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(OSCAR
SELGADO |
APPLICANT |
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
(
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(ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF BELIZE
(AND MINISTER OF DEFENCE |
RESPONDENTS |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 418 of 2002
18th December, 2002
AWICH, J.
Mr. Dean
Lindo, S.C. for the Applicant
Mr. E. Kaseke, Solicitor-General for the Respondents.
J
U D G M E N T
1. Notes: Grounds for Judicial review:- Grounds for judicial
review such as non-disclosure of material facts, availability
of statutory relief and locus standi, used to resist judicial
review application cannot be raised merely as preliminary
objections, although they may be used in an application to
set aside leave granted to bring the review application. Court
is not precluded at the hearing of the review application
from considering again grounds it had considered when it granted
leave to bring the review application. Rules of procedure
and practice:- There are no rules of practice and procedure
in the Supreme Court of Belize Rules for regulating judicial
review applications, the Rules in England are applied.
2. Oscar
Selgado, the Applicant, in this judicial review application
has challenged his dismissal from the Belize Defence Force
(the BDF) on 18.7.2002. He obtained leave on 18.10.2002 ex
parte, so as to make this application, which was listed and
presented for hearing on 4.12.2002. When it came up for hearing,
learned Solicitor General, Mr. E. Kaseke, for the two Respondents,
the Attorney General and Minister of Defence, verbally presented
to the Court what he termed, Apreliminary objections.@
3. The
objection was threefold, namely:
A1.
That the Applicant be required to pursue the normal, speedy,
cost effective and economic remedy of appeal to the Belize
Advisory Council available under section 111 of the Belize
Constitution;
1. That the Applicant [did] not [provide] full disclosure...
[he] did not inform the Court of his previous voluntary
resignation from the Belize Defence Force... ; and
2. That the Attorney General be struck off as a Respondent
to the instant action because he is neither a necessary
or a proper party..., the Security Services Commission is
an independent constitutional entity not subject to the
direction or control of any person in the discharge of its
duties.@
Mr. Kaseke
relied on the evidence in affidavits filed for the Respondents
in order to advance his objection.
4. Mr.
D. Lindo S.C., learned counsel for the Applicant, chose to
reply to the points raised by Mr. Kaseke as objection, without
suggesting that the points were neither preliminary, nor objection,
they formed the substantive grounds for resisting the judicial
review application itself. However, during his submission,
Mr. Lindo complained that he was taken by surprise and that
some of Mr. Kaseke=s submissions were evidence improperly
given by an attorney in the case. Much of Mr. Lindo=s own
submissions relied on evidence in the affidavits filed on
behalf of the Applicant and on occasions on his own statements
of facts about his correspondence and inquiry, the sort of
materials he had submitted were improper evidence given by
Mr. Kaseke.
5. I fully
appreciate the difficulty that attorneys and indeed judges
find themselves in when dealing with judicial review application
in this jurisdiction, because there are no rules of procedure
and practice in the Supreme Court Rules (Belize) Cap.
82, concerning judicial review application. We have
to resort to Order 53 of the Rules of the Supreme Court
of England and Wales, by authority of our Order
78 rule 1 which allows for direct application of Athe
procedure and practice then in force in the Supreme Court
of Judicature (England),@ to the Supreme Court of Belize when
its Rules do not provide any rules of procedure and practice
for the matter at hand.
6. Order
53 of the Rules in England does not provide for preliminary
objection in a judicial review application, although at r.
8 it provides for interlocutory applications which include
applications for discovery, interrogatories and leave to cross-examine
on affidavits filed. That, however, may not necessarily mean
that preliminary objection is excluded merely because it has
not been included in the Rules. Additional reason must be
pointed out for not entertaining a particular preliminary
objection.
7. In
my view, the scheme of O. 53 of the Rules in England which
we adopt, is to provide for a speedy hearing of cases that
are the subject of judicial review proceedings. Such a proceeding
must be brought within three months of the administrative
event complained about. The proceeding is commenced by obtaining
leave of court to file it in the first place. That is a step
to discourage busy-bodies from bringing frivolous and vexatious
review applications thereby abusing the process of court.
When leave has been granted, the actual judicial review application
must be brought as early as within 14 days. Notice to the
Respondent need not be longer than ten days. Then during the
actual application, the fact that leave had been granted upon
the court having considered certain points of law does not
become a fetter on the right of the Respondent to resist the
actual review application on the same points of law. The more
common points of law that arise at the ex parte application
for leave are: whether the Applicant has locus standi,
whether there is available alternative statutory relief such
as an appeal, and whether the wrong Respondent (in this case,
the Attorney General) has been cited as a party. Moreover,
the Applicant must show good faith by making full disclosure
of material facts to the case at that stage. The Court requires
no more than locus standi in the Applicant and a mere
arguable case on the merit, for leave to be granted.
8. So
in the normal course of events therefore, there should be
no need to raise any point of law grounds as preliminary objections
when the application for review has come up for hearing because
the application is ready to be argued and all points of law
to oppose it may be presented at the hearing as part of the
substantive defence of the Respondent. Moreover, the technical
point that the Applicant did not make full and honest disclosure
of material facts at the stage of application for leave may
be used in an application to set aside the leave granted,
and of course, the other grounds such as lack of
locus
standi, available alternative relief and the wrong Respondent
may also be used to show that an arguable case was not or
could not be established for leave to be granted. The court
is not precluded from considering the grounds again if an
application to set aside the leave granted is made or indeed
at the hearing of the judicial review application itself.
9. Mr.
Kaseke cited several case authorities to support his preliminary
objection. The case authorities are important and relevant
to the issues that arise in the judicial review application
itself, namely; non-disclosure of material facts and there
being other reliefs provided for by statute. However, none
of the cases was decided on a point of preliminary objection.
In two of the cases the actual applications for review were
decided on the grounds of availability of statutory relief;
in another, leave to bring review application was decided
again on the ground of availability of alternative relief;
and in yet another the application to set aside leave was
decided on the ground of non-disclosure of material facts.
1. In
my view, it is improper in the circumstances of this case
to raise the three points as merely preliminary objections
because the points are indeed the substantive grounds for
resisting the judicial review application. To deal with the
points as preliminary objections first merely serves to punctuate
an otherwise procedure intended to be a speedy one and slows
it down with the result that the determination of the review
application is delayed to that extent. It was, however, open
to the Respondents to bring an application for court order
to set aside the leave granted on 18.10.2002 to file the judicial
review application. The application would be on notice - by
notice of motion or summons.
2. The
preliminary objection of Mr. Kaseke fails for the reasons
I have given. It is disallowed. Of course, Mr. Kaseke is not
precluded from raising again at the hearing of the application
for judicial review, the points of law he has canvassed. I
direct that the hearing of the review application be proceeded
with. The Applicant is directed to obtain a date from the
Registrar.
3. Let
me mention something related, but not relevant to the issues
in this case. I have had before me in the past applications
to set aside leave which had been granted to bring judicial
review application, and I know of Action No, 152 of
2002, Belize Telecommunications Ltd. v. Attorney General and
Minister of Finance etc., in which my learned brother,
C. Blackman, J. granted an application to set aside leave.
We have entertained those applications because it is the practice
in England - see for instance: R v. Lloyd=s of London,
ex parte Briggs and Others [1992] QB 698 and R. v. Eurotunnel
Developments Ltd, ex parte Stephens [1995] 73 P&CR1.
Speaking for myself only, however, I think that an application
for an order to set aside leave only serves to delay the substantive
judicial review application, and protracts proceedings; it
borders on abuse of court process, especially given the circumstances
in Belize where there are not enough judges and the Court
of Appeal sits only three times a year. If an application
to set aside leave is refused and leave is maintained, a Respondent
bent on delaying the judicial review application may appeal
against the decision not to set aside leave. He can gain up
to three months delay through the back door while waiting
for the Court of Appeal to convene, and that is as long a
period as is allowed to bring review application before it
is time-barred. In England an appeal can be heard the same
day or in a matter of days depending on the urgency. That
is not possible in Belize. On the other hand, I see nothing
wrong in the right to appeal against a decision refusing leave
to bring a review application.
4. In
view of the fact that there are no rules of procedure and
practice regarding judicial review application in the Supreme
Court of Belize, a situation which the learned Chief Justice
himself noted in one of his learned judgments, he might wish
to consider a practice direction or having the review and
revision of the Supreme Court Rules speeded up so that rules
for judicial review, among other omissions, are included and
perhaps modifications taking into account the circumstances
in Belize are effected.
5. Dated
this Wednesday the 18th day of December, 2002
At the Supreme Court
Belize City.
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