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There is massive rot at
A-G's dept - Martin Amidu
* Source:
CitiFMonline
A former Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Martin Amidu,
has once again waded into the controversial $1.5 billion being
demanded by African Automobile Limited for some gallopers they
imported for government in 2001.
Touching on several issues including claims that the State wanted
to settle the case out of court, Mr. Amidu, who has been firing
salvos recently over certain legal issues said there is massive rot
at his former office.
Below is his full statement unedited
MARTIN AMIDU ON GALLOPERS, SETTLEMENTS AND THE HALLOWED TRADITIONS
OF THE OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL: BY MARTIN A. B. K.
AMIDU
I have read and heard various versions of the story, narrative, and
discourse on what the former Minister of Local Government and Rural
Development describes as: “Press Statement, The Galloper II
Vehicles.” July 2011 features prominently as the month in which a
decision was made to discontinue or hold in abeyance the
continuation of the case in Court to explore a possible settlement.
In this regard, his matter touches upon the period of my tenure as
the Attorney-General of the Republic of Ghana under Article 88 of
the 1992 Constitution for which I am personally accountable to the
people of Ghana for my conduct in office. I, therefore, have to
speak out on this matter.
I took over as the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice on
21st January 2011 to 19th January 2012. Within the period that I
was the Attorney-General under Article 88 of the Constitution I had
the sole and personal responsibility under my oath of office for
the running of the Attorney-General’s Department. Unlike Article 79
of the Constitution, Article 88 does not establish a position of a
Deputy Attorney-General. Even in the case of the ordinary
Ministerial level, the Chief of Staff wasted no time in reminding
Deputy Ministers that they could not under the Constitution write
or sign letters in their own capacity as Deputy Ministers. They had
to do so only upon the instructions or the authority of the
Minister under Article 78 and on behalf of the Minister.
The Joy News editor, Samson Lardy Ayenini, in an article on
myjoyonline.com of 6th July 2012 claims to have gone through the
stack of court documents on the Gallopers and states that African
Automobile Limited “filed the writ in 2005”, and I believe, a
statement of claim as well. This is because he adds that: “but the
A-G at the time filed a defence, making a counter-claim.” He later
gives a narration of the content of African Automobile Limited’s
Statement of Claim after which he states to my utter shock and
surprise that: “In July 2011, African Automobile Ltd. applied to
the court to discontinue with the case stating the possibility of
settlement negotiations.” I have been shocked and amazed because if
in July 2011 the Attorney-General had a defence and counter-claim
in the suit the only person who could have given express authority
for the Attorney-General’s office to accept any offer to hold the
case in abeyance to attempt an out of Court settlement was myself,
the Attorney-General at the time. In my unavoidable absence for
whatever reasons the President had to specifically appoint in
writing another Minister to double as Minister of Justice (not as
Attorney-General) to act in my place with a copy of the letter to
me to enable me hand over to that Minister.
No such temporary appointment took place in July 2011. Neither the
Deputy Attorney-General, Hon. Barton Odro, MP, who took liberties
for claiming to hail from Cape Coast with the President of the
Republic nor the Solicitor-General, Mrs. Amma Gaisie had the
constitutional authority under Article 88 to make such an important
and critical decision which could cost millions of Ghana Cedis to
the Republic without my expressed concurrence and in writing. I
make bold to say that not even the President who appointed me as
the Attorney-General could under Article 88 of the Constitution
delegate my constitutional functions as the Attorney-General to any
other person or authority without first relieving me of my
appointment by express revocation of my warrant of
appointment.
This is why I state unequivocally that any decision by anybody to
hold in abeyance the conduct of the case between African Automobile
Limited Vs. the Attorney-General in July 2011 which was not made by
me, as the Attorney-General, was unconstitutional, fraudulent, null
and void as contravening Article 1(2) of the Constitution. It could
only have been intended to promote some self serving purpose by the
person or persons who took the decision in violation of Article 88
of the Constitution particularly, sub-clause (5) thereof.
And I wish to state for the avoidance of doubt that no file on the
case involving the Galloper II Vehicles was ever submitted to me as
Attorney-General with recommendations for any decision whatsoever.
I challenge the Deputy Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General
during my tenure of office to produce evidence to the public that
the file on the Gallopers was ever brought to my attention as the
Attorney-General for any action and my instructions thereon to have
warranted an agreement in July 2011 to enter into settlement
discussions on behalf of the Republic of Ghana. If there is no such
evidence on the file, then, the Deputy Attorney-General, Hon.
Barton Odro, and the Solicitor-General, Mrs. Amma Gaisie, have some
explaining to do to the people of Ghana; how come the case was
discontinued or held in abeyance for settlement without authority
from the Attorney-General?
If the alleged discontinuance or holding of the case in abeyance
was done unconstitutionally it will follow that my successor cannot
rectify a void and unconstitutional act by any usurpers of the
authority granted the Attorney-General under Article 88. Any
experienced legal practitioner assuming the office of the
Attorney-General must have satisfied himself by now that any
on-going settlements he inherited were properly authorized by the
person with Constitutional authority to do so. The Deputy
Attorney-General, Hon. Barton Odro, and the Solicitor-General, know
that I always insisted that whatever I continued from my
predecessor was properly authorized in accordance with the law
since I had personal responsibility for whatever happened during my
tenure. No Commission of Enquiry or Court would take the excuse
that ones predecessor breached the Constitution so one also
continued to do so.
In accordance with the hallowed tradition of the Attorney-General’s
office the Deputy Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General should
state whether or not the holding of the case in abeyance for
settlement negotiations was initiated by the Attorneys directly
handling the case in the Court or upon instructions from either of
them. If the Attorneys handling the case initiated the negotiations
for settlement there must be memoranda coming up to the
Solicitor-General and beyond stating the necessity for a
settlement. If it was initiated from the Deputy Attorney-General or
the Solicitor-General there must similarly be a memorandum or
memoranda to the Attorney-General recommending the necessity for a
settlement. The Deputy Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General
know that this was the procedure adopted when recommendations were
made to me on 11th November 2011 to consider the proposals for
withdrawal of the case of Attorney-General Vs. Alfred Agbesi Woyome
from the High Court for settlement negotiations which I refused,
for good legal reasons, to withdraw.
I had been a Deputy Attorney-General and Deputy Minister for
Justice for upwards of twelve and half years and know more than
anybody else the limits of the authority a Deputy Attorney-General
and the Solicitor-General. Consequently, I did not waste time when
I assumed office as the Attorney-General in reminding the Deputy
Attorney-General, Hon. Barton Odro, MP and the Solicitor-General,
Mrs. Amma Gaisie, that I would not take responsibility for any
actions or omissions by either of them or those working up to them
unless the acts or omission were done with my knowledge and express
authorization. The situation I met at the Attorney-General’s office
upon my first briefings when I took over as the Attorney-General
justified my insistence that no major decisions that committed the
Republic to the settlement and payment of money or so called debt
was done without my express authority.
It is on record that I refused to endorse a number of so called
settlement agreements that were forwarded to me by the
Solicitor-General either directly or through the Deputy
Attorney-General because there was no evidence of authorization
either from my predecessor or myself for entering into the
settlement agreement or that my predecessor’s instructions had
overlooked aspects of the Constitution or the law. There were other
written records of cases file in which I refused to endorse and
forward to the Minister for Finance and Economic Planning for
payment of settlements purportedly entered into by junior Attorneys
without any indication on file of their authority to commit the
Republic of Ghana to such debts.
There is also evidence of several memoranda I wrote to the Deputy
Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General asking for explanations
for the Republic having to pay certain settlements or judgment
debts which were never answered in spite of reminders. Some of
these memoranda related to other African Automobile Limited
judgments in which the Court of Appeal or High Court had had to
make adverse comments about the performance of the Attorneys who
represented the office in Court.
The Deputy Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General knew that my
general attitude to cases pending in the Courts was to allow the
Court to decide rather than settle them out of Court, abuse the
Court process and fool the electorate and general public by
transforming them into consent judgments granted by the Court. I
also insisted that in the exceptional cases in which the office had
to consider settlement of cases out of Court the settlement
proposal had to be accompanied by a written memorandum citing
relevant precedents for the conclusions reached, coming from the
Attorney handling the case through his Head of Group to the
Solicitor-General to the Deputy-Attorney-General and then to me,
the Attorney-General for consideration and final decision. I
reminded the Solicitor-General several times that this was the
hallowed practice of the Attorney-General’s Office in settling
cases for purposes of probity, accountability and transparency in
discharging the burdensome and onerous duty in approving payments
from the Consolidated Fund. I told the Deputy Attorney-General who
was making his first stint as a Deputy Attorney-General that the
practice was evolved to prevent putting temptation in the path of
the Attorney-General in just assigning any figures to cases to
settle at his whims. This brings the Attorney-General into
unnecessary suspicion and disrepute in the exercise of his quasi
judicial functions.
I had the misfortune of entering into an office where a long and
hallowed tradition of settlement or legal decision making being
accompanied by legal justifications from the bottom-up that enabled
the Attorney-General within his busy schedule to make informed
decisions had been abandoned. A number of debt settlements that had
been signed by the Deputy Attorney-General and letters signed to
the Minister of Finance and Economic Planning for payment had no
memoranda attached to them to show the legal basis of arriving at
the settlements. A number of other settlements by the
Attorney-General and letters to the Ministry of Finance and
Economic Planning also had no memoranda supporting how the
settlements and figures were arrived at.
In a number of written responses from the Solicitor-General to some
of my memos she disclaimed any knowledge about how the figures were
arrived at or even her being allowed making her views known on the
matters. That was why I wanted the right thing to be done in
accordance with the hallowed traditions of the Attorney-General’s
office, in which I had practiced as Deputy Attorney-General for
over a decade, during my tenure of office as Attorney-General. It
saves one’s integrity and indemnifies one against corrupt
practices.
After 23rd December 2011 when President was busy diverting the
electorate’s attention from the crimes involved in the Woyome
payments to those who created the liabilities, Hon. Barton Odro,
the Deputy Attorney-General, had the boldness, without any direct
or express authority from me since I took over as the
Attorney-General to work out and arrive at a settlement of GH¢38
million plus for alleged wrongful dismissal of workers of the
National Mobilization Progamme by Mr. Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey in a
pending Court case that had been brought by the dismissed workers
against the Attorney-General.
I queried the settlement and instructed that the Court be allowed
to determine whether or not there was wrongful dismissal. I pointed
out that unless the Court determined that Mr. Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey
had indeed wrongfully dismissed the workers it was full hardy for
me as the Attorney-General to settle the matter on the basis of
wrongful dismissal and pretend that my decision could be used to
prosecute Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey for causing financial loss to the
state.
There are other cases which were settled before I went to the
Attorney-General’s Office under the naïve believe that evidence of
the Attorney-General’s settlement could be used as evidence of
causing financial loss to the state. As a former PNDC operative, my
decision in the National Mobilization Programme settlement case, a
temptation put in my path, was difficult for me as a politician.
But I was acting not as Minister of State, a politician, but as the
Attorney-General of the Republic, a quasi judicial officer, who has
faith in the judicial system to determine the issues presented to
the Court by the parties. I have deliberately stayed away from the
controversy whether or not there was a binding and subsisting
contract between African Automobile Limited and the Government of
Ghana at the time of the performance of the contract because of my
faith in Constitution and its Courts. My attitude towards the
presumptuousness of any Attorney-General who wants to court
suspicion for himself in the settlement of such pending cases are
well known to have decided those with access to the case files not
to have allowed me to see the file on the Gallopers while I was the
Attorney-General.
My considered view is that it is always better for an
Attorney-General to have faith in and prefer a Court’s
interpretation of facts to determine whether or not there is a
contract between litigants as a matter of law than to arrogate to
himself that judicial function and open himself up to suspicions
and unwarranted insinuations of motives inconsistent with his quasi
judicial office.
In Civil Appeal J4/23/2012, African Automobile Limited vs. The
Attorney-General, 6th June 2012, (Supreme Court, Unreported) the
Supreme Court dismissed African Automobile Limited’s appeal for the
enforcement of an agreement to be paid compound interest on the
grounds that a referee appointed by the High Court had found that
two exhibits constituted a contract between the parties. The
Supreme Court said: “This submission misses the point of Ofoe JA’s
analysis in the passage from his judgment quoted above. His point
indeed is that the interpretation of facts to determine whether
they result in the conclusion of a contract is a matter of law for
a judge to undertake. Accordingly, the assumption by the referee
that Exhibits A and B resulted in a contract and therefore their
terms were to be applied to the calculation of interest on the
indebtedness he ascertained was not binding on the trial court nor
on the Court of Appeal. He [Ofoe JA] was correct in his analysis.”
The Supreme Court accordingly affirmed both the decision of the
High Court and the Court of Appeal by “upholding the legal
conclusion of the learned trial judge that Exhibits A and B did not
result in the formation of a contract.”
An Attorney-General must not have a personal or political bias in
any case in the exercise of his professional responsibilities under
Article 88 of the Constitution. My long experience as a Deputy
Attorney-General has taught me that it is professionally better to
allow the Courts assigned under the Constitution to determine
conclusively whether or not there is a subsisting contract between
the African Automobile Limited and the Government of Ghana in the
pending case to do so. An Attorney-General, with years of legal
practice to his credit, knows he will ultimately take personal and
professional responsibility for saddling the Republic with any debt
settlement. He would consequently not act upon the basis of the
opinions of persons who may have self-serving interests in any out
of court settlement or court settlement of cases however learned or
powerful they may claim to be in the law or in the Government
overtly or covertly. Caution, they say is the better part of
valour. The Supreme Courts can never, in making authoritative
decisions on the law, cause financial loss to the state.
Martin A. B. K.
Amidu
Ghana Flood 2015
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