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Thursday, April 24, 2025

Court rules on Auditor General appeal Friday

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309 days ago
20240619
Auditor General Jaiwantie Ramdass at the Hall of Justice with attorney Anand Ramlogan, SC, on Monday.

Auditor General Jaiwantie Ramdass at the Hall of Justice with attorney Anand Ramlogan, SC, on Monday.

DEREK ACHONG

Derek Achong

Se­nior Re­porter

derek.achong@guardian.co.tt

Au­di­tor Gen­er­al Jai­wantie Ram­dass is set to learn the fate of her law­suit over an on­go­ing Cab­i­net-ap­point­ed probe in­to the de­ba­cle be­tween her of­fice and the Min­istry of Fi­nance on Fri­day. 

Af­ter hear­ing sub­mis­sions in Ram­dass’ ap­peal over the pre­ma­ture dis­missal of her case on Mon­day, ap­pel­late judges Mark Mo­hammed, Pe­ter Ra­jku­mar, and James Aboud said they need­ed time to ren­der their judg­ment. 

In a sub­se­quent no­tice is­sued yes­ter­day af­ter­noon, the pan­el in­di­cat­ed that its de­ci­sion would be pro­vid­ed dur­ing an in-per­son hear­ing at the Hall of Jus­tice in Port-of-Spain at 9 am on Fri­day.

If the pan­el dis­miss­es the ap­peal and Ram­dass does not suc­cess­ful­ly chal­lenge the out­come be­fore the Unit­ed King­dom-based Privy Coun­cil, it would mean that the in­ves­tiga­tive com­mit­tee head­ed by re­tired judge David Har­ris would be able to com­plete as­pects of their probe re­lat­ed to Ram­dass and her of­fice.

The com­mit­tee had pre­vi­ous­ly agreed that it would miss its Ju­ly 5 dead­line for sub­mit­ting its fi­nal re­port, as the even­tu­al out­come of the ap­peal would de­ter­mine whether their work can in­clude Ram­dass as ini­tial­ly en­vis­aged. 

In the ap­peal, Ram­dass’ lawyers, led by Anand Ram­lo­gan, SC, are con­tend­ing that High Court Judge West­min James erred in find­ing that Ram­dass did not have an ar­guable case with a re­al­is­tic prospect of suc­cess at an even­tu­al tri­al. In her sub­stan­tive law­suit, Ram­dass con­tend­ed that the in­ves­ti­ga­tion is un­con­sti­tu­tion­al and il­le­gal be­cause nei­ther Fi­nance Min­is­ter Colm Im­bert nor the Cab­i­net has the ju­ris­dic­tion to probe the con­duct of the Au­di­tor Gen­er­al. 

They al­so claimed that Im­bert was bi­ased in ini­ti­at­ing the probe. De­liv­er­ing a 15-page de­ci­sion two Mon­days ago, Jus­tice James ruled that Sec­tion 116(6) of the Con­sti­tu­tion, which in­su­lates the Au­di­tor Gen­er­al from be­ing un­der the di­rec­tion and con­trol of any oth­er pow­er or au­thor­i­ty, could not ap­ply to in­ves­ti­ga­tions such as the one or­dered by the Cab­i­net. 

Jus­tice James not­ed that the in­ves­tiga­tive team, which in­cludes for­mer au­dit di­rec­tor David Ben­jamin, was tasked with in­ves­ti­gat­ing sev­er­al state de­part­ments and was not specif­i­cal­ly prob­ing Ram­dass for a dis­ci­pli­nary of­fence.

Jus­tice James al­so stat­ed that Ram­dass failed to prove bias by Im­bert, as he not­ed that Im­bert and his min­istry are al­so sub­ject to the probe. Pre­sent­ing sub­mis­sions on Mon­day, Ram­lo­gan main­tained that the probe in­fringed on the in­de­pen­dence of his client’s of­fice un­der the Con­sti­tu­tion. “It is a pre­lude to some­thing else,” he said, as he sug­gest­ed that it may be the pre­cur­sor for dis­ci­pli­nary ac­tion. 

In his sub­mis­sions, Se­nior Coun­sel Dou­glas Mendes, who rep­re­sent­ed Cab­i­net, stat­ed that Jus­tice James’ de­ci­sion could not be fault­ed. He not­ed that the de­ci­sion was based on an es­tab­lished le­gal prece­dent in a case brought by Chief Jus­tice Ivor Archie af­ter the Law As­so­ci­a­tion ini­ti­at­ed a probe against him sev­er­al years ago.

In that case, the Privy Coun­cil ruled that the as­so­ci­a­tion’s probe was law­ful, al­though the Con­sti­tu­tion pre­scribes a spe­cif­ic process for prob­ing and dis­ci­plin­ing judges. Mendes sug­gest­ed that the find­ings in the case di­rect­ly ap­plied to Ram­dass’. 

“You can re­move Chief Jus­tice and re­place it with Au­di­tor Gen­er­al,” he said. 

The dis­pute be­tween Ram­dass and the min­istry arose in April af­ter the min­istry sought to de­liv­er amend­ed pub­lic ac­counts to ex­plain a re­port­ed $2.6 bil­lion un­der­es­ti­ma­tion in rev­enue.

Ram­dass ini­tial­ly re­fused re­ceipt as she claimed that she need­ed le­gal ad­vice on whether she could ac­cept them af­ter the Jan­u­ary statu­to­ry dead­line for sub­mis­sion. Ram­dass even­tu­al­ly ac­cept­ed the records and dis­patched au­dit staff to ver­i­fy them.

She then sub­mit­ted her orig­i­nal an­nu­al re­port to Par­lia­ment, which was based on the orig­i­nal records. In sub­se­quent le­gal cor­re­spon­dence be­tween the par­ties, Ram­dass claimed that her au­dit team was un­able to rec­on­cile the amend­ed records based on the doc­u­ments it au­dit­ed. She al­so con­tend­ed that the amend­ed records ap­peared to be back­dat­ed to the orig­i­nal statu­to­ry dead­line in Jan­u­ary.

Ram­dass al­so took is­sue with the fact that the dis­crep­an­cy was ini­tial­ly es­ti­mat­ed at $3.4 bil­lion. Im­bert re­peat­ed­ly de­nied any wrong­do­ing. His lawyers claimed that the rec­on­cil­i­a­tion af­ter the ini­tial es­ti­mate re­vealed that the vari­ance was, in fact, $2,599,278,188.72, which was at­trib­uted to Val­ue Added Tax (VAT), In­di­vid­ual, Busi­ness Levy and Green Fund Levy con­tri­bu­tions.

They al­so claimed that checks in re­la­tion to the ap­prox­i­mate $780 mil­lion dif­fer­ence be­tween the ini­tial and fi­nal es­ti­mat­ed vari­ances at­trib­uted it to tax re­fund cheques to tax­pay­ers is­sued for the 2022 fi­nan­cial year be­ing cashed in the fi­nan­cial year 2023. They at­trib­uted the er­ror to a switch from a man­u­al to an elec­tron­ic cheque-clear­ing sys­tem by the Cen­tral Bank.

They claimed that there was no back­dat­ing, as they not­ed that the al­le­ga­tion was made be­cause a doc­u­ment re­lat­ed to the orig­i­nal pub­lic ac­counts was in­ad­ver­tent­ly in­clud­ed in the re­vised doc­u­ments. They al­so con­tend­ed that Ram­dass act­ed il­le­gal­ly by ini­tial­ly re­fus­ing to ac­cept the amend­ed ac­counts. How­ev­er, they claimed that their client has, for now, de­cid­ed against tak­ing le­gal ac­tion against her for it. Im­bert even­tu­al­ly agreed to lay the orig­i­nal re­port in Par­lia­ment and did so on May 24.

His de­ci­sion was based on the un­der­stand­ing that Ram­dass would is­sue a spe­cial re­port clar­i­fy­ing her ini­tial re­port based on the amend­ed records pro­vid­ed.

Ram­dass was al­so rep­re­sent­ed by Kent Sam­lal, Natasha Bis­ram, and Aasha Ram­lal. Si­mon de la Bastide, SC, Jo-Anne Julien, Jerome Ra­j­coomar, and Son­nel David-Longe are al­so rep­re­sent­ing Im­bert and the Cab­i­net. 


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