IN
THE MATTER of an application by Belize Telecommunications
Limited for leave to apply for Judicial Review |
|
AND
|
IN
THE MATTER of the Decisions of the Government of Belize
and/or the Minister of Finance, Foreign Trade & Economic
Development on the 16th day of November, 2000 and the
25th day of September, 2001 to enter into contracts with
LGS Services Limited and International Telecommunications
Limited to provide certain telecommunication services
to and/or on behalf of the Government of Belize |
|
AND
|
|
IN
THE MATTER of the Finance and Audit Act, Chapter 15 of
the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000 |
|
The
Queen |
|
AND |
|
The
Attorney General of Belize
Min. of Finance, Foreign Trade & Economic Development |
|
AND |
International
Telecommunications Limited |
RESPONDENTS |
Ex
Parte,
Belize Telecommunications Limited |
APPLICANT |
|
2002:
|
September
18,
November, 12 |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 152 of 2002
Blackman, J.
Mrs. Lois
Young-Barrow, S.C., for the Applicant.
Eamon Courtenay, S.C., for the 1st and 2nd Respondents.
Denys Barrow, S.C., with Christopher Coye, for the 3rd Respondent.
Judicial
Review - Application that leave to apply for judicial review
previously granted be set aside - Applicant not disclosing
all material facts when applying for leave - Effect of non-disclosure
- Whether leave granted after an inter partes hearing
can be set aside due to material non-disclosure by Applicant
- Delay - Effect of delay on applications to set aside leave
to apply for judicial review previously granted - Need for
Applicant to exhaust alternative remedies before applying
for judicial review.
J U D G M E N T
- On
the 2nd of April, 2002 the Applicant applied ex parte, for
leave for judicial review of contracts dated the 15th day
of November, 2000 and the 25th day of September, 2001, entered
into by the Government of Belize and/or the Minister of
Finance, Foreign Trade and Economic Development with LGS
Services Limited and International Telecommunications Limited
(hereinafter called Intelco) to provide certain telecommunications
services to and/or on behalf of the Government of Belize.
Given
that on the face of the documents, the application appeared
to be
outside the three month period required by Rules of Court
which stated that:
"An
application for leave to apply for judicial review shall
be made promptly and in any event within three months from
the date when grounds for the application first arose unless
the Court considers that there is good reason for extending
the period within which the application shall be made,"
I directed
at the hearing of the ex parte application on April
12th, that notice of the Application be served on the 1st
and 2nd Respondents.
-
The application for leave was supported by the affidavit
of Edibert. Tesecum, the Chief Executive Officer of the
Applicant, and was sworn on the 2nd of April, 2002. The
following paragraphs of that affidavit are reproduced hereunder:
2.
"In January, 2002, I heard rumors about a contract
involving the Government and ITL and/or LGS Services Limited,
for the provision by one or both of telecommunications
services in Belize.
3.
On the 30th January, 2002, legal counsel for BTL wrote
to the Minister of Budget Management, Investment and Public
Utilities, asking for a copy of this contract or agreement.
A copy of this letter dated 30th January, 2002 is now
produced and shown to me and marked E.T. (1) for identification.
5. By a reply dated 15th day of February, 2002 Legal Counsel
in the Ministry of Budget Management, Mr. Gian Ghandi,
refused the said application on the basis that "in
our view" the agreements were exempt documents under
section 31 of the Freedom of Information Act as their
disclosure would constitute a breach of confidence.
6.
In his response, however, Mr. Gian Ghandi informed BTL's
legal counsel of the parties to and the dates of the two
agreements, namely:
"Government
of Belize entered into two agreements - one with LGS Services
Limited on the 16th November, 2000 and the other with
LGS Services Limited and International Telecommunications
Ltd., on 25th September, 2001 amending the first agreement."
7.
Mr. Ghandi also notified BTL's legal counsel that "both
agreements have been reviewed by the Contractor General
and I enclose for your information a copy of his letter
containing his observations on the agreements". A
copy of Gian Ghandi's letter dated 15th February, 2002
is now produced and shown to me and marked E.T. (2) for
identification.
9.
Both agreements were made without the knowledge of the
Applicant. At no time was the Applicant aware of the agreements."
18.
In addition, in mid 2001, I have been informed by Phillip
Osborne, and verily believe that, an offer was made by
the Michael Ashcroft Foundation, an educational non-profit
foundation, of which he is an officer, to the Government
of Belize, for a donation of 5,000 computers to Government
aided educational institutions in Belize. This offer was
rejected by the Government of Belize.
24.
The Applicant has applied for relief since becoming aware
of the agreements and now seeks relief from this Court."
- On
16th of April, 2002, after hearing submissions from Counsel
for the Applicant and the Solicitor-General on behalf of
the 1st and 2nd Respondents, and having taken into account
the affidavit of Mr. Tesecum sworn on April 2nd, and the
statement in support of the Application for leave to apply
for Judicial Review, in particular the material facts set
forth at paragraph 3.2 of the statement which was essentially
in similar terms as deposed by Mr. Tesecum in the affidavit
of 2nd April, leave was granted for judicial review in the
following terms:
"That
the time for applying for leave to apply for Judicial
Review be extended to include the 2nd day of April, 2002.
That the Applicant Belize Telecommunications Limited do
have and is hereby granted leave to apply for Judicial
Review in the form of:
(i)
A Declaration that the Decisions of the Government of
Belize and/or the Minister of Finance, Foreign Trade &
Economic Development on the 16th day of November, 2000
and on the 25th day of September, 2001, to enter into
contracts with LGS Services Limited and International
Telecommunications Limited to provide telecommunications
services to the Government of Belize, are ultra vires
the Financial Orders 1965, irrational and illegal.
(ii)
An Order of Certiorari to remove into this Honourable
Court and quash the contracts with LGS Services Limited
and International Telecommunications Limited.
(iii)
An Order of Mandamus to direct the Government of
Belize and/or the Minister of Finance, Foreign Trade &
Economic Development to comply with its/his statutory
duties under the provisions of the said Financial Orders
before entering into a contract for telecommunication
services."
- The
hearing of the substantive application was fixed for the
2nd of September, 2002. However, on 23rd August, 2002 almost
five months after being granted leave for Judicial Review,
the Applicant filed an Application seeking:
(i)
leave to amend the Originating Notice of Motion and the
Statement in Support;
(ii)
an order that all proceedings be stayed until the trial
of, and decision in this Action, and;
(iii)
an order that Intelco produce the contracts referred to
at 1 above, and which are the subject matter of this application
for judicial review.
-
On
August 26th, Intelco filed a Notice of Motion seeking
leave to join the proceedings as an interested party.
In the affidavit filed in support of this application,
Mr. Juan McKenzie, its C.E.O., deposed that as a result
of the contract dated 25th September, 2001 with the Government
of Belize, Intelco had invested the sum of U.S. $28,900,000.00
and that his company was directly affected by the proceedings.
-
The
Notices of Motion from the Applicant and Intelco were
heard on 2nd September, and on the conclusion of submissions
by all Counsel, orders in respect of (i) and (iii) of
the Applicant's Summons as shown at 4 above were made,
and leave granted for Intelco to be joined in the proceedings.
Directions were given as to the time frame for the filing
and exchange of documents between the parties, as well
as for the filing of skeleton arguments and supporting
authorities, and it was ordered that trial of the matter
be set for 18th September, 2002. Prior to the adjournment
on the 2nd September, both Mr. Courtenay and Mr. Barrow
intimated that they would be applying to have the grant
of leave to the Applicant for judicial review set aside,
as in their view, the application "was entirely misconceived."
- On
13th September, 2002, Counsel for the First and Second Respondents
and Counsel for the Third Respondent filed separate Notices
of Motion, returnable on 18th September, 2002, that sought
an Order that the Leave to apply for Judicial Review granted
on the 16th day of April, 2002 be set aside (inter alia)
on the grounds that:
(1)
the Statement and the Affidavit in Support of the Statement
contained material misrepresentations;
(2)
the Applicant withheld from the Court material matters
of fact and law which they were under a duty to disclose;
(3)
the Applicant failed to draw to the attention of the Court
the fact that there existed an alternative remedy under
the Contractor General Act.
-
On
September 16, 2002, Counsel for the Applicant filed six
(6) Notices of Motion also returnable on the 18th day
of September, 2002, that sought an Order of Committal
against the First and Second Respondents and Glenn
Godfrey, Roberto Young, Hector B. Knight and Herman Contreras
four of the Directors of the Third Defendant, for their
joint and several contempt of the Court in failing to
produce the contracts referred to in 1 above of this Decision.
Affidavits of service verifying that the Order dated 2nd
September, 2002, had been served on each of the above
named persons on the 13th of September, have been exhibited.
-
At
the start of the proceedings on 18th September, Counsel
for the Applicant referred to the Notices of Motion dated
the 16th day of September, hereinbefore referred to, and
sought to obtain orders for committal. However, I ruled
that the Motions dated the 13th of September, that sought
to have the Leave for Judicial Review set aside, should
be heard first on the basis that if those Motions succeeded,
then the Motions for committal for contempt would be of
mere academic significance.
-
Following
this ruling, Ms. Lois Young sought leave to file out of
time affidavits, opposing the applications to set aside
leave, tendered by Mr. Tesecum and by Lord Ashcroft, the
CEO and Chairman of the Applicant's Board respectively.
Permission was granted for the affidavit of Mr. Tesecum,
which had been sworn, to be filed and served on all parties.
After hearing Counsel for the Applicant and the Respondents,
I refused leave for the filing of Lord Ashcroft's affidavit,
as at the time of the hearing, it had not been sworn.
- Mr.
Denys Barrow SC, Counsel for Intelco, in support of his
application that the grant of leave to apply for judicial
review should be set aside, relied on the affidavit evidence
of Glenn Godfrey, Juan McKenzie and Roberto Young to support
his contention that BTL knew of the existence of the contracts
in issue from as early as May, 2001, and that it was a material
and gross misrepresentation on its part, to advance its
application, as averred by Mr. Tesecum in his affidavit
of the 2nd April, on the ground that:
"In
January 2002 I heard rumors about a contract involving
the Government and ITL and/or LGS Services Limited, for
the provision by one or both of telecommunication services
in Belize."
- An
examination of the affidavit evidence of Roberto Young,
as appears from extracts of his affidavit sworn on the 13th
September, 2002, and set out hereunder, is instructive:
(1)
"I was an employee of LGS Services Limited (hereinafter
"LGS") when LGS was carrying on business operations
in the years 2000 and 2001.
(2) Belize Telecommunications Limited (hereinafter "the
Applicant") is and was, at all material times, a
subsidiary of Carlisle Holdings Limited (hereinafter "Carlisle").
(4)
During my period of employment, LGS on or about the 16th
November, 2000 entered into the contract mentioned in
the title of this action (hereinafter "the said contract")
with the Government of Belize in respect of telecommunications
services.
(5)
In or about May 2001, employees, services, agents, and/or
members of the Board of Directors of the Applicant entered
into negotiations with LGS for purchase by Carlisle and/or
the Applicant of the property, equipment, assets and goodwill
of LGS including the goodwill associated with the said
contract between the Government and LGS Services Limited
(hereinafter "the LGS Assets").
(6)
There were numerous negotiations and meetings from May
to August of 2001 between LGS, Carlisle and/or the Applicant
(hereinafter "the Negotiations and Meetings")
with regard to the proposed purchase by Carlisle and/or
the Applicant of the LGS Assets.
(8)
The Chairman of the Applicant, namely Lord Michael Ashcroft,
and three Directors of the Applicant, namely Ian Pluthero,
Philip Osborne, and Reginald Ross, each participated from
time to time in the Negotiations and Meetings for the
purchase of the LGS Assets including the said contract
during the period, May to August, 2001.
(9)
Herman Contreras, then Financial Controller for and on
behalf of LGS, and Christopher Coye, then Attorney-At-Law
for LGS, and others each participated from time to time
in the said Negotiations and Meetings on behalf of LGS.
(10)
A copy of the annual report 2000 - 2001of the Applicant
showing (inter alia) the said Lord Michael Ashcroft
as Chairman of the Applicant and the said Ian Pluthero,
Philip Osborne and Reginald Ross as Directors of the Applicant
is now shown to me, exhibited herewith and marked "RY-2".
(12)
A copy of a letter signed by the said Ian Pluthero, while
he was a Director of the Applicant, and dated the 25th
of May, 2001 is exhibited herewith, produced and shown
to me marked "RY-3" wherein, inter alia,
he acknowledged the existence of the said contract and
the intent of Carlisle to purchase LGS Assets including
the said contract.
(13) A copy of a letter referring to (inter alia)
the Negotiations and Meetings signed by the said Reginald
Ross acting for and on behalf of the Applicant while he
was an Executive Director of the Applicant and dated the
6th of June, 2001 is exhibited herewith, produced and
shown to me marked "RY-4".
(14)
A copy of a letter signed by the said Philip Osborne,
Director of the Applicant, sent the 20th of June, 2001
is exhibited herewith, produced and shown to me marked
"RY-5" wherein, inter alia, he acknowledged
the existence of the said contract and the intent of Carlisle
to purchase the LGS assets including the said contract.
(15)
A copy of a "Letter of Understanding" signed
by the said Lord Michael Ashcroft referring to a meeting
on the 19th day of May, 2001 with respect to the intent
of Carlisle to purchase the LGS Assets including the said
contract is exhibited herewith and shown to me marked
"RY-6".
- I
reproduce herein "RY-6", which is representative
of the contents of "RY-3; 4 and 5" to indicate
the matters covered by the Letter of Understanding.
"RY-6"
Letter of Understanding ("LOU") between Carlisle
Holdings Limited ("CHL") and LGS Services Limited
("LGS").
This LOU
is intended to provide a framework to record the LGS and CHL
issues discussed at the meeting held between representatives
of the above parties and the Government of Belize ("GOB")
on Saturday, May 19, 2001 and in subsequent discussions between
the parties.
- CHL
would progress the opportunity to purchase the assets and
goodwill associated with the GOB telecommunications contract
with LGS ("The Contract").
- The
value assessed by LGS for the goodwill of LGS arising under
the Contract was US$10 m, being derived from LGS' estimate
of 2 years loss of revenue stream.
- LGS
and its subsidiaries, and all associated and affiliated
entities and persons thereof, would within a period of 4
weeks from the conclusion of an agreement between the parties,
withdraw from the telecommunications market and, for an
agreed period of time, would not own, run, provide, or operate
any telecommunications services to any third parties within
or to and from the geographical territory of Belize.
- CHL
needs to understand what assets they are buying in order
to determine their usability and thereby evaluate the proposed
business proposition.
- The
value assessed by LGS for the assets acquired and monies
already spent by LGS under the Contract was circa US$18m.
- LGS
would produce a schedule to support the circa US$18m and
this would form the basis for CHL proceeding with their
due diligence review.
- All
confidential information concerning the affairs of LGS and
CHL and all discussions leading up to or concerning the
entering into of any agreements between the parties, would
be kept confidential.
- This
document is the broad non-binding LOU discussed by the parties
at the meeting and is not intended to constitute a commitment
to or create any legal obligation between the parties, but
is to be principally used to communicate CHL's interest
in the assets and goodwill associated with the Contract
to LGS' and CHL's shareholders.
- In
order to address the concerns raised at the meeting by the
principal of DataPro, it has been agreed that a suitable
"carve out" with respect to DataPro's own existing
business operations would be engineered in accordance with
the spirit of the Hon. Said Musa's letter of June 8, 2001
to Lord Ashcroft, and more specifically, with respect to
the provision by BTL of suitable telecommunications services
to DataPro as mutually agreed by the parties.
Acknowledged and agreed to by:
Signed:
M. Ashcroft |
|
CARLISLE
HOLDINGS LIMITED |
LGS
SERVICES LIMITED. |
-
It has been further submitted that failure to draw to the
attention of the Court, at the leave stage, of the existence
of an alternative remedy under the Contractor General
Act, Cap 6 of the Laws of Belize, R.E 2000 was a material
and major omission. In support of this, reliance has been
placed on the observation by Laws LJ in R (on the application
of Bancoult) v. Secretary of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office [2001] 2 WLR 1219 at [27], letter h that:
"judicial
review is a legal recourse of last resort and an applicant
must exhaust any proper alternative remedy open to him
before the judicial review court will consider his case."
The position
taken by Laws LJ had earlier been propounded by Lord Donaldson
MR in R v. Panel on Take-Overs and Mergers, ex parte Guinness
Plc [1989] 2 WLR 863 at 885F to 886 B, and followed by
Popplewell J in R v. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries
and Food, ex parte Live Sheep Traders Ltd [1995] COD 297.
-
Mr.
Eamon Courtenay SC, in support of the application that
Leave for Judicial Review be set aside, contrasted the
disclosure by Mr. Ediberto Tesecum in his affidavit of
18th September, 2002 (the Third Affidavit) that he had,
on 31st January, 2002 written to the Contractor General
about the contracts, with the affidavit of 2nd April,2002
that suggested the information relied upon had been acquired
through an application pursuant to the Freedom of Information
Act.
- In
setting out below the relevant paragraph of the Third Affidavit,
with extracts of the letter of 31 January, 2002, it should
be noted that on the 17th of September, 2002, Mr. Robert
C. Swift, the Contractor General of Belize, disclosed at
paragraphs 5 and 6 of his affidavit that:
(5)
"On the 31st January, 2002 I was written a letter
by Mr. Ediberto Tesecum, the Chief Executive Officer of
the Belize Telecommunications Limited, requesting me as
Contractor General, among other things, to conduct an
'immediate investigation... of the recently announced
contract awarded by GOB to Intelco, to provide
GOB with various telecommunication products and
services.' A copy of the said letter is now produced and
shown to me marked "RCS3".
(6)
On the 13th February, 2002, I replied to Mr. Ediberto
Tesecum, pointing out in my reply that I had already conducted
an investigation into the matter, my views in respect
thereof were no doubt communicated to the Belize Telecommunications
Limited, but that if the Belize Telecommunications Limited
had other pertinent information which it was prepared
to provide me relating to the contracts in question; I
would be 'happy to again review the matter'. A copy of
the said reply dated 13th February, 2002 is now produced
and shown to me marked "RCS-4"."
- The
critical paragraphs of Mr. Tesecum's affidavit are as follows:
3.
The allegation by Intelco that the Applicant failed to
exhaust the alternative remedy set out in the Contractor
General Act is false. On the 31st day of January, 2002,
I wrote to the Contractor General, Mr. Robert Swift, on
behalf of the Applicant requesting "an immediate
investigation by the Contractor General of the recently
announced contract awarded by Government of Belize (GOB)
to Intelco, to provide GOB with various telecommunication
products and services."
4.
The letter went on to express that "BTL is also concerned
as to the irregular manner in which this contract was
awarded to Intelco, in that contrary to the norm in awarding
public contracts, neither the general public nor BTL as
the sole licensed telecommunications provider in Belize,
were informed or invited to submit tenders for the award
of the contract. Furthermore, no publication of the intention
to award the contract was published in the local media
prior to the announcement by GOB of the award to Intelco."
A
copy of this letter dated the 31st day of January, 2002,
is now produced and shown to me and marked "E.T.-1"
for identification.
5.
On the 14th day of February, 2002, I received a response
from the Contractor General in a letter dated the 13th
day of February, 2002. The Contractor General responded
essentially as follows:
"On
receipt of your letter I reviewed this matter carefully.
Given the information available to this office at this time,
I do not consider that any (further) investigation
is necessary or desirable."
A copy
of this letter from the Contractor General dated the 14th
day of February, 2002, is now produced and shown to me and
marked "E.T.-2" for identification.
-
Mr. Courtenay further submitted that notwithstanding evidence
which contradicted that of Mr. Tesecum which had led to
leave being granted in the Third affidavit, no explanation
was offered or given with respect to the contracts or to
the negotiations which Directors of the Applicant Company
had with Intelco to acquire the underlying business of the
company, and related to the contracts in question as stated
by Mr. Young in his affidavit. In support of this, Mr. Courtenay
referred to the observations of Lord Diplock in O'Reilly
v. Mackman {1982} 3 All E.R. 1124 at p.1130j to1131a
and to those of Leggatt LJ in R v. Lloyds of London
ex-parte Briggs [1993] 5 Admin. LR 698, where at
p.705 he restated the requirements of disclosure on an ex-parte
application, which had earlier been summarized by Ralph
Gibbons LJ in Brink's Mat Ltd.,v . Elcombe
[1988] 1 WLR 130.
"In
considering whether there has been relevant non-disclosure
and what consequences the court should attach to any failure
to comply with the duty to make full and frank disclosure,
the principles relevant to the issues in these appeals
appear to me to include the following:
(1)
The duty of the applicant is to make 'a full and fair
disclosure of all material facts.' See R v. Kensington
Income Tax Commissioners ex-parte Princess Edmond de Polignac
[1917] 1 K.B., 514 per Scutton, L.J.
(2)
The material facts are those which it is material for
the Judge to know in dealing with the application as made:
materiality is to be decided by the court and not by the
assessment of the applicant or his legal advisers: See
R v. Kensington Income Tax Commissioners,
per Lord Cozens-Hardy, M.R., at p. 504, citing Dalglish
v. Jarview [1850] 2 Mac, & G. 231, 238 and
Browne-Wilkinson, J. in Thermax Ltd., v. Schott
Industrial Glass Ltd., [1981] F.S.R. 289, 295.
(3)
The applicant must make proper inquiries before making
the application: see Bank Mellatt v. Nikpur [1985]
F.S.R. 87. The duty of disclosure therefore applies
not only to material facts known to the applicant, but
also to any additional facts which he would have known
if he had made such inquiries".
(4)
The extent of the inquiries which will be held to be
proper, and therefore necessary, must depend on all circumstances
of the case including (a) the nature of the case which
the applicant is making when he makes the application;
and (b) the order for which the application is made and
the probable effect of the order on the defendant: see,
for example, the examination by Scott, J., of the possible
effect of an Anton Piller order in Columbia
Pictures Industries Inc. v. Robinson [1987] Ch. 38;
and (c) the degree of legitimate urgency and the time
available for the making of inquiries: see per Slade,
L.J. in Bank Mellai v Nikpur [1985] F.S.R. 87, 92-93.
(5)
If material non-disclosure is established the court will
be astute to ensure that a plaintiff who obtains [an ex
parte injunction] without full disclosure . . . is
deprived of any advantage he may have derived by that
breach of duty; see per Donaldson, L.J. in Bank
Mellat v. Nikpur, at p. 91 citing Warrington,
L.J. in Kensington Income Tax Commissioners'
case [1917] 1 K.B. 486, 509.
(6)
Whether the fact not disclosed is of sufficient materiality
to justify or require immediate discharge of the order
without examination of the merits depends on the importance
of the fact to the issues which were to be decided by
the Judge on the application. The answer to the question
whether the non-disclosure was innocent, in the sense
that the fact was not known to the applicant or that its
relevance was not perceived, is an important consideration
but not decisive by reason of the duty on the applicant
to make all proper inquiries and to give careful consideration
to the case being presented.
(7)
Finally, it is not for every omission that the injunction
will be automatically discharged. A locus poenitentiae
may sometimes be afforded: per Lord Denning, M.R. in Bank
Mellat v. Nikpur [1985] F.S.R. 87, 90. The court
has a discretion, notwithstanding proof of material non-disclosure
which justifies nor requires the immediate discharge of
the ex parte order, nevertheless to continue the order,
or to make a new order on terms."
-
Ms.
Lois Young for the Applicant was dismissive of the significance
of the non-disclosure of the correspondence between Mr.
Tesecum and the Contractor General, and queried whether
the non-disclosure was in fact, material. With respect
to the proposition that there was an alternative remedy
under the Contractor General Act, she submitted that in
the circumstance where the Contractor General had advised
her client "given the information available to the
office at this time, I do not consider that any
(further) investigation is necessary or desirable",
the statement that "if you have additional pertinent
information that you are prepared to provide me I shall
be happy to again review the matter," was
meaningless and that it would have been pointless to go
back to the Contractor General as he had already made
up his mind on the issue.
-
In
support of this position, reliance has been placed on
the statement by Lewis in Judicial Remedies
in Public Law, (Second Edition) pages 351/352.
"The position is not as simple as the dicta suggest.
The exhaustion of remedies 'rule' is only a general principle
governing the exercise of judicial discretion. There are
qualifications on that principle, and different formulations
and understanding of the rule can be seen in the case
law. Judges have also exhibited '. . . varying emphasis
on the reluctance to grant judicial review.' One recurrent
theme is the extreme to which errors which could be corrected
by way of judicial review should be left to the appellate
system. Another important issue is the adequacy of the
alternative remedy as a means of resolving the complaint.
These issues can be seen as defining the scope of the
'exhaustion of remedies' principle, or as exceptions to
the general rule. In addition, an alternative remedy which
may normally be adequate may not on the particular facts
of a case be appropriate, and that may justify allowing
recourse to judicial review. In exceptional circumstances,
which, '. . . by definition . . . defy definition,' judicial
review may be used notwithstanding the availability of
alternative remedies."
-
In
resisting the application that the leave granted should
be set aside, Counsel for BTL has submitted that the Respondents
should have made the application promptly, or as noted
in Supperstone and Goudie's Judicial Review at
para 16.7 "it must be made timeously if it is to
have any point at all." She observed that nearly
five months had elapsed since the leave had first been
granted and that the information relied upon at this hearing,
could have been put before the Court when consideration
was being given to the grant of leave. With respect to
the evidence of Roberto Young that some of the Directors
of Carlisle Holdings/BTL had been negotiating with representatives
of Intelco in May 2001 about a takeover of Intelco's business,
inclusive of the Contracts, it was her position that as
the Applicant is a separate legal entity distinct from
Carlisle, information acquired by Carlisle cannot be imputed
to the Applicant and as a consequence to Mr. Tesecum,
who as Chief Executive Officer is supposed "to know
the affairs of the Company".
- Attention
has been drawn to the following passage in Wade &
Forsyth (8th Edition) at pages 689/690, where it
is stated that:
"An
applicant may lose his claim to relief because his own
conduct has been unmeritorious or unreasonable. Examples
of this have already been given in the context of natural
justice. An applicant may also have raised his objection
too late. It is a general rule that the court will not
intervene in favour of an applicant who has allowed a
court or authority to proceed to a decision without setting
up an objection of which he was aware at the time - except
perhaps upon an irresistible case, and an excuse for the
delay, such as disability, malpractice, or matter newly
come to the knowledge of the applicant."
-
In
reply, Mr. Barrow for Intelco, has referred, on the issue
of delay, to R. v. Eurotunnel Developments Limited,
ex-parte Stephens [1995] 73 P& CR 1 where
leave for judicial review, was set aside one year after
the application had initially been granted. As to the
separate legal status of Carlisle Holdings and BTL, it
was his position that where X, a Director of Company A,
and also a Director of Company B and Company A is the
parent of B, it is neither logical or credible to believe
that X would void his mind of any knowledge acquired in
the course of negotiations/discussions for and on behalf
of the parent and intended to be for the benefit of the
subsidiary. In the instant case, the Annual Reports indicate
that Ian Pluthero, Philip Osborne and Lord Ashcroft are
some of the Directors of the Applicant Company as well
as members of the Board of Carlisle Holdings. In that
capacity, as apparent from the exhibits R.Y.-3 and RY4
of the affidavit of Roberto Young, they negotiated with
the Directors of the Third Respondent for the acquisition
of its business. Consequently, it was his submission that
what the Directors knew, the Applicant Company must be
deemed on all reasonable grounds to also know.
-
Mr.
Courtenay, in elaborating on the submission made by Mr.
Barrow that what the Directors knew, the Company must
be deemed to also know, noted that companies cannot act
on their own volition but by their Directors and officers,
and that as a consequence, an examination of the exhibits
to the affidavit of Roberto Young which carried the signatures
of persons who were Directors and/or officers of BTL would
confirm an awareness of the existence of the contracts
as early as June 2001, by Directors and officers of the
Applicant, rather than late January 2002, as alleged by
Mr. Tesecum.
Mr.
Courtenay also referred to R (on the application
of Holmes v. General Medical Council [2001], 63
BMLR 131 and R (on the application of Lichfield
Securities Ltd) v. Litchfield DC 8 March, 2001,
unreported) CA as authorities for setting aside a leave
which had been granted inter-partes.
-
The
submission that recourse to the Contractor General is
an alternative remedy requires some consideration. In
the letter of 13th February, 2002, the Contractor General
advised the CEO of the Applicant that "He would be
happy to again review the matter." This statement
must be examined in light of the following provisions
of the Contractor General Act, Cap. 6 of the Laws of Belize.
Sections 15, 16, 17 and 20 state as follows:
15.
"The Contractor General shall, where it is necessary
and desirable, conduct an investigation into any or all
of the following matters:-
(a)
the selection of contractors;
(b) tender procedures relating to contracts awarded by
public bodies;
(c) the award of any public contract;
(d) any allegation of fraud, mismanagement, waste or abuse
involving public contracts;
(e) the implementation of the terms of any public contract;
(f) the circumstances of and the practices and procedures
relating to the grant, issue, use, suspension or revocation
of any prescribed licence.
16.
(1) An investigation pursuant to section 15 of this Act
may be undertaken by the Contractor General on his own
initiative or as a result of representations made to him,
if in his opinion such investigation is warranted.
(2) The Contractor General may receive and investigate
complaints or information from an employee of a public
body concerning the possible existence of an activity
constituting a violation of laws, rules, or regulations;
or mismanagement, gross waste of funds, fraud, corruption
or other impropriety relating to the award or termination
of any contract; or the grant, issue, suspension or revocation
of any prescribed licence.
(3) The Contractor General shall not, after receipt of
a complaint or information from an employee under subsection
(2) of this section, disclose the identity of the employee
without the consent of the employee, unless the Contractor
General determines that such disclosure is unavoidable
during the course of the investigation.
17.
(1) The Contractor General may adopt whatever procedure
he considers appropriate to the circumstances of a particular
case and, subject to the provision of this Act, may obtain
information from such person and in such manner and make
such enquiries as he thinks fit.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as requiring
the Contractor General to hold any hearing and no person
shall be entitled as of right to comment on any allegations
or to be heard by the Contractor General.
(3) Regulations made under this Act may prescribe the
practice and procedure to be adopted at any hearing.
(4) Where, for the purpose of an investigation, the Contractor
General requires a person to attend before him, that person
shall be entitled to be paid for any expenses incurred
by him by reason of such attendance and by way of compensation
for the trouble and loss of time suffered by him.
20.
(1) After conducting an investigation under this Act,
the Contractor General shall, in writing, inform the principal
officer of the public body concerned and the Minister
having responsibility therefor, of the result of that
investigation and make such recommendations as he considers
necessary in respect of the matter which was investigated.
(2) Where any report of the Contractor General reflects
adversely upon any person, the Contractor General shall,
so far as practicable, inform that person of the substance
of the report.
(3) Where the Contractor General has made a recommendation
under subsection (1) of this section, and within the time
specified or a reasonable time thereafter, and he is of
the opinion that no adequate action has been taken in
pursuance of his recommendation, he shall expeditiously
lay before the National Assembly a special report on the
case."
- As
noted in Lewis', Judicial Remedies in Public Law
quoted at 20 above with respect to alternative remedies,
is the question of the adequacy of alternative remedies
as a means of resolving the conflict. Lewis at p. 356 opined
further that:
"The
courts are unlikely to insist that the applicant pursue
an alternative remedy which is inadequate . . . Certain
remedies are generally considered an inadequate alternative
to judicial review. The opportunity to complain about
a local authority decision to the local ombudsman does
not affect the ability of an individual to seek judicial
review of the decision, if grounds for doing so exist.
The role of the local ombudsman is to supplement judicial
review remedies, not replace them".
-
In
light of the above provisions of the Contractor General
Act particularly Section 20, it seems to me that judicial
review must be the preferred alternative available to
aggrieved persons as the determination by the Contractor
General is by way of recommendation only which is not
binding on the public body concerned. Indeed, the recourse
of the Contractor General, if he is of the opinion that
no adequate action has been taken in pursuance of his
recommendations, is to lay before the National Assembly
a specific report on the case.
-
Accordingly,
I do not find that the Applicant needed to have looked
to the Contractor General for relief before coming to
the court for leave for judicial review, as the role of
the Contractor General in the words of Lewis is "to
supplement judicial review remedies, not replace them."
-
The
remaining issue which has to be determined is whether
there was full disclosure by the Applicant on the application
for grant of leave for judicial review. Latham J in R
v. Leeds City Council, ex parte Hendry {1994}6 Adm LR
439 at 444D, observed that:
"it
is of fundamental importance that applications for judicial
review should be made with full disclosure (emphasis
added) of all material available to the Applicant."
When the
several affidavits in this Action filed on behalf of the Applicant
are considered against those filed by the Respondents with
their supporting Exhibits, particularly those attached to
the affidavit of Roberto Young, it appears that there has
been a significant lack of candour on the part of the Applicant.
-
As Dillon LJ in Lloyds Bowmaker Ltd v. Britannia Arrow Plc
[1988] 1W.L.R 1337 at p.1348 f noted:
"the
applicant owes a duty of fullest and frank disclosure:
if he puts in matters of prejudice he must put them in
as fully as is necessary to be fair. He cannot pile on
the prejudice and then when it is pointed out that he
has told only half the story and has left out matters
which give quite a different complexion, say, "Oh,
well, it is not material. It is only prejudice, and so,
on a strict analysis of the pleadings, does not have to
be regarded."
-
The
position stated by Ralph Gibbons LJ in Brink's Mat
Ltd v. Elcombe earlier mentioned at paragraph
18 of this decision bears repetition.
"The
duty of the applicant is to make 'a full and fair disclosure
of all material facts . . . The material facts are those
which it is material for the Judge to know in dealing
with the application as made: materiality is to be
decided by the court and not by the assessment of the
applicant or his legal advisers (emphasis added)."
-
In
the circumstances of the present case, I am of the view
that the failure of the Applicant to fully disclose all
matters including the abortive and unsuccessful negotiations
with Intelco justifies the withdrawal of the grant of
leave for judicial review. However, this view needs to
be weighed against the contention on the part of the Applicant
that there has been unreasonable delay on the part of
the Respondents in seeking to set aside the grant of Leave.
If there is any merit in this proposition, it could only
be applicable to the First and Second Respondents, not
Intelco, the Third Respondent, who was granted leave on
2nd September, 2002, to join the proceedings as an interested
party. However, as noted at paragraph 4 hereof, as recently
as the 23rd of August, 2002, the Applicant filed an Application
seeking (inter alia) leave to amend the Originating
Notice of Motion and the Statement in Support and thus
is equally culpable.
-
On
a review of all the facts of this case, I do not consider
that there has been any unreasonable delay by the First
and Second Respondents in bringing their application to
set aside the grant of leave. In accordance therefore,
with the criteria laid down in the authorities to which
I have referred and for the reasons mentioned in the paragraph
immediately preceding, I order and declare that the leave
for judicial review granted on the 16th of April, 2002,
be set aside.
- The
Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the 3rd Respondent,
to be taxed or agreed. No order as to cost for the 1st and
2nd Respondents.
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