Sunday, 22 October 2000

Emtel (Mauritius) Ltd v The Ministry of Telecommunication

Emtel (Mauritius) Limited

Appellant

v.

(1) The Ministry of Telecommunication

(2) The Telecommunication Authority

(3) Cellplus Mobile Communications Ltd. and

(4) Mauritius Telecom Ltd.

Respondents

FROM

THE SUPREME COURT OF MAURITIUS

---------------

JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL

COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,

Delivered the 2nd October 2000

------------------

Present at the hearing:-

Lord Bingham of Cornhill

Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead

Lord Cooke of Thorndon

Lord Hutton

Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough

[Delivered by Lord Bingham of Cornhill]

------------------

On 2 July 1997 the Supreme Court of Mauritius refused an application by Emtel (Mauritius) Limited (“Emtel”) for leave to apply for an order of mandamus against the Telecommunication Authority (“the Authority”). Emtel appeals by special leave against that refusal. It complains in particular that the Supreme Court misconstrued and misapplied the Telecommunication Act 1988.

The history.

The Telephone Act 1938 empowered the Director of Telecommunications on behalf of the Government of Mauritius to establish, maintain and operate telephone services in Mauritius and to authorise persons to operate external services. At the beginning of the 1980s, overseas telecommunication services were operated by Cable and Wireless Limited and internal telecommunication services were operated by the Department of Telecommunications of the Government of Mauritius, which also exercised regulatory functions. In 1984 the Government formed a wholly-owned company, Overseas Telecommunications Services Co. Limited (“OTS”). With effect from 1 January 1985 that company took over the assets and operations of Cable and Wireless in Mauritius. On 1 April 1988 another wholly-owned company was incorporated, Mauritius Telecommunication Services Limited (“MTS”). Under the Telecommunication (Transfer) Act 1988 the undertaking of the Department of Telecommunication of the Mauritius Government (excluding the regulatory functions of the Government) was transferred to that company. By another Act, the Telecommunication Act 1988, the control and regulation of telecommunication services in and from Mauritius were further restructured.

Section 4 of the 1988 Act established the Authority. The functions of the Authority, as provided by section 5 of the Act, were:

“(a) to monitor, control, inspect and regulate … telecommunication services and facilities;

(b) to ensure that no … telecommunication services or facilities are operated or provided except in accordance with this Act;

(c) to issue, modify or revoke licences under this Act;

(d) to sanction any tariff or charge under section 17;

(f) to do all such things as may be requisite under this Act.”

These were far-reaching powers, since by section 2 of the Act “telecommunication services” were defined to mean:

“(a) the services between persons and persons, things and things, or persons and things, provided in respect of radio, sounds including speech and music, telephone, telegraph, telex, telefax, actuation or control of machinery or apparatus, images, data, information and other kinds of services that may be provided by means of telecommunication;”.

By section 6 of the Act there was established a Telecommunication Advisory Council, the functions of which were, as provided by section 7, to

“(a) advise the Minister on all matters relating to –

(i) the promotion of the interests of consumers, purchasers and other users in respect of the prices charged for and the quality and variety of telecommunication services provided and telecommunication equipment and facilities supplied; …

(iii) the improvement of telecommunication services in Mauritius generally;

(iv) any other matter which may be referred to it by the Minister.”

Section 9 of the Act empowered the Minister to give to the Authority and the Council

“… such directions as to the performance of their respective duties under this Act as appear to the Minister to be requisite in the public interest and the Authority and the Council, as the case may be, shall comply with such directions.”

Section 10 of the Act provided:

“(1) No person shall establish, maintain or operate a telecommunication installation which is connected in any manner to a telecommunication line outside his business or outside premises or part of premises not exclusively occupied by him for his own business unless he obtains a licence from the Authority.”

By section 11 it was provided that applications for licences should be made in writing and give such information as might be prescribed. The Authority might request an applicant to furnish additional information. In determining whether to grant, renew, modify or revoke a licence, the Authority was required by section 11(3) to have regard, among other matters, to the public interest, any international obligation of Mauritius in the field of telecommunication and any directions of the Minister. By subsection (4) it was provided that every licence should specify

“(e) any terms, conditions or restrictions which the Authority may think fit to impose.”

By section 12 the Authority was empowered to modify a licence

“… if it considers the modification to be necessary in the interests of the users of telecommunication services or the purchasers of telecommunication equipment or for any other reason;”

and to revoke a licence

“where the licensee is in breach of the terms, conditions or restrictions of his licence.”

By section 14 of the Act it was the duty of licensees to

“(d) furnish to the Authority such reports, audited accounts, documents and information concerning his installations and operations as the Authority may request.”

Section 17 of the Act provided:

“(1) Any rates, tariffs or charges proposed by a licensee shall be subject to the approval of the Authority.

(2) The Authority shall not approve any rates, tariffs or charges unless it considers that they are reasonable.

(3) The Authority may call for such information as it thinks fit in determining the reasonableness of any rates, tariffs or charges or any proposed alteration of them.

(4) No licensee shall claim any rates, tariffs or charges which have not been approved by the Authority.”

Section 40 of the Act provided:

“Any person who establishes, maintains or operates a telecommunication installation to provide a telecommunication service in breach of section 10 or in breach of the terms, conditions or restrictions of any licence in respect of that installation shall commit an offence.”

In section 43(8) it was provided:

“Notwithstanding section 10, the telecommunication services provided by the Overseas Telecommunications Services Co Ltd and the Mauritius Telecommunication Services Ltd, shall be deemed to have been validly licensed under this Act.”

In 1992 MTS changed its name to Mauritius Telecom Limited, following a merger of the domestic and international services operated by MTS and OTS respectively.

Before the 1988 legislation took effect, a new market had begun to develop in mobile telephone communications. Emtel, a joint venture company formed by a Mauritian company with foreign partners, prepared to enter the market in Mauritius. On 23 May 1988 it was granted a Cellular Mobile Telephone Operator’s Licence by the Department of Telecommunications of the Government. This licence provided in clause 2(a):

“This licence shall not be construed as granting any exclusive rights to the licensee in the operation of the service except for an initial period of seven years from the date of its coming into service …”

By clause 4 the Telecommunications Department reserved the right:

“(a) Of not renewing the licence after the initial period of 7 years.

(b) Of granting licences to new operators after the initial period …”

By clause 6 of the licence Emtel was required, after a period of grace of three years, to pay terminal charges to the Telecommunications Department, reckoned on the gross proceeds from all calls made by and to the mobile subscribers, the percentage payable rising from 15% to 25% of gross proceeds. It appears that this licence was superseded, with effect from 1 January 1989, by a licence issued by the Authority on 19 May 1989 under section 10 of the 1988 Act. An interconnection agreement was eventually negotiated between Emtel and Mauritius Telecom on 24 July 1995, under which interconnection charges at the specified rate became payable by Emtel to Mauritius Telecom.

Emtel did not at that time wish, or was not in a position, to exploit an alternative form of mobile telephone service dependent on the use of what was known as GSM technology. It appears that an application for a licence to operate a service using that technology was made by another party in December 1993 and approved in principle in March 1994. Emtel was, however, greatly concerned by this proposal, no doubt fearing that the value of its investment in the market would be reduced and its competitive position undermined. The Government took these concerns seriously, and a committee was formed under the chairmanship of the Prime Minister to review the situation. The outcome was communicated to Emtel in a letter from the Authority dated 25 September 1996 which said:

“It is recalled that during the meeting of the Ministerial Committee set up to look into major issues in the telecommunication sector, held on 15 August 1996, the representatives of your company stated that Emtel Ltd did not have any immediate plans to migrate to GSM.

In the light of the above and after considering various other factors, the Authority has decided to grant a licence to Cellplus Mobile Communications Ltd with three (3) years exclusive rights to use GSM technology to operate a cellular mobile telephone service, with effect from 05 September 1996.

The application made by your company for a licence to operate a GSM network and services will be considered in due course.

A copy of the press release issued by the Telecommunication Authority on 05 September 1996 is enclosed herewith, for your information.”

Cellplus was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mauritius Telecom, which was the monopoly supplier of fixed line services in Mauritius, and accordingly posed a potential competitive threat to Emtel.

In its press release the Authority referred to recent developments in the national telecommunication network and to the Government’s strong commitment to the liberalisation of this sector. The press release stated:

“The Telecommunication Authority has taken note of the various steps already taken by Government in the pursuit of the above objectives: (a) the commitment to the World Trade Organisation to gradually liberalise its telecommunication sector by the year 2004; (b) the reconstitution of the Telecommunication Advisory Council so as to propose a comprehensive policy aimed at –

- reviewing the legal, regulatory and institutional

framework in the sector;

- encouraging fair and healthy competition among all

operators in that sector …”

In the press release the Authority summarised its reasons for deciding to grant a licence to Cellplus to operate a cellular mobile telephone service using the GSM technology with exclusive rights for a period of three years, acknowledging the investment which that company had made in the project and the period before it would become profitable. The press release concluded:

“6. The Authority has given its approval to the tariffs proposed by Cellplus Mobile Communications Ltd in respect of telecommunication services to be provided to the public.

7. The Authority has further decided that the following conditions be met:

(a) the interconnection agreement between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus should be on the same terms as those offered to Emtel Ltd without, however, any grace period as was previously granted to Emtel Ltd;

(b) the Authority would appoint an independent auditor to certify that Cellplus Mobile Communications Ltd is keeping separate accounts from Mauritius Telecom and that it is not benefiting from any cross subsidisation.”

On 19 December 1996 Emtel issued an application for leave to apply for an order of mandamus against the Authority directing it:

“(i) to appoint an independent auditor to verify and monitor on an ongoing basis and certify that [Cellplus] is keeping separate accounts from [Mauritius Telecom] and that it is not benefiting from any cross subsidisation, and to communicate to the Applicant any report made by the Auditor, and

(ii) to make available to the Applicant a copy of the Interconnection Agreement between [Mauritius Telecom] and [Cellplus] so as to ensure that it is on the same terms as those offered by [Mauritius Telecom] to the Applicant, and

(iii) to ensure that interconnect fees are in fact paid by [Cellplus] to [Mauritius Telecom], and

(iv) further to ensure that such interconnect fees are paid as from 15th March 1996, and that the licence issued to [Cellplus] on 5th September 1996 granting a three year exclusivity period on the use of the GSM technology to [Cellplus] is made to take effect as from 15th March 1996.”

The application was supported by an affirmation of the General Manager of Emtel who stated that Cellplus had operated its mobile telephone service from 15 March 1996, although not licensed to do so until 5 September 1996, that Cellplus had published a tariff which was substantially lower than that of Emtel and which was not commercially sustainable if interconnection charges were paid at the prescribed level, in the absence of cross-subsidy between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus, that there was evidence of cross-subsidy between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus and that on the prevailing tariffs offered by Cellplus Emtel was bound to sustain a crippling loss from its operations. Emtel accordingly sought the relief claimed in order to ensure that the conditions summarised in the press release as those upon which Cellplus were to be licensed to enter the mobile telephone market should be enforced.

Although at the outset relief was sought against the Authority alone, notice was given to Mauritius Telecom, the Ministry of Telecommunications and Cellplus, all of whom exercised their right to appear and be heard. At an interlocutory hearing on 5 May 1997 the representative of the Authority informed the court that it had directed Mauritius Telecom to appoint an auditor of its own and that an interconnection agreement between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus had been signed on 31 March 1997. The Authority indicated that it was under no statutory duty, and did not have the power, to appoint an auditor to look into the accounts of Cellplus. It had, however, directed Cellplus to furnish its own auditor’s report regarding its accounts.

The application for leave to apply was heard by the Supreme Court (A.G. Pillay C.J. and P. Lam Shang Leen J.) and in a judgment given on 2 July 1997 it was dismissed. The Supreme Court concluded that the application was “clearly misconceived” for a number of reasons. It held that no public duty was owed by the Authority to Emtel. It further held that no statutory or public duty was owed by the Authority to Emtel to appoint an independent auditor, to communicate the terms of an agreement between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus, to enforce contractual obligations between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus or to modify the date of the licence which it had granted to Cellplus. In the opinion of the court, the relief sought by Emtel would be tantamount to ordering the Authority to act beyond its powers and to do acts which would violate the right of privacy guaranteed by the Constitution to the Authority and Cellplus, and the relief claimed would, if granted, interfere with the exercise of a discretion granted solely to the Authority. The court observed that “the principles of fair trading, transparency and disclosure in the field of telecommunications” were not enshrined in the Act of 1988. Mandamus would not lie to order the doing of anything which was contrary to law. Emtel had no right to complain if, as it claimed, it had been undercut by Cellplus and had as a result suffered crippling losses, since any duty was owed by the Authority to consumers of telecommunication services and not Emtel, and its duty was to approve tariffs which it considered reasonable. Even if the licence issued by the Authority to Cellplus was subject to the condition that there should be no cross-subsidy between Cellplus and Mauritius Telecom it was for the Authority to ensure that this condition was complied with by Cellplus, and there was nothing to suggest that the Authority was shirking its duty. While the Authority had power to obtain information, and had directed Mauritius Telecom to furnish it with audited accounts, the Authority had no duty to communicate such information to Emtel. The Authority had no power under the Act to appoint an independent auditor to look into the accounts of Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus. There was nothing to prevent the Authority changing its position, as it had done in relation to the appointment of an independent auditor.

Emtel sought leave to appeal, relying on a further affirmation of its General Manager, who stated that to his knowledge Cellplus was still benefiting from cross-subsidisation and that the unfair competition of which Emtel complained still persisted. Leave to appeal was refused on 24 July 1998. Special leave was granted by the Board on 24 February 1999.

By this time events had moved on. Following the publication of a Green Paper, the Government had (in December 1997) published a White Paper on the telecommunications sector. This White Paper recognised the rapid pace of change in the sector and announced plans for a new statutory framework which would, among other things, stimulate competition in the market and control unfair or anti-competitive practices by licensees. Of mobile cellular services the White Paper said:

“Competition presently exists in the mobile cellular service market, although each cellular license included an initial exclusivity period. Emtel Limited’s exclusivity in the mobile cellular market expired in December 1995; Cellplus’ exclusivity in the GSM market will continue on through 1999. The extent to which additional competitors may be licensed will be left to the discretion of the Mauritius Telecommunications Authority.”

The White Paper was followed by the Telecommunications Act 1998, which established a new Mauritius Telecommunications Authority, whose objects were expressed to include the promotion of fair competition and efficient market conduct and the prevention of unfair or anti-competitive practices by licensees, such as cross-subsidising.

In June 2000 Emtel issued civil proceedings in the Supreme Court of Mauritius against the Authority, Mauritius Telecom, Cellplus and the Ministry, claiming damages: the facts relied on were essentially those summarised above, which were said to give rise to a cause of action in tort.

The submissions of the parties.

Emtel submitted that the functions conferred on the Authority by section 5 of the Act of 1988 were expressed in very broad terms. In exercising its licensing function the Authority was required to have regard to the public interest and any direction of the Minister. It enjoyed a wide power to impose licence conditions directed to the purposes of the Act. In imposing conditions on Cellplus to protect and stimulate competition between Emtel and Cellplus, by preventing cross-subsidisation and ensuring that Cellplus dealt with Mauritius Telecom on the same terms as Emtel, the Authority was acting within its powers. There was nothing to prevent it granting a licence to Cellplus on the condition that Cellplus should permit an independent auditor appointed by the Authority to inspect and report to the Authority on its books and accounts. The Supreme Court was wrong to interpret the Act as concerned only with consumers and not with competitors to a licensee such as Emtel: given the broad terminology of section 5; there was nothing in the language of the Act to preclude the Authority regulating competition; any system of market regulation must give effect to principles of fair trading, transparency and disclosure. The public interest was not immutably fixed when the Act was passed, and the Authority plainly understood its functions to include the regulation of competition when it announced the conditions on which Cellplus would be permitted to enter the mobile telephone market. Even in 1988 when the Department granted the initial licence to Emtel, the advent of competition was envisaged: it was implicit in the grant of an exclusivity period of seven years that after the expiry of that time the licence might not be exclusive, and the Department expressly reserved the right to license new operators (who might be additional operators) after that period. The terms of the Authority’s letter of 25 September 1996 and its press release of 5 September 1996 entitled Emtel to expect that those conditions would be enforced and it had strong grounds for contending that its expectation should not be defeated. The right to privacy guaranteed by Articles 3 and 9 of the Constitution was not absolute: it was subject to the rights and freedoms of others and the public interest, and licensees could properly be required to furnish to the Authority any relevant information concerning their operations reasonably called for by the Authority. The Authority was a public body exercising public functions and as a party adversely affected by the exercise of those functions Emtel had sufficient interest to seek relief by way of judicial review. It was not a ground for refusing leave to apply that the relief claimed might be inappropriate or call for amendment. The Supreme Court had erred in concluding that Emtel did not show a good arguable case justifying the grant of leave to apply.

On behalf of the Ministry and the Authority it was submitted that the Act of 1988, properly construed, conferred no power or duty on the Authority to regulate competition, as the Supreme Court had rightly concluded. This submission relied heavily on the history of telecommunications services in Mauritius, of which (it was submitted) Emtel’s submissions betrayed a fundamental misunderstanding. In 1988 there had been no competition in the telecommunication industry, and it had not then been the policy of the Government to encourage it. The purpose of the Act was not to provide a framework for competition between multiple providers but to provide an improved structure for the management and operation of a state monopoly. The powers conferred on the Authority to impose licence conditions and approve tariffs were to be understood in that context only. In 1988 there was no local market, and accordingly the Act made no provision for regulation of a market. The Authority did not have the staff, the resources or the expertise to regulate a competitive market. It was not until the later 1990s that steps were taken to liberalise the market and introduce competition, and effect was given to those objectives for the first time in the Act of 1998, which envisaged a gradual transition to a competitive environment. Since the telecommunications industry had now made an important advance and since Emtel had issued civil proceedings canvassing the same issues as were raised by its application for leave to seek judicial review, there was no useful purpose to be served by now granting leave.

Cellplus drew the attention of the Board to an affirmation made by the Chief Executive of Mauritius Telecom, in response to Emtel’s petition for leave to appeal (after the judgment of the Supreme Court and its refusal of leave to appeal) in which it was asserted that Cellplus had never benefited from any subsidy by Mauritius Telecom, that there had never been a situation of unfair competition in favour of Cellplus and that the interconnection agreement between Mauritius Telecom and Cellplus was on the same terms and conditions as those obtaining between Mauritius Telecom and Emtel. The main thrust of Cellplus’ submissions was, however, as urged by the Ministry and the Authority, that the regulation of competition was not within the purposes of the 1988 Act and accordingly the Authority had had no power to impose any condition providing for the appointment of an independent auditor or for preventing cross-subsidisation, and such conditions were accordingly ultra vires and unreasonable. It appeared that the Authority might have wrongly anticipated the changes brought about by the 1998 Act. There could be no legitimate expectation that a public body would act otherwise than in accordance with the lawful scope of its authority, and the Authority had rightly recognised that it had no power to appoint an independent auditor. Cellplus joined with the Ministry and the Authority in submitting that no useful purpose would now be served by granting leave to apply for judicial review.

Mauritius Telecom allied itself with the submissions made by the Ministry, the Authority and Cellplus, relying heavily on the changed situation which had resulted from the passing of the 1998 Act and the launching of a civil action for damages by Emtel. Reliance was also placed on section 43(8) of the 1988 Act: this made plain that the statutory objective was to protect the state monopoly; there was no power to license a competitor with the state monopoly; and there had accordingly been no need to license Cellplus since it was a subsidiary of Mauritius Telecom, which was deemed to have been validly licensed under the Act.

Conclusions.

The Board is very conscious that it lacks the intimate knowledge of conditions in Mauritius which the Supreme Court will have enjoyed and also that, because leave to apply for judicial review was refused, there has been very limited enquiry into the underlying facts. It is not, however, suggested that there are any additional facts, not known to the Board, which bear on the correct construction of the 1988 Act.

It seems plain that in 1988 the internal telephone system in Mauritius, as in many other countries, was operated by a state-owned monopoly and the transfer of the Department’s undertaking to MTS did not in itself affect that. It may readily be accepted that the prime object of the 1988 Act was to regulate that monopoly and not to usher in a new era of competition. Had the regulation of competition featured prominently among the legislators’ intentions, it is reasonable to infer that the 1988 Act would have contained provisions expressly directed to that end. It has not, however, been suggested that the licence granted to Emtel in May 1988, before the Act came into force but after a lengthy period of negotiation and substantial investment by Emtel, was in any way invalid or ultra vires. That licence provided that, after an initial period of exclusivity and a period of grace during which no inter-connection charges would be payable to the Department, other mobile telephone operators might be licensed to enter the field. Thus, even if it was not contemplated that there would be competition with MTS, or Mauritius Telecom as it became, it certainly was contemplated that there might be competition between licensed operators of mobile telephone services.

When Cellplus sought a licence to exploit the new GSM technology in the mobile telephone market, the Authority decided that it should be subject to the conditions specified in the press release. The evidence does not show whether the Minister directed the Authority to impose those conditions under section 9(1) of the Act, nor whether the Authority complied pursuant to section 11(3)(f); but since the decision to grant the licence subject to those conditions followed the deliberations of a ministerial committee it is at least possible that a direction was given. The purpose of the conditions was, plainly, to ensure that Emtel and Cellplus competed on broadly equal terms; in other words, to see that Cellplus as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the monopoly fixed-line operator did not gain an unfair competitive advantage. There was no challenge to the validity of those conditions until Emtel sought to enforce them.

The question nevertheless remains whether the Authority had power under the statute to impose the conditions which it is understood that it did. The Authority’s functions were laid down in section 5 in the most general terms, and “telecommunication services” were very broadly defined. The remit of the Council directed attention to the interests of “purchasers and other users” as well as consumers, referred to “the … variety of telecommunication services provided” and embraced any matter other than those specified which might be referred to it by the Minister. The Minister’s power to give mandatory directions was limited only by the purposes of the Act and the public interest. In deciding what terms or conditions to impose on the grant of a licence the Authority enjoyed a wide discretion, provided it had regard to the public interest and any directions of the Minister. It had power to modify licences. Nowhere in the Act is there any indication that the Authority lacked power to license competing operators of mobile telephone services if it judged it to be in the public interest to do so or if it was directed by the Minister to do so. If it had power to license such competitors, it plainly had power to impose what it considered to be appropriate conditions to regulate competition between licensees. It cannot be thought that the Authority had power to license such competitors but not to control the terms on which they were to compete. It may be (although this must be questionable having regard to the terms of Emtel’s 1988 licence) that it would not have been thought to be in the public interest in 1988 to license such competitors; but perception of the public interest may evolve over time, and even if that were the position in 1988 it would not preclude the Authority from licensing such competitors and imposing appropriate terms in 1996 if it was then judged to be in the public interest to do so or if the Minister (acting within the powers conferred by Parliament) directed it to do so.

The Authority was a public body exercising public functions and its powers and duties must be analysed for judicial review purposes in a public law context, not in terms of private law duties or obligations. Any person or body with a sufficient interest could, if reasonable grounds were shown, challenge the manner in which its functions were exercised. In the judgment of the Board there can be no doubt that Emtel had sufficient interest to seek appropriate relief if (as it claims) Cellplus was permitted to enter the mobile telephone market only upon terms, designed to protect the reasonable commercial interests of Emtel, which the Authority had power but failed to enforce. Whether or not that claim will be made good is a matter on which it would be premature for the Board to express an opinion.

The Act confers no free-standing power on the Authority to appoint an independent auditor to inspect and report on the books and accounts of a licensee, but there is no reason in law why the grant of a licence should not be made subject to a condition that the licensee makes its books and accounts open for inspection by an independent auditor if such a condition is judged by the Authority to be an appropriate means of monitoring the fairness of competition between licensees. The Board has not seen the licence granted by the Authority to Cellplus and has not been referred to the express terms of any conditions imposed. It is therefore unclear at this stage whether an enforceable condition relating to an independent auditor was imposed by the Authority.

Emtel submitted to the Board (but not, it seems, to the Supreme Court) that the effect of the Authority’s conduct had been to defeat an expectation legitimately entertained by Emtel that the conditions upon which Cellplus were to be licensed, as specified in the press release, would be imposed and enforced. The Board cannot rule on the correctness of this submission, but regards it as capable and worthy of argument. The press release recorded the conditions on which the Authority had decided to license Cellplus. Those conditions were of obvious significance to Emtel, which may have made commercial decisions in the expectation that the conditions would be imposed and enforced and was in any event liable to suffer loss if they were not. If it be true that the conditions were not imposed or not enforced, it is at least arguable that Emtel’s expectation, legitimately entertained, was unfairly defeated.

The Board was not pressed with the argument, accepted by the Supreme Court, based on the constitutional guarantee of privacy. It may readily be accepted that the Authority, in the course of performing its regulatory function, will acquire commercially sensitive information which it would not be at liberty to disclose to another licensee. But there is no restriction, under the 1988 Act, on the information which the Authority may request from a licensee, provided such information is required to enable the Authority to perform its regulatory function and is related to the licensed operations of the licensee. Even if an enforceable condition relating to an independent auditor was not imposed, the Authority did not lack powers under the Act to obtain information which would enable it to verify the terms upon which licensees were competing.

The Board cannot accept that there was no need for Cellplus, as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mauritius Telecom, to be licensed at all: that was not the view taken by any of the parties involved at the time, and the submission ignores the legal distinctness of parent company and subsidiary. Nor can the Board accept that Mauritius Telecom was outside and immune from the regulatory regime established by the 1988 Act. By section 43(8) of that Act the predecessors of Mauritius Telecom were deemed to be validly licensed under the Act, and it is understood that no licence has ever been granted to Mauritius Telecom. It would, however, emasculate the regulatory regime established by the Act if the Authority were held to have had no power to approve the rates, tariffs or charges proposed by Mauritius Telecom as the monopoly fixed-line operator, and the Authority would have had no means of enforcing the requirement that Cellplus make an inter-connection agreement with Mauritius Telecom on the same terms as that between Mauritius Telecom and Emtel unless it could, in the last resort, enforce that obligation on Mauritius Telecom as well as on Cellplus.

In the opinion of the Board, the Supreme Court construed the 1988 Act too narrowly and erred in its analysis of the Authority’s public law powers and duties. Leave to apply for judicial review should have been granted. The Court may well have been right to regard the relief sought by Emtel as inappropriate, and Emtel has now indicated an intention to seek declaratory relief instead of the order of mandamus originally sought. The Court’s reservations about the terms of the relief sought were not, however, a good ground for refusing leave to apply. The form which any relief should take would have been something to consider if and when Emtel had made out a case for some relief.

It remains to consider whether leave to apply should at this stage be granted or whether, having regard to the changed statutory framework and the initiation of civil proceedings by Emtel, leave should be refused as serving no useful purpose. This submission has caused the Board to hesitate. But at present the judgment of the Supreme Court when refusing leave still stands, and so long as it stands it represents a potential obstacle which Emtel must overcome in pursuing its civil claim. On balance, it is right that leave to apply should be granted. How, procedurally, that application should hereafter be handled in relation to the civil claim is a matter on which the Supreme Court is very much better fitted to rule than is the Board.

The Board accordingly allows Emtel’s appeal and grants leave to apply for judicial review. Emtel’s costs on appeal and in the Supreme Court must be paid by the respondents, all four of whom have appeared and resisted the application and the appeal.


Monday, 10 July 2000

Sooriamurthy Darmalingum v The State

Sooriamurthy Darmalingum

Appellant

v.

The State

Respondent

FROM

THE SUPREME COURT OF MAURITIUS

---------------

REASONS FOR DECISION OF THE LORDS OF THE

JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL OF THE

22nd May 2000, Delivered the 10th July 2000

------------------

Present at the hearing:-

Lord Steyn

Lord Hope of Craighead

Sir Patrick Russell

Sir Andrew Leggatt

Mr. Justice Blanchard

[Delivered by Lord Steyn]

------------------

At the conclusion of the hearing before their Lordships on 22nd May 2000 the appeal of the appellant was allowed and the convictions and sentences on all counts quashed. Their Lordships indicated that they would give their reasons later and this they now do.

On 13th May 1993 an Intermediate Court (Mr. Domah and Mrs. Matadeen, Magistrates) in Mauritius found the appellant guilty on one count of aggravated embezzlement and fourteen counts of forgery and sentenced him to a total term of four years’ imprisonment. On 2nd July 1998, some five years after the conviction of the appellant, the Supreme Court of Mauritius (Balancy J. and Lam Shang Leen J.) gave a judgment dismissing the appeal of the appellant against his convictions. On 22nd May 2000 the Privy Council heard the appellant’s appeal, which by direction of their Lordships was confined to grounds of appeal relating to delay, namely the delay of 8½ years between the time of the appellant’s arrest in 1985 and his conviction May 1993 as well as the delay of a further 5 years between his conviction and the final disposal of the appeal in the Supreme Court of Mauritius.

A Narrative

In 1980 the appellant started work as a cashier in the Savings Department of the Indian Ocean International Bank Ltd. at Port Louis in Mauritius. On 7th November 1985 the manager of the Bank reported alleged irregularities affecting the appellant’s work to the Police. The irregularities covered the period between January and October 1985. The appellant resigned from his post. In early December 1985 the appellant was arrested on provisional charges of forgery. He was held in custody for 17 days. Since then he has been on bail. During the period 3rd to 17th December 1985 the appellant made a series of seven statements which the prosecution alleged contained comprehensive and specific admissions of all the charges in due course brought against him. There was therefore no reason for substantial delay in the prosecution. But the case went to sleep in the hands of the Police and in the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (D.P.P.).

The chronology of events before conviction is as follows. Only at the end of 1986 or early 1987 did the Police transfer the file to the office of the D.P.P. In September 1988 the decision was taken to prosecute the appellant on 90 charges. In 1991 the provisional charges were struck out. In January 1992 an Information containing 20 counts was served on the appellant and another defendant. Pausing here, the position is that between December 1985 to January 1992 there was a complete silence from the authorities. Over this period of seven years the appellant was in the dark as to the intentions of the authorities. In any event on 7th April 1992 the charges against the other defendant, who was no longer in Mauritius, were struck out.

On 30th April 1992 the appellant served a notice of motion seeking a stay of the Information on the grounds of delay. The Intermediate Court heard the motion in May 1992 and dismissed it in June 1992. Then followed a delay of about 2½ months during which the defence considered seeking immediate relief from the Supreme Court but eventually abandoned the idea.

The trial

The trial date was fixed for 10th November 1992. The appellant indicated that he was challenging the admissibility of his statements. On 10th March 1993 the voire dire was held. On 30th March 1993 the Intermediate court ruled that the statements were admissible. On 7th April 1993 the trial continued. The prosecution case depended on documentary evidence and the appellant’s statements to the Police. The appellant did not testify. Instead he made a brief statement from the dock saying that he made the statements under pressure. Final submissions were made on the same day. The trial only lasted one day. On 13th May 1993 the Intermediate Court gave judgment. The appellant was convicted on all counts and sentenced to a total term of 4 years’ imprisonment. He was granted bail pending appeal.

The Appeal to the Supreme Court

On 31st May 1993 the appellant lodged grounds of appeal. The appeal was set down for hearing on 15th November 1993. At the request of the prosecution that date was vacated and the appeal came on for hearing in the Supreme Court before Boolell J. and Balancy J. on 28th March 1994. On that occasion the Supreme Court heard argument on only one ground of appeal, namely the argument that by reason of the inordinate pre-trial delay the proceedings were an abuse of process. The court reserved judgment. The two judges disagreed. This impasse then caused a delay of about three years. The rehearing before the bench of three judges (Boolell J., Balancy J. and Lam Shang Leen J.) only took place on 10th March 1997. The argument was confined to the ground of appeal alleging abuse of process. On 3rd September 1997, about six months later, the court dismissed this ground by a majority (Boolell J. dissenting). The majority agreed that time may run from the time a person is charged (in this case December 1985) but treated the appellant as bound by an argument advanced before the Intermediate Court based on the effect of delay from the time of the decision of the D.P.P. to prosecute (September 1988). The majority concluded that the delay caused no prejudice. They were “not surprised that the charges in relation to this voluminous file which had to move to and from the D.P.P’s office were only finalised three years later”. They acknowledged an argument “that there had been delay since the time that this appeal had been argued before two Judges of this court in March 1994”. At that time the delay in the disposal of the appellate proceedings had been 3½ years. They observed:-

“Although we do take note that this is so, we do not consider it either proper or pertinent for us to go into the reasons for that delay, especially as it relates to a post-trial period, such that it cannot in our view, have, per se any real bearing upon the question whether the appellant has been denied a fair trial.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The majority was satisfied that there had been no breach of the constitutional right in question “having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including its complexity and ... ‘systemic delays’ in respect of which one has to accept as normal and inevitable a period of delay”. In his dissenting judgment Boolell J. concluded that the long delay might have been prejudicial to the appellant and he would have quashed the conviction. On 22nd January 1998 argument on the remaining grounds took place. In June 1998 Boolell J. retired. On 2nd July 1998, about 12½ years after the appellant was arrested and more than 5 years after the lodging of the grounds of appeal, Balancy J. and Lam Shang Leen J. gave final judgment dismissing the appeal. While the judgment is mainly concerned with other grounds of appeal, the issue of delay resurfaced. The following ground of appeal was before the court:-

“Because the delay which has elapsed between the arrest of the appellant in December 1985 and the final hearing of the appeal on 22 January 1998 i.e. 12 years and one month constitutes a breach of section 10(1) of the Constitution resulting in a miscarriage of justice. In the result, the conviction must be quashed.”

The court dismissed this argument in the following terms:-

“It is at once apparent that the appellant is here invoking the same point as in ground A1 – which was rejected in our interlocutory judgment – but in relation, to, so to say, an updated period. Considering that –

(i) in relation to the interlocutory judgment earlier delivered, this Court had to be reconstituted by the addition of a third judge in view of the conflicting views of the two judges who initially heard the grounds of appeal relating to delay, and arguments had to be heard anew before the Court thus re-constituted;

(ii) the appellant is merely relying on delay per se at appeal stage, without relying on any facts – which could, for instance have been averred by affidavit – to ‘suggest that the delay was not a systemic one’; and

(iii) the appellant has thus invoked no new fact of such significance as to lead to change our conclusion that “there has not been in the present case a breach of the constitutional right of the appellant, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including its complexity and ...“systemic delays” in respect of which “one has to accept as normal and inevitable a period of delay”,’

we find that ground A6 is also devoid of merit.”

At the same time the court rejected an argument that, in view of the delay of more than 12 years since the arrest of the appellant, a custodial sentence was no longer right.

On 25th February 1999 the Supreme Court by a majority (Narayen and Seetulsingh JJ.; Lam Shang Leen J. dissenting) granted leave to appeal to the Privy Council. An important reason why the Supreme Court granted leave to appeal was doubt whether the constitutional right to a fair trial within a reasonable time under section 10(1) of the Constitution extends to appellate proceedings.

The Issues

Apart from a number of points directed to the issues of delay, the grounds of appeal before the Privy Council contained points on the voluntariness of the statements and the question whether Balancy and Lam Shang Leen JJ. (who had heard the appeal with Boolell J.) acted irregularly in giving judgment without his participation. While their Lordships were prima facie unimpressed with these grounds, it would be wrong to state a firm conclusion since their Lordships have heard no oral argument on these points. Instead these reasons will, as already foreshadowed, be confined to the issues of delay.

The Constitution

The starting point is the Constitution of Mauritius. Chapter 2 contains a Bill of Rights securing to the people of Mauritius fundamental rights and freedoms. It is substantially modelled on the European Convention of Human Rights. Section 10 contains detailed provisions to secure the protection of the law to the people of Mauritius. The relevant provision is section 10(1). It reads as follows:-

“Where any person is charged with a criminal offence, then, unless the charge is withdrawn, the case shall be afforded a fair hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial court established by law.”

It will be observed that section 10(1) contains three separate guarantees, namely (1) a right to a fair hearing; (2) within a reasonable time; (3) by an independent and impartial court established by law. Hence, if a defendant is convicted after a fair hearing by a proper court, this is no answer to a complaint that there was a breach of the guarantee of a disposal within a reasonable time. And, even if his guilt is manifest, this factor cannot justify or excuse a breach of the guarantee of a disposal within a reasonable time. Moreover, the independence of the “reasonable time” guarantee is relevant to its reach. It may, of course, be applicable where by reason of inordinate delay a defendant is prejudiced in the deployment of his defence. But its reach is wider. It may be applicable in any case where the delay has been inordinate and oppressive. Furthermore, the position must be distinguished from cases where there is no such constitutional guarantee but the question arises whether under the ordinary law a prosecution should be stayed on the grounds of inordinate delay. It is a matter of fundamental importance that the rights contained in section 10(1) were considered important enough by the people of Mauritius, through their representatives, to be enshrined in their constitution. The stamp of constitutionality is an indication of the higher normative force which is attached to the relevant rights: see Mohammed v. The State [1999] 2 W.L.R. 552, at 562G.

On the other hand, in point of form this matter comes before the Privy Council not by way of a constitutional motion under section 17 of the Constitution but as an appeal with the leave of the Supreme Court of Mauritius.

The pre-trial delay

Counsel for the appellant relied singly and in combination on the pre-trial delay as well as the delay during the appellate proceedings. Counsel for the respondent objected that no leave had been given to appeal on pre-trial delay. It would have been quite unrealistic for their Lordships to bifurcate the consideration of this case in such a way. Given the constitutional guarantee the case had to be considered in the round. Their Lordships permitted the issue of pre-trial delay to be argued.

The argument before the Intermediate Court led it to believe that the relevant period of delay was not from the time that the appellant was arrested but from September 1988 when the Solicitor-General took the decision to prosecute the appellant. Acting on this assumption the Intermediate Court mistakenly assumed the relevant period after September 1988 to have been 2 years and 4 months whereas the period was about 3 years and 4 months. This misapprehension does not matter greatly because the Supreme Court was entitled to review the matter afresh. So their Lordships turn to the judgment of the Supreme Court. In considering the period of pre-trial delay the Supreme Court felt compelled to approach the matter on the basis that the relevant period started when the Solicitor-General decided to prosecute. It was common ground on the present appeal, and rightly so, that the relevant period would have commenced upon the arrest of the appellant: Deweer v. Belgium [1980] 2 E.H.R.R. 439. Given this position, and the constitutional nature of the guarantee in question, their Lordships do not consider that the Supreme Court was inhibited by the shape of the case previously presented from grappling with the real issues. And their Lordships certainly do not feel so inhibited. In the result it is necessary to consider a delay of 6 years and 9 months between the arrest of the appellant in December 1985 and the ruling of the Intermediate Court on this point in June 1992. This delay was caused by the inaction of the Police and D.P.P.’s office.

This is an inordinately long delay, taking into account the nature of the charges, the documentary records available, what the prosecution described as comprehensive confessions on all counts, and the duration of the eventual trial. The decision of the Intermediate Court on this issue was flawed for the reasons explained. The decision of the Supreme Court was also too narrowly based for the reasons set out. In these circumstances their Lordships had to consider the matter afresh. Objectively considered there is a strong argument that the pre-trial delay by itself amounted to a breach of the constitutional guarantee. On balance, however, their Lordships have found it unnecessary to rule on this matter as an independent ground of appeal.

The delay in the appellate proceedings

It is now necessary to consider the delay in the disposal of the appellate proceedings. Here the threshold question arises whether the guarantee in section 10(1) of the Constitution is wide enough to cover such post-conviction delay. The guarantee applies where “any person is charged with a criminal offence”. Literally it may be said that a convicted person, who seeks to appeal against his conviction, is no longer a person “charged”. Accordingly the guarantee could be said to be inapplicable. Their Lordships observe immediately that this is a technical interpretation inappropriate to the construction of a Bill of Rights in a Constitution such as that of Mauritius. It would be strange if a defendant was afforded protection in a Bill of Rights against undue delay in his trial but left wholly unprotected in respect of oppressively delayed appellate proceedings. A purposive and generous interpretation, which avoids “the austerity of tabulated legalism”, is necessary: Minister of Home Affairs v. Fisher [1980] A.C. 319, at 328E-329A, per Lord Wilberforce. On these grounds alone their Lordships would hold that the guarantee in section 10(1) extends to appellate proceedings. This view is, however, strongly reinforced by the view which has prevailed on the interpretation of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1953) (Cmd. 8969). Article 6(1) provides as follows:-

“In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law.”

In strict theory it could be said that under Article 6(1) an appeal involves a determination not of a criminal charge but the appropriateness of a conviction. Not surprisingly, the European Court of Human Rights has unambiguously ruled that Article 6(1) extends to appellate proceedings: see Wemhoff v. Federal Republic of Germany [1968] 1 E.H.R.R.; Eckle v. Federal Republic of Germany [1982] 5 E.H.R.R. 1. The difference in wording between the relevant provisions in the Constitution of Mauritius and the European Convention is not material. Their Lordships regard these decisions as directly in point. It is true that in Potvin v. The Queen [1993] 2 S.C.R. 880 a majority of the Canadian Supreme Court adopted the interpretation that a convicted person is no longer “charged with a criminal offence”. There was a cogently expressed dissent. Their Lordships do not consider it necessary to examine the merits of the reasoning of the majority. It is sufficient to say that the majority was strongly influenced by the detailed provisions of section 11 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which differ in material respects from section 10(1) of the Constitution of Mauritius and article 6(1) of the European Convention. The majority emphasised that “many of the rights found in section 11 cannot apply to appeals and are restricted to the pre-trial or trial process”: at 107a. This context was held to be decisive. The decision in Potvin does not therefore assist in regard to the interpretation of the Constitution of Mauritius. In their Lordships’ view section 10(1) of the Constitution of Mauritius must be construed like article 6(1) of the European Convention. It extends to appellate proceedings.

The delay in the disposal of the appellate proceedings was 5 years and 1 month. The delay between the hearing before two judges and the hearing before three judges was almost three years. Once it became clear that the two judges were unable to agree it was necessary as a matter of some urgency to arrange a new hearing before three judges. Alarm bells should have rung loudly. The fact that a delay of almost 7 years had taken place between the time of the arrest of the appellant and his conviction should have heightened this sense of urgency. The greater part of the delay in the appeal proceedings is entirely unexplained. The inference is unavoidable that there is no satisfactory explanation. Regrettably, their Lordships must record that the cause of the delay must be laid at the door of the Supreme Court of Mauritius. In the result the appellant has had the shadow of the proceedings hanging over him for about 15 years. There has manifestly been a flagrant breach of section 10(1).

The remedy

The normal remedy for a failure of this particular guarantee, viz. the reasonable time guarantee, would be to quash the conviction. That is, of course, the remedy for a breach of the two other requirements of section 10(1), viz. (1) a fair hearing and (2) a trial before an independent and impartial court. Counsel for the respondent argued however that the appropriate remedy in this case is to affirm the conviction and to remit the matter of sentence to the Supreme Court so that it may substitute a non-custodial sentence in view of the delay. The basis of this submission was that the guilt of the appellant is obvious and that it would therefore be wrong to allow him to escape conviction. This argument largely overlooks the importance of the constitutional guarantee as already explained. Their Lordships do not wish to be overly prescriptive on this point. They do not suggest that there may not be circumstances in which it might arguably be appropriate to affirm the conviction but substitute a non-custodial sentence, e.g. in a case where there had been a plea of guilty or where the inexcusable delay affected convictions on some counts but not others. But their Lordships are quite satisfied that the only disposal which will properly vindicate the constitutional rights of the appellant in the present case would be the quashing of the convictions.

For all these reasons their Lordships quashed the convictions and sentences of the appellant. The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the appellant before their Lordships’ Board.