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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> de Freitas v. The Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Lands and Housing and Others (Antigua and Barbuda) [1998] UKPC 30 (30th June, 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1998/30.html Cite as: [1998] 3 WLR 675, [1999] AC 69, [1999] 1 AC 69, 4 BHRC 563, [1998] UKPC 30 |
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JISCBAILII_CASE_Immigration
Privy Council Appeal No. 42
of 1997
Elloy de
Freitas Appellant
v.
(1) The Permanent Secretary of Ministry of
Agriculture,
Fisheries,
Lands and Housing
(2)
The Public
Service Commission and
(3) The Attorney General Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF ANTIGUA
AND BARBUDA
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 30th June 1998
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Browne-Wilkinson
Lord Lloyd of
Berwick
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Clyde
·[Delivered by Lord Clyde]
------------------
1. The question in this appeal arises out of the
participation by a civil servant in certain demonstrations in September and
October 1990 against Government corruption in Antigua and Barbuda. In 1990 the appellant was an Extension
Officer in the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Lands and Housing of Antigua
and Barbuda. In that year a Commission
of Inquiry was held in Antigua relating to the transhipment into Antigua of a
consignment of guns. In the course of
the Inquiry various allegations of Government corruption were made. Some of these allegations were directed at
the Minister of Agriculture, Mr. Hilroy Humphreys. The appellant admitted in an affidavit that on 24th and 25th September
1990, after the Inquiry and while he was on vacation, he was one of several
persons peacefully picketing the Headquarters of the Ministry. Some of the
placards displayed by the appellant were critical of Mr. Humphreys.
2. The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries, Lands and Housing, who is the first respondent, immediately claimed
that the appellant was acting in breach of the restraints imposed on civil
servants by section 10(2)(a) of the Civil Service Act Laws of Antigua and
Barbuda c. 87 and threatened to refer the matter to the Public Service
Commission for disciplinary action.
That body is the second respondent.
The appellant replied denying that he was infringing that section and
referred to the Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda, sections 12 and 13 of
which protected his rights of expression and assembly. On 27th September 1990
while he was still on vacation and on 2nd October after he had returned to work
he made further peaceful demonstrations. After further communications between
himself and the first respondent the latter, under a power which he possessed
under the Public Service Commission Regulations 1967, interdicted the appellant
from the exercise of the powers and functions of his office. In November 1990 the appellant issued an
Originating Motion seeking redress under section 18 of the Constitution, which
makes provision for the enforcement of the protective provisions in the
Constitution. The motion was opposed by
the first and second respondents and by the Attorney-General who is the third
respondent. The matter came before
Redhead J. and on 26th February 1993 he declared that section 10(2)(a) of the
Civil Service Act was unconstitutional.
He took the view that it had not been demonstrated that section 10(2)
fell within the permissible limits prescribed by the Constitution. He accordingly granted the various orders
which the appellant had sought. The matter was then taken to the Court of
Appeal and that Court on 3rd July 1995 allowed the appeal. In addition to the point of
constitutionality certain issues of jurisdiction and of prematurity were
canvassed before the Court of Appeal, but these are not now pursued.
3. The arguments which were deployed before their Lordships
fell into two distinct chapters. In the
first place a general question was raised as to the constitutional validity of
section 10(2)(a) of the Act of 1984. If
that subsection is invalid, then that is an end of the case. The second area of argument only arises if
the subsection is valid. Here two
questions require to be determined, and they are questions related to the
circumstances of the particular case and not of generality, namely, first,
whether the interdiction and the intended disciplinary proceedings impose
restrictions on the appellant which are reasonably required for the proper
performance of his functions and, second, whether they are reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
These were the narrower issues which the appellant initially raised in
his Notice of Motion. Only at a later
stage of the case did he more precisely and expressly formulate a wider attack
upon the validity of the statutory provision.
The wider ground no doubt lay behind the particular remedies which he
sought but it appears that the respondents did not initially appreciate that
the wider attack was intended.
4. It is appropriate at this stage to refer to section 10
of the Civil Service Act. Section 10(1) provides that a civil servant is
disqualified from membership of the Senate, the House of Representatives or any
local government body. Section 10(2)
provides:-
"A civil servant may not -
(a)in any public place or in any document or any other
medium of communication whether within Antigua and Barbuda or not, publish any
information or expressions of opinion on matters of national or international
political controversy;
(b)be a polling agent or counting agent under the
Representation of the People Act.
…"
5. The word "publish" is defined in subsection
(4) as meaning:-
"… to communicate the information or opinion to any
other person whether by word or in writing and includes the broadcasting of
word and pictures by wireless telegraphy, and in relation to any writing means
exhibiting in public or causing to be read or seen or showing or delivering or
causing to be shown or delivered in order that the writing may be read or seen
by any person.”
Subsection (3) states certain reservations from section
10(2)(a) in the following terms:-
"The provisions of subsection (2)(a) do not apply -
(a)where a civil servant is acting in the execution of
his official duties; or
(b)where the information or opinion is published in the
course of a lecture or address, the subject matter of which is approved by the
Minister to whose Ministry the civil servant is attached, made or given at an
educational institution in the bona fide pursuit of the professional or
vocational activities of the civil servant; or
(c)where the information or opinion is expressed in an
article or other literary contribution, the subject matter of which is approved
by the Minister to whose Ministry the civil servant is attached, to an approved
journal or other periodical or document prepared in pursuit of the professional
or vocational activities of the civil servant.”
Their Lordships are satisfied that the activities in
which the appellant engaged in his demonstrations fell within the terms of
section 10(2)(a) and were not excluded by anything in section 10(3). While some argument was presented to the
effect that the appellant's actings were related neither to matters of
controversy nor to matters political, the contrary position was, in their
Lordships' view, clearly established on the facts. It should also be recorded that no argument was levelled at the
provisions contained in section 10(1) and while there was some mention in the
course of argument of the width of the terms of the definition of the word
"publish" in section 10(4) no point arises in the present case in
that regard and their Lordships are not concerned to comment further upon it.
Under section 6 of the Civil Service Act it is provided
that a civil servant shall hold office "subject to the provisions of the
Constitution, this Act or any other written law ..." so that the tenure of
office of a civil servant is to be subject to both the Act and the
Constitution. Section 12(1) of the
Constitution provides that "Except with his own consent, no person shall
be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of expression". Section 12(4) however provides that:-
"Nothing contained in or done under the authority
of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of this
section to the extent that the law in question makes provision - …
(b)that imposes restrictions upon public officers that
are reasonably required for the proper performance of their functions;
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may
be, the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.”
Section 13(1) correspondingly provides that no person
shall be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of peaceful assembly and
association and section 13(2) contains a provision in the same terms as section
12(4) in relation to public officers.
But it is substantially with section 12 that the present case is
concerned. Notice should also be taken
of section 31 of the Civil Service Act which provides that:-
“For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared that
nothing in this Act shall be construed as applying in relation to any matter
for which specific provision is made in the Constitution in respect of any
public officer.”
This latter provision may be seen as an echo of section
2 of the Constitution which provides that the Constitution is the supreme law
of Antigua and Barbuda, that the Constitution is to prevail over any other law
if such law is inconsistent with it, and that such other law shall to the
extent of the inconsistency be void.
It is accepted that civil servants are "public
officers". It is also accepted
that in the construction of statutory provisions which contravene human rights
and freedoms there is a presumption of constitutionality (Attorney-General
of The Gambia v. Momodou Jobe [1984] A.C. 689) and that in construing
constitutional provisions a liberal approach is required (Minister of Home
Affairs v. Fisher [1980] AC 319.
6. Their Lordships also recognise the special position
which is enjoyed by civil servants in a democratic society. As Sir Vincent Floissac C.J. pointed out in
the Court of Appeal, in every truly democratic society a civil servant holds a
unique status in many respects. As the
servant or agent of the state he enjoys special advantages and protections and
correspondingly must submit to certain restrictions. Their special position is recognised in the existence of a
special chapter, chapter VII, in the Constitution containing provisions
relating to them and to the express provisions in sections 12 and 13
authorising restrictions on the freedoms contained therein. The preservation of the impartiality and
neutrality of civil servants has long been recognised in democratic societies
as of importance in the preservation of public confidence in the conduct of
public affairs. The point can be found
in the quotation which Redhead J. took from Hood Phillips' Constitutional and
Administrative Law, 5th edition (1973) at page 299:-
“… the public interest demands the maintenance of
political impartiality in the Civil Service and confidence in that impartiality
as an essential part of the structure of government in this country.”
7. Along with these elements of neutrality and impartiality
their Lordships would associate an element of loyalty, in particular to the
Minister whom the civil servant has been appointed to serve. The importance of these characteristics lies
in the necessity of preserving public confidence in the conduct of public
affairs. That is at least one
justification for some restraint on the freedom of civil servants to
participate in political matters and is properly to be regarded as an important
element in the proper performance of their functions.
8. The Court of Appeal took the view that the appellant's
expressions of ridicule and contempt for the Minister would not be tolerable in
private sector employment if advanced by an employee about his employer. But the analogy is not valid. The Minister was not the employer of the
appellant; they are both servants of the State. More importantly, the Minister is a politician and one
necessarily and properly exposed to public opinion. Their Lordships do not find the suggested analogy of assistance
in resolving the issue in the present case.
The acceptability or otherwise of the appellant's conduct as matter of
what might be thought proper or seemly is not relevant to the immediate issue
of the validity of the restrictions imposed by section 10 of the Civil Service
Act.
9. The general proposition that civil servants hold a
unique status in a democratic society does not necessarily justify a
substantial invasion of their basic rights and freedoms. The proper balance to be struck between the
freedom of expression and the duty of a civil servant properly to fulfil his or
her functions was discussed by Dickson C.J.C. in Re Fraser and Public
Service Staff Relations Board (1985) 23 D.L.R. (4th) 122, 131:-
“The act of balancing must start with the proposition
that some speech by public servants concerning public issues is
permitted. Public servants cannot be, to use Mr. Fraser's apt phrase, ‘silent
members of society’. I say this for three reasons.
10. First, our democratic system is deeply rooted in, and
thrives on, free and robust public discussion of public issues. As a general rule, all members of society
should be permitted, indeed encouraged, to participate in that discussion.
11. Secondly, account must be taken of the growth in recent
decades of the public sector ... as an employer. A blanket prohibition against
all public discussion of all public issues by all public servants would, quite
simply, deny fundamental democratic rights to far too many people.
12. Thirdly, common sense comes into play here. An absolute
rule prohibiting all public participation and discussion by all public servants
would prohibit activities which no sensible person in a democratic society
would want to prohibit.”
13. The restrictions which may consistently with the
Constitution be imposed upon the freedom of expression in section 12 and the
freedom of assembly in section 13 of the Constitution in the case of civil
servants must be restrictions which are reasonably required for the proper performance
of their functions. Furthermore they
must be reasonably justifiable in a democratic society. The considerations which are relevant to
these two requirements may to an extent overlap, but their Lordships turn first
to the former.
14. The critical words of this provision are that the
restrictions must be "reasonably required" for the stated
purpose. It can be, and indeed it was,
argued that the provisions of section 10 could be regarded as a valid expression
of the restraints on the freedoms contained in sections 12 and 13 of the
Constitution which are permitted by the reservations in those sections. An absolute prohibition may constitute a
restriction (Council of Civil Service Unions v. United Kingdom 20th
January 1987 (Application No. 11603/85) (1987) 50 D.& R. 228. Moreover, so
the argument may run, the restrictions in section 10 are not universal since
they relate only to matters of national or international controversy. The freedoms in question can be exercised
without restraint outwith matters in that category.
15. But their Lordships are not persuaded that the
restrictions set out in section 10 without qualification would meet the
condition that they be reasonably required for the proper performance of the
civil servant's functions. A blanket restraint
on all civil servants from communicating to anyone any expression of view on
any matter of political controversy
would in the view of their Lordships be excessive. It would not satisfy the qualification in
the Constitution that the restriction be reasonably required for the proper
performance of their functions. Their
Lordships recall the observation made by the majority of the European Court of
Human Rights in Vogt v. Germany 26th January 1995; Publications of the
European Court of Human Rights, Series A, No. 323 in paragraph 59 at page 28 in
relation to the duty of loyalty of a teacher under the particular provisions of
German law:-
“Even so, the absolute nature of that duty as construed
by the German courts is striking. It is owed equally by every civil servant,
regardless of his or her function and rank. It implies that every civil
servant, whatever his or her own opinion on the matter, must unambiguously
renounce all groups and movements which the competent authorities hold to be
inimical to the Constitution. It does not allow for distinctions between
service and private life; the duty is always owed, in every context.”
16. Section 10(2)(a) then cannot survive as it stands. That indeed was accepted by the Court of
Appeal. But what that Court sought to
do was to secure its validity by endeavouring to apply the presumption of
constitutionality and taking the view that there should be implied in the
sub-section some such words as "when his forbearance from such publication
is reasonably required for the proper performance of his official
functions". Thereby the Court
sought to give effect to the legislative intention expressed in section 6 of
the Civil Service Act that a civil servant should hold office subject to the
provisions of the Constitution.
17. Their Lordships cannot regard that solution to the
problem as a permissible one. While it
may be justifiable on occasion to imply words into a statute where there is an
ambiguity or an omission and the implied words are necessary to remedy such a
defect, in the present case subsection 10(2)(a) is perfectly clear and entire,
free from any ambiguity or omission. As
Lord Diplock explained in Attorney-General of The Gambia v. Momodou Jobe
[1984] A.C. 689, at p.702 the presumption of constitutionality is:-
“… but a particular application of the canon of
construction embodied in the Latin maxim magis est ut res valeat quam pereat
which is an aid to the resolution of any ambiguities or obscurities in the
actual words used ...”
18. Secondly, Parliament has made express provision in
section 10(3) to cover situations where publication of information or
expression of opinion may be permitted and it is difficult in the light of the
existence of express provision to read in by way of implication some further
exception. Thirdly, their Lordships are
not persuaded that the formula proposed by the Court of Appeal meets the
intention of section 12(4) of the Constitution. By virtue of section 6 of the Civil Service Act the Act and the
Constitution must be read together, and where necessary the one must be
understood to be qualified by the other.
But where section 12(4) refers to:-
“the extent that the law in question makes provision ...
(b)that imposes restrictions upon public officers that
are reasonably required for the proper performance of their functions”
the reference must, even if it includes an implied
provision, at least not be to an implied provision which simply echoes the
description of the kind of provision which may lawfully be made.
19. But that does not end the matter. Even if the solution proposed by the Court
of Appeal was to be adopted their Lordships are not persuaded that the validity
of the provision can thereby be secured. What the solution seeks to do is to
remove the excessive scope of the express terms of the sub-section. But in the view of their Lordships it fails
effectively to achieve that. One
principle which has to be observed here is that of legal certainty. This was succinctly expressed by the
European Commission on Human Rights in G. v. Federal Republic of Germany,
6 March 1989 Application No. 13079/87 60 D.& R .256, 261, where it was
stated that “legal provisions which interfere with individual rights must be
... formulated with sufficient precision to enable the citizen to regulate his
conduct". The critical question
then is whether the prohibition in section 10(2) as qualified by the Court of
Appeal produces a rule sufficiently precise to enable any given civil servant
to regulate his conduct.
20. The rule applies to all civil servants without
distinction so that it is left to the individual in any given circumstances to
decide whether he is or is not complying with the rule. Their Lordships are not
persuaded that the guidance given is sufficiently precise to secure the
validity of the provision. It is to be
noticed that the provision is fenced with a possible criminal sanction in
section 32 of the Act and it is necessary that in that context a degree of
precision is required so that the individual will be able to know with some
confidence where the boundaries of legality may lie. It cannot be that all expressions critical of the conduct of a
politician are to be forbidden. It is a
fundamental principle of a democratic society that citizens should be entitled
to express their views about politicians, and while there may be legitimate
restraints upon that freedom in the case of some civil servants, that restraint
cannot be made absolute and universal.
But where the line is to be drawn is a matter which cannot in fairness
be left to the hazard of individual decision.
Even under the formulation suggested by the Court of Appeal the civil
servant is left with no clear guidance as to the exercise of his constitutional
rights.
21. Further, the provision remains too wide in its scope and
possible application. The principle
here was expressed by Brennan J. in the United States Supreme Court in National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People v. Button (1963) 371 US 415, 433, in these terms:-
“The objectionable quality of vagueness and overbreadth
does not depend upon absence of fair notice to a criminally accused or upon
unchanneled delegation of legislative powers, but upon the danger of
tolerating, in the area of First Amendment freedoms, the existence of a penal
statute susceptible of sweeping and improper application ... These freedoms are
delicate and vulnerable, as well as supremely precious in our society. The threat of sanctions may deter their
exercise almost as potently as the actual application of sanctions ... Because
First Amendment freedoms need breathing space to survive, government may
regulate in the area only with narrow specificity.”
22. Similar views may be found in Gooding v. Wilson
405 U.S. 518, 521 (1972) and in the passage in the judgment of Kania C.J. in Romesh
Thappar v. State of Madras [1950] SRC 594 which was quoted by Redhead J in
the present case.
23. A further formulation of the deficiency of the proposed
solution can be found in the principle that an enactment construed by severing,
reading down or making implications into what the legislature has actually said
should take a form which it could reasonably be supposed that Parliament
intended to enact. The proposed
solution requires the subsection to be applied on a case by case basis, amounting
for all practical purposes to a retrospective imposition of liability on those
civil servants considered by the Court to have fallen on the wrong side of the
line. That would be an altogether
different provision from that which Parliament enacted. In this context
reference may usefully be made to the observations of Sopinka J., giving the
judgment of the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada in Osborne v. Canada
(Treasury Board) (1991) 82 D.L.R. (4th) 321. In that case the Supreme Court held unconstitutional a statute
which prohibit public servants from "engaging in work" for or against
a political party or candidate. It will
be noticed that the statute did not prohibit freedom of expression as such and
so would probably not have attracted the principle of overbreadth applied by
the United States Supreme Court to First Amendment rights; see Broadrick v.
Oklahoma (1973) 413 U.S. 601. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court of Canada
held the entire provision unconstitutional on the principle of "reading
down". Sopinka J. said at page
347:-
“The language of (the section) is so inclusive that (the
trial judge) declined to provide any definition of its scope but rather
preferred to deal with the activity of each of the plaintiffs individually in
measuring the restriction imposed by the section against the Charter. The
number of instances in which the operation of the section would otherwise have
been in breach of ... the Charter is extensive. On this basis there is little doubt that in future other
instances will arise which will require a similar reading down of the
section. In the final analysis, a law
that is invalid in so many of its applications will, as a result of wholesale
reading down, bear little resemblance to the law that Parliament passed and a
strong inference arises that it is invalid as a whole ... In my opinion, it is
Parliament that should determine how the section should be redrafted and not
the court. Apart from the impracticability of a determination of the
constitutionality of the section on a case-by-case basis, Parliament will have
available to it information and expertise that is not available to the court.”
24. It is precisely the same considerations which in the
view of their Lordships apply to the solution proposed by the Court of Appeal
and render it inadequate to save the validity of the provision in question.
25. Even if the subsection, with or without the
supplementary provision sought to be implied by the Court of Appeal satisfied
the first of the two requirements already referred to, namely that was a
restraint upon the freedom of civil servants “reasonably required for the
proper performance of their functions", it would still have to satisfy the
second requirement of being “reasonably justifiable in a democratic
society". Their Lordships were
referred to three cases in which that phrase has been considered. In Government of the Republic of South
Africa v. The Sunday Times Newspaper [1995] 1 L.R.C. 168 Joffe J. adopted
from Canadian jurisprudence four criteria to be satisfied for a law to satisfy
the provision in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that it be
“demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society". These were a sufficiently important objective
for the restriction, a rational connection with the objective, the use of the
least drastic means, and no disproportionately severe effect on those to whom
the restriction applies. In two cases
from Zimbabwe, Nyambirai v. National Social Security Authority [1996] 1
L.R.C. 64 and Retrofit (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Posts and Telecommunications
Corporation, [1996] 4 L.R.C. 489, a corresponding analysis was formulated
by Gubbay CJ., drawing both on South African and on Canadian jurisprudence, and
amalgamating the third and fourth of the criteria. In the former of the two
cases at page 75 he saw the quality of reasonableness in the expression
“reasonably justifiable in a democratic society" as depending upon the
question whether the provision which is under challenge “arbitrarily or
excessively invades the enjoyment of the guaranteed right according to the
standards of a society that has a proper respect for the rights and freedoms of
the individual". In determining
whether a limitation is arbitrary or excessive he said that the Court would ask
itself:-
“whether: (i) the legislative objective is sufficiently
important to justify limiting a fundamental right; (ii) the measures designed
to meet the legislative objective are rationally connected to it; and (iii) the
means used to impair the right or freedom are no more than is necessary to
accomplish the objective.”
26. Their Lordships accept and adopt this threefold analysis
of the relevant criteria.
27. Their Lordships would be prepared to accept in principle
that the first two of these criteria could be met in the case of civil servants
once it is noticed that their special status, with its advantages and
restraints, is recognised as proper in the administration of a free society. But the third criterion raises a question of
proportionality which was developed in argument by junior counsel for the
appellant and gives rise to real difficulty for the respondents. The blanket approach taken in section 10
imposes the same restraints upon the most junior of the civil servants as are
imposed upon the most senior. The point
was made by Redhead J. that in the United Kingdom there are classes of civil
servants related to the seniority of the posts which they fill and a
distinction is made between the classes as to the extent of any restraints
imposed upon them in regard to their freedom of political expression. In the Civil Service Act of Antigua and
Barbuda a considerable analysis of the grades of civil servants is set out in
the First Schedule and it would plainly be practical to devise a comparable
system of classification as has been adopted in the United Kingdom. Without some such refinement their Lordships
are not persuaded that the validity of the provision can be affirmed. The distinction between the different grades
of civil servant and the application of the provision in particular
circumstances to particular individuals cannot in their Lordships' view
sufficiently be made by the implied condition proposed by the Court of Appeal
for the reasons which have already been set out. It was for the appellant to
show that the restraint, with its qualification, was not reasonably justifiable
in a democratic society and their Lordships are persuaded that that has been
shown to be the case.
28. For the foregoing reasons it becomes unnecessary to
explore the more particular issues relating to the particular proceedings of
which the appellant complains. It
follows from the view taken by their Lordships on the general issue that the
interdiction and the intended disciplinary proceedings contravene the
appellant's constitutional rights.
Their Lordships
will accordingly humbly advise Her Majesty that the appeal should be allowed
and the orders pronounced by Redhead J. restored. The appellant is entitled to his costs in the appeal to the Court
of Appeal and in the appeal to their Lordships.
© CROWN COPYRIGHT as at the date of
judgment.