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IN
THE SUPREME
COURT
OF THE
REPUBLIC OF VANUATU
(Civil
Jurisdiction)
Civil Case No 71 of 2000
BETWEEN:
NOEL
BERRY
Claimant
AND:
ALICK
SOALO
Defendant
Coram: Justice C.N.
Tuohy
Dates of Hearing: 12 March
2007
Date of Decision: 12 March 2007
Council: Mr. Toa for
Claimant
Mr. Kilu for Defendant
ORAL JUDGMENT
I have heard in Chambers
today argument in relation to a four fold application filed by Mr. Soalo, the
Defendant in this proceeding.
The application is headed "To suspend enforcement
proceeding, to stay execution of judgment, to invoke the Court’s inherent
powers and to obtain leave to appeal out of time". In effect it is the latter
two of those which are the important applications because
whether the judgment
is enforced or suspended or execution stayed depends on what the Court decides
in relation to the last two applications.
The application to invoke
inherent powers is in effect an application to hear again the application
decided by Justice Treston on
1 August 2006, that is, an application for a
re-hearing of the trial to assess the amount of damages which took place on1
February
2006.
The last
application is an alternative to that one which is for leave to appeal out time
against Justice Treston’s decision
of 1 August 2006 in which he declined
to re-hear the trial of 1 February 2006.
I have decided to refuse the
first of those applications but to grant the second of them. I will give full
reasons in writing as soon
as I have the opportunity. I am giving these reasons
orally to the parties now so that they will have some understanding of the
decision
today. I am also giving it orally because granting leave to appeal will
require very quick action on Mr. Soalo’s part to get
a case ready for the
Court of Appeal session starting on 26 March 2007.
Returning to the first
application to invoke the Court inherent power, I cannot escape the conclusion
that Mr. Kilu’s argument
here really is asking the Supreme Court to hear
an appeal against a decision of the Supreme Court. The case he relied upon,
Fujitsu (NZ) Limited
v. International Business Solutions
Limited, CAC 07 of 1998, his authority
for the proposition that a Court has the power to order a rehearing and set
aside a judgment given
after trial in the absence of one party. It is authority
that Justice Treston had the jurisdiction on 1 August 2006 to reach the
opposite
decision to the one which he made. However, it is not authority that I can
re-hear the argument that Justice Treston dealt
with on 1 August and come to
different conclusion to him on the exactly the same facts. But this is what Mr.
Kilu is asking me to
do. There is no authority for it in the Rules that I have
been referred to and no authority in precedent for that to be done, and
it seems
to breach the basic principle that the only appeal against a decision of a Court
is to a higher Court, not to another person
sitting in the same Court. So I
refuse that application.
However,
the second application is an application for leave to appeal Justice
Treston’s decision of 1 August 2006 out of time.
In my view there is a
right to appeal that decision given under the Court of Appeal Rules 1973. It was
an effect a final decision
in the sense that it brought to a conclusion the
proceeding in the Supreme Court.
The time for filing given by the
Court of Appeal Rules 1973 is 30 days. Under Rules 4 and 9, there is provision
for this Court, indeed
the Court of Appeal itself, to enlarge that time. The
time for filing an appeal as of right expired on or about 31 August. Mr. Kilu
has said that the judgement of 1 August took some time to get to Mr. Soalo
because of the place where he lives which is in a village
behind the Airport at
Bauerfield. I am not impressed with that. It is not difficult for messages to be
given to people living in
places like that within a matter of hours at most. I
feel confident that Mr. Soalo learnt about the decision of 1 August within hours
or a short time from the time it was delivered. Mr. Soalo appeared at the
Enforcement Conference on 11 September which was my first
contact with the case.
That was only 11 or 12 days after the time for filing an appeal had expired.
However, Mr. Soalo appeared on
that occasion without the benefit of counsel and I spent some time explaining to
him that the process
was really completed at that stage, as it was. On 13
October, which was the next conference, Mr. Kilu did appear for Mr. Soalo. Mr.
Kilu then indicated that he wished to apply for suspension of enforcement of the
judgment and that he intended to apply to the Court
to review Justice
Treston’s decision. At that time I queried the jurisdiction for the Court
to review its own decision. As
I have just decided, I have found that the Court
does not have the power to review its own decision or, to put in another way, to
sit on appeal on the decision of another Judge of this Court. I suggested then
to Mr. Kilu that, if he had any remedy, it was an
appeal to Court of Appeal
against the decision of 1 August and pointed out to him that that itself was out
of time. Finally an application
for leave to appeal out of time was not filed
until 28 November which is really unacceptable given the great concern that Mr.
Soalo
has in this case that the original judgment is unfair to him and has the
potential to effectively destroy the foundation of his family’s
lives by
taking away from him his customary land. That is the position that he is
presenting to the Court. In those circumstances
it is very surprising that there
was delay in filing an appeal against Justice Treston’s decision of 1
August and further delay
after the Court had made it clear that this was remedy
which should be considered.
Nevertheless, I intend to grant
leave, as I mentioned already, for the appeal to be filed out of time to the
Court of Appeal. The
reason for that is because I consider that in the interests
of justice, Mr. Soalo should be permitted to fully argue before the highest
Court in the land whether or not he can have another chance to dispute the
amount of damages in this case, despite his non-appearance
at the original trial
when that was done in 2001 and the non-appearance the second time in February
2006. Why I believe it is in
the interests of justice is because of a number of
reasons: first, the amount involved here is a very large sum and the effect of
the judgment is incredibly important to both parties. The judgment certainly
does have the potential for Mr. Soalo to lose, not his
customary land, but the
leasehold interest that he has in his customary land. Secondly, It seems to me
that the fault for non-appearance
on 1 February may well not have been Mr.
Soalo’s personally, but his legal advisor’s. Thirdly, I have noted
that in the
judgment of 1 February 2006, Justice Treston did not seem to bring
to bear his own mind and asses quantum on the basis of all the
evidence that has
been put before the Court between 2001 and 2006. Rather he simply reinstated the
judgement of Justice Marum. So
that I am not sure whether in fact a judicial
mind has been directed towards actually fixing the amount of damages in this
case based
on whole updated evidence before the Court. Rather its seems to me
that Justice Treston simply reinstated the judgment of Justice
Marum. I think
there is a difference between simply reinstating the whole judgment and
assessing the matter anew and coming to a
decision. I am not sure whether
Justice Treston did come to his own decision of 1 February 2006 as opposed to
simply reinstating
the original judgment because there was no one there on
behalf of Mr. Soalo. So I have a concern that Mr. Soalo may possibly suffer
some
injustice if he is not given his final chance to attempt to convince the highest
Court in the land that he should be allowed
to have a further trial about the
amount of damages.
Now I have
given an early hearing to this present application and make this decision orally
because I am well aware that a Court of
Appeal session is coming in the next two
or three weeks. My intention is that the appeal against Justice Treston’s
decision
of 1 August will be heard in this session. I do not intend at this
stage to stay execution of the original judgment or suspend enforcement
action.
The reason is because, if Mr. Soalo fails to prosecute the appeal which I grant
him leave to bring out of time quickly, diligently
and expeditiously and fails
to get it into this session of the Court of Appeal, he may find that the
original judgment will be enforced
pending his appeal anyway. So Mr. Soalo and
his advisers will be required to file an appeal book by the end of this week.
That should
not be difficult. The appeal is only against the 1 February
decision. The appeal does not ask the Court of Appeal to decide the quantum
of
damages. All the appeal is about is whether Judge Treston’s decision of 1
August should stand or be reversed. All the material
required is already on
file. No sworn statements have to be prepared. All that is necessary is the
notice of appeal to be filed,
because it still has not been, along with a copy
of the order I have just made granting leave for it to be filed out of time
together
with the judgment of 1 August which the appeal is against, together
with the sworn statements or other material necessary to argue
an appeal against
the judgment of 1 August 2006. All that needs to be put in an appeal book and
filed by Friday. I repeat if that
is not done in time, if the appeal is not done
in the next session, it is likely that the Court will not stay the judgment
pending
a hearing of the appeal sometime in the never-never because the basic
law says a decision stands unless and until overturned by the
Court of Appeal
and the basic law says a party that has a judgment is entitled to the fruit of
the judgment even if an appeal is
pending.
ADDENDUM:
Having reviewed this transcript of my oral judgement I see no reason to add any
further written
reasons.
Dated
AT PORT VILA on 26 March 2007
BY THE COURT
C.N.TUOHY
Judge
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