IN
THE MATTER |
of
an application by Belize Telecommunications Limited for
leave to apply for Judicial Review |
|
AND
|
IN
THE MATTER |
of Statutory Instrument No.11 of 2002 made by the Minister
of Budget Management, Investment and Public Utilities
in effect on 26th January 2002
|
|
AND
|
IN
THE MATTER |
of section 23 of the Telecommunications Act, Chapter 229
of the Laws of Belize, R.E. 2000 |
THE
QUEEN
and
THE MINISTER OF BUDGET MANAGEMENT,
INVESTMENT AND PUBLIC UTILITIES |
RESPONDENT |
EX
PARTE BELIZE TELECOMMUNICATIONS LIMITED |
APPLICANT
|
Supreme
Court
Action No. 47 of 2002
12th 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.
Judicial
Review - Preliminary Objection by Respondent that the proceedings
irregular because of failure to cite Attorney General as
Respondent - Sections 2 and 42(5) of the Belize Constitution
- Whether judicial review proceedings "civil proceedings"
- Whether Attorney General a necessary or proper party to
such proceedings.
J
U D G M E N T
-
The
Applicant in this application is seeking leave of this
Court to launch by way of judicial review a challenge
of a Statutory Instrument made by the Minister of Budget
Management, Investment and Public Utilities pursuant to
the Telecommunications Act - Chapter 229.
This Statutory Instrument is No. 11 of 2002.
-
The
Applicant is seeking leave to move this Court to declare
that the Minister acted ultra vires his
powers under the Act; to have this Court make an Order
of Certiorari quashing the decision of the
Minister to make the Order; an Order of Certiorari to
quash Statutory Instrument No.11 of 2002; an Order restraining
the Minister from making any further Order interfering
with the charges and collection of revised tariffs by
the Applicant until the hearing of the Applicant's judicial
review motion; an Order restraining the Minister from
making an Order or Statutory Instrument on the basis of
breaches alleged to have been committed by the Applicant
as stated in the Statutory Instrument, and for consequential
directions and an order for costs.
-
In
this application it has named the Minister as the Respondent.
Against this, the learned Solicitor General has launched
what can best be described as a pre-emptive strike by
way of a preliminary objection. That is to say, the learned
Solicitor General is asking the Court in limine
to strike out the Applicant's application for leave since
he has cited the wrong Respondent, contrary to section
2 as read with section 42(5) of
the Constitution of Belize. In other words, the Solicitor
General is asking, in effect, that the proceedings commenced
by the Applicant in this matter be set aside for irregularity.
-
I
was however, troubled by the format of the
Solicitor General's preliminary objections given the requirements
of Order 76 Rule 2 of the Supreme Court
Rules which provides.
"3.
When an application is made to set aside proceedings for
irregularity, the several objections intended to be insisted
upon shall be stated in the summons or notice
of motion."
-
The
objections by the learned Solicitor General are in a format
headed "Preliminary Objections by Solicitor General".
This is neither a regular summons nor a
notice of motion. Instead, it sets out
the several objections the learned Solicitor General wants
to urge on the Court why the Applicant's application should
be struck out. The format goes on under the caption "Submissions"
to argue why the various objections should succeed, rounding
off with "Respondent asks for costs".
-
Be
this as it may, I however indulged the learned Solicitor
General and in any event, the learned Attorney for the
Applicant Ms. Lois Young Barrow S.C., did not raise any
objection, but insisted instead that the Solicitor General
should only be heard on the first objection as the rest
could come in later in answer to the application for leave.
I accordingly, allowed the learned Solicitor General to
argue his objection that the application itself should,
in limine, be struck out as the Applicant
has cited the wrong party.
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The
learned Solicitor General submitted that in virtue of
the supremacy of the Constitution as stipulated in section
2, and the constitutional provision in section
42(5) of the Belize Constitution that in "civil
proceedings" against the state, the proper Respondent
or Defendant is the Attorney-
General.
Consequently, because the Applicant has cited the Minister
of Budget Management, Investment and Public Utilities
as Respondent in these proceedings, the wrong Respondent
is before the Court.
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It
is I think instructive to set out in full the provision
of subsection (5) of section 42
of the Belize Constitution:
"5.
Legal proceedings for or against the State shall be taken
in the case of civil proceedings, in the name of the Attorney
General and, in the case of criminal proceedings, in the
name of the Crown".
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From
this seemingly innocuous provision of the Constitution,
the learned Solicitor General has set out to fashion a
missile to blow the Applicant's case out of the water,
if not sink it altogether, even before it sets sail. The
Solicitor General submitted that in any civil proceedings
involving the State, it is by the Constitution, mandatory
that the Attorney-General be a party. He further submitted
that as the Minister of Budget Management, Investment
and Public Utilities was exercising governmental powers
when he made Statutory Instrument No.11 of 2002, if a
challenge of that instrument is sought, as the Applicant
is seeking leave by the present application to do, this
would be "civil proceedings" and therefore by
the Constitutional provisions, the Attorney General is
the proper Respondent. Therefore, the Minister, so the
learned Solicitor General's argument goes, is not the
proper party. The Attorney General should have been the
sole Respondent in these proceedings when they were commenced,
ergo, the application should be struck out. Finally, the
learned Solicitor General submitted nothing in any Act
in Belize or in the Supreme Court Rules of Belize or the
English Rules can override section 42(5)
by virtue of section 2 of the Belize Constitution.
-
The
learned Solicitor General understandably put much store
on a decision of this Court in Supreme Court Action No.253
of 1998, Said Musa v Harry Lui and William Tillett
(unreported). This case like the instant one, was concerned
with leave to apply for judicial review of a decision
made by the then Prime Minister to appoint Harry Lui and
William Tillett to be Commissioners of Inquiry pursuant
to Statutory Instrument No. 29 of 1998. At the initial
ex parte stage, Nathan J. ordered that
the application be heard inter partes. At
the inter partes hearing for leave, the
Applicant's Attorney applied for leave to join the Attorney
General as the third respondent and to have all papers
served on him. The Attorney General was not joined by
the Applicant in his leave application. The then Solicitor
General stoutly raised a preliminary objection, as the
learned Solicitor General has done before me, to the effect
that the action was brought in breach of section
42(5) of the Constitution and should therefore
be struck out.
-
Sosa
J., as he then was, in striking out the action, said,
among other things that:
"It
is beyond question, in my judgment, that the Attorney
General is a proper party to an action or procedure such
as this one. The very phraseology employed in instituting
the action makes it plain that the applicant seeks judicial
review in respect of acts of the Government or acts of
State. By section 42(5) of the Constitution, this procedure
or action, if one can properly regard it as an action
despite its introduction in England as an entirely new
form of procedure in 1977, being a civil proceeding, was
required to have been commenced against the Attorney-General."
The
learned Justice then concluded:
".....the
launching of these proceedings against the Respondent
only resulted in fundamentally flawed proceedings which
cannot stand, absent joinder of the Attorney-General."
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In
addition to dismissing an application for joinder of the
Attorney General, the learned Justice upheld the preliminary
objection of the Respondents and struck out the action.
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Let
me say right away that I was puzzled and indeed troubled,
when I reflected on this submission of the learned Solicitor
General. It dawned on me that the framers of the Belize
Constitution must themselves be troubled by this; and
those of their number who have gone to the great beyond
must turn in their graves, and those who are still on
this side of the great divide, will pause in their tracks,
if they realize that so seemingly an innocent provision
in the Constitution could be used to shut the doors of
the Courts of this country in the face of citizens who
perceive some wrong that may well turn out to be good
ground for complaint as the result of some exercise of
governmental power. This surely, could not have been intended
for a Constitution under whose protective shade every
citizen should find succour when necessary.
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As
a result of some deep reflection and analysis, I am unable
to accede to the weighty submission put forward by the
learned Solicitor General. I say weighty, because every
Court must pay the utmost deference and yield in the face
of an invocation by a party before it of Constitutional
propositions, if well grounded.
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The
kernel of the learned Solicitor General's submission was
that the Attorney General, who should be the Respondent
before the Court in these proceedings, was not cited by
the Applicant and therefore its suit must be struck out.
I tried to point out to the learned Solicitor General
the ameliorative, indeed curative powers of the provision
of Order 17 Rule12 of the Supreme Court
Rules which opens in the context of his submission with,
in my view, these stirring words:
"No
cause or matter shall be defeated by reason of the misjoinder
or non-joinder of parties..."
The
rule goes on that:
"The
Court may, at any stage of the proceedings, either upon
or without the application of either party and on such
terms as may appear to the Court to be just, order that
the names of any parties improperly joined, whether as
plaintiff or as defendants, be struck out, and that the
names of any parties, whether plaintiffs or defendants,
who ought to have been joined, or whose presence before
the Court may be necessary in order to enable the Court
effectually and completely to adjudicate upon and settle
all questions involved in the cause or matter, be added."
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The
learned Solicitor General however submitted this provision,
beneficent as it is, in my view, was unavailing in the
face of the Constitution's stipulation that "in the
case of civil proceedings", legal proceedings for
or against the State shall be taken in the name of the
Attorney General. He relied on the decision in the Said
Musa case (supra) of this Court. I notice however
that Rule 12 of Order 17 was nowhere mentioned
in the learned judge's decision but much stress was laid
instead on Rule 13 about application to
add or strike out or substitute a plaintiff or defendant.
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More
fundamentally however, I venture to think, with respect
to the decision in the Said Musa case (supra)
that it was arrived at by a possible misapprehension of
the nature and character of
the proceedings themselves; and possibly the attorneys
did not help the Court in that instance, in the light
of the legal learning and judicial decisions in this area
of the law that proceedings such as the instant one before
me and like that in the Musa case, are sui
generis and not "civil proceedings"
simpliciter. This is possibly due to the fact that in
this jurisdiction like, I suspect in other sister jurisdictions
in the region, we do not have what is called the Crown
Side in the jurisdictions of our Supreme Court
as a distinct division.
-
I
see no inconvenience or irregularity in citing the Minister
as the Respondent to the Applicant's application, as Farwell
L.J. said in Dyson v A.G. [1911] 1 K.B.
410 at p.423:
"if
inconvenience is a legitimate consideration at all, the
convenience in the public interest is all in favour of
providing a speedy and easy access to the Courts for any
of His Majesty's subjects who have any real cause of complaint
against the exercise of statutory powers by Government
departments and Government officials."
Again
in an earlier case, Deare v A.G. [1835]
14 & C Ex. 197 at p. 208, Lord Chief Baron said:
"It
has been the practice, which I hope never will be discontinued,
for the Crown to throw no difficulty in the way of proceedings
for the purpose of bringing matters before a Court of
justice when any real point of difficulty that requires
judicial decision has occurred."
-
I
can only adopt with approbation the sentiments in these
two decisions. It could not have been intended that the
Constitution would be used as a ball and chain to knock
down a citizen's attempt in independent Belize to come
to Court to vindicate a perceived right in the face of
an alleged wrongful exercise of governmental or statutory
power.
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Section 42(5)
in my view, is only declaratory and does not provide a
procedural code for the conduct of litigation involving
the State. It would in my view be very odd if this section
can be used to deny a litigant access to the Courts simply
because the Attorney General is not cited in a litigation
where the citizen perceives the wrong as being done by
an officer of the Government whom in fact he cites in
his challenge in Court.
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Much
was made by both sides as to the meaning and effect of
the expression "civil proceedings"
in section 42(5) of the Constitution.
The
learned Solicitor General submitted that it must include
the practice and procedure in the civil division of the
Supreme Court and by extension includes cases where remedies
are sought for wrong by Government officials. Therefore
he submitted the Attorney General is the only proper party
to the application.
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Ms.
Young Barrow S.C., on the other hand, argued that "civil
proceedings" as used in section 42(5)
of the Constitution should be as is defined in the Crown
Proceedings Act - Chapter 167 of the Laws of Belize, Revised
Edition 2000, in particular, in section
2(1) which excludes from the meaning of "civil
proceedings" proceedings on the Crown Side.
She submitted that judicial review proceedings such as
the instant one before me, fall into the Crown side,
and that in such proceedings there is no lis inter
partes as such.
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It
must be remembered that though the expression "civil
proceedings" is used in section 42(5)
of the Constitution, it is nowhere defined; though where
definitions are necessary the relevant provisions in section
131 spell them out. This is not surprising for
as I have pointed out above the section is not a procedural
code. Judicial review proceedings did not in my view arrive
in Belize with the attainment of independence in 1981.
It is salutary to remember that under Part IV of the Supreme
Court of Judicature Act -Chapter 91 of the Laws of Belize,
Revised Edition 2000 dealing with the jurisdiction
and law of this Court, it is provided in subsection
(2) of section 18 as follows:
"(2)
Subject to rules of Court, the jurisdictions, powers and
authorities hereby vested in the Court shall be exercised
as nearly as possible in accordance with the law, practice
and procedure for the time being in force in the High
Court of Justice in England."
Under
Part VII dealing with the Practice and
Procedure of the Court, it is provided in section
60 as far as is material here as follows:
"60.
The practice and procedure of the Court -
(a)
in its general civil jurisdiction shall be regulated by
this or any other Act or by rules of Court and where no
provision is made, by the practice and procedure in the
High Court of Justice in England."
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I
have set out these statutory provisions of this Court's
procedural powers to show that even though it has powers
under section 21 to issue orders of mandamus,
prohibition and certiorari (formerly prerogative
writs) because of the absence of local rules, liberal
use is often made in this Court to the applicable rules
of the English High Court to conduct litigation in these
matters. In England legal proceedings concerning these
matters are taken in what is referred to as the Crown
Side of the Queen's Bench Division, because of
the historical origins and evolution of the remedies.
Legal proceedings in the Crown side are those means by
which the Queen's Bench Division came to exercise the
ancient jurisdiction of supervising the inferior courts,
commanding magistrates and others such as public authorities
to do what their duty requires in every case where there
is no specific remedy (or no equally convenient and effective
method of appeal) and protecting the liberty of the subject
by speedy and summary interposition. See Halsbury's
Laws of England, Vol. II 4th Edition at paragraph
1451 where the learned editors cited Blackstone's
Commentaries (14th Ed.) and Coke's Institutes
as authorities for this.
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This
supervisory jurisdiction used to be exercised principally
by the prerogative writs of habeas corpus, certiorari,
mandamus and prohibition. Today in Belize, jurisdiction
concerning these matters are statutory as I have stated
earlier and the remedies are now styled orders
- See section 27 of the Supreme Court
of Judicature Act - Chapter 91. An important component
of this power of superintendence touching and concerning
the liberty of the subject is provided for in the writ
of habeas corpus. Through this remedy the subject was
able to question and test the validity of his detention
by public officers and others. This remedy was available
in Belize even before the advent of the protection of
personal liberty provided for in section 5
of the Constitution at independence in 1981. Thus, section
30 of the Supreme Court of Judicature Act;
which predates the Constitution itself, although the latter
affirms and establishes the Supreme Court, provides as
follows:
"The
common law right to the writ of habeas corpus,
as confirmed and regulated by the Habeas Corpus Act 1679
and extended by the Habeas Corpus Act 1816, shall be part
of the law and procedure of Belize and, subject to any
rules of court, shall be granted and issued as nearly
as possible in accordance with the practice and procedure
for the time being in force in regard to that writ in
the High Court of Justice in England."
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Therefore
today in Belize in terms of Crown side practice and procedure
even though we may have local statutory equivalent of
the applicable remedies, there is a kind of umbilical
cord with the practice and procedure in England in the
absence of local rules governing this area of the law.
I must hasten to add that this recourse to English practice
and procedure is itself statutorily provided for as I
have tried to point out.
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Therefore
in my view, notwithstanding the use of the expression
"civil proceedings" in section 42(5)
of the Constitution, I do not think that the matter is
as simple as the learned Solicitor General has contended
that all civil proceedings involving the
State must be taken in the name of the Attorney General.
It is my humble view that in "civil proceedings"
involving the application of what were formerly prerogative
writs, now orders, and there are no local rules of practice
and procedure available, recourse perforce, must be made
to the practice and procedure in England. In England,
judicial review applications and procedure do not always
involve the Attorney General as a party, unless the action
giving rise to the application emanates from his office.
It is only decisions and actions which are made in a public
law context that are subject to judicial review. The proceedings
before me are entitled "The Queen and The Minister
of Budget Management Investment and Public Utilities
(the offending public body or authority) ex parte
Belize Telecommunications Limited" (indicating
the person who is bringing the application).
- The
issue whether proceedings involving judicial review are
civil proceedings in which the Attorney General must always
be a party has come up for consideration in this jurisdiction
and sister jurisdictions in the region, in one case culminating
in the Privy Council. I have mentioned earlier the decision
in the Said Musa case. I am, with respect,
not persuaded by the reasoning and conclusion arrived at
in that case. In the Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Trade and Industries v Vehicles and Supplies Ltd. and Another
[1992] LRC (Const) 720, a case from Jamaica in which
this very issue came up for resolution, that is, whether
in judicial review applications the Attorney General was
a necessary party instead of the Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Trade and Industries, who had made orders under the Trade
Act of that country which the Applicant was seeking to impugn,
the Jamaican Court of Appeal (Rowe P., Carey and Forte J.A.)
unanimously held that because the proceedings were on the
Crown side, the Attorney General in that application was
neither a necessary nor a proper party to the action. This
conclusion was reached after an instructive survey of the
origins and development of this area of public law by all
the three learned justices. Rowe P. stated at page 731:
"I
find Crown side proceedings do not fall to be dealt with
under the Crown Proceedings Act. The direct consequence
of this is that there is no statutory requirement for
Crown side proceedings to be commenced against the Attorney
General and that in the instant case the Attorney General
was neither a necessary nor a proper party to the action."
And
at p.732 he concluded:
"
proceedings
for an order for leave to issue an order of certiorari
are not civil proceedings."
Carey
J.A. analyzing the restrictions in section 16 of the Jamaican
Crown Proceedings Act against granting injunctions or
orders against the Crown if the effect would be to give
any relief against the Crown which could not have been
obtained in proceedings against the Crown, concluded at
p.738 that:
"The
restrictions against such orders is directed, however,
at civil proceedings. The Act defines such proceedings
which in England would be taken on the Crown side of the
Queen's Bench Division. Consequently all proceedings
for prerogative orders, viz certiorari, prohibition
and mandamus would not come within the ambit of
the provision". (emphasis added)
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On
appeal to the Privy Council, one of the questions expressly
certified as of public importance that ought to be submitted
for resolution was:
"(4)
Should the Attorney General be named as the respondent
in these proceedings instead of the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Trade and Industry?"
Lord
Oliver of Aylmerton delivering the judgment of the Board
said at p.747 of the report:
"As
regards the last of these questions their Lordships entertain
no doubt whatever that the Court of Appeal was correct
in concluding that the proceedings were not 'civil proceedings'
as defined in the Crown Proceedings Act, and that the
appellant and not the Attorney General was the proper
party to the proceedings instituted for the purpose of
reviewing the exercise of his statutory powers."
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I
am therefore fortified in my view that, with the greatest
of respect to the provision of section 42(5)
of the Constitution, the Minister in question here is
a necessary and proper party to be the respondent in this
application whereby the exercise of his statutory powers
is being called into question. To name the Minister as
the respondent in proceedings that involve an application
for the prerogative orders does not conflict with the
provision of section 42(5) especially where
in an important area of public law we have to rely on
the practice and procedure of the Crown side in England.
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The
learned Solicitor General however, urged on me the decision
of the High Court of Barbados in the case of C.
O. Williams Construction Ltd. v Blackman and Another
(1989) 41 WIR 31, and the decisions of the Board of
the Privy Council in the Hong Kong cases of Re a
firm of Solicitors (1991) LRC (Const) 764;
and Than v Cameron (1993) 2 LRC 641,
to find that the Attorney General should have been the
respondent to this application before me as it is "civil
proceedings" for the purposes of section 42(5)
of the Constitution. I cannot, with respect, accede to
this. This application is about the exercise of ministerial
power against which orders that were formally prerogative
orders are being sought. I do not conceive of it necessarily
as "civil proceedings" in terms of the provision
of section 42(5) of the Constitution that
would necessitate it being brought against the Attorney
General. I do not think the cases relied on by the learned
Solicitor General assist me very much in this respect.
These cases come from jurisdictions (Barbados and Hong
Kong) that, unlike Belize, have their own autochthonous
statutory provisions in this area of public law which
are radically different from the practice and procedure
in this jurisdiction. Sir Denys William, the learned Chief
Justice in the Williams Construction case
from Barbados, for example, in analyzing that country's
Administrative Justice Act which provides for relief against
administrative acts or omissions by way of judicial review,
found that there an applicant is required to give notice
of the application to the Attorney General and to furnish
him with copies of the statement and every affidavit in
support; also that the rules under that Act do not require
that leave be obtained before making applications for
judicial review. A position that is clearly different
in the practice and procedure in this area of the law
in Belize and the United Kingdom.
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In
Belize to obtain relief by way of mandamus, certiorari
and prohibition, recourse is necessary to the practice
and procedure in England for want of local rules. This
does not in my view, necessarily render such proceedings
"civil proceedings" in terms of section
42(5) of the Constitution that would have the
Attorney General always as a respondent.
-
It
is for these reasons that I was unable to accept the preliminary
objection of the learned Solicitor General and allowed
the attorney for the Applicant to urge the application
for leave as I find that the Minister of Budget Management,
Investment and Public Utilities, is a necessary and proper
respondent to this application before me. After all, it
is the Minister's order, decision and action that the
Applicant is seeking to challenge by judicial review with
the hope that it may, if it gets to the hearing stage,
and is successful, obtain the orders it is requesting
of this Court directed against the Minister.
-
Let
me in conclusion say that because judicial review proceedings
involve public law issues, there is therefore, I think,
no true lis inter partes. Therefore in my
view, judicial review proceedings are not necessarily
"civil proceedings" in the sense mentioned in
section 42(5) of the Constitution.
To be
sure, here in Belize, nearly always the practice has been
to cite the Attorney General in such proceedings. But the
Attorney General per se, for the purposes of
these proceedings is not a necessary or proper respondent
always to any and every judicial review application.
In public law, almost always, the wrong of which an applicant
for judicial review seeks redress before the Court would have
been committed by a functionary of the State or other authority
exercising public or statutory powers and not necessarily
the Attorney General himself. It is therefore, I think, just,
fair and proper that the responsible officer or authority
be cited as a respondent. But the Attorney General, absent
his own involvement in the decision or action against which
judicial review is being sought, may not necessarily be a
respondent.
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