Constitutional law - Interpretation
-Termination of Contract -
Capacity - Parliamentary
ratification.- Whether or not
Minister for Energy had power
and/or authority to annul or
terminate the Petroleum
Agreement between the Government
of the Republic of Ghana and
Aker ASA - Whether the said
Termination of Agreement was
null, void and of no effect. -
Whether or not the question
raises plaintiffs locus -
Whether or not section 23(15) of
PNDCL 84, that is Petroleum
(Exploration and Production)
Law, 1984 was violated
HEADNOTES
The plaintiff has invoked the original
jurisdiction of this court in a
matter which for a moment seems
to raise question of his locus.
This is because it is a matter
which involves the termination
of a petroleum exploration
contract which had been signed
and received the required
constitutional parliamentary
ratification . The
parties affected by the
termination do not complain, but
rather the plaintiff who has
nothing to do with the contract.
Yet that is the right given to
citizens of this country to seek
interpretation of the
constitution even in matters in
which they have no direct
interest so long as it raises a
question of interpretation under
Article 2 of the Constitution,
1992. The facts giving rise to
this case are not in dispute. On
or about the 24th day
of October, 2008 the Government
of Ghana entered into a
petroleum exploration agreement
with a Norwegian company, 2nd
defendant herein, and a local
company the 3rd
defendant herein. In line with
the provisions of Article 268(1)
of the Constitution the said
agreement was placed before
Parliament which duly ratified
it on the 5th day of
November 2008. Subsequently, the
Ghana National Petroleum
Corporation (GNPC) advised the
Minister for Energy that the
agreement violated section
23(15) of PNDCL 84. It was
apparent that acting on this
advice the Minister for Energy
together with the GNPC, on one
side, opened termination talks
with the defendants, on the
other side. The parties agreed
upon terms of termination. They
also agreed on the payment of
the sum of twenty-nine million
US dollars ($29,000,000.00) by
the GNPC to the 2nd
defendant which was thereby
required to surrender to the
GNPC seismic data gathered by
them from their operation of the
oilfield under the agreement.
This termination agreement was
not referred to Parliament for
approval. The Minister purported
to act under section 23(15) of
PNDCL 84 to terminate the
agreement. The plaintiff
believes the action of the
Minister was wrongful
HELD It is
the party who is affected by the
Minister’s action and who feels
aggrieved who may proceed to
court for a declaration of his
rights under the contract. In
respect of whether the Minister
should have referred to
Parliament for approval, I would
have accepted that but for the
fact that the agreement itself
clearly stated that it must
conform to the laws of this
country. Therefore, since the
Minister had the right to
terminate the agreement, he
could do so under any of its
provisions, besides article
23.5. It is unreasonable to
isolate the other provisions of
the agreement; indeed the
principle of construction that a
document or deed must be read as
a whole is applicable to this
situation. Thus by a combined
reading of articles 26.1 and
23.5 of the agreement, the
Minister was mandated by
Parliament to terminate the
agreement if it did not conform
to the laws of the country,
This is the crux of
article 1 (1) of the
Constitution which is anchored
in the welfare of the people of
Ghana. This is the crux of both
the letter and spirit of the
Constitution must move in
harmony. This is also the crux
of articles 23 and 296 of the
Constitution and s. 10(4) of the
Interpretation Act 2009, (Act
792).For all the foregoing
reasons I agree that this action
be dismissed.
STATUTES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
1992 Constitution. Article 268,
PNDCL 84. section 23(15)
LN
140A, procedure prescribed under
Order 28, r 7 under r 1
Interpretation Act, 2009 (Act
792)
Companies Code, 1963 (Act 179)
Judicial Service Regulation,
1963(LI 319
Judicial Service Act, 1960 (CA
10)
National Industrial Recovery Act
of 1933 ( US A)
legislative Policy and Intent of
the Investment Act, 1990,
(Solomon Islands)
CASES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
Barnes v Jarvis (1953) I WLR 649
at 652 Goddard CJ
Awoonor-Williams v Gbedemah
[1970] 2 G&G 1184(2d),
Attorney-General v
Faroe Atlantic Co. Ltd.
(2005-2006) SC GLR 271,
Amidu (No. 2) v A-G,
Isofoton S A & Forson (No. 1)
[2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 167,
Klomega (No. 2) v A-G
& Ghana Ports and Harbours
Authority & Ors. (2013-2014) 1
SCGLR 581.
Okane v Electoral
Commission of Ghana &
Attorney-General (2011)2 SCGLR
1136
Metcalfe v Cox [1895] AC 328 at 339-340, HL
Republic v Chieftaincy
Committee on Wiamosehene Stool
Affairs; Ex parte Oppong Kwame
(1971) 1 GLR 321
Republic v High Court
(Fast Track Division) Accra; Ex
parte Attorney-General
(2013-2014)1 SCGLR 70 at 78-83.
Asare v
Attorney-General [2003-2004] 2
SCGLR 823.
Captan v Minister of
the Interior (1970) 2 G & G 1223
(2d), C.A
New Patriotic Party v
Attorney-General (31st
December Case) [1993-94] 2 GLR
35 S.C,
J H Mensah v
Attorney-General [1996-97] SCGLR
320.
Agbevor v
Attorney-General [1999-2000]2
GLR 186 S.C
Mansfield CJ in
Holman v Johnson [1775-1802]
I All ER 98 at 99.
Zagloul Real Estates
Ltd. v. British Airways Ltd.
[1997-1998]2 GLR 428 S.C
External Companies
and Diplomatic Missions
(Acquisition or Rental of
Immovable Property) Law, 1996
(PNDCL 150)
Aerolift
International Limited v Mahoe
Heli-lift (SI) Limited and
Others (2002) 2 LRC 213
Kwapong and Another
v Ghana Cocoa Marketing Board
and Others; (1984-86) 1 GLR 74
Ghana Cocoa
Marketing Board v Agbettoh and
Others [1984-86] 1 GLR 122 C.A.
Vine v National Dock Labour
Board [1959] AC 488, HL;
Francis v Municipal Councillors
of Kuala Lumpur [1962] 3 All ER
633, PC
Bank of Ghana v Nyarko [1973] 2
GLR 262, CA cited.
Republic v High
Court (Fast Track Division)
Accra, Ex parte Attorney-General
(Maud Nongo Interested Party)
[2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 70
Churchward v R
(1865) LR 1QB 173
New South Wales v Bardolph
(1934) 52 CLR
455,
New South Wales v Bardolph
(1934) 52 CLR 455,
Tuffour v Attorney-General
(1980) GLR 637 C.A.
Pearce v The Republic (1968) GLR
211 at 225
Osei v Ghanaian Australian
Goldfield Limited [2003-2004] 1
SCGLR 69
Adjei-Ampofo v. Accra
Metropolitan Assembly and
Attorney-General (No.1)
(2007-2008) SCGLR 611
Amidu (No. 2) v.
Attorney-General, Isofoton SA &
Forson (No.1) (2013-2014) SCGLR
167
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v.
Sawyer (The Steel Seizure case),
343 U.S. 579 (1952)
Marshall Field & Co. v. Clark,
143 U.S. 649 (1892)
J.
W. Hampton, Jr. & Co. v. United
States, 276 U.S. 394 (1928)
PANAMA REFINING CO v. RYAN, 293
U.S. 388 (1935)
SCHECTER POULTRY CORP. v. UNITED
STATES, 295 U.S. 495 (1935)
Yakus v. United States, 321 U.S.
414 (1944),
American Textile Manufacturers
Institute v. Donovan, 452 U.S.
490 (1981)
Amidu (No. 3) v.
Attorney-General, Waterville
Holdings (BVI) Ltd & Woyome (No.
2) (2013-2014) SCGLR 606;
BOOKS REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
The Law of
Interpretation in Ghana
(Exposition and Critique). Dr.
Bimpong- Buta
Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th
edition vol 44,
DELIVERING THE LEADING JUDGMENT
BENIN, JSC:-
COUNSEL
THADEUS SORY ESQ. FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
GRACE OPPONG (MS) (PSA) WITH
HER MODESTER LEGIBO (ASA) FOR
THE 1ST DEFENDANT.
KWEKU AINUSON ESQ. FOR THE 3RD
DEFENDANT.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ATUGUBA, JSC
I have read, with
advantage, the masterly judgment
of my able brother Benin JSC.
Whilst agreeing with his
conclusion I have some views to
express on some of the issues in
this case.
FACTS OF THE CASE
The 1st
defendant’s statement of case
dated the 21st day of
November 2013 reveals the
following:-
2.1.
On the 24th of
October 2008, the Government of
Ghana signed a petroleum
agreement (“Petroleum
Agreement”) over the South
Deepwater Tano block with the
Ghana National Petroleum
Corporation (“GNPC”), Aker ASA,
a Norwegian company, and Chemu
Power Company Limited, a
Ghanaian company.
2.2
On 29th October
2008, Aker ASA incorporated
a wholly owned local
subsidiary, Aker Ghana Limited
(“AGL”) to conduct petroleum
operations in Ghana pursuant to
Section 23 (15) (a) of the
Petroleum (Exploration and
Production) Law, 1983 (PNDCL
84), Chemu Power Company
Limited, a Ghanaian company, was
incorporated earlier on 7th
February 2008.
2.3
On the 5th of
November, 2008, the Petroleum
Agreement was ratified by
Parliament pursuant to Article
268 (1) of the Constitution
1992.
2.4
In a letter dated 24th
February 2009, the Managing
Director of GNPC informed
Aker ASA of the need to assign
its interest in the Petroleum
Agreement to AGL pursuant to
section 23 (15) (a) of the
Petroleum (Exploration and
Production) Law, 1983 (PNDCL
84). Aker ASA in a response
dated 26th
February 2009 noted that in
its view Aker ASA could be a
co-signatory with AGL to the
Petroleum Agreement and did not
have to assign its interest to
AGL. However, in another letter
dated 27th February,
2009, Aker ASA informed GNPC of
its readiness to assign its
interest to AGL.
2.5.
On 17th February
2009 Aker ASA informed GNPC
that AGL had entered into
seismic contracts and had
started performing its
obligations under the Petroleum
Agreement. Aker ASA again noted
its intention to make AGL
signatory to the Petroleum
Agreement.
2.6.
In a letter dated 26th
March, 2009, GNPC informed the
Minister of Energy that Aker ASA
had applied to the Ministry and
GNPC for approval to assign its
85% participating interest in
the Petroleum Agreement.
2.7.
On 30th December
2009, the Minister for Energy
wrote to Aker ASA refusing the
assignment of its interest in
the Petroleum Agreement to AGL.
The Minister’s decision was
based on Aker ASA’s
non-compliance with PNDCL 84 to
have a Ghanaian subsidiary as
signatory to the agreement and
allegations of corruption on the
process of awarding the license.
The Minister informed Aker ASA
that they would be reimbursed
for the work carried out on the
block.
2.8.
Further to the letter of 30th
December 2009, the
Government of Ghana, GNPC, Aker
ASA and Chemu Power Limited
signed a Termination Agreement
on 11th November
2011 whereby Aker ASA agreed
to transfer data acquired on the
South Deepwater Tano block to
GNPC. It was agreed that GNPC
would pay US$29,000,000 to Aker
ASA for the data.”
CONSTRUCTION OF ARTICLE 268 OF
THE CONSTITUTION.
Much mental fuel has
been burnt as to the due
construction of article 268 of
the 1992 Constitution which is
the central region of this
case.
That article provides
thus:
“268.
Parliamentary ratification of
agreements relating to natural
resources
(1)
Any transaction, contract
or undertaking involving the
grant of a right or concession
by or on behalf of any person
including the Government of
Ghana, to any other person or
body of persons howsoever
described, for the exploitation
of any mineral, water or other
natural resource of Ghana made
or entered into after the coming
into force of this Constitution
shall be subject to
ratification by Parliament.
(2)
Parliament may, by
resolution supported by the
votes of not less than
two-thirds of all the members of
Parliament, exempt from the
provisions of clause (1) of this
article any particular class of
transactions, contracts or
undertakings.”(e.s)
The nagging question
is whether when parliament has
ratified a natural resource
exploitation transaction,
contract on undertaking under
article 268(1) its termination,
must be done with the leave of
Parliament. It is said that the
protective purpose, in the
interest of the people of Ghana,
of the article necessarily and
as a matter of common sense
compels a positive response to
that question. I readily agree
that common sense is necessary
in the construction of statutes
inclusive of a constitution.
Indeed it is one of the rules of
the construction of statutes and
Dr. Bimpong- Buta has stated
that much at pages 134-136 of
his Maxwellian book, The Law of
Interpretation in Ghana
(Exposition and Critique).
Indeed in Barnes v
Jarvis (1953) I WLR 649 at
652 Goddard CJ said “A
certain amount of common sense
must be applied in construing
statutes. The object of
the Act has to be
considered …”
I however do not
think that the applicable common
sense includes unbridled and
illegitimate common sense.
It must not be
thought that the plain and
unambiguous wording of a statute
can never correctly and properly
transmit the real intent or
purpose of the legislature. I
do not think that the word
“ratification” in article 268
connotes any power sharing
between the legislature and the
Executive with regard to the
implementation of a natural
resource exploitation agreement
after its ratification by the
former. The expression,
ratification, in the context of
article 268 simply means
approval. One does not have to
travel far to find that that is
so.
It is a hackneyed
principle of construction of
statutes that their provisions
be construed as a whole, each
part throwing light on the
other, all geared towards the
attainment of a harmonious
goal. And so the construction I
have placed on the word
ratification in article 268 is
the product of reading articles
268 and 269 together. They are
as follows:
“268.
Parliamentary ratification of
agreements relating to natural
resources
(1)
Any transaction, contract
or undertaking involving the
grant of a right or concession
by or on behalf of any person
including the Government of
Ghana, to any other person or
body of persons howsoever
described, for the exploitation
of any mineral, water or other
natural resource of Ghana made
or entered into after the coming
into force of this Constitution
shall be subject to
ratification by Parliament.
(2)
Parliament may, by
resolution supported by the
votes of not less than
two-thirds of all the members of
Parliament, exempt from the
provisions of clause (1) of this
article any particular class of
transactions, contracts or
undertakings.
269. The Natural
Resources Commission
(1) Subject to the
provision of this Constitution,
Parliament shall, by or under an
Act of Parliament, provide for
the establishment, within six
months after Parliament first
meets after the coming into
force of this Constitution, of a
Minerals Commission, a Forestry
Commission, Fisheries Commission
and such other Commissions as
Parliament may determine, which
shall be responsible for the
regulation and management of the
utilization of the natural
resources concerned and the
co-ordination of the polices in
relation to them.
(2) Notwithstanding
article 268 of this
Constitution, Parliament may,
upon the recommendation of any
of the Commissions established
by virtue of clause (1) of this
article, and upon such
conditions as Parliament may
prescribe, authorize any other
agency of Government to
approve the grant of rights,
concessions or contract in
respect of the exploitation of
any mineral, water or other
natural resources of Ghana.”
(e.s)
It is clear that the
delegatus of Parliament
in article 269(2) is intended to
have and exercise the power
conferred on Parliament by
article 268(1) and the word
approval appearing in article
269(2) is therefore a statutory
synonym of the word ratification
in article 268(1). In any case
statutory words are construed in
their ordinary meaning unless a
contrary intention appears in
the statute, see
Awoonor-Williams v Gbedemah
[1970] 2 G&G 1184(2d), Osei v
Ghanaian Australian Goldfield
Limited [2003-2004] 1 SCGLR
69. Any euphoria about the word
ratification in article 268 (1)
must keep in view the user and
implications of the same
expression under article 75 (2)
of the Constitution.
The purpose of
requiring parliamentary approval
of agreements or measures of
critical national importance has
been held by this court to be to
ensure transparency, openness
and parliamentary consent in the
national interest, but this
court has never attributed an
overbreadth role to parliament
in such matters beyond the
parameters of the particular
matter in regard to which such
parliamentary approval is
required. See
Attorney-General v Faroe
Atlantic Co. Ltd.
(2005-2006) SC GLR 271, Amidu
(No. 2) v A-G, Isofoton S A &
Forson (No. 1) [2013-2014] 1
SCGLR 167, Klomega (No. 2) v
A-G & Ghana Ports and Harbours
Authority & Ors. (2013-2014)
1 SCGLR 581.
It must be emphasized
that when parliamentary approval
is given under article 268(1)
the agreement in question
remains an executive act and not
the act of the legislature. I
dwelt at length on a similar
matter in Okane v Electoral
Commission of Ghana &
Attorney-General (2011)2
SCGLR 1136 at 1148-1149 as
follows:
“This incidence of the annulment
power of Parliament over the
Minister’s proposed subsidiary
legislation does not dislodge
the Minister from his status as
the maker of that subsidiary
legislation. Thus in
Metcalfe v Cox [1895] AC 328
at 339-340, HL Lord Herschell in
reaction to a contention that
because a statutory power of
making subsidiary legislation
was subject, inter alia,
to parliamentary and Crown
approval, the actual
power did not reside in the
Commissioners, said:
“It is urged by the respondents
that … it cannot be correct
to say that the Commissioners
have power to affiliate the
college, and make it form part
of the university, inasmuch as
all the ordinances made by the
Commissioners are ineffectual
unless approved by the Queen in
Council. I do not feel pressed
by this argument. Although it
is true that an ordinance might
be disapproved of, and might
therefore never become
effectual, yet, when approved
of, that which is ordained by
its takes effect by the act of
the Commissioners, and it
does not seem to me inaccurate
to say that the Commissioners
have power to do everything
which they can direct to be done
by an ordinance, merely because
that ordinance is made subject
to approval of the Sovereign.
It is a common case for
appointments made by one public
official to require the approval
of another. Such appointments
cannot take effect without that
approval; but I do not think
that any one would hesitate to
say that the appointment was
made by the person who selected
and nominated the appointee.”(The
emphasis is mine).
Similarly (at page
351 of the Report) Lord
Macnaghten said:
“The learned counsel for the
respondents …dwelt mainly on the
difference in language between
sect. 15 and sect. 16. In the
latter section they pointed out
that the power of affiliation is
given directly to the
Commissioners. In the former
the Commissioners have only the
power of making ordinances to
extend any of the universities
by affiliation. The ordinance
is inoperative without more.
The real power; they said, is in
Her Majesty in Council. But
there is a fallacy, I think, in
that view. The power is in the
Commissioners, though they do
proceed by ordinance. The
power, no doubt, is in suspense
until the ordinance is duly
published, laid before
parliament, and approved by Her
Majesty in Council. But when
the final stage is safely
reached whatever the ordinance
does is the doing of the
commissioners.” (The
emphasis is mine).
Article 297(d) therefore cannot
enable Parliament which is not
the maker of LI 1983 to amend
it. “
Indeed long ago in
Republic v Chieftaincy Committee
on Wiamosehene Stool Affairs; Ex
parte Oppong Kwame (1971) 1
GLR 321, it is stated in holding
(3) thereof as follows:
“…where the National Liberation
Council confirmed a
recommendation under the
chieftaincy Act, 1961, it
was, in such a case, the
recommendation of the
chieftaincy committee which in
fact would operate …….” I
prefer this view to that of Osei
Hwere JA, as he then was in
Maritime and Dockworkers Union
of the Trade Union Congress v
State shipping Corporation
[Black Star Line] (1982-83)1
GLR 671. Similarly in Amidu
(No. 1) v A-G, Waterville
Holdings (BVI) Ltd Woyome (No.
1) [2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 112
at 157 Dr. Date-Bah JSC stated
the legal effect of non
compliance with statutory
preconditions thus: “It is
obvious that the second
defendant is in error as to the
legal effect of the inchoate
contracts embodied in the
two stadia agreements.
Without the satisfaction of
their conditions precedent,
they could not become
enforceable contracts”(e.s)
It is clear therefore that upon
the parliamentary approval of
the oil exploration agreement
involved in this case the
principles of contract
including, privity, termination
etc will govern its operation
unless there is clear statutory
variation of that legal
position.
I cannot see any
direct role for parliament in
the termination of the agreement
in this case after it has
approved the same. Any undue
interference with the operation
of the contract will damage the
commercial image of the
government to the detriment of
the public interest. This was,
mutatis mutandis, emphasized by
Dr. Date-Bah JSC delivering the
ruling of this court in the
Republic v High Court
(Fast Track Division) Accra; Ex
parte Attorney-General
(2013-2014)1 SCGLR 70 at 78-83.
The 1992 Constitution
has adopted Montesquieu’s theory
of the separation of powers,
however with checks and
balances, but not overbreadth
incursions into each others’
spheres of authority. This point
was stressed in Asare v
Attorney-General [2003-2004] 2
SCGLR 823.
Parliament does
however have oversight
responsibility over the
functioning of the President and
his agents, particularly
ministers of state under
articles 58 (3) (4), 78 (2) 69,
82, 103 (3) and 111. These
provisions are the legitimate
supplementary checks over the
Executive by Parliament and
therefore eliminate any need for
further extensions to
parliamentary authority over the
Executive.
Foreign Decisions
The purposive rule of
construction does not authorize
this court in construing the
provisions of the constitution
to emplane for destinations
uncontemplated by it.
It is for this reason
that though in Captan v
Minister of the Interior
(1970) 2 G & G 1223 (2d), C.A
the court held that the 1969
constitution was patterned in
some respects on the American
Constitution, some caution is
needed in the resort to American
decisions. The texts of the two
constitutions must be shown to
be similar before they can be
applied in Ghana, see New
Patriotic Party v
Attorney-General (31st
December Case) [1993-94] 2
GLR 35 S.C, J H Mensah v
Attorney-General [1996-97]
SCGLR 320.
The context of the
constitution militates against
the notion that Parliament must
be resorted to in case of the
termination of a parliamentarily
approved transaction.
There is no such
parliamentary reversionary
interest in respect of the
several instances of
parliamentary approval, in the
constitution, see articles 78,
79, 144(1) and (2), 148 and
151. Article 268(1) should not
therefore be given an erratic
construction.
Indeed in Agbevor
v Attorney-General
[1999-2000]2 GLR 186 S.C, this
court, mutatis mutandis,
stressed this point. The
headnote to that case, as far as
relevant, states as follows:
“The plaintiff, while in the
employment of the Judicial
Service as a deputy judicial
secretary, received a letter
from the office of the
President, dated 20 March 2000,
which informed him that the
President had accepted the
recommendation of the Judicial
Council given in accordance with
section 28 (2) of the Judicial
Service Regulation, 1963(LI 319)
and had therefore directed his
immediate redeployment outside
the Judicial Service for
displaying a high degree of
incompetence in the discharge of
his duties. Consequently
the plaintiff filed suit in the
Supreme Court for, inter alia, a
declaration that his removal
from the Judicial Service as a
judicial officer for the reasons
stated in the letter dated 20
March 2000 was contrary to
article 151(1) of the
Constitution, 1992. In his
statement of case the plaintiff,
who contended that he was a
judicial officer, maintained (i)
the effect of the President’s
letter was to remove him from
his judicial office; (ii) since
the coming into force of the
Constitution, 1992 the
provisions of regulation 28 (2)
of LI 319 either ceased to apply
for the purpose of removing a
judicial officer or that its
application should be with such
modifications as were necessary
to bring those provisions in
conformity with articles 151 and
127 of the Constitution, 1992 of
the Constitution, 1992 and (iii)
by virtue of articles 151 and
127, it was only the Chief
Justice who had the power to
remove a judicial officer from
office and such removal
could only be upon the grounds
and pursuant to the process
stipulated therein. In
response, the Honourable
Attorney-General in his
statement of case contended,
inter alia, that regulation
28(2) of LI 319 was not
inconsistent with article 151
and remained applicable for the
purpose of removing a judicial
officer against whom allegation
were made; and further that the
plaintiff was not a judicial
officer and so could not avail
himself of article 151.
Held, upholding plaintiff’s
claim:
(1) “Pursuant to the object of
the framers of the Constitution,
1992 of assuring and
safeguarding the independence of
the Judiciary, article 148 of
the Constitution, 1992 clearly
vested the power to appoint
persons to hold or act in a
judicial office in the Chief
Justice, acting on the advice of
the Judicial Council. Such
appointments were however, made
subject to the approval of the
President. Where such an
officer was to be removed
from office on the other hand,
article 151 expressly stipulated
that this might be done by the
Chief Justice on grounds
only of stated misbehavior,
incompetence or inability to
perform his functions arising
from infirmity of body or mind
and upon a resolution supported
by the votes of not less than
two-thirds of all the members of
the Judicial Council. Article
151 (2) also stipulated that
such an officer was entitled to
be head in his defence by
himself or a lawyer or other
expert of his choice.
Significantly, there was no
reference whatsoever in article
151 to the President, whether in
a directive or approving
capacity, or in any other wise.
The President was therefore
under the Constitution, 1992
clearly not the disciplinary
authority for the removal of a
judicial officer.
Consequently, to the extent that
any portion of the Judicial
Service Act, 1960 (CA 10) or the
Judicial Service Regulations,
1963 (LI 319) gave any power of
removal or discipline of a
judicial officer to any person
other than the Chief Justice,
that provision should, pursuant
to article 11(6), be read with
such modifications, adaptations
and exceptions as were necessary
to bring them in conformity with
the Constitution, 1992.” (e.s)
Right to terminate the contract
in this case
Following immediately
upon the above, I hold that the
right of the parties to
terminate the transaction herein
arises from the common law of
contract which is part of the
existing law of Ghana under
article 11(1)(e) and I can’t see
anything in it that is
inconsistent with the
constitution in so far as it
regulates the parties’ right of
termination of their contract.
For violating s.23(15) of the
Petroleum (Exploration and
Production) Law, 1984 (PNDCL
84), the contract herein was
illegal and unenforceable, and
the government was entitled to
take that stand. They did not
have to return to Parliament for
leave to abandon the agreement.
As was eloquently and
classically put by Lord
Mansfield CJ in Holman v
Johnson [1775-1802] I All ER
98 at 99.
“The objection that a contract
is immoral or illegal as between
plaintiff and defendant, sounds
at all times very ill in the
mouth of the defendant. It is
not for his sake, however, that
the objection is ever allowed;
but it is founded in general
principles of policy which the
defendant has the advantage of,
contrary to the real justice, as
between him and the plaintiff,
by accident; if I may so say.
The principle of public policy
is this: Ex dolo malo non
oritur actio. No court will
lend its aid to a man who founds
his cause of action on an
immoral or an illegal act. If,
from the plaintiffs own stating
or otherwise, the cause of
action appears to arise ex
turpi causa, or the
transgression of a positive law
of this country, there the court
says he has no right to be
assisted. It is on that ground
the court goes; not for the sake
of the defendant, but because
they will not lend their aid to
such a plaintiff.”
This plainly means
that at law a party is free
(though there are some
exceptions, not relevant here),
to resile from an illegal
contract and cannot be compelled
to comply with the same.
Indeed the stance that the
government should have returned
to Parliament in this case is
not different from that which
was disallowed in respect of the
respondents in the celebrated
case of Zagloul Real Estates
Ltd. v. British Airways Ltd.
[1997-1998]2 GLR 428 S.C.
In that case the parties entered
into a lease the payment of the
rent of which was to be in cedis
contrary to the provisions of
the External Companies and
Diplomatic Missions (Acquisition
or Rental of Immovable Property)
Law, 1996 (PNDCL 150) which
required payment in convertible
currency.
However the lease,
contained an indemnity clause
for the refund of he cedi
payment of the rent if the
lessees were subsequently made
to pay the rent in convertible
currency.
In an action by the appellants,
the trial judge entered judgment
for them but ordered them to
refund the cedi payment to the
respondents. On appeal the
Court of Appeal affirmed the
judgment of the trial judge that
the respondents should comply
with PNDCL 150 but remitted the
issue of the refund of the cedi
payment to the trial court for
retrial. On further appeal this
court held, allowing the appeal,
that once the Court of Appeal
had affirmed the trial judge’s
holding that the lease violated
PNDCL 150 the order for retrial
regarding the refund of the
payment in cedis was
misconceived and that upon
affirming the trial judge’s
order that the respondents
should comply with PNDCL 150,
the Court of Appeal should
simply have dismissed the
residue of the appeal in its
entirety
Similarly in this
case once the contract herein is
illegal for violation of s. 23
(15) of PNDCL 84, the matter
ends there and resort to
Parliament will be misconceived.
After all Parliament is as much
subject to the laws of Ghana as
any other person or institution
in Ghana.
The $29,000,000.00 dollar
Payment
This amount was paid
by the government of Ghana for
the data that the 2nd
defendant generated in the
course of the petroleum
exploration. In the Amidu
cases referred to by my
brother Benin JSC, this court
held that, as a general rule,
nothing is recoverable under a
contract that is
unconstitutional as opposed to
infringement of an ordinary
statute.
In this case the
infringement, in my view, was of
an ordinary statute, that is to
say, PNDCL 84 and therefore the
equitable remedy of Restitution
should avail the 2nd
defendant.
I do not however think that the
distinction between
constitutional and ordinary
statutory
illegality is a
conclusive test for the
availability of the equitable
remedy of Restitution and the
Amidu cases did not so
hold.
In Aerolift
International Limited v Mahoe
Heli-lift (SI) Limited and
Others (2002) 2 LRC 213 the
High Court of the Solomon
Islands held that having regard
to the legislative Policy and
Intent of the Investment Act,
1990, its breach could not
accommodate the remedy of
Restitution.
To my mind breaches
of the 1992 Constitution have
been treated with much
flexibility by this Court and I
do not think that a different
approach should be had with
regard to constitutionally
illegal contracts.
Thus in Kwapong
and Another v Ghana Cocoa
Marketing Board and Others;
(1984-86) 1 GLR 74 at 89-90
Osei-Hwere J.A (as he then was,
sitting as an additional Justice
of the High Court, held as
follows:
“The President, by exhibit M,
appointed the second defendant
as chairman and the third and
fourth defendants as members of
a committee to manage the
affairs for the cocoa industry
pending the formation of the
Cocoa Council.
Exhibit M was, ex facie,
a personal appointment made by
the President and it was clearly
aimed at appointing the
governing body of a public
corporation. This
appointment was in clear
contravention of article 57 of
the Constitution, 1979 because
he could only make the
appointment with the advice of
the Council of State. It
was conceded by the defendants
counsel that on 9 October when
the President made his
appointment the Council of State
had not been constituted. The
appointments of the second,
third and fourth defendants
(which seem to have been made
out of necessity) were,
therefore, quite irregular.
Although their appointments were
irregular they constituted the
de facto governing body of the
first defendants and they could
properly execute the lawful
powers of the first defendants.
What they could not do was to
exercise powers not allowed them
by either the Constitution or
their governing enactment and
they remained liable for acts
ultra vires of these powers.”
Although the
plaintiffs obtained their
reliefs, inclusive of
reinstatement, consequent upon
the declaration of
unconstitutionality of their
dismissal, the Court of Appeal,
was without disrespect, more
pragmatic in almost identical
circumstances in Ghana Cocoa
Marketing Board v Agbettoh and
Others [1984-86] 1 GLR 122
C.A. The relevant parts of the
headnote thereof are as
follows:-
“The plaintiffs were all
senior employees of the
defendants, a statutory
corporation established entirely
out of public funds as a
commercial venture. The
defendant board had a stereotype
form of appointment letters by
which the terms of the
plaintiffs’ contracts of
employment were defined. Under
its provisions, the appointment
of the plaintiffs could be
terminated by either side on
giving three months’ notice or
payment of three months’ salary
in lieu of notice. The defendant
board, however, reserved the
right to dismiss the plaintiffs
summarily on grounds of
“indiscipline” and
“inefficiency.” Without
reference to their terms of
employment, the defendant board
prematurely retired the
plaintiffs “to take immediate
effect” in accordance with an
alleged “re-organisation
exercise.” That action was taken
in pursuance of the purported
implementation of paragraph 35
of a government white paper on
the Archer Committee of Enquiry
into the affairs of the Ghana
Cocoa Marketing Board, popularly
known as the Archer Report,
which recommended, among other
things, that “all senior
officers of the rank of Deputy
Chief Executive, Directors,
General Managers and Heads of
the various departments and
units” be redeployed outside the
cocoa industry upon the
formation of a Cocoa Council.
The plaintiffs sued for a
declaration that the dismissal
was unlawful as being violative
of article 138(b) of the
Constitution, 1969 which
provided that no member of the
public services should be
dismissed or removed from office
or reduced in rank or otherwise
punished without just cause. The
plaintiffs also sought perpetual
injunction to restrain the
defendant board from ejecting
them from their accommodation
and an order for their salaries
to be paid. The trial judge
found that the only reason why
the plaintiffs were purportedly
retire was a mistaken belief on
the part of the interim
management committee of the
defendant board that paragraph
35 of the Archer Report gave it
power to do so. The judge
therefore declared the dismissal
to be unlawful and granted the
other reliefs sought. In the
instant appeal against the
decision, the board complained,
inter alia, that the judgment
ordering reinstatement was wrong
because the action was about
contracts of service between the
plaintiffs and the board the
breach of which was properly
redressable in pecuniary damages
and not specific performance.
The court however found that (i)
the trial judge did not eo
nomine make an order for
reinstatement, and (ii) after a
witness of the defendant board
had concluded his evidence, the
plaintiffs had filed without
leave, a notice of amendment in
which they sought to add to the
indorsement on the writ, the
word “Reinstatement.”
On these facts,
Held,
dismissing the appeal:
(3) If the rights and
liabilities of the parties had
fallen to be decided only by
their contracts of employment,
the plaintiffs could have
lawfully contented themselves
with pecuniary damages only
since to enjoin the specific
performance of a contract of
employment would turn a contract
of service into a status of
servitude. However, the law that
the normal remedy for the breach
of service contracts was
pecuniary damages and not
specific performance was not an
inflexible one. There were cases
where irrespective of the terms
of the contract of employment
the determination of the
contract was regulated by
legislation as, in the instant
case, where the plaintiffs’
rights to remain in the service
of the defendant board were
determined by a constitutional
provision. Vine v National
Dock Labour Board [1959] AC 488,
HL; Francis v Municipal
Councillors of Kuala Lumpur
[1962] 3 All ER 633, PC and Bank
of Ghana v Nyarko [1973] 2 GLR
262, CA cited.
(4) It was not competent for the
plaintiffs to have filed without
leave, notice of amendment of
the writ after the witness of
the defendant board had
concluded his evidence. Thus if
the High Court had granted them
leave under Order 28, r 1 of LN
140A, the plaintiffs would still
have had to comply with the
procedure prescribed under Order
28, r 7 in order for the leave
to become effective. But as the
plaintiffs had failed to comply
with the procedural rules, there
was no valid claim for
reinstatement and as such the
High Court could not be held to
have granted such a relief. That
conclusion would, however, not
avail the defendant board
because if the purported
retirement of the plaintiffs
from office was a nullity in the
face of a clear constitutional
injunction, then the question of
reinstatement did not arise.
(5) Although de jure the
plaintiffs were still
technically in the service of
the defendant board, de facto
they had ceased to be so since
November 1979, and as such it
would be unrealistic to assume
that the status quo in 1979
still existed five years
afterwards in 1984 and to grant
perpetual injunction restraining
the latter from ejecting the
former from their bungalows
in addition to making an order
for the payment of salaries for
work they had not done in the
circumstances, whilst not
permitting the injunction
imposed by the High Court to
stand, it would be just and
proper for the court to mark its
disapproval of the plaintiffs’
unconstitutional retirement by
ordering that the defendant
board pay to each plaintiff an
amount equal to two years’
salary in addition to receiving
their entitlements under their
contracts of employment.”
This pragmatic approach is
gaining ground in climes where
parliamentary sovereignty is
absolute. Thus in Republic v
High Court (Fast Track Division)
Accra, Ex parte Attorney-General
(Maud Nongo Interested Party)
[2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 70 at 78-82
Dr. Date-Bah JSC stated at
length as follows:-
“…there was claimed to be a
limitation on the liability of
the Crown in relation to a
contract dependent on a grant
from Parliament. This
limitation was extrapolated from
dicta uttered in Churchward v R
(1865) LR 1QB 173. In this
case, Shee J. said (as stated at
209-210):
“In the case of a contract
with commissioners on behalf of
the crown to make large payments
of money during a series of
years, I should have thought
that the condition which clogs
this covenant, though not
expressed, must, on account of
the notorious inability of the
crown to contract
unconditionally for such money
payments in consideration of
such services, have been implied
in favour of the crown. The
inconvenience suggested by Sir
Hugh Cairns as likely to arise
from so holding, were it
necessary so to hold, could
practically have no existence.
The condition of parliamentary
provision is usually notified to
government contractors, for
services of a continuing
character, by covenants… When
not so notified, the occurrence
of the alleged inconvenience –
such are known to be the justice
and honour of parliament – is
too improbable to induce any of
the Queen’s subjects to forego
when the opportunity offers the
advantages of a good government
contract. It was beyond the
power of the commissioners, as
suppliant must have known, to
contract on behalf of the crown,
on any terms but those by which
the covenant is restricted and
fenced. I am of the opinion
that the providing of funds by
parliament is a condition
precedent to it attaching. The
most important department of the
public service, however
negligently or inefficiently
conducted, would be above
control of parliament were it
otherwise.” (e.s)
Some have interpreted
these words of Shee J as
asserting that government
contracts contain an implied
term that they are conditional
on Parliamentary appropriation
of funds to enable their
execution. The underlying
policy rationale for this
position is, as expressed by
Shee J. above:
“The most important department
of the public service, however
negligently or inefficiently
conducted, would be above
control of parliament were it
otherwise.”
However, this
rationale is refutable. The
need for the executive branch of
government to be subject to
Parliamentary financial control
does not necessarily imply that
contractual obligations entered
into by the executive without a
Parliamentary appropriation
should be viewed by the courts
as invalid and void.
Indeed, in the same case, there
were dicta by Cockburn CJ to a
contrary effect, when he earlier
said (as stated at page 200 of
the Report):
“I
am very far, indeed, from
saying, if by express terms,
the Lords of the Admiralty had
engaged, whether parliament
found the funds or not, to
employ Mr. Churchward to perform
all these services, that then,
whatever might be the
inconvenience that might arise,
such a contract would not have
been binding; and I am very
far from saying that in such a
case a petition of right would
not lie, where a public officer
or the head of a department
makes such a contract on the
part of the crown, and then
afterwards breaks it.”
This difference of
opinion as to whether a contract
requiring a Parliamentary grant
or appropriation is valid or
enforceable without such grant
or appropriation relates to an
issue that is distinct from that
around which the controversy in
this case revolves.
Nevertheless, the underlying
policy issues are similar and
that is why the judicial dicta
above have been cited.
In the Australian
case of New South Wales v
Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455, the
Australian High Court doubted
the dictum of Shee J. supra and
inclined towards the dictum by
Cockburn CJ. It did so in
holding that the Crown can
validly and enforceably promise
to pay money. Evatt J in that
case said (as stated at pages
467-468):
“The judgment of Shee J. has
always been accepted as
determining the general
constitutional principle. But it
should be added that
CockburnC.J. said[(1865)L.R.1QBatp.201]:
“I
agree that, if there had been no
question as to the fund being
supplied by Parliament, if the
condition to pay had been
absolute, or if there had been a
fund applicable to the purpose,
and this difficulty did not
stand in the petitioner’s way,
and he had been throughout ready
and willing to perform this
contract, and had been prevented
and hindered from rendering
these services by the default of
the Lords of the Admiralty, then
he would have been in a position
to enforce his right to
remuneration.”
It
appears clear that the first
part of this passage has not
been acted upon by the Courts in
the cases subsequently
determined, and that, even where
the contract to pay is in terms
“absolute” and the contract
fails to state that the fund has
to be “supplied by Parliament,”
the Crown is still entitled to
rely upon the implied condition
mentioned by Shee J.
The second part of
Cockburn’sC.J. statement, that,
if there is a fund “applicable
to the purpose” of meeting
claims under the contract, the
contractor may enforce his right
to remuneration, has never, so
far as I know, been questioned.
Moreover, its correctness was
assumed by the terms of the
Crown’s third plea in
Churchward’s
Case
[14] which denies
that moneys were ever provided
by Parliament “out of which the
suppliant could be paid for the
performance of the said
contract.””
Evatt J’s concluding view (as
stated at pages 474-475) was
that:
“…I am satisfied that, in the
absence of some controlling
statutory provision, contracts
are enforceable against the
Crown if (a) the contract is
entered into in the ordinary or
necessary course of Government
administration, (b) it is
authorized by the responsible
Ministers of the Crown, and (c)
the payments which the
contractor is seeking to recover
are covered by or referable to a
parliamentary grant for the
class of service to which the
contract relates. In my opinion,
moreover, the failure of the
plaintiff to prove (c) does not
affect the validity of the
contract in the sense that the
Crown is regarded as stripped of
its authority or capacity to
enter into the contract. Under a
constitution like that of New
South Wales where the
legislative and executive
authority is not limited by
reference to subject matter, the
general capacity of the Crown to
enter into a contract should be
regarded from the same point of
view as the capacity of the King
would be by the Courts of common
law. No doubt the King had
special powers, privileges,
immunities and prerogatives. But
he never seems to have been
regarded as being less powerful
to enter into contracts than one
of his subjects. The enforcement
of such contracts is to be
distinguished from their
inherent validity.”
The Australian High Court
strains to uphold the validity
of contracts involving payments
of money from the public purse
for the obvious reason of
protecting the creditworthiness
of the State in the interest of
its citizens.”
(e.s)
In this case the
Ghana National Petroleum
Corporation and the Minister for
Energy in their correspondence
with the 2nd
defendant were not sure of the
legal position concerning the
oil exploration agreement,
themselves. Their role in this
agreement was very dilatory and
Parliament itself hailed it as
compliant with PNDCL 84. Ex
concessis, the construction of
section 23 (15) of PNDCL 84
troubled this court much, owing
to its nebulous drafting. In all
these circumstances there will
be a deficit of justice if the
refund of the $29,000,000.00 to
the 2nd defendant
were disallowed by this court.
It is a cardinal
principle in the administration
of justice that the courts stand
for justice and should not be
deflected from doing justice,
having regard to the facts of
the particular case. This has
been poignantly stated by that
great star of substantial
Justice Lord Denning in his
book, Road to Justice
at pages 6-7, quoted with
approval by Archer J, as he then
was, in Pearce v The Republic
(1968) GLR 211 at 225 as
follows:-
“When you set out on this
road (to justice) you must
remember that there are two
great objects to be achieved:
one is to see that the laws
are just; the other that
they are justly administered.
Both are important; but of
the two, the more important is
that the law should be justly
administered.” (e.s)
This is the crux of
article 1 (1) of the
Constitution which is anchored
in the welfare of the people of
Ghana. This is the crux of
Tuffour v Attorney-General
(1980) GLR 637 C.A. (sitting as
the Supreme Court) which
emphasizes that both the letter
and spirit of the Constitution
must move in harmony. This is
also the crux of articles 23 and
296 of the Constitution and s.
10(4) of the Interpretation Act
2009, (Act 792).
For all the foregoing
reasons I agree that this action
be dismissed.
(SGD) W.
A. ATUGUBA
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
BENIN, JSC:-
The plaintiff has
invoked the original
jurisdiction of this court in a
matter which for a moment seems
to raise question of his locus.
This is because it is a matter
which involves the termination
of a petroleum exploration
contract which had been signed
and received the required
constitutional parliamentary
ratification. The parties
affected by the termination do
not complain, but rather the
plaintiff who has nothing to do
with the contract. Yet that is
the right given to citizens of
this country to seek
interpretation of the
constitution even in matters in
which they have no direct
interest so long as it raises a
question of interpretation under
Article 2 of the Constitution,
1992. The Constitution thus
permits what passes for public
interest litigation endorsed by
this court in cases like
Adjei-Ampofo v. Accra
Metropolitan Assembly and
Attorney-General (No.1)
(2007-2008) SCGLR 611
and Amidu (No. 2) v.
Attorney-General, Isofoton SA &
Forson (No.1) (2013-2014)
SCGLR 167. This is one
of such cases.
The facts giving rise
to this case are not in dispute.
On or about the 24th
day of October, 2008 the
Government of Ghana entered into
a petroleum exploration
agreement with a Norwegian
company, 2nd
defendant herein, and a local
company the 3rd
defendant herein. In line with
the provisions of Article 268(1)
of the Constitution the said
agreement was placed before
Parliament which duly ratified
it on the 5th day of
November 2008. Subsequently, the
Ghana National Petroleum
Corporation (GNPC) advised the
Minister for Energy that the
agreement violated section
23(15) of PNDCL 84. It was
apparent that acting on this
advice the Minister for Energy
together with the GNPC, on one
side, opened termination talks
with the defendants, on the
other side. The parties agreed
upon terms of termination. They
also agreed on the payment of
the sum of twenty-nine million
US dollars ($29,000,000.00) by
the GNPC to the 2nd
defendant which was thereby
required to surrender to the
GNPC seismic data gathered by
them from their operation of the
oilfield under the agreement.
This termination agreement was
not referred to Parliament for
approval. The Minister purported
to act under section 23(15) of
PNDCL 84 to terminate the
agreement. The plaintiff
believes the action of the
Minister was wrongful as same
was in violation of Article
268(1) of the Constitution,
hence this action wherein he
seeks these reliefs:
(a)
A declaration that upon a true
and proper construction of
Article 268 of the Constitution
1992 of the Republic of Ghana,
the Minister for Energy had no
power and/or authority by
himself to annul or terminate
the Petroleum Agreement executed
on 24/10/08 between the
Government of the Republic of
Ghana of the one part and Aker
ASA (2nd defendant
herein) of the other part
consequent and upon the approval
of the said agreement by
Parliament of the Republic of
Ghana in accordance with the
aforesaid Article 268 of the
1992 Constitution.
(b)
A declaration that upon a true
and proper construction of
Article 268 of the Constitution,
1992 of the Republic of Ghana,
the decision by the Minister for
Energy to terminate the
Petroleum Agreement concluded on
24/10/08 between the Government
of the Republic of Ghana of one
part and Aker ASA of Norway
subsequent to its approval by
the Parliament of the Republic
of Ghana on the 5th
day of November 2008 is null and
void and of no effect.
(c)
A further declaration that the
Termination Agreement concluded
between the Government of the
Republic of Ghana, Aker ASA of
Norway and Chemu Power Limited
of Ghana on the 11th
November 2010 is null, void and
of no effect.
(d)
An order for recovery of the sum
of twenty-nine million United
States dollars
(US$29,000,000.00) paid by the
Government of the Republic of
Ghana to Aker ASA of Norway
consequent upon the Termination
Agreement of 11/11/2010.
The plaintiff’s argument in a
nutshell was that the
Constitution had empowered
Parliament to ratify any
agreement that falls within the
purview of Article 268(1) of the
Constitution. Therefore the same
body, that is Parliament, is
entitled to be notified about
any decision to abrogate the
agreement for its consent. Thus
any decision to terminate any
such contract without reference
to Parliament was contrary to
the letter and spirit of this
Constitutional provision.
The 1st
defendant rejected the
plaintiff’s arguments. Among
others, they argued that
parliamentary approval was not
required in the termination of
an agreement that Parliament had
ratified under Article 268(1) of
the Constitution. The 2nd
defendant did not take part in
the proceedings. The 3rd
defendant appeared to have taken
a position which largely
supported that of the plaintiff.
All the various arguments will
be highlighted as we proceed to
discuss the various issues
agreed upon for hearing.
The issues set down
for determination are:
i.
Whether or not the
Minister for Energy can without
recourse to Parliament of the
Republic of Ghana terminate an
agreement ratified by
Parliament.
ii.
Whether or not it was
legally proper for the
Government of the Republic of
Ghana to pay the sum of
$29,000,000.00 to the 2nd
defendant upon terminating the
agreement declared by the same
Government to be null and void.
iii.
Whether or not the
Petroleum Agreement between the
Government of the Republic of
Ghana and the 2nd
defendant violated section
23(15) of PNDCL 84.
Article 268(1) of the
Constitution provides that:
Any transaction,
contract or undertaking
involving the grant of a right
or concession by or on behalf of
any person including the
Government of Ghana, to any
other person or body of persons
howsoever described, for the
exploitation of any mineral,
water or other natural resource
of Ghana made or entered into
after the coming into force of
this Constitution shall be
subject to ratification by
Parliament.
This provision is
clear and unambiguous in so far
as the prior ratification by
Parliament was concerned. But
the problem that arises is
whether Parliamentary approval
must be sought to make any
termination or purported
termination of an agreement
effective and legal. Thus the
first issue that calls for
determination is whether or not
under Article 268(1)
Parliamentary approval is
required to render legally valid
the termination of an agreement
it has ratified. If a
determination is made that
Parliamentary approval is
required, the next issue will
then have to be addressed, that
is, whether in the instant the
Minister for Energy acted in
violation of this constitutional
provision when he failed to seek
Parliamentary approval either
before or after terminating the
Agreement. Thereafter reliefs
(ii) and (iii) set out in the
memorandum of issues will be
addressed.
The first question
raised in this case appears at
first blush to be quite small
and insignificant since the
executive it is which enters
into all kinds of agreements and
treaties on behalf of the State,
applying the laws of the country
at it is enjoined to do under
Article 58(2) of the
Constitution. However, upon a
deep reflection on the
constitutional framework it has
deep consequences on good
governance of the country which
the framers of the Constitution
sought to achieve. Thus the
court is enjoined by section
10(4)(a) of the Interpretation
Act, 2009 (Act 792) to take
account of matters of good
governance in interpreting this
constitutional provision.
The words or
expressions ‘undertaking’,
‘contract’ and ‘transaction’ as
used in Article 268(1) of the
Constitution have no special
meanings; they must be given
their ordinary meanings in order
to give effect to this
provision. In the law of
contract the person whose
ratification of a contract is
required is a necessary party to
give the contract its validity
and legal enforceability.
Without the ratification, either
expressly or impliedly given,
such an agreement is invalid.
Thus a person with a right to
ratify an agreement has three
things in mind. Firstly, he must
examine and review the agreement
and inform himself about all its
terms and conditions in order to
be clear about what he seeks to
do. Next, he must make an
express or implied declaration
that he accepts the terms and
conditions of the agreement.
Finally, by ratifying the
agreement the person is legally
bound by it and thus becomes
legally liable for any breach
thereof.
Thus even going by
the terms of ratification of an
ordinary contract the person who
has the right to ratify an
agreement is necessarily a party
to be involved in its
termination since he can be held
liable for the consequences
resulting from its breach.
But here we are
dealing with a constitutional
provision which could dispense
with this result in contract
law. But unless the intention of
the framers of the Constitution
to dispense with this
requirement could be gathered
from the letter and/or spirit of
the provision, prima facie the
plaintiff would be right that
Parliament should be notified
for its consent. The letter of
Article 268(1) does not say
anything about Parliament’s
involvement in termination of
agreement it has ratified.
Indeed the provision is
completely silent on variation
and termination of such an
agreement. They might have been
left for those terms to be spelt
out in the contract, which is
normal in written contracts, or
to be found in existing statute
law, if any.
Let me proceed to
consider the spirit of that
provision. Since the
Constitution is silent on what
happens if it becomes necessary
to vary or terminate an
agreement after it has been
ratified by Parliament, it is
reasonable to suggest that all
the parties involved in the
agreement should have a say.
There is no justification to
rule out any of the parties
which brought the contract into
fruition. It is reasonable to
say that each party should play
the same role as before the
contract was made valid. Even a
common sense approach will
dictate that course of action.
This brings us to the
rationale for Parliamentary
involvement in approval of such
agreement. Clearly it is to
enhance transparency and
expansive participation in
matters involving the nation’s
natural resources. Hence it was
considered unwise and unsafe to
entrust that responsibility to
the executive alone, which by
practice of party politics which
the Constitution permits, may be
formed by only one party at any
given time. But with a
multi-party system in Parliament
the nation’s natural resources
would have several persons from
different parties and interests
examining any agreement in
respect thereof. That ensures
good governance and the court
could not lose sight of that
fact in giving effect to this
important provision which has
been placed there to assure the
people that the nation’s natural
resources would be well taken
care of no matter which
political party is in charge of
the executive. Counsel for the 1st
defendant was therefore right
when he said that “………parliamentary
ratification is intended to
ensure transparency and prevent
abuse by executive power when it
comes to the execution of
contracts relating to our
natural resources. Parliamentary
intervention in the award of
this category of contracts is
thus an important check on
executive action.” Having
said this, the only logical
conclusion should have been that
in order to prevent executive
abuse in the performance of the
contract through a possible
variation and termination, then
Parliament should be involved.
In other words the executive
could revise the terms of the
contract or even terminate it
altogether for political or
other reasons which have nothing
to do with the efficient
execution of the contract,
thereby rendering ineffectual
what Parliament had ratified.
But Counsel then submitted that
“the same logic, however,
does not apply to the
termination of contracts by the
executive as this may be
challenged in court. Access to
court is thus sufficient check
on the arbitrary termination of
agreements.” This argument
belies the fact that arbitrary
variation or termination could
cost the taxpayer some fortune,
payment of which Parliament
would have to authorize. That is
the more reason why Parliament
should come in to check possible
abuse by the executive. The
performance of the contract
after it has been ratified by
Parliament is an executive act
which Parliament cannot
interfere with. But a variation
or termination of the contract
will amount to a unilateral
decision by the executive to
alter or curtail a legislative
act without Parliament’s
involvement and that will be
unconstitutional. It is noted
that unlike parliamentary
approval of certain appointments
for which clear provisions for
their termination have been
provided for in the
Constitution, in this case no
such provision exists. The
situation is thus fluid and in
line with good governance and
the object sought to be achieved
by this provision, it is safe to
say that all the parties to the
agreement as well as Parliament
should have a say in its
variation and termination.
In some developed
democracies this provision and
others like Article 181(5) of
the Constitution are likely to
cause some friction between the
Executive and Legislative
branches of government over the
dispersal of power between them.
The intense political struggle
and uneasy compromise that have
characterized the relationship
between the US Congress and the
President over the years have so
far eluded this country largely
on account of the fact that
since the 4th
Republic was ushered in, one
party has dominated both
branches of government at any
given time. Hence some inroad
into the domain of one or the
other is likely to be overlooked
by members of the same party
even in cases of breach of the
law. But we must remember always
that the acts of the executive
and parliament are perpetual and
continual even if the present
executive and parliament which
respectively signed and ratified
the agreement are no longer in
place. With that continuity
assured by the Constitution, it
could not have been the
intention of the framers of the
Constitution that the next
executive should undo what the
previous Parliament had ratified
without reference to the present
Parliament which has succeeded
the previous one. It was not
intended that one branch of
Government should have absolute
monopoly over how the nation’s
resources are utilized at any
point in time.
Besides, Parliament
has sole responsibility over how
state resources are to be
applied or disbursed through its
power of approving or
disapproving the budget
presented by the executive.
Indeed it exercises full control
over how public funds are to be
disbursed from the Consolidated
Fund as well as the Contingency
Fund. Articles 108, 174, 175,
176, 177 and 178 of the
Constitution are very clear in
their terms. Thus since it has
to approve funds to pay for any
damages that may result from the
variation or termination of a
contract it has ratified, it
stands to reason that it should
be involved in the variation or
termination, as the case may be,
except where it has delegated
that power to the executive.
In the case of
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v.
Sawyer (The Steel Seizure case),
343 U.S. 579 (1952) the
issue arose as to whether the
President’s order for the
seizure of some steel works
without Congressional approval
was justified by the President’s
exercise of executive authority
under the Constitution. The US
Supreme Court found there was no
express constitutional provision
that justified the President’s
action. And there was also no
legislation in force which
authorized him to take that kind
of action. The argument founded
on the aggregation of the
President’s executive power
under the Constitution was
rejected by the court. I would
only refer to the concurring
opinion expressed by Mr. Justice
Douglas when he said “……..though
the seizure is only for a week
or a month, the condemnation is
complete and the United States
must pay compensation for the
temporary possession…..The
President has no power to raise
revenues. That power is in the
Congress by Article I, Section 8
of the Constitution. The
President might seize and the
Congress by subsequent action
might ratify the seizure. But
until and unless Congress acted,
no condemnation would be lawful.
The branch of government that
has the power to pay
compensation for a seizure is
the only one able to authorize a
seizure or make lawful one that
the President had effected.”
Emphasis mine.
Parliament has the
power to decline a request by
the executive to appropriate
funds for a particular purpose,
including funds to pay penalties
under an agreement which the
executive had terminated without
recourse to it. In such a
chaotic situation the State
suffers. That is why such
executive acts must be presented
to Parliament for ratification
even if prior approval was not
sought before the action was
embarked upon by the executive
due to the exigencies of the
moment.
Thus in my opinion,
applying a purposive
interpretation, in order to
ensure good governance,
Parliament, whose ratification
was required to give validity
and legality to any agreement in
respect of the nation’s mineral
and natural resources, and which
would be required to approve
funds to pay compensation or
even penalty arising from breach
of the agreement by the State
acting per the executive, is a
necessary party and their
approval is sine qua non to its
variation or termination or to
make the executive action valid.
The only exception is where, as
earlier mentioned, Parliament
has delegated the ultimate right
and power to terminate such an
agreement to the executive, not
excluding individuals and other
State institutions performing
part of executive mandate, which
is likely to be found in the
terms and conditions spelt out
in the agreement it has
ratified. Indeed the delegation
in such matters may be embodied
in the terms and conditions of
the contract itself so after the
ratification it need not go back
to Parliament again.
The next issue is
whether the Minister for Energy
violated this constitutional
provision when he negotiated and
executed the termination
agreement with the defendants,
without recourse to Parliament.
The Minister and/or the GNPC had
the mandate to act under Article
23.5 of the agreement to
terminate it. Indeed Article 23
of the agreement was devoted to
terms of termination. For its
full force and effect I propose
to set out Article 23.5. It
provides:
If GNPC and/or the State believe
an event or failure to act as
described in Article 23.4 above
has occurred, a written notice
shall be given to Contractor
describing the event of failure.
Contractor shall have thirty
(30) days from receipt of said
notice to commence and pursue
remedy of the event or failure
cited in the notice. If after
said thirty (30) days Contractor
has failed to commence
appropriate remedial action,
GNPC and/or the State may then
issue a written Notice of
Termination to Contractor which
shall become effective thirty
(30) days from receipt of said
Notice by Contractor unless
Contractor has referred the
matter to arbitration. In the
event that Contractor disputes
whether an event specified in
Article 23.3 or Article 23.4 has
occurred or been remedied,
Contractor may, any time up to
the effective date of any Notice
of Termination refer the dispute
to arbitration pursuant to
Article 24 hereof. If so
referred, GNPC and/or the State
may not terminate this Agreement
in respect of such event except
in accordance with the terms of
any resulting arbitration award.
In the agreement the
State was described as the
Republic of Ghana represented by
the Minister for Energy. Thus by
article 23.5 either the GNPC or
the Minister for Energy or both
of them could terminate the
agreement upon the occurrence or
non-occurrence of certain events
mentioned in the agreement. Thus
in my opinion by ratifying the
entire agreement without
reservation, Parliament had
ceded the power or right of
termination to the persons named
therein. Nothing prevented
Parliament from asking that it
should be involved in
termination of the agreement. I
say so because even though
Article 268(1) of the
Constitution clearly calls for
Parliamentary ratification, yet
it was found necessary to insert
it as a term of the contract,
per article 26.9 thereof. Indeed
it is normal for such a written
contract to embody all the terms
and conditions that the parties
want to govern their
relationship, to give certainty
to the parties. The party who
complains that there is a term
or condition which is to be
found outside what is expressed
in the agreement assumes the
burden of proof. It could not be
said that the document left
something out unless all parties
were aware of it and agreed
expressly, impliedly or by
operation of law, to be bound by
it as an integral part of the
agreement. In this case the
intent of the parties, including
Parliament as the ratifying
party, was fully expressed in
the agreement.
From the foregoing
discussion, it is certain the
action by the Minister was
justified in terms of Article
268(1) of the Constitution in
the sense that whatever he did
had its derivative source from
not only article 23.5 but also
from article 26.1 of the
agreement. The relevance of
article 26.1 of the agreement
will become apparent in due
course. The Minister had thus
Parliamentary blessing to
terminate the agreement under
the conditions spelt out in
articles 23.5 and 26.1 of the
agreement. This point will be
further addressed when I come to
consider relief (iii).
It is necessary at
this stage to say a word about
Parliament’s right to delegate
part of its quasi-legislative
functions to other persons and
departments outside the
legislature. Admittedly, I
examined this subject in the
light of the practice and
experience in the USA only,
because I was satisfied it
represents what I believe to be
the correct position under the
1992 Constitution. The accounts
show that this principle of
non-delegation, as it was
commonly known in the USA, was
the prevailing view because on
grounds of policy, it was
believed that it would ensure
Congressional accountability to
the people. But the US Supreme
Court began to realize that it
might become necessary for
Congress to delegate some of its
quasi-legislative functions to
individuals and agencies in the
executive branch for more
effective governance.
In the case of
Marshall Field & Co. v. Clark,
143 U.S. 649 (1892)
Congress had delegated some
power to the President. It was
contended that the law had
delegated to the President both
legislative and treaty-making
powers and was thus
unconstitutional. The court held
that what the President was
required to do was merely in
execution of an Act of Congress;
it was not the making of the
law. He was the mere agent of
the lawmaking body to ascertain
and declare the event upon which
the expressed will was to take
effect.
In the case of
J. W. Hampton, Jr. & Co. v.
United States, 276 U.S.
394 (1928), The
Tariff Act, 1922 empowered and
directed the President to
increase or decrease duties
imposed by the Act so as to
equalize the differences which,
upon investigation, he finds and
ascertains between the costs of
producing at home and in
competing foreign countries the
kinds of articles to which such
duties apply. The Act laid down
certain criteria to be taken
into consideration in
ascertaining the differences,
fixed certain limits of change
and made an investigation by the
Tariff Commission, in aid of the
President, a necessary
preliminary to any proclamation
changing the duties. The court
held that the delegation was not
unconstitutional and that a
valid delegation must establish
“an intelligent principle to
which the person or body
authorized to take action is
directed to conform…………The true
distinction, therefore, is,
between the delegation of power
to make the law, which
necessarily involves discretion
as to what it shall be, and
conferring an authority or
discretion as to its execution,
to be exercised under and in
pursuance of the law. The first
cannot be done; to the latter no
valid objection can be made.”
The legislature had not
delegated any authority or
discretion as to what the law
shall be, which would not be
allowable, but had merely
conferred an authority and
discretion, to be exercised in
the execution of the law by
Congress, and authorize the
application of the congressional
declaration, to enforce it by
regulation equivalent to law.
In the 1930’s
delegation of Congressional
authority to the executive was
rampant through what was known
as the New Deal era. During this
period two cases of delegation
or non-delegation that came
before the Supreme Court were
decided against delegation by
Congress. The first one was
PANAMA REFINING CO v. RYAN,
293 U.S. 388 (1935)
wherein the court invalidated a
provision of the National
Industrial Recovery Act of 1933
which delegated to the Executive
the authority to prohibit the
interstate transportation of oil
violating state mandated
production quotas. The court
held that the vagueness of the
statute did not sufficiently
direct the Executive’s actions
and therefore impermissibly
delegated legislative discretion
to the President. Next, in
SCHECTER POULTRY CORP. v. UNITED
STATES, 295 U.S. 495 (1935) the
Supreme Court rejected a statute
authorizing the Executive to
promulgate a “live poultry code”
which established regulations
governing the sale and quality
of chickens, unfair competition
and employee wage and hour
limits. The court stated that
Congress was not permitted to
abdicate or transfer to others
the essential legislative
function with which it is thus
vested, the constant recognition
of the necessity and validity of
such delegated provisions, and
the wide range of administrative
authority which has been
developed by means of them
cannot be allowed to obscure the
limitations of the authority to
delegate if the constitutional
system is to be maintained.
These are the only
two cases I came across in which
the court has struck down
legislation for improper
delegation of quasi-legislative
function. For since then from
the cases I came across, the
court has upheld all such
legislations as proper.
Subsequent decisions have
approved a broad variety of
generalized delegations. A case
in point is Yakus v.
United States, 321 U.S. 414
(1944), typical of the
modern approach to delegated
Congressional authority to
individuals and agencies in the
Executive branch. The YAKUS case
involved a challenge to the
Emergency Price Control Act,
which allowed the office of
Price Administration to issue
regulations fixing the maximum
prices of commodities and rents.
The Act declared that prices
were to be fixed to effectuate
the Act’s policy of preventing
wartime inflation, directed the
Administrator to give
consideration to prevailing
prices and mandated that the
prices set be “fair and
equitable.” The court held that
the legislation did not involve
an unconstitutional delegation
to the Price Administrator of
the legislative power of
Congress to control commodity
prices in time of war. The court
said this: “The essentials of
the legislative function are the
determination of the legislative
policy and its formulation and
promulgation as a defined and
binding rule of conduct- here
the rule, with penal sanctions,
that prices shall not be greater
than those fixed by maximum
price regulations which conform
to standards and will tend to
further the policy which
Congress has established. These
essentials are preserved when
Congress has specified the basic
conditions of fact upon whose
existence or occurrence,
ascertained from relevant
data by a designated
administrative agency, it
directs that its statutory
command shall be effective. It
is no objection that the
determination of facts and the
inferences to be drawn from them
in the light of the statutory
standards and declaration of
policy call for the exercise of
judgment; and for the
formulation of subsidiary
administrative policy within the
prescribed statutory
framework...............”
The court made reference to the
New Deal era and continued thus:
“We ought not to shy away
from our judicial duty to
invalidate unconstitutional
delegations of legislative
authority solely out of concern
that we should thereby
reinvigorate discredited
constitutional doctrines of the
pre-New Deal era. If we are ever
to re-shoulder the burden of
ensuring that Congress itself
makes the critical policy
decisions, these are surely the
cases in which to do it.”
See also American Textile
Manufacturers Institute
v. Donovan, 452 U.S. 490 (1981).
The court has largely moved away
from the principle of
non-delegation.
In view of the fact
that it is almost impossible and
impracticable for Parliament to
oversee all the activities and
functions that fall within its
domain, it is appropriate that
it delegates some of these
functions which do not involve
law-making to others to execute
the policies it has set out,
within the framework and the
policy outlined in the law. This
does not infringe the principle
of separation of powers. Thus
the principle of delegation is
permissible if it does not
infringe the power granted to
Parliament to make laws for the
country uner Article 93(2) of
the Constitution.
Now to relief (iii)
set out in the memorandum of
issues. It is ‘whether or not
the Petroleum Agreement between
the Government of the Republic
of Ghana and the 2nd
defendant violated section
23(15) of PNDCL 84, that is
Petroleum (Exploration and
Production) Law, 1984’. The
sub-section provides:
Except for such sub-contractors
as may be exempted from the
requirements of this subsection
by the Regulations, a contractor
or sub-contractor which is not
an incorporated company in Ghana
under the Companies Code, 1963
(Act 179) shall-
(a)
register an
incorporated company in Ghana
under the provisions of the
Companies Code, 1963 (Act 179)
to be authorised to carry out
solely petroleum operations in
respect of which a petroleum
agreement or petroleum
sub-contract has been entered
into under this Law and such
company shall be a signatory to
any petroleum agreement;
(b)
maintain an office or
establishment in Ghana to carry
out petroleum operations and
shall have in charge of such
office or establishment a
representative with the
authority to act and enter into
binding commitments on behalf of
the contractor or
sub-contractor, as the case may
be; and
(c)
in respect of such
petroleum operations, open and
maintain an account with a bank
in Ghana.
Counsel for the 3rd
defendant made this relevant
reference in his submissions
when he said that “……..in the
spirit of the purposive approach
to interpretation, words or
phrases used in a statute are in
the first instance to be given
their ordinary or where
appropriate the technical
meaning in context. This basic
rule of statutory interpretation
is put by the learned authors of
Halsbury thus: ‘if there is
nothing to modify, alter or
qualify the language which a
statute contains, the words and
sentences must be construed in
their ordinary and natural
meaning.’ Halsbury’s Laws of
England 4th edition
vol 44, paragraph 863” This
provision is clear and must thus
be given its ordinary and
natural meaning contrary to the
conclusion reached by Counsel
for the 3rd
defendant. The said provision
states that a foreign company
which seeks to take advantage of
this Law to engage in petroleum
exploration business must
register a subsidiary company in
Ghana with full powers of
management and local presence.
The local subsidiary is required
to be a signatory to any
petroleum agreement. It follows
that no agreement entered into
without a local subsidiary in
place and without the signature
of the local subsidiary shall be
valid. Therefore, before
Parliament ratifies any such
agreement it ought to ensure
that the provisions of section
23(15) of PNDCL 84 have been
complied with otherwise its
ratification would be an
exercise in futility.
In this case the
agreement was executed on the 24th
of October 2008 whilst the local
subsidiary of the 2nd
defendant company was said to
have been incorporated on 29th
October 2008, see the narration
of facts by the 3rd
defendant. It is thus clear that
as at the date the agreement was
executed there was no local
subsidiary in place, let alone
one to be a co-signatory to the
agreement. Contrary to the
position taken by the plaintiff,
the 3rd defendant’s
signature did not satisfy the
requirements of the law as it
was not the subsidiary of the 2nd
defendant; the 3rd
defendant was a signatory in its
own right. The agreement
therefore clearly violated
section 23(15) of PNDCL 84 and
was thus invalid. Thus
Parliament’s ratification of the
agreement given on 5th
November 2008 was also done in
error, for it could not ratify
an invalid contract. Thus all
acts done in relation to the
invalid contract were equally
invalid. Therefore the Minister
for Energy, when he purported to
act under section 23(15) of
PNDCL 84 to terminate the
agreement was perfectly
justified, for the executive is
enjoined by Article 58(2) of the
Constitution to uphold all the
laws of the country. Besides,
Article 26.1 of the agreement
states that it shall be
“governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of the
Republic of Ghana……” The
Minister did not purport to
terminate the agreement under
any of the conditions prescribed
under article 23.5 of the
agreement but did so under
section 23(15) of PNDCL 84 for
non-compliance with the law. His
action was thus justified. He
did not have to refer it to
Parliament since the agreement
was invalid and did not exist in
law and he had the right to
terminate in terms of the
Constitution which enjoins all
executive action to be guided by
the laws of the land. Moreover
article 26.1 of the agreement
also justified this course of
action, as the agreement was not
governed by the laws of the
country.
The 3rd
defendant considers that since
the Minister did not purport to
act under article 23.5 of the
agreement to terminate it, he
was bound to refer it to
Parliament or to go to court to
determine the agreement. That
argument sounds persuasive, but
as pointed out the duty cast
upon the executive to act in
accordance with the laws of the
land, enjoins the Minister to
put a halt to any infraction of
the law that comes to his
attention. Contrary to the
position taken by the 3rd
defendant, he does not require a
court order to stop an
illegality which does not
involve a constitutional
interpretation. It is the party
who is affected by the
Minister’s action and who feels
aggrieved who may proceed to
court for a declaration of his
rights under the contract. In
respect of whether the Minister
should have referred to
Parliament for approval, I would
have accepted that but for the
fact that the agreement itself
clearly stated that it must
conform to the laws of this
country. Therefore, since the
Minister had the right to
terminate the agreement, he
could do so under any of its
provisions, besides article
23.5. It is unreasonable to
isolate the other provisions of
the agreement; indeed the
principle of construction that a
document or deed must be read as
a whole is applicable to this
situation. Thus by a combined
reading of articles 26.1 and
23.5 of the agreement, the
Minister was mandated by
Parliament to terminate the
agreement if it did not conform
to the laws of the country,
inter alia.
I fully appreciate
the fears expressed by Counsel
for the 3rd defendant
when he said this: “…..where
Parliament has studied the
Petroleum Agreement vis-à-vis
the existing laws of the land,
the executive on its own motion
claim that Parliament made a
mistake and therefore move to
correct the said mistake………..if
this position is left to stand,
it will obviously lead to a
chaotic situation as every
Minister who thinks there is a
‘mistake’ in an act of
Parliament will take steps to
correct the perceived mistake on
its (sic) own accord.” This fear
will be reduced and even
non-existent if Parliament
limits the amount of power
delegated or if it removes any
such delegation altogether in
such important matters that
require joint action from both
arms of government. Counsel’s
fear really stems from the facts
of this case, where the Minister
acted without going back to
Parliament as a result of the
power given to him to terminate
the agreement if it does not
conform to the laws of the
country, inter alia.
Finally I will
consider relief (ii). The
question that logically arises
is this: since the Minister was
legally justified in terminating
the agreement, why did he agree
to pay the sum of $29 million to
the 2nd defendant?
The plaintiff has raised this
issue in view of this court’s
decisions in these cases:
Amidu (No. 3) v.
Attorney-General, Waterville
Holdings (BVI) Ltd & Woyome (No.
2) (2013-2014)
SCGLR 606;
Amidu (No. 2) v.
Attorney-General & 2 others,
supra, called Amidu cases,
for short. These cases decided,
inter alia, that when the
contract is invalid because it
violated the Constitution then
all acts done under it including
payment of money could not hold
and that no order of restitution
could be made under such invalid
contracts. It was for that
reason that payments made under
those contracts were ordered to
be refunded to the State.
Let us get the facts
right. The Minister communicated
his decision to the 2nd
defendant by letter dated 30
December 2009, exhibit JN4. In
the said letter the Minister
suggested to the GNPC to pay for
the data that the 2nd
defendant had gathered in the
course of the petroleum
exploration activities in the
country. This is the penultimate
paragraph of the said letter and
it reads:
“Considering that you had
undertaken some data
acquisition, I am, by copy of
this letter, asking GNPC, as
owner of such data, to reimburse
you the costs of the data.”
It was on the
strength of this that the $29
million was negotiated and paid
for. Thus it is certain that the
money was not paid as
compensation or penalty for the
termination of the agreement per
se, but to enable GNPC gain
access to the data which was in
the possession of the 2nd
defendant. It was purely a
commercial or business deal
which benefited both parties,
regardless of the termination.
For going by the principle of no
restitution in the two Martin
Amidu cases under reference
herein, the 2nd
defendant would not be entitled
to compensation under an illegal
contract; by parity of reasoning
the GNPC, and for that matter
the State, could also not derive
any benefit, by way of the data,
from the illegal contract. There
was thus nothing wrong in
deciding that though the
contract is illegal, yet they
would take mutual benefits
thereunder in a business deal.
In my opinion so long as the
payment was not made under and
pursuant to the contract but
outside of it, the facts should
be distinguished from the Martin
Amidu cases. The payment was not
made for breach of contract but
as consideration for data GNPC
obtained from the 2nd
defendant.
In conclusion, whilst
I uphold the issues, (i) and
(iii), I disallow issue (ii) for
reasons explained above.
Consequently, subject to the
decision that parliamentary
approval, unless otherwise
delegated to the executive, is a
requirement in a revision or
termination of a contract
ratified by Parliament under
Article 168{1} of the
Constitution, reliefs (a) and
(b) are dismissed. Reliefs (c)
and (d) are entirely
dismissed.
(SGD)
A. A. BENIN
JUSTICE OF THE
SUPREME COURT
(SGD) S. O. A.
ADINYIRA (MRS)
JUSTICE OF THE
SUPREME COURT
(SGD) ANIN YEBOAH
JUSTICE OF THE
SUPREME COURT
(SGD) P. BAFFOE - BONNIE
JUSTICE OF
THE SUPREME COURT
(SGD) N. S.
GBADEGBE
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
(SGD) V. AKOTO –
BAMFO (MRS
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
COUNSEL
THADEUS SORY ESQ. FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
GRACE OPPONG (MS) (PSA) WITH
HER MODESTER LEGIBO (ASA) FOR
THE 1ST DEFENDANT.
KWEKU AINUSON ESQ. FOR THE 3RD
DEFENDANT.
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