

JCIO 96/25
Date: 26 March 2026
A spokesperson for the Judicial Conduct Investigations Office said:
The Lady Chief Justice, with the Lord Chancellor’s agreement, has issued
Tribunal Judge Alex Hobbs (‘TJ Hobbs’), of the Social Security and Child
Support Tribunal, with formal advice for misconduct.
Facts
The Guide to Judicial Conduct states that judicial office holders are expected
to display diligence and care in the discharge of judicial duties.
A complaint was submitted to the JCIO concerning a delay by TJ Hobbs in
issuing a decision notice following a Child Maintenance Service Tribunal
hearing, which remained outstanding at the time of the complaint. The
decision notice was not provided until nearly four months after the hearing.
TJ Hobbs’ Representations
TJ Hobbs accepted responsibility for the delay and apologised to the parties.
He attributed the delay to pressure of work and acknowledged that he had
not given the matter the priority it deserved. He also confirmed that he had
taken steps to more clearly diarise decision notices to prevent similar delays
in future.
Nominated Judge’s findings
Following an investigation under the Judicial Conduct Rules 2023, a
nominated judge found that TJ Hobbs’ delay of 16 weeks (just under four
months) in issuing the decision notice amounted to misconduct.
In recommending formal advice, the nominated judge took into account TJ
Hobbs’ previously unblemished conduct record, expression of remorse and
demonstration of insight. The nominated judge also noted his acceptance of
responsibility for the delay, his apology to the parties and the steps he had
taken to prevent a recurrence. The nominated also took into account that TJ
Hobbs’ delay beyond the three-month general threshold was just over a
month, and, therefore, was not a case of excessive delay.
However, the nominated judge considered it an aggravating factor that TJ Hobbs failed to keep the parties informed, did not respond to multiple chaser emails from the Tribunal, did not inform his leadership judge of the matter to request writing time, and that the decision notice was only produced after the complaint was made.
Decision
The Lady Chief Justice and the Lord Chancellor agreed with the nominated
judge’s recommendation and issued TJ Hobbs with formal advice.
Sanctions for misconduct by judicial office-holders are set out in the Constitutional Reform Act 2005. They are, in order of severity: formal advice, formal warning, reprimand and removal from office.
For more information about the Office, including details on how to make a complaint against a judicial office holder, you can visit the JCIO website at: Judicial Conduct Investigations website