|
(CARL
SMITH
(NORMA SUTHERLAND
(LORNA PANTON
(FERNANDO PALACIO
( |
PLAINTIFFS |
BETWEEN |
(AND
( |
|
|
(THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL |
DEFENDANT
|
Supreme
Court
Action No. 389 of 1982
7th April, 1983
Moe, CJ.
Mr. Michael
Young for the Plaintiffs.
Mr. George Brown, Solicitor General, for the Defendant.
Public
Officer - Constitution - Whether posting is transfer - Whether
transfer properly effected by Chief Education Officer - Jurisdiction
of Public Service Commission - Transfer held to be unconstitutional.
J
U D G M E N T
The four
Plaintiffs are public officers. They were appointed as follows:
the first to the post of Assistant Lecturer (Psychology or
General Science) at the Belize Teachers' College; the second
to the post of Assistant Lecturer (Home Economics and Educational
Psychology) at the Belize Teachers' College; the third to
the post of Temporary Lecturer (Educational Psychology) at
the Belize Teachers' College, and the fourth to the post of
Lecturer (English) at the Belize Teachers' College. Each of
them received a letter dated the 24th August, 1982 under the
hand of the Acting Chief Education Officer.
The important
portions of the relevant letters sufficient to be set out
for this purpose are as follows:- That to the first Plaintiff
stated, inter alia, "This is to inform you that
with the re-structuring of the Belize Teachers' College and
the re-organisation of the courses there it has not been found
possible to assign you subjects other than science and provisions
have already been made for the teaching of that subject. You
will therefore be posted at the Belize Junior Secondary School
No. 2 where I am sure your teaching competence will be much
better utilised. The effective date of your posting is 30th
August, 1982. That to the second stated, inter alia,
"I am to inform you that effective from the 30th August,
1982 you will be posted at the Belize Junior Secondary School
No. 2. This posting is a consequence of the re-structuring
of the Belize Teachers' College and the re-organisation of
its courses." To the third, "I am to inform you
that effective from 30th August, 1982 you will be posted to
teach at the Belize Junior Secondary School No. 1. This posting
is a consequence of the re-structuring of the Belize Teacher's
College and the re-organisation of the courses at that institution."
To the fourth, "As you are aware, the Belize Teachers'
College is being re-structured and its courses are being re-organised.
Consequently it has been found necessary to second you to
the Belmopan Comprehensive School." The fourth received
a further letter dated 13th September, 1982 asking that the
word "post" be read in place of the word "second".
Each Plaintiff
now claims that he or she was transferred from one post by
virtue of the letter dated the 24th August, 1982 without his
or her consent and seeks a declaration that such a transfer
is unconstitutional and void. The Defendant says that there
was no transfer from the respective posts as claimed, but
that each Plaintiff was posted to an institution under the
direction and control of the Ministry of Education. He seeks
a declaration that the posting was constitutional and valid.
The issues
raised in this Action are of great public importance. They
highlight a matter to which I adverted in an address to the
Court on 19th January, 1982; namely, the need for a clear
understanding of the new constitutional status and faithful
counselling in the situation. The first issue for determination
is whether there was a transfer. The Solicitor General in
support of the contention that there was "posting"
relied on the following: - (a) the use of the word "posted"
in the letters concerned. Such use he argues is deliberate
and intended to mean that it is a situation which is not permanent;
(b) the institutions involved are all sections within one
department, the Department of Education. In such a situation
the head of department can assign officers to perform suitable
duties; and (c) there was an assignment of suitable duties
as provided for by the General Orders for the Public Service
Regulations in Chapter 10 paragraph 3 thereof which reads
as follows:-
"Officers
are required to discharge the usual duties of the office
to which they are appointed and any other suitable duties
which the Permanent Secretary or Head of Department may
call upon them to perform."
Mr. Young
for the Plaintiffs contended that it is an exercise in semantics
to draw a difference between the words "post" and
"transfer". That there is no special magic in either
word. The Court has to look at the facts and situation before
it.
It is
clearly the duty of the Court to determine what in fact transpired
irrespective of the name given to or the term used to describe
the matter under consideration. I must, therefore, determine
the true nature of the event or transaction. What then is
the substance of the transaction? The letters concerned told
the Plaintiffs "you will be "posted" at or
to the relevant school. According to the Solicitor General
that is intended to mean that the Plaintiffs are in a situation
which is not permanent. But the question is what has happened
or is happening that is not permanent? The clear inference
is that the Plaintiffs are to assume duties in some post at
the respective schools. There is nothing before me to show
that the word "posted" is to be given any particular
meaning or defined in any particular way. Giving it its ordinary
meaning, the one relevant to the context of this matter which
I find in Websters New Twentieth Century Dictionary
is "stationed at or assigned to a post". In the
Shorter Oxford English Dictionary "post"
is defined as "to place, to station". By this approach
alone the letters have said you will be "stationed at"
or "assigned to a post" at the relevant school.
The evidence
shows that Assistant Lecturer (Psychology or General Science)
Belize Teachers' College and Teacher, Belize Junior Secondary
School No. 2 are separate posts; Assistant Lecturer (Home
Economics and Educational Psychology) Belize Teachers' College
and Teacher, Belize Junior Secondary School No.2 are separate
posts; Lecturer (Educational Sociology) Belize Teachers' College
and Teacher Belize Junior Secondary School No.1 are separate
posts; and Lecturer (English) Belize Teachers' College and
Teacher, Belmopan Comprehensive School are separate posts.
The effect of the respective letters was to require the person
concerned to "shift", "move" or "go"
from duties in one post to duties in another post. To move
from one place to another place is to transfer and it is a
transfer by whatever term the move is described, whether it
be shift, move, post or transfer. Further, it is a transfer
notwithstanding that the "shift" or "move"
or "posting" is not permanent. Again the fact that
the posts are at institutions within one department does not
alter the fact that there is a transfer from one post to another
albeit within the same department. Consequently I hold that
in this case there was a transfer of the Plaintiffs on the
occasion concerned.
The next
issue is whether the transfer was properly effected. Who has
jurisdiction to transfer such public officers? Section 106
of the Constitution provides "(1) The power to appoint
persons to hold or act in offices in the public service (including
the power to confirm appointments) and subject to the
provisions of section 111 of this Constitution, the power
to exercise disciplinary control over persons holding
or acting in such offices and the power to remove such
persons from office shall vest in the Public Services Commission
constituted for each case as prescribed in section 105(11)
of this Constitution". It is further provided in section
123 (ibid) "(1) Any reference in this Constitution to
power to make appointments to any public office shall be construed
as including a reference to power to make appointments on
promotion and transfer to that office ---."
The Constitution has thus vested in the Public Service Commission
two classes of power: (I) the power to make appointments to
the service, promotions and transfers within the service,
and (II) the power to remove and exercise disciplinary control
over members of the service. There are certain exceptions
provided for in the said section which are not of concern
to us here. It would be seen from a careful study of the Constitution
that the powers thus vested in the Public Service Commission
is to the exclusion of any other person or authority.
I observe,
firstly, that the provision contained in section 106(1) is
part of a chapter similar to chapters contained in many Constitutions
of the New Commonwealth. In the Caribbean, see Chapter VIII
Bahamas Constitution; Chapter VIII Barbados Constitution;
Chapter IX Jamaica Constitution; Chapter VIII Constitution
of Trinidad and Tobago. The purpose of these provisions such
as are set out in Chapter VIII of the Constitution placed
under that head "The Public Service" is to isolate
members of the public service from undue influence and unwarranted
interference. Having vested the Commission with the powers
just adumbrated above, the Constitution also excludes it from
being itself a part of the public service; secures its independence
of the executive and legislature; and provides security of
tenure.
Secondly,
there cannot be two authorities with concurrent power or jurisdiction
to make appointments, or promotions or transfers. The Constitution
is the supreme law of the land. It has vested the powers under
consideration in the Public Service Commission. Any other
law which provides for the contrary is void in that respect
and the Constitution must prevail. That this must be the position
is inherit in a judgment of Lord Denning delivered as far
back as 1962 in the Privy Council in Kanda v. Government
of the Federation of Malaya [1962] A.C. 322. If it were
otherwise a person or authority with concurrent power could
thwart the exercise by the Commission of its functions. You
therefore cannot have persons taking actions which in effect
amount to doing what the Constitution says the Public Services
Commission is to do. Thus, even if Chapter 10 paragraph 3
of the General Orders for the Public Service properly interpreted
means a head of department can assign officers to perform
suitable duties, the extent of such power must be construed
in conformity with the provisions of the Constitution.
The Public
Service Commission then is the authority with the power to
transfer the persons concerned. It is to be noted also that
by virtue of section 106(5) the Commission may delegate any
one of its powers. It is accepted by all that it was the Acting
Chief Education Officer who performed the act under consideration.
There is no evidence that he was simply communicating a decision
of the Public Service Commission to transfer the persons concerned
or that the power of the Commission to transfer was delegated
to him. In the result, I must hold that the transfer of the
Plaintiffs was not in keeping with the Constitution and thus
invalid.
The Plaintiffs
will have their declarations accordingly. They are to have
their costs.
----------OO----------
|