Case LawGhana
Taylor v High Court (Commercial Division) (J5/80/2025) [2025] GHASC 47 (22 July 2025)
Supreme Court of Ghana
22 July 2025
Judgment
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF JUDICATURE
IN THE SUPREME COURT
ACCRA – AD.2025
CORAM: AMADU JSC (PRESIDING)
GAEWU JSC
DZAMEFE JSC
SUURBAAREH JSC
MENSAH JSC
CIVIL MOTION
NO. J5/80/2025
22ND JULY 2025
THE REPUBLIC
VRS.
HIGH COURT (COMMERCIAL DIVISION) ……..…. RESPONDENT
EX PARTE:
KEVIN EKOW TAYLOR …………….…. APPLICANT
ATTORNEY-GENERAL …………...…… INTERESTED PARTY
RULING
MAJORITY OPINION
TANKO AMADU JSC:
INTRODUCTION
Page 1 of 48
PROLOGUE
“There cannot be anything of greater consequence than to keep the streams of
justice clear and pure, that parties may proceed with safety both to
themselves and their characters.” Per Lord Hardwicke in The St. James’ Evening
Post Case (1742) 2 Atkins 469 at 472.
(1) On the 22nd day of July, 2025 this court, by majority decision granted the
Applicant’s prayer for an order of certiorari to lie against the warrant of arrest
issued from the High Court (Commercial Division) Accra, on the 16th day of
January 2020 and accordingly quashed same. We hereby set out the reasons
for the majority decision.
(2) The case of THE REPUBLIC VS. EUGENE BAFFOE-BONNIE & 4 ORS Ref.
No. J1/06/2018, dated 7th June 2018, did not only produce the ground breaking
guidelines on pretrial disclosures in further enhancement of our criminal
justice system in strict fidelity with Articles 19(2)(e) and (g) of the 1992
Constitution. In the course of the trial at the High Court, the case provoked an
unrelated matter to the substantive trial, in consequence of which the trial judge
issued a warrant of arrest on KELVIN TAYLOR on the 16th day of January 2020.
(3) The said warrant is reproduced as follows:-
WARRANT FOR THE ARREST OF KELVIN TAYLOR
WHEREAS the above-named case is pending before the High Court, Accra.
AND WHEREAS, the Court’s attention has been drawn to a scandalous video circulating on
social media in relation to this case, which video contains an extremely scandalous and prima
facie contemptuous speech that scandalizes the Judge, the Court and the whole administration
of justice.
Page 2 of 48
AND WHEREAS, the said scandalous video is purported to have been made by a scoundrel
who styles himself as Kelvin Taylor, who is not a party to this case.
AND THE COURT, finding it necessary to invoke the powers vested in it under Article
126(2) of the Constitution, 1992, to proceed against the said scoundrel, Kelvin Taylor for
contempt.
NOW THEREFORE, the Court orders the issuance of this Warrant for the apprehension of
the body of Kelvin Taylor, and for him to be produced before the court, to answer to the
question why he should not be committed to prison for making such contemptuous statements
which are totally a fabrication by him, in the said video.
IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED, that this Warrant is directed at the Inspector-
General of Police (IGP) and the Ghana Police Service, the Bureau of National
Investigations (BNI) and the National Security, to take appropriate steps for the
apprehension and production of the said Kelvin Taylor before the court.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, that this Warrant remains in force until the said Kelvin
Taylor is arrested, and shall lapse the day the said Kelvin Taylor expires from the surface of
the earth.
(4) Freedom of expression often described as free speech is not unlimited.
However, such limitations to the freedom to express oneself must be grounded
in law and due process. As all persons are equal before the law, and have rights
protected either by statute or common law, so are judges who are also human
and constrained by the frailties of men. But, unlike the laity, judges cannot
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descend into the arena to respond to what they find scandalous or insulting in
the discharge of their judicial duties. The antidote developed by the common
law, is the offence of contempt of court.
(5) In our jurisdiction as in other common law jurisdictions, contempt of court is
the only conceivable offence which ordinarily appears contrary to Article 19(11)
of the 1992 Constitution which requires every criminal offence to be defined
together with prescribed sanctions in a written law. However, the offence of
Contempt of Court is justified by the constitution itself under Articles 19(12)
and 126(2).
(6) The powers of the court to commit for contempt, is the tool that cushions the
very sustenance of the administration of justice and the dignity of the courts.
However, if not carefully deployed especially in the procedure to exercise that
power to attach or commit for contempt, judges may become arbitrary
“monsters” against the very people on whose behalf justice is administered and
thwart the very justice we have by our judicial oaths sworn to uphold. Henry
Cecil, a novelist and a former County Court Judge in England wrote at page 56
of his book “the English Judge” thus:-
“Every sane person abuses his power from time to time, but a judge has
many more opportunities of doing this than most other people. One
unfair remark by one judge can bring the judiciary as a whole into
disrepute, just as a few unruly and bad-mannered students can give the
young people of today a bad name. In each case the percentage is tiny
but the harm is done just the same”. He further stated that:
“The judge is in a unique position. Not merely is everything said by him
during a case absolutely privileged, but he cannot be shouted down as
in Parliament or even answered back if he refuses to allow it. He can
cause great misery and cause frustration to parties, witnesses and
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advocates. The harm that a judge can do is not merely in actual
injustice, that is wrong decision, but in sending litigants (and
advocates) away with a feeling that their cases had not been properly
tried”.
(7) As the apex court of the land and final gatekeepers of the rule of law, we have
a higher duty to uphold the law to every manner of persons without fear or
favour, affection or ill will, and to ensure that individual liberties and
freedoms as enshrined and guaranteed in the 1992 Constitution, are not
unjustifiably compromised. In undertaking our adjudicative functions, we
must at all times, remind ourselves of the source of our power which is from
the polity. Our duty is therefore, one of service in the name of the state and on
behalf of the people. The service we render, and must be seen to render, is
justice. The term justice in itself, is not of a monolithic import, but at its
foundation, is the requirement of fairness. My Lords, our constitution and
judicial oaths expect our adjudicatory processes to be consistent with the
principles of fairness, absence of bias and preemptory vilifications of persons
who appear before us either by themselves or in response to the courts’
processes.
(8) At the same time, in every social setting, perfectionism is almost an illusory
construct without life. Therefore, the framers of our constitution recognised
situations where persons may deliberately and/or recklessly make it their
modus to scandalize the courts in unprintable and insulting language or
conduct which will provoke judicial response. Such irritable conduct against
the judicial system or particular judges not only endangers the administration
of justice, but undermines the authority of the courts with the potential
consequence of throwing the entire administration of justice into disrepute or
disrespect.
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(9) Referencing the quotation in the prologue in this delivery, Lord Denning MR
(as he then was) continued in the introduction of his book “Due Process of Law”
(Oxford University Press, 1980, 3) as follows:
“There is not one stream of justice. There are many streams. Whatever
obstructs their courses or muddies the waters of any of those streams is
punishable under the single cognomen ‘Contempt of Court’. It has its
peculiar features. It is a criminal offence but it is not tried on indictment
with a jury. It is tried summarily by a judge alone, who may be the very
judge who has been injured by the contempt. These features have led to
some concern. Commentators have criticised it. Committees have
considered it. A Discussion Paper has been presented to Parliament. So
I have tried to collect our cases upon it. Its importance is undoubted.”
(10) My Lords, before us is an application, which triggers a careful consideration of
two pertinent aspects of our national lives the adherence to the due process of
law, and the respect for the authority of the court. The procedure to enforcing
the latter, requires adherence to the principles of the former. Ours is not a
dictatorial setting but is procedurally defined, as it is underpinned by respect
for the rights of all persons including accused persons or Respondents to any
process of the court alleging contempt. This ruling presents an opportunity to
re-visit the principles and procedures in citing a person for contempt of court,
especially by the court itself, the issuance of a warrant for arrest, recognising
that, the alleged contemnor has constitutional rights which command respect.
THE APPLICATION
(11) On 2nd July 2025, the Applicant, Kevin Ekow Taylor (described in the warrant of
arrest as Kelvin Taylor) invoked the jurisdiction of this court and sought relief
for certiorari formulated as follows:
Page 6 of 48
“an order of certiorari directed at the High Court, Commercial
Division, to bring up into this Court for purposes of being quashed and
the quashing of the warrant of arrest issued by His Lordship Eric Kyei
Baffour JA (Sitting as an additional Justice of the High Court) dated the
16th day of January, 2020 in the case instituted the REPUBLIC VS.
EUGENE BAFFOE-BONNIE & FOUR OTHERS (CASE NO. CR/904/17)
for the arrest of the Applicant and for a declaration that the High Court
has no jurisdiction to issue a warrant for the arrest of the Applicant
without first giving the Applicant an opportunity to answer any
charges against him.”
(12) The grounds for the application as set out in the paper, are that:
a. The High Court acted in breach of the rule of natural Justice audi alteram partem
when it issued the warrant for the “apprehension of the body of” the Applicant
without first hearing the Applicant on the allegations based on which the High
Court issued the said warrant of arrest.
b. The High Court’s warrant for the “apprehension of the body of” the Applicant
was not made in accordance with any procedure sanctioned by law.
c. The High Court committed an error of law when by its order directed the
Applicant’s be first apprehended before being heard when there was no previous
order for the Applicant to appear before the High Court to show cause which the
Applicant did not comply with.
(13) In a 21 paragraphed affidavit in support, the Applicant stated that he is of the
United States of America. He deposed that, he acquired knowledge of the facts
he deposed to based on media information and through, a copy of the order,
the subject of the application which had been made available to his lawyers.
Page 7 of 48
According to him, for quite some time now, friends and relatives in Ghana
informed him that the High Court of the Republic of Ghana has issued a
warrant for his arrest, but none of such relatives and friends was able to make
a copy available to him. He claimed that, because he is not ordinarily resident
in Ghana, he has not paid attention to it, especially as no one ever showed him
a copy of the order even though he always requested for copies each time a
friend or relative mentioned it to him in a conversation or whenever there had
been social media discussion on it.
(14) The Applicant deposed further that, given the frequency of the discussions on
the subject, he engaged the services of his present lawyer sometime in April
2025, who, after about a month of search, sent him a copy of the order.
According to him, his lawyer explained the difficulty in obtaining a copy of the
court order because although he instructed him to procure a copy of the said
order, he did not know which court issued it.
(15) The Applicant deposed additionally that, the named Kelvin Taylor mentioned
in the order is not his name. However, it has a close resemblance to his name
and from the information he has received from his friends and relatives in
Ghana, it is believed to be directed at him. He contended that, the order refers
to a “scandalous video circulating on social media…which video contains an
extremely scandalous and prima facie contemptuous spe (sic) that scandalizes
the Judge, the Court and the whole administration of justice”, yet, the order
did not direct that he be served with a copy of the said video to enable him
appear before the Court to explain whether the video was generated by
artificial intelligence or doctored or his thinking based on which the video was
made before directing that he be arrested.
Page 8 of 48
(16) The Applicant asserted further that, his lawyer confirmed that, the registry of
the High Court did not have a copy of the video to enable him offer advice. It
is the case of the Applicant that, the order for his arrest was made in breach of
his right to be heard before any order is made against him. The Applicant also
asserted that, the said order is contrary to law because it was made without
first giving him a hearing. According to the Applicant, the impugned order
undermined the High Court’s own obligation to protect his fundamental
human right to liberty because he had not refused nor disobeyed an invitation
of the Court to appear to answer any charge of contempt against him.
Consequently, there was no legal basis for the ordering of the warrant for his
arrest before his appearance in court to answer to the contempt charge.
(17) Additionally, the Applicant stated that, in all instances in which the courts have
summoned persons to appear and show cause why they should not be attached
for contempt, any appearance before the court is not preceded by an order for
the arrest of the alleged contemnor if there is no intention to refuse to appear
in court voluntarily to answer any charges.
(18) The Applicant therefore contended that, the warrant for his arrest even before
he is given a hearing constitutes a real threat to his fundamental human rights
and must not be executed unless he has been given the opportunity to
voluntarily appear before the court to answer the contempt charge.
(19) When the application came up for hearing, this court sought an explanation of
the lapse of time between the date the warrant for the Applicant’s arrest was
issued and the date of filing the application as same is in contravention of the
time lines prescribed by the rules of this court, the long delay in applying to the
court, Counsel for the Applicant responded that, while acknowledging the 90
day time limit within which to bring applications of this nature, the nature of
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the impugned order is not constrained by time limitations, since, the order in
their view is a nullity and being void there is no time limit in bringing the
application for same to be quashed being a nullity ab initio.
NO OPPOSITION TO THE APPLICATION
(20) It is trite legal knowledge that, there is no statutory obligation on an opponent
to an application to file an affidavit in opposition. Indeed, an application may
be opposed without the necessity of filing any formal affidavit in opposition in
answer, especially, when the basis of the opposition are legal points, which can
be raised by oral submission in court. As held by this court in REPUBLIC VS.
COURT OF APPEAL, ACCRA; EX-PARTE TSATSU TSIKATA [2005-2006]
SCGLR 614:
“An opponent who does not file any affidavit in opposition to the
Applicant’s affidavit is only deemed to have admitted the facts
contained therein. Furthermore, the default does not debar him or her
from arguing the matters in connection thereto on points of law, for an
Applicant is under such circumstances not entitled to an automatic
grant of the prayer on the sole basis that the facts are undisputed.”
(21) In the instant case, there is evidence before the court that, the application was
duly served on the office of the Attorney-General. However, no opposition
process was filed. We note with regret that, there was no appearance in court
by or on behalf of the Honourable Attorney-General even if only out of
deference to this court to make an appearance and concede that the procedural
shortcomings raised in the Applicant’s statement of case are unanswerable or
alternatively raise points of law in opposition to the application.
Page 10 of 48
(22) Be that as it may, the absence of any opposition to an application has never
resulted in an automatic success of the application. Courts are still under a duty
to evaluate the merits of any application in the context of the applicable law
and the available evidence in order to make a determination. That was what
the majority in the instant application did on the 22nd day of July, 2025 when
the application was argued by the Applicant’s counsel and same was granted
having found that the procedure adopted by the trial high court in issuing the
warrant of arrest was without due process of law on the ingredients of want of
jurisdiction and breach of natural justice, the combination of which resulted in
a nullity of the impugned order.
THE LAW AND PRINCIPLES
(23) Under the 1992 Constitution, the Supreme Court, and the High Court are the
only courts vested with jurisdiction to supervise superior courts and lower
courts and other adjudicating bodies respectively. (See Articles 132 and 141 of
the 1992 Constitution). This power of judicial review, is a special power that
provides an inherent check in the administration of justice itself. It ensures that,
even the courts (both inferior and superior) are not by themselves insulated from
adhering to due process and the rule of law.
(24) This court has developed a rich line of jurisprudence on the essence and
grounds on which the court’s supervisory jurisdiction will be properly
invoked. The authorities are consistent that, the court’s supervisory jurisdiction
would be properly invoked upon an allegation of:
a. Breach of the Rules of Natural Justice (both the audi-alteram partem rule
and nemo judex in causa sua). See AWUNI VS. WEST AFRICAN
EXAMINATIONS COUNCIL [2003-2004] 1 SCGLR 471; ABOAGYE
VS. GHANA COMMERCIAL BANK [2001-2002] 2 SCGLR 797
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b. Want and/or Excess of Jurisdiction. See REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT,
KOFORIDUA; EX PARTE OTU [1995-96] 1 GLR 177.
c. Error of law patent on the face of the record, which error goes to the
jurisdiction of the court below. See REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT,
ACCRA; EX-PARTE INDUSTRIALISATION FUND FOR
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES [2003-2004] 1 SCGLR 348; REPUBLIC
VS. COURT OF APPEAL, ACCRA; EX-PARTE TSATSU TSIKATA
[2005-2006] SCGLR 612; REPUBLIC VS HIGH COURT, CAPE
COAST; EX-PARTE JOHN BONDZIE SEY (UNIVERSITY OF
EDUCATION WINNEBA-INTERESTED PARTY) [2020] 164 GMJ.1
d. Breach of the Wednesbury Principles of illegality, unreasonableness,
irrationality or procedural impropriety. REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT,
KUMASI; EX PARTE BANK OF GHANA & OTHERS (SEFA &
ASIEDU INTEREST3ED PARTIES) (NO.1); REPUBLIC VS. HIGH
COURT, KUMASI; EX-PARTE BANK OF GHANA & OTHERS
(GYAMFI & OTHERS INTERESTED PARTIES) (NO.1)
(CONSOLIDATED) (2013-2014) 1 SCGLR 477 AND TEMA
DEVELPMENT CORPORATION & MUSAH V ATTA BAFFOUR
[2005-2006] SCGLR 121.
(25) In the TEMA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION & MUSAH VS. ATTA
BAFFOUR case supra, this Court, relying on the English case of COUNCIL OF
CIVIL SERVICE UNIONS AND OTHERS VS. MINISTER FOR THE CIVIL
SERVICE [1984] 3 ALL ER 935 set out the grounds on which an application for
judicial review may be proper before the court for consideration:
Page 12 of 48
“To qualify as a subject for judicial review the decision must have
consequences which affect some person (or body of persons) other than
the decision-maker, although it may affect him too. It must affect such
other person either (a) by altering rights or obligations of that person
which are enforceable by or against him in private law or (b) by
depriving him of some benefit or advantage which either (i) he has in the
past been permitted by the decision- maker to enjoy and which he can
legitimately expect to be permitted to continue to do until there has
been communicated to him some rationale ground for withdrawing it
on which he has been given an opportunity to comment or (iii) he has
received assurance from the decision-maker will not be withdrawn
without giving him first an opportunity of advancing reasons for
contending that they should not be withdrawn…
For a decision to be susceptible to judicial review the decision-maker
must be empowered by public law to make decisions that, it validity
made, will lead to administrative action or abstention from action by
an authority endowed by law with executive powers, which have one or
other of the consequences mentioned in the preceding paragraph.”
(26) In REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT, SEKONDI, EX-PARTE AMPONG AKA
AKROFA KRUKOKO (KYEREFO III AND OTHERS-INTERESTED
PARTY) [2011] 2 SCGLR 716 at 722 this Court restated the nature and essence
of the remedy of certiorari in the following words:
“an order of certiorari, it is trite learning, is a discretionary remedy
granted on grounds of excess or want of jurisdiction and or some breach
of a rule of natural justice.”
Page 13 of 48
(27) Further, in REPUBLIC VS. CAPE COAST DISTRICT MAGISTRATE
COURT II; EX-PARTE AMOO [1979] GLR 150 Apaloo CJ (of blessed memory)
observed about the remedy of certiorari as follows:
“As is well known, the remedy of certiorari is a useful tool in aid of
justice and ought to be used to correct defects of justice whether they
arise from illegality, fraud, breach of the rules of natural justice, error
on the face of the record and the like. I am not even prepared to say that
the category of cases in which this useful remedy can or should be used
is closed. There is no reason why I should stifle the development of the
law by any such assertion.”
(28) In the instant application, the Applicant contended that, before the issuance of
the impugned warrant of arrest, the court below ought to have afforded him a
hearing. According to the Applicant the trial high court, not having given him
the opportunity to appear to offer an explanation on the alleged contemptuous
video, his right to a fair hearing was violated, and consequently the court was
bereft of the jurisdictional competence to proceed against him to issue the
impugned warrant of arrest directed at the Inspector General of Police and
Director of the Bureau of National Investigations now National Investigations
Bureau for execution.
(29) The Applicant further urged on this court that, the trial high court ought not to
have in the first instance, issued a warrant for his arrest, without first issuing a
summons to show cause commanding his appearance as was the procedure
applied by this court in the case of ABU RAMADAN & EVANS NIMAKO VS.
ELECTORAL COMMISSION & ATTORNEY GENERAL IN RE (1) THE
OWNER OF THE STATION MONTIE FM (2) SALIFU MAASE @ MUGABE
(3) ALISTAIR NELSON (4) GODWIN AKO GUNN Civil Motion
No.J8/108/2016 Dated 27th July 2016 (the Montie 3 case).
Page 14 of 48
JUDICIAL REVIEW NOT CONCERNED WITH THE MERITS OF AN ACTION
(30) It would be observed from the above grounds settled by the authorities that,
the conditions for judicial review, are procedurally focused. A writ or order of
certiorari is only limited to the procedure by which a decision is made, and not
the rightness, or wrongfulness of the substantive decision. It is therefore not
available to test the merits of a decision. That avenue is by way of an appeal.
What this simply means is that, when a court of law is seised with a matter in
the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction, the court’s focus is strictly on the
grounds of the review, which does not entail an examination and
determination of the merits of the impugned decision but only the procedure
by which the decision was arrived at.
(31) In the EX-PARTE JOHN BONDZIE SEY case (supra), this Court pronounced
on this duty as follows:
“It is trite that judicial review is not concerned with the decision but
rather the way the decision was made. The High Court did not commit
any breaches of the rules of natural justice. Applicant contends that by
failing to recognize the breach of natural justice the High Court had
exceeded its jurisdiction. This is respectfully an erroneous assertion by
the Applicant.
In the recent case of REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT, (PROBATE AND
ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION), ACCRA EX-PARTE: PATRICK
AGUDEY TEYE, (INTERESTED PARTIES) NOMO AGBOSU
DOGBEDA AND 5 OTHERS CIVIL MOTION NO.J5/62/2018; 29TH
MAY, 2019 (UNREPORTED) The Supreme Court stated that:
“In this case, the Applicant is praying for an order of Certiorari not
because the trial judge did not have jurisdiction to give a ruling on the
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matter but that he is dissatisfied with the ruling. This may be a ground
of appeal but definitely not a ground for certiorari. The judge might have
erred in his appreciation of the facts and the conclusion drawn from
them. If that is the case, it would not be an egregious error on the face
of the record to be cured by certiorari. Where a judge has jurisdiction, he
has jurisdiction to be wrong as well as to the right and the corrective
machinery to a wrong decision in the opinion of a party is an appeal.”
(32) By way of simple illustration, if a student is said to have cheated in an
examination and hence his script ought to be cancelled, the examiners must
first, grant the student the opportunity to be heard. Videographic evidence of
the cheating, or the cheating being committed in flagrante delicto of the
examiners are not by themselves sufficient to justify a unilateral sanction
without a hearing. If the right to be heard is violated, the substantive decision
will be quashed even though the court did not consider the merits. It is so
because certiorari is strictly concerned with procedure and not substance. Thus,
in AWUNI VS. WAEC (supra) this court underscored the essence of
administrative justice, and pointed out that, the audi alteram partem rule of
natural justice is an indispensable requirement that ought to be met, before a
decision is taken to affect the right of a person or body of persons. Her Ladyship
Sophia Akuffo, JSC (as she then was) articulated judicial sentiments on the
subject (within the context of administrative review) as follows:
Where a body or officer has an administrative function to perform, the activity
must be conducted with, and reflect the qualities of fairness, reasonableness
and legal compliance. I will not venture to give a comprehensive definition of
what is fair and reasonable, since these qualities are dictated by the
circumstances in which the administrative function is performed. At the very
least however, it includes probity, transparency, objectivity, opportunity to be
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heard, legal competence and absence of bias, caprice or ill-will. In particular,
where, as in this case, the likely outcome of an administrative activity is of a
penal nature, no matter how strong the suspicion of the commission of the
offence, it is imperative that all affected persons be given reasonable notice of
the allegations against them and reasonable opportunity to be heard, if the
objective of Article 23 is to be achieved.
(33) In other words, whether or not the Applicant before this court is in contempt
of court and deserved to be arrested and sanctioned for allegedly making the
offensive publication is not an issue before the court in the instant application.
Our duty is a simple one, and it is to determine whether due process was
adhered to by the trial high court by the procedure it adopted in issuing the
warrant of arrest against the Applicant.
(34) Indeed, the alleged contemptuous contents of the video said to have been
circulated on social media which the trial high court judge described as
“extremely scandalous and a fabrication” is not part of the evidence before the
court.
(35) As this court has previously held, even if a decision is correct on the law, but
same was arrived at in breach of the rules of natural justice, that decision is
susceptible to be quashed by certiorari where jurisdiction is properly invoked.
In REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT, ACCRA; EX-PARTE EYITI (AKAN
PRINTING PRESS & RAJWANI INTERESTED PARTIES) [2015-2016] 1
SCGLR 388, Gbadegbe JSC (of blessed memory) pointed out the policy reasoning
on this point which we reproduce in extenso as follows:
“This view of the matter accords with settled practice of the court which
requires motions that have been struck out to be resorted to the list by
formal applications in that behalf.
Page 17 of 48
In the course of preparing this delivery, we tried in vain if we could come
across any previously decided case in regard to the procedure for
restored applications that have been struck out but there are reported
cases involving appeals that were struck out such as ASCHKAR VS.
KARAM [1972] 1 GLR 1 AND FORI VS. AKROBETTOE [1971] 2 GLR
137, which decided that in such cases an application can only be made
to restore the appeals to the list for a trial on the merits. Although the
said cases were pronounced upon in regard to appeals, we think we
should be guided by the principles which were applied in those cases;
and develop by analogy similar principles in regard to applications
that are struck out. This approach recognises the potential of an existing
precedent case to create a new precedent where, as in this case the
circumstances to which it is subsequently applied are not the same with
that of the previous case in which the principle was pronounced upon.
In our opinion, this is one of the strengths of the common law tradition
in which one of the features is judge-made law. It seems to us that, as
applications are commenced by a solemn process of depositions
supporting them, a relaxation in the practice would undermine the
purpose for which affidavits are to serve namely swearing to the truth
of the facts grounding applications.
We think that the Learned Trial Judge having done that which falls
outside the settled practice of the court can be said to have acted
without jurisdiction and rumblings whether in the circumstances there
was any miscarriage of justice are of no moment as an application for
judicial review in the nature of certiorari concerns itself with due
process requirements and not the merits. See REPUBLIC VS.
COMMITTEE OF INQUIRY INTO NUNGUA TRADITIONAL
Page 18 of 48
AFFAIRS EX-PARTE ODAI IV AND OTHERS [1996-97] SCGLR
401. In her judgment at page 14, Bamford -Addo JSC (as she then was)
observed as follow:
“A decision made in breach of the rules of natural justice would be
quashed even if made correctly…”. [Our Emphasis].
(36) We are however not unmindful that, the scope of the jurisdiction invoked is
discretionary. Therefore, the court can refuse a prayer for certiorari on the
ground of the inappropriate conduct of the Applicant. That is, if there is
evidence before the court, which demonstrates that, the Applicant is not
deserving of the grant, especially when he himself has sanctioned the
impugned order, in the sense of having participated in or encouraged the
making of the order, the court will not lend itself to any such conduct which
mitigates against the exercise of the judicial discretion. In THE REPUBLIC VS.
THE NATIONAL HOUSE OF CHIEFS AND THE CENTRAL REGIONAL
HOUSE OF CHIEFS, EX-PARTE: NANA AKWESI PEPRAH II, CIVIL
MOTION No. J4/46/2013 DATED 7TH MAY, 2014, this court held that:
In considering an application for an order of certiorari, one will necessarily
need to consider the conduct of the parties especially the Applicant, so that
where he is guilty…, he may be denied it. It ought to be borne in mind that
certiorari is a discretionary remedy and the conduct of an Applicant is worthy
of consideration. The circumstances of the case and the conduct of the
Applicant can disentitle him to the remedy”.
(37) See also REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT, CAPE CAOST; EX PARTE JOHN
BONDZIE SEY (UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION WINNEBA-INTRESTED
PARTY) [2020] 164 GMJ 1. But this, as indicated, is based on positive evidence
put before the court.
Page 19 of 48
TIME FOR FILING THE APPLICATION
(38) Before delving into the merits of the application, it was important to dispose of
an issue that came up during the hearing. That is, whether the application was
filed within the permissible time prescribed by the rules of this court. This
enquiry is of much significance, not just to satisfy the procedural dictates of our
rules of court, but also, to engage the conduct of the Applicant whether he is
deserving of a hearing at all. As was held in the case of THE REPUBLIC VS.
THE NATIONAL HOUSE OF CHIEFS, THE CENTRAL REGIONAL
HOUSE OF CHIEFS; EX-PARTE: NANA AKWESI PEPRAH II (supra), per
Ansah JSC (as he then was):
“In our opinion, where there was an undue delay of a period of about
twenty-one long years in making the application, such as in this case, it
will militate against the success of the application for the reliefs sought.
Tardy and delayed applications scarcely succeed in securing favourable
results in applications of this nature.”
(39) In the instant case, the Applicant concedes that, the impugned order was made
on the 16th day of January 2020, over five years ago. However, the Applicant
contended that, although same was brought to his attention, none of his friends
or relatives were able to furnish him with a copy of the order. According to
him, it was not until April 2025 that his lawyer was able to procure a copy of
the order. It is therefore quite disingenuous, when the Applicant’s counsel
sought to suggest in his statement of case that, the time began to reckon only
when they formally procured the order. Counsel submitted at page 3 of the
Applicant’s statement of case as follows:
“In this case, the Applicant has deposed that he was not aware of the
order until his lawyer procured it sometime in May of this year. The
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month of May this year is therefore the valid period from which to
reckon the timing of the present application.”
(40) As noted, the Applicant himself had deposed to the factual circumstance
regarding when the order was brought to his attention, albeit informally. That
being the case, we are not persuaded by his lame excuse that, none of his
informants was able to procure a copy of the order for him same being a public
document and readily available upon request. If indeed, the Applicant was
really concerned and minded, he would have, as he has now sought to do,
engaged a lawyer to do the needful, just when his friends and relatives drew
his attention to the order. It should be noted that, an application invoking our
supervisory jurisdiction is constrained by time. This is regulated by Rules 62
and 66 of the Supreme Court Rules, 1996 (C.I.16) (as amended) which demands
that, an application to invoke the supervisory jurisdiction of the Court shall be
filed within 90 days of the date when the grounds for the application first arose
unless the time is extended by the court.
(41) From the affidavit in support of the application, the Applicant does not disclose
the first time his attention was drawn to the subsistence of the order. But
clearly, from his own depositions, and concessions by his counsel during the
hearing, the Applicant knew of the order being sought to be quashed long
before the expiration of the 90 days within which the supervisory jurisdiction
of this court ought to have been invoked unless time is extended. It is therefore
our considered view that, the Applicant has been tardy in bringing the
application. This conclusion notwithstanding, as submitted by Counsel for the
Applicant, the crucial issue provoked by the application is one, which should
not be constrained by time limitations.
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(42) There is consensus of judicial authority from this court and the jurisprudence
is well settled that, where an order, judgment, ruling or proceeding being
sought to quashed is one, which is a nullity and therefore void, public policy
frowns upon its subsistence and hence limitations of time shall not be a bar to
enabling the court interrogate same. What this simply means is that, in
appropriate circumstances, this court can dispense with the timelines for
applications of this nature especially where, the subject of the application is
void or a nullity ab initio. It must be stressed however that, each case is
determined on its peculiar facts.
(43) In our considered view, the issue the instant application has provoked is a
pivotal public law question, especially within our criminal justice system which
balances the requirement of due process and the exercise of the court’s powers
generally and particularly in contempt proceedings where the liberty of a
person or group of persons is at stake. It is this essential public utility,
undergirding the instant application, and the fact of likely void character of the
impugned order, that sustains our jurisdiction to admit the application for
consideration. After all, we have consistently held that, this court will not allow
time limitations to inhibit the setting aside of a void order which is a nullity ab
initio. The authorities are legion and settled on this position of the law.
(44) In the case of THE REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT (HUMAN RIGHTS
DIVISION), ACCRA, EX PARTE: ATTORNEY-GENERAL (CIVIL APPEAL
NO. J5/39/2016) DATED 9TH FEBRUARY 2017 the respected Appau JSC
speaking on behalf of this court restated the position of the law as follows:
“It must be emphasized that when we talk of void judgments/decisions',
they are in two categories. There are those that are void ab-initio just
because the court that determined or took those decisions in question
had no jurisdiction in the first place, to entertain the matter or matters
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before it. Such decisions or orders are complete nullities because they go
to jurisdiction and can be set aside at any time, even by the very court
that made the void orders. This is because they go to jurisdiction and
should not have been entertained at all by the court. Time does not
therefore run when it comes to the setting aside of such void judgments
or orders. Then there are those that are patent errors made within
jurisdiction. The procedure to impeach this second category of void
orders or judgments is forum and/or time regulated. Such errors of law
that are patent or apparent on the face of the record but made within
jurisdiction could be set aside as void upon an appropriate application
made by an affected or interested party as specified under the rules or
through the appeal procedure. In this second category of judgments or
orders, time is of the essence, depending on the procedure adopted”.
(45) In a similar exposition of the same position of the law, our esteemed brother
Pwamang JSC in the case of NAI OTUO TETTEH V. OPANYIN KWADWO
ABABIO (DECEASED) AND NAI KOJO ADU II [2018] DLSC 221 articulated
as follows:
“[T]he power of the court or a judge to set aside any such judgment or
order is derived from the inherent jurisdiction of the court to set aside
its own void orders and it is irrespective of any expressed power of
review vested in the court or a judge; and the constitution of the court
is for this purpose immaterial. Further, there is no time limit in which
the party affected by a void order or judgment may apply to have it set
aside. CRAIG V. KANSEEN [1943] 1 K.B. 256, C.A.; FORFIE V. SEIFAH
[1958) A.C. 59, P.C.: AMOABIMAA V. BADU (1957) 2 W.A.LR. 214,
W.A.C.A.; CONCESSION ENQUIRY NO. 471 (ASHANTI) [1962] 2
Page 23 of 48
G.L.R. 24, S.C., and GHASSOUB V. DIZENGOFF [1962] 2 G.L.R. 133,
S.C. applied”.
(46) See also IN RE: NUNGUA CHIEFTAINCY AFFAIRS, NII ODAI AYIKU IV
VS. ATTORNEY GENERAL & WOR NII BORTELABI ABI BORKETEY
LAWEH XIV [2010] SCGLR 413. See also REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT
(FAST TRACK DIVISION) ACCRA EX-PARTE SPEEDLINE
STEVEDORING CO. LTD. (DOLPHYNE INTERESTED PARTY) [2007-2008]
1 SCGLR 108, cited by Counsel for Applicant.
BENCH WARRANT VERSUS SUMMONS TO APPEAR
(47) My Lords, as an overture to considering the procedure adopted by the courts
in dealing with situations of contempt, we deem it pertinent to consider an
analysis and distinction between two processes of the court, a bench warrant
and a summons to appear.
(48) Generally, courts use bench warrants and summons (notices to appear) as legal
instruments to compel individuals to attend court proceedings. A summons is
an official court document or notice ordering a person to appear at a specified
time and place, without immediate arrest. In contrast, a bench warrant is an
arrest warrant issued directly by a judge (“from the bench”) commanding law
enforcement to detain and bring a person before the court. These tools serve
similar purposes of securing attendance but operate under different legal
circumstances.
(49) A bench warrant is essentially a court order for arrest issued by a judge to
compel appearance. In Blacks Law Dictionary (11th Edition by Bryan A
Garner, 2019) a bench warrant is defined as: “A warrant issued directly by a
judge to a law-enforcement officer, especially for the arrest of a person who
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has been held in contempt, has been indicted, has disobeyed a subpoena, or has
failed to appear for a hearing or trial.” So, a person must in the normal course
of events have refused or failed to attend court on request before a bench
warrant is issued to compel him to do so. See REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT,
COMMERCIAL DIVISION, EX PARTE MILLICOM GHANA LIMITED
[2009] SCGLR 41
(50) Unlike an original arrest warrant (which initiates a criminal case), a bench
warrant usually arises after a case is underway, for example, when a defendant
or witness has failed to appear as required or has defied a court order. (See
section 71 of Act 30). In practical terms, a bench warrant directs a law
enforcement agent or agency to take the person into custody and bring them
before the specific court that issued the warrant.
(51) In Ghana, the power to issue bench warrants is well-established in the criminal
procedure legislation. Under Ghana’s Criminal Procedure Act, 1960 (Act 30),
if an accused person is not already in custody or present when a criminal case
commences, the court may either issue a summons or a warrant for the person’s
arrest to secure their attendance. The choice between summons and warrant
depends on the circumstances. Act 30 permits a warrant to be issued at any
time “before or after the time appointed in the summons for the appearance of
the accused although a summons may have been issued.” (Section 71 of Act
30). In other words, even if a summons was initially used, the court can resort
to an arrest warrant if needed.
(52) From our practice and procedure, a bench warrant is justified to be issued in
situations such as:
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(a) when a person who has been duly served with a criminal summons willfully
fails to appear in court, or
(b) when the underlying offence is particularly serious, justifying immediate
custody rather than reliance on a summons.
(c) if the complaint is made on oath by affidavit.
(53) This is reflected in Section 71 of Act 30, which allows the court to issue an arrest
warrant at any stage if it is deemed necessary to ensure the accused’s presence.
(54) Furthermore, Section 72 of Act 30 provides that if an accused disobeys a
summons, the court may issue a warrant for the person’s arrest (usually upon
proof on oath of the failure to appear). Before issuing a bench warrant, the court
should be satisfied that the summons was properly served. Ghanaian law
requires personal service of a criminal summons where practicable. (Section
63(1) of Act 30).
(55) It is also instructive to note that when it comes to the issuance of bench
warrants, if service of the summons cannot be proven, issuing a warrant would
be premature. Therefore, in discussing whether a bench warrant can be issued
to compel persons who had not willfully failed to come to court, the Supreme
court in the Millicom Ghana Limited case, supra held that: “After hearing the
motion for stay of execution, if the court felt that it still wanted to proceed
with the application for contempt against the first Applicant company and
therefore required the presence of the directors instead of the in-house lawyer,
there were two options open to it:
(a) if the trial judge was minded to proceed against the directors,
then it had to adjourn the case to ensure that the directors of the
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company were served to come to court to represent the company:
See Order 43, rr 5(1)(b)(cc) and 7(3)(a); or,
(b) to treat the company as represented by its in-house lawyer and
go ahead to deal with it (after all in contempt against companies,
not being a human person, there can only be a fine and not
incarceration). To have issued a bench warrant at this early stage
to compel persons who had not willfully failed to come to court,
was premature and wrongful.”
THE PROCEDURE IN CITING A PERSON FOR CONTEMPT BY THE COURT
ITSELF
(56) Contempt of court is an offence against the dignity of the court and no other
person. And, as already referred to, the 1992 Constitution, has invested the
superior courts with the authority to commit persons for contempt of court.
Generally, the fact of the contemptuous conduct, may be brought to the
attention of the court, by an application or some other means. In the instant
case, the order of the court itself shows that, the court’s attention was drawn to
the alleged contemptuous conduct contained in a certain video but the source
by which the court’s attention was drawn to same and whether or not the
instant Applicant was the person indisputably responsible for its production
and publication is not apparent on the face of the order. Indeed, as aforesaid,
in the instant application, the authenticity of the video and the merit or
otherwise of the allegation and any defence is not a matter before us for our
consideration.
(57) Having so observed, whether the contemptuous conduct is brought to the
attention of the court through a formal application or otherwise, there is one
indispensable requirement which if violated would render the entire
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proceedings a nullity. That is, the evidence that, the alleged contemnor had first
been ordered to appear and show cause if he is responsible for the alleged
contemptuous conduct to enable him to defend himself. It should be noted that,
in quasi criminal proceedings, an alleged contemnor is entitled to all the
requirements of fair hearing as established by the common law courts, and
entrenched in the 1992 Constitution. In particular, and within our
constitutional tenets under Article 19 of the 1992 Constitution, there is the
constitutional requirement that the process must be fair.
(58) Undoubtedly, the alleged contemptuous conduct, which we are confronted
with, is not one of willful disobedience of an order of the court. It is that, the
Applicant being aware that a criminal case is sub judice, engaged in a conduct
that unfairly prejudiced the hearing of the matter, and/or, deliberately
conducted himself in a manner, to bring the administration of justice into
disrepute.
(59) In our view, just as in a formal application for contempt where the alleged
contemnor is served with an application to enable him defend himself, where
the court cites another for being in contempt, the court is under a mandatory
duty to bring the fact of the allegation to the attention of the alleged contemnor.
Procedurally, the court is expected to issue a summons or order requiring the
attendance of the alleged contemnor as was the procedure applied in the
Montie 3 case (supra). We do not think that, the court has the option to side-
step the issuance of a summons or an order to appear and rather sanction a
warrant for the arrest of a person, who, has not in the first instance,
demonstrated any intention to appear before the court.
(60) In the Applicant’s statement of case, counsel for the Applicant contended that,
the trial high court deprived the Applicant the opportunity to be heard before
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issuing the warrant for his arrest. And hence, the court was bereft of
jurisdiction. It appears to us that, properly construed, the contention should
rather be that, in the absence of any demonstration of unwillingness to appear
before the trial high court, the trial judge acted without jurisdiction to have
issued the warrant for arrest which had the effect of curtailing the Applicant’s
fundamental right to free movement. As is glaring in the warrant, the Trial
High Court was emphatic that, the Applicant should be arrested and brought
before him, “to answer to the question why he should not be committed to prison for
making such contemptuous statements which are totally a fabrication by him, in the
said video”.
(61) What we however find irregular with the approach by the trial high court is the
issuance of a warrant for the arrest of the Applicant without first issuing a civil
summons or an order directed at the Applicant to appear and show cause. As
has been demonstrated, Ghana, just like other common law jurisdictions have
legislated the appropriate procedure to compelling attendance in a civil,
criminal or quasi-criminal proceeding to be, in the first instance, the issuance
of a summons to appear, and upon breach, a consideration for a warrant for the
arrest of the subject of the order. Ignoring the liberty of the individual, and
commanding his arrest, in our view offends the constitutional requirements for
fair hearing and due process of law. In the instant case, the summary
jurisdiction exercised by the trial judge suo motu in ordering a warrant of arrest
to issue on the Applicant without first ordering his appearance to show cause
is procedurally flawed. That jurisdiction is irregular for which reason same was
quashed by certiorari.
THE REQUIREMENTS OF FAIRNESS AND DUE PROCESS
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(62) My Lords, central to our analysis so far, is a direction to all courts that, in
contempt proceedings, and in fact, in all proceedings before any court of law,
same must be pursued within the confines of fair hearing and due process.
While judges wield power, including, in our present context, the power to
commit for contempt, that power must be carefully guarded and exercised. At
all times, the court must act strictly, and be guided by the proper exercise of
discretionary powers as defined under Article 296 of the 1992 Constitution, that
the exercise demands a duty to be fair and candid and should not be “arbitrary,
capricious or biased whether by resentment, prejudice or personal dislike and
shall be in accordance with due process of law.”
(63) Having said that, we reiterate the appropriate judicial attitude that, while there
is necessity for, and the duty of a court subjected to contempt ex facie curiae or
in facie curiae, to quickly, and if possible in the immediate presence of those who
witnessed the insult or other disrespectful conduct to restore the dignity and
authority of the court by sharp, instantaneous and incisive response, the above
duty of a judge must be correspondingly balanced by the other requirement
that a judge must not give in to intemperate and excessive reaction, or be easily
irritable to a person's conduct of his case or the provocative conduct of counsel.
(64) The judge or court must always be guided by their mature experience on the
bench. As an unfettered impartial arbiter, a judge is required to exercise judicial
probity, mindful that, in some cases, excessive reaction from the judge may do
as much harm to the image of the court as insufficient reaction to a blatant insult
or any other conduct that brings the administration of justice into disrepute.
The mean between the two is the quality by which the outcome is assessed and
the judicial temperament by which it was expressed as well as the quality of
justice embedded in the decision.
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(65) What this also means is that, judges must note that, while the court should
not allow itself to be scandalised, exposed to ridicule and belittled
unjustifiably, the jurisdiction of the court to punish for contempt has been
created and maintained for the preservation, enhancement of the honour and
dignity of the court and not for personal aggrandisement of the judge. This
jurisdiction or power should be used sparingly and within the ambit of the
rule of law and undergirded by due process. Without these, every order made
by a court may be a resultant nullity and void. No court must hesitate in
pronouncing any order, ruling, judgment or proceeding conducted without
due process as a consequential nullity.
(66) The lesson is that, summary proceedings for alleged contempt in the face of the
court should not be invoked unless the ends of justice demand such a drastic
measure. It is “off the cuff” justice which sometimes hurts both the contemnor
and the Court. The scope of the offence of contempt of court by conduct,
comment, or publication and not necessarily disobedience of the court order is
not precise. But generally, it may be described as any conduct which tends to
bring into disrespect, scorn or disrepute, the authority and administration of
the law or which tends to interfere with and/or prejudice litigants and/or their
witnesses in the course of litigation. See the case of THE REPUBLIC VS.
KORLE GONNO DISTRICT MAGISTRATE COURT, EX-PARTE MOFFAT
[1971]2 GLR 391-403
(67) In the English case of BALOGH VS. ST ALBANS CROWN COURT [1975]1
QB 73 Stephenson L.J made an observation about the peculiar nature of the
court itself citing a person for contempt in the following words:
“The power of a Superior Court to commit (or attach) a contemnor to prison
without charge or trial is ancient, very necessary, but very unusual, if not
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indeed unique. It is as old as the courts themselves and it is necessary for the
performance of their function of administering justice whether they exercise
criminal or civil jurisdiction. If they are to do justice, they need power to
administer it without interference or affront, as well as enforce their own
orders and to punish those who insult or obstruct them directly or indirectly
in the performance of their duty or misbehave in such a manner as to weaken
or lower the dignity and authority of a court of law.
In a latter portion of the judgment Stephenson L.J made certain observations
which we particularly consider germane to proceedings for instant punishment
for contempt in curiae facie. Said the Learned Lord: “…..but when a judge of
the High Court or Crown Court proceeds of his own motion, the procedure is
more summary still. It must never be invoked unless the ends of justice richly
require such drastic means; it appears to be rough justice; it is contrary to
natural justice; and it can only be justified if nothing else will do. But if a
witness or juror is bribed or threatened in the course of a case, whether in the
court or in its precincts or at any distance from it, the judge must act at once
against the offender and if satisfied of his offence, punish him, if necessary by
committing him to prison”.
(68) We must state without any equivocation however that, the balance between the
exercise of the court’s coercive power to suo motu conduct proceedings to
commit or attach for contempt demands due process. This requires judicial
sobriety by not suggesting in any judicial expression or conduct prejudicial and
predetermined presumption of guilt resulting in a situation of real likelihood
or actual bias which beclouds the sense of the justice intended to be dispensed.
Anything to the contrary would be potentially unconstitutional as it would
contravene the provision of Article 19(2) (c) of the 1992 Constitution on the
presumption of innocence.
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(69) In the REPUBLIC VRS HIGH COURT, (LAND DIVISION), ACCRA EX
PARTE KENNEDY OHENE AGYAPONG (SUSAN BANDOH
INTERESTED-PARTY) CIVIL MOTION NO J5/62/2020 DATED 20TH
OCTOBER 2020, this court had the opportunity of pronouncing on the
language by a trial court while dealing with an allegation of conduct arising
from statements against the trial judge which were scandalous and
disrespectful thereby allegedly bringing the administration of justice into
disrepute. In that case this court took the view that by demanding of the
Applicant to appear and show cause why he should not be ‘severely’ punished
before hearing the Applicant, the trial judge had acted prejudicially and had
‘convicted’ the Applicant even before he appeared before the court to be heard.
The result was that the Applicant’s right to fair hearing had been implicitly
violated. An application for certiorari to quash the summons and the relief of
prohibition were both granted by this court. Our respected brother Kulendi JSC
in articulating the position of the court said inter alia and reproduced in extenso
as follows: “In our opinion, the nature of the contempt summons, to the extent
that it was suggestive of the magnitude or gravity of the sentence that would
be meted out to the Applicant, was prejudicial. Where a judge, even before
taking the plea of an accused, expressly states that if the charge preferred
against the Accused (the Applicant herein) is proven against him, he shall be
“punished severely’, the inference that the judge is clearly biased is irresistible.
…These considerations, coupled with the trial judge’s express language
regarding the gravity of punishment he contemplates against the Applicant,
smacks of prejudice and bias. In context, the word severely is a single but
defining word that betrays the judge’s intention if it comes to punishment of
the Applicant. That kind of subjective language and moreover coupled with the
conduct reflected in the proceedings as enumerated above, puts a judge in a
position where he or she cannot be presumed to be objective, and/or impartial.
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In any event, we observe that, when the circumstances that give rise to
contempt proceedings are such that, a judge becomes personally interested in
the matter, or that a judge’s personality is attacked or that scandalous or
insulting language has been used against a particular judge, and, where the
contempt is committed ex facie curiae, that particular judge, where the
circumstances permit, should not adjudicate on the matter.
This is especially so because, the purpose of the contempt proceedings is to
maintain the dignity of the court and ensure public confidence in the
administration of justice. If judges who are personally interested in a matter
or whose personality have been subjected to scandalous and contemptuous
attack have to sit and adjudicate on such matters and pass judgment, justice
will not appear to be done, even though such judges will have the jurisdiction
so to act.
Even in cases of contempt committed in facie curiae, there is the need to do a
balancing between the need to stamp out interferences with ongoing legal
proceedings and the need to ensure that justice appears to be done. Where a
judge, in fairness to his conscience is of the opinion that the nature of contempt
committed in facie curiae is such that he cannot impartially discharge his
judicial oath, such a judge should recuse himself from sitting on the
proceedings and cede the trial to the Court, differently constituted.”
(70) We wish to emphasize that, the right to fair hearing, and the requirements of
due process, has crystalised into a jus cogen among all civilized democratic
states. A breach of the fair hearing principles should not be the doing of a judge.
It is dangerous, if, a judge-complainant in a contempt hearing, forgets these
tenets. The result could be draconian.
(71) Indeed, apart from our position, that the issuance of the arrest warrant was
unwarranted at the time same was issued, we find the order made by the court,
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especially the language employed quite disturbing. Even before the Applicant
is heard, the court appears, obviously biased on certain prejudicial trajectory in
describing the Applicant as a “scoundrel.” And the warrant itself conclude the
prejudice “that this Warrant remains in force until the said Kelvin Taylor is arrested,
and shall lapse the day the said Kelvin Taylor expires from the surface of the earth.”
(72) With utmost deference to the Trial Judge whose distinguished judicial career
we do not hesitate to place on record that, characterisation of the Applicant as
a scoundrel before he is heard, is unjudicial and same exposes a grave concern
of potential bias. The tenor of the order in itself, contravened the Applicant’s
constitutional right to be presumed innocent until his guilt is proven as
provided Article 19(2)(c) of the 1992 Constitution. In THE REPUBLIC VRS
HIGH COURT (GENERAL JURISDICTION 11) EX-PARTE ANAS
KENNEDY OHENE AGYAPONG INTERESTED PARTY) CIVIL MOTION
NO. J5/72/2023 DATED 28TH FEBRUARY, 2023 our esteemed brother Kulendi
JSC said inter alia in his dissenting opinion which of relevance to the factual
circumstances of this application as follows:
“…On this score, not only will it be inappropriate for offensive
language to be employed by a judge but also fair trial requires that a
judge must attend to the issues before him without attacks, whether
direct or indirect, on a party, especially where the basis of such scathing
remarks are not sufficiently proven nor required as any material part to
validate his or her judgment.
I am of the firm opinion that, as a matter of principle, negative
comments or insulting words directed at parties or witnesses might be
perceived, in appropriate case, as grounds of bias.
[Emphasis Added]
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(73) This caution remains more instrumental, especially in a situation, where the
judge is the complainant and abiter at the same time and in no other
proceedings than in contempt situations. We therefore, share the position of
one of the illustrious legal luminaries of this country Dr. W.C Ekow Daniels in
his article ‘WHEN A JUDGE IS NOT A JUDGE: PRESENT TRENDS’ Review
of Ghana Law 1970, Vol. II. No. 3, 192-206, where he stated that; where there
are subtle, concealed or inchoate instances of bias which when allowed to
permeate judicial proceedings could mar judicial decisions, they should
operate to disqualify a judge from sitting on a matter.
(74) As a matter of procedure incidental to contempt proceedings, we say without
any equivocation therefore that, the practice where court’s especially trial
courts before whom applications for attachment for contempt is pending issue
bench warrant for arrest of a Respondent(s) to the application who fails, refuses
or neglects to appear, after service of the application, is unlawful as it is
unconstitutional in the absence of the specific order by the court directed at the
Respondent(s) to physically appear in court in person. Contempt is a
substantially civil process and the failure or refusal to attend court on any
return date cannot provoke any sanctions. We dare say that, if the Respondent
fails, refuses or neglects to appear, the failure refusal or neglect shall not
diminish the statutory burden of the Applicant to prove the allegation of
contempt beyond reasonable doubt failing which no liability for contempt can
be lawfully made by the court. For future guidance, we propose this practice
direction, that:
Where the court itself, cites a person for contempt, or where the
jurisdiction is invoked in the course of pending proceedings and that
person is not present in court at the material time and the court, given
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the circumstances of the allegation intends to ensure the attendance of
the alleged contemnor, the court must:
a. First, cause to be issued, a summons or order demanding the presence of the
alleged contemnor to show cause why he should not be committed for contempt.
b. The summons should simply contain a statement demanding appearance before
the court to show cause without more.
c. Prejudicial statements or words likely to be construed as prejudicial should not
accompany the summons to show cause.
d. The Registrar of the court, must ensure that, the alleged contemnor is duly
served with the summons.
e. In the event that, the alleged contemnor is duly served, yet refuses to appear
before the court, then, the court may decide to issue an arrest warrant. Even at
this stage, the court must assess all the circumstances of the case impartially
and first determine whether, the default in appearing was not occasioned by any
special circumstance, which made it impossible for the alleged contemnor to
appear, and the exercise must be guided by the principles of fairness especially
as defined under Article 296 of the 1992 Constitution.
(75) In situations of contempt ex faciae curiae, the proactiveness of the Attorney-
General in invoking jurisdiction against any person whose conduct is likely to
bring the administration of justice into disrepute is a preferable procedural step
in ensuring that cases where the Trial Judge or the Court allegedly scandalised
shall not necessarily be the forum for the trial of the alleged contemptuous
conduct.
Page 37 of 48
(76) We further take the opportunity of this delivery to comment on a disturbing
emerging judicial approach especially in the High Court in determining
applications for attachment for contempt. This involves situations where the
Respondent to an application has vehemently denied the alleged
contemptuous conduct by affidavit in opposition thereby joining issues on the
facts before the court. In spite of this situation, instead of directing the cross-
examination of the deponents to affidavits in order to resolve the conflict in the
respective affidavits, the High Courts have developed this practice of directing
written submissions to be filed when factual conflicts in affidavits have not
been resolved and no admissions for the allegations are apparent on the face of
the affidavit in opposition. How the Trial Court is able to determine whether
or not the statutory burden of proof has been discharged by the affidavit
evidence exclusively in the absence of oral examination is mysterious to say the
least. And inspite of the conflicts in affidavits, some trial High Courts are able
to make a finding of liability for contempt which requires proof beyond a
reasonable doubt.
(77) This in our view, is not only erroneous but results in a potential mistrial as any
ruling arising therefrom is liable to reversal on appeal especially where the
Respondent is found liable. It is also tantamount to an abandonment of judicial
responsibility to effectively adjudicate the allegation and must not be
countenanced in our judicial system.
(78) Having made these observations on the appropriate procedure in dealing with
cases of contempt before the court, it is for the earlier reasons fully set out in
this delivery which informed the decision of the majority to grant the instant
application when it came up for hearing on the 22nd July, 2025.
Page 38 of 48
(79) Quite clearly, the order issued by the trial high court for the arrest of the
Applicant was not compliant with due process as the trial high court lacked the
jurisdiction to proceed in that manner and had violated the Applicant’s
constitutional rights resulting in a nullity ab initio.
(80) Finally given the factual circumstances which gave rise to this application, we
state without any equivocation that, as judges we should not lose our temper
with counsel or litigants no matter how irritable they may be, so that the
composure required to administer justice may not depart from the temple of
justice, while we have the rare privilege to adjudicate.
(SGD) I. O. TANKO AMADU
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
(SGD) S. DZAMEFE
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
(SGD) G. S. SUURBAAREH
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
(SGD) P. B. MENSAH
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
Page 39 of 48
DISSENTING OPINION
GAEWU JSC:
On 22nd July 2025, this Court by majority of 4:1, Gaewu, JSC, dissenting, granted
certiorari to quash the order of Warrant of Arrest issued for the arrest of one Kelvin
Taylor on the 16th day of January 2020 by the High Court (Commercial Division),
Accra, in the matter; Case No. CR904/17, the Republic v. Eugene Baffoe Bonnie and 4
ors. The honourable High Court was presided over by H/L Eric Kyei Baffour, JA,
(sitting as additional High Court Judge). I reserved my reasons for my Ruling and
dissent which I hereby proceed to render in this dissenting opinion as follows:
On 2nd July 2025, the applicant, now Kevin Ekow Taylor, filed this application
invoking the supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court pursuant to Article 132 of
the Constitution of Ghana and Rule 61(1) of the Supreme Court Rules, 1996 (CI 16),
seeking to quash the warrant of arrest issued by H/L Eric Kyei Baffour, JA, (sitting as
an additional Justice of the High Court), dated 16th day of January 2020 in the case
intituled the Republic v. Eugene Baffoe Bonnie & 4 ors. (Case No. CR904/17), for the
arrest of the applicant and for a declaration that the High Court has no jurisdiction to
issue a warrant for the arrest of the applicant without first giving the applicant an
opportunity to answer any charges against him.
The applicant has raised three grounds in the application. These are:
a) The High Court acted in breach of the rule of natural justice audi alteream
partem when it issued the warrant for the “The apprehension of the body
of the applicant without first hearing the applicant on the allegations
based on which the High Court issued the said warrant of arrest.
Page 40 of 48
b) The High Court’s warrant for the “apprehension of the body of the
applicant was not made in accordance with any procedure sanctioned
by law.
c) The High Court committed an error of law when by its order directed
the applicant be first apprehended before being heard when there was
no previous order for the applicant to appear before the High Court to
show cause which the applicant did not comply with.
It is noted that the Attorney General who was made the interested party to the
application was from the proof of service shown the court, served with the application
on 3rd July 2025. However, no processes, affidavit in opposition or otherwise and
statement of case were filed to either defend the court and/or support the application.
And quite surprisingly, on the day the application was called to be heard, neither the
Honourable Attorney General nor his Deputy and/or any lawyer from the large
retinue of lawyers employed at the office of the Attorney General and Ministry of
Justice was present in court, if for nothing at all, to show courtesy and respect to the
court. This conduct of the Attorney General and the lawyers does not auger well for
the kind of strong and healthy democracy the country is building.
Justice, it is said, emanates from the people and same is administered in the name of
the Republic by the Judiciary. If therefore, a justice of the superior court sitting to
administer justice and makes order(s) and these order(s) is/are attacked in the manner
herein, it is only fair that the Attorney General who is responsible for the institution
and conduct of all civil cases on behalf of the state and all civil proceedings against
the state shall be instituted against the Attorney General as defendant shall be alive
to such responsibility in order to defend Justices of the Judiciary whose
decisions/orders are brought under attack in the manner herein.
Page 41 of 48
As members of the community, we sometimes feel the energy and the kind of public
interest engendered in some of these cases before the courts. Members of the public
are entitled to know why orders of this nature by the court are brought to be quashed.
The failure, refusal and/or unwillingness by the Attorney General to defend the case
has in itself deprived the public from knowing what went into the order being made
by the High Court. The Attorney General could have brought before us the full facts
of the case before the lower court and the failure and/or refusal to do so and to the
defend the case amounted to a breach of the audi alteream partem rules or principles as
the lower court’s side of the case was not properly brought before us to be heard.
Be that as it may, I shall proceed to deal with the application on its own merits. And
as noted earlier, the applicant raised three grounds in this application before us.
However, before proceeding to deal and consider the grounds of the application, there
is the need to ascertain whether the application rightly invokes the jurisdiction of the
court to hear and deal with the application.
The supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is provided for under Article 132
of the Constitution as follows:
“The Supreme Court shall have supervisory jurisdiction over all courts and over any
adjudicating authority and may, in the exercise of that supervisory jurisdiction, issue
orders and directions for the purpose of enforcing or securing the enforcement of its
supervisory power”.
Supervisory jurisdiction is defined under Article 161 of the Constitution to include
jurisdiction to issue writs or orders in the nature of habeas corpus, certiorari,
mandamus, prohibition, and quo warranto.
An application seeking to invoke the supervisory jurisdiction of the court under
Article 132 of the Constitution shall be as provided for under Rule 61 of the Supreme
Page 42 of 48
Court Rules, 1996, (CI 16). Rule 62 of CI 16 on time limits as substituted by CI 24, as
follows”
“An application to invoke the supervisory jurisdiction of the court shall be filed within
ninety days of the date when the grounds for the application first arose unless the time
is extended by the court”.
It is quite clear that the instant application has been brought well after five years after
the occurrence of the relevant event that is being called into question by the applicant.
The order of the trial High Court was made on 16th January 2020 and it was not until
2nd July 2025 that the instant application was filed seeking to quash the order.
In the applicant’s affidavit filed in support of the application, he deposed to at
paragraphs 7, 8,9, 10 and 12 as follows:
“7. For quite some time, friends and relatives in Ghana have informed me that the
High Court of the Republic of Ghana has issued a warrant for my arrest but
none of such relatives and friends have ever made available to me a copy of the
High Court’s order despite several requests.
8. Indeed, friends and relatives in Ghana have drawn my attention to several social
media discussions of the said warrant for my arrest but none was able to provide
a copy to me for my attention.
9. Because I do not ordinarily reside in Ghana, I have not paid attention to it
especially that no one ever showed me a copy of the order even though I always
asked for copies each time a friend or relative mentions it to me in a conversation
or when I hear social media discussions on it.
10. Giving the frequency of the reference to the order and the discussions I have
heard about it on social media, I engaged the services of my present solicitor
sometime in April this year 2025, who after about a month (that is sometime at
Page 43 of 48
the end of May) of search sent me a copy of the order which is exhibited hereto
and marked A.
12. The order says that it is issued for the arrest of a certain Kelvin Taylor which
is not my name but because its close resemblance with my name and the
information I have received from my friends and relatives in Ghana, the order
is believed to refer to me because all media discussions I have heard on the
subject all point to me as the subject of the order”.
From the applicant’s own depositions as captured above, he has all along been aware
of the order of the court of the arrest of a certain Kelvin Taylor but he chose to ignore
same and stayed away from challenging the order at the High Court until now, that
is, after over five years contrary to Rule 62 of CI 16 claiming that the said certain Kelvin
Taylor is not his name.
The principle is well established that certiorari is a discretionary remedy, that the
omission of a party to raise objection to a proceeding and/or challenge an order in an
appropriate forum should disentitle the applicant to that remedy where the omission
was wilful and an abuse of the process of the court. - In Re Appenteng (deceased);
Republic v. High Court (Commercial Division, Accra), Ex-parte Appenteng [2010]
SCGLR 327
The law is also well established that the existence of an alternative remedy is one of
the factors that a court can rely on to exercise its discretion against the grant of
certiorari - See Republic v. High Court, Ex-parte Attorney General (Ohene
Agyapong - Interested Party) [2012] 2 SCGLR 1204; Republic v. High Court, Accra,
Ex-parte Tetteh Apain [2007-2008] SCGLR 72.
In certiorari applications also, the conduct of an applicant is significant and important
as to whether the application may be granted to him or be refused. In the case of
Page 44 of 48
Republic v. The President, National House of Chiefs & Anor; Ex-parte Nana Akwesi
Peprah II [2013-2014] 2 SCGLR 1307 @ 1312, Ansah, JSC, (as he then was) stated and
held thus,
“We wish to consider one other point germane to applications on orders of the nature
under consideration and state that, in considering an application for an order of
certiorari, one will necessarily need to consider the conduct of the parties especially the
applicant, so that where he is guilty of a long delay in applying for the remedy, he may
be denied it. It ought to be borne in mind that certiorari is a discretionary remedy, and
the conduct of an applicant is worthy of consideration. The circumstance of the case
and the conduct of the applicant can disentitle him to the remedy”.
The length of time is also material in the grant or otherwise of certiorari applications.
In Ex- parte Nana Akwesi Peprah II (supra), Ansah, JSC, further said:
“In our opinion, where there was an undue delay of a period of about twenty-one long
years in making the application, such as in this case, it will militate against the success
of the application for the relief sought. Tardy and delayed applications scarcely succeed
in securing favourable results in applications of this nature”.
In Republic v. High Court, Cape Coast, Ex-parte John Bondzie Sey (University of
Education, Winneba - Interested Party) [2020] 164 GMJ 1 at 57, this court stated as
follows:
“The Supreme Court has also set out the parameters and the essence of the grant of
certiorari in the case of Republic v. High Court, Kumasi, Ex-parte Bank of Ghana &
ors. (Sefa and Asiedu - Interested parties) (No. 1) Republic v. High Court, Kumasi, Ex-
parte Bank of Ghana & ors. (Gyamfi and ors - interested parties) (No. 1) consolidated
[2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 477, that over the years the courts have established guidelines
for the grant of these judicial review applications of certiorari, prohibition, and
Page 45 of 48
mandamus. These are: A. Availability of alternative effective remedies such as (i)
Appeal, (ii) application to set aside the proceedings sought to be impugned, B. The
conduct of the applicant and in some cases conduct of counsel for the applicant which
may be found to be reprehensible and therefore undeserving of the grant of the court’s
discretion in their favour”.
In this case, the conduct of the applicant when in his own deposition, he was informed
by friends and relatives that a warrant of arrest has been issued for the arrest of a
certain Kelvin Taylor which even if not his name but bears close resemblance to his
name, ought to have been proactive enough to apply to the trial High Court to clarify
the person the order was directed at and to have the order set aside rather than waiting
for a whole five years after to come and apply to the Supreme Court to have the order
quashed by certiorari.
Indeed, in the case of Republic v. High Court, Accra, Ex-parte Nii Nueh Odonkor,
the Executive Director, Economic and Organized Crime Office, Bank of Ghana,
Ecobank Ghana Ltd; Civil Motion No. J5/26/2014 dated 22nd July 2014 (unreported),
Atuguba, JSC, (as he then was), (for the majority) stated as follows:
“This court has stated time without number that the discretionary nature of the remedy
of certiorari is not prejudiced by the incidence of nullity of proceedings sought to be
quashed … Perhaps it is necessary to explain that the mere fact that rules of court on
time limits cannot shut out an application in respect of proceedings that are nullity,
does not mean the reliefs sought will be granted pro tanto. The discretionary nature of
certiorari still applies in relation to it. Since even when an application for certiorari is
brought within time limits can still be refused for tardiness, it would be pessimi exempli
to hold that tardiness cannot, as a matter of discretion, defeat certiorari application
brought outside statutory time limits”.
Page 46 of 48
In emphasizing the discretionary nature of certiorari, Atuguba, JSC, again stressed
that certiorari is a special and residual remedy which is held in reserve, hence the rule
that where there is an equally effective alternative remedy, resort to certiorari will be
refused.
Again, relying on the case of Republic v. Anlo Traditional Council, Ex-parte Hor II
[1979] GLR 234, CA, @ 243, where Jiagge, JA (as she then was) emphasised the point
as follows:
“As a matter of practice, great caution accompanies the exercise of discretionary powers
under prerogative orders. The prerogative has been defined as ‘the residue of
discretionary or arbitrary authority which at any given time is largely left in the hands
of crown; (that is State)’”.
In view of the reasons stated supra, the application for an order of certiorari to quash
the order of the High Court (Commercial Division), Accra for warrant for the arrest of
Kelvin Taylor presided over by Eric Keyi Baffour, JA, sitting as additional High Court
judge dated 16th January 2020 fails and same is accordingly dismissed in its entirety.
(SGD) E. Y. GAEWU
(JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT)
COUNSEL
PETER OKUDZETO ESQ. FOR THE APPLICANT. WITH HIM ELI AHU ESQ.
Page 47 of 48
ATTORNEY-GENERAL ABSENT.
Page 48 of 48
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