Audio By Carbonatix
It is almost five months after the Supreme Court of the Republic Ghana gave a landmark ruling and ordered Waterville Holdings Ltd. to return to the state monies it obtained illegally arising out of claims it brought against the state in 2009 but the company is yet to abide by the ruling which has elicited huge public outcry.
The Attorney-General and Minister of Justice therefore initiated legal processes at the High Court for the execution of the order of the apex court in order to retrieve €47m but Waterville Holdings also filed an application for stay of proceedings pending arbitration which the state opposed.
The High Court presided over by Justice Jennifer A Dodoo last week dismissed Waterville’s application for stay of proceedings and subsequently ordered it to file its defence “within 14 days for the matter to take its normal course” and further awarded cost of GH¢800.00 against them.
The Court reasoned that, the contracts Waterville was relying on in seeking a referral to arbitration did not exist as ruled by the Supreme Court in the case of Amidu v. The Attorney General and 3 others.
According to the High Court, the said contract had “been declared null and void as not having been approved by Parliament. The requirement for arbitration is not separate and separable from the main contract as Defence Counsel has contended but essentially part and parcel of it. It the contracts are declared null and void, so are the provisions in it relating to arbitration”.
The Court continued that, “the argument that this suit arises out of the annulled contracts falls flat on its face. Once the highest court of the land has pronounced on them, and held them to be null and void, it is not open to any other court to determine them valid and accord either the party the benefits of any of the said contracts”.
It would be recalled that, the Supreme Court in June after listening to arguments before it by former Attorney General Martin Amidu that neither Waterville nor businessman Alfred Agbesie Woyome, who also obtained similar payments, had a valid contract with the state to warrant the payments unanimously declared the payment as illegal and must be refunded.
The Deputy Attorney-General, Dr. Dominic Ayeni, Mrs. Dorothy Afriyie-Ansah, Chief State Attorney represented the state with Kofi Peasah-Boadu representing the Waterville.
Latest Stories
-
VAT reforms: GRA raises registration threshold to GH¢750,000, cuts rate to 20% from Jan. 2026
1 minute -
NPP Primaries: Dr Bawumia takes commanding 73% lead — latest Global InfoAnalytics report
13 minutes -
DGPP helped Ghana defy IMF currency forecasts and stabilise the Cedi – Senyo Hosi
14 minutes -
Guinea junta chief wins presidency in controversial election
17 minutes -
Cassava from reclaimed mine lands found to contain unsafe cyanide and lead levels – Study reveals
24 minutes -
Gov’t settles $709m eurobond payment ahead of schedule – Ato Forson
30 minutes -
Fuel prices set to drop from Jan 1, 2026 on cedi strength and falling crude prices
33 minutes -
‘Be vigilant, be professional’ – Private security guards urged to stay alert during festivities
37 minutes -
NPP race: Bawumia holds commanding lead – Global InfoAnalytics
42 minutes -
Goldbod sas slashed gold smuggling and boosted official exports – Senyo Hosi
2 hours -
Israel to bar 37 aid groups from Gaza
2 hours -
High Court freezes GNAT elections amid claims of constitutional ‘subversion’
2 hours -
MTN announces airtime and data sales blackout for January 2 in preparation for new VAT tariffs
3 hours -
Not Semenyo’s ‘last game’, says Iraola as Man City close in
4 hours -
12 of the best TV shows to watch this January
4 hours
