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Supreme Court of Vanuatu |
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IN
THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF
VANUATU
(Civil
Jurisdiction)
Civil Case No. 195 of 2003.
BETWEEN:
CYCLAMEN
LIMITED
Plaintiff
AND:
THE
PORT VILA MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
Defendant
JUDGMENT
The claimant has applied on an urgent basis to this Court
for mandatory orders requiring the defendant to make a decision on or before
Friday 12 December 2003 in respect of the claimant’s application of 21
October 2003 for the extension of its approved building
permit and its
application of 17 November 2003 for usage of the premises under classes two and
three of the Physical Planning Act [CAP. 193].
The claimant claims that
the delay of approximately 5 weeks since the lodging of its first application
and about 3 weeks for the second
application is an unreasonable delay. The
Council has not exercised its powers under the Physical Planning Act in a
reasonable and timely manner, and, the Court has jurisdiction to compel the
defendant to carry out its functions who is by law
compelled to carry out.
The defendant submitted that the claimant has no standing to come to the
Court at this time and ask the Court to intervene. Defendant
submits further
that the rule in judicial review is that there must first be a decision by the
decision maker entitled in law to
make such a decision. If the decision infringe
on the rights of the claimant, then the claimant can apply to the Courts for
redress.
Until such time there is no urgency in the matter to warrant the Courts
intervention. The defendant further submitted that the exercise
of relevant
powers under the Physical Planning Act are subject to consultations with certain
Government Departments. That a procedure is in place to facilitate consultations
and that
the claimant is aware of this.
The claim before this Court are
twofold. Firstly that there is an urgency to deal with the claimant’s
applications. Delays are
causing harm to the claimant. Secondly, that the length
of delay is unreasonable and that the defendant has not exercised its powers
under the Physical Planning Act [CAP. 193] in a reasonable and timely manner.
The defendant is the authority under the Physical Planning Act [CAP.
193] to determine applications for development within the Port Vila Physical
Planning area. In the oral submissions before
the Court and in the documents
before the Court it is acknowledged that the defendant must consult certain
Government Departments
before it can finally make a decision on the
claimant’s applications. The defendant needs to take into account relevant
matters
to reach a decision and as such must consult others. The arrangement in
place may be cumbersome and slow but that does not mean that
the defendant has
refused to determine the claimant’s application, or just letting it lie
there without dealing with it. The
defendant is willing to consider and
determine the applications and has commenced the process to do so.
In
the circumstances, can the Court intervene?
The defendant's powers are
discretionary powers. The purpose of a Writ of Mandamus, now called a mandatory
order under the Civil Procedure
Rules of 2002, is to compel a person or
authority to whom it is directed to perform some act which he or it is under a
legal duty
to perform. However, where the person or authority is vested with a
discretion, a mandatory order will not lie to compel the person
or authority to
exercise the discretion so as to attain any particular result. It will, however,
issue to compel the discretion to
be exercised.
Mandamus however, will
only issue to command the performance of a duty when the Court is in a position
to see that its command has
been carried out. In the present case the Court is
not satisfied that if mandamus or mandatory orders are granted that the
defendant
can perform the duty being asked of it to be performed in the time
suggested that is on or before 12 December 2003. The exercise
of that duty is
subject to views or decisions of other entities of which the defendant has no
control or say whatsoever. This is
not contested before this Court.
The
Court is not satisfied that in the circumstances it is proper, or that the
matter has reached a point in time when the Court must
intervene. Information in
documents submitted and oral submissions made have not shown what it is that the
defendant must receive
and from which Government Departments to assist the Court
to reach an opinion whether the length of time it is taking before the
defendant
can make a decision is unreasonable. Therefore the claim for a mandatory order
requiring the defendant to make a decision
on or before Friday 12 December 2003
in respect of the claimant’s application of 21 October 2003 for extension
of its approved
building permit and the claimant’s application of 17
November 2003 for usage of the Physical Planning Act [CAP. 193], and other
relief, is struck out.
Each party to pay its own costs.
Dated at Port Vila, this
8th
day of December 2003.
H.
BULU
Judge.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUSC/2003/97.html