06 Rep V BTC Exp Aborah574-582
06 Rep V BTC Exp Aborah574-582
06 Rep V BTC Exp Aborah574-582
COURT OF APPEAL
LAMPTEY, FORSTER, BENIN, JJA
8 DECEMBER 1994
State proceedings – Certiorari – Application for leave – Application to be
made within six months or as prescribed by statute – Court may extend
time – Or 59 r 3, High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 1954 (LN 140A).
State proceedings – Certiorari – Application for leave – Court granting
leave out of time – Respondent to apply to vacate order, not to appeal.
State proceedings – Certiorari – Application for leave – Application filed,
moved and granted on same day – Procedure irregular but not fatal -
Order 59 r 2(3), High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 1954 (LN 140A).
State proceedings – Certiorari – Application for leave – Objection to
application to be raised timeously – Or 59 r 21, High Court (Civil
Procedure) Rules 1954 (LN 140A).
Contempt of court – Committal – Application – Whether respondent may
object to regularity of application.
The applicant and some members of the royal family filed a petition
in the Ashanti Regional House of Chiefs challenging the election the
7th respondent as chief and applied for certiorari to quash the
proceedings of the traditional council nominating and electing him.
The application was filed, granted, drawn up and signed on the
same day and restrained the respondents from installing the 7th
respondent. Upon service of the order on them the respondents
proceeded to install the 7th respondent. The applicant applied for
leave to commit them for contempt. The motion paper did not
indicate the rule under which the applicant had applied but the
respondents did not raise the point. Rather they pleaded guilty and
the 2nd to the 6th respondents were committed to prison for a
month each. They appealed to the Court of Appeal.
Counsel for the appellant-respondents argued on appeal that the
application for leave was filed out of time and in violation of Order
59 r 21. Counsel for the applicant-respondent submitted that once
the order restraining the installation emanated from a superior court
it ought to have been obeyed until set aside. Furthermore Order 59 r
575 Ghana Bar Reports [1994-95] GBR
Held: (1) Under Order 59 r 3 leave could not be granted to apply for
certiorari unless the application was made not later than six months
after the date of the proceeding complained of or within such
shorter period as may be prescribed by enactment unless the court
extended time. The application was filed out of time. Eku alias
Condua III v Acquaah [1961] GLR 285, Danawi & Sons v Dako [1961]
GLR 72, SC, State v Asantehene’s Divisional Court B1, ex parte Kusada
[1963] 2 GLR 238, SC, Elliott v Thompson 33 LT 337, Republic v
National House of Chiefs, ex parte Faibil III [1984-86] 2 GLR 731, CA
referred to.
(2) Order 59 r 2(3) provided that an applicant for certiorari should
give notice of the application for leave to the registry not later than
the day preceding the application and lodge copies of the statement
and affidavit in the registry at the same time. Although the rule was
defaulted (as the application was heard on the day of filing) the
default did not nullify the proceedings. The rule was to enable the
registry process the application and afford the judge sufficient time
to study the application and prepare for the hearing. The judge had
the discretion to rule whether the default obstructed the hearing; the
respondent could also waive the default. Republic v Moffat, ex parte
Allotey [1971] 2 GLR 391 referred to.
(3) A party affected by an order made in violation of Order 59 rule
2(3) was entitled to apply to the court ex debito justitiae to vacate
the order but not to appeal. For it was in the interest of justice that
parties should exhaust available remedies at the trial before
embarking upon appeal. If the appellants believed that the order
granting leave was void they ought to have applied to the court to
vacate it in the first instance. State v Asantehene’s Divisional Court B1,
ex parte Kusada [1963] 2 GLR 238, SC, Republic v National House of
Chiefs, ex parte Faibil III [1984-86] 2 GLR 731, CA, Craig v Kanseen
[1948] 1 All ER 108, CA, Forfie v Seifah [1958] 1 All ER 289, PC, Mosi
v Bagyina [1963] 1 GLR 337, SC referred to.
(4) The application was made not under order 59 but under Order
44. Granting that it was made wrongfully under Order 59 the
respondent was entitled to have it set aside in the court below. No
party had a vested right in procedure. A party affected by a wrong
procedure ought to move the court timeously to set aside the
proceeding. Where such party participated in the proceeding to a
conclusion, such party would be deemed to have waived the
objection. The respondents ought to have applied under Order 70 r
2 to set aside the application when they were served, before taking a
576 Ghana Bar Reports [1994-95] GBR
Certain matters that ensued after this are not relevant to re-call
here except that the respondent and some members of the royal
family filed a petition on 10 February 1993, in the Ashanti Regional
House of Chiefs challenging the validity of the 7th respondent’s
election. Notwithstanding the pendency of that petition, it was the
respondent’s contention that the appellants, inter alia, were bent on
installing the Omanhene-elect as Omanhene. The respondent
therefore instituted prerogative proceedings for an order of
certiorari to quash the decisions of the council taken on 18 June
1992. The application ex parte, with an accompanying statement and
affidavit was filed on 15 February 1993 at 9.10 a.m. was moved the
same day and granted the same day. The order was also drawn up
and signed that same day.
It is this part of the order which gave rise to the contempt
proceedings: “It is hereby ordered that the respondents are
restrained forthwith from installing the 7th respondent (Nana Kwasi
Kobi) as Bekwaihene until the final determination of this suit.” The
respondent, on 25 February 1993 came back to that very court with a
motion on notice praying for an order requiring the respondents to
show cause why each of them should not be committed to prison for
contempt. The reason being that notwithstanding the court’s
restraining order the alleged contemnors went ahead and installed
the 7th respondent as Omanhene after they had been served with
the order. After an initial opposition all the appellants pleaded
guilty to being in contempt of the court. This they did by affidavit
filed with the court. As if to avoid any doubt, the court put all of
them into the witness stand to confirm on oath that they actually
intended to plead guilty and they did just that. The court therefore
sentenced them.
They have appealed to this court on several grounds out of which
only two were argued namely:
“(i) That the grant of leave to apply for an order of certiorari and
the order itself be declared incompetent, null and void and be set
aside.