Court Attire
Last revised January 18, 2024

Court attire is addressed in The Professional Conduct Handbook, reprinted May 1988 - see Part E, Ruling 4.

This ruling was not incorporated into the current Professional Conduct Handbook.  It is traditional however, for lawyers to wear gowns except in chambers and before an associate judge.  If a lawyer appears without a gown he will not "be heard".

Practice Direction 11, Gowning Policy for Counsel was updated on October 26, 2018 and expands the occasions which require gowns.

The wearing of wigs was abolished in British Columbia in 1905 by An Act Further to Amend the Supreme Court Act, S.B.C. 1905, c. 16.

Further Reading
  • "A Brief History of Court Attire", (2006) 64 The Advocate 65-77
  • "Judicial Robes", (1952) 10 The Advocate 109-111
  • "Off with the Wigs", (1960) 18 The Advocate 209
  • "The Order of the Coif", (1945) 3 The Advocate 124-125
  • "Wigs - White - Red  "on the Green" - Gone!", (1984) 42 The Advocate 405 

 

References