How Do I Address the Judge?
How you address the judge depends on which court you are in. Each court has a particular honorific that should be used when addressing the judge, and the judge is properly addressed by that honorific when in court, not as "sir," "ma'am," or something else.
Judges of the BC Court of Appeal and BC Supreme Court are officially called Justices. Please note, they are no longer addressed as My Lord, My Lady, Your Lordship, or Your Ladyship. Since November of 2021 the ways to address judges are:
- For Justices of the Court of Appeal use Chief Justice (for the Chief Justice only), Justice, Madam Justice, Mr. Justice”, or, if addressing more than one, as “Justices”, according to the context. It is no longer acceptable to address them as My Lady, My Lord, Your Ladyship or Your lordship. In a Registrar’s hearing at the Court of Appeal, the Registrar is to be addressed as Your Honour.
- Masters and registrars of the Supreme Court are addressed as Your Honour. Provincial Court judges are also called Your Honour.
- For Justices of the BC Supreme Court use Chief Justice (for the Chief Justice of the BC Supreme Court only), Justice, Madam Justice, or Mr. Justice”. Here too, the terms My Lady, My Lord, Your Ladyship or Your lordship are no longer acceptable. The most appropriate form of address for a Master of the BC Supreme Court is Your Honour. A District Registrar or the Registrar of the BC Supreme Court is called "Your Honour."
- For BC Provincial Court judges, the proper form of address for a judge is Your Honour. For Judicial Justices, Judicial Case managers", justice of the Peace Adjudicators, or Court Services Justices of the Peace, the proper term is still Your Worship.
Courthouse Libraries BC maintains a helpful resource which includes references as well as ways to address a judge outside the courtroom. See Forms of address, on their website. You can find information about what to expect in court in How Do I Conduct Myself in Court at an Application?. You can find information about court processes in the chapter Resolving Your Legal Problem in Court.
This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Nate Russell, May 12, 2023. |
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JP Boyd on Family Law © John-Paul Boyd and Courthouse Libraries BC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada Licence. |