Consumer Panel The Commission has a
Consumer Panel which is mandated by Schedule 1, Section 11A of the Legal Profession and Legal Aid (Scotland) Act 2007.
Finances The Commission is responsible for managing its own finances and setting its own annual budget and it is not funded by the public. It has an annual income of around £1.8million, raised through a levy which is collected from the
Law Society of Scotland, the
Faculty of Advocates and the Association of Commercial Attorneys.
Judicial Review Decisions of the Commission are subject to
judicial review by the
Court of Session, but can only be heard with the permission of the Court. However, a complaint can only be brought if the following grounds are met, set out in Section 21 of the 2007 Act are met: • that the Commission's decision was based on an error of law; • that there has been a procedural impropriety in the conduct of any hearing by the Commission on the complaint; • that the Commission has acted irrationally in the exercise of its discretion; • that the Commission's decision was not supported by the facts found to be established by the Commission. The Law Society of Scotland challenged the Commission's power to decide if a complaint previously classified as
hybridwas either a service-related or conduct-related complaint. The Inner House found, unanimously, in favour of the Commission, affirming that the Commission has power as a matter of law of re-categorise or re-determine any previously categorised hybrid complaint. The Commission alone has the power to determine if a complaint is service-related or conduct-related, and such power is an exercise of administrative law, and as such is within its power. ==References==