Federal Court ruled that the Prime Minister (PM) and ministers are public officers, which means that they can be sued for misfeasance in public office, and the government can be held vicariously liable for any wrongdoing they committed.
This decision OVERULED '...an earlier bench upheld the Court of Appeal and the High Court's decision that ruled the PM and members of the Cabinet are members of administration and not public officers....'
It must be noted that in our laws, many of the offenses are about wrongdoings or crimes committed by PUBLIC OFFICERS - I do not think we have any offences about wrongdoings of 'members of the administration'. Thus, if Najib, other Prime Ministers, Ministers and/or members of the cabinet are considered not to be 'public officers' then they could also escape many of the crimes specific to public officers or holders of public office...This concern is now settled, as the Federal Court decided they are public officers...
This decision may also have a bearing on on-going criminal trials - more charges concerning wrongdoings as public officers could now be levied against Najib or any the former Ministers...
In landmark judgement, Federal Court rules PM, ministers can be sued for misfeasance in public office
PUTRAJAYA
(Nov 19): In a landmark judgement, the Federal Court ruled that the
Prime Minister (PM) and ministers are public officers, which means that
they can be sued for misfeasance in public office, and the government
can be held vicariously liable for any wrongdoing they committed.
The decision was made by a seven-member bench led by Chief Justice
Tan Sri Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat, but it was Federal Court judge Datuk P
Nalini who wrote the judgment and read the summary of the unanimous
decision.
The bench answered two questions of law posed by Damansara MP Tony
Pua, who is appealing a Court of Appeal and High Court decision.
The questions are:
- Is the tort of misfeasance in public office available against the then Prime Minister of Malaysia, as an individual holding public office or as a public officer?
- Can the government be vicariously liable for the acts of Datuk Seri Najib Razak if the tort is proven against him under the Government Proceedings Act 1956?
Pua had in January 2017 sued the then-PM Najib and the
government for misfeasance — which means the wrongful use of lawful
authority — in public office over the 1Malaysia Development Bhd fiasco
(1MDB).
The DAP national publicity secretary had alleged that Najib had
abused his public office and had benefitted from receiving money from
1MDB, which are public funds.
With the decision today, it corrected a decision in Tun Dr Mahathir
Mohamad and Khairuddin Abu Hassan's suit against Najib and the
government on the same issue where an earlier bench upheld the Court of
Appeal and the High Court's decision that ruled the PM and members of
the Cabinet are members of administration and not public officers.
Najib is presently facing 25 charges, namely four for abuse of power
and 21 for money laundering in relation to 1MDB, as well as separate
graft and abuse of power charges in relation to 1MDB's former subsidiary
SRC International Sdn Bhd and other 1MDB-related charges.
Why PM and ministers are not just 'members of administration'
On ruling why the PM and ministers should not be defined only as "member[s] of administration" as per the Federal Constitution, Justice Nalini said the reasoning and interpretation of these Articles 132(1) and (3) are untenable as those articles are to be construed purely in the context of, and for the purposes of, the Constitution.
"To that end the definition of 'public service' stipulated there is
intended to apply to the Federal Constitution and not to the definition
of a public officer under the common law," she explained.
The Federal Court judge said a purposive reading of Article 132
reflects the administrative structure envisaged for the governance and
operation of the Federation, and not to determine who can be held liable
for misfeasance while holding public office.
"This means that ministers are no less holders of public office in
the context of misfeasance in public office. They derive their salary
from the public purse and carry out their functions with a public
purpose.
"Therefore there was no express legislative intent in either the
Federal Constitution or the Interpretation Acts to abrogate the common
law definition of the term 'public officer'," she explained further.
Nalini said the Federal Court also accepted the tort of misfeasance
in public office in the Keruntum Sdn Bhd vs The Director of Forests case
and others, where the Sarawak Chief Minister was treated as a public
officer or a person holding public office.
"This fortifies our conclusion that the then-PM is a person holding
public office or a public officer for the purposes of misfeasance in
public office," the top judge said.
Quoting a foreign judgment, Nalini expressed that the tort of
misfeasance in public office is that in a legal system based on the rule
of law, executive or administrative power may be exercised only for the
public good and not for ulterior and improper purposes.
"The tort serves to protect each citizen's reasonable expectation
that a public officer will not intentionally injure a member of the
public through deliberate and unlawful conduct in the exercise of public
functions. There is an obvious public interest in bringing public
servants guilty of outrageous conduct to book. Those who act in such a
way should not be free to do so with impunity," she said.
She added as the court ruled the PM and ministers are public officer,
then the government can be held liable for their acts in public office.
"There is a specific definition of 'officer' in the Government
Proceedings Act 1956, which when construed purposively, supports the
legal conclusion that the government may be sued for alleged vicarious
liability under that section.
"In other words, an action can be brought against the government in
respect of the acts of a PM or other minister under misfeasance in
public office," Justice Nalini said.
The court further ruled that the suit by Pua can be reinstated if he
wishes to continue to do so, but the suit would be decided again after a
trial at the High Court.
Besides Justices Tengku Maimun and Nalini, also on the panel were
Court of Appeal president Tan Sri Ahmad Ma'arop, Chief Judge of Malaya
Tan Sri Azahar Mohamed, and Federal Court judges Justices Rohana Yusof
and Datuk Mohd Zawawi Mohd Salleh.
The other Federal Court judge, Justice Datuk Alizatul Khair Osman Khairuddin, has just retired.
Pua was represented by Datuk Malik Imtiaz Sarwar, while senior federal counsel Alice Loke appeared for the government.
Malik, commenting the decision, said this is a good decision that upheld the rule of law.
Najib is asked to pay costs of RM30,000, and the apex court has fixed Nov 26 for mention at the High Court.
The court did not make any order as to costs to be paid by the government. - Edge Market, 19/11/2019
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