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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Crawford & Ors v Financial Institutions Services Ltd (Jamaica) [2003] UKPC 13 (6 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2003/13.html Cite as: [2003] UKPC 13 |
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Crawford & Ors v. Financial Institutions Services Ltd (Jamaica) [2003] UKPC 13 (6 February 2003)
ADVANCE COPY
(1) Donovan Crawford
(2) Regardless Limited and
(3) Alma Crawford Appellants
v.
Financial Institutions Services Limited Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF JAMAICA
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL UPON A
Delivered the 6th February 2003
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Hutton
Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
Lord Scott of Foscote
[Delivered by Lord Scott of Foscote]
------------------
"(1) An appeal shall lie from decisions of the Court of Appeal to Her Majesty in Council as of right in the following cases –
(a) where the matter in dispute on the appeal to Her Majesty in Council is of the value of one thousand dollars or upwards or where the appeal involves directly or indirectly a claim to or question respecting property or a right of the value of one thousand dollars or upwards, final decisions in any civil proceedings;
…"
"3. Applications to the Court for leave to appeal shall be made by motion or petition within twenty-one days of the date of the judgment to be appealed from, and the applicant shall give all other parties concerned notice of his intended application.
4. Leave to appeal to Her Majesty in Council in pursuance of the provisions of any law relating to such appeals shall, in the first instance, be granted by the Court only –
(a) upon condition of the appellant, within a period to be fixed by the Court but not exceeding ninety days from the date of the hearing of the application for leave to appeal, entering into good and sufficient security to the satisfaction of the Court in a sum not exceeding £500 sterling for the due prosecution of the appeal and the payment of all such costs as may become payable by the applicant in the event of his not obtaining an order granting him final leave to appeal, or of the appeal being dismissed for non-prosecution, or of the Judicial Committee ordering the appellant to pay costs of the appeal (as the case may be); and
(b) upon such other conditions (if any) as to the time or times within which the appellant shall take the necessary steps for the purposes of procuring the preparation of the record and the despatch thereof to England as the Court, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, may think it reasonable to impose.
5. A single judge of the Court shall have power and jurisdiction –
(a) to hear and determine any application to the Court for leave to appeal in any case where under any provision of law an appeal lies as of right from a decision of the Court;
(b) generally in respect of any appeal pending before Her Majesty in Council, to make such order and to give such other directions as he shall consider the interests of justice or circumstances of the case require:
Provided that any order, directions or decision made or given in pursuance of this section may be varied, discharged or reversed by the Court when consisting of three judges which may include the judge who made or gave the order, directions or decision.
6. Where the judgment appealed from requires the appellant to pay money or do any act, the Court shall have power, when granting leave to appeal, either to direct that the said judgment shall be carried into execution or that the execution thereof shall be suspended pending the appeal, as to the Court shall seem just, and in case the Court shall direct the said judgment to be carried into execution, the person in whose favour it was given shall, before the execution thereof, enter into good and sufficient security, to the satisfaction of the Court, for the due performance of such Order as Her Majesty in Council shall think fit to make thereon."
(a) that within 90 days the petitioners enter into good and sufficient security in the sum of one thousand dollars for the due prosecution of the appeal and the payment of costs, and
(b) that within the same period the petitioners take all necessary steps for the preparation of the record and the dispatch thereof to England.
(i) the order of Downer JA made on 12 February 2002 do not come into effect until 60 days from the date hereof, and
(ii) that the proceedings be further stayed until payment of costs by the petitioners within 60 days.
(i) that the conditional leave to appeal to the Privy Council granted on 8 October 2001 be rescinded; and
(ii) that the stay of execution granted on the same date be discharged.
(i) Where a party has an appeal as of right to the Privy Council under section 110(1)(a) of the Constitution Order, what powers, if any, does the Court of Appeal in Jamaica have (whether by a single judge or a three judge court), under the Privy Council Appeals Order or otherwise, to restrict or impose terms upon the exercise of that right of appeal.
(ii) Does section 5 of the Privy Council Appeals Procedure Order enable either the single judge there mentioned, or the Court of Appeal sitting as a three judge court, to impose conditions on the grant of leave to appeal, or on the right to prosecute an appeal for which leave to appeal has been granted, additional to conditions falling within paragraphs (a) or (b) of section 4?
(iii) Did Downer JA have power by his order of 12 February 2002 to stay the petitioners' appeal to the Privy Council pending payment of the costs therein mentioned?
(iv) Did the Court of Appeal have power by its order of 22 April to stay the said appeal as therein directed?
(v) If Downer JA and/or the Court of Appeal did not have power to stay the said appeal as directed in the said orders, does the original grant of conditional leave to appeal stand or is it necessary for the petitioners to apply to the Privy Council for special leave to appeal?
(vi) If an application for special leave to appeal is made to the Privy Council in a case to which section 110(1)(a) of the Constitution Order applies, can the Privy Council dismiss the application on the ground that the merits of the appeal do not warrant the grant of leave?
These issues ought, in their Lordships' opinion, to be dealt with by a full Board.