Audio By Carbonatix
The Court of Appeal has dismissed an application challenging the revocation of the operating license of a defunct microfinance company, TI Microfinance Limited, by the Bank of Ghana (BoG).
In a unanimous decision, a three-member panel of the court held that the judicial review application filed before the High Court was wrong in law.
It was the considered view of the court that per Section 141 of the Banks and Specialized Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 (Act 930), any dispute concerning the revocation of the license of an insolvent entity by the BoG should be sent to arbitration for redress.
“By the provision of the law, a party aggrieved by the decision of the Bank of Ghana and desires to seek legal redress shall resort to arbitration. Act 930 has provided a remedy for an aggrieved person to submit himself to arbitration, the applicant is enjoined by law to submit himself to arbitration”.
“For, after all, it is the duty of the court to uphold Acts of Parliament. It has been said that the courts are servants of the legislature in terms of construing laws passed by Parliament,” the Court of Appeal held.
The court gave the decision after it upheld an appeal by BoG challenging the decision of the High Court not to grant a preliminary legal objection against the judicial review application.
“The appeal succeeds. The application for an order of certiorari in the instant case fails and is hereby dismissed on the ground that the application was procedurally flawed,” the court held.
Application
On October 23, 2019, the Founder of TI Microfinance Limited, Emmanuel Babuboa, filed an application for certiorari at the High Court urging the court to quash the decision of the BoG to revoke the operating license of the company.
It was his case that the Central Bank revoked the license of the financial company without any notice in conformity with Section 16 of Act 930.
Section 16 of Act 930 stipulates that the BoG may revoke the license of a bank or specialised deposit-taking institution if that entity had engaged in any illegality, crime or fails to comply with the terms of the license.
It, however, provides that the BoG shall exercise its powers under Section 16 only after it had served notice to the affected financial institution, but the central bank can forgo the notice in emergency situations or in the public interest.
Preliminary objection
The Bank of Ghana after being served with a judicial review application filed a preliminary legal objection for the High Court to set it aside on the basis that the application was flawed in law.
On December 2, 2022, the High Court dismissed the preliminary legal objection by the BoG and awarded cost of GHC15,000 against the Central Bank.
The BoG then appealed against the decision of the High Court at the Court of Appeal.
Appeal
Making a case for the appeal, the BoG argued that it revoked the license of TI Microfinance under Section 123 of Act 930 and not Section 16.
Unlike Section 16 which allows the BoG to revoke the license of a financial institution that is engaged in a crime or illegalities, Section 123 of Act 930 allows the BoG to revoke the license of a financial institution that is insolvent.
It was the case of the BoG that per Section 141 of Act 930, any entity dissatisfied with a decision of the BoG to revoke its license under Section 123 ought to resort to arbitration and not litigation.
In view of that, the BoG argued that the applicant breached Section 141 of Act 930 by resorting to a judicial review application instead of arbitration to seek redress, and therefore the High Court should not have accepted the application.
“In the instant case, although the challenge is against the decision of a public institution, statute has specifically prescribed the form for seeking redress. Thus, the respondent is disabled from circumventing the procedure set out in the Act,” the BoG argued.
The court of Appeal also set aside the cost of GH₵15, 000 which was awarded in favour of the plaintiff by the high court.
Latest Stories
-
Ofori-Atta is embarrassing Ghana, says Martin Kpebu
26 seconds -
Africa Prosperity Network unveils Projet Afrique ahead of APD 2026 in Accra
1 minute -
ACRR analysis and assessment of the SSNIT 2026 Pension Indexation Report
5 minutes -
If you want 2026 to feel like your happiest year yet, let go of these 7 habits
8 minutes -
Iran official says 2,000 people have been killed in unrest
15 minutes -
About 2,000 killed in Iran protests, official says
22 minutes -
If judge finds no basis, Ofori-Atta will be put on the next flight home, says Victor Smith
22 minutes -
GWL to reassign 41 District managers in crackdown on illegal connections
23 minutes -
NDC smuggling LGBTQ agenda into school curriculum, Ntim Fordjour claims
28 minutes -
Hopeson Adorye backs Frimpong-Boateng’s claim of rigged 2024 NPP Flagbearer election
29 minutes -
NPP should pursue Ofori-Atta to return to Ghana for accountability – Hopeson Adorye
31 minutes -
I haven’t seen my client since arrest – Martin Kpebu on Alhaji Seidu Abagre’s detention
35 minutes -
Ofori-Atta has brought disgrace to NPP — Hopeson Adorye
38 minutes -
Illegal Water Connections: 41 GWL managers to be reassigned by January 15
38 minutes -
Motorists bemoan long-nonfunctional traffic lights at Poku Transport Junction
42 minutes
