State appeals contempt against IGP
The State has appealed a contempt conviction against the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr David Asante Apeatu.
A Deputy Attorney-General, Mr Godfred Yeboah Dame, told the High Court in Accra yesterday that an interpleader to make a case that the police owned the property in dispute had also been filed.
The state is arguing that the trial judge committed a serious error of law when he failed to take account of the fact that none of the mandatory procedures required by the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004, C. I. 47 for enforcement of judgment or order for recovery of possession of immovable property had been complied with in the case in question.
Hearing for the application for stay of execution has been scheduled for November 1, 2018.
Contempt
The IGP was on September 25, 2018, committed for contempt for disobeying a court order.
The presiding judge, Mr Justice Daniel Mensah, took
He said the IGP ‘wilfully’ disobeyed two court orders that directed him to provide security for the execution of another court order that gave the green light for the sale of a 12-block uncompleted flat at Redco Flats in Madina.
“The act of the IGP can appropriately be said to be
The respondent (IGP) has failed to discharge the burden required to avoid a conviction and must, therefore, be committed for contempt of court and sanctioned appropriately,’’ Mr Justice Mensah held.
Application
The ruling of the court followed an application for contempt filed against the IGP by two individuals — Mr Samuel Aggrey and Mrs Augustina Gyekye.
The two had gone to court with a case that the IGP disobeyed two court orders, dated October 23,
They argued that the failure of the IGP to obey the orders had brought the administration of justice into disrepute.
Appeal
The state’s appeal against the IGP’s conviction argues that Order 43 rule 3 (1) of C. I. 47 requires a judgment or order for recovery of possession to be enforced by a writ of possession issued with leave of the court.
The rule further states that leave for the issue of a writ of possession shall not be granted without notice to the persons in actual possession of the property – the personnel of the Ghana Police Service in this case.
According to the state, none of the above was done in the instant case.
“The learned judge committed a grave error of law when he failed to note that the essential conditions required for using contempt as a process for enforcing an order had not been satisfied in the instant case before the institution of the contempt proceedings in question,” the
Highlighting the particulars of error of law, the state is arguing that the trial judge erred in holding that a case of contempt had been proven beyond reasonable doubt against the IGP.
The state is further arguing that the contempt application and all that followed from it were void for having been issued by a lawyer who did not have a valid Solicitor’s licence as of the date of the filing of the application for contempt.
It is accordingly praying the court to reverse and set aside the ruling of the High Court dated September 25, 2018, convicting the IGP of contempt of court.
Background
The contempt case against the IGP is the result of a legal dispute that started in 1988 between Redco Ghana Limited, the former owners of the flats, and one Mrs Isabella Odi Aggrey (now deceased).
In 1988, Mrs Aggrey sued Redco Limited for failing to pay an amount owed her.
On February 23, 1993, she won the case at the High Court and the court ordered Redco to pay her the money.
On March 15, 1993, the block of flats
Redco filed an application for a stay of execution of the High Court’s judgment at the Court of Appeal and subsequently the Supreme Court but both were dismissed.
Instead of giving the property back to Mrs Aggrey or her family, Redco, the applicants, gave it to the Ghana Police Service to house some officers.
Dissatisfied with the situation, Mr Aggrey and Mrs Gyekye, representing Mrs Aggrey, filed an application at the High Court to seek an order for the police to vacate the flats, and also help execute the High Court order for the flats to be sold by providing security.
The High Court, on two different occasions, ordered the IGP to provide security to enable the auctioneer to sell the block of flats.
Lawyers for the two applicants later filed another case, citing the IGP for contempt with the case that the IGP failed to perform his statutory duty and wilfully disobeyed the orders of the court to provide security for the execution of the court order.
Case of IGP
In response, the Attorney-General (A-G), representing the Ghana Police and the IGP, argued that the property in contention was for the Ghana Police Service and not Redco.
The applicants, the A-G argued, could not sell the properties if they had won a case against the Ghana Police Service, which the A-G argued was the rightful owner.
Writer’s email: mabel.baneseh@graphic.com.gh