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(SOCIAL
SECURITY BOARD |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(W.H.
COURTENAY & CO. and
(VERNON HARRISON COURTENAY |
FIRST
DEFENDANT
SECOND DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 206 of 1997
18th April, 2000
Gonzalez, J.
Ms. Lisa
Shoman for the Plaintiff
Mr. Fred Lumor for the Defendants
Issue
Estoppel - Whether the fact that a Defendant was acquitted
in a criminal trial can be raised in civil proceedings involving
the same parties and the same facts for the court to dismiss
the civil proceedings as an abuse of process.
J
U D G M E N T
On the
22nd April, 1997, the Plaintiff issued a Writ against the
Defendants claiming damages for fraudulent misrepresentation
and breach of fiduciary duty with respect to the purchase
of shares in Belize Electricity Company Limited (BECOL). An
amended Statement of Claim was filed on the 23rd September,
1997, which stated, inter alia, that the Defendants
had induced the Plaintiff to issue a cheque in the sum of
$3,340,000.00 by representing that the Plaintiff would receive
shares in BECOL representing five percent of its share capital
and that, acting on the said representation by the Defendants,
the Plaintiff did, on the 28th July, 1992, issue a cheque
in the said sum of $3,340,000.00 to the first-named Defendant,
which cheque was received by the second-named Defendant and
deposited into an account maintained by the first-named Defendant.
The Statement of Claim further alleged that no shares were
in fact received by the Plaintiff for the said sum of $3,340,000.00
and that, in consequence, the Plaintiff had suffered loss
and damage.
While
this civil Action was still pending, the Director of Public
Prosecutions on the 11th June, 1997 preferred an indictment
against the Defendants charging them with: (1) theft, contrary
to section 145(1) of the Criminal Code, and (2) obtaining
property by deception, contrary to section 159(1) of the Criminal
Code. (The Defendants were also charged with two other offences
which are not relevant here). The particulars of 'theft and
obtaining property by deception', as given in the indictment,
were substantially the same as those set out in the said Statement
of Claim filed in the civil Action.
On the
20th August, 1997, the two Defendants were acquitted by the
jury of all charges in the criminal trial.
The civil
Action, however, continued, and on the 11th May, 1998, a judgment
in default of defence was entered against the Defendants for
the sum of $3,340,000.00 with interest.
On the
2nd February, 1999, the default judgment was set aside by
the Supreme Court and the Defendants were given leave to file
a defence which they did file on the 8th February, 1999.
The Plaintiff,
however, took no steps to set down the case for trial even
though the pleadings had closed. On the 8th February, 2000
(exactly one year after filing their defence), the Defendants
took out a summons under 0.37, r.10 of the Supreme Court Rules
of Belize, for an order that the Action be dismissed for want
of prosecution. This application came before me for hearing
on the 25th February, 2000, and Counsel for the Defendants
sought leave to amend the Summons to substitute the following
ground for the ground stated in the Summons:
"That
this action be dismissed on the basis that it is an abuse
of the court process."
Leave
was granted and the Summons amended accordingly. In the result,
Counsel for the Defendants argued the case only on the above-stated
new ground and abandoned the original ground.
Mr. Fred
Lumor, Counsel for the Defendants, argued that this civil
Action be dismissed as an abuse of the process of the Court
on the ground that the facts and issues in this case had already
been the subject of criminal proceedings before a jury, and
that the jury had already delivered its verdict on the 20th
August, 1997 on the self-same facts and issues, with the acquittal
of both the Defendants. He argued that the civil Action was
an attempt by the Plaintiff to re-litigate the same issues
and that this amounted to a direct attack on the said decision
of the Supreme Court given on the 20th August, 1997, whereby
the Defendants were found not guilty. Mr. Lumor added that
it was a scandalous attack on the Courts and that the Court
should exercise its inherent jurisdiction and dismiss the
Action summarily.
Counsel
for the Plaintiff, Ms. Lisa Shoman, made no submission in
reply except to say that she could not "usefully add
anything to that which has already been said by Mr. Lumor".
However, the learned Counsel was careful to add that her clients
had not given her leave to concur with the submissions of
Mr. Lumor.
As Mr.
Lumor's submission runs counter to the established practice
in Belize and several other common law jurisdictions, it is
necessary to examine his submissions in some detail. The main
authority relied upon by him was the House of Lords Decision
in Hunter v Chief Constable of West Midlands [1981] 3All
ER 727. The facts in this case were that the police arrested
the Plaintiff with five others on 21st November, 1974 following
the death of 21 people in bomb explosions in two Birmingham
public houses. On 23rd November the Plaintiff and the other
accused confessed to the bombings and were charged with murder.
On 25th November they were brought before a magistrate who
ordered them to be remanded in custody. They were admitted
to prison. When the accused were again brought before a magistrate,
on 28th November, their faces were badly bruised. At their
trial for murder the accused claimed that they had been beaten
up by the police to make them confess and that therefore their
confessions of 23rd November, on which the Crown heavily relied,
were inadmissible. At a lengthy trial within a trial the judge
heard evidence from the accused and the police officers, and
ruled that the confessions were admissible. The allegations
and the evidence were then repeated to the jury to enable
them to assess the weight to be given to the confessions.
The accused were found guilty, and an appeal to the Criminal
Division of the Court of Appeal, at which no complaint was
made of the trial judge's ruling that the confessions were
admissible, was dismissed. The accused then brought a civil
Action against the chief constable in charge of the police
officers claiming damages for assault by the police. The chief
constable applied to have the Action struck out on the ground
that it raised an issue identical to that which had been finally
determined at the accused's murder trial. At the hearing of
the chief constable's application, the accused adduced new
evidence consisting of statements by the prison officers,
and expert evidence from a forensic specialist who considered
that at least some of the accused's injuries had been inflicted
before they left police custody. The judge held that the new
evidence prevented him from striking out the civil Action,
because it was reasonably conceivable that another tribunal,
acting judicially, might accept at least part of the accused's
case. On appeal by the chief constable, the Court of Appeal
held that the accused's civil Action should be struck out
because it would be an abuse of the process of the Court to
allow the accused to litigate again the identical issue that
had been decided against them in the criminal trial and because
they were barred by issue estoppel from raising the issue
of whether they had been assaulted by the police. The Plaintiff
then appealed to the House of Lords.
It was
held by the House of Lords that initiation of proceedings
in a Court of justice for the purpose of mounting a collateral
attack on a final decision adverse to the intending Plaintiff
reached by a Court of competent jurisdiction in previous proceedings
in which the Plaintiff had a full opportunity of contesting
the matter was, as a matter of public policy, an abuse of
the process of the Court. The fact that the collateral attack
was by means of a civil Action raising an identical issue
decided against the Plaintiff in a competent Court of criminal
jurisdiction was immaterial, since if the issue had been proved
against the Plaintiff beyond all reasonable doubt in the criminal
Court it would be wholly inconsistent if it were not decided
against him on the balance of probabilities in the civil Action.
A careful
reading of this case will show that it is clearly distinguishable
from the case before me. In Hunter's case, the Plaintiff
had been convicted in the criminal trial, whereas in
the instant case, the Defendants were acquitted. The
principle laid down in Hunter has no application to
a finding in favour of a Defendant in a criminal trial. This
distinction is well brought out by Lord Diplock himself in
Hunter's case (at p. 734, letters f, g, h):
"My
Lords, this is the first case to be reported in which the
final decision against which it is sought to initiate a
collateral attack by means of a civil action has been a
final decision reached by a court of criminal jurisdiction.
This raises a possible complication that the onus of proof
of facts that lies on the prosecution in criminal proceedings
is higher than that required of parties to civil proceedings
who seek in those proceedings to prove facts on which they
rely. Thus a decision in a criminal case on a particular
question in favour of a Defendant, whether by way of acquittal
or a ruling on a voire dire, is not inconsistent with the
fact that the decision would have been against him if all
that were required were the civil standard of proof on the
balance of probabilities. This is why acquittals were not
made admissible in evidence in civil actions by the Civil
Evidence Act 1968. (My emphasis). In contrast to this,
a decision on a particular question against a Defendant
in a criminal case, such as Bridge J's ruling on the voire
dire in the murder trial is reached on the higher criminal
standard of proof beyond all reasonable doubt, and is wholly
inconsistent with any possibility that the decision would
not have been against him if the same question had fallen
to be decided in civil proceeding instead of criminal. That
is why convictions were made admissible in evidence in civil
proceedings by the Civil Evidence Act 1968," (my
emphasis).
Commenting
on Hunter's case, Phipson on Evidence (14th Edn.) says
at para 33-68:
"It
is thought that the decision in Hunter v Chief Constable
does not give rise to a general prohibition on the raising
of issues in civil cases which have already been the subject
of a conviction in criminal proceedings. The interests of
finality are not so powerful as to require an accused to
accept his conviction as correct for all purposes, nor does
the Civil Evidence Act envisage that they should. The
case is aimed at the abuse of the process by convicted persons.
The principle laid down has no application to a finding
in favour of a Defendant in a criminal trial. (My emphasis).
I should point out here that the Evidence Act of Belize has
not so far been amended in line with the UK Civil Evidence
Act, 1968 which made convictions (but not acquittals)
admissible in evidence in civil proceedings. In other words,
the law of Belize is still the same as was laid down in the
celebrated case Hollington v Hewthorn [1943] 1KB 587.
This was an Action arising out of a collision between two
motor cars in which the Plaintiff alleged negligence on the
part of the Defendant driver and sought to give evidence of
the conviction of the Defendant of careless driving
at the time and place of the collision. It was held by a strong
Court of Appeal (Lord Greene, MR, Goddard and de Parcq LJJ)
that both on principle and authority, evidence of the conviction
was inadmissible.
In Hunter's
case, Lord Diplock expressed the view (at p.734, letter
j) that Hollington was wrongly decided insofar as it
made convictions inadmissible in evidence in civil
proceedings. But the fact remains that an Act of Parliament
(Civil Evidence Act 1968) was necessary to overrule Hollington
and to make convictions admissible in evidence.
Whatever
view may be taken of the decision in Hollington, there
can be little dispute that in Belize (as in the UK), acquittals
are not admissible in evidence in civil proceedings. Mr. Lumor
cited no section of the law which would sanction the admissibility
of acquittals. If the fact that the two Defendants in the
case before me were acquitted in the criminal proceedings
arising out of the same facts is not admissible in
evidence in the present civil Action, Mr. Lumor's entire argument
instantly falls to the ground.
While
this is sufficient to dispose of the present application,
in deference to the learned Counsel, I will briefly refer
to the other cases cited by him. Smith v Linskill and Another
[1996] 2 ALL ER 353 was a decision of the Court of Appeal.
In this case also, the Plaintiff had been convicted
of aggravated burglary. He brought civil proceedings against
the solicitors who had acted for him in relation to the trial,
claiming damages for negligence in the preparation and conduct
of his defence. The claim was struck out as an abuse of the
process of the Court on the basis that it was contrary to
public policy for a conviction in a criminal Court
to be impugned in a civil Action by a person seeking to re-litigate
the same issue. Hunter was applied. Once again, this
case has no application to the instant case as it was a case
of conviction in criminal proceedings and not of acquittal.
Mr. Lumor
also cited the recent case of In Re Norris, a report
of which appeared in The Times of London dated 27th
February, 2000. In this case, the Court of Appeal held that
although the High Court had power in proceedings to enforce
a restraint order made under the Drug Trafficking Offences
Act, 1986, to allow a third party in an appropriate case to
reopen the issue whether he had an interest in the property
in question, it would be an abuse of process for the Court
to allow a third party to re-litigate issues which had already
been decided in the Crown Court on the same or substantially
the same evidence and submissions where the third party, although
not a party to the criminal proceedings and not separately
represented, had had a fair opportunity of putting his case
before the Crown Court.
It will
be readily seen that this case is widely off the mark and
has little relevance to the issues in question. The decision
in this case turned on the particular provisions of the UK
Drug Trafficking Offences Act, 1986, which, while giving the
Defendant a right of appeal against any confiscation order,
gave no such right of appeal to the third party.
During
the course of Mr. Lumor's argument, I raised the question
whether "issue estoppel" could also arise on the
facts of this case. While Mr. Lumor submitted that it could,
the thrust of his argument was based on the abuse of the process
of the court rather than on issue estoppel. In Mcllkenny
v Chief Constable of West Midlands [1980] 2 ALL ER 227,
where the facts were the same as in Hunter, Lord Denning
MR and Sir George Baker were in favour of extending the description
"issue estoppel" to cover the particular example
of abuse of process of the court presented by that case. Goff,
L.J., on the other hand, expressed his own view that such
extension would involve a misuse of that expression. In Hunter,
supra, Lord Diplock said that if what Hunter
was seeking to do in initiating the civil Action was an abuse
of the process of the court, the question whether it also
qualified to bear the label "isue estoppel" was
a matter not of substance but of semantics'. But Lord Diplock
significantly added (at p 773, letter a):
"Nevertheless
it is my own view, which I understand is shared by all your
Lordships, that it would be best, in order to avoid confusion,
if the use of the description 'issue estoppel' in English
law, at any rate (it does not appear to have been adopted
in the United States), were restricted to that species of
estoppel per rem judicatum that may arise in civil
actions between the same parties or their privies, of which
the characteristics are stated in a judgment of my own in
Mills v Cooper [1967] 2 ALL ER 100 at 104, [1967]
2 QB 459 at 468-469 that was adopted and approved by
this House in Director of Public Prosecution v Humphrys
[1976 2 ALL ER 497, [1977] AC 1, the case in which it
was also held that 'issue estoppel' had no place in English
criminal law."
Another
difficulty in applying the doctrine of issue estoppel' to
jury trials is the problem of determining what was decided
by the jury. In Hunter's case it was the trial judge's
ruling on the voire dire, giving reasons for the decision,
which qualified as the final decision'. As Lord Diplock said
(at p 734, letter b):
"In
the instant case, the relevant final decision by a competent
Court in which the identical question sought to be raised
has already been decided is the ruling of Bridge J.,
on the voir dire in the murder trial that Hunter's confession
was admissible." (My emphasis).
Lord Diplock
added (at p. 734, letters d and e):
"The
fact that the whole matter of the circumstances in which
the confession was obtained was gone into a second time
before the jury and that the jury, in view of the judge's
direction to them, must clearly also have been satisfied
beyond reasonable doubt that Hunter's account of the
assaults on him by the police was a fabrication and does
not affect the finality of the judge's ruling, though it
would exacerbate the public scandal to the administration
of justice that would be involved if Hunter, by changing
the form of the proceedings to a civil Action, were to be
permitted to set up in that Action the same case that must
have been decided against him not only once but twice, even
though technically it was only the first of those decisions
that eventually qualified as the final decision against
him by a competent court on the very question that he seeks
now to raise." (Emphasis added)
In the
case before me, on the other hand, it is the jury's verdict
which is being characterized as the final decision' by a competent
Court. As juries give no reasons for their verdicts it would
be no more than a conjecture as to what issues were determined
by the verdict. As Professor Telford Georges, J.A. said in
Requena and Flores v The Queen, (Belize Criminal Appeals
Nos. 19 and 20 of 1980 at p.6), a case which considered
the applicability of 'issue estoppel' in criminal law:
"Apart
from that difficulty of lack of mutuality there are practical
difficulties which are set out in the speech of Lord Devlin
in Connelly v D.P.P. (1967) AC 1254 and which I respectfully
adopt. There may be serious problems of analysis in determining
what was decided by the jury. In some case this might be
done simply enough while in others it might be quite difficult,
thus introducing an element of chance in the effective use
of the doctrine as a bar to successive prosecutions. The
problems are further compounded where the accused is convicted
at the trial, indicating that the jury took a view of the
facts adverse to the accused, but that decision was reversed
on appeal on the ground of misdirection and no new trial
ordered. Although there is clearly a verdict of not guilty
which could support a plea of autre fois acquit,
much sophistry would be required to discover what "issues
had been decided."
Professor
Georges, J.A. continued:
"It
should also be frankly recognized that the verdicts of jurors
represent compromises impossible to analyse as strict exercises
in logic, but representing a community consensus of what
seems just. Thus in Hoag v New Jersey (1958) 356 U.S.
464 at page 472, in dismissing an appeal from a conviction
for robbery in which there had been a previous acquittal
on a charge where another victim had been named though the
facts were identical and the issue - that of identity -
the same, the Court, through Harlam J., stated:
"Keeping
in mind the fact that jury verdicts are sometimes inconsistent
or irrational we cannot say that the New Jersey Supreme
Court exceeded constitutionally permissible bounds in concluding
that the jury might have acquitted the petitioner at the
earlier trial because it did not believe that the victim
had been put in fear, or that property had been taken from
them or for other reasons unrelated to the issue of identity."
It follows
that 'issue estoppel' has no application to the facts of the
case before me.
I must
add that although I have considered in some detail the authorities
cited by learned Counsel for the Defendants, as well as the
question of 'issue estoppel', the fundamental proposition
that acquittals are inadmissible in evidence in civil proceedings
renders the above discussion an academic exercise.
In the
circumstances, the application by the Defendants to have this
Action struck out on the ground that it is an abuse of process
of the Court is dismissed. I make no order as to costs. Decision
accordingly.
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