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Magistrates Court of Fiji |
IN THE RESIDENT MAGISTRATE'S COURT OF SUVA
SCT Appeal No: - 2476/2010
ROHIT PRASAD TRIVEDI/ ORIAN ENTERPRISES
Appellant
V
BABITA KUMAR VERMA
Respondent
For Appellant: - Present in Person,
Respobdent: - Present in Person.
JUDGMENT
"Any party to proceedings before a Tribunal may appeal against an order made by the Tribunal under section 15(6) or section 31(2) on the grounds that:
(a) the proceedwere conducted bted by the Referee in a manner which was unfair to the appellant and prejudicially affected the result of the proceedings; or
"At the outset it must be noted that the form of wording used in ground (a) is unusual and is plainly distinguishable from a general right of appeal such as that conferred under Section 36 of the Magistrates Courts Act (Cap.14); Section 12 of the Court of Appeal Act (Cap.12); and on the Supreme Court under Section 122 of the 1997 Constitution.
What is more ground (a) specifically refers to the manner in which the referee conducted the proceedings as the crucial concern of the right of appeal on that first ground. Furthermore not only must the conduct complained about be unfair to the appellant it must, in addition, prejudicially affect the result.
As to the manner or procedure required to be followed by the referee in conducting a proceeding under the Decree these are principally to be found in Sections 24 to 29 (inclusive) under the heading 'HEARINGS'. A cursory examination of these provisions serves to highlight the informal, non-adversarial nature of the proceedings before the Small Claims Tribunal and militates against a general appeal on the merits or for errors of law.
The non-legalistic nature of a Tribunal proceeding is further exemplified by the requirement in Section 15(4) of the Decree that:
'The Tribunal shall determine the dispute according to the substantial merits and justice of the case and in doing so ... shall not be bound to give effect to strict legal rights or obligations or to legal forms or technicalities.'
I am fortified in my narrow view of the appellant's right of appeal, by the observations of Thorp J. in N Insurance N.Z. Ltd. v.d. v. Auckland District Court [1993] .L.R. 453 when he sahe said of a similar right granted in the Disputes Tribunals Act 1988 (New Zealand), in identical termsur gr(a) above, at p.4t p.458:
'The essential matter (in the words uses used) ... is its specification of the basis for appeal against a referee's determination as being the conduct of proceedings in a manner that was unfair to the appellant and prejudicially affected the result of the proceedings. This formulation is both specific and unusual. On its ordinary grammatical construction it provides only a limited right of appeal, and requires any intending appellant to direct the (Court) to some unfairness in the form, and not simply the result, of the tribunal's hearing.'
and a little later in his judgment his honour said:
'read on (its) own, and on the basis of (its) ordinary grammatical meaning, (the section) would not leave any careful interpreter in much doubt that the right of appeal (it) created was a special type of appeal, limited to cases of procedural unfairness (and does not extend to the correction of errors of law).'
Even more trenchant is the view expressed by Greig J. in Hertz New Zealand v. Dis. Disputes Tribunal (18 PRNZ where his honour sour said in rejecting the appeal in that case, at p.151:
'... there is neal o merits even if there is a clear and fundamental ntal error of law in the conclusion of thef the Tribunal.'
Quite plainly in my view not only is this second ground of appeal misconceived in so far as it seeks to question the merits of the referee's decision without pointing to any procedural unfairness but further, in so far as it purports to be predicated on the difficult legal principle of unjust enrichment it fails to properly appreciate the function and nature of a non-legally qualified referee exercising what in effect is an equity and good conscience jurisdiction."
On this 6th day of January 2012.
R.D.R.Thushara Rajasinghe
Resident Magistrate, Suva.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/fj/cases/FJMC/2012/20.html