Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk says she is not considering parliamentary intervention to end a feud in the senior ranks of Queensland's judiciary.

The head of Queensland's Court of Appeal, Justice Margaret McMurdo, recently said she would not sit with Chief Justice Tim Carmody in any court.

He was selected as Chief Justice in June 2013 by the former LNP government, despite never having sat on the Supreme Court, and after only nine months in the Chief Magistrate's job.

Chief Justice Carmody was chosen over long-serving judges.

Queensland Parliament has the power to remove a judge if it is recommended by a tribunal of former judges.

But Ms Palaszczuk said that was not on the cards.

"I am not considering that at this stage. I have made my comments very clear in relation to issues down at the courts — that the public expects more," she said.

Queensland Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg said the bitter dispute in the senior ranks of the judiciary was a matter for the relevant parties to sort out.

Mr Springborg said there was no need for Parliament to intervene.

"Justice Carmody possesses extraordinary skills and he has presented that over a long period of time," he said.

"The other issues I think within the court go beyond that to matters of personality and circumstance and that's a matter for the courts, for individuals to sort out."

Justice Carmody was sworn in at a private ceremony in July 2014 after his appointment was plagued by sustained criticism from the judiciary and legal fraternity, including corruption fighter Tony Fitzgerald.

A public welcoming ceremony in Brisbane in August 2014 had marked the arrival of both Justice Carmody and new Supreme Court Justice Peter Flanagan.

But the other 25 Supreme Court judges did not attend that event, in what many considered was a major snub to the new Chief Justice.