Injunction - National Media
Commission (Content Standards)
Regulations, 2015 (LI 2224) -
Article 130 (2) of the 1992
Constitution - Whether or not
declarations to the effect that
the requirement for prior
authorisation of content amounts
to censorship, control and
direction of media institutions
- Whether or not the said L.I
was inconsistent with Articles
162(1) and (2), 162 (4), 167 (d)
and 173 of the 1992 Constitution
which guarantee freedom of the
media.
HEADNOTES
The relevant facts upon which
the application has been brought
are as follows; LI 2224, which
came into force on 9th
December, 2015, requires
electronic communication
networks and broadcast media
institutions to obtain prior
authorisation from the 2nd
respondent before they can carry
any content on their networks
Under the LI it is an offence to
carry any content on a network
without authorisation and upon
summary conviction one may be
fined or imprisoned for not less
than two years or more than five
years or both fine and
imprisonment. The main ground
for this motion is that its
members stand to suffer
irreparable injury if the
respondents are not restrained
from enforcing LI 2224
Prosecution, as we know, goes
with all the pre-trial criminal
justice processes of arrest,
detention, preferring of charges
and presentation of the accused
persons before the criminal
court. According to the
applicant, these indignities by
themselves without actual
imprisonment constitute serious
injury which, if not prevented
by injunction, cannot be
afterwards adequately remedied
by any decree which the court
can pronounce in the result that
the court declares LI 2224
unconstitutional. The
respondents referred to Article
130 (2) of the 1992 Constitution
which deals with stay of pending
proceedings, They contend the
Article provides sufficient
protection to applicant.
HELD -
After
pondering over the exceptional
circumstances of this case as
explained above, we have arrived
at the decision to grant the
prayer of the applicant. We find
it just and convenient to grant
an order of interlocutory
injunction restraining
respondents from enforcing the
impugned provisions of LI 2224
pending the determination of the
substantive suit.
STATUTES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
National Media Commission
(Content Standards) Regulations,
2015 (LI 2224) -
1992 Constitution Article 130
(2)
CASES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
Welford Quarcoo v
Attorney-General [2012] 1SCGLR
259
Republic v High Court (Fast
Track Division) Accra; Ex parte
Ghana Lotto Operators
Association (National Lottery
Authority; Interested Party)
[2009]SCGLR 372
Attorney-General v Commission on
Human Rights and Administrative
Justice [1999-2000]1GLR 358, SC
Awuni v West African Examination
Council [1971]1 GLR 63
Cruickshank v Bidwell, 176 US
73, 80 – 81 (1900)
R
v Secretary of State for
Transport; Ex parte Factortome
(No. 2) [1991] AC 603
Ransford France (No.1) v
Electoral Commission and
Attorney-General [2012] 1 SCGLR
689
BOOKS REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
DELIVERING THE LEADING JUDGMENT
PWAMANG, JSC.
COUNSEL
KWAME BOATENG ESQ.
WITH HIM RAPHAEL AGYEMANG FOR
THE PLAINTIFF /APPLICANT.
GRACE EWOAL (PSA)
FOR THE 1ST
DEFENDANT./RESPONDENT
THADEUS SORY ESQ.
FOR THE 2ND
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT
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RULING
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PWAMANG, JSC.
In this ruling the
plaintiff/applicant will be
referred to as ‘applicant’ and
defendants/respondents as
‘respondents’. This is a motion
on notice for an order of
interlocutory injunction filed
by the applicant seeking to
restrain the respondents from
enforcing specified provisions
of the National Media
Commission (Content Standards)
Regulations, 2015 (LI 2224)
pending this court’s
determination of the substantive
Suit No. J1/4/2016.
The relevant facts upon which
the application has been brought
are as follows; LI 2224, which
came into force on 9th
December, 2015, requires
electronic communication
networks and broadcast media
institutions to obtain prior
authorisation from the 2nd
respondent before they can carry
any content on their networks.
Under the LI it is an offence to
carry any content on a network
without authorisation and upon
summary conviction one may be
fined or imprisoned for not less
than two years or more than five
years or both fine and
imprisonment.
In its substantive suit filed on
8th January, 2016,
applicant prayed for, among
other reliefs, declarations to
the effect that the requirement
for prior authorisation of
content amounts to censorship,
control and direction of media
institutions by the 2nd
respondent which plaintiff
claims is inconsistent with
Articles 162(1) and (2), 162
(4), 167 (d) and 173 of the 1992
Constitution which guarantee
freedom of the media. Applicant
also contends that the
provisions on criminal sanctions
in LI 2224 are inconsistent with
Article 162 (4) of the
constitution as they impair free
expression guaranteed under the
Constitution.
LI 2224 provided a grace period
of three months within which
existing operators were to
obtain content authorisation
failing which they cannot carry
any content on their networks or
they do so on the pain of being
arrested and prosecuted.
Applicant, whose members have
apparently not obtained content
authorisation while their
challenge against LI 2224 is
pending, filed this motion for
interim relief on 3rd
March, 2016, before the lapse of
the grace period. Respondents
have opposed the motion and
filed affidavits in opposition
and statements of case. We have
read closely all the processes
filed and taken note of the
viva voce submissions by
applicant’s lawyer and lawyers
for respondents.
It is useful at this juncture to
quote the succinct statement of
the law on interlocutory
injunctions by Dr. Date-Bah JSC
in the case of Welford
Quarcoo v Attorney-General
[2012] 1SCGLR 259. At page
260 of the Report the respected
jurist delivered himself as
follows;
“It has always been my
understanding that the
requirements for the grant of
interlocutory injunctions are:
first, the applicant must
establish that there is a
serious question to be tried;
secondly, that he or she would
suffer irreparable damage which
cannot be remedied by the award
of damages, unless the
interlocutory injunction is
granted; and finally that the
balance of convenience is in
favour of granting him or her
the interlocutory injunction.
The balance of convenience of
course means weighing up the
disadvantages of granting the
relief against the disadvantages
of not granting the relief.
Where the relief sought relates,
as here, to a public law
matter, particular care must
be taken not to halt the action
presumptively for the public
good, unless there are very
cogent reasons to do so, and
provided also that any
subsequent nullification of the
impugned act or omission cannot
restore the status quo”.
The position of the law that,
where a case falls under public
law, a court ought to be slow in
granting interlocutory
injunction was also underscored
by this court in the case of Republic
v High Court (Fast Track
Division) Accra; Ex parte Ghana
Lotto Operators Association
(National Lottery Authority;
Interested Party) [2009]SCGLR
372. While the authorities
urge caution, the jurisdiction
of the court to grant
interlocutory injunction in a
public law matter is beyond
debate. Thus in the case of
Ex parte Ghana Lotto Operators
Association, supra, Atuguba
JSC said as follows at page 400;
“It is not surprising therefore
that it has been held by this
court that when a body is
entrusted with statutory
discretion, the courts should be
careful not to clog its exercise
with injunctions: see
Attorney-General v Commission on
Human Rights and Administrative
Justice [1999-2000]1GLR 358, SC.
This, however, does not mean
that an interim injunction
cannot lie against the improper
use of statutory discretion: see
Awuni v West African
Examination Council [1971]1 GLR
63.”
In its equity jurisdiction, the
authority of the court extends
to the grant of interim
injunctions in exceptional
circumstances to halt the
enforcement of a statute the
constitutionality of which is
being challenged on prima facie
good and substantial grounds. In
the case of Cruickshank v
Bidwell, 176 US 73, 80 –
81 (1900) for example, Chief
Justice Fuller, delivering the
decision of the U S Supreme
Court, stated as follows;
“It is settled that the mere
fact that a law is
unconstitutional does not
entitle a party to relief by
injunction against the
proceeding in compliance
therewith, but it must appear
that he has no adequate remedy
by the ordinary process of the
law, or that the case falls
under some recognised head of
equity jurisdiction … Inadequacy
of remedy at law exists where
the case made demands preventive
relief, as for instance, the
prevention of multiplicity of
suits or the prevention of
irreparable injury.”
In a similar vein, in the case
of R v Secretary of State for
Transport; Ex parte Factortome
(No. 2) [1991] AC 603, the
House of Lords, in order to
prevent irreparable injury,
granted an interim injunction
restraining the British Minister
for Transport from implementing
an Act of the British Parliament
on registration of European
fishing vessels pending a
determination by the European
Court on whether the British Act
of Parliament contravened
European Union Law.
Where the application for
interlocutory injunction is made
in a public law case, the court
is required to balance the
public interest against the
interest of the applicant.
It is against the background of
the above principles that we
consider the application before
us. It has not been contended by
respondents that applicant’s
action does not present serious
questions for determination by
this court. In fact, the matters
raised in the writ of summons
relate to constitutional issues
of great importance to the
practice of democracy in Ghana.
Applicant’s main ground for this
motion is that its members stand
to suffer irreparable injury if
the respondents are not
restrained from enforcing LI
2224 in that they are likely to
be prosecuted and may suffer
imprisonment in the meantime
that the substantive suit has
not been determined.
Prosecution, as we know, goes
with all the pre-trial criminal
justice processes of arrest,
detention, preferring of charges
and presentation of the accused
persons before the criminal
court. According to the
applicant, these indignities by
themselves without actual
imprisonment constitute serious
injury which, if not prevented
by injunction, cannot be
afterwards adequately remedied
by any decree which the court
can pronounce in the result that
the court declares LI 2224
unconstitutional.
The respondents referred to
Article 130 (2) of the 1992
Constitution which deals with
stay of pending proceedings,
including criminal proceedings,
where the constitutionality of a
statute has been challenged
before a court other than the
Supreme Court and a referral has
been made to this court. They
contend the Article provides
sufficient protection to
applicant. It is however worth
noting that that provision would
come into play only after a
person has suffered the
indignities of the pre-trial
criminal justice processes as
outlined above and is
conditional on the accused
person’s capacity to raise
objection as to the
constitutionality of LI 2224.
The relevant question in our
view is whether there is a real
probability of the prosecution
of applicant’s members. The
respondents in their affidavits
in opposition and statements of
case have evinced a clear
intention to enforce the law by
the arrest, and at least,
presentation of members of
applicant association before
court for criminal proceedings
while the substantive suit is
pending. In our judgment,
restraining the threatened
prosecution will better prevent
the irreparable injury in this
case than relying on Article 130
(2) of the Constitution.
On the balance of convenience in
this case, we have compared the
injury members of applicant are
likely to suffer by the
curtailment of their
constitutionally guaranteed
rights to freedom of expression
and of the media if we refuse
the injunction, to the general
public’s interest in a more
regularised broadcast content in
the interim. In our considered
view, since the general public
has put up with the status quo
for all this period that the
airwaves have been liberalised
and determination of the
substantive suit is not likely
to delay, the balance tilts in
favour of applicant’s members.
The facts of this case are
distinguishable from the recent
cases decided by this court on
interlocutory injunctions in
public law causes that have been
relied upon by respondents in
opposing the application. In
both Welford Quarcoo v
Attorney-General (supra) and
Ransford France (No.1)
v Electoral Commission and
Attorney-General [2012] 1 SCGLR
689, the plaintiffs did not
stand to suffer any personal
irreparable injury. Their
actions were directed at
ensuring compliance with the
provisions of the constitution
but without being personally
affected in a direct manner.
However in this case the members
of applicant stand to be
directly affected by the
enforcement of the impugned
legislation. In fact, members of
applicant appear to be the main
target of the impugned statute
so their special circumstances
are an important consideration.
Furthermore, in the earlier
cases, the programmes of
activities leading to general
elections would have been
disrupted if the interlocutory
injunctions prayed for were
granted, but that is not the
case here.
After pondering over the
exceptional circumstances of
this case as explained above, we
have arrived at the decision to
grant the prayer of the
applicant. We find it just and
convenient to grant an order of
interlocutory injunction
restraining respondents from
enforcing the impugned
provisions of LI 2224 pending
the determination of the
substantive suit.
(SGD)
G. PWAMANG
JUSTICE OF THE
SUPREME COURT
(SGD)
S. A. B. AKUFFO
(MS)
JUSTICE OF
THE SUPREME COURT
(SGD) V. J.
M. DOTSE
JUSTICE OF THE
SUPREME COURT
(SGD)
P. BAFFOE - BONNIE
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME
COURT
(SGD)
V. AKOTO – BAMFO (MRS)
JUSTICE
OF THE SUPREME COURT
(SGD)
A. A.
BENIN
JUSTICE
OF THE SUPREME COURT
(SGD)
J. B. AKAMBA
JUSTICE
OF THE SUPREME COURT
COUNSEL
KWAME BOATENG ESQ. WITH HIM
RAPHAEL AGYEMANG FOR THE
PLAINTIFF /APPLICANT.
GRACE EWOAL (PSA) FOR THE
1ST
DEFENDANT./RESPONDENT
THADEUS SORY ESQ. FOR THE 2ND
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT
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