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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. 201 of 2004
BETWEEN:
LEIASMANU
CULLWICK
Claimant
AND:
MRS
MARY LINI
First Defendant
AND:
JENNY
LIGO, ROBIN TRU
Second
Defendant
AND:
ANNET
MIAL, MARYANNE BANI, ROSALYN GARAE, NAOMI MALAU, ELIZABETH HOSEA, SUPIE FRANK,
LILY AMOS, YELO RUTH, MORRIS
KALORAN
Third Defendant
AND:
WESTPAC
BANK (VANUATU) LIMITED
Fourth
Defendant
AND:
ANZ
BANK (VANUATU) LIMITED
Fifth
Defendant
AND:
NATIONAL
BANK OF VANUATU
Sixth
Defendant
Coram: Justice P. I.
Treston
Mrs. Cullwick in person
(assisted by Ms. Temakon as Mackenzie
friend)
Mrs. Lini, Mrs. Ligo, Mrs.
True in person (assisted by Ms. Helen Wodak as Mackenzie
friend)
Date of hearing:
23
November
2004
Date of decision: 26 November
2004
JUDGMENT
APPLICATION
The
Claimant has filed an application for interim restraining orders as follows:
-
1. Order to restrain the Defendants from organizing the VNCW Board Meeting and Conference scheduled for 8th to 4th November 2004 until further order of the Court.
2. Order to maintain the Claimant as President of the Vanuatu National Council of Woman until further orders of the Court.
3. Order that the Claimant be responsible for the affairs of the VNCW until further orders of the Court.
4. Order to restrain the Defendants from disturbing the Claimant from undertaking her role as President of VNCW until further order of the Court.
As
it happens the Conference of the Vanuatu National Council of Women has been
adjourned until 9 to 10 December 2004 on the island
of Espiritu
Santo.
The grounds in support of
the application, are as follows: -
1. In Civil Case No. 51 of 2003, the Court held that the VNCW convene a conference to elect a President and the Claimant has been duly elected President of VNCW by the Conference held from the 16th to 18th of December 2003 in Port Vila
2. The Claimant had been terminated as President of VNCW by the First Defendant on or about 26th April 2004.
3. The VNCW Constitution provides under Article 8.3 that there are procedures to appoint an independent mediator to mediate when there is a conflict concerning the President before the President can be removed by two thirds majority of the Board however this was not followed.
4. Article 5 of the VNCW Constitution provides that the Claimant is a member of the Board of VNCW even if she is not the President however, she was never called to a meeting by the First, Second and Third Defendants and the Claimant has never been given an opportunity to be present at the Board meetings.
5. The First, Second and Third Defendants are calling a National Conference from 8th November to 14th November 2004 to elect a new President of the Vanuatu National Council of Women without the Claimant's knowledge and participation.
6. The Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Respondents had assisted the First, Second and Third Defendants to change the authorized signatories to VNCW Bank Accounts whereas Article 7.2 (1) (a) of the VNCW Constitution provides that the Claimant as President is a signatory and has the authority to authorize change the signatories to the Bank Accounts.
7. The Claimant had on or about May 2004 reported the matter to the Public Solicitor but nothing has been done concerning her termination as President of VNCW whereas the Public Solicitor had referred the misappropriation case to the Police but no positive action has been done by the Police to date.
The
application was opposed. Neither party applied to cross-examine the makers of
the sworn statements which were filed, all of which
the Court has considered in
full.
FACTS
The
Applicant has been a member of the Vanuatu National Council of Women ("VNCW")
Board since 1998. Last year she was also a Claimant
in Civil Case No. 51 of
2003. The Claimant has said that that case involved the same parties. That in
itself is an inaccuracy because
she was one of the three Claimants and, while
Jenny Ligo, Naomi Malau, Elizabeth Hosea, Supie Frank and Lily Amos together
with ANZ
Bank (Vanuatu) Limited and Westpac Bank (Vanuatu) Limited were
Defendants to the previous action, in the present application parties
are
different. Effectively the other case involved the previous Board of VNCW while
this case concerns the present Board together
with Mrs. Robyn True, and the
named banks.
At the last
conference of the VNCW in December 2003, the Claimant was duly elected President
by a margin of one and at that conference
a motion put forward by the Claimant
resolved that the costs of CC51/03 would be paid by VNCW. The Claimant's costs
came to the rather
extraordinary amount of VT750, 000 which included food
amounting to VT30, 000, fuel amounting to VT54, 000, secretarial work amounting
to VT150, 000 meeting and Court attendance amounting to VT150, 000 and unsocial
hours of work, communication costs and meeting with
the Defendants amounting to
VT250, 000. Significantly the invoice containing that amount from the Claimant
was dated 15/12/2003 which
was before the conference took place on 16 to 18
December 2003 and shows a certain amount of prescience. It seems that the
Claimant
anticipated that her invoice for payment of costs would be accepted
even before the conference took
place.
In any event, such an
application for costs is again extraordinary in the face of the decision of the
Court in the earlier action
when it was specifically said as follows:
-
"As to the question of costs, some of which have been reserved from time to time during the course of the hearing, I note that on one occasion the Court considered whether the action should be struck out for want of prosecution by the Claimants. I note that the members of VNCW, apart from the CEO and other staff, are largely voluntary workers giving generously of their time and support for furtherance of the aims of VNCW. I also add that, although the Claimants have required the Court to make a decision in relation to their claim, I am of the view that the rulings earlier made by the Court on 25 June 2003 largely answered their concerns and that with even a small amount of cooperation and working together with goodwill the issues could have been resolved internally months ago. I remind the parties that it is incumbent upon members of VNCW to remember and operate under the stated aims of their organization.
Having said all that, I consider that costs should lie where they fall and I make no order for costs one way or the other."
Certainly
the orders to facilitate the judgment of 21 October 2003 included this ruling:
-
"That the National Conference can vote on the question of the expenses in relation to this action".
Clearly
expenses are different to costs and under Rule 15.4 of the Civil Procedure Rules
No. 49 of 2002 ("the Rules"), a party who
is not represented by a lawyer may
recover disbursements but is not entitled to recover costs. Expenses are the
same as disbursement
and it seems to me totally inappropriate that a largely
non-profit organization (see Article 1.4 of the constitution of VNCW) should
have to fund the costs of a private action brought by its
members.
However it is clear the
in the 2003 resolution the conference agreed that the costs of the case be paid
by VNCW. Significantly a further
resolution was as follows: -
"In the future VNCW solve (sic) disputes without going to Court."
The
first Board meeting after the 2003 National Conference and AGM took place on
Friday 19 December 2003, the Board discussed the
date of the next Board meeting
and said it was important for the next Board meeting to review the finances of
VNCW and matters to
go before the Board, and at that meeting Mary Lini spoke to
the Claimant and said that she did not think that the VT750, 000 should
be paid
to the Claimant until they had had a proper look at the budget and their
accounts. She said that they would not have a chance
to do that until the next
Board meeting. It was as a result of that that the Board agreed that financial
matters in relation to the
budget should be discussed at the 19 January 2004
meeting.
However, shortly after
that the Claimant, as president arranged with Annett Mial, the elected treasurer
of VNCW, to sign a cash cheque
of VT750, 000 that was subsequently cancelled
because at the time Mrs. Mial was not a signatory to the account. However, on 23
December
2003, it seems from the evidence of Paula Aruhuri, financial officer of
VNCW at the time, that the Claimant arranged for a cheque
to be signed for the
VT750, 000 even though the Board had not approved it and this was discussed in
the presence of Jenny Ligo and
the Claimant and the cheque was paid out on the
same day.
As a result of that the
Board at its next meeting on 19 January 2004 noted through Mary Lini the vice
president, that although the
Conference had approve the spending of VT750, 000,
the Board had not received an invoice for that expense and was not requested to
approved that spending. It was her concern that the president did not advice the
vice-president and the treasurer of this transaction
and the Board considered
that a conflict of interest situation with regard to the Claimant had arisen and
she should not be present
while the Board dealt with financial matters that she
was directly involved with.
It
seems that the president said that the Board was making a big issue about
finance and spending too much time on finance
issues.
The meeting continued on
20 January 2004 and the Claimant was asked to remove herself from the meeting
due to her conflict of interest
in the matters to be discussed. Decisions were
made that a letter should be sent to the Claimant requesting her to return the
VT750,
000 to the VNCW or to produce an itemized account with receipts by 23
January. The Board considered that the account was not legitimate
and was
grossly inflated, there was also another issue concerning other expenditure made
by the Claimant.
At the hearing the Claimant confirmed
that she has never furnished the receipts and the detail of expenditure
contained in the VT750,
000 and has never returned the
moneys.
As a serious dispute had
arisen the Claimant was to remove herself from the Board meeting. Various
meetings were set up for the Board
to meet the Claimant on 29 January and 16
February 2004 but she either refused to attend or gave unsatisfactory excuses
and did not
show up.
Thereafter
arrangements were made for mediation in accordance with the constitution but
despite being give notification the Claimant
did not attend on 20 February 2004.
Another date was set when the Board attended but the Claimant did not and the
mediation proceeded
in her
absence.
On 10 March 2004, in a
telephone vote all Board members but one, who declined to vote, agreed that the
Claimant should be removed
from her position as president of VNCW
Board.
The decision was confirmed
to the Claimant by a letter from VNCW of 26 April
2004.
SUBMISSIONS
The
Claimant submitted that a president could only be removed at a Board meeting and
that a telephone vote could not be valid or
appropriate.
The Claimant also
submitted that the mediation process had not been properly carried out because
it was the mediator who should have
contacted both parties. She choose not to go
because the notification of mediation was from the vice president. The Claimant
also
complained that she had never been informed who the mediator was, and, as
the mediator named had been peripherally involved in Civil
Case 51/03, she was
disqualified.
The Defendants
argued that the dispute resolution procedure had been followed but the Claimant
choose not to attend any of the scheduled
meetings or mediations and that the
voting procedure of removing the president was valid because it was conducted
under the particular
article which did not require such a vote to occur at a
meeting of the
Board.
PRELIMINARY
MATTERS
Prior to the hearing the
Defendant Robyn True (referred to as "Robin Tru")applied to the Court to be
removed from the case. The Defendant
said that she was a CUSO volunteer advisor
to the Board, management and staff of VNCW and not a member of the Board of
Directors
and did not attend regular meetings and had no standing or
responsibility for the financial management or the decisions made by the
Board.
This application was
opposed by the Claimant who indicated that it was clear that Ms. True had
assisted the Board in composing letters
and had signed some
documents.
The question of removal
of a party from a case is covered by Rules 3.2(2) (a)(b) of the Rules where it
is set out as follows: -
"The court may order that a party to a proceeding is no longer a party if:
(a) the person's presence is not necessary to enable the court to make a decision fairly and effectively in the proceeding; or
(b) for any other reason the court considers that the person should not be a party to the proceeding."
The
Court was satisfied that Ms. True's presence was not necessary to enable the
Court to make a decision fairly and effectively in
the proceeding. She had no
capacity of decision making in the VNCW, she could also not be bound by any of
the orders sought by the
Claimant. I directed that she was no longer a
party.
Although Westpac Bank
(Vanuatu) Limited, ANZ Bank (Vanuatu) Limited and National Bank of Vanuatu were
cited as parties, it is also
clear that they ought to be removed as parties.
There was no relief sought against those parties. Although they were served with
the application only the National Bank of Vanuatu filed a notice of beginning to
act through its solicitor Mr. Morrison. Mr. Morrison
did not attend the
hearing.
Each of those Defendants,
namely the fourth, fifth and six Defendants is also removed as a party and I
make no orders as to costs
because none was
sought.
FINDINGS
Article
5.2(3) of the Constitution of VNCW provides as follows: -
"A member of the Board cannot serve for longer than two consecutive terms"
In
her own sworn statement and at the hearing, the Claimant conceded that she has
been a member of the Board for three consecutive
two year terms namely from 1998
to the present time. Her presence on the Board, then, has been contrary to the
constitution and consequently
she has no status to apply to this Court to grant
any order making her president to be responsible for the affairs of the VNCW
without
disturbance. She is not even currently eligible under the Constitution
itself to be a Board member.
The
Claimant argued that others are in the same situation. That is irrelevant as far
as her situation is concerned and no doubt VNCW
will regularize the situation as
to the membership of the Board according to the Constitution at its next
conference.
Effectively that
disposes of the Applicant's application but for completeness I turn to deal with
her other submissions.
I earlier
indicated that one of the resolutions of the last conference in December 2003
was that in the future VNCW should solve disputes
without going to Court. The
Applicant has applied to Court contrary to that resolution although she claimed
that her rights had been
infringed but really she has no right to come back to
the Court and to impose further expense on
VNCW.
As to the Claimant's
contention that she was wrongly excluded from the meetings because of conflict
of interest and that the dispute
procedure was not correctly carried out, it
clearly was a conflict of interest situation. While the conference in its
resolution
had agreed that the costs of the current case be paid by VNCW it was
clear that the Claimant had never received the approval of the
Board to the
payment. Article 5.6(3) provides as follows: -
"All expenditures and financial commitments in excess of VT200, 000 are to be approved by the Board prior to spending"
Even
though there had been a resolution for payment of the costs, and I have already
commented about that, that resolution was subject
to Board approval because it
was in excess of the amount contained in the constitution. The reason for that
is clear. If there is
a resolution by the conference as to expenditure it needs
to be checked and properly verified by the Board. The Board had not approved
the
payment of costs to the Claimant. The Claimant took it upon herself, knowing
that she did not have the Board approval, and arranged
for payment to herself
immediately after the first Board meeting and is for that reason that the Board
ruled that there was a conflict
of interest. It was admitted that she has never
made available detailed receipts in relation to the amount sought for
verification
by Board, and it was not surprising that she was excluded from the
Board meeting in discussing the matter of the costs. She was asked
to return the
funds or to provide proper verification. She has declined to do
either.
In fact in that
circumstance where the Claimant failed to abide by the decision taken by the
Board to discuss financial matters at
the next Board meeting she should have
resigned from the Board in accordance with article 5.6 (9) which provides:
-
"Once the Board has taken a decision, all members must abide by the decision and speak with one voice. If a Board member cannot abide by the decision taken by the Board, she or he must resign from the Board".
The
Claimant has failed to do the honourable thing in accordance with that
article.
The process to resolve
dispute is contained in Article 8.2, which provides as follows: -
"DISPUTES
(1) Disputes are to be resolved by co-operative discussion at meetings of the Board, held in accordance with the procedures set out in this Constitution.
(2) If there is any dispute involving the Board of Director, the Board is to convene a meeting immediately to resolve the dispute.
(3) Once the Board votes on a matter, all Board of Directors and disputing parties are bound by the Board's decision, and must act in accordance with that decision. However, it does not prevent the disputing parties from raising the matter at a meeting of National Conference.
(4) If the dispute is between staff members, the Chief Executive Officer may deal with the matter following the instructions in the Staff Manual."
A
meeting had been arranged but the Claimant did not
attend.
The matter then proceeded
to mediation and Article 8.3 provides as follows: -
"Mediator
(1) If the dispute is not resolved, the matter may go to mediation.
(2) The role of the mediator is to reach a friendly and satisfactory resolution of the dispute, in the spirit of this Constitution and the aims of VNCW.
(3) The mediator and parties to a dispute are encouraged to place their loyalty to VNCW before their private view, and to keep the dispute, as far as possible, a private matter to be dealt with within VNCW rather than in the public area.
(4) The mediator is to:
(a) discuss the matters involved in the dispute with each of the disputing parties separately, as often as is necessary; and
(b) arrange a meeting between the disputing parties at a reasonable time; and
(c) at the meeting, encourage harmonious and meaningful discussions between the parties with a view resolving the disputes.
(5) In a dispute that does not involve the President, the President is to appoint a person to act as mediator (whether a member of VNCW or not). If the President is involved, the Board is to appoint a mediator who cannot be a member of the VNCW. The President is not entitled to vote on the matter.
(6) If the dispute is not resolved after mediation, the Board members concerned may be removed from office by a vote of two-thirds of the Board of Directors.
(7) If the removed member is the President, the National Conference shall appoint a new President. The Vice-President is to act as President until the next National Conference.
(8) If the dispute involves a criminal offence, the Board or any member must refer the matter to the police."
Despite
being given a number of chances the Claimant did not attend mediation, and she
simply relies on the fact that it was not the
mediator who had arranged the
meeting between disputing parties at a reasonable time. The Claimant was given
proper notice of the
meetings for mediation and, although that notice was given
to her by the vice president, she did not attend. There is nothing in
the
constitution to say that the mediator cannot arrange a meeting between the
disputing parties through another official such as
the vice president. I am
satisfied that the mediation process was in accordance with the
constitution.
In Article 8.3 (6)
it is provided that a removal from office can occur by a vote of two thirds of
the Board of Directors. I agree
that Article 8.3(6) does not require the vote to
take place at a meeting of the Board. It is a separate procedure involving a
resolution
of a dispute by mediation. I am satisfied that a vote may indeed be
taken by telephone. That is particularly so in relation to an
organization such
as VNCW. Common sense should prevail and it is far too expensive for VNCW to
arrange to bring in members to Port
Vila from their respective islands. I am
satisfied that the procedure was carried out correctly and that the Claimant was
quite properly
removed from her office as president by a vote of two-third of
the Board of Directors.
The first
order that the Claimant seeks is for the Court to restrain the Defendants from
organizing the VNCW National Conference this
year. This is it self contrary to
the Constitution because it is provided in Article 1(1) that the National
Conference of VNCW must
be held once a year. The last conference was held on 16
to 18 December 2003. The proposed conference is to be held in Santo on 9
to 10
December 2004. If that conference were restrained the Article would be
breached.
I am satisfied that any
potentially criminal matter has been referred to the
police.
CONCLUSION
For
all the above reasons, the application for interim restraining orders is
declined. The Court understands that certain banks may
have frozen the accounts
of VNCW. Any restriction should be immediately
lifted.
Throughout the hearing the
Claimant referred to the Constitution and in particular article 8.1 (1) which
states: -
"It is the aim of this Constitution that members of the VNCW conduct themselves in the spirit of harmony, cooperation and friendliness, to further and uphold the aims of VNCW."
With
the greatest respect to the Applicant, she has referred to this admirable
concept more than once during her submissions but has
failed to put the
philosophy into practice and seems to be putting her own interests ahead of
VNCW.
Dated AT
PORT VILA, this
26th
day of November 2004
BY THE COURT
P.
I.
TRESTON
Judge
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