Justice’s Sad Day In Court

A: Introduction

One of the most fundamental aspects of any court case – be it civil or criminal – is service of court processes on the persons involved in the case. The basic reason is that no one must be condemned by a court without being given an opportunity to tell their side of the story. The principle of natural justice[1] requires that every party in litigation must be given the opportunity to be heard before a court makes its decision or gives its judgment. Where a court violates this principle and proceeds to take a decision in a case without affording a party the chance to appear and be heard in their defence, the affected party can apply to a higher supervisory court for an order of certiorari to quash the impugned decision.

 

In March, 2024, the Supreme Court gave judgment in a case - Republic v High Court, Accra (Criminal Law Division 5); ex parte Benjamin Akuffo Darko (Attorney General & Inspector General of Police Interested Parties)[2] - in which an applicant (a member of a group known as “Democracy Hub”) had applied for certiorari to quash a High Court decision. His agitation was that the High Court made a decision against him even though he was not served with any hearing notice of the application. There was evidence to support his assertion that he was not given any notice that the case was coming on for hearing on the particular day. Surprisingly, the Supreme Court held that the High Court decision was valid.

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This article examines the facts of the case that was heard by the Supreme Court. It also analyses the effect of short service and non-service of court processes on parties in litigation. The article concludes that in the light of cogent evidence that showed that the applicant was not served with any hearing notice to attend the proceedings at which an injunction was issued to restrain him and others from organizing a public demonstration against the Government, the Supreme Court was wrong in dismissing his application for certiorari. The decision may struggle to find a place on the Supreme Court’s list of binding precedents.

 

B: The Case of Ex parte Akuffo Darko (The Democracy Hub case)

On 5th March, 2024, the Supreme Court gave its decision in a case titled Republic v High Court, Accra (Criminal Law Division 5); ex parte Benjamin Akuffo Darko (Attorney General & Inspector General of Police Interested Parties).[3] That was the case in which a Democracy Hub member applied for certiorari to quash a High Court’s order of injunction restraining Democracy Hub from holding a public demonstration.

 

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i) Background: The background to the case is as follows: On 9th October, 2023, Democracy Hub, a registered Civil Society Organisation, informed the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) that it intended to hold a public demonstration in Accra. Officials of Democracy Hub and Ghana Police Service held several meetings to agree on a date for the demonstration that would be convenient to both parties. But they could not reach any consensus. In the event, Democracy Hub decided to go ahead and hold their demonstration on their own chosen date without the Police’s input.

 

When the Police Service heard of Democracy Hub’s intended action, the IGP filed an application on notice at the High Court for injunction to restrain Akuffo Darko (an officer of Democracy Hub and later, the applicant in the Supreme Court case) and his group from holding any special event between 1st December, 2023 and 5th January, 2024.

 

The IGP’s application for injunction was served on Democracy Hub but they were short- served (by a day) because they were not given the statutory three (3) clear days between the date of service and the hearing of the application.[4] Democracy Hub and its representatives failed to attend court on the date of hearing. But it later confirmed that they learned from the media later that day that when the case was called in court on 21st November, 2023, the Court adjourned the hearing of the motion for injunction to the following day, that is, 22nd November, 2023. Again, no one from Democracy Hub attended the court session on 22nd November, 2023. But the court proceeded to hear the motion and issued an order prohibiting Democracy Hub from holding any
special events between 1st December, 2023 and 5th January, 2024.


Democracy Hub, acting through its office, one Akuffo Darko, applied to the Supreme Court for an order of certiorari to quash the High Court’s order made on 22nd November, 2023 on the grounds of breach of the rules of natural justice. The reasons for the application were that the adjournment from 21st November, 2023 to 22nd November, 2023 was without notice to him.

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Both the IGP and Attorney-General were served with copies of the application as well as hearing notices for the hearing before the Supreme Court. But neither of them filed any processes in response nor attended the hearing.

 

ii) The Supreme Court’s Decision: The Supreme Court dismissed Akuffo Darko’s application. It did not grant the order of certiorari. The reason was that the short service of the motion slated for 21st November, 2023 was a mere irregularity and not a nullity. Therefore, by failing to attend the proceedings slated for 21st November, 2023, the applicant deprived himself of the opportunity to be heard in the proceedings. He could not, therefore, turn around and accuse the High Court of breaching his rights to natural justice.

 

Secondly, the Supreme Court agreed with the applicant’s contention that adjourning a case without notice to a party, constitutes a violation of the audi alteram partem rule of natural justice.[5] But surprisingly, the Court held that it was the applicant’s duty, as any prudent litigant would do, to have enquired about the outcome of the proceedings of 21st  November, 2023 and advise himself appropriately. Once the applicant failed to find out that the case had been adjourned to the next day and, thus, did not attend court, the adjournment of the proceedings to 22nd November, 2023 did not occasion any breach of the audi alteram partem rule of natural justice, such as to affect jurisdiction.

 

C: Why It Is Difficult to Support the Supreme Court’s Decision

The Supreme Court’s decision in Ex parte Akuffo Darko is one that may be tough to support or defend on several grounds. First of all, on a careful reading of the decision, one realizes - with all due deference to the Court – that the Court set down an issue that was moot and expended its energy on justifying it. The issue as set down was this: Does short service give rise to a mere procedural irregularity, or does it acquire a jurisdictional character that renders all proceedings founded upon it a nullity?[6] It is contended that the issue of short service was moot because the High Court acknowledged it and adjourned the case to the next day. Therefore, the fundamental issue the Supreme Court had to settle was whether the High Court had jurisdiction to hear the application for an injunction the very next day, without making an order for the absent respondent to be served with a hearing notice, nor granting leave for short notice of one day under the High Court Rules.[7] In other words, the main issue for determination was one of non-service, rather than short-service.

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Secondly, assuming for the purposes of argument that the issue of short service was relevant, the position on service of notice to parties in court hearings and proceedings adopted by the Supreme Court strikes at the heart and soul of fairness and justice. The Supreme Court quoted with approval the wise counsel of Amissah, JA in Vasquez v Quashie,[8] thus:

"A court making a decision in a case where a party does not appear because he has not been notified is doing an act which is a nullity on the ground of absence of jurisdiction. A person who is condemned in his absence in proceedings of which he has no knowledge cannot be limited as to the time within which he may repudiate the decision."

 

Relying on Amissah, JA’s dictum above, the Supreme Court admitted that the applicant was not notified of the new hearing date of 22nd November. But the Supreme Court turned around and held that the High Court’s decision of 22nd November was not a nullity. The decision may, perhaps, only be explained by oracular intervention. The Supreme Court, in trying to justify its conclusion, placed the burden of giving notice of the 22nd November hearing on the absent respondent! This is how the Court delivered its position: “We think it was incumbent upon the Applicant as any prudent litigant would do, to have enquired about the outcome of the proceedings of the 21st of November 2023 and advised himself appropriately.”

 

It is submitted that the rules of court, case law and the settled practice of the courts do not lend support to the Supreme Court’s latest invention in this case. It is a basic fact in litigation proceedings that it is an applicant in proceedings who must take steps to bring court processes and proceedings to the attention of a respondent. It has never been the case that an applicant files a process or initiate proceedings, attend court hearings and go to sleep. And a respondent must then buckle his shoes and go searching for information on court proceedings held without notice to him. Not surprisingly, no serious foray was made to support the Court’s decision with direct and applicable authorities.[9] The forensic spring dried up even before it could well up, to borrow the words of Francois, JA (as he then was) in Afrifa v Class-Peter.[10]

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To be fair, the Supreme Court cited the case of Aponsah v Okailey[11] in support of its decision for the reason that it “presented facts which bear a striking resemblance to those existing in the instant application.” But as will be demonstrated presently, that assertion could not be farther from the reality. In fact, in the Aponsah case, it was the plaintiff who applied for adjournment but failed to attend court. If anything, there is a striking dissemblance with Ex parte Akuffo Darko and so, the Aponsah case did little to bolster the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court.

 

Now, to appreciate the full effect of Aponsah v Okailey,[12] and the assertion that it does not support the Supreme Court’s decision in Ex parte Akuffo Darko,[13] a detailed discussion is necessary. What happened in Aponsah v Okailey[14] was that, Nii Aponsah (the plaintiff) failed to attend court on the date that had been fixed for the case to be heard, that was, 2nd May, 1989. He had written a letter for a long adjournment but the judge rejected the request for adjournment. The judge rather adjourned the case to the very next day, that is, 3rd May, 1989. On that day, Nii Aponsah again failed to go to court. The judge struck out the case for want of prosecution.

 

Nii Aponsah later applied for an order to reinstate his case but the judge refused to grant the order. He filed an appeal to the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal. It held that the trial judge had exercised his discretion judicially when he refused to vacate the order striking out Nii Aponsah’s case for want of prosecution. In arriving at the above conclusion, the Court of Appeal reasoned that Nii Aponsah had failed to act with ordinary prudence when he neglected to check on the fate of his application for adjournment on 2nd May, 1989, and advise himself appropriately.

 

It is contended that what happened in Nii Aponsah’s case (Aponsah v Okailey[15]) is radically different from what happened in the Democracy Hub case (Ex parte Akuffo Darko[16]) under discussion. The reason is not far-fetched. In the Democracy Hub case, unlike Nii Aponsah’s, it was not Democracy Hub’s application that was short-served. It was rather the IGP’s application for injunction that had been short-served on Democracy Hub. Therefore, the burden or responsibility of informing Democracy Hub that the application had been adjourned to the next day rested on the IGP, and by extension, the Police Service. After all, it was the IGP’s application that had been adjourned.

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By law, since the application was made on notice, the IGP was bound to give Democracy Hub and its member-respondents notice of the return date for the hearing of the motion.[17] The need to give notice before the hearing of the application is to afford the intended respondent ample opportunity to file a response by way of affidavit in opposition or raise a legal objection to the application at the hearing. Thus, since Democracy Hub and company were short-served for the 21st November proceedings, and were not served at all for the 22nd November hearing, they could not by any stretch of language be said to have waived their right to be heard, as the Supreme Court asserted.

 

D: Practical Steps to Be Taken When There Is Short-service of Court Processes

When a person is served with court documents requiring court attendance, but the period of notice is too short (that is, there is short service), it is not prudent for the person to just ignore the processes and refuse to attend court. The person must endeavour to inform the court of the reason for his absence. In that regard, it is advisable to write a letter to the Registrar of the Court concerned, informing her of the short service. If the party will be unable to prepare and attend court for the hearing because of the short service, she must state so in the letter. Most importantly, she must request for an adjournment and suggest a convenient date to which the hearing could be adjourned.

 

Such course of action serves several purposes. First of all, it informs the court the reason why the party is absent from court on the hearing day. Secondly, once the letter suggests a possible date of adjournment, if the court and the other party agree to go by it, there may be no need to issue and serve hearing notice on the absentee. But if the court and the other party find the suggested date inconvenient and fix a different date, the other party will be duty bound to serve a hearing notice on the absentee, whether the court orders it or not.

 

Thirdly, writing formally to inform the court of the reason for the absence shows due courtesy and deference to the court. It is also attuned to the best traditions of the legal profession. Parties and lawyers (as officers of the court) ought to demonstrate utmost respect for the courts and court processes. Refusing to attend court on grounds of short service may be permissible under law but it is not in accord with the settled practice of the courts. Failing to inform the court of one’s absence and the reasons thereof will cut no ice with many a judge.

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E: Police Permission/Concurrence For Demonstration: Did Archer, CJ & Co. Speak in Vain?

Before ending this piece, there is one issue that sticks out like a sore thumb in the fall out of the Democracy Hub case. It is the benignly unconstitutional power the Police Service continue to arrogate to themselves  to determine when and how citizens can exercise their fundamental right of assembly, including organizing or participating in demonstrations and public protests. The question regarding the need for citizens to seek Police permission before embarking on demonstrations in this Fourth Republic was put to rest over 32 years ago.

 

It was in the case of New Patriotic Party v Inspector-General of Police,[18] a case widely considered as the locus classicus on the subject. This was the case in which the New Patriotic Party sued the IGP for a declaration that the requirement of police permits for meetings and processions in public places was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court granted the declaration and the need for police permits was held to be against the fundamental human rights of citizens. Chief Justice Archer, speaking about the law[19]  which introduced police permits for meetings and processions in public places, declared in his famously rich language as follows:

It seems incongruous that legislation that was originally meant to control asafo companies, yam festivals, fetishes, a century ago, should be allowed to develop into hideous and ugly tumours on the near immaculate face of our present Constitution, 1992. Those who introduced police permits in this country do not require police permits in their own country to hold public meetings and processions. Why should we require them?”

 

After 32 years of having unequivocally rejected the law that restrained citizens from enjoying their right and freedom to assemble, it is difficult for one to sanction the recent  phenomenon where the Police Service - almost as a matter of routine - apply for injunction orders whenever citizens inform them of their plans to hold public demonstrations. As it happened in Ex parte Akuffo Darko,[20] the courts mostly grant such applications, effectively clothing the Police Service with the very power that the Supreme Court graciously stripped off them in New Patriotic Party v Inspector-General of Police.[21]  This is more so the situation where the intended public protest appears likely to have an effect on the fortunes of a ruling Government.

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The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Ex parte Akuffo Darko[22] - justifying an injunction order made against the organizers of a public protest without their notice or participation in the proceedings - represents a new low in the gradual erosion of citizens’ rights under the Fourth Republic. It is not surprising that the Supreme Court in Ex parte Akuffo Darko[23] failed to make any reference to New Patriotic Party v Inspector-General of Police[24] at all.

 

In 1993, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), as a political party in opposition, was the plaintiff in New Patriotic Party v Inspector-General of Police[25] and won the case. The Supreme Court declared the Public Order Act of 1961 unconstitutional. In 2024, the NPP was the party in power and the Supreme Court declared that an injunction order obtained by the IGP to restrain an impending public protest without organisers’ notice or participation was valid. Surely, the category of ironies is never closed.

 

F: Conclusion

If any party had to suffer for the shortcomings of the High Court in Ex parte Akuffo Darko,[26] it was the IGP (and by extension, the Police Service), not Democracy Hub. The IGP was the applicant who failed to notify the respondents of the new date for hearing. The one-day adjournment itself left a lot to be desired.

 

In the light of the foregoing discussion, one does not need to be a soothsayer to predict that this decision - Ex parte Akuffo Darko[27] - may not stand up to scrutiny as a viable precedent. If by any stroke of luck the decision stands, its life would be wholly undeserved.  The Supreme Court itself may be wary to follow it. Lower courts may avoid it like a cancerous tumour.

 



[1] The principle known as the audi alteram partem rule

[2] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[3] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[4] Order 19 rule 2 (1) of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004 (C.I. 47)

[5] See: Vasquez v Quashie [1968] GLR 62

[6] Source: P. 9 of the case report as published by GHALII available at https://ghalii.org/akn/gh-hr-accra/judgment/ghasc/2024/2/eng@2024-03-05 (accessed on 6th January, 2026)

[7] Under Order 19 rule 2 (2) of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004 (C.I. 47), the High Court could have granted leave to the IGP (the applicant) to short serve Democracy Hub to appear for the hearing the next day. However, there is no indication on record that such leave was sought or granted at all

[8] [1968] GLR 62 at 65

[9] Indeed, the cases cited rather support the applicant’s argument that the motion for injunction heard on 22nd November, 2023 without notice to the applicant was a nullity. The cases include In re Kumi (Dec’d); Kumi v Nartey [2007-2008] SCGLR 623; Republic v High Court, Accra; ex parte Salloum (Senyo Coker interested party) [2011] 1 SCGLR 574; Republic v High Court, Accra; ex parte Allgate Co Ltd (Amalgamated Bank Ltd Interested Party) [2007-2008] 2 SCGLR 1041; Boakye v Tutuyehene [2007-2008] 2 SCGLR 970. Yet a greater number of the cases cited are also clearly distinguishable. These include Republic v High Court (Human Rights Division), Accra; ex parte

Josephine Akita (Mancell-Egala and Attorney-General, Interested Parties) [2010] SCGLR 374 where the applicant was held to have deliberately absented herself from court which constituted a waiver of her right to be heard. See also: Republic v High Court (Fast Track Division); ex parte State Housing Co. Ltd. (No. 2) [2009] SCGLR 189

[10]  Afrifa v Class-Peter  [1975] 1 GLR 359 at 361, CA

[11] [1992-93] GBR 86, CA

[12] [1992-93] GBR 86, CA

[13] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[14] [1992-93] GBR 86, CA

[15] [1992-93] GBR 86, CA

[16] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[17] Order 19 rules 1 (3) & (4) and 2 (1) of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2004 (C.I. 47),

[18] [1993-94] 2 GLR 459, SC (Coram: Archer CJ, Francois, Amua-Sekyi, Aikins, Edward Wiredu, Bamford-Addo & Charles Hayfron-Benjamin, JJSC)

[19] That is, Public Order Act, 1961 (Act 58)

[20] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[21] [1993-94] 2 GLR 459, SC (Coram: Archer CJ, Francois, Amua-Sekyi, Aikins, Edward Wiredu, Bamford-Addo & Charles Hayfron-Benjamin, JJSC)

[22] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[23] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[24] [1993-94] 2 GLR 459, SC (Coram: Archer CJ, Francois, Amua-Sekyi, Aikins, Edward Wiredu, Bamford-Addo & Charles Hayfron-Benjamin, JJSC)

[25] [1993-94] 2 GLR 459, SC (Coram: Archer CJ, Francois, Amua-Sekyi, Aikins, Edward Wiredu, Bamford-Addo & Charles Hayfron-Benjamin, JJSC)

[26] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko

[27] Civil Motion No. J5/18/2024 ruling dated 5th March, 2024, SC (Coram: Amadu, Kulendi, Barbara Ackah-Yensu, Gaewu & Darko Asare, JJ.SC), simply referred to as Ex parte Akuffo Darko


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