The decision of Ms Justice Laffoy in the High Court case of Alison Bloomer and Others v. The Incorporated Law Society of Ireland, Ireland and the Attorney General has placed the Law Society's existing admissions procedure in turmoil. Since 1989 all students with law degrees obtained from universities in the Republic of Ireland were exempt from sitting the entrance exam of the Incorporated Law Society. Effectively, the judgment of Ms Justice Laffoy overturned the entire exemption system as it applied to all law graduates from the National University of Ireland, Trinity College and the University of Limerick.
The motion I have before the House this evening seeks to obtain urgent clarification from the Minister for Justice and the Law Society as to the existing situation. I speak on behalf of students who bona fide entered on a course in a university to do a law degree. They did so in the expectation that having obtained their degree and having passed the eight core subjects required for entrance to the Law Society, they would then be entitled to attend the solicitors professional course in Blackhall Place. Students sat for their leaving certificate and filled in their CAO forms choosing law as a career. The points they received in their leaving certificate reflected the standard of the competition. Many students would have followed courses other than law, courses that would have provided them with wider career options, were it not for the exemption clause.
There is a meeting of the Law Society on Friday, 20 October. I strongly urge the council of the Law Society to continue with the existing system. Students had legitimate expectations that they would be exempt from the Law Society exam. In justice and equity, the continuation of the existing system must be allowed for all students with law degrees obtained since 1989, and all students currently pursuing a law degree course in any of the aforementioned universities. It is essential that every effort is made by the Law Society to find a legal basis to allow people in the system at present to qualify as solicitors.
The situation resulting from the High Court judgment has led to the suspension of the automatic entrance of 66 law graduates to the law society course in November. Similarly, law students who have already been accepted for future law courses, students who are about to be conferred and current law students, are as of now all placed in a state of limbo. The stress, strain and worry, together with the additional cost and expense should these people have to do the entrance exam, will place an intolerable burden on many of these students. To compel such individuals to sit this entrance exam would be unjust and inequitable. Many lives and careers will be damaged. Common sense dictates that a solution satisfactory to all of these students must be found. I urge the council of the Law Society and the Minister for Justice in the interest of fair play and equity to resolve this very sad and difficult situation.
I am confident that the Minister, her Department and the Law Society will do all they can in this matter. I await the Supreme Court decision at an early date and I hope I will not have to refer to the Minister about this matter again. I thank you, a Chathaoirligh, for allowing me to raise this matter.