NTCS wins appeal at the Privy Council
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Ezroy Millwood.Less than a week before the company loses its franchise, the Ezroy Millwood-led National Transport Cooperative Society (NTCS) has won a major round in his legal fight with the government.
Thursday morning the UK based Privy Council allowed its appeal against a May 2008 decision and sent the case back to the local Court of Appeal.
The government and the NTCS has been locked in a bitter 11 year dispute over a franchise agreement.
At the centre of the quarrel between the NTCS and the government was whether the original franchise agreement signed by the government, was null, because the Minister was not qualified and whether the franchise was valid.
As part of the agreement between the government and NTCS, the Transport Ministry should have published a new fare table by June 1995.
However the date was not met and the franchise operated on an old structure until 2001.
The NTCS sued the government and the matter went to arbitration.
In 2004 the arbitration panel awarded the NTCS $4.5 billion, representing losses suffered by the NTCS in the years when the government failed to publish a new fare structure.
But the government appealed the decision insisting that the arbitrators made errors in law by not accepting their argument that the franchises were illegal to begin with.
The court of appeal subsequently overturned the ruling.
Not satisfied the NTCS took the issue to the Privy Council requesting that the Court of Appeal decision be quashed.
In its judgement handed down on Thursday the Privy Council ruled that the NTCS' appeal should be allowed and the matter remitted to the local Court of Appeal.
It said the Appeals Court should consider the consequences in light of the fact that the duration of the Franchise Agreement was three and not 10 years.
As result damages were also reduced to just over one billion dollars.
The parties have 21 days in which to make written submissions as to costs. Meanwhile the NTCS defence team is hailing the Privy Council's decision.
Lead defence attorney, Lord Anthony Gifford told RJR News on Thursday morning the judgement is a major triumph for his side.
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Ezroy Millwood.Less than a week before the company loses its franchise, the Ezroy Millwood-led National Transport Cooperative Society (NTCS) has won a major round in his legal fight with the government.
Thursday morning the UK based Privy Council allowed its appeal against a May 2008 decision and sent the case back to the local Court of Appeal.
The government and the NTCS has been locked in a bitter 11 year dispute over a franchise agreement.
At the centre of the quarrel between the NTCS and the government was whether the original franchise agreement signed by the government, was null, because the Minister was not qualified and whether the franchise was valid.
As part of the agreement between the government and NTCS, the Transport Ministry should have published a new fare table by June 1995.
However the date was not met and the franchise operated on an old structure until 2001.
The NTCS sued the government and the matter went to arbitration.
In 2004 the arbitration panel awarded the NTCS $4.5 billion, representing losses suffered by the NTCS in the years when the government failed to publish a new fare structure.
But the government appealed the decision insisting that the arbitrators made errors in law by not accepting their argument that the franchises were illegal to begin with.
The court of appeal subsequently overturned the ruling.
Not satisfied the NTCS took the issue to the Privy Council requesting that the Court of Appeal decision be quashed.
In its judgement handed down on Thursday the Privy Council ruled that the NTCS' appeal should be allowed and the matter remitted to the local Court of Appeal.
It said the Appeals Court should consider the consequences in light of the fact that the duration of the Franchise Agreement was three and not 10 years.
As result damages were also reduced to just over one billion dollars.
The parties have 21 days in which to make written submissions as to costs. Meanwhile the NTCS defence team is hailing the Privy Council's decision.
Lead defence attorney, Lord Anthony Gifford told RJR News on Thursday morning the judgement is a major triumph for his side.
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