  speed divorce where  it was inevitable and help stop it where the
marriage  was repairable. Also, Medical and social workers would  help
see that children were looked after. Accountants would  help in property
adjustments. Marriage  counsellors and psychologists would concentrate on
saving marriages that could be repaired. In the same article a criminologist
(Mr. D. Biles) was reported as saying that family courts should also deal
with juvenile delinquency. As a large number of delinquent problems have
their basis in the home it would seem  logical for one court to handle all
those problems. Such  a thesis has much  to commend   it, but might the
matter be taken further?
    For rather  different reasons, concerned with the overloading of the
United  States Supreme   Court by  appellants, the Chief Justice, Justice
Berger, is reported as saying3 that he proposed
    That State and Federal courts be relieved of a great many matters
    traditionally handled by them ... There is a broad and serious social
    question  . . . whether  such  things as  divorce, child custody,
    adoptions, receiverships, various other matters of that kind belong
    in the courts at all.
He  questioned also whether courts should be the instruments  for dealing
with  the chronic alcoholic, the narcotic addict and the  serious mental
patient.
      There would appear, at first sight, to be much to be said for such a
point of view. Clearly any quasi-judicial tribunal dealing with family matters
and such questions as mental illness would be subject to appeal to the tradi-
tional courts. However, one problem that must occur to all workers in the
field is where one draws the  line, or whether any line should be drawn.
Where  and at what  stage does delinquency end and criminality begin, and
how  ill is a serious mental patient? In other words, is there not a case


1. See The Child, the Family and the Young Offender, (1965) Cmnd. 2742 H.M.S.O. London.
  The recommendations then made were criticised and a later White Paper, Children in
  Trouble (1968) Cmnd. 3601 H.M.S.O. London, made less radical recommendations and these
  were later essentially enacted as the Children and Young Persons Act, 1969. See Children,
  Young Persons and the Courts - A Survey of the New Law [1970] Crim. L.R. 368.
2. The Age (Melbourne) 28th December 1970.
3. International Herald Tribune 8th December 1970.


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