IN
THE MATTER |
of
an application by Belize Telecommunications Limited for
leave to apply for Judicial Review |
|
AND
|
IN
THE MATTER |
of Decisions of the then Minister of Public Utilities,
Transport & Communications made on the 27th day
of April 1999 granting Datapro International Ltd. an
"operating agreement" for the operation of
a commercial satellite communication system; and on
the 5th day of May 2000, granting International Telecommunications
Limited the right, licence and authority to, inter alia,
provide local and international telecommunication services
within designated areas of Belize
|
|
AND
|
IN
THE MATTER |
of the refusal of the Director of Telecommunications to
perform those duties imposed upon him by the Telecommunications
Act, Chapter 229 of the Laws of Belize, R.E. 2000 |
THE
QUEEN
AND
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL |
RESPONDENT
|
|
|
EX
PARTE BELIZE TELECOMMUNICATIONS LIMITED |
APPLICANT |
Supreme
Court of Belize
Action No. 40 of 2002
11th February, 2002
A.O. Conteh, C.J.
Ms. Lois
Young Barrow S.C., for the Applicant
Mr. Elson Kaseke, Solicitor General, with Ms. Minnet Hafiz,
Crown Counsel, for the Respondent
Application
for leave to apply for judicial review - Applicant failing
to make its application promptly and in any event within
three months from the date on which the grounds for the
application first arose - When does time to make application
for leave begin to run - Applicant failing to advance good
reason to explain the reasons for the delay - What constitutes
good reasons to explain delay - Applicant found to have
"slept on its rights" - Consideration of the interests
of third parties - Court taking judicial notice of investments
in the telecommunications by third parties which would prejudice
their interests if leave were granted - Court taking into
account likelihood of prejudice to the administration in
refusing leave - Court finding Applicant's complaints to
be founded on the law of contract pursuant to its monopoly
licence to provide telecommunication services in and for
Belize until 31st December, 2002 - Whether judicial review
appropriate mechanism to challenge alleged breaches of contract
- Application for leave to pursue the remedy of mandamus
to require the Director of Telecommunications to keep a
register of telecommunications as required by section 14
of the Act - Court granting leave to apply for mandamus
to require the Director of Telecommunications to keep a
register as required by the Act.
J
U D G M E N T
1. The
Applicant in this matter before me is the Belize Telecommunications
Ltd. It carries on business as a licensed provider of national
and international telecommunication services in and for the
country of Belize.
2. The
Minister responsible for telecommunication is charged by section
20 of the Telecommunications Act - Chapter 229
of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000 with the
responsibility and power to licence the running of telecommunications
systems in Belize. The Attorney General is cited as the Respondent
in this application no doubt as the representative of the
Government.
3. The
Applicant was granted a licence on 30th December 1987 for
fifteen-year period, which is set to expire on 29th December,
2002.
4. The
Applicant avers that it was an express provision of its licence
in clause 7 that the Government of Belize would
not, during the existence of the Applicant's licence, grant
any other licence pursuant to section 20 of
the Telecommunications Act, to any other person.
5. The
Applicant's complaint in this application concerns principally
the grant of two operating agreements or telecommunications
licences by the Government, first, on 27 April, 1999 to DATAPRO
INTERNATIONAL LTD. and then the second, on 5th May,
2000 to INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS LTD.
(which I shall refer to as INTELCO hereafter).
I say principally in regards to the Applicant's complaint
because in this application it is seeking leave to have issued
orders of mandamus directed at the Director of Telecommunications
in relation to the Register of telecommunications licences
issued under the Act, as well as to get him to prevent persons
or other entities from operating telecommunications services
contrary to section 34 of the Act. I shall say more
on this later.
6. Having
carefully listened to the arguments and submissions of Ms.
Lois Young Barrow S.C., the attorney for the Applicant and
the learned Solicitor General for the Respondent, I am of
the considered view that in all the circumstances of this
application, leave should not be allowed the Applicant to
seek judicial review of the decisions dated 27 April,
1999 by which the Minister of Public Utilities granted
what is described as an "operating agreement" to
DATAPRO LTD; and that dated 5 May 2000
to grant an operating agreement to INTELCO LTD.
7. I have
come to this conclusion after a careful review of all the
materials put before me and the applicable legal rules and
principles a Court must bear in mind when considering whether
to grant or refuse leave to an Applicant for judicial review.
8. I have
arrived at this decision for the following considerations,
which I will now set out.
9. It
is clear from the facts of this case that the Applicant became
aware of the issuance of what in effect were licences to the
two other entities, that is, DATAPRO and INTELCO
from as early as April 1999 and May 2000
respectively. But the Applicant however chose to do nothing.
This inaction of the Applicant was perhaps not to antagonize
the regulatory officers of the telecommunication industry,
10. In
my view, the delay in having recourse to the Courts by the
Applicant may be commendable on its part as a less litigious
corporate citizen, but it does not however, in the circumstances
of this case, warrant the exercise of my discretion to grant
it leave to have those decisions now reviewed by the Courts.
Since the grant of those licences or agreements, much water,
as it were, has flowed under the bridge. In the nature of
the telecommunications industry, no doubt, some expenditure
of time, money and other resources would have ensued. I have,
of course, no evidence on this. However, one of the grounds
on which an application for leave for judicial review might
be denied is that if, as a result of the delay on an Applicant's
part, such delay may lead to prejudice or hardship on third
parties.
11. I
am of the view that to grant leave now to review the decisions
to grant the operating licences to DATAPRO and
INTELCO, would, whether there has been any
outlay by them in furtherance of their licences or not, cause
some prejudice and hardship.
12. Moreover,
since the lapse of time that has ensued, to grant leave now
to review those decisions will, my view, be destabilizing
or detrimental to good administration. This is an additional
reason why I think leave should be refused to the Applicant.
13. An
application for leave must be made promptly and in any event
within three months from the date on which
the grounds for the application first arose, unless the Court
considers that there is good reason for extending the period
within which the application can be made - Order 53
r. 4(1) of the Court Rules in England, which for want
of readily applicable or available local rules we must, perforce,
have recourse to in Belize in this area of the law and practice
in this jurisdiction.
14. In
this type of application to the Court where the issue of delay
may be involved, the Courts have even held that an application
would not necessarily be prompt simply because it was made
within three months; see for example, R v Exeter City
Council, ex parte J.L. Thomas & Co. (1990)
1 All E.R. 413. The learned Solicitor General has, on
behalf of the Respondent, strenuously argued that the Applicant
has, to use with respect, his somnolent phraseology, "slept
on its rights."
15. I
am persuaded after a careful perusal of the applicable rules
and principles that the time-limit for applying for leave
begins to run from the date when grounds for the application
arose. This I think is the clear intent of Order 53
r. 4(1). Therefore, I believe as a matter of common
sense and construction of the rules, the date on which the
grounds first arise would be ordinarily, the date on which
the decision, for which leave is sought is to be impugned,
was taken.
16. From
the evidence before me in this application, it is evident
that the date on which the Applicant became aware of the decision
or the grant of telecommunications licence to INTELCO
was on 16th May, 2000 - see para. 15
of Ernesto Torres's Affidavit.
17. I
must state here that at the heart of the Applicant's case
is the grant of two telecommunications licences by the Respondent
to DATAPRO INTERNATIONAL LTD. and INTERNATIONAL
TELECOMMUNICATIONS LTD. The Applicant avers as much
- see para. 14 of Mr. Torres' Affidavit, the
Applicant's Chief Operating Officer.
18. What
is also manifestly clear is that at least on 30th October,
2000, the Applicant had realised that the game was
up. That is, the fog enshrouding the issue as to whether or
not other licences had been granted to others had lifted.
Its Attorney wrote to the Director of Telecommunications in
respect of the telecommunications operations of these two
entities. See para. 16 of Torres' Affidavit
and Exhibit "ET 3" annexed thereto. This application
could have been launched soon thereafter. But this was not
done.
19. It
is significant to remember on this issue of delay that two
principal reliefs the Applicant is seeking leave to avail
of are Orders of Certiorari. Now by Order
53 r. (2) it is provided that where the relief sought
is certiorari the date when the grounds first
arose is to be the date of the judgment, order, conviction
or other proceedings. It is reasonable to think
that reference to proceeding is to be construed
as meaning any decision-making process by any public law body.
20. Therefore
in my view, commendable as the restraint of the Applicant
might be in not rushing to Court when it became aware of the
decisions it now seeks to challenge, it does not, I think,
or should not, absolve it of blame for the delay in making
this instant application. I think the Applicant has not acted
with the promptitude that would otherwise incline this Court
to exercise its discretion and grant it leave. There is no
good reason in my estimation on the evidence before me to
justify or indulge the Application not being prompt in bringing
this application.
Although
no comprehensive definition of good reason can be offered,
the reason for the delay must be scrutinized to see if it's
good enough to warrant an extension of the time-limit. The
Applicant's desire to avoid a full frontal confrontation (to
use its Attorney's own words) with the Respondent, is not,
in my view, good enough reason to excuse the lapse of time
attendant on this application since the grounds first arose.
Even putting
the time lapse at its lowest on the Applicant's own estimation,
some nine months since it says it became officially
aware of these two licences, I think this is simply not enough
- this application is, in my view, made tardily. On the evidence
the Applicant had known of the issuance of the licences to
the two other entities since 16 May, 2000: see para.
16 of Mr. Torres' Affidavit and its Exhibit 2, an
inter-office Memorandum from the Applicant's Chief Operating
Officer to its Chief Executive Officer. This I find to be
too long a lapse which would undermine the application for
leave.
21. I
have borne in mind also the observations of Lord Woolf, as
he then was, in the case of R v Commissioner for Local
Government, ex parte Croydon London Borough Council and Another,
[1989] 1 All E.R. 1033, that so long as no prejudice is
caused, the Courts will not rely on those provisions in a
technical manner to deprive a litigant who has behaved sensibly
and reasonably, even though late in making his application
for judicial review.
Ms. Young-Barrow for the Applicant, plausibly urged this case
on me. I think however, that to grant leave now to challenge
the grant of these other licences would cause prejudice in
view of the time that has elapsed since the grant.
There
will be prejudice to the administration itself to have its
decisions challenged now so late in the day after its grant
of those other licences. I say nothing about probable injustice
or hardship to these other grantees as they are not before
me and I have no evidence of this. But it must be plain common
sense that since the grant to them, DATAPRO
and INTELCO must have bestirred themselves with
consequential outlay of resources in anticipation of operating
their licences. I therefore feel unable to grant leave to
the Applicant to launch its judicial review attack on the
grant of those licences.
22. For
all these reasons, I find myself unable, as I stated at the
outset, to grant leave to the Applicant-whatever yardstick
is used to measure the time that has elapsed since the decision
the Applicant is seeking leave to challenge I think it is
long enough to disentitle it to leave.
23. Moreover,
and perhaps more significantly, from the materials before
me it is clear that the heart of the Applicant's complaint
for which it is seeking leave for judicial review is the grant
by the Respondent of telecommunications licences to two other
entities. This, the Applicant apprehends, is an incursion
into its exclusive domain, for as the Applicant avers, the
Respondent, that is, the Government of Belize, had promised,
covenanted or undertaken not to do so.
What has
therefore agitated this application is the apprehension of
the Applicant that the Government has broken faith with it,
for the Applicant has since the grant of its own licence on
30 December, 1987, in its own words "placed
great reliance on its Licence as the exclusive provider of
telecommunication services in Belize" (see paras.
3,11,12,13, and 14 of Mr. Torres' Affidavit).
24. In
other words, in the more familiar phraseology of the market
place, the Applicant has since 1987 regarded itself as having
a monopoly on the provisions of telecommunication
services in and for Belize. That is, up until perhaps April
1999, when the Applicant avers, the Respondent issued telecommunications
licences to other entities than itself.
Stripped
to its bare essentials, the gravamen of the Applicant's complaint
is that the Respondent has by its grant of other licences
or operating agreements to other entities, breached of Clause
7 of its agreement with the Applicant. (see paras.
5, 29, 30 and 31 of Torres' Affidavit).
25. In
my view, in the circumstances, the remedy open to the Applicant
that is, if its averment is right, is not through the portals
of the present proceedings.
26. Judicial
review is pre-eminently a public law remedy to enable
the Courts to scrutinize and, where necessary, correct by
appropriate relief, the exercise of governmental or statutory
powers that might have adversely affected citizens' rights
and interests.
It is
not any or every alleged breach of these powers that must
lead to judicial review; for depending on the context, even
though a given relationship may have as its backdrop an Act
of Parliament, that relationship may however in fact be based
on a contractual footing between the parties.
In this event the doors of the Courts are open to proffer
remedies if necessary, other than by judicial review.
I believe
this is one such relationship between the Applicant and the
Respondent.
27. It
is salutary to remember that the Applicant is not alleging
any improper action by the Respondent in relation to its own
licence as such; rather, that the grant of other licences
to others is, as it were, an infringement of its monopoly,
a breach of the Respondent's promise not to do so.
The Applicant's
apprehension that the grant of these operating agreements
or licences to DATAPRO and INTELCO
was a breach of the Respondent's undertaking to it in clause
7 of its own licence, is readily understandable. But
this I am afraid, is a different matter, for under the provisions
of the Telecommunications Act, the Respondent is empowered
to grant licences for the running of telecommunications systems
as would be specified in the licence.
28. In
the circumstances therefore, any remedy the Applicant may
have must lie in the private law arena and not in the domain
of public law, one of whose principal pillars is the mechanism
of judicial review.
29. Additionally
therefore, in the light of these considerations, I must refuse
leave to the Applicant to challenge the decisions to issue
licences by the Respondent to DATAPRO LTD. and
INTELCO LTD. for telecommunications operating
systems.
30. However,
with regards to leave to pursue by judicial review an order
of mandamus against the Director of Telecommunications in
relation to section 34 of the Telecommunications Act,
in view of what I have said concerning the licences or operating
agreements issued to DATAPRO and INTELCO,
this request in my view, is inextricably linked with that
for the Orders of Certiorari and Declarations
the Applicant is also seeking leave for. I do not think therefore,
that any useful purpose would be served by granting leave
to pursue this.
31. I
am not convinced that the Applicant has an arguable case on
this score. In any event, a perusal of section 34
would disclose that it prohibits, in order to control telecommunications
systems and services within Belize and its territorial waters,
certain activities and the possession of certain kind of apparatus,
save in accordance with a licence granted by the Minister.
Moreover, section 40 of the Act creates an offence
and its punishment for the contravention of the provisions
of section 34. This in my view is a penal provision
that is best regulated by the prosecuting authorities and
not a mandamus directed at the Director of Telecommunications.
Mandamus in my view, is therefore not the most
appropriate way to proceed. In the light of the facts and
circumstances underlying this application, I am unable to
grant leave to the Applicant to pursue this Order.
However,
with regards to leave to pursue the other Order of mandamus
regarding the keeping of a register of telecommunications
licences and allowing access thereto by the Director of Telecommunications,
I think that clearly, the Applicant has an arguable case on
this score as well as a legitimate interest, being as it is,
a licensed telecommunications operator.
32. The
Director is under a statutory duty by the provisions of section
14 of the Act to keep a register of telecommunications
licences and Orders issued or made under the Act. The register
shall be open to the public for inspection during such hours
and on the payment of such fee as the Minister may prescribe.
Also, any person, on payment of any prescribed fee, is entitled
to a copy of or extract from any part of the register, which
shall be certified as a true copy or extract.
33. The
Applicant deposes in paragraph 28 of Mr. Torres'
Affidavit that since 5th January 2001, it asked
the Director to allow it to have a sight of the Register of
Licences, but no response has been forthcoming from the Director.
I do not feel the same inhibitions with regards to the passage
of time since the Applicant's request to the Director because
the Director's statutory duty to keep a register of licences
is a continuing one; failure or neglect to perform can be
raised at anytime.
34. I
am in the circumstances ineluctably of the view that the Applicant
is entitled to leave to pursue the remedy of mandamus
it is seeking. Accordingly, I grant leave to the Applicant
to have judicial review of the Director's action or inaction,
in relation to the duties imposed on him by section
24 of the Act.
Finally,
let me say this on mandamus. Historically, it
was a writ of grace as part of the prerogative writs: it alleged
a neglect of a public duty. It became at once of high governmental
importance to enforce the performance of a public duty and
a valuable remedy of last resort for the subject. This is
of especial relevance today in Belize where although the old
prerogative writs of mandamus, prohibition and
certiorari are no longer issued by the Court,
it has nonetheless, statutory power to grant mandamus
in all cases where it appears to the Court to be just or convenient
to do so. (see section 27 of the Supreme Court
of Judicature Act - Chapter 91 of the Laws of Belize, Revised
Edition 2000). And today, the former prerogative writs are
now available as orders of mandamus, prohibition
and certiorari.
Their
availability as remedies are however, subject to rules of
Court which, as we have no local ones, as has been shown in
the course of this decision, have to be extrapolated from
the practice and procedure of the High Court of Justice in
England as permitted by section 60 of the Supreme Court
of Judicature Act.
----------OO----------
|