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 day of 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
AND
|
APPLICANT |
IN
THE MATTER
|
of
a Licence granted to Belize Telecommunications Limited
under section 20 of the Telecommunications Act, (now)
Chapter 229 of the Substantive Laws of Belize, Revised
Edition 2000 |
|
(THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL |
PLAINTIFF
|
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
(
|
|
|
(BELIZE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS LTD. |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action Nos. 47 and 261 of 2002
25th November, 2002
Conteh, CJ.
Ms. Lois
Young Barrow S.C. for the Applicant/Defendant.
Mr. Elson Kaseke, Solicitor General with Ms. Minnet Hafiz,
Crown Counsel, for the Respondent/Plaintiff.
Judicial
Review - Application to impugn validity of delegated Legislation
- Section 23 of the Telecommunications Act - Whether statutory
instrument made without observing the rules of natural justice.
J U D G M E N T
The Applicant, Belize Telecommunications Limited, is the sole
provider of telecommunications services both nationally and
internationally for Belize under a licence granted by the
Government of Belize in 1987 for a period of fifteen years.
The respondent is the Minister responsible for telecommunications
under the Telecommunications Act - Chapter 229 of the Laws
of Belize, Revised Edition 2000. It was pursuant to this Act
that the applicant's licence was granted. I shall hereafter
refer to the parties as the applicant and respondent respectively
unless otherwise indicated.
-
On
12th February this year, this Court granted leave to the
applicant to seek judicial review in the form of a Declaration
that by making an order embodied in Statutory Instrument
No. 11 of 2002, the respondent, the Minister of Budget
Management, Investment and Public Utilities, acted ultra
vires his powers under the Telecommunications Act and
therefore unlawfully; and certiorari to quash the
decision of the respondent to make the Order; and certiorari
to quash the said Statutory Instrument No. 11 of 2002.
At the same time as granting leave to the applicant, the
respondent was required by the Court to suspend the Statutory
Instrument and to refrain from making any further order
interfering with the charges and collection of revised
tariffs by the applicant until the hearing and determination
of the applicant's request for judicial review.
-
Before
the substantive hearing of the applicant's request for
judicial review which finally commenced on 22nd July 2002,
the Attorney General as Plaintiff had, on 22nd of May,
taken out an Originating Summons against the respondent
as Defendant, in Action No. 261 of 2002, seeking a determination
from this Court that "on the true construction
of the said Licence and in light of the telecommunication
rates increases as from 1st December 2001, whether the
Defendant is entitled under Condition 10 of the Licence
to alter the tariffs applicable for supplying the telecommunication
services to users without adequate previous notice to
the Minister of Public Utilities and to impose new tariffs
without the agreement of the Minister." The Originating
Summons also sought further other relief including costs
for the application.
-
As
the Originating Summons raised issues on Condition
10 of the applicant's licence and the applicant's
judicial review sought to impugn the respondent's action
for alleged breaches of this condition, the two actions
raised substantially the same issues, it was accordingly
agreed to consolidate the two actions together for the
purposes of these proceedings.
- The
Order of the respondent embodied in Statutory Instrument
No. 11 of 2002 which the applicant seeks to impugn was made
pursuant to section 23 of the Telecommunications Act. It
is material and helpful, I think, to reproduce this statutory
instrument in full. And it states as follows:
"STAUTORY
INSTRUMENT
No. 11 of 2002
__
ORDER
UNDER SECTION 23
(Gazetted 25th January, 2002.)
__
WHEREAS,
section 23 of the Telecommunications Act, Chapter 229 of
the Substantive Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000, provides,
inter alia, that where the Minister is satisfied that a
telecommunications operator is contravening or has contravened,
and is likely again to contravene, any of the conditions
of his licence, the Minister may by order make such provision
as is requisite for the purpose of securing compliance with
that condition;
AND WHEREAS, I am satisfied that the Belize Telecommunications
Limited ("BTL"), a telecommunications operator
under the said Act, is contravening the conditions of its
licence in the following respects:
(a) By replacing coin operated call boxes (Pay Phones)
with prepaid operating card call boxes in the districts
without consultation with the Director of Telecommunications,
contrary to Condition 5.5 of the Licence.
(b) By implementing a new tariffs structure for national
telecommunication services as of December 1, 2001, without
properly complying with Condition 10 of its Licence;
AND WHEREAS, having particular regard to the extent
to which the members of the public are likely to sustain
loss or damage in consequence of the said contraventions,
I am satisfied that an Order in terms of the said section
23 ought to be made;
NOW, THEREFORE, I RALPH H. FONSECA, Minister responsible
for telecommunications, DO HEREBY ORDER that the BTL shall
-
(a) STOP the implementation of the new tariffs and
revert to the position as it was immediately before December
1, 2001;
(b) PROGRAM prepaid call boxes already installed
in the districts to accept prepaid cards at 15 cents per
call until further notice;
(c) NOT issue or serve any Bills to consumers for
the month of December, 2001 or thereafter, based on the
new tariffs implemented with effect from December 1, 2001.
Subject to the provisions of the said section 23, this
Order shall take effect from 26th January 2002.
DATED this 28th day of December, 2001.
(RALPH H. FONSECA)
Minister responsible for Telecommunications
To:
The Belize Telecommunications Limited
Esquivel Telecom Center,
St. Thomas Street,
Belize City"
- It
is to be noticed that the respondent in exercising the powers
granted him under section 23 of the Telecommunications Act
avers in the Statutory Instrument that the applicant was
in breach or contravention of its licence in two respects
namely, as stated in paragraphs a) and b) of the second
Whereas clause of the Statutory Instrument. That
is to say:
(a)
By replacing coin operated call boxes (Pay Phones) with
prepaid operating card call boxes in the districts without
consultation with the Director of Telecommunications,
contrary to Condition 5.5 of the Licence.
(b)
By implementing a new tariffs structure for national telecommunication
services as of December 1, 2001, without properly complying
with Condition 10 of its Licence."
- It
is also helpful to set out in extenso the provisions
of section 23 of the Telecommunications Act. This provides
as follows:
"23.-(1)
Where the Minister is satisfied that a person who is authorised
by a licence granted under section 20 above to run a telecommunication
system (in this Act referred to as a "'telecommunications
operator") is contravening or has contravened, and
is likely again to contravene, any of the conditions of
his licence, the Minister may by Order make such provision
as is requisite for the purpose of securing compliance
with that condition.
(2) In determining the extent of the Order to be made,
the Minister shall consider in particular the extent to
which every person is likely to sustain loss or damage
in consequence of anything which, in contravention of
the relevant condition, is likely to be done, or omitted
to be done.
(3) The Order made under subsection (1) above -
(a)
shall require the telecommunications operator (according
to the circumstances of the case) to do, or not to do,
such things as are specified in the Order;
(b) shall take effect at such time, being not earlier
than -
(i) twenty-eight days after notice of such an Order (stating
the relevant conditions of the licence and the acts or
omissions, which in the opinion of the Minister, constitute
or would constitute the contravention of any of the provisions
of the Act or the conditions of licence) has been served
upon the licensee; or
(ii) such longer period as may be specified by or under
that Order:
Provided
that no such Order shall take effect, if before the expiry
of the period specified in subsection (3) (b) above, the licensee
has remedied the alleged contravention to the reasonable satisfaction
of the Minister:
Provided
further that no such Order shall take effect unless the Minister
has given reasonable consideration to any representations
or objections made to him by or on behalf of the licensee
or any other affect person within the first twenty days of
the period specified in subsection 3 (b) above; and
(c)
may be revoked at any time by the Minister.
(4) In this section, "contravention", in relation
to any condition of a licence, includes any failure to comply
with that condition and "contravene" shall be
construed accordingly.
(5)
Nothing in this section shall supersede the authority of
the Minister to cancel a licence under section 31 below."
-
In
support of its application for judicial review of the
respondent's decision and the Statutory Instrument, a
number of affidavits together with exhibits were filed
on behalf of the applicant; as well, a number of affidavits
were filed together with exhibits by the respondent and
on his behalf, by Mr. Clifford Slusher, the Director of
Telecommunications in the respondent's ministry.
- Let
me say at the outset and for the avoidance of doubt, that
I granted leave to review the respondent's order even though
it was, by the provisions of section 81 of the Telecommunications
Act, a Statutory Instrument and therefore on its face, a
legislative act or a piece of subordinate legislation,
in contradistinction from an administrative act,
and therefore presumptively immune from attack, at least
in the Courts; unlike a purely administrative order or decision
which is more readily amenable to judicial review. In the
instant case, the respondent's action or decision which
the applicant seeks by these proceedings to impugn is, as
I have stated, embodied in a Statutory Instrument, quintessentially,
a piece of delegated or subordinate legislation. Today,
however, there is no doubt that judicial review is available
against subordinate or delegated legislation - R v Secretary
of State for Health, ex parte United States Tobacco International
Inc. (1991) 3 WLR 529, where the Divisional Court in
England granted certiorari to quash regulations made
by the Secretary of State for Health banning the applicant's
oral snuff. Therefore, in these proceedings, though the
Statutory Instrument in question is a subordinate legislation
and could be regarded as a piece of administrative
legislation, it is however, governed and must be informed
by the same legal principles such as vires or ultra vires,
reasonableness, procedural fairness and proper purpose,
that govern administrative actions generally. The Statutory
Instrument therefore does not, ipso facto, or qua
a Statutory Instrument, partake of the immunity from attack
in court that is generally part of the attribute of a legislative
Act by Parliament. As stated in Administrative Law by
Wade and Forsyth (8th Ed. 2000) at p. 854:
"It
is axiomatic that delegated legislation no way partakes
of the immunity which Acts of Parliament enjoy from challenged
in the courts, for there is a fundamental difference between
a sovereign and subordinate law-making power. Even where,
as if often the case, a regulation is required to be approved
by resolutions of both House of Parliament, it still fall
on the 'subordinate' side of the line, so that the court
may determine its validity. Only an Act of Queen, Lords
and Commons is immune from judicial review."
- A
propos the last sentence, I can say however, that in
a country with a written constitution which is proclaimed
to be the supreme law, like Belize, even legislative Acts
stricto sensu, may not be immune from challenge for
non-conformity with the Constitution. Although in such a
case, the avenue for challenge might not be by way of judicial
review proceedings. But in a proper case and by the appropriate
process, the Courts can and will entertain a challenge alleging
that an Act of the Legislature is in contravention of the
Constitution.
ON
WHY LEAVE WAS GRANTED
-
In
the instant proceedings, as the applicant was seeking
principally relief by way of certiorari, the historical
operation of this formerly prerogative order was for the
applicant to be granted a rule nisi calling on
the respondent body to "show cause" why
a writ of certiorari should not issue - Local
Government Board v Arlidge (1915) A.C. 120 at 149.
Hence the grant of leave for the applicant to ventilate
its complaint against the Statutory Instrument in question.
-
In
these proceedings, in which, as I mentioned earlier, the
Attorney General's own action in Supreme Court Action
No. 261 of 2002 has been subsumed or consolidated with
the applicant's own action in which it seeks to impugn
the respondent's order as contained in Statutory Instrument
No. 11 of 2002, in my view, the principal burden of the
applicant's case however, turns on what is called, in
the jurisprudence of judicial review, the precedent
fact. Ms. Lois Young-Barrow S.C., the learned attorney
for the applicant addressed the Court at some length on
this.
- Mr.
Michael Fordham in his admirable book, Judicial Review
Handbook (3rd ed. 2000) has succinctly described a precedent
fact as follows:
"A
precedent (or antecedent) fact is one which 'triggers'
the public body's function. If the public body considers
the factual trigger to exist, when in truth it does not
exist, the body is proceeding to exercise a function which
in truth is beyond its powers. This justifies the court
in investigating for itself the key question of fact,
on all available material. Accordingly, errors of precedent
fact are not just reviewable, but correctable."
- Therefore,
in my view, the crucial issue for these proceedings is this:
Did the precedent fact that the applicant had not complied
with the conditions of its licence exist to 'trigger' the
respondent to act in making the Order that he did as embodied
in the Statutory Instrument? In other words, was the respondent
right or justified in making and issuing Statutory Instrument
No. 11 of 2002?
Although
section 23 of the Telecommunications Act (already reproduced
supra), under which the respondent issued the Statutory
Instrument is framed in the "subjective" form, that
is to say, "where the Minister (that is the respondent)
is satisfied", and indeed, the respondent himself states
in the second Whereas clause of the Statutory Instrument
that he was "satisfied" that the applicant was contravening
the conditions of its licence in two identified respects,
that in my view, does not foreclose enquiry by this Court.
As Lord Wilberforce stated the principle thus, in a statement
which I respectfully adopt, in Secretary of State for Education
& Science v The Metropolitan Borough of Tameside (1976)
3 All. ER 665 at p. 681 where the direction of the British
Secretary of State for Education under section 68 of the U.K.
Education Act 1944, to the respondent local authority was
in issue concerning the reorganisation of schools in the area
of the respondent local government authority:
"The
section is framed in a 'subjective' form - if the Secretary
of State 'is satisfied'. This form of section is quite well
known, and at first sight might seem to exclude judicial
review. Sections in this form may, no doubt, exclude judicial
review on what is or has become a matter of pure judgment.
But I do not think that they go further than that. If a
judgment requires, before it can be made, the existence
of some facts, then, although the evaluation of those facts
is for the Secretary of State alone, the Court must enquire
whether those facts exist, and have been taken into account,
whether the judgment has been made on a proper self direction
as to those facts, whether the judgment has not been made
on other facts which ought not to have been taken into account.
If these requirements are not met, then the exercise of
judgment, however bona fide it may be, becomes capable of
challenge: See Secretary of State for Employment v Associated
Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen (No. 2) [1976]
2 All E.R. at 967 . . . per Lord Denning MR."
-
It
is therefore the duty of this Court to inquire into the
evidence, whether the precedent fact of contraventions
of its licence by the applicant exists to support the
decision of the respondent to make and issue the Statutory
Instrument in question. Does the evidence in this case
support or warrant the respondent's action? The evidence
in these proceedings is all in form of affidavits and
copious and extensive ones at that, together with exhibits.
As I mentioned earlier, the respondent himself swore to
a number of affidavits. I have taken care to sift through
the several affidavits filed by both sides together with
their attached exhibits.
- For
a proper determination of this issue, I think, it is important
to set out the relevant conditions of the Applicant's licence.
Condition 5.5 of the licence provides as follows:
"5.5
The Licensee shall from time to time consult with the
Director on the methods of payment to be used for the
services provided in Public Call Boxes and on the distribution
of these methods of payment in the Public Call Boxes."
In Condition
5.7(e), which is a kind of definition section, "Public
Call Box" is said to "mean a Call Box to which the
public has access at all times which is neither a Private
Call Box nor a Temporary Call Box and at which Call Box Services
are or may be provided." Paragraph (b) of Condition
5.7 states:
"
'Call Box Services' means the installation, repair and maintenance
of Call Boxes, the service of conveying by means of the
Applicable System voice telephony messages to and from such
Boxes, directory information services relating to switched
voice telephony services available at such Boxes and Public
Emergency Call services as available."
- Condition
10 of the applicant's licence with the caption: "TARIFF
DETERMINATION" provides as follows:
"10.
"The tariffs applicable for supplying national telecommunications
services to users shall be notified in advance to the
Minister who may require changes where these are inconsistent
with any development and financial plan which may from
time to time be agreed between the Licensee and the Minister.
Provided that in fixing the prices, regard shall be
had to:
(a) the cost of supplying the services
(b) the need of the Licensee to secure a reasonable rate
of return on investment
(c) the interests of the users.
The
rates to be charged by the Licensee for supplying international
telecommunication services will be determined by market
conditions."
ON
CONDITION 5.5
-
Before
examining the evidence on the alleged contraventions of
conditions 5.5 and 10 of the applicant's licence,
I must say a word or two about the office of the Director
of Telecommunications which is the focus of the alleged
contravention of condition 5.5 of its licence by
the application (paragraph (a) of the second Whereas
clause of the Statutory Instrument in question).
-
By
the scheme and provisions of the Telecommunications Act,
it is clear that the Director of Telecommunications is
a vital cog in the regulation, provision, licensing and
control of telecommunication services in Belize. The office
itself is expressly established by section 6 of the Act;
and by section 11, the Director is given authority to
make by-laws relating to a wide range of things, including
for example, fees to be charged for the provision of telecommunications
services and all matters generally connected with the
operation of telecommunications services (see section
11(1) d) and e)). Failure to comply with by-laws made
by the Director is made an offence punishable on conviction
to a fine.
-
Also,
under the licence granted to the applicant, the Director
of Telecommunications features prominently. He can in
fact be fairly described as the point man for the operational
details of the applicant's licence.
-
There
is no evidence before me however, that the Director of
Telecommunications made any by-laws as he is empowered
to do regarding the operations of the applicant's licence.
But the licence itself did import express duties and obligations
on the applicant regarding some operational aspects of
its business of providing telecommunications services.
Thus, for example, the provision in Condition 5.5
of its licence, which is part of the controversy between
the parties in the present proceedings.
-
This
condition of the applicant's licence clearly imposes an
obligation, nay a duty, on it to consult with the
Director of Telecommunications on the methods of payments
to be used for the telephony services provided in Public
call boxes, and on the distribution of these methods
of payment in such public call boxes.
-
On
the evidence, from the several affidavits and exhibits
filed by both sides, I find and hold that there really
was no meaningful consultation in the accepted sense of
the word, and within the provision, spirit and intent
of Condition 5.5, by the applicant of the Director
of Telecommunications, before the applicant changed the
method of payment in the Public call boxes which include
the community telephones, from coin/card to prepaid card
only.
-
I
must say however, there is some divergence in the affidavits
from both sides about consultation before the change in
the method of payment in public call boxes from coin/card
to prepaid cards only. I am, however, satisfied, after
a careful analysis of the affidavit evidence, that there
really was no meaningful, relevant or material consultation
by the applicant of the Director of Telecommunications
on such a material issue expressly provided for in Condition
5.5 of the applicant's licence.
- The
learned Solicitor General for the respondent referred me
to page 258 of Judicial Remedies in Public Law (1992
edition) by Clive Lewis, where the following statement appears:
"As
the onus is on the applicant to make out his case for
judicial review, this means that in cases of conflict,
the courts will proceed on the basis of the respondent's
affidavit."
The learned
author cited in the footnote as authority for this proposition
the case of R v Reigate Justices ex parte Curl (1991) L.O.D.
66. The learned Solicitor General therefore invited me
to prefer the evidence on behalf of the respondent on this
issue of consultation or lack of it, as constituting a breach
by the applicant of its licence. Sufficient to say that I
decline to accede to this invitation, for I think that a conclusion
on the evidence, where there is manifest divergence, must
be arrived at, after some analysis, weighing or sifting of
the whole and not by some a priori formula.
-
My
conclusion was reached after a careful sifting through
of all the affidavits, together with their exhibits from
both sides, which lead me to find that there was no relevant
consultation of the Director of Telecommunications in
terms of Condition 5.5, before the change from
coins to prepaid cards only.
-
The
following excerpts from some of the affidavits filed on
behalf of the parties respectively led me to the conclusion
I have arrived at on this issue:
A.
ON BEHALF OF THE APPLICANT
1) From
the first affidavit dated 1st February 2002 of Mr. Ediberto
Tesucum, the Chief Executive Officer of the applicant -
"5.
Chronology of Events in relation to Condition 5.5
In
May 2001 BTL began to move from coin/card operated Public
Call Boxes to purely card operated Public Call Boxes. In
doing so BTL did not violate condition 5.5 of its Licence.
BTL has always from time to time consulted with the Director
of Telecommunications on matters concerning BTL's service
to customers. I have discussed with the Director the need
to change from coin/card operated Public Call Boxes because
the boxes were constantly vandalised to force out the coins,
or operate the machine with irregular coins. Mrs. Karen
Bevans, the Manager for Marketing and Sales at BTL has also,
I have been informed by her, and verily believe, discussed
this matter with the Director.
6. I have received a letter from Dr. Victor Gonzalez the
Chief Executive Officer in the Ministry of Public Utilities,
Energy, Communications and Immigration dated 29th August
2001. The letter alleged that BTL replaced coins in Public
Call Boxes with prepaid cards without consulting either
the Director of Telecommunications or the Ministry of Public
Utilities contrary to condition 5.5 of BTL's Licence. The
letter also alleged that BTL replaced the "distribution
of methods of payment in the Public Call Boxes, particularly
for Community Phones" without consultation. A copy
of this letter is now produced and shown to me and marked
E.T. (2) for identification.
7. Before I was able to respond Dr. Gonzalez wrote another
letter dated 6th September 2001 referring to the 29th August
letter. He said that his Ministry "deplores" BTL's
action in discussing and agreeing with the Ministry of Rural
Development for the introduction of payphones using prepaid
calling cards in place of Community phones. I should say
that Community phones are different from Public Call Boxes.
A copy of this letter is now produced and shown to me and
marked E.T. (3) for identification.
8. On the 11th September 2001 I replied to Dr. Gonzalez's
letter of 29th August 2001 informing him that the matter
of the methods of payment of public telephones had been
discussed with the Director of Telecommunication and that
as far as BTL was concerned there was no issue about it.
I told him that the purpose of the change was to prevent
vandalism and provide a better service to the public. A
copy of this letter is now produced and shown to me and
marked E.T. (4) for identification.
9. Notwithstanding the change to card operated Public Call
Boxes in May to June, it was not until the 14th November
2001 that the Director of Telecommunications wrote to BTL
to say that "BTL is also in violation of condition
5.5 of its Licence with respect of the replacement of payphones
with pre-paid pay phones in the districts." The Director
said that this "is of concern with respect to the proposed
increase in the rates for local calls in the district."
This was on the same day as the Director received BTL's
notification of its new tariffs. In his letter, the Director
confined his comments to the districts and made no mention
about the introduction of prepaid payphones in Belize City.
A copy of the Director's letter is now produced and shown
to me and marked E.T. (5) for identification.
10. I should state that cards had replaced coins in Public
Call Boxes in the districts from about June of 2001and the
Director, who had been consulted before, had found no issue
with the change. In fact, calls in all districts from Public
Call Boxes have always been metered at 25¢ for 3 minutes.
This is the same as calls made in Belize City from Public
Call Boxes. With prepaid calling cards, the customer pays
for exactly the time used, whereas with a coin, the 25¢
was non-retrievable regardless of the time used.
11. On the 24th day of January 2002 the said Karen Bevans
telephoned the Director of Telecommunications and asked
him whether she could meet with him along with the CEO of
BTL, in order to discuss the public pay phones issues. The
Director refused to meet with us."
2) From
the third affidavit dated 29th April 2002 of Mr. Tesucum:
"3.
I know Clifford Slusher and I have had to consult with him
very often in his capacity as the Director of Telecommunications.
I have frequently spoken with him on matters affecting the
applicant and the telecommunication services it provides.
4. I refer to paragraph 3 of Mr. Slusher's affidavit which
incorrectly states the tariff in coin operated Public Call
Boxes in districts. I repeat what I stated in paragraph
10 of my first affidavit which is that "calls in all
districts from Public Call Boxes have always been metered
at 25¢ for 3 minutes." The real cost per minute
was thus 8.3¢, but the 25¢ was charged whether
or not the customer used up the whole 3 minutes. Public
Call Boxes can use only a 25¢ coin because the box
operates by the weight of the coin. When the method of payment
was changed from dual coin and card to the prepaid card,
a call from a Public Call Box in the districts, cities and
towns of Belize was metered at 5¢ per minute up until
1st December 2001 when it was increased to 10¢ per
minute. A copy of each page in the 1997 and 1998 Telephone
Directory showing that Public Call Boxes were metered at
25¢ is now produced and shown to me and collectively
marked E.T. (1) for identification.
5. I refer to the statement made by Mr. Slusher in paragraph
5 of his affidavit. The first I knew of Mr. Slusher's concern
was his letter to me dated 14th November 2001. See Exhibit
E.T. (5) to my affidavit dated 1st February 2002. It was
because I did not know of his concern that I responded to
Dr. Victor Gonzalez on 11th September 2001 (Exhibit E.T.
(4)) by stating: "Kindly note that this matter was
discussed with the Director, Office of Telecommunications
and, as far as we are concerned, there was no issue. Our
aim is to prevent vandalism and provide a better service
to the public."
6. Again, in relation to paragraph 5, I wish to state that
Community Telephones together with the Ministry of Rural
Development is a separate and distinct issue from changing
from coins/card to prepaid cards in Public Call Boxes. A
Public Call Box is defined in the licence, which definition
is as stated in paragraph 4 of my first affidavit.
7. In the case of Community Telephones, these are telephones
manned by a real life operator which people can access when
the operator is awake and has his or her house open. Community
Phones are not contemplated by the BTL licence and are a
carry-over from the days when the telephone system was operated
by the Statutory Authority, BTA. The Applicant and the Ministry
of Rural Development had discussed the manning of Community
Phones by operators; and with the concurrence of this Ministry,
instead of customers paying money to operators of the Community
Phones for usage, the phone lines of the various Community
Phones were directed to the prepaid platform at the Switch
so that usage would be paid for with prepaid cards.
8.
Therefore, I could not have informed Mr. Slusher that the
Applicant had the approval of the Minister of Rural Development
to change from coin to card-operated Public Call Boxes because
there is no connection between the two types of phone facilities."
3) Affidavit
dated 1st February 2002 of Karen Bevans, the General Manager
of Marketing and Sales of the applicant -
"2.
During the first week of May 2001 I spoke with the Director
of Telecommunications over the telephone about BTL's intention
to change its Public Call Boxes from coin/card operated,
to prepaid card operated.
3. The Director's concern, as I understand it, was that
the public's access would be restricted by having to purchase
the prepaid calling cards. I explained that the public's
access was even more restricted when Public Call Boxes were
constantly broken through vandalism.
4. I explained to the Director that many phones were put
out of service when attempts were made to get the coins
out of the boxes and by removing the temptation caused by
having coins in the payphones the vandalism would probably
stop.
5. In addition, I explained that to facilitate customers
BTL was introducing a $2.00 calling card along with the
existing higher denominations and greatly increasing the
number of calling and distributions. Further, all Public
Call Boxes carried clear instructions on how to make a collect
call through BTL's operators and free local calls to emergency
numbers.
6.
At the end of our conversation the Director expressed his
satisfaction with the change to prepaid cards for Public
Call Boxes.
7. On the 24th day of January 2002 I telephoned the Director
of Telecommunications and asked him whether I could meet
with him along with the CEO of BTL in order to discuss the
public payphone issues. The Director refused to meet with
us."
B.
ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT
1) From
first affidavit dated 17 April 2002 of Mr. Clifford Slusher,
the Director of Telecommunications:
"2.
In my capacity as Director of Telecommunications it came
to my attention on or before August 10, 2001 that Belize
Telecommunication Limited was changing the methods of payment
used for service provided in public coin operated call boxes,
to prepaid card operated public telephone boxes, and such
replacement affected the payments by users of the call boxes.
4. On the 10th August 2001, I informed the then Minister
responsible for Telecommunications that Belize Telecommunication
Limited was replacing coin operated public call boxes without
consulting the Director of Telecommunications as required
by condition 5.5 of BTL's licence. A copy of the letter
to the Minister is exhibited hereto and marked "CS
2".
5. I was never consulted by Mr. Ediberto Tesecum or Mrs.
Karen Bevans, on the need for BTL to change from coin to
card operated public call boxes, and I spoke to Mr. Edilberto
Tesecum, expressing grave concern that BTL had changed in
the Districts from coin to card operated public call boxes
without consulting me as required by condition 5 of BTL's
Licence, whereupon Mr. Tesecum informed me that they had
obtained the approval of the Minister of Rural Development.
I was the one who approached BTL after my investigation,
BTL never consulted me, and as a result of the reply I obtained
from Mr. Tesecum, I wrote the letter exhibited hereto and
marked "CS 2".
6. On the 14th November 2001 I wrote to Mr. Ediberto Tesecum
informing him that BTL should not implement or publish any
increased rates for National Telecommunication Services
until condition 10 of BTL's licence was complied with. In
the same letter I also informed BTL that it was contravening
condition 5.5 of BTL's Licence. A copy of the letter is
exhibited hereto and marked "CS 3"."
8. It has been the practise that before implementing any
tariff changes BTL give adequate advance notice to the Minister
and it is only after the Minister has duly considered the
proposed tariff changes and communicated these approvals
to BTL, that BTL implements the tariff changes. A copy of
the letter showing the existence of such practice is exhibited
hereto as "CS 5".
2) From his second affidavit dated 23rd July 2002, Mr. Slusher,
the Director of Telecommunications, states:
"3.
I have read the Fourth Affidavit of Ediberto Tesecum sworn
to on the 18th July, 2002 and I ask the leave of the court
to refer thereto.
4. In respect to Paragraph 3 of the said Fourth Affidavit
of Ediberto Tesecum, I categorically state that I was not
consulted in respect of the change to coin/card public pay
phones in Crooked Tree Village, Double Head Cabbage, San
Juan Area, Bermudian Landing and Hattieville, referred to
the said Paragraph and more fully set out in Exhibit ET
(1) exhibited thereto. Significantly, this appears to me
to be an internal Memorandum of the Applicant, in which
the Applicant not only seeks to change the method of payment
from coin to card operated public pay phones without prior
consultation with the Director of Telecommunications as
required by Condition 5.5 of Applicant's Licence, but significantly,
the Memorandum seeks to change rates contrary to Condition
10 of BTL's Licence in the portion where it provides that
"In future, we will advise you of the appropriate rates
we would like to use for any Pay Phone we are placing outside
an existing exchange area. This will be done at the initial
stage when the request is issued to the Pay Phone section
for installation". Also, the Memorandum is captioned
"Rates for Public Payphones Outside an Exchange Area".
5. I have also read Ediberto Tesecum's Third Affidavit sworn
to on the 29th April, 2002. I ask the leave of the court
to refer to Paragraphs 3 to 10 of the said Affidavit.
6. I deny Paragraph 3 of the said Affidavit in so far as
it speaks of any alleged consultations between the Applicant
and myself. I am very clear there was no consultation on
the migration from coin operated public all boxes to card
operated public call boxes, hence the reason I kept on informing
my Ministry of the violation of Condition 5.5.
8. I refer to Paragraph 5 of the said Affidavit. I have
made enquiries with the Ministry of Public Utilities, and
I have seen copies of letters to Ediberto Tesecum dated
29th August, 2001 and 6th September, 2001, in which the
non-consultation by the Applicant with the Director of Telecommunication
was raised with Ediberto Tesecum and the fact that such
non-consultation violated Condition 5.5 of the Applicant's
Licence was stated. A copy of the said letters are now shown
to me marked CS (1).
9. I refer to Paragraph 6 of the said Affidavit. I maintain
that community telephones are public phones because members
of the community have access to them, and that community
telephones fall within the Telecommunications Act and the
Applicant's Licence.
10. The Ministry of Rural Development does not have jurisdiction
over telecommunications, which is an area governed by the
Telecommunications Act.
12. I categorically state that I was not telephoned by Karen
Bevans or Ediberto Tesecum at any time to discuss the pay
phones issues, before or after January, 2002."
-
From
all this welter of evidence, I am convinced that there
was no material consultation of the Director of Telecommunications
before the applicant changed the method of payment in
public telephone boxes from coin/card to prepaid cards
only. It is evident, from the evidence, that the applicant
might have been motivated by the need to stop the vandalization
of these public call boxes by some mischievous persons
in their bid to get at the coins in the boxes. This is
an unfortunate irritant in most societies with coin-operated
public call boxes. But, to change from coin to pre-paid
card only, however well intentioned the move, the relevant
condition of the applicant's licence required it to consult
with the Director of Telecommunications. I find that this
was not done in any meaningful manner within the context
of Condition 5.5 of the applicant's licence. This
was a matter that required more than a cursory discussion
or telephone conversation. A personal meeting with the
Director of Telecommunications and possibly followed by
a written memorandum on the issue, would in my view, have
met the requirements of Condition 5.5. I have set
out earlier the role and significance of the Director
of Telecommunications both within the provisions of the
Telecommunications Act and the applicant's licence. On
the evidence the applicant had in fact been told repeatedly
whom to consult regarding Condition 5.5 - see letters
to Chief Executive Office of respondent's ministry to
applicant - Exhibit ET 2 of Tesucum's affidavit
of 1st February 2002 and paragraph 6 thereof. Also on
29th August, applicant was told again whom to consult
- Exhibit ET 3. Somehow inexplicably, the applicant
chose not to consult directly with the Director of Telecommunications,
quite contrary to Condition 5.5. Instead, it is
averred on behalf of the applicant that there was discussion
with Director of Telecommunications. The Director of Telecommunications
himself wrote on 14 November 2001 to applicant
among other things, pointing out that there was no consultation
by the applicant regarding the change to card only in
the public telephone boxes.
-
Accordingly,
from my analysis of the evidence, I find that there was
no material consultation of the Director of Telecommunications
by the applicant before the change from coin/card to prepaid
cards only for public call boxes. I have a feeling that
there was, on the applicant's part, some misunderstanding
or lack of appreciation of the role of the Director of
Telecommunications in the context of both the Telecommunications
Act and the licence granted to the applicant.
-
Therefore,
in so far as non-compliance with Condition 5.5
of the licence is concerned, the applicant's challenge
of Statutory Instrument No. 11 of 2002, cannot be sustained
- the applicant was in clear breach of this condition.
-
However,
in view of my finding and conclusion on Condition 5.5
of the applicant's licence, I nonetheless do not think
that the dispositive paragraph (b) of the Statutory Instrument
to the effect that the applicant should:
"(b)
PROGRAM prepaid call boxes already installed in the districts
to accept prepaid cards at 15 cents per call until further
notice;"
can lawfully
secure compliance with the licence. What the respondent could
legitimately and properly do is to instruct the applicant
to revert to the pre prepaid card only regime operative in
public phone boxes. The respondent cannot order the applicant
to "programme prepaid call boxes already installed
in the districts to accept prepaid cards at 15 cents per call
until further notice." To do so would be imposing
a tariff for calls from public call boxes on the applicant.
Ms. Young Barrow S.C. for the applicant has rightly in my
view therefore complained. Accordingly, I will therefore,
strike out the dispositive paragraph (b) of the Statutory
Instrument. This will also overcome the conflicting evidence
from the parties as to the true rate for calls from these
telephone boxes before the switch to cards only; that is,
whether it was 25 cents per 3 minutes as was contended for
by the applicant, or 15 cents per call, as was averred on
behalf of the respondent.
- In
view of my finding however, of the precedent fact of violation,
contravention or non-compliance with Condition 5.5
by the applicant of its licence, the respondent is entitled
under section 23 of the Telecommunications Act to require
or order the applicant to revert to the previously operating
regime for payment for the use of public phone boxes, that
is, the pre prepaid card only regime, until after proper
consultation with the Director of Telecommunication or until
further notice. This will ensure and secure compliance with
the applicant's licence, as is intended by section 23 of
the Telecommunications Act. An order framed along these
lines would, I think, satisfy the requirements of subsection
(2) of section 23 of the Telecommunications Act.
Moreover,
in view of this finding on the evidence, the absence or
lack of consultation of the Director of Telecommunications
by the applicant before the change over to prepaid cards
only for public telephones, was in effect, an unilateral
change in the tariff structure for national telecommunication
services, contrary to Condition 10 of the licence
as there was no prior notification to the respondent (more
on this later).
-
I
have come to this conclusion because I believe in construing
legislation, it is the function of the Court to take account,
inter alia, of the purpose of the legislation,
the subject-matter it deals with and the mischief, if
any, it is intended to avoid. Section 23 of the Telecommunications
Act is part of Part III of the Act dealing with the licensing
of telecommunications systems generally. Section 20 of
this part of the Act provides for the grant of licence
to telecommunications operators. Subsection (5) provides
for some of the conditions to which the grant of a licence
may be subjected to. Section 23 provides for securing
compliance with the conditions of the licence and what
the Minister (the respondent) may do in the event of contravention
of a condition of a licence.
- I
cannot of course rewrite the Order for the respondent, and
I am not certain, on the present state of the law, that
I have that power, but I can and do say that the operative
paragraph b) of the Statutory Instrument is outside the
scope of what the respondent may do under section 23 of
the Telecommunications Act "as requisite for the
purpose of securing compliance with (the) conditions."
But I am confident that the respondent will be guided by
my observations here.
ON
CONDITION 10 OF THE APPLICANT'S LICENCE
- I
now turn to the controversy surrounding Condition 10
of the applicant's licence.
I have
already set this out earlier, and it is headed "TARIFF
DETERMINATION". This expressly provides for the determination
of rates for the supply of telephone services by the applicant
for both national and international calls. For the two types
of calls, that is local or national and international call,
this condition of the licence provides two formulas for the
determination of the rates applicable to each type of call,
that is whether national or international.
-
I
must confess that this condition is not exactly a model
for clarity or precision on such an important issue as
the determination of rates for telephone calls, especially
in an undertaking that was, until the licence granted
to the applicant in 1987, a state-owned public utility.
I expressed my concerns about the rendition of this condition
and its provenance during the argument before me to the
learned Solicitor General. This condition for example,
uses the expressions "tariffs", "prices"
and "rates" presumably interchangeably when
what is intended is to refer to the cost to the consumers
or users of the telecommunications services provided by
the applicant.
-
It
is not surprising therefore, that matters have come to
the boil between the parties as to the true meaning and
purport of this condition in the applicant's licence.
The kernel of the controversy between the parties over
this condition is that the applicant contends that it
was only liable to inform the respondent of changes
in the tariff structure for its services to the public
in advance and, that it did so in the instant case; and
that in any event, as there is no agreed financial and
development plan in existence, the respondent could not
require or insist on changes to the rates proposed by
the applicant. The respondent for his part contends that
he was not given sufficient time to consider the proposed
changes in the rates and that the applicant merely informed
him as a matter of form when it had unilaterally and as
a fait accompli, decided on the new rates by publishing
them with a given operational date in its customer information
notice and brochure even before informing him. This, the
respondent contends, was contrary to Condition 10
of the applicant's licence.
-
First,
was the necessary notification of the proposed new tariffs
the applicant wished to bring into force given in advance
to "the Minister" as is required by Condition
10 of the licence? From the evidence it is established
that the applicant did send on 25th January 2001
a memorandum on the subject "BTL Tariff Proposals"
to "Minister Fonseca". This memorandum itself
is in evidence as Exhibit ET 6 to the first affidavit
dated 1st February 2002 of Mr. Ediberto Tesucum, the Chief
Executive Officer of the applicant. He states in this
connection at paragraph 13 of the said affidavit as follows:
"13.
Chronology of Events in relation to Condition 10
On
the 25th day of January 2001 BTL's proposed tariff proposals
were delivered to the Hon. Ralph H. Fonseca, then the
Minister of Budget Management Investment and Trade.
The documents sent contained the rationale for the rebalancing,
highlights of the rebalancing, the tariff rebalancing
schedule, outline of the network's upgrade and expansion
plan, profile of the lower user group and proposals with
respects thereto. A copy of the package sent to Minister
Fonseca is now produced and shown to me and marked ET
(6) for identification." (emphasis added)
-
The
respondent on the other hand, states in his affidavit
of 17th April 2002, among other things, as follows:
"1.
I am a Minister of Government, and as from the 15th day
of October, 2001, I became the Minister responsible, among
other things, for Telecommunications.
6.
In regard to the letter dated 25th January 2001 from BTL
addressed to myself as Minister of Budget Management,
Investment and Trade, I had then no power to consider
the tariff change proposal from BTL as I was then not
the Minister responsible for Telecommunications and I
am informed by the acting Financial Sectary (sic)
and verily believe that the acting Financial Secretary
wrote to BTL on the 30th January, 2001, advising BTL that
it should forward its letter to the Hon. Maxwell Samuels,
the then Minister responsible for Telecommunications.
7.
BTL never held a meeting with me in my capacity as Minister
responsible for Telecommunications such as that held on
the 8th February, 2001 in Belmopan (as I subsequently
found out) between three directors of BTL and the Hon.
Maxwell Samuels, Dr. Victor Gonzalez, Dr. Gilbert Canton
when BTL allegedly presented its new tariff proposals
to the Hon. Maxwell Samuels.
8.
On the 14th November, 2001, BTL sent me a notice pursuant
to Condition 10 of BTL's Licence as Minister responsible
for Telecommunications that BTL's revised rates would
become effective on 1st December, 2001, and containing
a bald assertion unsupported by any data that in setting
the new charges, BTL had regard to the cost of supplying
the service, BTL's need to secure a reasonable rate of
return on its investment and the interests of users. A
copy of the said notice is now shown to me marked "RF
5".
9.
BTL has never supplied me, in my capacity as Minister
responsible for Telecommunications, on or after the said
letter of 14th November, 2001, any evidence on which the
tariff revision was based."
38. It
is clear from this that the respondent was not notified in
terms of Condition 10 of the licence of the proposed
change of tariffs by the applicant. The memorandum of 25 January
2001 was addressed to "Minister Fonseca" who, it
is common ground between the parties, was not on that date
the Minister responsible for telecommunications. In fact,
a couple of days following the date of the memorandum, Mr.
Joseph Waight acting Financial Secretary in the respondent's
ministry wrote to Mr. Tesucum, the Chief Executive Officer
of the applicant in terms, not exactly "return to sender"
but such as to make it clear that the memorandum was addressed
not to the appropriate authority. It is helpful, I think,
to reproduce this letter here, It is Exhibit ET 7 to
Mr. Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February 2002:
"GOVERNMENT
OF BELIZE
Ministry of Finance
Belmopan, Belize
___________________________________________________
Please
Quote
Ref: C/GEN/5/01/01(12)
By Fax and By Mail
Fax No. 02-32096
30th January, 2001
Mr. Ediberto Tesucum
Chief Executive Officer,
BELIZE TELECOMMUNICATIONS LIMITED
P.O. Box 603
Belize City
Dear Sir
I
refer to your letter of 26th January, 2001 and to an unsigned
memorandum from the "BTL Management" dated 25th
January, 2001 both of which were addressed to the Hon. Ralph
H. Fonseca, Minister of Budget Management, Investment and
Trade and both of which concerned new BTL Tariff Proposals.
I
wish to advise that such proposals should more appropriately
be submitted to the Hon. Maxwell Samuels, Minister of Public
Utilities, Energy, Communications and Immigration under
whose portfolio this subject falls. At the same time the
proposals should be copied to the Chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission, Gilbert Canton, Ph.D.
The
Hon. Minister of Public Utilities would, after consultation
with the Public Utilities Commission, submit the proposals
to Cabinet for its consideration together with his Minister's
recommendations on the matter. At this time, of course,
Minister Fonseca will be privy to tall (sic) of the
Information for decision making.
You
may therefore wish to resubmit the proposals as indicated
above.
Yours
Sincerely,
sgd: J Waight
Joseph Waight
Ag. Financial Secretary
cc: Hon. Minister of Public Utilities, Energy, Communications
and
Immigration
Chairman, Public Utilities Commission"
Moreover, although Mr. Tesucum avers in the same affidavit
at paragraph 15 that he had been informed and verily believed
that at a meeting on 8th February 2001 in Belmopan, three
directors of the applicant presented its new tariff proposals
to the Hon. Maxwell Samuels the Minister responsible then
for telecommunications, in the presence of witnesses, there
is nothing in evidence to show what was actually presented
to the Hon. Maxwell Samuels, who was then the Minister responsible
for telecommunications. What is in evidence on this issue
is Exhibit ET 6 to "Minister Fonseca" who
only became the Minister responsible for telecommunications
on 15 October 2001.
-
Thereafter,
on 14 November 2001, the applicant wrote to the respondent
in his capacity as the Minister responsible for telecommunications.
This letter is in stark contrast to the memorandum of
25 January 2001 sent to "Minister Fonseca" when
he was not responsible for telecommunications. This letter
was really in effect, a fait accompli and intimated
to the respondent that in accordance with Condition
10 of the applicant's licence it was enclosing advance
notification of BTL's revised rates which would become
effective as from December 1, 2001. The enclosed "advance
notification" was actually a Customer Notice
by the applicant informing the public of the schedule
of services, the existing rates and new rates that would
become effective as from 1st December 2001. The same schedule
was sent to the Director of Telecommunications together
with a slightly differently worded letter - see Exhibits
9 and 10 of Mr. Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February
2002 and paragraph 5 of his fourth affidavit of 22nd July
2002.
-
However,
on behalf of the respondent, the Director of Telecommunications
sent Exhibit CS 4 of Mr. Slusher's affidavit of
17th April 2002 complaining about the notification to
the respondent by the applicant in the letter of 14th
November 2001 (Exhibits 9 and 10 of Tesucum's affidavit
of 1st February 2002).
-
On
the available evidence, I am not satisfied that such "notification"
as there was of the respondent met the requirements of
Condition 10.
-
Secondly,
a relevant question also pertinent to Condition 10
is this: Does it merely provide for advance notification
to the respondent of any proposed tariff change by the
applicant and nothing more? In my view a closer reading
and analysis of Condition 10 shows that more than
advance notification was intended. I have noted earlier
that this condition provides for two formulas in determining
the tariffs for the applicant telecommunications services,
depending on whether they are 1) national and 2) international.
In the case of the latter, the licence provides that the
rates (no doubt meaning the tariffs the applicant may
charge) will be determined by market conditions. Whatever
this provision may mean, in the context of the applicant's
position, as the sole provider of telecommunications
services and, therefore enjoying a veritable monopoly,
however, it was really a kind of golden formula. "Market
conditions" as price determinant would, I imagine,
ordinarily depend on supply and demand. But where there
is only one supplier, market conditions as a price determinant
is a wholly different thing altogether. But such is the
provision of the applicant's licence in relation to the
rates to be charged for supplying international telecommunication
services. I can only say that in an imperfect market without
countervailing competition, it is an alluring provision
a less scrupulous supplier would be sorely tempted to
capitalise on.
-
However
in relation to the tariffs for national, that is, local
or domestic calls the applicant can charge, different
considerations come into play. First, there is the need
to notify the respondent in advance and he in turn may
require changes to the proposed tariffs. This he can do
where the proposed tariffs are inconsistent with any development
and financial plan which may be agreed between the applicant
and the respondent. There is no evidence before me that
there was in existence at the material time an agreed
development and financial agreement between the parties.
Ms. Lois Young Barrow S.C. for the applicant therefore
submitted, that absent such a plan, the applicant was
free to implement the proposed tariff changes, the only
obligation on the applicant was to inform the respondent
in advance. If this argument was pressed home, then the
formula for determining the tariff for domestic or national
calls would be no different from that applicable to international
calls.
-
But,
secondly, there is the need to have regard in setting
the tariff for national (domestic) calls, to bear in mind
the three-fold consideration stated in paragraphs a),
b) and c) of the proviso in Condition 10.
I think that properly interpreted and understood, even
in the absence of an agreed financial and development
plan between the parties, the determination of the tariffs
for domestic calls should (the proviso says "shall"'),
be influenced and informed by the considerations stipulated
in the proviso. I think therefore, that the learned Solicitor
General is correct when he submitted that the effect of
the proviso in Condition 10 of the licence is that
in relation to the formula for setting the tariffs for
domestic calls, these should be notified in advance to
the respondent, who may then require changes, having regard
to any data or evidence or submissions to him relating
to a) the cost of supplying the services; b) the need
of the licensee (the applicant) to secure a reasonable
rate of return on investment and c) the interests of the
users.
-
Thirdly,
therefore, discounting the fact that the respondent qua
the minister responsible for telecommunications did not
receive Exhibit ET 6 of 25th January 2001, as I
have recounted above on the evidence, then all he received
by way of notification of the proposed tariffs change
from the applicant, was the bare and formulaic letter
of 14th November 2001 (Exhibit ET 9). This was
a kind fait accompli, informing the respondent
that the new rates would come into effect on 1st December
2001. There was nothing in it on which the respondent
could make an informed response as to the new tariffs.
Nor did it say for that matter, how the applicant itself
arrived at the revised rates, other than the bare assertion
that it had regard to the three considerations. It was
in truth, no more and no less than an unilateral determination
of rates by the applicant not in keeping with the provisions
of Condition 10, nor within its spirit. And it
was quite contrary to the practice, I find on the evidence,
that had developed between the parties in determining
the rates for the applicant telecommunications services.
This practice, I find, involved the fact that the applicant
would inform the respondent (that is the Minister for
the time being responsible for telecommunications), in
good enough time so as to enable the latter to take the
proposals to Cabinet for consideration and approval before
the applicant implemented the changes - see paragraph
8 of the Director of Telecommunications Mr. Slusher's
affidavit of 17th April 2002 and Exhibit CS 5 thereto.
This practice was certainly not outside the spirit or
provision of Condition 10. It furnishes evidence
that that was how the parties themselves understood and
applied Condition 10 in determining the rates for
tariffs.
-
I
therefore find that on the materials before me, and have
weighed carefully the arguments and submissions of Ms.
Lois Young Barrow S.C., the learned attorney for the applicant,
and those of the Solicitor-General, for the respondent,
there was an unilateral determination of new tariffs by
the applicant that was not in keeping with its licence.
- Accordingly,
this precedent fact of violation of its licence in so crucial
an aspect as tariff determination, I find, entitled the
respondent to exercise the powers granted him under section
23 of the Telecommunications Act to ensure compliance by
the applicant with its licence. Therefore, the Statutory
Instrument No. 11 of 2002 is valid and lawful in this respect.
WAS
THE RESPONDENT'S DECISION TO MAKE AND ISSUE STATUTORY
INSTRUMENT NO. 11 OF 2002 FLAWED AND INVALID?
-
The
applicant has however, also sought to impugn the Statutory
Instrument on other grounds as well. Ms. Lois Young Barrow
S.C. for the applicant with some vigour and skill constructed
a platform of several planks from which to launch this
attack. Let me say right away on this score that if, from
the evidence, any of these is true, it would vitiate the
Statutory Instrument, for the respondent would have been
acting ultra vires in making it. These may be stated
briefly. In the very able presentation of Ms. Young Barrow
S.C., the cutting edge of this attack is that in making
the Statutory Instrument, the respondent acted unfairly,
because he did not, before making the Order contained
in the Statutory Instrument, tell the applicant what the
alleged breaches of its licence were and that he did not
give the applicant an opportunity to remedy these alleged
breaches.
-
It
is now settled law that if a decision-maker who is authorised
by law to take an action that would adversely affect some
other person fails to inform that other person the reason
for making the decision and giving him the opportunity
to dissuade the decision maker by being allowed to put
forth reasons or to put his own side of the case, as it
were, the resultant decision would be flawed and vitiated
for ignoring what has been called the elementary doctrines
of fair procedure. As the learned authors, Wade and Forsyth
in their seminal work Administrative Law, already
mentioned above, state at page 437:
"Just
as a power to act 'as he thinks fit' does not allow a
public authority to act unreasonably in bad faith, so
it does not allow disregard of the elementary doctrines
of fair procedure. As Lord Selborne once said:
"There would be no decision within the meaning of
the statute if there were anything of that sort done contrary
to the essence of justice." (In Spackman v Plumstead
District Board of Works (1885) 10 App. Cas. 229
at 240)
"Quoting
these words, the Privy Council has said that 'it has long
been settled law' that a decision which offends against
the principles of natural justice is outside the jurisdiction
of the decision making authority (in Attorney General
v Ryan [1980] A.C. 718).
Likewise
Lord Russell has said:
"It
is to be implied, unless the contrary appears, that Parliament
does not authorise by the Act the exercise of powers in
breach of the principles of natural justice, and that
Parliament does by the Act require, in the particular
procedures, compliance with those principles."
Thus
violation of natural justice makes the decision void, as
in any other case of ultra vires."
-
I
am therefore satisfied and, indeed fortified, to state
that even though section 23 of the Telecommunications
Act (under which the respondent made the Statutory Instrument)
states clearly that "Where the Minister is satisfied"
that a licensed telecommunications operator (such as the
applicant) is contravening, or has contravened, and is
likely again to contravene, any of the conditions of its
licence, then the Minister (the respondent), may make
and order to secure compliance with the conditions of
the licence, if on the evidence, in making the Order there
was a disregard of the elementary doctrines of fair procedure,
as alleged by the applicant, then the resulting Statutory
Instrument would be infected with procedural impropriety
and consequently bad in law. As has succinctly been stated
by Fordham in his Judicial Review Handbook, already
mentioned, supra, at page 186: "Natural
justice is an umbrella term for the legal standards of
basic fairness."
-
I
believe however, that a closer examination of section
23 itself would show that it has a kind of in-built safeguard
to assure compliance with the principles of fair procedure
consonant with respect for natural justice - see in particular
subsection (3).
-
What
is the evidence in this case of the circumstances attendant
on the final making of the Statutory Instrument and its
coming into effect? On 29th August 2001, the applicant
received a letter from the Chief Executive Officer in
the respondent's Ministry complaining about lack of consultation
with the Director of Telecommunications on the change
over to prepaid card only for calls from public call boxes
(see paragraph 6 of Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February
2002 and Exhibit ET 2 thereto). This was followed
by yet another letter from the same Chief Executive Officer
on 6th September 2001 to the applicant mentioning the
letter of 29th August 2001, and repeating the allegation
of breach of Condition 5.5. of the applicant's
licence; and deploring the applicant's discussion of introducing
prepaid calling cards with the Ministry of Rural Development
whose 'approval' the applicant obtained, as a clumsy attempt
to circumvent the authority of the respondent's Ministry.
Again, explanation and or comment from the applicant was
sought as was done in the letter of 29th August 2001 (see
paragraph 7 of Tesucum's affidavit supra and Exhibit
ET 3. The applicant replied on 11th September 2001
to the Chief Executive Officer of the respondent's Ministry
referring only to the letter of 29th August 2001, stating
that there was discussion with the Director of Telecommunications,
and as far as the applicant was concerned there was no
issue - see Exhibit ET 4 of Tesucum's affidavit
supra and at paragraph 8 thereof.
Three
days later on 14th November 2001, the applicant wrote to both
the respondent and the Director of Telecommunications informing
them of its revised tariffs and stating that the new rates
would become effective on December 1, 2001. (See Exhibits
9 and 8 respectively of Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February
2002). On the same day, that is 14th November 2001, the Director
of Telecommunications in the respondent's Ministry, wrote
to Mr. Tesucum, the Chief Executive Officer of the applicant,
informing the applicant that it should not implement or publish
any increased rates for its domestic services until Condition
10 of the applicant's licence had been complied with.
In this letter, the Director of Telecommunications also informed
the applicant that it was contravening Condition 5.5
of its licence (see Exhibit CS 3 of Mr. Slusher's affidavit
of 17th April 2002). It would appear that the applicant forwarded
a copy of Exhibit ET 9 (its letter of 14th November
2001 to the respondent himself) to the Director of Telecommunications;
the latter again wrote the applicant on 15th November 2001
stating that there was no evidence that Condition 10
was being observed by the applicant. The Director of Telecommunications
in this letter directed the applicant not to further any activities
for the implementation of the proposed rates on 1st December
2001, until the respondent had given approved directive (see
Exhibit ET 11 of Tesucum's affidavit supra,
which is the same as Exhibit 4 of Slusher's affidavit
supra).
This was
were the exchanges between the parties rested until 28th December
2001 when the applicant was served with the respondent's Order
containing the Statutory Instrument. This draft order contained
the particulars of the breaches of its licence being alleged
against the applicant. It is, however, important to observe
here, that although the Statutory Instrument is dated 28th
December 2001, it states expressly on its face that it "shall
take effect on 26th January 2002", so it did
not therefore stop the applicant immediately - this would
be as from 26th January 2002, if at all.
The applicant
in the meantime wrote the respondent on 16th January 2002,
some 18 days after the date of the Order (which was really
then only a draft) and some nine days before it was to come
into effect, taking objections to and making representation
on the draft order to the respondent (see paragraph 26 of
Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February 2002 and Exhibit 14
thereto). The respondent replied to the applicant on 24th
January 2002 stating that he had considered its representations
but he was satisfied that it was in contravention of Conditions
5.5 and 10 of its licence and as such the draft order
would go into effect on 26th January 2002. The respondent
however, concluded that the applicant might make further representation
to him (see paragraph 6 of the respondent's affidavit of 6th
February 2002 and Exhibit RF 3 thereto). Two days later
the draft order came into effect as Statutory Instrument No.
11 of 2002. And on 28th January 2002, Ms. Lois Young Barrow
S.C. wrote to the respondent stating that the applicant would
comply with the Statutory Instrument (see Exhibit RF 4).
The applicant therefore launched these proceedings to challenge
the Statutory Instrument.
-
I
have set out the evidence at some length. From my analysis
of it, I don't think it is reasonable to say with any
degree of conviction that the respondent acted unfairly
and breached the principles of natural justice. It is
manifestly clear that from August and November 2001, the
applicant had been informed by the Chief Executive Officer
of the respondent's Ministry and twice by the Director
of Telecommunications, that Conditions 5.5. and 10
of its licence were not being complied with. Moreover,
even after service upon it of the draft order, the applicant
did make objections and representations to the respondent.
It is plainly therefore unarguable, that the applicant
was informed of the alleged contraventions and it was
afforded a clear opportunity to make representations to
the respondent and to dissuade him from acting as he did.
- Accordingly,
therefore, I am not convinced, on the evidence, that in
deciding to make the Order and in making the Order as contained
in the Statutory Instrument in question, the respondent
acted unfairly or unreasonably.
Ms. Lois
Young Barrow S.C. for the applicant valiantly sought to impugn
the Statutory Instrument on the grounds that it was unreasonable
and made in bad faith. I am afraid on the evidence before
me, as I have tried to set it out here, this charge against
the respondent falls quite short of the Wednesbury standard,
that is, that the respondent's decision in the circumstances,
was "so absurd that no sensible person could even
dream that it lay within the powers of the authority"
- Associated Provincial Pictures House Ltd v Wednesbury
Corporation (1948) 1 K.B. 223, where at p. 229, Lord
Greene MR citing Warrington L.J. in Short v Poolecpn (1926)
Ch. 66 giving the example of the red-haired teacher who
was dismissed because she had red hair. Lord Greene MR continued:
"That is unreasonable in one sense. In another sense
it is taking into consideration extraneous matters. It is
so unreasonable that it might almost be described as being
done in bad faith, and in fact all these things run into one
another."
-
Accordingly,
on the evidence, I am satisfied that the respondent did
not act unreasonably or irrationally or in bad faith.
- Ms.
Young Barrow S.C. also argued that in making the Statutory
Instrument the respondent took into account irrelevant matters
and failed to take into account relevant issues such as
that the applicant's new rates lowered tariffs in more cases.
Although the correctness of the last assertion is, on the
evidence, debatable, the short answer is that it is not
however an answer to a charge of not consulting the Director
of Telecommunications before changing the method of payment
in public call boxes, nor for failing to meet the requirements
of Condition 10 on determining the rates for national
calls.
The charge
of taking irrelevant matters into consideration by the respondent
in making the Statutory Instrument is outlined in paragraphs
21, 22 and 23 of Mr. Tesucum's affidavit of 1st February 2002
to which he exhibited a copy of a press release issued by
the Government of Belize and dated 28th December 2001 as Exhibit
ET 12. I am however unable to find or hold, on a close
reading of this press release, that the respondent took extraneous
or irrelevant issues into consideration in issuing the Statutory
Instrument. I am persuaded by the evidence as averred in paragraph
3 of the respondent's affidavit of 17th April 2002, that ".
. . at no time did I take into account extraneous or irrelevant
factors in arriving at the decision to issue the Order."
See also paragraph 3 of his further affidavit of 23rd July
2002.
-
I
am therefore unable to hold that the respondent in making
the Statutory Instrument in question here, took irrelevant
or extraneous matters into consideration or acted in bad
faith with a view to punish the applicant, such as to
render flawed or tainted the Order he made.
- CONCLUSION
It is
the position that in judicial review proceedings that it is
generally for the claimant (the applicant in these proceedings)
to prove that grounds for intervention by the Court are made
out, rather than for the respondent to prove that they are
not. The jurisprudence in judicial review cases shows that
there are a series of presumptions of validity favouring public
bodies which emphasise that the claimant shoulders the burden
of presumed legality and demonstrating a public law wrong
- see generally Fordham, Handbook of Judicial Review
cited supra at pp. 664 - 666. These presumptions of
validity arise in favour of, for example, delegated or subordinate
legislation, Acts of Parliament and of the decision-making
power by public officers.
In the
instant proceedings, it is the validity of a subordinate legislation,
albeit in the context of an administration decision, in the
form of Statutory Instrument No. 11 of 2002, that is in issue;
all things being equal, this presumption of validity could
avail in its favour: McEldownay v Forde (1971) A.C. 632
where Lord Diplock though dissenting from the decision of
the House of Lords in the case, said however, of the presumption
in favour of the subordinate legislation that was in issue
in that case:
"Omnia
praesumutur rite esse acta and the onus lies upon the party
challenging the subordinate legislation to establish its
invalidity."
- In
these proceedings, on the evidence before me, I am not satisfied
that the applicant had displaced this burden to establish
the invalidity of Statutory Instrument No. 11 of 2002.
Moreover,
in the light of all the materials before me and after weighing
carefully the arguments and submissions of Ms. Lois Young
Barrow S.C. for the applicant and the Solicitor General, Mr.
Elson Kaseke for the respondent, I am unable to grant the
reliefs the applicant seeks from this Court.
Accordingly,
the application is refused and, save as I have indicated earlier
at paragraphs 31 and 32 of this judgment, the Order of the
respondent contained in Statutory Instrument No. 11 of 2002
is not ultra vires and is therefore lawful and valid.
- I
must, in closing, record my appreciation of the industry
which both Ms. Young Barrow S.C. and the Solicitor General
put into this case and the tenacity with which both learned
attorneys argued for their respective clients and the assistance
they afforded the Court. I also gratefully acknowledge the
assistance they afforded to the Court, although the passage
was not exactly smooth sailing.
I will
now hear counsel on the question of costs.
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