MOTOR VEHICLES (THIRD PARTY
INSURANCE) ACT, 1958 (NO. 42 OF
58)
As amended
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
Section
1. Short title and commencement.
2. Interpretation.
3. Users of motor vehicles to be
insured against third party risks.
4. Limitation of time for
proceedings.
5. Exemptions.
6. Requirements in respect of
policies.
7. Requirements in respect of
securities.
8. Certain conditions to policies
or securities to be of no effect.
9. Avoidance of restrictions on
the scope of policies covering
third party risks.
10. Duty of insurers to satisfy
judgments against persons insured
in respect of third party risks.
11. Rights of third parties
against insurers.
12. Duty to give information to
third parties.
13. Certain settlements between
insurer and insured to be of no
effect.
14. Bankruptcy, etc., of insured
persons not to affect certain
claims.
15. Further rights of third
parties against insurers.
16. Duty to surrender certificate
on cancellation of policy.
17. Certificate to be produced.
18. Duty of owner to give
information.
19. Deposits.
20. Offences.
21. Application of Act to
securities.
22. General penalty.
23. Power to make regulations.
24. Repeal.
GHANA NO. 42 OF 1958 DATE OF
ASSENT
Assented to in Her Majesty's Name
and on Her Majesty's behalf this
23rd day of December, 1958.
LISTOWEL
Governor-General.
AN ACT to make provision for the
protection of third parties
against risks arising out of the
use of motor vehicles, and for
purposes incidental thereto.
Date of Commencement. [1st April,
1959.]
BE IT ENACTED by the Queen's Most
Excellent Majesty, by and with the
advice and consent of the National
Assembly of Ghana in this present
Parliament assembled, and by the
authority of the same as follows:—
Section 1—Short Title and
Commencement.
This Act may be cited as the Motor
Vehicles (Third Party Insurance)
Act, 1958 and shall come into
force on the first day of April,
1959.
Section 2—Interpretation.
(1) In this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires—
"company" includes any company
registered or required to be
registered under the provisions of
the Companies Ordinance, any
corporation incorporated by law
and any firm or partnership;
No. 55 of 1952
"driving licence" means a licence
to drive a motor vehicle granted
under the provisions of the Road
Traffic Ordinance, 1952;
"highway" includes any roadway or
place to which the public lawfully
have free access;
"insurer" and "approved insurer"
mean a person or body of persons
carrying on an insurance business
approved by the Minister;
"local authority" means a council
established under the provisions
of the Local Government Ordinance
or the Municipal Councils
Ordinance, 1953 or any Act
amending either of the said
Ordinances;
"Minister" means the Minister
responsible for the Interior;
"passenger vehicle" means a motor
vehicle used for carrying
passengers for hire or reward;
"policy" and "policy of insurance"
means a policy of insurance in
respect of third party risks
arising out of the use of motor
vehicles, being a policy which
complies with the provisions of
this Act, and includes a covering
note issued in respect of any such
policy;
"security" means such security in
respect of third party risks
arising out of the use of motor
vehicles as complies with the
provisions of this Act.
No. 55 of 1952.
(2) If any word or expression used
in this Act is defined in the Road
Traffic Ordinance, 1952, such word
or expression, unless the context
otherwise requires, shall have in
this Act the meaning assigned to
it in the said Ordinance.
(3) Any reference in this Act to
the expressions "bankrupt" or
"bankruptcy" in relation to a
person shall be construed as a
reference to any person who is
insolvent or has entered into a
composition or arrangement with
his creditors or who has been
adjudicated bankrupt under the
provisions of any enactment
relating to bankruptcy having
effect for the time being in
Ghana.
(4) Any reference in this Act to
the use of a motor vehicle shall
be construed as referring only to
the use thereof on any highway as
defined in this Act.
Section 3—Users of Motor Vehicles
to be Insured Against Third Party
Risks.
(1) Subject to the provisions of
this Act no person shall use, or
cause or permit any other person
to use, a motor vehicle unless
there is in force in relation to
the user of that motor vehicle by
such person or such other person,
as the case may be, such a policy
of insurance or such security in
respect of third party risks as
complies with the provisions of
this Act.
(2) Any person acting in
contravention of this section
shall be liable on conviction to a
fine not exceeding two hundred
pounds or to imprisonment for one
year or to both such fine and
imprisonment and a person
convicted of an offence under this
section shall be disqualified from
holding or obtaining a driving
licence.
(3) A disqualification under the
provisions of subsection (2),
unless the court for special
reasons to be recorded otherwise
orders, shall be for a minimum
period of twelve months from the
date of the conviction, and any
person so disqualified from
holding or obtaining a driving
licence under the provisions of
this section shall be deemed to be
so disqualified under the
provisions of the Road Traffic
Ordinance, 1952.
No. 55 of 1952
Section 4—Limitation of Time for
Proceedings.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
any written law which prescribes a
time within which proceedings may
be brought before a court,
proceedings in respect of an
offence under section 3 may be
instituted—
(a) within a period of six months
from the date of the commission of
the alleged offence; or
(b) within a period which exceeds
neither six months from the date
on which it came to the knowledge
of the prosecutor that the offence
had been committed, nor one year
from the date of the commission of
the offence,
whichever period is the longer.
Section 5—Exemptions.
The provisions of section 3 shall
not apply—
(a) to the user of a motor vehicle
owned by or exclusively employed
in the service of the Government
while such motor vehicle is being
used for the purposes of the
Government; or
(b) to the user of a motor vehicle
other than a passenger vehicle
owned by a person who has
deposited and keeps deposited with
the Accountant-General the sum of
five thousand pounds in respect of
such motor vehicle at any time
when such motor vehicle is being
driven by the owner or by a
servant of the owner in the course
of his employment; or
(c) to the user of a motor vehicle
at any time when it is driven for
police purposes by or under the
direction of a superior police
officer as defined in the Police
Force Ordinance; or
Cap 37
(d) to any person or class of
persons declared by the
Governor-General to be exempted
from the the provisions of this
Act.
(e) to any motor vehicle or type
of motor vehicle declared by the
Governor-General to be exempted
from the provisions of this Act.
Section 6—Requirements in Respect
of Policies.
(1) A policy of insurance for the
purposes of this Act must be a
policy which —
(a) is issued by an insurer
approved by the Minister; and
(b) insures such persons or
classes of person as may be
specified in the policy in respect
of any liability which may be
incurred by him or them in respect
of the death of or bodily injury
to any person caused by or arising
out of the use of a motor vehicle
covered by the policy:
Provided that such policy shall
not be required to cover—
(a) liability in respect of the
death arising out of and in the
course of his employment of a
person in the employment of a
person insured by the policy or of
bodily injury sustained by such a
person arising out of and in the
course of his employment; or
(b) save in the case of a
passenger vehicle or where persons
are carried by reason of or in
pursuance of a contract of
employment, liability in respect
of the death of or bodily injury
to persons being carried in or
upon or entering or getting on to
or alighting from a motor vehicle
at the time of the occurrence of
the event out of which the claims
arise; or
(c) any contractual liability.
(2) Where any payment is made,
whether or not with an admission
of liability, by —
(a) an insurer under or in
consequence of a policy issued
under the provisions of this Act;
or
(b) the owner of a motor vehicle
in relation to the user of which a
security under section 7 is in
force; or
(c) the owner of a motor vehicle
who has made a deposit under
section 5,
in respect of the death of or
bodily injury to any person
arising out of the use of a motor
vehicle and the person who has so
died or received bodily injury has
to the knowledge of the insurer or
such owner, as the case may be,
received treatment at a hospital,
whether as an in-patient or an
out-patient, in respect of the
injury so arising there shall be
also paid by the insurer or such
owner to such hospital the
expenses reasonably incurred by
such hospital in giving such
treatment after deducting any
money actually received by such
hospital in payment of a specific
charge for treatment:
Provided that the amount to be
paid by the approved insurer or
the owner shall not exceed fifty
pounds for each person so treated
as an in-patient and five pounds
for each person so treated as an
out-patient.
(3) [Repealed by Contracts Act,
1960 (Act 25), s.18]
Certificate of Insurance.
(4) A policy shall be of no effect
for the purposes of this Act
unless and until there is issued
by the insurer to the person by
whom the policy is effected a
certificate, in this Act referred
to as a certificate of insurance,
in the prescribed form and
containing such particulars of any
conditions subject to which the
policy is issued and of such other
matters as may be prescribed.
Section 7—Requirements in Respect
of Securities.
(1) For the purposes of this Act a
security must —
(a) be given either by an insurer
approved by the Minister or by a
person, company or body of persons
approved by the Minister carrying
on the business of giving
securities of a like kind; and
(b) consist of an undertaking by
the giver of the security to make
good, subject to any conditions
contained therein, any failure by
the owner of any passenger or
other motor vehicle or such other
persons or classes of person as
may be specified in the security
duly to discharge any such
liability as is required to be
covered by a policy of insurance
issued under the provisions of
this Act which may be incurred by
him or them, and such security
shall in the case of an
undertaking relating to the use of
a passenger vehicle be up to an
amount of not less than
twenty-five thousand pounds and in
other case of not less than five
thousand pounds.
(2) A security shall be of no
effect for the purposes of this
Act unless and until there is
issued by the person giving the
security to the person to whom it
is given a certificate, in this
Act referred to as a certificate
of security, in the prescribed
form and containing such
particulars of any conditions
subject to which the security is
issued and of such other matters
as may be prescribed.
Section 8—Certain Conditions in
Policies or Securities to be of no
Effect.
Any condition in a policy or
security issued or given for the
purposes of this Act providing
that no liability shall arise
under the policy or security, or
that any liability so arising
shall cease in the event of some
specified thing being done or
omitted to be done after the
happening of the event giving rise
to a claim under the policy or
security, shall be of no effect in
connection with such claims as are
set out in paragraph (b) of
subsection (1) of section 6:
Provided that nothing in this
section shall be so construed as
to render void any provision in a
policy or security requiring the
person insured or secured to repay
to the insurer or the giver of the
security any sums which the
insurer or the giver of the
security may have become liable to
pay under the policy or the
security and which have been
applied to the satisfaction of the
claims of third parties.
Section 9—Avoidance of
Restrictions on the Scope of
Policies Covering Third Party
Risks.
Where a certificate of insurance
has been delivered under the
provisions of subsection (4) of
section 6 to the person by whom a
policy has been effected so much
of the policy as purports to
restrict the insurance of the
person insured thereby in respect
of any of the following matters —
(a) the age or physical or mental
condition of persons driving the
motor vehicle; or
(b) the condition of the motor
vehicle; or
(c) the number of persons that the
motor vehicle carries; or
(d) the weight or physical
characteristics of the goods that
the motor vehicle carries; or
(e) the times at which or the
areas within which the motor
vehicle is used; or
(f) the horsepower or value of the
motor vehicle; or
(g) the carrying on the motor
vehicle of any particular
apparatus; or
(h) the carrying on the motor
vehicle of any particular means of
identification other than any
means of identification required
to be carried under the provisions
of the Road Traffic Ordinance,
1952,
No. 55 of 1952
shall, in respect of such
liabilities as are required to be
covered by a policy under
paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of
section 6, be of no effect:
Provided that nothing in this
section shall require an insurer
to pay any sum in respect of the
liability of any person otherwise
than in or towards the discharge
of that liability and any sum paid
by an insurer in or towards the
discharge of the liability of any
person which is covered by the
policy by virtue only of this
section shall be recoverable by
the insurer from that person.
Section 10—Duty of Insurers to
Satisfy Judgments Against Persons
Insured in Respect of Third Party
Risks.
(1) If after a certificate of
insurance has been delivered under
the provisions of subsection (4)
of section 6 to the person by whom
a policy has been effected
judgment in respect of any such
liability as is required to be
covered by a policy issued under
the provisions of paragraph (b) of
subsection (1) of section 6, being
a liability covered by the terms
of the policy, is obtained against
any person insured by the policy
then, notwithstanding that the
insurer may be entitled to avoid
or cancel or may have avoided or
cancelled the policy, the insurer
shall, subject to the provisions
of this section, pay to the
persons entitled to the benefit of
such judgment any sum payable
thereunder in respect of the
liability including any sum
payable in respect of costs and
any sums payable by virtue of any
written law in respect of interest
on that sum or judgment.
(2) No sum shall be payable by an
insurer under the provisions of
subsection (1) —
(a) in respect of any judgment
unless before or within fourteen
days after the commencement of the
proceedings in which the judgment
was given the insurer had notice
of the bringing of the
proceedings; or
(b) in respect of any judgment so
long as execution thereon is
stayed pending an appeal; or
(c) in connection with any
liability if before the happening
of the event, which was the cause
of the death or bodily injury
giving rise to the liability, the
policy was cancelled by mutual
consent or by virtue of any
provision contained therein and
either —
(i)
before the happening of such event
the certificate of insurance was
surrendered to the insurer, or the
person to whom the certificate of
insurance was delivered made a
statutory declaration stating that
the certificate of insurance had
been lost or destroyed and so
could not be surrendered; or
(ii) after the happening of such
event but before the expiration of
fourteen days from the taking
effect of the cancellation of the
policy the certificate of
insurance was surrendered to the
insurer, or the person to whom the
certificate of insurance was
delivered made a statutory
declaration that the certificate
of insurance had been lost or
destroyed and so could not be
surrendered; or
(iii) either before or after the
happening of the event or within a
period of fourteen days from the
taking effect of the cancellation
of the policy the insurer had
commenced proceedings under this
Act in respect of the failure to
surrender the certificate of
insurance.
(3) No sum shall be payable by an
insurer under the provisions of
this section if in an action
commenced before or within three
months after the commencement of
the proceedings in which the
judgment was given he has obtained
a declaration that apart from any
provision contained in the policy,
he is entitled to avoid it on the
ground that it was obtained by the
non-disclosure of a material fact
or by a representation of fact
which was false in a material
particular or if he has avoided
the policy on the ground that he
was entitled to do so apart from
any provision contained in it:
Provided that an insurer who has
obtained such a declaration in an
action shall not thereby be
entitled to the benefit of the
provisions of this subsection in
respect of any judgment obtained
in any proceedings commenced
before the commencement of that
action unless before or within
seven days after the commencement
of that action he has given notice
thereof to the person who is
plaintiff in the action under the
policy specifying the
non-disclosure or false
representation on which he
proposes to rely and that he
intends to seek a declaration and
any person to whom notice of such
action is given may, if he
desires, be made a party thereto.
(4) If the amount which an insurer
under the provisions of this
section becomes liable to pay in
respect of the liability of a
person insured by a policy exceeds
the amount for which he would,
apart from the provisions of this
section, be liable to pay under
the policy in respect of that
liability he shall be entitled to
recover the excess from that
person.
(5) In this section—
"liability covered by the terms of
the policy" means a liability
which is covered by the policy or
which would be so covered were it
not that the insurer is entitled
to avoid or cancel or has avoided
or cancelled the policy; and
"material" means of such a nature
as to influence the judgment of a
prudent insurer in determining
whether he will accept the risk
and if so, at what premium and on
what conditions.
Section 11—Rights of Third Parties
against Insurers.
(1) Where under a policy issued
for the purposes of this Act a
person, hereinafter referred to as
the insured, is insured against
liabilities to third parties which
he may incur, then —
(a) in the event of the insured
becoming bankrupt or making a
composition or arrangement with
his creditors; or
(b) in the event of the insured
being a company and a winding-up
order being made or a resolution
for the voluntary winding-up of
the company being passed in
respect of the company or a
receiver or manager of the
company's business or undertaking
being duly appointed or in the
event of possession being taken by
or on behalf of the holders of any
debentures secured by a floating
charge, or any property comprised
in or subject to the change,
if either before or after either
event any such liability is
incurred by the insured his rights
against the insurer under the
policy in respect of that
liability shall, notwithstanding
anything in any written law to the
contrary contained, be transferred
to and vest in the third party to
whom the liability was so
incurred.
(2) Where under the provisions of
any law an order is made for the
administration in bankruptcy of
the estate of a deceased debtor
then if any debt, which may be
proved in bankruptcy, is owing by
the deceased in respect of a
liability against which he was
insured under a policy issued for
the purposes of this Act as being
a liability to a third party then
the rights of the deceased debtor
against the insurer under that
policy shall, notwithstanding
anything in any law to the
contrary contained, be transferred
to and vest in the person to whom
the debt is owing.
(3) Any condition in a policy
issued for the purposes of this
Act purporting directly or
indirectly to avoid the policy or
to alter the rights of the parties
thereunder upon the happening of
any of the events specified in
subsections (1) and (2) shall be
of no effect.
(4) Upon a transfer of rights
under subsection (1) or subsection
(2) the insurer shall, subject to
the provisions of section 13, be
under the same liability to the
third party as he would have been
under to the insured save that —
(a) if the liability of the
insurer to the insured exceeds the
liability of the insured to the
third party nothing in this Act
shall affect the right of the
insured against the insurer in
respect of such excess; and
(b) if the liability of the
insurer to the insured is less
than the liability of the insured
to the third party nothing in this
Act shall affect the rights of the
third party against the insured in
respect of the balance.
(5) The provisions of this section
and of sections 12 and 13 shall
not apply—
(a) where a company is wound up
voluntarily merely for the
purposes of reconstruction or of
amalgamation with another company;
or
Cap 94.
(b) to any case to which the
provisions of section 26 of the
Workmen's Compensation Ordinance
applies.
(6) For the purposes of this
section and of sections 12 and 13
the expression "liabilities to
third parties" in relation to a
person insured under a policy of
insurance shall not include any
liability of that person in the
capacity of insurer under some
other policy of insurance.
Section 12—Duty to Give
Information to Third Parties.
(1) Any person against whom a
claim is made in respect of any
liability required to be covered
by a policy under the provisions
of this Act shall on demand by or
on behalf of the person making
such claim state whether or not he
was insured in respect of that
liability by any policy having
effect for the purposes of this
Act or would have been so insured
if the insurer had not cancelled
or avoided the policy and, if he
were or would have been so
insured, give such particulars
with regard to that policy as were
specified in the certificate of
insurance issued to him in respect
thereof.
(2) In the event of any person
becoming bankrupt or making a
composition or arrangement with
his creditors or in the event of
an order being made under the
provisions of any law relating to
bankruptcy in respect of the
estate of any person or in the
case of a winding-up order being
made or a resolution for a
voluntary winding-up being passed
with respect to any company or of
a receiver or manager of the
company's business or undertaking
being duly appointed or of
possession being taken, by or on
behalf of the holders of any
debentures secured by a floating
charge, of any property comprised
in or subject to the charge, it
shall be the duty of the bankrupt
debtor, personal representative of
the deceased debtor and, as the
case may be, of the official
assignee, trustee, liquidator,
receiver, manager or person in
possession of the property to give
at the request of any person
claiming in respect of a liability
to him such information as may
reasonably be required to
ascertain whether any rights have
been transferred to and vested in
him under the provisions of this
Act, and for the purpose of
enforcing such rights, and any
contract of insurance in so far as
it purports either directly or
indirectly to avoid the contract
or to alter the rights of the
parties thereunder upon the giving
of any such information or
otherwise to prohibit, prevent or
limit the giving of such
information shall be of no effect.
(3) If the information given to
any person in pursuance of the
provisions of subsection (2)
discloses reasonable grounds of
belief that rights have or may
have been transferred to him under
the provisions of this Act against
any particular insurer that
insurer shall be subject to the
same duty as is imposed by
subsection (2) on the persons
therein mentioned.
(4) The duty imposed by this
section to give information shall
include a duty to allow all
contracts of insurance, receipts
for premiums and other relevant
documents in the possession, power
or control of the persons on whom
the duty is so imposed to be
inspected and copies thereof to be
taken.
(5) Any person who, without
reasonable excuse, the onus of
proving which shall be upon him,
fails to comply with the
provisions of this section or who
wilfully or negligently makes any
false or misleading statement in
reply to a demand for information,
shall be guilty of an offence
against this Act.
Section 13—Certain Settlements
Between Insurer and Insured to be
of No Effect.
Where a person who is insured
under a policy issued for the
purposes of this Act has become
bankrupt or where such insured
person being a company a
winding-up order has been made or
a resolution for a voluntary
winding-up has been passed with
respect to that company, no
agreement made between the insurer
and the insured after liability
has been incurred to a third party
and after the commencement of the
bankruptcy or the winding-up, as
the case may be, nor any waiver,
assignment or other disposition
made by or payment made to the
insured after such commencement
shall be effective to defeat or
affect the rights transferred to
or vested in the third party under
the provisions of this Act and
such rights shall be the same as
if no such agreement, waiver,
assignment, disposition or payment
had been made.
Section 14—Bankruptcy, Etc., of
Insured Persons not to Affect
Certain Claims.
Where under the provisions of this
Act a certificate of insurance has
been delivered to the person by
whom a policy has been effected
the happening in relation to any
person insured by the policy of
any of the events specified in
subsection (1) or subsection (2)
of section 11, notwithstanding
anything in this Act contained,
shall not affect any such
liability of that person as is
required to be covered by a policy
under the provisions of this Act,
and nothing in this section shall
affect any rights against the
insurer conferred under the
provisions of sections 11, 12 and
13 on the person to whom the
liability was incurred.
Section 15—Further Rights of Third
Parties Against Insurers.
(1) No settlement made by an
insurer in respect of any claim
which might be made by a third
party in respect of any liability
as is required to be covered by a
policy issued under the provisions
of this Act shall be valid unless
such third party is a party to
such settlement.
(2) A policy issued under the
provisions of this Act shall
remain in force and available for
third parties notwithstanding the
death of any person insured under
such policy as if such insured
person were still alive.
Section 16—Duty to Surrender
Certificate on Cancellation of
Policy.
Where a certificate of insurance
has been delivered under the
provisions of this Act to the
person by whom a policy has been
effected and the policy is
cancelled by mutual consent or by
virtue of any provision in the
policy, the person to whom such
certificate was delivered shall,
within seven days from the taking
effect of the cancellation of such
policy, surrender such certificate
to the insurer or if such
certificate has been lost or
destroyed make a statutory
declaration to that effect and any
person contravening the provisions
of this section shall be guilty of
an offence against this Act.
Section 17—Certificate to be
Produced.
(1) Any person driving a motor
vehicle on a highway shall, on
being so required by a police
officer, give his name and address
and the name and address of the
owner of the motor vehicle and
shall produce his certificate of
insurance and any person
contravening the provisions of
this subsection shall be guilty of
an offence against this Act.
(2) In any case where owing to the
presence of a motor vehicle on a
highway an accident occurs
involving bodily injury to any
person the driver of the motor
vehicle shall produce his
certificate of insurance to a
police officer or to any person
having reasonable grounds for
requiring its production and if
any such driver for any reason
fails so to produce his
certificate of insurance he shall
so soon as possible, and in any
case within twenty-four hours of
the occurrence, report the
accident and produce his
certificate of insurance to the
police station nearest to the
scene of the accident or to the
nearest administrative officer and
any person contravening the
provisions of this subsection
shall be guilty of an offence
against this Act.
No. 55 of 1952
(3) The provisions of this section
shall be in addition to and not in
derogation of the provisions of
section 23 of the Road Traffic
Ordinance, 1952.
(4) In this section "to produce a
certificate of insurance" means to
produce for examination the
relevant certificate of insurance
or certificate of security or such
other evidence as may be
prescribed that the motor vehicle
was not being driven in
contravention of the provisions of
this Act
(5) In this section "police
officer" includes a member of the
Ghana Police Force, a member of a
police force established and
maintained by a local authority,
and an administrative officer.
Section 18—Duty of Owner to Give
Information.
An owner of a motor vehicle shall
give such information as may be
required by a police officer for
the purpose of determining whether
the motor vehicle was or was not
being driven in contravention of
the provisions of this Act on any
occasion on which the driver was
required to produce his
certificate and any owner failing
so to do shall be guilty of an
offence against this Act.
Section 19—Deposits.
Where a sum is deposited by any
person under the provisions of
section 5 or as a condition of
approval by the Minister under the
provisions of section 6 or section
7 neither that sum nor any part
thereof shall, so long as any
liability being a liability
required to be covered by a policy
of insurance under this Act which
has been incurred by such person
remains undischarged or otherwise
unprovided for, be applicable in
discharge of any other liabilities
incurred by such person.
Section 20—Offences.
(1) If any person for the purpose
of obtaining a certificate of
insurance or a certificate of
security under the provisions of
this Act makes any statement
either oral or written which is
false or misleading or withholds
any material information such
person shall, unless he proves to
the satisfaction of the Court that
he acted without any intent to
deceive, be guilty of an offence
against this Act and be liable, on
conviction, to a fine not
exceeding two hundred pounds or to
imprisonment for two years or to
both such fine and imprisonment.
(2) Any person who with intent to
deceive —
(a) forges, alters, defaces or
mutilates any certificate of
insurance or certificate of
security or any other certificate
or document issued under this Act;
or
(b) uses or allows to be used by
any other person any forged,
altered, defaced or mutilated
certificate of insurance or
certificate of security or any
other certificate or document
issued under this Act; or
(c) lends to or borrows from any
other person a certificate of
insurance or a certificate of
security or any other certificate
or document issued under the
provisions of this Act; or
(d) makes or has in his possession
any document so closely resembling
any certificate or document issued
under the provisions of this Act
as to be calculated to deceive; or
(e) issues any certificate of
insurance or certificate of
security or other certificate or
document to be issued under the
provisions of this Act,
shall be guilty of an offence and
liable on conviction, to a fine
not exceeding two hundred pounds
or to imprisonment for two years
or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
(3) If any police officer has
reasonable cause to believe that
any certificate of insurance or
certificate of security or any
other certificate or document
produced to him in pursuance of
the provisions of this Act by the
driver or owner of a motor vehicle
is a document in relation to which
an offence under this section has
been committed he may seize the
document and when any such
document is so seized the driver
and the owner of such motor
vehicle or either of them shall,
if neither of them has been
charged with an offence under the
provisions of this section, be
summoned before a magistrate to
account for the possession of or
the presence on the motor vehicle
of the said document and the
magistrate may make such order
respecting the disposal of the
document and award such costs as
he may deem just.
Section 21—Application of Act to
Securities.
(1) The provisions of this Act
shall apply in relation to
securities or to cash deposits and
any certificate or document issued
in respect thereof, issued or made
in accordance with the provisions
of this Act as such provisions
apply in relation to policies of
insurance and in relation to any
such security or cash deposit and
any certificate or document issued
in respect thereof and references
in this Act to being insured, to a
certificate of insurance, to an
insurer and to persons insured
shall be construed as references
to the having in force of the
security or of the cash deposit,
to the certificate of security or
other certificate or document
issued in respect of a cash
deposit, to the giver of the
security or the person making the
cash deposit and to the persons
whose liability is covered by the
security or the cash deposit.
(2) In this Act references to a
certificate of insurance in any
provisions relating to the
surrender or loss or destruction
of a certificate shall, in
relation to policies under which
more than one certificate is
issued be construed as references
to all or any of such certificates
and shall, where any copy of a
certificate has been issued, be
construed as including a reference
to such copy.
Section 22—General Penalty.
Any person who is guilty of an
offence against this Act for which
no special penalty is provided
shall, on conviction, be liable in
respect of a first conviction, to
a fine not exceeding fifty pounds
or six months imprisonment or to
both such fine and imprisonment
and in the case of a second or
subsequent conviction to a fine of
one hundred pounds or to
imprisonment for one year or to
both such fine and imprisonment.
Section 23—Power to make
Regulations.
The Governor-General may make
regulations for prescribing
everything which may be prescribed
under the provisions of this Act
and generally for the purpose of
putting this Act into effect and
in particular but without
prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing provisions may make
regulations—
(a) prescribing the forms to be
used for the purposes of this
Act;
(b) declaring approved insurers;
(c) prescribing the requirements
in relation to securities either
generally or in particular case;
(d) as to application for and the
issue of certificates of insurance
and any other documents which may
be prescribed and as to the
keeping of records of documents
and the furnishing of particulars
thereof and the giving of
information with respect thereto;
(e) as to the issue of copies of
any certificates or documents
which are lost, mutilated or
destroyed
(f) as to the custody,
production, cancellation and
surrender of any such certificates
or other documents;
(g) for providing that any of the
provisions of this Act shall, in
relation to motor vehicles brought
into Ghana by persons making only
a temporary stay in Ghana, have
effect subject to such
modifications and adaptations as
may be prescribed;
(h) with respect to the payment of
deposits and the documents to be
issued in relation thereto and the
investments thereof and dealing
with the deposit of stocks or
other securities in lieu of money,
the payment of the interest or
dividends from time to time
accruing due on any securities in
which deposits may be for the time
invested and the withdrawal and
transfer of deposits;
(i)
prescribing fees to be charged in
respect of anything done under the
provisions of this Act;
(j) prescribing penalties for the
breach of any regulations made
hereunder not exceeding a fine of
two hundred pounds or imprisonment
for two years or both such fine
and imprisonment.
Section 24—Repeal.
Cap. 229.
The Motor Vehicles (Third Party
Insurance) Ordinance is hereby
repealed.
This printed impression has been
carefully compared by me with the
Bill which has passed the National
Assembly, and found by me to be a
true and correctly printed copy of
the said Bill.
K. B. AYENSU
Clerk of the National Assembly.
MOTOR VEHICLES (THIRD PARTY
INSURANCE) (ECOWAS BROWN CARD)
LAW, 1986 (PNDCL 141)
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
Section
1. Articles to have Force of Law.
2. Act No.42 of 1958 Modified.
SCHEDULE
Schedule
WHEREAS a Protocol entitled
Protocol on the Establishment of
an Ecowas Brown Card Relating to
Motor Vehicle Third Party
Liability Insurance the fact of
which is set out in the Schedule
to this Law, and in this Law
referred to as "the Cotonou
Protocol" was signed on behalf of
the Government of Ghana in Cotonou
on the 29th day of May, 1982, and
ratified by the said Government on
the 2nd day of March, 1985;
AND WHEREAS the Cotonou Protocol
provided for the establishment of
a common system for the settlement
of claims arising in international
motor vehicle traffic in the
Economic Community of West African
States, and for the harmonization
between the member State parties
to the Cotonou Protocol of the
laws and regulations governing
liability to third parties in
respect of motor vehicle
accidents;
AND WHEREAS it is decided to give
effect to the Cotonou Protocol and
to provide, so far as necessary,
that its provisions shall have the
force of law in Ghana;
NOW, THEREFORE IN PURSUANCE of the
Provisional National Defence
Council (Establishment)
Proclamation, 1981, this Law is
hereby made:
Section 1—Articles to have Force
of Law.
Articles 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the
Cotonou Protocol (relating to
Structure of the Ecowas Brown Card
Scheme, Participants in the
Scheme, Responsibility of
participants, the Ecowas Brown
Card and the National Bureau
respectively) shall have the force
of Law in Ghana.
Section 2—Act No.42 of 1958
Modified.
The Motor Vehicles (Third Party
Insurance) Act, 1958 (No. 42 of
1958) shall be construed with such
modifications as may be necessary
to give full effect to the
provisions of this Law.
SCHEDULE
PROTOCOL ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF
AN ECOWAS BROWN CARD RELATING TO
MOTOR VEHICLE THIRD PARTY
LIABILITY INSURANCE
Preamble
THE GOVERNMENT OF MEMBER STATES OF
THE ECONOMIC COMMUNITY OF WEST
AFRICAN STATES:
NOTING the rapid increase in
international road traffic in
ECOWAS member States and the
problems raised by such traffic in
regard to motor vehicle liability
insurance;
CONSCIOUS of the need to
guarantee, for road accident
victims, fair and prompt
compensation for damage they may
have sustained as a result of such
accidents;
ANXIOUS to facilitate, for their
nationals driving their vehicles
within the Member States, payment
of compensation due from them as a
result of accidents they may have
caused and to enable them comply
with their obligations under local
law or regulations on the subject;
DESIROUS of encouraging the
development of trade and tourist
exchange between African counties;
CONVINCED that the establishment
of a common system for the
settlement of claims arising in
international motor vehicle
traffic will lead gradually to a
desirable harmonisation between
the parties to the present
protocol of the laws and
regulations governing liability in
respect of motor vehicle
accidents;
WISHING to offer their insurance
markets an opportunity and a means
to develop international links and
exchanges, which will inevitably
contribute to the extension of
these markets;
AWARE of the satisfactory results
obtained by the international
insurance card scheme which has
been in force for many years in
Europe, and of the institution of
a similar scheme by the Arab
countries;
DECIDE to establish, by this
Protocol, an ECOWAS BROWN CARD
covering motor vehicle liability
when the vehicle insured is
passing through the territories of
the parties to this Protocol such
cover providing at least the same
guarantees as those required by
the laws in force in territory of
each of the parties.
ARTICLE 1
STRUCTURE OF THE SCHEME
1. The Liability insurance scheme
established by this Protocol shall
have, as its legal, technical and
financial basis, the guarantees
which are afforded to motorists
proceeding to an ECOWAS Member
State by taking out an insurance
policy on the usual terms with an
insurer authorised to undertake
this type of business in the
country which is the point of
departure for the journey.
2. The scheme shall be based
materially on an ECOWAS BROWN CARD
whose form, as well as the
guarantees it affords, are defined
in the provisions of Article 4 of
this Protocol.
3. The ECOWAS BROWN CARD shall be
issued by a National Bureau
established by each party to this
Protocol in accordance with the
provisions of Article 5 of this
Protocol. The card shall be
issued to motorists through the
insurers with whom they have taken
out a liability insurance policy
valid when driving in their own
country.
4. Each National Bureau shall
settle, on behalf of its member
insurers, claims arising from
accidents caused abroad by holders
of the cards it has issued, and
shall also handle claims arising
from accidents caused in its
country by holders of cards issued
by the National Bureaux of other
parties to this Protocol. It may
also take over the settlement of
claims under cover of a joint
deposit, the ECOWAS BROWN CARD
constituting proof of this
deposit.
5. The legal, administrative and
financial operation of the scheme
established by this Protocol shall
be co-ordinated and supervised by
a council of Bureaux of which all
the National Bureaux of the
parties to this Protocol shall be
members in accordance with the
provisions of Article 6 of this
Protocol.
ARTICLE 2
PARTICIPANTS IN THE SCHEME
1. Parties to this Protocol shall
participate in the Scheme as
principal participants.
2. Insurers, irrespective of their
legal or financial structure,
which are authorised by the
competent authorities of their
countries of activity to undertake
insurance operations against
liability risks in respect of
motor vehicle accidents, shall
participate in the scheme as
subsidiary participants. The
participation of such insurers in
the present scheme shall be
subject to their membership in the
National Bureaux of their
countries of activity.
ARTICLE 3
RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PARTICIPANTS
1. The responsibilities of a party
to this Protocol shall be:
(a) To recognise the ECOWAS BROWN
CARD and to enact laws and
regulations for the establishment
of the card scheme, and
particularly for the creation of
its National Bureau;
(b) To ensure that its National
Bureau is established and
functions in accordance with the
provisions of this Agreement, and
that it joins the Council of
Bureaux and complies with the
decisions of the Council;
(c) To guarantee the solvency of
its National Bureau;
(d) To deposit at its National
Bank or a designated Commercial
Bank a letter of credit in the
amount equivalent to 174,000 UA to
guarantee the performance by its
National Bureau of the obligations
under Article 5.
(e) Drawing may be made under the
West African Clearing Account to
discharge any obligations under
this scheme.
2. The responsibilities of a
subsidiary participant shall be:
(a) To issue to its policy holders
ECOWAS BROWN CARDS guaranteeing
such policy holders adequate cover
against the motor vehicle third
party risks they incur in the
countries which they visit;
(b) To undertake, by way of
reimbursement to the National
Bureau, payment of compensation
for damages and any accessory or
related expenses;
(c) To contribute to the operating
of the National Bureau and,
through the Bureau, to the
operating expenses of the Council
of Bureaux.
ARTICLE 4
THE ECOWAS BROWN CARD
1. An ECOWAS BROWN CARD is hereby
established.
2. This card shall be of a
strictly uniform type to be
determined by decision of the
Council of Bureaux, which alone
may alter the format,
typographical layout, colour and
content of the card.
3. The card shall include the
following particulars: the name
and address of the National Bureau
which has issued it, particulars
of the insurer insuring the motor
vehicles, the identity of the
policy holders, identification of
the vehicle, period of validity of
the card, its individual serial
number, a list of countries in
which it is valid, and the name
and address in each of those
countries, of the National Bureau
which the policy holder shall
notify in the event of an
accident. The card shall be signed
by the insurer and by the policy
holder.
4. The guarantee provided by the
ECOWAS BROWN CARD shall cover the
liability incurred by the holder
of the card in accordance with the
laws of such member country which
he visits.
5. Notwithstanding the terms of
the insurance policy under which
it is issued, the card shall
provide all the guarantees
required by the laws or
regulations governing compulsory
motor vehicle insurance in the
country in which the accident
occurred. Such guarantees shall
be subject to the conditions and
limitations contained in the
insurance policy, if the said
conditions and limitations are
permitted by the laws or
regulations of the party to this
Protocol in which the accident has
occurred.
6. The ECOWAS BROWN CARD shall be
recognised as a valid certificate
of insurance in the territories of
the parties to this Protocol in
which the production of such a
certificate is required, either
within the national territory or
at its frontiers, as a condition
for the circulation of motor
vehicles.
7. For a party in whose territory
insurance is not compulsory by
law, the guarantee provided by the
ECOWAS BROWN CARD shall correspond
to the third party liability on
the motorist in accordance with
the laws and regulations in force
in the country where the accident
occurred, as interpreted and
applied by the local judicial or
administrative authorities.
8. During the period of its
validity, the ECOWAS BROWN CARD
should constitute proof of the
existence of an insurance policy.
It will be effective only in the
event that the original cover is
in force.
ARTICLE 5
THE NATIONAL BUREAUX
1. The status of each National
Bureau shall be defined by the
legal provisions in force, for
this category of establishment, in
the territory of a party to this
Protocol. Its method of operation
shall be determined by the legal
instrument by which it is created.
2. In accordance with paragraph 2
of Article 2, each National Bureau
shall be composed of insurers
authorised by the local
supervisory authorities for
insurance against motor vehicle
liability risks. The insurer shall
apply for administration to the
National Bureau and shall provide
the Bureau with any guarantees it
may require. In a country where
one single State-owned insurance
company has the monopoly of all
insurance operations, the
Government of that party to this
Protocol may designate that
company to act as the National
Bureau of that country.
3. The National Bureau shall be
financed by the contributions of
members. The amount and method of
payment of contributions shall be
determined at the time of
admission to membership.
4. The members shall undertake to
place at the disposal of the
National Bureau as advances, at
its request, the sum necessary for
its operation.
5. The dissolution of a National
Bureau shall be at the initiative
of the Government of the Party to
this Protocol which shall take the
necessary decision, stating the
conditions and modalities of the
dissolution. The notification of
this decision shall be made to the
Council of Bureau at least six
months before the dissolution. The
National Bureau shall act either
as an agency handling commitments
under ECOWAS BROWN CARDS issued by
other National Bureaux.
A. The National Bureau, as an
issuing agency:
(a) shall arrange for the printing
of the cards and shall allot to
each of them a serial number in a
single series; it shall issue the
cards to insurers who are members
of the Bureau and who request
them. The said insurers shall keep
a record enabling them to identify
card-holders and the particulars
shown on their cards; the insurers
shall undertake not to issue cards
to persons other than their own
policy-holders who have taken out
a policy against motor vehicle
liability risks;
(b) shall give to each of the
National Bureau of other
signatories to this Protocol a
general mandate authorising them
to receive statements and claims
concerning accidents caused in the
territory of such other parties by
the holders of the cards it has
issued, to proceed with the
investigation of such accidents
and to pay compensation on
request, supported by the usual
documents of proof. It shall
reimburse the National Bureau
which has paid compensation as
follows:
(i)
the total amount paid by way of
damages, expense, and
disbursements or, where the
settlement is made by amicable
agreement, the amount agreed in
the settlement including the
agreed expenses. Fines shall on no
account be reimbursed;
(ii) the expenses actually
incurred in the investigation and
settlement of the claim;
(iii) a handling fee calculated as
a percentage of the amount of
damages and legal costs or
expenses agreed upon in a
settlement by amicable agreement.
This percentage shall be
determined in advance and for all
cases by the Council of Bureaux;
(c) shall make reimbursement as
calculated on the above-mentioned
basis, including the minimum
handling fee, even if the claim
has been settled without any
payment being made to an injured
third party. Reimbursement shall
be made to the requesting National
Bureau; in the currency of its
country and free of any exchange
of transfer charges;
(d) shall pay interest on the
amount involved at the rate of 8
per cent calculated from the date
the claim is made up to the day it
is paid, if after a period of
three months from the day the
request for reimbursement is made
the settlement has not been
received.
B. The National Bureau, as a
handling agency:
(a) shall, as soon as it is
informed of an accident caused in
a country which is a party to this
protocol by the holder of an
ECOWAS BROWN CARD issued by the
National Bureau of another Party
to this Protocol, act in the best
interest of the Bureau on
receiving a claim for damages, it
shall undertake necessary
verification concerning the
circumstances of the accident and,
on the basis of these
verifications, it shall advise the
issuing Bureau and take any
administrative or non-judicial
action which it deems necessary.
At the judicial level, the Bureau,
in its capacity as a handling
agency, shall be entitled to take
any steps to institute or contest
an action. In the case of claims
for damages below a certain amount
established by agreement with each
of the other issuing Bureaux the
Bureau may agree to a settlement
out of court. In the case of
claims for damages exceeding the
amount so established, the Bureau
shall obtain the prior consent of
the issuing Bureau before agreeing
to any settlement;
(b) shall not knowingly entrust or
relinquish the handling of a claim
to an insurer or to any person who
may have a financial interest in
the accident which has given rise
to the claim;
(c) shall be entitled, in a case
where the compensation payable is
in excess of 8,696 UA, to require
the issuing Bureau to instruct a
bank or other financial
establishment to place immediately
at its disposal, at its registered
office, a sum corresponding to the
estimated amount of the
compensation.
ARTICLE 6
THE COUNCIL OF BUREAU
1. The Council of Bureaux
(hereinafter referred to as "the
Council") is hereby established.
2. The Council shall consist of
one full fledged representative
and one alternate representative
selected from each National
Bureau. It shall appoint on
rotatory basis its Chairman and
Vice-chairman from among the
representatives in alphabetical
order and for a period of one
year. In the absence of both the
Chairman and Vice-chairman the
members present shall elect one
representative to preside over the
meeting.
3. The Council shall hold its
first meeting not later than two
months after the entry into force
of this Protocol at the Executive
Secretariat of ECOWAS which shall
be the Temporary Headquarters of
the Council until such a time the
Council may decide on its
Headquarters.
4. The Council shall meet at least
once a year at a place and on a
date which it shall determine. On
the initiative of its Chairman or
at the request of at least one
third of its members, a meeting of
the Council may be summoned by
invitation to members at least 30
days before such a meeting.
5. The Council shall itself
establish the agenda for its
meetings, and only items included
in the agenda shall be discussed.
Items proposed in writing to the
Chairman by at least a quarter of
the members not less than ten days
before the meeting shall be
included in the agenda.
6. Each member of the Council
shall have one vote. With the
exception of decisions under
paragraph 12 of Article 6,
decisions of the Council shall be
by a simple majority vote;
decisions shall require the
presence of the representatives of
at least half the members.
7. The Council shall appoint the
Chairman who shall hold office for
one year and co-ordinate the
activities of the Council.
8. The Council shall establish its
annual budget and shall fix the
annual contributions to be paid by
members which shall be an equal
amount as among the members.
9. The Council shall have a
general function of orientation,
co-ordination and supervision over
the whole of the ECOWAS Insurance
Scheme established by this
Protocol.
10. The Council shall determine
the form and content of the ECOWAS
BROWN CARD.
11. The Council shall co-ordinate
the operation of the National
Bureaux for this purpose, it shall
prepare a standard inter-Bureaux
contract which shall be signed by
all Bureaux and which the council
alone shall be entitled to amend.
This contract shall in particular
determine the maximum amount for
the delegation of owners of
settlement by one National Bureau
to another, and the minimum
handling fee payable for each case
handled by them.
12. Any dispute between two or
more National Bureaux as to the
interpretation on application of
this Protocol shall be referred to
Council. The Council shall decide
the dispute on absolute majority.
The decision pronounced shall be
final and binding on the parties
to the dispute. The decision shall
be notified to all the National
Bureaux and the Council shall see
to its execution.
13. The Council shall on its own
initiative or on the initiative of
any Government Party to this
Protocol consider and, if it deems
it advisable, propose changes in
the laws or regulations of the
parties to this Protocol with a
view to improving the functioning
of the ECOWAS BROWN CARD scheme,
or to harmonising the systems of
compensation for damages
occasioned by road traffic
accidents, or to improving
accident prevention.
ARTICLE 7
WITHDRAWALS AND EXCLUSION
1. A Party to this Protocol may
withdraw from it any time after
the expiration of a period of one
year from the date on which this
Protocol has entered into force by
means of notification in writing
addressed to the Executive
Secretariat of ECOWAS. The
withdrawal shall take effect
twelve (12) months after the date
of receipt of the notification by
the Executive Secretariat, during
which period the withdrawing Party
shall remain liable for its
financial obligation under this
Protocol.
Any insurer member ceasing for any
reason to be a member of the
National Bureau shall remain bound
by the undertakings assumed by the
Bureau during the period of its
membership.
2. If any Party is in breach of
its obligations under this
Protocol and such breach
substantially impairs the
operation of this Agreement the
Heads of States and Government may
by a resolution exclude such a
Party from this Protocol.
3. The Council of Bureau shall
determine any settlement of
accounts with a withdrawing or
excluded Party. A withdrawing or
excluded Party shall not be
discharged from its obligations
until the extinction of all its
existing liabilities.
ARTICLE 8
REVISION AND AMENDMENT
1. Any Party to this Protocol may
submit proposals for amendment or
revision of this Protocol.
2. Any such proposal shall be
submitted to the Executive
Secretariat of ECOWAS which shall
communicate them to other Member
States not later than thirty days
after receipt of such proposals.
Amendments or revisions shall be
considered by the Heads of State
and Government after Parties have
given one month's notice thereof.
ARTICLE 9
ENTRY INTO FORCE
1. The present Protocol shall
enter into force provisionally
upon signature by Heads of State
and Government of Member States
and definitely upon ratification
by at least seven (7) signatory
states in accordance with the
constitutional procedure
applicable to each Member State.
2. This Protocol and all the
instruments of ratification shall
be deposited with the Executive
Secretariat which shall transmit
certified true copies of this
Protocol to all Member States
informing them of dates on which
the Instruments of Ratification
have been deposited. This Protocol
shall be registered with the
Organisation of African Unity, the
United Nations Organisation and
such Organisations as the Heads of
State and Government of ECOWAS
shall determine.
May this 9th day of January, 1986.
FLT.-LT. JERRY JOHN RAWLINGS
Chairman of the Provisional
National Defence Council
Date of Gazette Notification: 28th
February, 1986.
NARCOTIC DRUGS (CONTROL,
ENFORCEMENT AND SANCTIONS) LAW,
1990 (PNDCL 236)
The purpose of this Law is to
bring under one enactment offences
relating to illicit dealing in
narcotic drugs and to further put
in place provisions that will
prevent illicit narcotic drug
dealers benefiting from their
crimes.
In view of the rising incidence of
narcotic drug abuse in the country
and the threatening dimensions
that illicit narcotic drug dealing
has taken internationally, it has
become necessary to revise the
existing laws on narcotic drugs by
clearly spelling out the offences
and providing realistic and
deterring punishments in respect
of them.
Furthermore, Ghana as a signatory
to the United Nations Convention
on Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic
Substances is obliged to enact
national laws to implement the
provisions of the Convention.
To this end, provision is made in
this Law for the pursuit, seizure
and forfeiture of equipment used
in the commission of narcotic drug
offences and of properties and
proceeds acquired or derived from
narcotic drug offences or illicit
narcotic drug dealings.
In furtherance of international
co-operation and mutual assistance
among member countries parties to
the Convention, provision is made
in this Law for assistance, on
request, to foreign countries to
enable them pursue and seize in
Ghana, through due process of law,
properties acquired or derived
from illicit narcotic drug
activities.
The following are the essential
elements of the Law.
PART I—Section 1-6
Under this Part, importation,
exportation, possession,
cultivation, manufacture, supply,
use and administration of any
narcotic drug without lawful
authority is prohibited.
Under section 7 a court or
Tribunal that convicts any person
has discretion not to impose the
minimum sentence where the
circumstances of the case demand.
Section 8 (1) repeats the
provision in the current law where
if an accused person with two
previous convictions for specified
narcotic drug offences is again
convicted for such an offence he
shall be liable to imprisonment
for life.
Subsection (2) of section 8
enables District Magistrates and
District Tribunals to try offences
under Part I but since most of the
stipulated minimum sentences are
beyond their jurisdiction,
convicts must be sent to the
appropriate higher Courts or
Tribunals for sentence.
Under section 9 (1) the meaning of
narcotic drugs is defined and
section 9(2) provides for
amendment of the Schedules by the
Secretary.
PART II
This Part deals with activities in
relation to properties which
constitute offences.
Section 10 makes any dealing
directly or indirectly in relation
to any property whether in Ghana
or outside Ghana with the
intention of managing, promoting,
establishing or carrying on any
activity which is an offence under
Part I an offence; and a person
with intention to assist or
facilitate such a crime also
commits an offence.
Section 11 makes possession of
property or proceeds from any
property known to have been
obtained from activities which
constitute a narcotic drug offence
in Ghana, an offence, wherever the
offence was committed.
Section 12 prohibits the
laundering of proceeds from
narcotic drug offences wherever
committed. Where any person is
convicted of a narcotic drug
offence under this Law, the
equipment or property, the subject
matter of the offence, shall be
forfeited to the State under
section 13 (1). However, section
13 (2) exempts carriers from
liability where the offence was
committed by someone other than
the owner of the carrier and it is
proved to the court that the use
of the carrier for the offence was
without the owner’s knowledge or
consent.
Under section 14, once, there is
proof that a narcotic drug offence
has been committed, any equipment
or property used for the
commission of the offence shall be
forfeited notwithstanding that no
person has been convicted of the
offence . . .
PART III
This Part deals with the pursuit
and forfeiture of illegal
properties.
Under section 16 the
Attorney-General, may, where he
has reason to believe that a
person has or is holding on behalf
of another person property
suspected to be illegal property
under this Law, make an ex parte
application to a court for the
forfeiture of the property
specified in the application from
the person named therein.
Under section 15 is specified
persons, who can be proceeded
against by the Attorney-General,
referred to as “liable persons”,
these are persons who have been
convicted of narcotic drug
offences, either in Ghana or of
similar offences abroad; persons
knowingly holding or concealing
illegal properties; persons to
whom such properties have been
passed, unless they hold them as
purchasers in good faith for
valuable consideration. Where a
person who can be proceeded
against under section 15 dies, his
personal representatives or where
there are no personal
representatives any beneficiaries
may be pursued.
Under section 17, a court may on
hearing the Attorney-General on an
application under section 16,
cause a notice to be issued to the
liable person named in the
application to show cause why the
properties specified by the
Attorney-General in the
application should not be
forfeited, and the Court shall
rule after hearing the parties,
and make such order as it deems
just.
Under section 18, the Court has
power to order forfeiture where
the person named as liable fails
to appear.
Under section 19, the Court may
where it is satisfied that illegal
property has been sold to a
purchaser in good faith or that
the property cannot be traced or
is otherwise irrecoverable, order,
among others, that an amount equal
to the full value of the illegal
property shall be paid.
Failure to pay attracts
imprisonment under section 19 (3),
and where the liable persons dies
before or after the Court order,
the representative of his estate
or any beneficiary can be pursued.
Under section 20 (1), all
contracts and dealings effected by
any person against whom notice has
been issued under Part III in
respect of the illegal property
are null and void.
Under section 21, proceedings do
not abate upon the death of the
liable person, and any proceedings
pending are to be continued
against his personal
representatives or beneficiaries.
Under section 22 (1) only the High
Court, National or Regional Public
Tribunals have original
jurisdiction under Part III of the
Law.
PART IV
This Part deals with arrest,
investigation and seizure.
Under section 23, a police officer
has power to arrest without
warrant any person whom he
reasonably suspects to have
committed or to be committing an
offence under this Law.
Section 24 deals with powers of
entry, search and seizure on
premises suspected to be used for
offences under the Law and section
25 deals with body searches of
suspects which can include both
external and internal body
searches, the latter of which must
be conducted by a medical officer.
Females are only to be searched by
other females; obstruction of a
person inspecting or searching is
an offence under section 26.
Section 27 empowers a magistrate
or District Tribunal to grant, on
an application by a police
officer, a right to intercept,
detain, open and search any
communication or postal article
which the magistrate or District
Tribunal considers likely to
contain relevant information or
substance for prosecution under
the Law. This application can
also extend to a request to the
magistrate or District Tribunal
for authorisation to intercept
transmitted messages and to listen
to any conversation by
telecommunication.
Section 28 gives the
Attorney-General special powers to
authorise any police officer, by a
written order, to investigate,
inspect and take copies of any
documents held by a bank or
financial institution among
others, for purposes relating to
an investigation into a narcotic
drug offence under this Law or
under a corresponding foreign law.
Under section 29, the
Attorney-General has further
powers for the purposes of any
investigation into proceedings
relating to a narcotic drug
offence suspected to have been
committed under this Law or under
any corresponding foreign law, or
for purposes of Part III of this
Law, to require, by written
notice, any person whom the
Attorney-General has reason to
believe has information that would
assist in any such investigation,
to furnish him in writing a sworn
statement, identifying his
properties both inside and outside
Ghana, identifying properties sent
outside the country by him within
a specified period, the estimated
value and whether the property is
held by some other person on his
behalf and setting out all his
sources of income, earnings or
assents. Under section 30 the
Attorney-General also has power in
like manner to request any public
officer to furnish any document in
his possession.
Under sections 31 to 34, where the
Attorney-General intends to make
an application against any person
to show cause why certain
specified properties should not be
forfeited, or where he intends to
institute court proceedings
against any person for a narcotic
drug related offence or where
proceedings have already been
instituted and pending, he may by
order require any person named in
the order to disclose the
whereabouts of all properties held
by him, prevent him from dealing,
expending or disposing of any
property the subject matter of the
proceedings, not to remove the
properties or not to leave Ghana
without prior written approval of
the Attorney-General. This order
may extend to any person holding
property for or on behalf of the
person named in the order and the
order may require such latter
person to also make such
disclosure and prohibit such
latter person from disposing of
any specified property without the
written approval of the
Attorney-General.
Under subsection (7) of section
31, failure to comply constitutes
an offence. The method of
seizure of movable and immovable
property suspected to be illegal
for the purposes of this law is
dealt with under sections 35 and
36.
Under section 37, all unauthorised
dealings with regard to seized
property after the seizure are
void.
Sections 39 and 40 provide for the
release of property seized under
the Law where there is no
prosecution or further action in
respect of the property and no
claim within a specified period
from the date of the seizure.
PART V
This Part deals with vesting of
properties forfeited under the Law
in the State.
PART VI
Section 42 deals with co-operation
and assistance to foreign
authorities who request for
assistance in relation to drug
related offences in the foreign
country and enjoins the Ghanaian
authorities to render assistance.
Section 44 indicates how the
Ghanaian authority should assist
with service of processes or
documents from abroad.
Section 45 deals with transmission
of copies of statements or records
or results of investigations in
Ghana to the requesting foreign
authority.
Section 46 makes it clear that the
Ghanaian authority may authorise
any police officer to examine any
person specified in a request from
a foreign authority in respect of
a drug related offence.
Under section 47, the examination
of a person suspected of a drug
related offence and specified by a
foreign authority as being so
suspected may, on an application
by the Attorney-General or the
Ghanaian authority to a magistrate
or District Tribunal, be ordered
by the magistrate or the Chairman
of the District Tribunal who shall
carry out the examination.
Section 48 allows the Ghanaian
authority to authorise search of
any person specified by a foreign
authority in a request and a
police officer so authorised shall
search the premises and may under
section 49 seize any property
requested by the foreign authority
as being property liable for
forfeiture under the law of the
foreign country or that the
property is required as evidence
in a drug related offence. The
section sets out the modalities
for transmission of any property
seized and the return of the
property where it is found not to
be illegal property.
Under section 50, on a request
from a foreign authority the
Ghanaian authority may intercept
communications for the purpose of
rendering assistance to the
foreign authority in relation to
any drug related matter.
Section 52 deals with the transfer
of a person in prison in Ghana to
a foreign country at the deals
with the transfer of a person in
prison in Ghana to a foreign
country at the request of a
foreign authority as a witness in
a prosecution in that country.
Any such transfer must be
authorised by the Secretary and
section 53 deals with arrangements
that may be entered into between
the foreign authority and the
Government of Ghana with regard to
payment.
PART VII
Section 55 sets up a Narcotics
Control Board under the control
and supervision of the Ministry of
the Interior.
Section 56 deals with punishment
for attempt and conspiracies for
offences under the Law.
Section 57 deals with offences by
bodies of persons. Under section
59 the powers of the police are
clearly indicated to be in
addition to their powers under any
other law.
Section 60 imposes a penalty not
exceeding ¢500,000.00 or
imprisonment for a term not
exceeding three years or both for
any offence under the Law for
which no specific penalty has been
imposed and provides in subsection
(2) for analyst reports.
Section 61 deals with the powers
of the Secretary to make
regulations and sections 62 and 63
deal with interpretation and
repeals respectively.
amended by
CONTRACTS ACT, 1960 (ACT 25)1
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