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National Court of Papua New Guinea |
Unreported National Court Decisions
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
[NATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE]
OS 299 OF 1998
BETWEEN: ELECTORAL COMMISSION OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA
FIRST PLAINTIFF
AND: PETER SIMBI
SECOND PLAINTIFF
AND: JOHN MASUENG
FIRST RESPONDENT
AND: RICHARD KORONAI
SECOND RESPONDENT
Waigani
Sevua J
19 August 1999
14 December 1999
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW - Judicial Review - Application for review of decision of District Court on Local Level Government Elections - Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections - Part XIX, Section 287.
JUDICIAL REVIEW - Local Level Government Elections - Appointment of Returning Officer - Statutory requirement - Notice of appointment not gazetted in National Gazette -Non-compliance with statutory requirement - Conduct of elections by person not appointed as Returning Officer in accordance with law - Result of such purported exercise of authority - Elections null and void - Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections - ss 18, 19, 21, 212, 217, and 287.
Held
1. T60; uee qon ti subftantitantial compliance discussed in Isidore Kaseng-v-Rabbie Namaliu, Supreme Court decision, SC 487, does not arise and has no relevance inpreseplica
ـ   Th0; The appointmointment ment of a Returning Officer pursuant to s.19 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections is by publication in the National Gazette. That statutory requirement is mandatory.3. ;ټ T60; The sece second plaintiff, Peter Simbi, was not legally appointed as the Returning Officer for the Aitape-Luen Elate in pursuance of s.19 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Governmenrnment Elet Elections therefore, did not have lawful authority to conduct the Aitape-Lumi Local Level Government Elections.
4. #160;; T60 sece second plnd plaintiff’s purported appointment was not an appointment pursuant to s.21 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Gover Elec as i not a case of emergency.
5.. < &; A ning Oing Officer cannotannot conduct an Election unless he is duly appointed under s.19 of the Organic Law. That is a fundamental jurisdictional issue.
6. ҈& the electionctions in s in the wthe whole of Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate was conducted by a person who had no authority in law to conduct elect the purported exercise of such authority affected all the Ward elections in that that elec electorate thereby rendering the result null and void.
7. ҈ T60; The plaintiff&;8217pl application for judicial review is dismissed.
Cases Cited
Isidore Kaseng -v- Rabbie Namaliu, SC 487.
Counsel
C. Makail for Plaintip> SEVUA J: The plaintiffs are seeking review of the decision of the second respondent in respect of a Local Level Government election petition
filed by the first respondent. The application commenced as a review under Order 16 of the National Court Rules then changed to a
Section 155 (3) Constitution, application for review. The facts are as follows; the second plaintiff conducted the Local Level Government Elections for the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate
from 27th September to 10th October, 1997. He was appointed by the Electoral Commissioner as the Returning Officer for that electorate, however his name was
not gazetted in the National Gazette as the Returning Officer for that electorate. The Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate comprised of four
Local Level Governments. East and West Wapei with 15 Wards each and 15 Ward Councillors to be elected and the Aitape East and Aitape
West Local Level Governments which consisted of 25 Wards with 25 Ward Councillors to be elected. Thus in all, 80 Ward Councillors
were elected during the Aitape-Lumi Local Level Government Elections in 1997. The first respondent was a losing candidate in Ward 7 in the Aitape East Local Level Government. He filed an election petition, LEP
14 of 1997 in the Aitape District Court seeking an order to invalidate the results of the Ward 7 election in the Aitape East Local
Level Government election. The ground for his petition was that, Peter Simbi, the second plaintiff, was not gazetted as the Returning
Officer to conduct the Local Level Government elections. The first respondent therefore challenged the legal authority of the second
plaintiff in conducting these elections. The second respondent sitting as the Principal Magistrate of the Aitape District Court declared, inter alia, that the second plaintiff’s
appointment as Returning Officer for the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate was null and void and of no effect. I set out in full the orders
of the District Court. “1. ـ It is h reby declareclared that: (a) The first reenond821&#s ap;s appointment as Returning Officer for the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate is null and void and of
no effect, and (b) #1160;& The resptRexe82exercise of delegatlegated poed powers wers and fand functiunctions under Section 19 of OLNLLGE,
including all orders, directions, apments and declarations, issued or made by him in respect ofct of the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate
Local Level Government Elections 1997, are null and void and of no effect, and (c) ـ The whoe whole election for Local level Governments within Aitape-Lumi Open electorate absolutely void, pursuant to
the provisions of Section 212(1)(h) of OLNLLGE. 2.ټ#160;; #160; And it is hereby ordered that:
(a)p>(a) ټ A new Enew Election for Local Level Governments within the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate shall be held, pursuant to the provision of Section 226(c) of OLNLLGE, within a period of montom the of thof this order, and
(b) &160; #160; e; Thst and second resp respondents meet the costs of the petitioner, to be agreed upon, if not taxed.”
The issue of leave can be disposed off immediately. I have simply take apprthat is granted nted as a as a mattematter of course, to review the District Court’s decision pursuant to Section 155 of the Constitution, therefore it is not necessary for an application for leave.
There are five grounds on which the plaintiffs seek to rely on, and these are stated in the statement filed pursuant to Order 16 Rule 3 (2) (a) of the National Court Rules, which I consider is misconceived as this application is not one which is brought under Order 16. Nevertheless, the Court has allowed the plaintiffs to rely on those grounds as no objections have been raised since the respondents were unrepresented in Court.
In order for one to follow the basis of this application, I will set out the grounds of the plaintiffs’ application:
(a) leae ed Mngistrate, committmmitted an error of law in declaring both the appointment of the second plaintiff as the Returning Officer for the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate invalid, for failure to comply with Section 19 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Governments elections, as well as invalidating the four (4) Local Level Government elections for the whole of the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate, under Section 212 (1)(h), for failure to comply with Section 19, when evidence showed that there was sufficient and substantial compliance with Section 19 by the Electoral Commission.
(b) Tae le Mnedstrgie, ctmmittmmitted an error of law in declaring the appointment of the second plaintiff as Returning Officer invalor fa to c withion 1the said Organic Law, as well as invalidating the Lthe Local ocal LevelLevel Gove Governmenrnment elections, for the whole of the Aitape-Lumi Open electorate under Section 212 (1)(h), for failure to comply with Section 19.
(c) e learned Magistrate cote committed an error in law in invalidating the appointment of both the first respondent as the Returninicer,ell alifyie four (4) Local Level Government Council elections, for fail failing ting to como comply wply with Section 19, without a proper consideration and application of Section 217, when evidence showed that there was sufficient and substantial compliance with Section 19.
(d) ـhe leae learned Mned Magistrate committed an error in law in not holding the appointment of the first respondent as Returning Officer valid in consideration and application of Sections 21 and 217 of the Organic Law when evidence showed, that there was sufficient and substantial compliance with Section 19 by the Electoral Commission.
(e) ;ټ The leae learned Mned Magistrate acted in excess of jurisdiction to declare all four (4) Local Level Government electioor thape-Lumi Open electorate void.
In respect of the first two grounds, Mr Makr Makail sail submitted that the applicants have substantially complied with Section 19 of the Organic Law. In other words, the applicants, in relying on the Supreme Court decision in Isidore Kaseng -v- Rabbie Namaliu, SC487; say that there has been substantial compliance by the fact that the Electoral Commissioner had submitted the second plaintiff’s name to the Government Printer to print in the Government Gazette. This argument is unmeritorious and misconceived. The question of substantial compliance does not arise in the present case. Therefore, the Supreme Court’s decision referred to has no relevance in the present application. The meaning of Section 19 is not as perceived by the plaintiffs.
The appointment of a Returning Officer pursuant to Section 19 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections (the Organic Law) is a mandatory requirement contrary to the plaintiff’s contention that the Electoral Commissioner had appointed Peter Simbi as the Returning Officer for Aitape-Lumi Electoral, but that such an appointment was not printed in the gazette, therefore, Peter Simbi was nevertheless the Returning Officer. That is not the letter and spirit of the Organic Law. Section 19 is emphatically clear. It starts with; “The Electoral Commission shall by notice in the National Gazette appoint a Returning Officer,”(my underlining). In my view, Section 19 can only mean this; the appointment of a Returning Officer is by publication in the National Gazette. The Instrument of Revocation and Appointment of Returning Officer signed by the Electoral Commissioner on 15th August, 1997 is not, per se, an appointment by notice in the National Gazette. It is my opinion that for an appointment to be legally effective, such an instrument of appointment of a returning officer must be published in the National Gazette. That is not the case in the present application.
I find, both as a matter of law and fact that, Peter Simbi was not legally appointed as the Returning Officer for the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate in pursuance of Section 19 of the Organic Law. Accordingly, he did not have legal authority to conduct the Local Level Government Elections in the Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate. Any purported exercise of authority was therefore null and void and of no effect. I find no error in the decision of the second respondent.
The plaintiffs’ alternative argument that the appointment of Peter Simbi was an appointment in case of emergency pursuant to Section 21 of the Organic Law is not only spurious, but equally mischievous and unmeritorious. Simply, Peter Simbi’s appointment was not a Section 21 appointment. It was not a case of an emergency. There is no evidence of that therefore that submission has no basis in law.
I therefore reject the plaintiffs’ first two grounds of review and they are dismissed.
On grounds (c) and (d), the plaintiff’s counsel relied on Sections 212(3), 217 and 218(1) of the Organic Law. He submitted that the presiding magistrate misconstrued those provisions. My view is that, it is not a matter of construction of those legal provisions. The crux of the matter here is a fundamental jurisdictional issue. A Returning Officer cannot conduct an election unless he is duly appointed pursuant to Section 19 of the Organic Law. Whether I accept that the second plaintiff did not commit an error so that reliance can be placed on Section 218(1), that is not the issue here, nor was it an issue before the District Court. The fundamental jurisdictional issue is that the second plaintiff did not have the legal authority to conduct the Aitape-Lumi Local Level Government Elections. I consider that this Court in such a case like this, would be failing in its duty to uphold the Constitution and the Organic Law, if it did not arrive at the same conclusion reached by the District Court.
Here, there was clearly a purported exercise of authority by the second plaintiff, who did not have such legal authority. The Court just cannot turn a blind eye to an unlawful act, that is, the conduct of an election, which was void from the start. I am of the view that the approach taken by the presiding magistrate was correct. The Courts are duty bound to uphold the Constitution and the law. We cannot ignore an illegality or an unconstitutionality and hope that it will resolve itself somehow. It would be tantamount to the Court’s formal sanctioning of an illegality or an unconstitutional act. These two grounds have no merits either, and I dismiss them as well.
The final ground relates to the District Court’s decision in declaring the elections for all the Wards in the four Local Level Government areas void.
It is correct that the petition LEP 14 of 1997, which gave rise to this application, was only in respect of Ward 7 election in the Aitape East Local Level Government election. It is equally correct that the first respondent had no interest in the other Ward elections. However, I would adopt the reasons given in respect of grounds (c) and (d). The appointment of the Returning Officer was not made in accordance with Section 19 of the Organic Law. How could the District Court declare the election in one Ward void and ignore the election in other Wards, when the whole election was conducted by someone who had no authority in law to conduct such elections? Whilst I agree that the petition LEP 14 of 1997 was only in respect of Ward 7 in the Aitape East Local Level Government, the non-compliance of a mandatory requirement of the Organic Law, affected all the election results of the whole Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate. Under the circumstances, I consider that the presiding magistrate acted in an appropriate manner by declaring all election results void. I would also dismiss ground (e) of the application.
For these reasons, I order that the plaintiffs application for review be dismissed, and I further order that the first plaintiff conduct a by-election of the whole of Aitape-Lumi Open Electorate Local Level Government as soon as practicable. I make no order as to costs.
Lawyer for Plaintiffs: Acting Solicitor General
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/pg/cases/PGNC/1999/108.html