Almost two decades after they were beaten by prison and police officers during a riot at the Golden Grove State Prison in Arouca, a group of former and current inmates are finally set to receive compensation.
Delivering a judgment yesterday, five Law Lords of the United Kingdom-based Privy Council ruled that two out of three Appeal Court Judges got it wrong when they weighed in on the group’s class action lawsuit in 2021.
In the appeal, the Privy Council had to consider whether the local appellate court had the power to interfere with an agreement between the inmates for their individual assault and battery cases to be defined by the outcomes of test cases from three of them.
Lady Ingrid Simler, who wrote the judgment, noted that the issue was not raised by the Office of the Attorney General when it filed an appeal after a judge partially upheld their lawsuit. She also noted that the AG’s Office provided generic defences to all the claims.
Noting the AG’s Office had consented to the case proceedings the way it did, Lady Simler ruled that the Appeal Court did not have the jurisdiction to intervene.
Lady Simler found that even if the Appeal Court had the jurisdiction to consider the issue, there was no legal basis to set it aside.
“This was a “win one win all” agreement that was either valid as a whole or not. It was not open to the Court of Appeal to rewrite it in favour of one side,” Lady Simler said.
She said that the two judges failed to consider that their decision would mean that the inmates, who benefited from the test cases, would now have to pursue individual claims almost two decades after the alleged incident.
The lawsuit stemmed from an incident at the prison on November 11, 2006.
A group of 54 inmates filed individual lawsuits as they claimed that they were wrongly beaten by prison and police officers during the riot.
While the case was at a preliminary stage, it was agreed that Antonio Sobers’ case would affect injured inmates, who received medical treatment at a hospital, and Gabriel Joseph’s case would affect injured inmates who were treated at the prison’s infirmary. The inmates, who claimed that they were injured but were not taken for treatment, were to be represented by Clint Wilson.
In 2012, former High Court and Appeal Court Judge Judith Jones upheld the cases brought by Sobers and Joseph.
Wilson’s case was rejected as Justice Jones found that he had not proven that he was injured in the incident.
In the initial appeal, Appellate Judges Nolan Bereaux, Peter Rajkumar and Vasheist Kokaram upheld their former colleague’s finding in the case.
However, Rajkumar and Bereaux took issue with the inmates pursuing the class action lawsuit instead of their case being determined individually based on the circumstances unique to them.
Justice Kokaram dissented.
The final outcome of the case means that Sobers, Joseph, and 18 inmates, whose cases were dependent on theirs, would now receive compensation.
The inmates were represented by Tom Richards, KC, and Gerald Ramdeen. The AG’s Office was represented by Rowan Pennington-Benton, and Katherine Bailey.