Cosmos Sohia v Fidelis Semoso
Jurisdiction | Papua New Guinea |
Judge | Makail, J |
Judgment Date | 28 July 2016 |
Citation | (2016) N6365 |
Court | National Court |
Year | 2016 |
Judgement Number | N6365 |
Full : EP No 2 of 2015; In the matter of the Bougainville Elections Act, 2007 and in the matter of Disputed Returns for Tsitalato Constituency; Cosmos Sohia v Fidelis Semoso and George Manu in his capacity as the Acting Electoral Commissioner for the office of Bougainville Electoral Commission and the Bougainville Electoral Commission (2016) N6365
National Court: Makail, J
Judgment Delivered: 28 July 2016
N6365
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
[IN THE NATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE]
EP NO 02 OF 2015
IN THE MATTER OF THE BOUGAINVILLE ELECTIONS ACT, 2007 AND IN THE MATTER OF DISPUTED RETURNS FOR TSITALATO CONSTITUENCY
BETWEEN
COSMOS SOHIA
Petitioner
AND
FIDELIS SEMOSO
First Respondent
AND
GEORGE MANU in his capacity as the Acting Electoral Commissioner for the Office of Bougainville Electoral Commission
Second Respondent
AND
THE BOUGAINVILLE ELECTORAL COMMISSION
Third Respondent
Waigani: Makail, J
2016: 27th & 28th July
ELECTION PETITION – PRACTICE & PROCEDURE – Autonomous Region of Bougainville Election – Application to dismiss – Petition incompetent – Grounds of – Pleading of wrong jurisdiction basis – Pleading of Bougainville Constitution – Bougainville elections governed under Bougainville Elections Act, 2007 – Bougainville Elections Act, 2007 – Sections 209 (1) (k) & 2 – National Court Election Petition Rules, 2002 (as amended) – Rules 18
Cases cited:
Jacob Kumbu v. Nicholas Mann & Ors (2012) N4746
Mathias Ijape v. Bire Kimisopa (2003) N2344
Robin Aegaiya v. Gari Baki & The State (2009) N3693
Steven Nining v. Dr. Nicholas Mann & Ors (2013) N5338
Counsel:
Mr. N. Yalo, for Petitioner
Mr. P. Mawa, for First Respondent
Ms. H. Masiria, for Second & Third Respondents
RULING ON APPLICATION TO DISMISS PETITION
28th July, 2016
1. MAKAIL, J: There is no dispute that the petition was commenced pursuant to the provisions of the Constitution of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, 2004 (“Bougainville Constitution”) and not the Bougainville Elections Act, 2007 (“Bougainville Act”) and has progressed this far.
2. There is also no dispute that the applicable law conferring jurisdiction on the National Court to hear a petition disputing an election of a candidate or result of an election arising from Autonomous Region of Bougainville (“ARB”) in 2015 is the Bougainville Act.
3. On the face of it, the reference to either law seemed quite perfect and needed no debate and the insistence by the Respondents to make a distinction was quite unnecessary. However, on a second glance, the true question which forms the basis of the objection to the competency of the petition and in turn its dismissal is not whether one law can be substituted by another or referred to interchangeably but whether the reference to the incorrect law is a significant defect, having the effect of rendering the petition incompetent.
4. It was argued in support of the real issue that it does. The counter argument by the Petitioner that given that the provisions of the Bougainville Constitution and the corresponding provisions of the Bougainville Act are not too dissimilar and any claim of prejudice by the Respondents is without merit can be disposed of at once because the Bougainville Constitution and the Bougainville Act are two different laws enacted by the ARB House of Representatives: see Section 65 of the Bougainville Constitution. The former applies to the first general election of the President and members of the ARB: see Schedule 10.1 (1) and Section 14 of the Bougainville Constitution and the latter applies to subsequent general elections generally: see Section 29 of the Bougainville Act.
5. The case under consideration arose from the general election subsequent to the first general election and the concession by the Petitioner that the applicable law was the Bougainville Act put it beyond argument that the petition should be based on that law. It renders the proposition advanced by the Petitioner that pleading a wrong law or non-existent law rendered the petition defective but not a nullity based on the cases of Mathias Ijape v. Bire Kimisopa (2003) N2344; Robin Aegaiya v. Gari Baki & The State (2009) N3693; Jacob Kumbu v. Nicholas Mann & Ors (2012) N4746 and Steven Nining v. Dr. Nicholas Mann & Ors (2013) N5338 quite unnecessary.
However, that proposition must be distinguished. In the first cited case, the Court struck out a paragraph of the petition which pleaded provisions applicable to Local-level Governments Elections and not provisions of the Organic Law on National and Local-level Government Elections. In this instance, the entire petition made reference to or pleaded the Bougainville Constitution. Given this, striking out the parts of the petition that made reference to or pleaded the Bougainville Constitution will result in the petition lacking the jurisdictional foundation.
7. The other three cited cases were judicial review applications. They are irrelevant because the...
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...– Incorrect Reliefs. Cases Cited: EP 43 of 2017 Mond Palme v Fabian Pok (2018) N7214, EP No. 2 of 2015 Cosmos Sohia v Fidelis Semoso (2016) N6365 Counsel: R. Diweni, for the Petitioner, A. Baniyamai, for the First Respondent, H. Nii, for the Second Respondent. 18th February, 2019 1. MANUHU ......
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In the matter of Section 206 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections; Pastor Bernard Peter Kaku v William Powi – Member for Southern Highlands Provincial Electorate and Electoral Commission of Papua New Guinea (2019) N7729
...– Incorrect Reliefs. Cases Cited: EP 43 of 2017 Mond Palme v Fabian Pok (2018) N7214, EP No. 2 of 2015 Cosmos Sohia v Fidelis Semoso (2016) N6365 Counsel: R. Diweni, for the Petitioner, A. Baniyamai, for the First Respondent, H. Nii, for the Second Respondent. 18th February, 2019 1. MANUHU ......