Chieftaincy –
Certiorari -Traditional
Council – Causes of matter
affecting Chieftaincy -
order of prohibition -
Perpetual injunction -
Nominating, electing a candidate
to occupy the stool – Judgment
procured by fraud - Contempt of
Court
HEADNOTES
Applicant that a chieftaincy
matter was initiated by
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon at
the Sharma Traditional Council
against Ebusuapanyin S.K. Obeng,
the 1st Interested
Party In the said suit,
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon
sought a number of reliefs from
the Shama Traditional Council a
declaration that it was the turn
of the Shama gate to nominate a
candidate to occupy the stool of
Konfeiku and an order of
perpetual injunction to restrain
the Defendant, his agents,
assigns and family members from
nominating, electing, confining
and installing anyone to mount
the Konfeiku stool. Pursuant to
this, the Shama Traditional
Council (the 2nd
Interested Party herein)
constituted a three-member
Judicial Committee comprising
the Applicant as Chairman of the
Panel and the 3rd and
4th Interested Parties as
Members to hear and determine
the chieftaincy matter It is the
Applicant’s case that he read
the judgment of the Judicial
Committee in open “court” to the
parties, dismissing the case of
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon and
entering judgment in favour of
the 1st Interested Party.
Counsel for both parties then
agreed on cost of GHS 2,000.
According to the Applicant,
after judgment was given and
cost pronounced, the Committee
dispersed. The Applicant claims
that he subsequently discovered
that the Registrar of the 2nd
Interested Party had
convened a meeting of the losing
party (Ebusuapanyin Kwamina
Ackon) and his supporters and
read to them another judgment
which he referred to as the
‘majority judgment’ in which
Ebuaupanyin Kwamina Ackon was
pronounced the victorious party.
Aggrieved by this purported
“majority judgment” which had
the effect of overriding the
judgment read in his favour by
the Applicant, the 1st
Interested Party instituted Suit
at the High Court, Sekondi
for a declaration that the
purported Judgment of the Shama
Traditional Council is null and
void as same was procured by
fraud. It is in respect of
these proceedings in the
Respondent High Court, Sekondi
that the Applicant is seeking an
order of certiorari to remove
into this Court for the purpose
of being quashed for nullity and
a further order prohibiting the
Respondent from continuing the
proceedings. The case of the
Applicant is that under the
Chieftaincy (Proceedings and
Functions) (Traditional
Councils) Regulations, 1972 (LI
798), Regulation 13(2) a member
of judicial committee of a
traditional council shall not be
liable in any action or suit in
respect of any matter or thing
done by him in the performance
of his functions under the
regulations. Consequently, the
Applicant contends that he and
the 3rd and 4th
Interested Parties being members
of the Judicial Committee of the
2nd Interested Party cannot be
held liable in the pending
action before the Respondent
High Court, Sekondi.
HELD
In convicting the Applicant, the
High Court found that the
actions of the Applicant also
undermined or defied the
authority of the High Court by
prejudicing the pending High
Court case which is the subject
matter of this application. What
does the Applicant hope to
achieve with the instant
application before us? By this
application, he is seeking to
prevent the Respondent High
Court from resolving the
confusion occasioned by alleged
conflicting judgements of the
Judicial Committee which the
Applicant himself chaired. We do
not think the Applicant has been
able to demonstrate that the
instant application is brought
in good faith to avert any
injustice or injury to him.
In the circumstances, we will
refuse this application as it is
wholly incompetent, umeritorious
and same is hereby dismissed.
STATUTES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
1992 Constitution
Supreme Court (Amendment) Rules,
1999 (CI 24),
Chieftaincy (Proceedings and
Functions) (Traditional
Councils) Regulations, 1972 (LI
798), Regulation 13(2)
Chieftaincy Act 2008 (Act 759),
CASES REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
Republic v High Court, Kumasi:
Ex-parte Bank of Ghana & Ors
(Gyamfi & Others – Interested
Parties) [2013-14] 1SCGLR 477
Republic vs. High Court (Fast
Track Division); Ex
parte National Lottery Authority
(Ghana Lotto Operators
Association & Others Interested
Parties) (2009) SCGLR 390
Jonah v. Duodu Kumi [2003-2004]
SCGLR 50
Dwamena Vrs Otoo and Others
Civil Motion No.: J4/47/2018
judgment dated 12 June 2019
Asante v Scanship Ghana Limited
Suit No.: J4/15/2013 judgment
dated 15 January 2014
British Airways v.
Attorney-General [1996-1997
SCGLR 547]
Republic v Court of Appeal,
ex-parte Tsatsu Tsikata
[2005-2006] SCGLR 612,
Republic v. High Court, Accra;
Ex Parte Industrialization Fund
for Developing Countries
[2003-2004] 1 SCGLR 312
BOOKS REFERRED TO IN JUDGMENT
DELIVERING THE LEADING JUDGMENT
KULENDI JSC:-
COUNSEL
BAFFOUR DWUMAH FOR THE 2ND,
3RD AND 4TH
INTERESTED PARTIES.
GUSTAV ADDITINGTON FOR THE
APPLICANT
KULENDI JSC:-
Introduction:
This is an application for an
order of certiorari directed at
the High Court 2, Sekondi to
remove into this court for the
purpose of being quashed, all
proceedings in respect of Suit
No.: E12/103/18 titled:
EBUSUAPANYIN S.K OBENG vrs.
SHAMA TRADITIONAL COUNCIL & 2
OTHERS, and a further order of
prohibition against the said
High Court from continuing to
hear the matter.
Before we proceed to consider
the contentions in this
application, we wish to observe
that the parties described by
the Applicant on the face of the
motion as 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th
Respondents ought to have been
referred to as the 1st, 2nd, 3rd
and 4th Interested Parties
respectively. This error was
correctly avoided by counsel for
the Interested Parties and we
will follow the correct
description of the Interested
Parties as such.
APPLICANT’S CASE:
It is the case of the Applicant
that a chieftaincy matter
entitled Ebusuapanyin Kwamina
Ackon (Suing For and On Behalf
of the Shama Gate of the
Ebiradze Family of Shama) Vrs
S.K. Obeng (Ebusuapanyin of the
Ebiradze Family of Dompoase)
was initiated on the 16th
of August, 2013 by Ebusuapanyin
Kwamina Ackon at the Sharma
Traditional Council against
Ebusuapanyin S.K. Obeng, the 1st
Interested Party herein.
In the said suit, Ebusuapanyin
Kwamina Ackon sought the
following reliefs from the Shama
Traditional Council:
i.
A declaration that it was the
turn of the Shama gate to
nominate a candidate to occupy
the stool of Konfeiku and
ii.
An order of perpetual injunction
to restrain the Defendant, his
agents, assigns and family
members from nominating,
electing, confining and
installing anyone to mount the
Konfeiku stool.
Pursuant to this, the Shama
Traditional Council (the 2nd
Interested Party herein)
constituted a three-member
Judicial Committee comprising
the Applicant as Chairman of the
Panel and the 3rd and
4th Interested Parties as
Members to hear and determine
the chieftaincy matter.
It is the Applicant’s case that
on the 4th of July
2017, he read the judgment of
the Judicial Committee in open
“court” to the parties,
dismissing the case of
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon and
entering judgment in favour of
the 1st Interested Party.
Counsel for both parties then
agreed on cost of GHS 2,000.
According to the Applicant,
after judgment was given and
cost pronounced, the Committee
dispersed. The Applicant claims
that he subsequently discovered
that the Registrar of the 2nd
Interested Party had
convened a meeting of the losing
party (Ebusuapanyin Kwamina
Ackon) and his supporters and
read to them another judgment
which he referred to as the
‘majority judgment’ in which
Ebuaupanyin Kwamina Ackon was
pronounced the victorious party.
Aggrieved by this purported
“majority judgment” which had
the effect of overriding the
judgment read in his favour by
the Applicant, the 1st
Interested Party instituted
Suit No: E12/103/18 at the
High Court, Sekondi entitled
Ebusuapanyin S.K. Obeng v Shama
Traditional Council and 3
Others. In this suit, 1st
Interested Party claimed for :
“A declaration that the
purported Judgment of the Shama
Traditional Council signed by
the 2nd and 3rd
Defendants in the case titled
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon vrs
Ebusuapanyin S.K. Obeng dated 4th
July 2017 is null and void as
same was procured by fraud.”
It is in respect of these
proceedings in the Respondent
High Court, Sekondi that the
Applicant is seeking an order of
certiorari to remove into this
Court for the purpose of being
quashed for nullity and a
further order prohibiting the
Respondent from continuing the
proceedings.
The case of the Applicant is
that under the CHIEFTAINCY
(PROCEEDINGS AND FUNCTIONS)
(TRADITIONAL COUNCILS)
REGULATIONS, 1972 (LI 798),
Regulation 13(2), a member
of judicial committee of a
traditional council shall not be
liable in any action or suit in
respect of any matter or thing
done by him in the performance
of his functions under the
regulations. Consequently, the
Applicant contends that he and
the 3rd and 4th
Interested Parties being members
of the Judicial Committee of the
2nd Interested Party cannot be
held liable in the pending
action before the Respondent
High Court, Sekondi.
CASE OF THE 2nd, 3rd and 4th
INTERESTED PARTIES
In response, the 2nd, 3rd
and 4th Interested
Parties seem to agree with the
Applicant that the said
Regulations 13(2) of L.I 798
grants they and the Applicant
immunity from liability in
respect of their functions as
members of the Judicial
Committee of the 2nd Interested
Party. However, they are opposed
to the grant of the reliefs of
certiorari and prohibition in
favour of the Applicant because
they would rather have the
allegations of fraud in the suit
pending before the Respondent
High Court, Sekondi determined
in order to “for the truth to
come out because the Applicant
is going about tarnishing our
image when in fact he is the one
who has brought the
administration of justice into
disrepute.”
Like the Applicant, 2nd, 3rd and
4th Interested Parties allege
that indeed there was an action
brought before the Shama
Traditional Council by one
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon. The
panel of the Judicial Committee
of the Shama Traditional Council
comprised the Applicant and the
3rd and 4th Interested Parties.
They further aver that during a
pre-judgment conference with the
Registrar of the 2nd Interested
Party, the Applicant and the 3rd
and 4th Interested Parties
resolved the dispute
differently. While the Applicant
decided the case in favour of
the 1st Interested Party, the
3rd and 4th Interested Parties
decided the matter in favour of
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon. That
when the panel sat on the 4th
of July 2017, the Applicant was
asked to read both the majority
and minority judgments. However,
the Applicant read only his
minority judgement and failed or
refused to read, during the open
hearing, the majority judgment
given by 3rd and 4th
Interested Parties in favour of
Ebusuapanyin Kwamina Ackon. They
contend that the Applicant by
reading his minority judgment
alone, intimated to those
present in the court that
judgment had unanimously been
given in favour of the 1st
Interested Party. It is their
case that it took the
intervention of the Registrar of
the 2nd Interested
Party, together with the 3rd
and 4th Interested
Parties to correct the
misrepresentation by the
Applicant. They claim that the 3rd
and 4th Interested
Parties interjected and
indicated, during the open
hearing, that the judgment read
by the Applicant was a minority
decision and not the judgment of
the majority. That the Applicant
then proceeded to walk out of
the hearing and the Registrar of
the 2nd Interested Party went on
to give a gist of the majority
judgement and announced that a
full text of the judgment was
available for collection. The
majority is said to have found
in favour of Ebusuapanyin
Kwamina Ackon and ordered a
perpetual injunction against the
1st Interested Party,
his agents, assigns and family
members from nominating,
electing, confining and
installing anyone to mount the
Konfeiku stool.
It is relevant to note that
after the institution of the
Suit in the High Court, Sekondi
by the 1st Interested Party,
the 1st Interested Party
together with the Applicant went
ahead to install a chief for the
disputed Konfeiku Stool. They
were subsequently cited by
Ebusuananyin Ackon for contempt
and convicted by the High Court,
Sekondi in a ruling dated 7th
November, 2019. The gravamen of
the contempt application was
firstly their disobedience of
the order of injunction
contained in the majority
judgment of the Judicial
Committee and secondly, their
interference with the subject
matter of the proceedings before
the High Court, Sekondi seeking
to declare the said majority
judgment null and void for
fraud.
PRELIMINARY
Rule 62 of C.I 16 provides as
follows:
“Rule 62—Time Limit.
An application to invoke the
supervisory jurisdiction of the
Court shall be filed within 90
days of the date when the
grounds for the application
first arose unless the time is
extended by the Court. [As
substituted by Supreme Court
(Amendment) Rules, 1999 (CI 24),
(c)].”
By rule 62 (supra), the
Applicant ought to have brought
the instant application seeking
to invoke our supervisory
jurisdiction within ninety days
of the date when the grounds of
the application first arose. The
proceedings in the High Court
that the Applicant seeks to
quash by certiorari was
commenced by a writ of summons
issued on 8th November, 2018
whilst the instant application
was filed on 2nd March, 2021.
The Applicant, in his bid to
evade the consequences of Rule
62 has contended in his
statement of case that his
attention “has just been
drawn to the on-going case
before the High Court…”
Although the Applicant says his
attention was just drawn to the
pendency of the High Court Suit
which he seeks orders of
certiorari and prohibition, the
evidence on record suggests the
contrary. Exhibit JSA 2, which
is the ruling of the High Court
dated 7th November, 2019,
convicting the Applicant
(therein the 3rd Respondent) for
contempt of court shows that at
the very least, the Applicant
has been aware of the
proceedings in the High Court
before 7th November, 2019, the
date Applicant was convicted for
contempt and his actions
declared as undermining the
authority of the High Court in
its effectual determination of
the very suit he now seeks to
quash.
On the basis of the affidavit
evidence, we find that the
Applicant’s instant application
has been filed in breach rule 62
of C.I 16.
However, in view of the fact
that the Applicant’s instant
application is hinged on a
contention that the High Court,
Sekondi is acting in breach of
statute and for that matter
engaged in a nullity, we shall
consider the merits of the
application since this Court has
repeatedly held that in cases of
nullity, time does not run.
GROUNDS
The grounds of the application
as set out by the Applicant are
as follows:
-
“That under the CHIEFTAINCY
(PROCEEDINGS AND FUNCTIONS)
(TRADITIONAL COUNCILS)
REGULATIONS, 1972, L.I. 798
Regulation 13(2) a member of
any judicial committee of a
Traditional Council shall
not be liable to any action
or suit in respect of any
matter or thing done by him
in the performance of his
functions under these
regulations.
-
That the 4th and
5th Interested
Parties/Respondents being
members of the Judicial
Committee of the 2nd
Interested Party shall not
be liable to the pending
action involving them before
the Respondent under L.I.
798 Regulation 13(2)”
THE LAW & ITS APPLICATION
Generally, this Court’s
supervisory jurisdiction can be
invoked on three legal grounds:
excess or want of jurisdiction;
breach of the principles of
natural justice; and clear
errors of law apparent on the
face of the record.
The above trio grounds have been
elaborated in a number of
judicial decisions of this
court. Dotse JSC in the case of
Republic v High Court, Kumasi:
Ex-parte Bank of Ghana & Ors
(Gyamfi & Others – Interested
Parties) [2013-14] 1SCGLR 477
postulates the grounds of
certiorari thus:
“It is well settled that
certiorari was not concerned
with the merits of the decision;
it was rather
discretionary remedy which would
be granted on grounds of excess
or want of jurisdiction and or
some beach of rules of natural
justice; or to correct a clear
error of law apparent on the
face of the record.”
The gravamen of the Applicant’s
application for orders of
certiorari and prohibition is
premised on the following
contention urged in the
Statement of Case filed by the
Applicant. At page 1 of the
Statement of Case, the Applicant
says that:
“In the exercise of its
jurisdiction, the 4th
and 5th Respondents
have been named as the 2nd
and 3rd Defendants
which means they are required to
mount their defenses while
examination of the evidence will
involve the input of the
Applicant herein, though not a
party to the action.”
It is worthy to point out that
the Applicant is not a party to
the proceedings in the High
Court for which he seeks an
order of certiorari and
prohibition. Albeit in an
inelegant manner of expression,
we understand the Applicant to
contend that he is immune from
liability and therefore neither
himself nor any other member of
the Judicial Committee can be
liable in “any action or suit in
respect of any matter or thing
done by them” in the performance
of their functions under law.
This is articulated in paragraph
10 of the Applicant’s affidavit
in support of this Application
as follows:
“10. That joined to the suit as
2nd and 3rd Defendants therein
are two members of the Judicial
Committee which tried the case
and i the chairman and a member
of the judicial committee,
neither of them nor my goodself
can be liable to any action or
suit in respect of any matter or
thing done by them or me in the
performance of our functions
under the law.”
In our view, what the Applicant
obviously fails to appreciate is
that statutory exemption from
civil or criminal personal
liability in the performance of
a statutory function does not
and cannot amount to an immunity
from being investigated by a
court of competent jurisdiction
in respect of an allegation of
fraud or unlawful conduct in the
performance of such statutory
functions. To conclude otherwise
will be an affront to the law
itself, good conscience and
public morality. This is more so
in society governed by the rule
of law and due process.
Further, any such statutory
exemptions cannot ordinarily or
necessarily, as a general rule,
preclude a person so exempt from
testifying in judicial
proceedings before a court of
competent jurisdiction in
respect of matters arising from
and/or related to the
performance of such statutory
functions.
In any case, even in the
appropriate circumstances,
regulation 13 (2) of LI 798
should not avail the Applicant
since on his own showing, he is
not a party to the proceedings
before the High Court, Sekondi.
For the avoidance of doubt, the
said Regulation 13(2) of LI 798
states as follows:
“A member of any judicial
committee of a Traditional
Council shall not be liable to
any action or suit in respect of
any matter or thing done by him
in the performance of his
functions under these
regulations.”
Regulation 13(2) is in pari
materia with section 33(5)
of the Chieftaincy Act 2008 (Act
759), its parent statute which
provides as follows:
“A member of any Judicial
Committee appointed under this
Act or the lawyer of a judicial
Committee is not liable to an
action or suit in respect of a
matter or thing done by the
member or the lawyer in the
performance of functions under
these Act.”
Clearly, the functions of a
member of a Judicial Committee
contemplated under both Act 759
and L.I. 798 cannot be properly
construed to include the
commission of acts of fraud or
some other criminal act.
Given our finding that the
Applicant is not a party to the
Suit before the High Court,
Sekondi in respect of which he
is seeking orders of
certiorari and prohibition,
the Application is untenable,
unjustifiable and must fail
in limine, for this
reason alone.
However, we cannot fail to
evaluate depositions by the 3rd
Interested Party for himself and
for and on behalf of the 4th
Interested Party in paragraphs
11, 12 and 13 of their affidavit
in opposition which read as
follows:
“11. That it was subsequent to
the 4th July, 2017 that the
Applicant brought two judgments
signed by him alone and created
the impression that the judgment
was given on 4th July, 2017.
Hereto attached and marked as
Exhibit NAK2 and NAK 3 are
copies of the two minority
judgments.
12. That thereafter, the 1st
Interested Party (described as
2nd Respondent in the title)
mounted the action in Exhibit A,
praying for the setting aside of
the majority judgement Exhibit
NAK1 on grounds of fraud.
13. That I admit the depositions
in paragraph 10 of the affidavit
in support except that the 4th
Interested Party and I have
chosen to defend the case for
the truth to come out because
the Applicant is going about
tarnishing our image when in
fact he is the one who has
brought the administration of
justice into disrepute.”
In paragraph 11 aforesaid, the
3rd and 4th Interested Parties,
understandably, concede the
contention of the Applicant that
they cannot be liable to any
action or suit in respect of any
matter or thing done by them in
respect of the performance of
their functions as members of
the Judicial Committee. We have
already opined that this
contention is tenable to the
extent that the conduct in issue
does not bother on fraud,
criminality or
unconstitutionality.
Consequently, section 33(5) of
Act 759 and Regulation 13(2) of
L.I. 798 do not provide an
impervious armour to the
Applicant and or the 3rd and 4th
Interested Parties when the
conduct in issue is alleged to
be fraudulent, criminal or
unconstitutional and moreover is
being challenged in a competent
judicial and/or even
quasi-judicial forum or
proceedings.
It is significant to note that
Regulations 7(4)(5)(6) of L.I
798 provide as follows:
“Regulation 7—Evidence Etc.,
before Judicial Committee.
...
(4) A judicial committee shall
in every case deliver a written
judgment, ruling or opinion
giving reasons for arriving at
its decision.
(5) Where any member disagrees
with the majority decision that
member shall also deliver a
written judgment, ruling or
opinion giving reasons for
arriving at his decision.
(6) The Registrar of each
Traditional Council shall within
one month of a judicial
committee delivering judgment,
ruling or opinion send a
certified true copy of the
judgment, ruling or opinion as
well as any dissenting opinion
to the Attorney-General.”
Further, Regulation 15 of LI 798
states that:
“15. There shall be kept by the
Registrar of a Traditional
Council a Tribunal Record Book
in which shall be recorded in
the English language the
proceedings of the judicial
committee of that Council.”
We are of the view that that,
read together, the import of the
said regulation 7(4)(5)(6) and
regulation 15 is that a
judgment, ruling or opinion of a
judicial committee, properly so
called, ought to comply with the
following minimum criteria:
-
It must be in writing and
must indicate whether it is
unanimous or by a majority;
-
It must contain reasons for
conclusions arrived at;
-
Where there is a dissent,
the dissent must be in
writing and must have
reasons for the conclusions
arrived at;
-
The judgment, ruling or
opinion as well as any
dissenting opinion(s) must
be read in part or whole at
a sitting of the judicial
committee;
-
All members of the panel
must be present at the
sitting at which it is read.
-
It must be entered in the
Tribunal Record Book;
-
The judgment as well as any
dissent, and the Record Book
into which it is entered
must be signed by all
members of the panel of the
judicial committee and;
-
It must be certified by the
Registrar and provided to
the parties or their lawyers
upon request.
-
A certified true copy of the
judgment, ruling or opinion
as well as of any dissenting
opinion must be sent to the
Attorney General within one
month of the delivery of the
judgment, ruling or opinion.
The contentions of the parties
before the Respondent High Court
border on which of the alleged
judgments in issue satisfies the
requirements enunciated above
and for that matter, whether
there was impropriety in the
nature of fraud, in the manner
in which the “majority judgment”
came into existence. Needless to
say, a resolution of the dispute
at hand, ultimately turns on
questions that can only be
addressed by the production of
relevant evidence to the
requisite standard of proof to
enable the High Court determine
which of the judgments in
contention complies with
regulation 7(4), (5) and (6) as
well as regulation 15, and the
criteria we have inferred
therefrom.
Indeed, several or most of the
matters, sought to be urged on
us in this application, are
matters which more properly
belong to the hearing in the
High Court. This is because, it
is the High Court, which can
make a definitive finding on
which of the judgments in issue
is tainted by fraud and is for
that matter null and void. This
important preliminary
determination has to be made to
enable a determination at a
secondary level, whether the
conduct of any of the members of
the 2nd Interested Party’s
judicial committee in relation
to the judgments in contention,
was bona fide and within the
remit of regulation 13(2) of LI
798 and/or section 33(5) of Act
759 to justify a recourse to
these provisions as an
impervious armour.
Otherwise this Court has held in
a plethora of cases that a court
of law cannot shut its eyes to
violations of statute.
The famous dictum of Date Baah
JSC (as he then was) in Republic
vs. High Court (Fast Track
Division); Ex parte National
Lottery Authority (Ghana Lotto
Operators Association & Others
Interested Parties) (2009) SCGLR
390, wherein he said: “No
judge has authority to
grant immunity to a party from
the consequences of breaching an
Act of Parliament … The
judicial oath enjoins judges to
uphold the law, rather than
condoning breaches of Acts of
Parliament by their orders”,
would have been of moment if the
circumstances of this case were
appropriate. However, the case
of the Applicant even with the
aid of the 3rd and 4th
Interested Parties is a far cry
from situations that would
warrant the intervention of this
Court to invoke the cloak of
statutory immunity.
Even if the plaint of the
Applicant were to fall within
circumstances that will amount
to a breach of a statutory
immunity from liability in suit,
we are of the view that this
would have amounted to a
misjoinder and as such cannot be
held to invalidate the entire
proceedings before the High
Court, Sekondi to warrant a
recourse to certiorari and
prohibition. [See: Jonah v.
Duodu Kumi [2003-2004] SCGLR 50;
Dwamena Vrs Otoo and Others
Civil Motion No.: J4/47/2018
judgment dated 12 June 2019 and
Asante v Scanship Ghana Limited
Suit No.: J4/15/2013 judgment
dated 15 January 2014 among
others.]
We are strengthened in our
considered opinion that even if
the Applicant, as well as the
3rd and 4th Interested Parties,
had, by virtue of the statutory
exemption in Regulation 13(2) of
LI 798, been improperly joined
to the suit before the High
Court, Sekondi, the misjoinder
would not invalidate the entire
proceedings of the High Court to
warrant our supervisory
intervention.
Our power to exercise judicial
review is derived from Articles
2(1) and 130(1) of the 1992
Constitution and may be
exercised in respect of
legislative, executive and
judicial actions.
In the case of British
Airways v. Attorney-General
[1996-1997 SCGLR 547], Her
Ladyship Bamford-Addo JSC in her
opinion observed that the
Supreme Court’s supervisory
jurisdiction should be exercised
“in appropriate and deserving
cases in the interest of
justice.” She further remarked
that “… whenever in the course
of any matter brought before
this Court, it is found that
there exists in any lower Court
any matter which would in the
long run result in injustice or
in illegality, it is the duty of
the Court to at once intervene,
and issue orders and directions,
with a view to preventing such
illegalities or injustice even
before they occur.”
This means that in all cases
where we are called to exercise
this awesome jurisdiction, we
ought to do so only when it will
preempt an illegality, or an
injustice with the ultimate
effect of protecting the ends of
justice. Also see the cases of
Republic v Court of Appeal,
ex-parte Tsatsu Tsikata
[2005-2006] SCGLR 612, Republic
v. High Court, Accra; Ex Parte
Industrialization Fund for
Developing Countries [2003-2004]
1 SCGLR 312.
It is obvious from the
contentions of the parties, that
the matter pending before the
High Court, is an enquiry into
whether or not fraud, a toxic
illegality, was perpetuated to
orchestrate the alleged majority
judgment authored by the 3rd and
4th Interested Parties. An
invitation to intervene to quash
proceedings in such an enquiry
and prohibit same will be
subversive of our duty to use
our supervisory powers to
prevent illegalities and protect
the ends of justice. That is why
we have already indicated that
we shall decline such an
invitation.
In any event, the Applicant’s
overall conduct in the
circumstances of this case is
worth commenting on. No person,
natural or artificial, is
entitled to our supervisory
remedies as of right. We have
reiterated times without number
that the grant of orders of
certiorari is a matter of
judicial discretion except in
relation to nullities. This
Court, being a bastion of
justice, will not be dribbled
into using the very tools meant
to aid the administration of
justice, to occasion injustice.
It is for this reason that the
conduct of a party seeking our
discretionary remedy must be
considered in determining
whether or not a compelling case
has been made to ground a
favourable exercise of our
judicial discretion. It is our
considered opinion that the
conduct of the Applicant is one
which is undeserving of a
favourable exercise of our
discretion. The Applicant and
1st Interested Party were
convicted for contempt by the
High Court. In convicting the
Applicant, the High Court found
that the actions of the
Applicant also undermined or
defied the authority of the High
Court by prejudicing the pending
High Court case which is the
subject matter of this
application. What does the
Applicant hope to achieve with
the instant application before
us? By this application, he is
seeking to prevent the
Respondent High Court from
resolving the confusion
occasioned by alleged
conflicting judgements of the
Judicial Committee which the
Applicant himself chaired. We do
not think the Applicant has been
able to demonstrate that the
instant application is brought
in good faith to avert any
injustice or injury to him.
Conclusion
In the circumstances, we will
refuse this application as it is
wholly incompetent, umeritorious
and same is hereby dismissed.
E. Y. KULENDI
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME
COURT)
V. J. M. DOTSE
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME
COURT)
G. PWAMANG
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
A. M. A
DORDZIE (MRS.)
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
PROF. H. J. A. N. MENSA-BONSU
(MRS.)
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
COUNSEL
BAFFOUR DWUMAH FOR THE 2ND,
3RD AND 4TH
INTERESTED PARTIES.
GUSTAV ADDITINGTON FOR THE
APPLICANT.
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