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2026年6月1日 星期一

The Illusion of Justice in the Small Claims Court

The Illusion of Justice in the Small Claims Court


The pursuit of justice is often less about finding a higher truth and more about navigating a labyrinth of paperwork and technicalities. Recently, a case in the Hong Kong High Court highlighted this reality, where a claimant spent years fighting over residential renovations, only to find that the law is less concerned with "truth" and more with the procedural validity of documents.


The claimant alleged that an contractor had provided faulty air conditioning, reduced the number of windows installed without permission, and—most aggressively—accused the contractor of forgery and perverting the course of justice due to an incorrect address on a quotation. The claimant’s narrative was one of moral indignation: if a document contains an error, it must be a fraudulent instrument.


However, the legal system remains unmoved by moral grandstanding. The presiding judge dismissed the appeal, noting that an incorrect address, while sloppy, does not automatically constitute a criminal forgery. The court viewed the error as a clerical mistake that, at most, might have influenced cost allocations, but certainly did not invalidate the entire contract.


This serves as a cynical reminder of how human nature functions within institutions. We often attach deep emotional significance to perceived slights—the wrong address becomes "perverting the course of justice," and an incomplete job becomes a "conspiracy". Yet, the machinery of law views these through a cold, dispassionate lens. The claimant’s belief that the world revolves around his specific grievance is a classic cognitive trap; the reality is that the legal system is designed to process disputes, not to validate the righteous fury of the litigants. In the end, the appeal was dismissed because the claimant offered grievances, not a compelling point of law. The lesson? Before you drag the court into your crusade, ensure you are fighting a legal battle, not just your own ego.