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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
[Ed. 1978]
CHAPTER 12
COURT OF APPEAL
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART I - PRELIMINARY
SECTION
1.
Short title.
2.
Interpretation.
PART II - FIJI COURT OF APPEAL
3. Name of Court
and general jurisdiction.
4. Seal of
Court.
5. Precedence and
seniority.
6. Number of
judges.
7. Sessions of Court of
Appeal.
8. Registrar of Court of
Appeal.
9. Judges not to sit on
appeals from their own
decisions.
10. Appeals from other
territories and under other
enactments.
11. Right of audience in
appeals from other territories.
PART III - APPEALS IN CIVIL CASES
12. Appeals in
civil cases.
13. Powers of Court of
Appeal in civil appeals.
14. Wrong
ruling as to sufficiency of
stamp.
15. Power to reserve question
of law for the decision of Court of
Appeal.
16. Conditions precedent to
appeal.
17. Discretionary power of
Court.
18.
Judgments.
19. Continuation of civil
appeal notwithstanding absence of a
judge.
20. Powers of a single judge
of appeal.
PART IV - APPEALS IN CRIMINAL CASES
21. Right of
appeal in criminal cases.
22.
Appeals from Supreme Court in its appellate, etc., jurisdiction in criminal
cases.
23. Determination of appeal
in ordinary cases.
24. Powers of
Court in special cases.
25.
Suspension of payment for restoration,
etc.
26. Time for
appealing.
27. Judge's notes and
report to be furnished on
appeal.
28. Supplemental powers of
Court.
29. Director of Public
Prosecutions to be party.
30. Legal
assistance to appellant.
31. Right
of appellant to be present.
32.
Costs of appeal.
33. Admission to
bail of appellant and custody when attending
Court.
34. Duties of Registrar with
respect to notices of appeal,
etc.
35. Powers which may be
exercised by a judge of the
Court.
36. Judgment in criminal
appeals.
37. Power to reserve
question of law for the decision of the Court of
Appeal.
38. Prerogative of
mercy.
PART V - RULES
39. Power to make
rules of Court.
----------------------------------------------------------
Ordinances
Nos. 2 of 1949, 25 of 1958, 44 of
1959,
37 of 1960, 36 of 1961, 37 of
1965, 37 of 1966,
Order 31st Jan.,
1967. Order 7th October 1970,
Acts
Nos. 38 of 1971, 14 of 1973
AN ACT FOR THE
ESTABLISHMENT OF A COURT OF APPEAL
AND
TO MAKE PROVISIONS FOR APPEALS
THERETO
[31st March, 1949.]
PART I-PRELIMINARY
Short title
1. This Act may
be cited as the Court of Appeal Act.
Interpretation
2.-(1) In this
Act, unless the context otherwise requires-
"appeal" for the purpose of Part III, includes a motion for a new trial or to set aside any decision;
"appellant" includes a person who has been convicted and desires to appeal under this Act; and where the Attorney-General or the Director of Public Prosecutions is, or is deemed to be, a party to any proceeding and desires to appeal under this Act includes the Attorney-General or the Director of Public Prosecutions, as the case may be;
"Court" means the Court of Appeal;
"Court of Appeal" means the Court of Appeal established for Fiji by section 93 of the Constitution;
"decision" includes an order, judgment or decree;
"President" means the President of the Court of Appeal;
"Registrar" means the Registrar of the Court of Appeal;
"sentence" includes any order of the Court made on conviction with reference to the person convicted, and any disqualification, penalty, punishment or recommendation made or imposed by the Court, and
"sentenced" shall be construed accordingly;
"Supreme Court" means the Supreme Court of Fiji.
(2) This Act applies to persons
convicted or sentenced pursuant to the provisions of section
11 of the Rotuma Act as it applies to
persons convicted on trial held before the Supreme Court of
Fiji.
(Cap.
122.)
(Section substituted by 37 of
1965, s. 2, and amended by Order 31st Jan., 1967.)
PART II-FIJI COURT OF APPEAL
Name of Court and general jurisdiction
3.-(1) The Court
of Appeal shall be called "the Fiji Court of Appeal."
(2) The Court shall
have-
(a) power and jurisdiction to hear and determine all appeals which lie to the Court by virtue of the Constitution, this Act or of any other law for the time being in force;
(b) all such powers and jurisdiction as are or may from time to time be vested in the Court under or by virtue of the Constitution, this Act or any other law for the time being in force.
(Section substituted by Order 31st Jan., 1967.)
(3) For the avoidance of doubt,
it is hereby declared that the Court shall have, and shall be deemed always to
have had, power to
exercise jurisdiction in relation to appeals from the High
Court of the Western Pacific or from any court or courts from time to
time
replacing or succeeding such High Court in any territory in or in relation to
which such High Court exercised or exercises
jurisdiction.
(Inserted by 13 of 1977 s.
2)
Seal of Court
4. The Court of
Appeal shall have and use as occasion may require a seal bearing a device or
impression of the Royal Arms with the inscription
"The Fiji Court of
Appeal".
Precedence and seniority
5.-(1) The judges
of the Court of Appeal, other than the President, shall, as between themselves,
take precedence and have seniority
as the President shall from time to time
determine.
(2) In the determination of such precedence and seniority due
regard shall be had to the date of appointment to, and the nature of,
any
judicial office held, or formerly held, by the judges respectively.
(3)
In default of a determination under subsection (1) judges or retired judges of
any superior court in the British Commonwealth
(including the Supreme Court of
Fiji) shall take precedence and seniority according to the respective dates of
their first appointment
as puisne judges in any territory.
(4) In the
absence of the President the senior member of the Court present at any
proceedings thereof shall be Vice-President and
shall preside; such seniority
being at all times determined according to the provisions of this
section.
(Section substituted by 37 of
1965, s. 4.)
Number of judges
6.-(1) For the
purpose of hearing and determining appeals the Court of Appeal shall be summoned
in accordance with directions given
by the President and the Court shall be duly
constituted if it consists of not less than three judges, but provision may be
made
by rules of court for the hearing and determining of specified classes of
cases by two judges of the Court of
Appeal.
(Amended by 37 of 1965, s.
5.)
(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1), the
Court of Appeal, shall be duly constituted if it consists of not less than
two
judges in any case or cases where the President is of opinion that it is
impracticable to summon a Court of three judges.
(3) In all appeals and
applications brought before the Court of Appeal the determination of any
question shall be according to the
opinion of the majority. If on the hearing of
an appeal or application the Court of Appeal is equally divided the appeal or
application
as the case may be shall be dismissed:
Provided that, if the
President so directs, the appeal or application shall, on the request of the
appellant or applicant, made within
thirty days of the dismissal of the appeal
or application or within such further period as the President may, at any time,
allow,
be re-argued and determined by three judges before appeal to the Privy
Council.
(Proviso inserted by 37 of 1965,
s. 5.)
(4) A judge of the Court of Appeal may sit as a judge upon
the re-hearing of an appeal or application pursuant to the provisions of
the
proviso to subsection (3) notwithstanding that he was a member of the Court
which was equally divided.
(Inserted by 37
of 1965, s. 5.)
Sessions of Court of Appeal
7. The Court of
Appeal shall sit at such places from time to time as the President may
determine.
Registrar of Court of Appeal
8. The Chief
Registrar of the Supreme Court shall be Registrar of the Court of
Appeal.
Judges not to sit on appeals from their own decisions
9. Without
prejudice to the provisions of subsection (4) of section
6, a judge of the Court of Appeal shall
not sit as a judge on the hearing of an appeal from any order, judgment or
decision made by
himself or on the hearing of an appeal against a conviction or
sentence if he was the judge by or before whom the appellant was
convicted.
(Amended by 37 of 1965, s.
7.)
Appeals from other territories and under other enactments
10.-(1) With
respect to appeals from the Courts of other territories, the law to be applied
shall be such as shall for the time being
be prescribed by or under the
enactments in that behalf; and the jurisdiction, powers and authorities of the
Court of Appeal with
respect to such appeals shall be subject to the provisions
of such enactments.
(2) With respect to appeals under enactments of, or
in force in, Fiji other than this Act, the jurisdiction, powers and authorities
of the Court of Appeal shall be subject to the provisions of such
enactments.
(3) The Governor-General is empowered to make such
arrangements as he may consider appropriate with the Governments of other
territories,
from whose Courts appeals lie to the Court of Appeal, for the
payment of contributions by such Governments towards the expenses of
the Court
of Appeal.
(Inserted by 37 of 1965, s.
8.)
Right of audience in appeals from other territories
11. A legal
practitioner having right of audience before the Court of any other territory
from which an appeal lies to the Court of
Appeal, may institute and conduct
proceedings in and before, and shall have right of audience before, the Court of
Appeal in any
such appeal.
(Inserted by 37
of 1965, s. 8.)
PART III-APPEALS IN CIVIL CASES
Appeals in civil cases
12.-(1) Subject
to the provisions of subsection (2), an appeal shall lie under this Part in any
cause or matter, not being a criminal
proceeding, to the Court of
Appeal-
(a) from any decision of the Supreme Court sitting in first instance, including any decision of a judge in chambers;
(b) from any decision of the Supreme Court under the provisions of the Matrimonial Causes Act;
(Cap. 51.)
(c) on any ground of appeal which involves a question of law only, from any decision of the Supreme Court in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction under any enactment which does not prohibit a further appeal to the Court of Appeal.
(2) No appeal shall lie-
(a) from an order allowing an extension of time for appealing from a decision;
(b) from an order of a judge giving unconditional leave to defend an action;
(c) from the decision of the Supreme Court or of any judge thereof where it is provided by any enactment that such decision is to be final;
(d) from an order absolute for the dissolution or nullity of marriage in favour of any party who, having had time and opportunity to appeal from the decree nisi on which the order was founded, has not appealed from that decree;
(e) without the leave of the Court or judge making the order, from an order of the Supreme Court or any judge thereof made with the consent of the parties or as to costs only;
(f) without the leave of the judge or of the Court of Appeal from any interlocutory order or interlocutory judgment made or given by a judge of the Supreme Court, except in the following cases, namely:-
(i) where the liberty of the subject or the custody of infants is concerned;
(ii) where an injunction or the appointment of a receiver is granted or refused;
(iii) in the case of a decision determining the claim of any creditor or the liability of any contributory or the liability of any director or other officer under the Companies Act in respect of misfeasance or otherwise;
(Cap. 247.)
(iv) in the case of a decree nisi in a matrimonial cause or judgment or order in an Admiralty action determining liability;
(v) in such other cases as may be prescribed by rules of Court.
(3) An order refusing
unconditional leave to defend an action shall not be deemed to be an
interlocutory order within the meaning
of this
section.
(Substituted by 37 of 1965, s.
9.)
Powers of Court of Appeal in civil appeals
13. For all the
purposes of and incidental to the hearing and determination of any appeal under
this Part and the amendment, execution
and enforcement of any order, judgment or
decision made thereon, the Court of Appeal shall have all the power, authority
and jurisdiction
of the Supreme Court and such power and authority as may be
prescribed by rules of Court.
(Amended by
37 of 1965, s. 9.)
Wrong ruling as to sufficiency of stamp
14. The Court of
Appeal shall not grant a new trial or reverse any judgment by reason of the
ruling of a court that the stamp upon any
document is sufficient of that the
document does not require a stamp.
Power to reserve questions of law for the decision of the Court of Appeal
15. In addition
and without prejudice to the right of appeal conferred by this Part, a judge of
the Supreme Court may reserve for consideration
by the Court of Appeal, on a
case to be stated by him, any question of law which may arise on the trial of
any cause or matter, and
may give any judgment or decision, subject to the
opinion of the Court of Appeal, and the Court of Appeal shall have power to hear
and determine every such question.
Conditions precedent to appeal
16. Subject to
the provisions of section 17, the Court
of Appeal shall not entertain any appeal made under the provisions of this Part
unless the appellant has fulfilled all
the conditions of appeal as prescribed by
the rules of Court.
Discretionary power of the Court of Appeal
17.
Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, the Court of Appeal may
entertain an appeal made under the provisions of this Part
on any terms which it
thinks just.
Judgments
18.-(1) The
decision of the Court of Appeal in any proceedings under this Part or of any
judge taking part in the determination of the
proceedings may be delivered by or
in the presence of a court constituted differently from that which heard the
proceedings, and
may, at the discretion of the presiding judge, be delivered by
a judge who was not present at the hearing of the proceedings, or
by the
Registrar, in the presence of the Court as for the time being
constituted.
(2) It shall be lawful for any decision to be delivered by
the effect thereof being pronounced, in such terms as the Court or judge
shall
think appropriate provided that the full terms of the decision shall have been
reduced to writing and that a copy thereof is
made available to the
parties.
(Substituted by 37 of 1965, s.
11.)
Continuation of civil appeal notwithstanding absence of a judge
19.-(1) If, in
the course of any proceedings under this Part, or in the case of a reserved
judgment in any such proceedings at any time
before delivery thereof, any judge
taking part or having taken part in the hearing of the proceedings dies, or is
unable through
illness or any other cause to attend, or continue to attend, the
proceedings or otherwise exercise his functions as a judge of appeal
in relation
thereto, the proceedings shall if the parties consent, continue before, and,
without prejudice to the provisions of section
18, the judgment or reserved judgment,
as the case may be, shall be given by the remaining judges of the Court, not
being less than
two, and the Court as so remaining constituted shall, for the
purposes of the proceedings, be deemed to be duly constituted notwithstanding
the death, absence or inability to act of such judge as aforesaid.
(2)
Where, in any such case as is referred to in subsection (1) proceedings continue
to be heard before the remaining judges the proceedings
shall be decided in
accordance with the opinion of the majority of the remaining judges, and,
subject to the provisions of the proviso
to subsection (3) of section
6, if there is no such majority the
decision appealed against shall stand.
(3) If the parties do not consent
that the proceedings should continue or that judgment should be given in
accordance with the provisions
of subsection (1), the appeal shall be
re-heard.
(Substituted by 37 of 1965, s.
12.)
Powers of a single judge of appeal
20. The powers of
the Court under this Part-
(a) to give leave to appeal;
(b) to extend the time within which a notice of appeal or an application for leave to appeal may be given or within which any other matter or thing may be done;
(c) to give leave to amend a notice of appeal or respondent's notice;
(d) to give directions as to service;
(e) to admit a person to appeal in forma pauperis;
(f) to stay execution or make any interim order to prevent prejudice to the claims of any party pending an appeal;
(g) generally, to hear any application, make any order, or give any direction incidental to an appeal or intended appeal, not involving the decision of the appeal,
may be exercised by any judge of the
Court in the same manner as they may be exercised by the Court and subject to
the same provisions;
but, if the judge refuses an application to exercise any
such power or if any party is aggrieved by the exercise of such power, the
applicant or party aggrieved shall be entitled to have the matter determined by
the Court as duly constituted for the hearing and
determining of appeals under
this Act.
(Inserted by 37 of 1965, s.
13.)
PART IV-APPEALS IN CRIMINAL CASES
Right of appeal in criminal cases
21. A person
convicted on a trial held before the Supreme Court may appeal under this Part to
the Court of Appeal-
(a) against his conviction on any ground of appeal which involves a question of law alone;
(b) with the leave of the Court of Appeal or upon the certificate of the judge who tried him that it is a fit case for appeal against his conviction on any ground of appeal which involves a question of fact alone or a question of mixed law and fact or any other ground which appears to the Court to be a sufficient ground of appeal; and
(c) with the leave of the Court of Appeal against the sentence passed on his conviction unless the sentence is one fixed by law.
Appeals from Supreme Court in its appellate, etc., jurisdiction in criminal cases
22.-(1) Any party
to an appeal from a magistrate's court to the Supreme Court may appeal, under
this Part, against the decision of the
Supreme Court in such appellate
jurisdiction to the Court of Appeal on any ground of appeal which involves a
question of law only
(not including severity of sentence):
Provided that
no appeal shall lie against the confirmation by the Supreme Court of a verdict
of acquittal by a magistrate's court.
(2) For the purposes of this
section, a decision of the Supreme Court in the exercise of its revisional
jurisdiction or on a case
stated, under the provisions of the Criminal Procedure
Code, shall be deemed to be a decision of the Supreme Court in such appellate
jurisdiction as aforesaid.
(Cap.
21.)
(3) On any appeal brought under the provisions of this
section, the Court of Appeal may, if it thinks that the decision of the
magistrate's
court or of the Supreme Court should be set aside or varied on the
ground of a wrong decision of any question of law, make any order
which the
magistrate's court or the Supreme Court could have made, or may remit the case;
together with its judgment or order thereon,
to the magistrate's court or to the
Supreme Court for determination, whether or not by way of trial
de novo or re-hearing, with such
directions as the Court of Appeal may think necessary:
Provided that, in
the case of an appeal against conviction, if the Court of Appeal dismisses the
appeal and confirms the conviction
appealed against, it shall not (save as
provided in subsection 4), increase, reduce or alter the nature of the sentence
imposed in
respect of that conviction, whether by the, magistrate's court or by
the Supreme Court, unless the Court of Appeal thinks that such
sentence was an
unlawful one or was passed in consequence of an error of law, in which case it
may impose such sentence in substitution
therefor as it thinks
proper.
(4) If it appears to the Court of Appeal that a party to an
appeal brought under this section, though not properly convicted on some
charge,
has been properly convicted on some other charge, the Court may, in respect of
the charge on which it considers that the
appellant has been properly convicted,
either affirm the sentence passed by the magistrate's court or by the Supreme
Court or pass
such other sentence (whether more or less severe) in substitution
therefor as it thinks proper.
(5) Where a party to an appeal brought
under the provisions of this section has been convicted of an offence and the
magistrate's
court or the Supreme Court could lawfully have found him guilty of
some other offence, and on the finding of the magistrate's court
or of the
Supreme Court it appears to the Court of Appeal that the court must have been
satisfied of facts which proved him guilty
of that other offence, the Court of
Appeal may, instead of allowing or dismissing the appeal, substitute for the
conviction entered
by the magistrate's court or by the Supreme Court a
conviction of guilty of that other offence, and pass such sentence (whether more
or less severe) in substitution for the sentence passed by the magistrate's
court or by the Supreme Court as may be warranted in
law for that other
offence.
(6) On any appeal brought under the provisions of this section,
the Court of Appeal may, notwithstanding that it may be of the opinion
that the
point raised in the appeal might be decided in favour of the appellant, dismiss
the appeal if it considers that no substantial
miscarriage of justice has in
fact occurred.
(7) Without prejudice to the application of sections
33 and
35, in any case where an appeal under
the provisions of this section is pending a judge of the Supreme Court may in
his discretion grant
bail to any convicted person who is a party to such
appeal.
(8) The provisions of sections
25,
26,
30,
32,
33,
34,
35,
36, and
38 shall apply
mutatis mutandis to appeals brought
under the provisions of this
section.
(Inserted by 37 of 1965, s.
15.)
Determination of appeal in ordinary cases
23.-(1) The Court
of Appeal on any such appeal against conviction shall allow the appeal if they
think that the verdict should be set
aside on the ground that it is unreasonable
or cannot be supported having regard to the evidence or that the judgment of the
court
before whom the appellant was convicted should be set aside on the ground
of a wrong decision of any question of law or that on any
ground there was a
miscarriage of justice, and in any other case shall dismiss the
appeal:
Provided that the Court may, notwithstanding that they are of
opinion that the point raised in the appeal might be decided in favour
of the
appellant, dismiss the appeal if they consider that no substantial miscarriage
of justice has occurred.
(2) Subject to the special provisions of this
Act, the Court of Appeal shall, if they allow an appeal against conviction,
either quash
the conviction and direct a judgment and verdict of acquittal to be
entered, or if the interests of justice so require, order a new
trial.
(3) On an appeal against sentence, the Court of Appeal shall, if
they think that a different sentence should have been passed, quash
the sentence
passed at the trial, and pass such other sentence warranted by law by the
verdict (whether more or less severe) in substitution
therefor as they think
ought to have been passed, or may dismiss the appeal or make such other order as
they think just.
(Amended by 44 of 1959,
s. 6.)
Powers of Court in special cases
24.-(1) If it
appears to the Court of Appeal that an appellant, though not properly convicted
on some count or part of the information
has been properly convicted on some
other count or part of the information, the Court may either affirm the sentence
passed on the
appellant at the trial or pass sentence in substitution therefor
as they think proper and as may be warranted in law by the verdict
on the count
or part of the information on which the Court consider that the appellant has
been properly convicted.
(2) Where the appellant has been convicted of an
offence, and the judge could on the information have found him guilty of some
other
offence, and on the findings of the judge it appears to the Court of
Appeal that the judge must have been satisfied of facts which
proved him guilty
of that other offence, the Court may, instead of allowing or dismissing the
appeal, substitute for the verdict
found by such judge a verdict of guilty of
that other offence, and pass such sentence in substitution for the sentence
passed at
the trial as may be warranted in law for that other offence, not being
a sentence of greater
severity.
(Substituted by 36 of 1961, s.
2.)
(3) If on any appeal it appears to the Court of Appeal that,
although the appellant was guilty of the act or omission charged against
him, he
was insane at the time the act was done or omission made so as not to be
responsible according to law for his actions, the
Court may quash the sentence
passed at the trial and order the appellant to be kept in custody in such place
and in such manner as
the Court shall direct until the Governor-General's
pleasure be known, and the Governor-General may thereupon and from time to time
give such order for the safe custody of the appellant during pleasure and in
such place and in such manner as to the Governor-General
may seem
fit.
(Amended by 37 of 1966, s.
2.)
Suspension
of order for restoration or
payment
of compensation or
expenses, etc.
25.-(1) The
operation of any order made on conviction by the judge before whom the
conviction takes place for the payment of compensation
or of any of the expenses
of the prosecution or for the restoration of any property to any person, and the
operation of the provisions
of any law re-vesting in case of any such conviction
in the original owner or his personal representative the property in stolen
goods, shall (unless the judge before whom the conviction takes place directs to
the contrary in any case in which in his opinion
the title to the property is
not in dispute) be suspended-
(a) in any case until the expiration of thirty days after the date of the conviction; and
(b) in cases where notice of appeal or leave to appeal is given within thirty days after the date of conviction, until the determination of the appeal;
and in cases
where the operation of any such order or provisions is suspended until the
determination of the appeal, the order or
provisions shall not take effect as to
the property in question if the conviction is quashed on appeal.
(2) The
Court of Appeal may by order annul or vary an order made in the trial for the
payment of compensation or of any of the expenses
of the prosecution or for the
restitution of any property to any person, although the conviction is not
quashed and the order, if
annulled, shall not take effect and, if varied, shall
take effect as so varied.
Time for appealing
26.-(1) Where a
person convicted desires to appeal under this Part to the Court of Appeal, or to
obtain leave of that Court to appeal,
he shall give notice of appeal or notice
of his application for leave to appeal in such manner as may be directed by
rules of Court
within thirty days of the date of conviction. Except in the case
of a conviction involving sentence of death, the time, within which
notice of
appeal or notice of an application for leave to appeal may be given, may be
extended at any time by the Court of Appeal.
(2) In the case of a
conviction involving sentence of death or corporal punishment-
(a) the sentence shall not in any case be executed until after the expiration of the time within which notice of appeal or of an application for leave to appeal may be given under this section; and
(b) if notice is so given, the sentence shall not be executed until after the determination of the appeal or, in cases where an application for leave to appeal is finally refused, of the application:
Provided that if a person
sentenced to corporal punishment signs a statement that he does not intend to
appeal against his conviction
or sentence, his right to appeal shall be deemed
to have been abandoned and shall, notwithstanding the provisions of any other
written
law, thereupon cease, and the sentence may be carried out
forthwith.
(Substituted by 14 of 1973 s.
2.)
Judge's notes and report to be furnished on appeal
27. The judge
before whom a person is convicted, shall in the case of an appeal under this
Part against the conviction or against the
sentence, or in the case of an
application for leave to appeal under this Part, furnish to the Registrar, in
accordance with rules
of Court, his notes of the trial; and shall also furnish
to the Registrar in accordance with rules of Court a report giving his opinion
upon the case or upon any point arising in the case.
Supplemental powers of Court
28. In the
exercise of their jurisdiction under this Part the Court of Appeal may, if they
think it necessary or expedient in the interests
of justice-
(a) order the production of any document, exhibit or other thing connected with the proceedings, the production of which appears to them necessary for the determination of the case; and
(b) order any witnesses who would have been compellable witnesses at the trial to attend and be examined before the Court, whether they were or were not called at the trial, or order the examination of any such witnesses to be conducted in manner provided by rules of Court, or in the absence of rules of Court making provision in that behalf, as they may direct, before any judge of the Court or before any officer of the Court or magistrate or other person appointed by the Court for the purpose, and allow the admission of any depositions so taken as evidence before the Court; and
(c) receive the evidence, if tendered, of any witness (including the appellant) who is a competent but not compellable witness, and, if the appellant makes an application for the purpose, of the husband or wife of the appellant, in cases where the evidence of the husband or wife could not have been given at the trial except on such application; and
(d) where any question arising in the appeal involves prolonged examination of documents or accounts, or any scientific or local investigation, which cannot in the opinion of the Court conveniently be conducted before the Court, order the reference of the question in manner provided by rules of Court for inquiry and report to a special commissioner appointed by the Court, and act upon the report of any such commissioner as far as they think fit to adopt it; and
(e) appoint any person with special expert knowledge to act as assessor to the Court in any case where it appears to the Court that such special knowledge is required for the proper determination of the case,
and exercise in relation to the
proceedings of the Court any other powers which may for the time being be
exercised by the Court of
Appeal on appeals in civil matters and issue any
warrants necessary for enforcing the orders or sentences of the
Court:
Provided that in no case shall any sentence be increased by reason
of or in consideration of any evidence that was not given at the
trial.
Director of Public Prosecutions to be party
29. For the
purposes of this Act, the Director of Public Prosecutions shall be deemed to be
a party to any criminal cause or matter
in which the proceedings were instituted
and carried on by a public prosecutor.
Legal assistance to appellant
30. The Court of
Appeal may at any time assign counsel to an appellant in any appeal or
proceedings preliminary or incidental to an appeal
in which, in the opinion of
the Court, it appears desirable in the interests of justice that the appellant
should have legal aid,
and that he has not sufficient means to enable him to
obtain that aid.
Right of appellant to be present
31.-(1) An
appellant, notwithstanding that he is in custody, shall be entitled to be
present, if he desires it and is not prevented
by sickness or other cause, on
the hearing of his appeal, except where the appeal is on some ground involving a
question of law alone,
but, in that case and on an application for leave to
appeal and on any proceedings preliminary or incidental to an appeal shall not
be entitled to be present, except where rules of court provide that he shall
have the right to be present or where the Court of Appeal
gives him leave to be
present.
(Amended by 25 of 1958, s.
8.)
(2) The power of the Court of Appeal to pass any sentence
under this Act may be exercised notwithstanding that the appellant is for
any
reason not present.
Costs of appeal
32.-(1) On the
hearing and determination of an appeal under this Part no costs shall be allowed
to either side.
(2) The expenses of counsel assigned to an appellant
under this Part and the expenses of any witness attending on the order of the
Court of Appeal or examined in any proceedings incidental to the appeal, and of
the appearance of an appellant when in custody on
the hearing of his appeal or
on any proceedings preliminary or incidental to the appeal, and all expenses of
and incidental to any
examination of witnesses conducted by any person appointed
by the Court for the purpose, or any reference of a question to a special
commissioner appointed by the Court, shall be defrayed out of the Consolidated
Fund up to an amount allowed by the Court but subject
to any provision as to
rates and scales of payment made by rules of Court.
Admission of appellant to bail and custody when attending Court
33.-*(1) An
appellant who is not admitted to bail pending the determination of his appeal
may, at his own request, be treated in like
manner as a prisoner awaiting
trial.
(2) The Court of Appeal may, if it sees fit, on the application of
an appellant, admit the appellant to bail pending the determination
of his
appeal.
(3) When an appellant under this Part is admitted to bail under
this Act the time during which he is at large after being so admitted
shall be
disregarded in computing the term of any sentence to which he is for the time
being subject.
(Substituted by 14 of 1973
s.3)
(4) Subject as hereinafter provided, six weeks of the time
during which any appellant, when in custody, is treated as a prisoner
awaiting
trial in pursuance of the provisions of subsection (1), or the whole of that
time if it is less than six weeks, shall be
disregarded in computing the term of
any such sentence as aforesaid:
Provided that-
(a) the foregoing provisions of this subsection shall not apply where leave to appeal is granted under this Part or where any such certificate as is mentioned in paragraph (b) of section 21 has been given for the purpose of the appeal; and
(b) in any other case, the Court of Appeal may direct that no part of the said time, or such part thereof as the court thinks fit (whether shorter or longer than six weeks) shall be disregarded as aforesaid.
(5) Subject to the foregoing
provisions of this section, the term of any sentence passed by the Court of
Appeal under this Part in
substitution for a sentence passed on the appellant in
the proceedings from which the appeal is brought shall, unless the court
otherwise
directs, begin to run from the time when it would have begun to run if
passed in those proceedings, and references in this section
to any sentence to
which an appellant is for the time being subject shall be construed
accordingly.
Duties of Registrar with respect to notices of appeal, etc.
34.-(1) The
Registrar shall take all necessary steps for obtaining a hearing under this Part
of any appeals or applications, notice
of which is given to him under this Act,
and shall obtain and lay before the Court of Appeal in proper form all
documents, exhibits
and other things relating to the proceedings in the court
before which the appellant or applicant was tried which appear necessary
for the
proper determination of the appeal or application.
(2) If it appears to
the Registrar that any notice of an appeal against a conviction, purporting to
be on a ground of appeal which
involves a question of law alone, does not show
any substantial ground of appeal, the Registrar may refer the appeal to the
Court
of Appeal for summary determination, and where the case is so referred,
the Court may, if they consider that the appeal is frivolous
or vexatious, and
can be determined without adjourning the same for a full hearing, dismiss the
appeal summarily, without calling
on any person to attend the hearing or to
appear for the Crown thereon.
(3) Any documents, exhibits or other things
connected with the proceedings on the trial of any person before the Supreme
Court who,
if convicted, is entitled or may be entitled to appeal under this
Part, shall be kept in the custody of the court of trial in accordance
with
rules of Court made for the purpose for such time as may be provided by the
rules, and subject to such power as may be given
by the rules for the
conditional release of any such documents, exhibits or things from that
custody.
(4) The Registrar shall furnish the necessary forms and
instructions in relation to notices of appeal or notices of application under
this Part to any person who demands the same, and to officers of courts, the
Controller of Prisons and such other officers or persons
as he thinks fit and
the Controller of Prisons shall cause these forms and instructions to be placed
at the disposal of prisoners
desiring to appeal or to make any application under
this Part and shall cause any such notice given by a prisoner in his custody
to
be forwarded on behalf of the prisoner to the Registrar.
(5) The
Registrar shall report to the Court or some judge thereof any case in which it
appears to him that although no application
has been made for the purpose,
counsel ought to be assigned to an appellant under the powers given to the Court
by this Act.
Powers which may be exercised by a judge of the Court
35. The powers of
the Court of Appeal under this Part to give leave to appeal, to extend the time
within which notice of appeal or of
an application for leave to appeal may be
given, to assign legal aid to an appellant, to allow the appellant to be present
at any
proceedings in cases where he is not entitled to be present without
leave, and to admit an appellant to bail, may be exercised by
any judge of the
Court in the same manner as they may be exercised by the Court and subject to
the same provisions; but, if the judge
refuses an application on the part of the
appellant to, exercise any such power in his favour, the appellant shall be
entitled to
have the application determined by the Court as duly constituted for
the hearing and determining of appeals under this Act.
Judgment in criminal appeals
36.-(1) In an
appeal under this Part the Court shall ordinarily give only one judgment, which
may be given by the senior member of the
Court present at the hearing of the
appeal or by such other judge present at the hearing of the appeal as he may
direct:
Provided that-
(a) if any judge dissents from the judgment of the Court it shall not be obligatory on him to sign the same; and
(b) separate judgments shall be given if the Court is of the opinion that it is convenient that there should be separate judgments.
(2) The judgment of the
Court or of any judge present at the hearing of the appeal shall be delivered in
open Court either at the
hearing of the appeal or at any subsequent time of
which notice shall be given by the Registrar to the parties to the
appeal.
(3) The judgment of the Court or of any judge present at the
hearing of the appeal may be read in open Court by any judge, whether
present at
the hearing of that appeal or not, or by the
Registrar.
(Inserted by 44 of 1959, s.
7.)
Power to reserve question of law for the decision of the Court of Appeal
37. In addition
and without prejudice to the right of appeal conferred by this Part, a judge of
the Supreme Court, at the conclusion
of the hearing by him of any appeal or case
stated from a magistrate's court in any criminal cause or matter, may reserve,
on a case
stated by him, any question of law which seems to him to be of general
public importance and which may have arisen during such hearing,
for
consideration by the Court of Appeal, and shall give his judgment subject to the
opinion of the Court of Appeal on such point
of law. The Court of Appeal shall
have power after hearing the appellant or his barrister and solicitor, if he
appears, and the respondent
or his barrister and solicitor, if he appears, to
determine every such question, and shall notify the Supreme Court of its
decision,
and the judge shall make such order, conformable with the decision of
the Court of Appeal, as may be necessary:
Provided that in the event of
such judge dying or departing from Fiji or being otherwise incapacitated from
acting, another judge
may make such
order.
(Inserted by 37 of 1960, s.
2.)
Prerogative of mercy
38. Nothing in
this Act shall affect the prerogative of mercy, by the Governor-General in
considering the exercise of such prerogative
with reference to the conviction of
a person by or in the Supreme Court or to the sentence (other than sentence of
death) passed
on a person so convicted, whether or not the person convicted has
petitioned in that behalf, may, if he thinks fit, at any time either-
(a) refer the whole case to the Court of Appeal and the case shall then be heard and determined by the Court of Appeal as in the case of an appeal by the person convicted; or
(b) if he desires the assistance of the Court of Appeal on any point arising in the case, refer that point to the Court of Appeal for their opinion thereon, and the Court shall consider the point so referred and furnish the Governor-General with their opinion thereon accordingly.
PART V-RULES
Power to make rules of court
39.-(1) The
President of the Court of Appeal may make rules of Court for carrying this Act
into effect and for regulating generally
the practice and procedure under this
Act.
(2) The power to make rules conferred by this section shall include
power to adopt, or make rules in the terms of, any of the Rules
of Her Majesty's
Supreme Court of Judicature in England or Her Majesty's Court of Criminal Appeal
in England as made from time to
time, with or without
modifications.
(Inserted by 37 of 1965, s.
17.)
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney-General.
Subsidiary Legislation
COURT OF APPEAL
SECTION
39-COURT OF APPEAL RULES
_________
TABLE OF
PROVISIONS
_________
PART I-PRELIMINARY AND GENERAL
RULE
1.
|
Short title
|
2.
|
Interpretation
|
3.
|
Convening of sittings, etc.
|
4.
|
Applications to be filed
|
5.
|
Appellant confined to the grounds of appeal
|
6.
|
Application of Supreme Court Rules
|
7.
|
Application of practice and procedure in England
|
8.
|
Judgments
|
9.
|
Taxation of costs
|
10.
|
Appeal from Registrar
|
11.
|
Service
|
12.
|
Sittings in chambers
|
13.
|
Fees
|
PART II-APPEALS IN CIVIL CASES
14.
|
Application of Rules to applications for new trial
|
15.
|
Notice of appeal
|
16.
|
Time for appealing
|
17.
|
Security for payment of costs
|
18.
|
Preparation and costs of record
|
19.
|
Respondent's notice
|
20.
|
Amendment of notice of appeal and respondent's notice
|
21.
|
Directions of the Court as to service
|
22.
|
General powers of the Court
|
23.
|
Powers of the Court as to new trials
|
24.
|
Evidence on appeal
|
25.
|
Stay of execution, etc
|
26.
|
Applications to Court of Appeal
|
27.
|
Extension of time
|
28.
|
Appeals against decisions under the Matrimonial Causes
Act
|
29.
|
Appeals from Supreme Court in its appellate jurisdiction in
civil cases
|
31.
|
Additional security, and interim orders
|
30.
|
Notice of hearing
|
32.
|
Costs and witnesses allowances
|
33.
|
Non-disclosure of payment into court
|
34.
|
Stay of execution
|
PART III-CRIMINAL APPEALS
35.
|
|
Notice of appeal
|
36.
|
|
Appeals from the Supreme Court in its appellate jurisdiction
in criminal
cases |
37.
|
|
Amendment of notice of appeal
|
38.
|
|
Notice of application for leave to appeal
|
39.
|
|
Abandonment of appeal
|
40.
|
|
Notice of application for extension of time for
appealing
|
41.
|
(1)
|
How applications are to be dealt with
|
|
(2)
|
Procedure where judge of Court of Appeal refuses
applications under
section 35 |
|
(3)
|
Application for leave to be present at hearing
|
|
(4)
|
Sittings of a judge under section
35
|
42.
|
|
Registrar to require particulars etc., of proceedings before
Supreme Court
|
43.
|
|
Fees and expenses on appeal
|
44.
|
|
Preparation and costs of record
|
45.
|
(1)
|
Registrar on application of appellant or respondent or when
he thinks necessary, to obtain documents, exhibits, etc. for purposes
of appeal,
and same to be open for inspection
|
|
(2)
|
Court of Appeal may order production of any document or
exhibit, etc.
|
46.
|
|
Exhibits (other than those to which section
25(1) relates) to be returned to
persons producing the same subject to order of Court
|
47.
|
|
How appellant or respondent may obtain from Registrar copies
of documents or exhibits
|
48.
|
|
Registrar to request judge's note
|
49.
|
(1)
|
Report of judge or court of trial
|
|
(2)
|
Judge's report to be furnished to Court of Appeal
|
50.
|
|
Judge's certificate
|
51
|
(1)
|
Appeals where fine only is imposed
|
|
(2)
|
Person in custody in default of payment of fine
|
|
(3)
|
Person fined may intimate appeal and recognizance may be
imposed
|
|
(4)
|
Fine to be repaid on success of appeal
|
|
(5)
|
Procedure on breach of recognizance
|
52.
|
|
Judge's directions as to custody of exhibits
|
53.
|
|
Varying order of restitution
|
54.
|
|
Non-suspension of orders for restitution
|
55.
|
(1)
|
Bail. Court of Appeal to specify amount and before whom
recognizance to be taken
|
|
(2)
|
Recognizances to be taken before the Registrar or a
magistrate
|
|
(3)
|
Registrar on receiving recognizances in due form to notify
Controller of Prisons to release appellant
|
|
(4)
|
Form of recognizances
|
|
(5)
|
Presence of appellant on bail, at hearing of his
appeal
|
|
(6)
|
Varying order for bail, by Court of Appeal
|
|
(7)
|
Provisions for sureties discharging their obligations
|
|
(8)
|
How appellant on bail to be dealt with on arrest at instance
of sureties
|
|
(9)
|
Arrest and commitment of appellant to be notified to
Registrar by clerk to magistrates' court
|
|
(10)
|
Power of Court of Appeal to revoke order for bail
|
|
(11)
|
Controller of Prisons on commitment of appellant to notify
Registrar
|
|
(12)
|
Surety's rights at common law preserved
|
|
(13)
|
Estreat of recognizances
|
56.
|
|
Appellant to surrender on appeal, be searched and remain in
custody
until further dealt with |
57.
|
(1)
|
Attendance of witness before Court of Appeal
|
|
(2)
|
Application to Court to hear witnesses
|
|
(3)
|
Order appointing examiner
|
|
(4)
|
Registrar to furnish examiner with exhibits, etc., necessary
for examination
|
|
(5)
|
Notification of date of examination
|
|
(6)
|
Proceedings under section
28(b)
on reference
|
58.
|
|
Notice by Registrar to appellant of result of all
applications
|
59.
|
(1)
|
On final determination of appeals, etc., Registrar to notify
appellant
|
|
(2)
|
In case of death sentence, notice of appeal and of final
determination to be sent to the Governor-General
|
60.
|
|
Registrar to notify officer of court of trial result of
appeal
|
61.
|
|
Reports as to legal aid under
section 34(5) to be made to judge of
the Court
|
62.
|
|
A petitioner under section
38(a)
to be deemed an appellant for all purposes
|
63.
|
|
Reference to Court under section
38(b)
|
64.
|
|
Non-compliance with Rules not wilful may be waived by
Court
|
|
|
|
|
|
First Schedule- Part I - Fees in Civil Appeals
Part II - Fees in Criminal Appeals |
---------------------------------------
Rules
16 September 1949, 8 October 1954, 28 November
1959,
5 November 1962, 24 March
1966, 26 November 1968*, 17 July
1970†,
7 October 1970‡,
3 June 1977§, 7 May 1984°, 17 May 1985x
(Made by the President of the Court of Appeal)
*
See Legal Notice No. 177 of 1968.
t
See Legal Notice No. 86 of
1970.
‡ See Legal Notice No.
112 of 1970.
§ See Legal
Notice No. 67 of 1977.
° See
Legal Notice No. 51 of 1984.
x See
Legal Notice No. 41 of 1985.
PART I-PRELIMINARY AND GENERAL
Short title
1. These Rules
may be cited as the Court of Appeal Rules.
Interpretation
2. In these
Rules, unless the context otherwise requires-
"Act" means the Court of Appeal Act;
"Court of Appeal" means the Fiji Court of Appeal;
"judge" means a judge of the Court of Appeal;
(Inserted by Rules 24th March 1966.)
"record" means the aggregate of papers relating to an appeal (including the pleadings, proceedings, evidence and judgments) proper to be laid before the Court of Appeal on the hearing of the appeal;
"Registrar" means the Registrar of the Court of Appeal;
"respondent" includes any person who has been served with notice of appeal or who is entitled to be so served;
"Supreme Court" means the Supreme Court of Fiji;
"Supreme Court Rules" means the Rules of the Supreme Court as for the time being made under section 25 of the Supreme Court Act.
(Inserted by Rules 24th March 1966.) (Cap. 13.)
Convening of sittings, etc.
3. Sittings of
the Court of Appeal shall be convened, and the Court shall be constituted, and
the venue and time for all sittings for
the hearing and determination of
criminal and civil proceedings shall be settled, from time to time, in
accordance with directions
to be given by the
President.
(Inserted by Rules 24th March
1966.)
Applications to be filed
4. All
applications, including applications for leave to appeal, and for an extension
of time within which to file an appeal or to apply
for leave to appeal, shall
ordinarily be filed with the Registrar at the Supreme Court Registry,
Suva.
Appellant confined to the grounds of appeal
5. The appellant
shall not, without the leave of the Court of Appeal, urge or be heard in support
of any ground of objection not stated
in his notice of appeal but the Court of
Appeal in deciding the appeal shall not be confined to the ground so
stated:
Provided that the Court of Appeal shall not rest its decision on
any ground not stated in the notice of appeal, unless the respondent
has had
sufficient opportunity of contesting the case on that ground.
Application of Supreme Court Rules
6. Subject to
these Rules, the Supreme Court Rules shall apply to proceedings in and before
the Court of Appeal in civil causes or
matters.
(Substituted by Rules 24th March
1966.)
Application of practice and procedure in England
7. Where no other
provision is made by these Rules, or by any other enactment, the jurisdiction,
power and authority of the Court of
Appeal and the judges thereof shall be
exercised-
(a) in civil causes or matters, according generally to the course of the practice and procedure for the time being observed by and before Her Majesty's Court of Appeal in England;
(b) in criminal proceedings, according generally to the course of the practice and procedure for the time being observed by and before Her Majesty's Court of Criminal Appeal in England
(Substituted by Rules 24th March 1966.)
Judgments
8. Upon the final
determination of an appeal the Registrar shall forthwith transmit to the Chief
Registrar of the Supreme Court a certified
copy of the judgement of the Court of
Appeal.
(Substituted by Rules 5th November
1962.)
Taxation of costs
9. The Registrar
shall be the taxing officer.
Appeal from Registrar
10. Any person
aggrieved by anything done or ordered by the Registrar other than anything
ordered or done under the direction of the
President, may apply to have the act,
order or ruling complained of set aside to a judge of the Court of Appeal who
may give such
direction or make such order thereon as he thinks fit. Such
application shall be made by notice of motion supported by affidavit.
Service
11. Service,
where required in these Rules, shall be effected in the same manner as is
prescribed for service of process of the Supreme
Court, and the Supreme Court
may make such orders and give such directions as may be
required:
Provided that any notice or other document which is required or
authorised the Act or these Rules to be given or sent shall be deemed
to be duly
given or sent if forwarded by registered post addressed to the person to whom
such notice or other document is so required
or authorised to be given or
sent.
Sittings in chambers
12. Except in
proceedings involving the decision of an appeal, the Court of Appeal or a judge
may sit and act in chambers.
(Inserted by
Rules 24th March 1966.)
Fees
13. The fees set
forth in the First Schedule shall be the fees payable in respect of proceedings
in the Court of Appeal.
PART II-APPEALS IN CIVIL CASES
Application of Rules to applications for new trial
*14. The rules
contained in this Part (except so much of paragraph (1) of rule15 as provides
that an appeal shall be by way of rehearing,
and except paragraph (1) of rule
23) apply to an application to the Court of Appeal for a new trial or to set
aside a verdict, finding
or judgment as they apply to that Court, and references
in these Rules to an appeal and to an appellant shall be construed
accordingly
* Substituted by rules 24
March 1966.
Notice of appeal
*15.-(1) An
appeal to the Court of Appeal shall be by way of rehearing and shall be brought
by notice of motion (in these Rules referred
to as "notice of
appeal").
(2) Notice of appeal may be given either in respect of the
whole or in respect of any specified part of the decision of the Court
below.
(3) In addition to complying with rule 5, every notice of appeal
shall specify the precise form of the order which the appellant proposes
to ask
the Court of Appeal to make.
(4) A notice of appeal shall, in addition to
being filed in the Court of Appeal. be served upon the Chief Registrar of the
Supreme
Court and upon all parties to the proceedings in the Court below who are
directly affected by the appeal; and parties not so
affected.
* Substituted by rules 24 March
1966.
Time for appealing
*16. Subject to
the provisions of this rule, every notice of appeal shall be filed and served
under paragraph (4) of rule 15 within the
following period (calculated from the
date on which the judgment or order of the Court below was signed, entered or
otherwise perfected),
that it to say-
(a) in the case of an appeal from an interlocutory order, 21 days;
(b) in any other case, 6 weeks.
*Substituted
by rule 24 March 1966.
Security for payment of costs
†17.-(1)
The appellant shall-
(a) upon filing the notice of appeal, pay to the Registrar the fee for setting down the appeal;
(b) upon request by the Registrar deposit with the Registrar such sums as he shall assess as the probable expense for the preparation, certification and copying of the record; and
(c) within 30 days of service of the notice of appeal, apply to the Registrar to fix the amount and nature of the security to be given by him for the prosecution of the appeal, and for the payment of all such costs as may be ordered to be paid by him, or, as the case may be, to dispense with such security.
(2) In
the event of non-compliance with paragraph (1) or in the event of any security
required to be given not being given, or being
only partly given, within the
time directed, or within such extended time as a judge of the Supreme Court may
allow, all proceedings
in the appeal shall be stayed, unless the Court of Appeal
shall otherwise order, and the appeal shall be listed for the next, or
any
subsequent sitting of the Court of Appeal for a formal order of
dismissal.
†Substituted by legal
notice 41 of 1985
Preparation and costs of record
†18.-(1)
The Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court shall be responsible for the
preparation, certification and copying of the record and may
for the purpose of
the preparation thereof give an opportunity to the parties or their
representative of appearing before him and
being heard. The preparation of the
record shall be subject to the supervision of the Supreme Court and the parties
may submit any
disputed question to the decision of a judge of the Supreme Court
who shall give such directions thereon as the justice of the case
may
require.
(2) The Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court as well as the
parties and their representatives shall endeavour to exclude from the
record all
documents (more particularly such as are purely formal) that are not relevant to
the subject-matter of the appeal, and
generally to reduce the bulk of the record
as far as practicable taking special care to avoid the duplication of documents
and the
unnecessary repetition of headings and other merely formal parts of
documents; but the documents omitted to be copied, shall subject
to Rule 33, be
specified in the record.
(3) Where in the course of the preparation of a
record one party objects to the inclusion of a document on the ground that it is
unnecessary
or irrelevant and the other party nevertheless insists upon it being
included, the record shall, with a view to the subsequent adjustment
of the
costs of and incidental thereto,, indicate the fact that the inclusion of the
document was objected to and the party who so
objected.
(4) After the
completion of the preparation of the record the Chief Registrar of the Supreme
Court shall, under his hand and the seal
of the Supreme Court, certify it to be
the record as made up by him and shall forward it together with four uncertified
copies thereof
to the Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
(5) Unless, on
disposing of an appeal or application for leave to appeal the Court of Appeal
otherwise orders, the costs as prescribed
of the preparation and certification
of the record and of the four uncertified copies to be forwarded the Registrar,
shall be borne
by the appellant.
(6) The Chief Registrar of the Supreme
Court shall on the application of any party to the appeal furnish such party
with a copy of
the record, or any part thereof, on payment of the prescribed
fees.
†Substituted by legal notice
41 of 1985
Respondent's notice
*19.-(1) A
respondent who, not having appealed from the decision of the Court below,
desires to contend on the appeal that the decision
of that Court shall be
varied, either in any event or in the event of the appeal being allowed in whole
or in part, shall give notice
to that effect, specifying the grounds of that
contention and the precise form of the order which he proposes to ask the Court
of
Appeal to make, or to make in that event, as the case may be.
(2) A
respondent who desires to contend on the appeal that the decision of the Court
below should be affirmed on grounds other than
those relied upon by that Court
shall give notice to that effect specifying the grounds of that
contention.
(3) Except with the leave of the Court of Appeal, a
respondent shall not be entitled on the hearing of the appeal to contend that
the decision of the Court below should be varied upon grounds not specified in a
notice given under this rule, to apply for any relief
not so specified or to
support the decision of the Curt below upon any grounds not relied upon by that
Court or specified in such
a notice.
(4) Any notice given by a respondent
under this rule (in these Rules referred to as a "respondent's notice") shall be
served on the
appellant, and upon all parties to the proceedings in the Court
below who are directly affected by the contentions of the respondent,
and shall
be served within 21 days after the service of the notice of appeal on the
respondent.
(5) A party by whom a respondent's notice is given shall,
within two days after service of the notice, furnish four copies of the
notice
to the Registrar of the Court of
Appeal.
*Substitute by Rules
4th
March 1966
Amendment of notice of appeal and respondent's notice
†20.- (1) A
notice of appeal or respondent's notice may be amended-
(a) by or with the leave of the Court of Appeal, at any time;
(b) without such leave, by supplementary notice served, not less than 14 days before the day on which the appeal is listed to be heard, upon each of the parties upon whom the notice to be amended was served.
(2) A party by whom a
supplementary notice is served under this rule shall, within two days after
service of the notice, furnish four
copies of the notice to the
Registrar.
† Substituted by Legal
Notice 41 of 1985.
Directions of the Court as to service
*21.- (1) The
Court of Appeal may in any case direct that the notice of appeal be served upon
any party to the proceedings in the Court
below on whom it has not been served,
or upon any person not party to those
proceedings.
*Substituted by Rules 24
March 1966.
(2) In any case in which the Court of Appeal directs
the notice of appeal to be served on any party or person, the Court may also
direct that any respondent's notice by which that party or person is directly
affected shall be served upon him.
(3) The Court of Appeal may in any
case where it gives a direction under this rule-
(a) postpone or adjourn the hearing of the appeal for such period and upon such terms as may be just; and
(b) give such judgment and make such order on the appeal as might have been given or made if the persons served in pursuance of the direction had originally been parties.
General powers of the Court
*22.-(1) In
relation to an appeal, the Court of Appeal shall have all the powers and duties
as to amendment and otherwise of the Supreme
Court.
*Substituted by Rules 24 March
1966.
(2) The Court of Appeal shall have full discretionary power
to receive further evidence upon questions of fact, either by oral examination
in court, by affidavit, or by deposition taken before an examiner or
commissioner:
Provided that in the case of an appeal from a judgment
after trial or hearing of any cause or matter upon the merits, no such further
evidence (other than evidence as to matters which have occurred after the date
of the trial or hearing) shall be admitted except
on special grounds.
(3)
The Court of Appeal shall have power to draw inferences of fact and to give any
judgment and make any order which ought to have
been given or made, and to make
such further or other order as the case may require.
(4) The powers of
the Court of Appeal under the foregoing provisions of this rule may be exercised
notwithstanding that no notice
of appeal or respondent's notice has been given
in respect of any particular part of the decision of the Court below or by any
particular
party to the proceedings in that Court, or that any ground for
allowing the appeal or for affirming or varying the decision of that
Court is
not specified in such a notice; and the Court of Appeal may make any order, on
such terms as the Court thinks just, to ensure
the determination on the merits
of the real question in controversy between the parties.
(5) The powers
of the Court of Appeal in respect of an appeal shall not be restricted by reason
of any interlocutory order from which
there has been no appeal.
Evidence on appeal
*24. Where any
question of fact is involved in an appeal, the evidence taken in the Court below
bearing on the question shall, subject
to any direction of the Court of Appeal,
be brought before that Court as follows:-
(a) in the case of evidence taken by affidavit, by the production of copies thereof;
(b) in the case of evidence given orally, by a copy of the judge's note, or, where an official shorthand note of the evidence was taken, by a copy of the transcript thereof, or by such other means as the Court of Appeal may direct.
Stay of execution, etc.
*25.-(1) Except
so far as the Court below or the Court of Appeal may otherwise direct-
(a) an appeal shall not operate as a stay of execution or of proceedings under the decision of the Court below;
(b) no intermediate act or proceeding shall be invalidated by an appeal.
(2) On any
appeal, interest for such time as execution has been delayed by the appeal shall
be allowed unless the Court of Appeal
otherwise
orders.
* Substituted by Rules 24 March
1966
Applications to Court of Appeal
*26.-(1) Every
application to a judge of the Court of Appeal shall be by summons in chambers,
and the provisions of the Supreme Court
Rules shall apply
thereto.
*Substituted by Rules 24 March
21966
(2) Any application to the Court of Appeal for leave to
appeal (whether made before or after the expiration of the time for appealing)
shall be made on notice to the party or parties affected.
(3) Wherever
under these Rules an application may be made either to the Court below or to the
Court of Appeal it shall be made in
the first instance to the Court
below.
Extension of time
*27. Without
prejudice to the power of the Court of Appeal, under the Supreme Court Rules as
applied to the Court of Appeal, to enlarge
the time prescribed by any provision
of these Rules, the period for filing and serving notice of appeal under rule 16
may be extended
by the Court below upon application made before the expiration
of that period.
Appeals against decisions under the Matrimonial Causes Act.
*28.-(1) The
following provisions of this rule shall apply to any appeal to the Court of
Appeal against the grant or refusal of a decree
nisi of divorce or nullity of marriage
in a matrimonial cause heard under the provisions of the Matrimonial Causes Act,
or of any order made or sought in any such
cause.
(Cap.
51)
(2) The period of 21
days or 6 weeks, as the case may be, specified in rule 16 shall be calculated
from the date on which the decision
is pronounced in court.
Appeals from Supreme Court in its appellate jurisdiction in civil cases
*29.- (1) The
following provisions of this rule shall apply to any appeal from the Supreme
Court to the Court of Appeal under the provisions
of paragraph
(d) of subsection (1) of section 12 of
the Act, and subject thereto the rules contained in this Part, and the Supreme
Court Rules, shall
apply to such
appeals.
* Substituted by rules 24 March
1966
(2) The notice of appeal, in addition to being filed in the
Court of Appeal, shall be served upon the Chief Registrar of the Supreme
Court
as well as upon the party or parties otherwise required to be served under rule
15.
(3) The notice of appeal shall state precisely the question of law
upon which the appeal is brought.
(4) In relation to the appeal, rule 16
shall have effect as if for the words "the date on which the judgment or order
of the Court
below was signed, entered or otherwise perfected" there were
substituted the words "the date of the judgment or order of the Court
below".
(5)
(Deleted)
(6)
Paragraph (1)(a) of rule 25
shall not apply; but the appeal shall not operate as a stay of proceedings in
the Supreme Court or the court of trial
unless a judge of the Supreme Court so
orders, or unless, within 14 days from the date of the judgment or order
appealed from, the
appellant deposits a sum fixed by the judge from whose
decision the appeal is brought not exceeding the amount of the money or the
value of the property affected by the judgment or order, or gives such security
for the said sum as the judge may
direct.
(Amended by Legal Notice 41 of
1985)
Additional security and interim orders
†30. The
Court of Appeal may, in its discretion, require security for the cost of the
appeal or for the performance of the orders to
be made on appeal (in addition to
any security which the Registrar has thought fit to direct, or notwithstanding
that the Registrar
has dispensed with security, as the case may
be).
†Substituted by Legal Notice 41
of 1985.
Notice of hearing
†31. The
Registrar shall, upon obtaining the directions of a judge, cause notice of the
date of the hearing of the appeal to be served
upon the parties to the
appeal.
†Substituted by Legal Notice
41 of 1985.
Costs and witnesses allowances
*32.-(1) Costs
allowed by the Court of Appeal shall be taxable according to the scales for the
time being in force in the Supreme Court.
(2) The allowances for
witnesses in the Court of Appeal shall be according to the scales for the time
being in force in the Supreme
Court.
Non-disclosure of payment into court
†33.-(1)
Where-
(a) any question on an appeal in an action for a debt, damages or salvage relates to liability for the debt, damages or salvage or to the amount thereof; and
(b) money was paid into court, in the proceedings in the court below before judgment,
neither the fact of the payment nor
the amount thereof shall be stated in the notice of appeal or the respondent's
notice or in any
supplementary notice or be communicated to the Court of Appeal
until all such questions have been decided.
This rule shall not apply in the case of an appeal as to costs only or an appeal in an action to which a defence of tender before action was pleaded.
(2) For the purpose of complying with
this rule the appellant must cause to be committed from the copies of the
documents lodged by
him every part thereof which states, or from which it can be
inferred, that money was paid into court in the proceedings in that
court before
judgement.
Stay of execution
†34.- (1)
Except so far as the court below or the Court of Appeal may otherwise
direct-
(a) an appeal shall not operate as a stay of execution or of proceedings under the decision of the court below;
(b) no intermediate act or proceeding shall be invalidated by an appeal.
(2) On an
appeal from the Supreme Court, interest for such time as execution has been
delayed by the appeal shall be allowed unless
the Court of Appeal otherwise
orders.
‡PART
III-CRIMINAL APPEALS
‡Part
substituted by Legal Notice 41 of 1985.
Notice of Appeal
35.-(1) An appeal
to the Court of Appeal shall be by way of rehearing and shall be brought by
notice of Motion (in these Rules referred
to as "notice of appeal").
(2)
Subject to the provisions of section
22(1) of the Act, notice of appeal may
be given either in respect of the whole or in respect of any specified part of
the decision of
the Court below.
(3) A person desiring, under the
provisions of the Act, to appeal to the Court of Appeal, shall commence his
appeal by sending to
the Registrar a notice of appeal or notice of application
for leave to appeal, or notice of application for extension of time within
which
such a notice shall be given, as the case may be, in the form of such notices
respectively set forth in the Second Schedule.
(4) In addition to
complying with Rule 5 such notice of appeal shall precisely specify the grounds
(including, if any, questions of
law) upon which the appeal is
brought.
(5) A notice of appeal shall, in addition to being filed with
the Registrar, be served upon all parties to the proceedings in the
Court below
who are directly affected by the appeal; and subject to the provisions of Rule
21 it shall not be necessary to serve
the notice on parties not so
affected.
Appeals from the Supreme Court in its appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases
36.-(1) The
notice of appeal shall state precisely the question of law upon which the appeal
is brought.
(2) Subject to the foregoing provision of this Rule, and to
the provisions of the Act, the provisions of this Part of the rules (except
Rules 49, 50, 57, 59(2), 62 and 63) shall apply mutatis mutandis to appeals to
the Court of Appeal under the provisions of section
22 of the Act.
Amendment of notice of appeal
37.-(1)
A notice of appeal may be amended-
(a) by or with the leave of the Court of Appeal, at any time;
(b) without such leave, by supplementary notice filed with the Registrar in quadruplicate and served, not less than 14 days before the opening day of the sitting of the Court of Appeal at which the appeal is listed to be heard, upon each of the parties upon whom the notice to be amended was served.
(2)
?
Notice of application for leave to appeal
38. Where the
Court of Appeal has, on a notice of application for leave to appeal duly served,
and in the form provided under these
Rules, given an appellant leave to appeal,
it shall not be necessary for such appellant to give any notice of appeal, but
the notice
of application for leave to appeal shall in such case be deemed to be
a notice of appeal.
Abandonment of appeal
39. An appellant,
at any time after he has duly served notice of appeal or for application for
leave to appeal, or of application for
extension of time within which, under the
Act, such notices shall be given, may abandon his appeal by giving notice of
abandonment
thereof in the form 3 in the Second Schedule to the Registrar, and
upon such notice being given the appeal shall be deemed to have
been dismissed
by the Court of Appeal.
Notice of application for extension of time for appealing
40. An
application to the Court of Appeal for an extension of time within which notices
may be given shall be in the form 6 in the Second
Schedule. Every person making
an application for such extension of time shall send to the Registrar, together
with the proper form
of such application, a form, duly filled up, of notice of
appeal, or of notice of application for leave to appeal, appropriate to
the
ground or grounds upon which he desires to question his conviction or sentence,
as the case may be.
How applications are to be dealt with
41.-(1)
Notice of application for leave to appeal or for extension of time within
which notice of appeal or notice of application for leave
to appeal may be
given, shall be given in the forms in the Second Schedule.
Procedure where judge of Court of Appeal refuses applications under section
(2) The Registrar, when any application mentioned in this
Rule has been dealt with by a judge, shall notify to the appellant the decision.
In the event of such judge refusing all or any of such applications, the
Registrar, on notifying such refusal to the appellant, shall
forward to him form
13 in the Second Schedule which form the appellant is hereby required to fill up
and forthwith return to the
Registrar. If the appellant does not desire to have
his said application or applications determined by the Court of Appeal as duly
constituted for the hearing of appeals under the Act and is not legally
represented, he may, if the Court of Appeal give him leave,
be present at the
hearing and determination by the Court of Appeal of hi said
application:
Provided that an appellant who is legally represented shall
not be entitled to be present without special leave of the Court of
Appeal.
Application for leave to be present at hearing
(3) When an
appellant duly fills up and returns within the prescribed time to the Registrar
form 13 expressing a desire to be present
at the hearing and determination by
the Court of Appeal of the applications mentioned in this rule, such form shall
be deemed to
be an application by the appellant for leave to be so present. And
the Registrar, on receiving the said form, shall take the necessary
steps for
placing the said application before the Court of Appeal. If the said application
to be present is refused by the Court
of Appeal, the Registrar shall notify the
appellant; and if the said application is granted, the Registrar shall notify
the appellant
and the officer in charge of the prison wherein the appellant is
in custody.
Sittings of a judge under section 35
(4) A judge of
the Court of Appeal sitting under the provisions of section
35 of the Act may sit and act wherever
convenient.
Registrar to require particulars etc., of proceedings before Supreme Court
42. When the
Registrar has received a notice of appeal, or a notice of application for leave,
or a notice of application for extension
of time within which under the Act,
such notices shall be given, or where the Governor-General shall exercise his
powers under section
38 of the Act, he
shall forthwith apply to the Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court for the record
of the proceedings before the Supreme
Court.
Fees and expenses on appeal
43.-(1)
The appellant shall-
(a) Upon filing the notice of appeal or application for leave to appeal pay the Registrar the prescribed fee for setting down the appeal; and
(b) Upon request by the Registrar deposit with the Registrar such sum as he shall assess as the probable expenses of the preparation, certification and copying of the record.
(2) In the event of non compliance-
with paragraph (1) within the time directed, or within such time as a Judge may
allow, all proceedings
in the appeal shall be stayed, unless the Court of Appeal
shall otherwise order, and the appeal shall be listed for the next or any
subsequent sitting of the Court of Appeal for formal order of dismissal.
Preparation and costs of record
44.-
(1) The Chief Registrar of the
Supreme Court shall be responsible for the preparation, certification and
copying of the record and may
for the purpose of the preparation thereof give an
opportunity to the parties or their representatives of appearing before him and
being heard. The preparation of the record shall be subject to the supervision
of the Supreme Court and the parties may submit any
disputed question to the
decision of a judge of the Supreme Court who shall give such directions thereon
as the justice of the case
may require.
(2) The Chief Registrar of the
Supreme Court as well as the parties and their representatives shall endeavour
to exclude from the
record all documents (more particularly such as are purely
formal) that are not relevant to the subject-matter of the appeal, and
generally
to reduce the bulk of the record as far as practicable, taking special care to
avoid the duplication of documents and the
unnecessary repetition of headings
and other merely formal parts of documents; but the documents omitted to be
copied shall be specified
in the record.
(3) Where in the course of the
preparation of a record one party objects to the inclusion of a document on the
ground that it is unnecessary
or irrelevant and the other party nevertheless
insists upon it being included, the record shall, with a view to the subsequent
adjustment
of the costs of and incidental thereto, indicate the fact that the
inclusion of the document was objected to and the party who so
objected.
(4) After the completion of the preparation of the record the
Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court shall, under his hand and the seal
of the
Supreme Court, certify it to be the record as made up by him and shall forward
it together with four uncertified copies thereof
to the Registrar of the Court
of Appeal.
(5) Unless, on disposing of an appeal or application for leave
to appeal the Court otherwise orders, the costs as prescribed of the
preparation
and certification of the record and of the four uncertified copies to be
forwarded to the Registrar shall be borne by
the appellant.
(6) The Chief
Registrar of the Supreme Court shall on the application of any party to the
appeal furnish such party with a copy of
the record, or any part thereof, on
payment of the prescribed fees.
Registrar on application of appellant or respondent or when he thinks necessary, to obtain documents, exhibits, etc., for purposes of appeal, and same to be open for inspection
45.-(1) The
Registrar may, on an application made to him by the appellant or respondent in
any appeal, or where he considers the same
to be necessary for the proper
determination of any appeal or application, or shall, where directed by the
Court of Appeal so to
do, obtain and keep available for use by the Court of
Appeal any documents, exhibits, or other things relating to the proceedings
before the Court, and pending the determination of the appeal, such documents,
exhibits, or other things shall be open as and when
the Registrar may arrange,
for the inspection of any party interested.
Court of Appeal may order production of any document or exhibit, etc.
(2) The Court of Appeal may, at any stage of an appeal,
whenever it thinks it necessary or expedient in the interest of the justice
so
to do, on the application of an appellant or respondent, order any document,
exhibit, or other thing connected with the proceedings,
to be produced to the
Registrar or before it, by any person having the custody or control
thereof.
Exhibits
(other than those to which
section
25(1)
relates)
to be returned to persons
producing the same subject to order of Court
46. Exhibits,
other than such documents as are usually kept by the proper officer of the court
of trial, shall, subject to any order
which the Court of Appeal may make, be
returned to the person who originally produced the same, provided that any such
exhibit to
which the provisions of subsection (1) of section 25 of the Act
relate shall not be so returned except under the direction of the
Court of
Appeal
How appellant or respondent may obtain from Registrar copies of documents or e.
47. At any time
after notice of appeal or notice of application for leave or appeal has been
given under the Act or these Rules, an
appellant or respondent, or other person
representing either of them, or any person having a proper interest in the
appeal may obtain
from the Registrar copies of the record of the proceedings at
the trial and of any documentary exhibits in the Registrar's possession
under
the Act or these Rules for the purposes of such appeal upon payment of the
prescribed fee:
Provided that no charge shall be made for any such copies
supplied to the Director of Public Prosecutions or to a barrister and solicitor
assign appellant under the Act or under the Legal Aid Act.
Registrar to request judge's note
48. The
Registrar, when he has received a notice of appeal or a notice of application
for leave to appeal under the Act, or a notice
of application for extension of
the time within which under the Act such notices shall be given, or when the
Governor-General shall
exercise his powers under section 38 of the Act, shall
request the judge of the court of trial, or of an appeal heard under the
provision
of section 319(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code, to furnish him with
the whole of or any part of his note of the trial or appeal or with a copy of
such note or any part thereof.
Report of judge of court of trial
49.-(1) The
Registrar, when he has received a notice of appeal, or a notice of application
for leave to appeal under the Act, or a notice
of application for extension of
time within which under the Act such notices shall be given, or when the
Governor-General shall exercise
his powers under section 38 of the Act, or
whenever it appears to be necessary for the proper determination of any appeal
or application
or for the due performance of the duties of the Court of Appeal
under the said section, may and whenever in relation to any appeal
under the Act
the Court of Appeal or any judge thereof directs him so to do, shall, request
the judge of the court of trial to furnish
him with a report in writing, giving
his opinion upon the case generally or upon any point arising upon the case of
the appellant,
and the judge of the court of trial shall furnish the same to the
Registrar in accordance with such request.
Judge's report to be furnished to Court of Appeal
(2) The report
of the judge shall be made to the Court of Appeal, and except by leave of the
Court or a judge thereof the Registrar shall
not furnish to any person any part
thereof.
Judge's certificate
50. The judge of
the court of trial may, in any case in which he considers it desirable so to do,
inform the person convicted before
him that the case is in his opinion one fit
for an appeal to the Court of Appeal under paragraph
(b) of section 21 of the Act, and may
give to such person a certificate to that effect in the form 1 in the Second
Schedule.
Appeals where fine only is imposed
51. (1) Where a
person has, on his conviction been sentenced to payment of a fine, and in
default of payment to imprisonment, the person
lawfully authorise to receive
such fine shall on receiving the same retain it until the determination of any
appeal in relation thereto.
Person in custody in default of payment of fine
(2) If such
person remains in custody in default of payment of the fine, he shall be deemed,
for all purposes of the Act or these Rules,
to be a person sentenced to
imprisonment.
Person fined may intimate appeal and recognizance may be imposed
(3) Where any person has been convicted and is thereupon
sentenced to the payment of a fine, and, in default of such payment, to
imprisonment,
and he intimates to the judge of the court of trial that he is
desirous of appealing against his conviction, such judge may, if he
thinks right
so to do, order such person forthwith to enter into recognizances in such amount
and with or without sureties in such
amount as such judge may think right, to
prosecute his appeal, and subject thereto, may order that payment of the said
fine shall
be made at the final determination of his said appeal, if the same be
dismissed.
Fine to be repaid on success of appeal
(4) An appellant
who has been sentenced to the payment of a fine and has paid the same in
accordance with such sentence, shall in the
event of his appeal being
successful, be entitled, subject to any order of the Court of Appeal, to the
return of the sum or any part
thereof so paid, by him.
Procedure on breach of recognizance
(5) If an
appellant to whom paragraph (3) applies does not serve, in accordance with these
rules, a notice of appeal within thirty days
from the date of his conviction,
the Registrar shall report such omission to the Court of Appeal who may, after
notice in the forms
16 and 17 in the Second Schedule has been given to the
appellant and his sureties, if any, order such recognizance and those of his
surety or sureties to be estreated and may issue a warrant for the apprehension
of the appellant and may commit him to prison in
default of payment of his fine
or may make such other order as the Court of Appeal may think right.
Judge's directions as to custody of exhibits
52.-(1)
The judge of the court of trial may make any order he thinks fit for the
custody, disposal or production of any exhibits in the case
and any person to
whom exhibits are returned shall retain such exhibits for thirty days pending
any appeal and shall, on notice from
the Registrar, produce or forward the same
as and when required so to do.
(2) The Chief Registrar of the Supreme
Court shall keep a record of any order or direction of the judge thereof given
under this rule.
Varying order of restitution
53. Where, upon
the trial of a person entitled to appeal under the Act against his conviction,
an order of restitution of any property
to any person has been made any person
in whose favour, or against whom an order to which rule 54 relates has been
made, and with
the leave of the Court of Appeal, any other person, shall, on the
final hearing by the Court of Appeal of an appeal against the conviction
on
which such order of restitution was made, be entitled to be heard by the Court
of Appeal before any order under the provisions
of subsection (2) of section
25 of the Act annulling or varying such
order of restitution is made.
Non-suspension of orders for restitution
54. Where the
judge of the court of trial is of opinion that the title to any property the
subject of an order of restitution made on
a conviction of a person before him
or any property to which the provisions of subsection (1) of section 25 of the
Sale of Goods Act apply is not in dispute, he, if he shall be of opinion that
such property or a sample or facsimile representation thereof is reasonably
necessary to be produced for use at the hearing of any appeal, shall give such
directions to or impose such terms upon the person
in whose favour the order of
restitution is made, or in whom such property revests under such subsection as
he shall think right
in order to secure the production of such sample, portion
or facsimile representation for use at the hearing of any such appeal.
Bail.
Court
of Appeal to specify amount and before whom recognizances to be
55.-(1)
When the Court of Appeal under the Act admits an appellant to bail
pending the determination of his appeal on an application by him
dully made in
compliance with these Rules, the Court shall specify the amounts in which the
appellant and his surety or sureties
(if any be required) shall be bound by
recognizance, and shall direct, if they think right so to do, before whom the
recognizances
of the appellant and his surety or sureties (if any) may be
taken.
Recognizances to be taken before the Registrar or a magistrate
(2) In the event of the Court of Appeal not making any
special order or giving special directions under this rule, the recognizances
of
the appellant, and the recognizances of his surety or sureties (if any) may be
taken before the Registrar or a magistrate.
Registrar
on receiving recognizances in due
form
to notify Controller of
Prisons to release
(3) The Registrar, on being satisfied that the
recognizances of the appellant and his surety or sureties (if any) are in due
form
and in compliance with the order of the Court admitting the appellant to
bail, shall send in form 14 in the second Schedule a notice
to the controller,
shall be a sufficient authority to him to release the appellant from
custody.
Form of recognizances
(4) The
recognizances provided for in this rule shall be in forms 9 and 10 in the Second
Schedule.
Presence of appellant on bail, at hearing of his appeal
(5) An appellant
who has been admitted to bail under the Act shall, by the order of the Court of
Appeal or a judge thereof under which
he was so admitted to bail, be ordered to
be and shall be personally present at each and every hearing of his appeal, and
at the
final determination thereof. The Court of Appeal may, in the event of
such appellant not being present at any hearing of his appeal,
if they think
right so to do, decline to consider the appeal, and may proceed to summarily
dismiss the same, and may issue a warrant
for the apprehension of the
appellant:
Provided that the Court of Appeal may consider the appeal in
his absence, or make such other order as they think right.
Varying order for bail, by Court of Appeal
(6) When an
appellant is present before the Court of Appeal, such Court may on an
application made by any person or, if they think right
so to do, without any
application, make any order admitting the appellant to bail, or revoke or vary
any such order previously made,
or enlarge from time to time the recognizance of
the appellant or of his sureties or substitute any other surety for a surety
previously
bound as they think right.
Provisions for sureties discharging their obligations
(7) Where the
surety or sureties for an appellant under the Act, upon whose recognizances such
appellant has been released on bail by
the Court of Appeal, suspects that the
said appellant is about to depart out of Fiji, or in any manner to fail to
observe the conditions
of his recognizances on which he was so released, such
surety or sureties may lay an information before a magistrate and such
magistrate
shall thereupon issue a warrant for the apprehension of the said
appellant.
How appellant on bail to be dealt with on arrest at instance of sureties
(8) The said
appellant shall, on being apprehended under the said warrant, be brought before
the magistrates' court in and for which the
said magistrate acts and before whom
the said information was laid. The said court shall, on verification of the said
information
by oath of the informant, by warrant of commitment, commit him to
prison.
Arrest and commitment of appellant to be notified to Registrar by clerk to magistrates' court
(9) The clerk of
the said magistrates' court on the commitment of any such appellant, shall
forthwith notify the Registrar to that effect,
and forward to him the said
information and the deposition in verification thereof taken before such court,
together with a copy
of the said warrant of commitment.
Power of Court of Appeal to revoke order for bail
(10) At any time after an appellant has been released on
bail under the Act, the Court of Appeal may, if satisfied that it is in the
interest of justice so to do, revoke the order admitting him to bail, and issue
a warrant for his apprehension and order him to be
committed to prison.
Controller of Prisons on commitment of appellant to notify Registrar
(11) When an appellant has been released on bail and has,
under a warrant under these Rules or by his surety or sureties, been apprehended
and is in prison, the Controller of Prisons shall forthwith notify the
Registrar, who shall take steps to inform the Court thereof,
and the Court of
Appeal may give to the Registrar such directions as to the appeal or otherwise
as it shall think right.
Surety's rights at common law preserved
(12) Nothing in these Rules shall affect the lawful right
of a surety to apprehend and surrender into custody the person for whose
appearance he has become bound, and thereby to discharge himself of his
suretyship.
Estreat of recognizances
(13) The Court of Appeal may on any breach of the
recognizance of the appellant, if it thinks right so to do, order such
recognizances
and those of his surety or sureties to the estreat.
Appellant to surrender on appeal, be searched and remain in custody until further
56. An appellant
who is not in custody shall, whenever his case is called on before the Court of
Appeal, surrender himself to such persons
as the Court shall from time to time
direct, and thereupon shall be searched by them and shall be deemed to be in
their lawful custody
until further released on bail or otherwise dealt with as
the Court shall direct.
Attendance of witness before Court of Appeal
57.-(1)
Where the Court of Appeal has ordered any witness to attend and be
examined before the Court under paragraph
(b) of section 28 of the Act, an order
shall be served upon such witness specifying the time and place at which to
attend for such purpose.
Application to Court to hear witnesses
(2) Such order
may be made on the application at any time of the appellant or respondent, but
if the appellant is in custody and not legally
represented application shall be
made by him in form 8 in the Second Schedule.
Order appointing examiner
(3) Where the
Court of Appeal orders the examination of any witness to be conducted otherwise
than before the Court itself, such order
shall specify the person appointed as
examiner to take and the place of taking such examination and the witness or
witnesses to be
examined thereat.
Registrar to furnish examiner with exhibits, etc., necessary for examination
(4) The
Registrar shall furnish to the person appointed to take such examination any
documents or exhibits and any other material relating
to the said appeal as and
when requested so to do. Such documents and exhibits and other material shall,
after the examination has
been concluded, be returned by the examiner, together
with any depositions taken by him under this rule, to the Registrar.
Notification of date of examination
(5) When the
examiner has appointed the day and time for the examination he shall request the
Registrar to notify the appellant or respondent
and their legal representatives,
if any. The Registrar shall cause to be served on every witness to be so
examined a notice in form
15 in the Second Schedule.
Proceedings under section 28(b) on reference
(6) The
appellant and respondent, or barrister and solicitor on their behalf, shall be
entitled to be present at and take part in any
examination of any witness to
which this rule relates.
Notice by Registrar to appellant of result of all applications
58. When the
Court of Appeal has heard and dealt with any application under the Act or these
Rules, the Registrar shall (unless it appears
to him unnecessary so to do) give
to the appellant (if he is in custody and has not been present at the hearing of
such application)
notice of the decision of the. Court of Appeal in relation to
the said application.
On final determination of appeals, etc., Registrar to notify appellant
59.-(1)
On the final determination of any appeal under the Act or of any matter
under section 35 of the Act the Registrar shall give to the
appellant, if he is
in custody and has not been present at such final determination, and to the
Controller of Prisons, notice of
such determination.
In case of death sentence, notice of appeal and of final determination to be sent to the Governor-General
(2) In any case of an appeal in relation to a conviction
involving sentence of death, the Registrar shall, on receiving the notice
of
appeal or of application for leave to appeal, send a copy thereof to the
Governor-General, and on the final determination of any
such appeal by the Court
of Appeal shall forthwith notify the appellant, the Governor-General, and the
Controller of Prisons.
Registrar to notify officer of court of trial result of appeal
60. The
Registrar, at the final determination of an appeal, shall notify in such manner
as he thinks most convenient to the Chief Registrar
of the Supreme Court the
decision of the Court of Appeal in relation thereto, and also any orders or
directions made or given by
the Court under the Act, or these Rules, in relation
to such appeal or any matter connected therewith.
Reports as to legal aid under section 34(5) to be made to judge of Court
61. A report made
by the Registrar under subsection (5) of section
34 of the Act shall be made to a judge
of the Court, and any directions given thereupon by such judge shall be
final.
A petitioner under section 38(a) be deemed an appellant for all purposes
62. When the
Governor-General exercises his powers under paragraph
(a) of section 38 of the Act and
refers the whole case to the Court of Appeal, the petitioner whose case is so
dealt with shall be deemed
to be for all purposes of the Act or these Rules a
person who has obtained from the Court of Appeal leave to appeal, and the Court
of Appeal may proceed to deal with his case accordingly.
Reference to Court under section 38 (b)
63. Where the
Governor-General refers a point to the Court of Appeal under paragraph
(b) of section 38 of the Act, such
Court shall, unless they otherwise determine, consider such point in
private.
Non-compliance with Rules not wilful may be waived by Court
64.
Non-compliance on the part of an appellant with these Rules or with any rule of
practice for the time being in force under the Act,
shall not prevent the
further prosecution of his appeal if the Court of Appeal or a judge thereof
considers that such non-compliance
was not wilful and that the same may be
waived or remedied by amendment or otherwise. The Court of Appeal or a judge
thereof may
in such manner as it or he thinks right, direct the appellant to
remedy such non-compliance, and thereupon the appeal shall proceed.
The
Registrar shall forthwith notify to the appellant any directions given by the
Court or the judge thereof under this rule, where
the appellant was not present
at the time, hen such directions were given.
__________
FIRST
SCHEDULE
(Rule
13)
(Amended by Legal Notice 51 of
1984)
___________
PART I-FEES IN CIVIL APPEALS
1. |
On filing a notice of appeal, or a notice of cross-appeal, from any decision, final or interlocutory (this fee includes the fees for setting down, notice of hearing and hearing) ...................................................... |
$
40.00 |
2
|
On an application for-
(a) leave to appeal; |
10.00 |
3.
|
On filing a respondent's notice
................................................................
|
10.00
|
4.
|
On every bond or deposit
.........................................................................
|
4.00
|
5.
|
On filing an affidavit or any other document unless
otherwise provided for by this Schedule
.................................................................................
|
2.00 |
6.
|
For every copy of the record of appeal prepared under Rule
18, or
of any proceedings, or of any judgment, order or document, per page (with a minimum fee of $1-00) ........................................................ (Provided that, where the fee exceeds $5000, the Registrar may on grounds of hardship or for other sufficient reason waive, wholly or in part, the fee in excess of $5000). |
0.20 |
7.
|
For certifying any copy, per page (with a minimum fee of
$1-00 and a maximum fee of
$1000)............................................................................
|
0.20 |
8.
|
On entering or sealing the judgment or order made on the
hearing
of an appeal .............................................................................................. |
10.0 |
9.
|
On entering or sealing any other order made by the Court of
Appeal or a judge thereof including orders for leave to appeal, security
for
costs or enlargement of time
..................................................................................
|
8.00 |
10.
|
On any certificate by the Registrar (other than
certification of a copy or of taxed costs)
................................................................................................
|
2.00 |
11.
|
On filing a bill of costs and obtaining an appointment to
tax-
For a bill not exceeding $100......................................................... |
7.00 10.00 16.00 |
12.
|
On a certificate or allocatur of the taxing officer
......................................
|
1.00
|
13.
|
On application for supervision by the Court of the
preparation of the record for the Privy Council on appeal, including such
supervision
...........
|
2500 |
PART II-FEES IN CRIMINAL APPEALS
14.
|
. On filing a notice of appeal or a notice of cross-appeal
(This fee includes the fees for setting down, notice of hearing and hearing)
.............
|
30.00 |
15.
|
On an application for-
(a) leave to appeal; or |
1000 |
16.
|
On filing any motion, affidavit or other document unless
otherwise provided for in this Schedule
......................................................................
|
2.00 |
17.
|
For every copy of the record of the proceedings at the trial
or of any documentary exhibits in the possession of the Registrar, per
page
(with a minimum fee of $1.00)
...............................................................................
(Provided that, where the fee exceeds $3000 the Registrar may on grounds of hardship or for other sufficient reason waive, wholly or in part, the fee in excess of $3000). |
0.20 |
18.
|
For certifying any copy, per page (with a minimum fee of
$1-00) and
a maximum fee of $1000)........................................................................... |
0.20
|
________________________________________________________________________
SECOND SCHEDULE
FORM
1
COURT OF APPEAL
RULES
JUDGE'S CERTIFICATE
In the Supreme Court of Fiji.
Criminal Jurisdiction
No.............. of 19.....
REGINA v.
Whereas the said
..............................................was tried and convicted before me
the undersigned in the Supreme Court
of Fiji sitting at
..................................... on the ............................. day
of ................................................,
19......, on a charge of
................................ and was sentenced by me to
.....................
I do hereby certify that the case is a fit case for
an appeal by the said ......................... to the Court of Appeal Act, upon
the following grounds:
Dated at .................. this
..................day of ....................., 19........
___________
FORM
2
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
NOTICE
OF APPEAL UPON CERTIFICATE OF THE
JUI
OF THE COURT OF TRIAL
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
To: The
Director of Public Prosecutions or other Respondent.
I,
........................ having been convicted of the offence of
................................ and being now a prisoner in
.......................
prison (or now living from the judge before whom I tried
for the said crime that it is a fit case for appeal, do hereby give notice
of
appeal against my conviction to the Court of Appeal.
Dated this
.......................... day of ............, 19.......
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor
Stated:-
(a) Whether you desire to be present on the hearing of the appeal.
(b) Whether you desire the Court to assign you legal aid.
______
FORM
3
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
REGINA v.
NOTICE OF ABANDONMENT OF APPEAL
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
I,
................................. having been convicted by the Supreme Court of
Fiji on the ....................................
day of ......................,
19.............., of the offence of ................. and having been desirous
of appealing and having
duly sent notice of that appeal to the Court of Appeal
against my said conviction (or sentence of
passed upon me on my said
conviction) do hereby give you notice that I do not intend to prosecute my
appeal but that I hereby abandon
all further proceedings in regard thereto as
from the date hereof.
Dated this ..................... day of
........................., 19......
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor.
____________
FORM
4
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
NOTICE
OF APPEAL OR APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO
APPEAL
AGAINST CONVICTION OR
SENTENCE
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
[Name of Appellant] convicted before the Supreme Court of Fiji at ............ of
the offence of .................................. and sentenced to ............................. on the ..................................day of ......................, 19....., and detained in ................................. prison .
I,
the above-named appellant, hereby give you notice that I desire to appeal to the
Court of Appeal against:-
(a) my conviction;
(b) my sentence;
on the following
grounds:-
State: - (a) Whether
you desire to be present on the hearing of the appeal.
(b) Whether you desire the Court to assign you legal aid.
Dated at
........................ this ................. day of ..................,
19......
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor.
_________
FORM
5
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
NOTICE OF APPEAL ON QUESTION OF LAW ALONE
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
I,
............................ having been convicted by the Supreme Court of Fiji
of the offence of ........................ and
being now a prisoner in
....................... prison (or now living at ............................. )
do hereby give you notice
of appeal against my conviction (particulars of which
hereinafter appear) to the Court of Appeal on questions of law, that is to
say:-
Dated this ....................... day of
..........................., 19......
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor.
Particulars of Trial and Conviction.
1. Date and place of trial.
2. Sentence.
3. Whether
above questions of law were raised at the trial.
4. Do you desire the Court
to assign you legal aid?
___________
FORM
6
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR EXTENSION OF TIME WITH WHICH TO APPEAL
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
I,
.............................. having been convicted of the offence of
...................... by the Supreme Court of Fiji at
........................
on the ................. day of ..........., 19....., and being now a prisoner
in .................. prison
(or now living at ...............) give you notice
that I hear by apply to the Court of Appeal for an extension of time within
which
I may give notice of appeal (or notice of application for leave to appeal)
on the grounds following:-
Dated this ............. Day of
..........................., 19.....
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor.
Witness
Signature
Address
________
FORM
7
COURT OF APPEAL
NOTICE
OF APPLICATION BY APPELLANT FOR BAIL
PENDING
APPEAL
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
I,
........................... having been convicted of the crime of
.............................. and being now a prisoner in
.................................
prison and having given notice of appeal/been
granted leave to appeal do hereby give notice that I desire to apply to the
Court of
Appeal for bail with/without sureties on the following
grounds:-
The undermentioned persons are willing to become sureties for
my presence at the hearing and determination of the appeal to the amount
of $
.............: each.
Name
Address
Name
Address
Dated this
.............................. day of ........................,
19........
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor
__________
FORM
8
COURT OF APPEAL
NOTICE
OF APPLICATION BY APPELLANT FOR LEAVE TO
CALL
FURTHER WITNESSES
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
REGINA v.
I, .......................... having appealed to the Court
of Appeal hereby request you to take notice that I desire that the said
Court
shall order the witness(es) hereinafter specified to attend the Court and be
examined on my behalf, viz.:-
Dated this .................. day of
.........................., 19.......
(Signed)
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor
You are required to give the following
particulars:-
1. Name and address of witness.
2. Whether such witness has been examined at the trial.
3. If not, state the reason why he/she was not examined.
4. On what matters do you wish him/her to be examined on the appeal.
State shortly the evidence you think he can give.
_________
FORM
9
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
RECOGNIZANCE OF BAIL OF APPELLANT
Be it remembered that whereas
........................................ Was convicted of
.................................... on the
...................... Day of
..................... 19....., an was thereupon sentenced to
.......................... and now is
in lawful custody in
............................ Prison and has duly appealed against his
conviction ( and sentence) to the Court
of Appeal and has applied to the Court
of Appeal for bail pending the determination of his appeal and whereas the Court
of Appeal
has granted hi, bail on his entering into his own recognizance in the
sum of $.........: ...and with ................ Surety/ies
each in the sum of
$........: ...... the said ................................ personally comes
before me and acknowledges himself
to owe to Her Majesty the Queen the said sum
of $........: ...... or good and lawfully money of Fiji to be made and levied of
his
goods. Chattels, lands and tenements to the use of Her Majesty the Queen,
her heirs and successors, if he the said
.........................................
fail in the condition hereon endorsed
Taken and acknowledged this ............ day of ....................,
19......, at the ..................... prison, before me.
Registered by Magistrates
CONDITION
The condition of the above written recognizance is such
that if he the said ...................
.................. shall personally
appear and surrender himself at and before the Court of Appeal at each and every
hearing of his
appeal to such Court and at the final determination thereof and
to then and there abide by the judgment of the said Court and not
depart or be
absent from such Coy art or any such hearing without the leave of the said
Court, and in the meantime not to depart
out of Fiji, then this recognizance to
be void or else to stand in full force and effect.
(The following to be
filled up by the appellant and signed by him.)
When released on bail my
residence, to which any notices, etc., are to be addressed, will be as
follows:-
(Signed)
Appellant
_________
FORM
10
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
RECOGNIZANCE OF BAIL OF APPELLANT'S SURETIES
Be it remembered that on this ................. day of
..........................,19........, of .....................................
and .................... of ............................. personally came before
me and severally acknowledged themselves to owe
to Her Majesty the Queen the
several sums following, that is to say the said ................., and the said
............ the sum
of $......................, of good and lawful money of
Fiji to be made and levied of their goods and chattels, lands and tenements,
respectively, to the use of Her Majesty the Queen, her heirs and successors, if
......................... now in lawful custody in
the ....................
prison fail in the condition hereon endorsed.
Taken and acknowledged
before me the undersigned the day and year first above
mentioned.
Registrar or Magistrate.
CONDITION
The condition of the above written recognizance is such
that wherever the said ...................... having been convicted of
......................
and now in such lawful custody as before mentioned under
a sentence of .................... for such offence has duly appealed to
the
Court of Appeal against his said conviction (and sentence) and having applied to
the Court of Appeal for bail, pending the determination
of his said appeal, has
been granted bail on his entering into recognizance in the sum of
$.........:...... with .....................
sureties each in the sum of
$........: ........... if the said .............. shall personally appear and
surrender himself at and
before the said Court of Appeal at each and every
hearing of his appeal to such Court and at the final determination thereof, and
to then and there abide by the judgment of the said Court and not depart or be
absent from the said Court at any such hearing without
the leave of the Court,
and in the meantime not to depart out of Fiji, then this recognizance to be void
or else to stand in full
force and effect.
__________
FORM
11
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
RECOGNIZANCE
OF APPELLANT SENTENCED TO PAYMENT OF
A
FINE
Be it remembered that whereas ............................
of .................. was on the ................. of ........................,
19........, convicted of ................. was thereupon sentenced to pay the
sum of $..........: ........... as a fine for his said
offence by the Supreme
Court and has intimated to the said Court that he desires to appeal against the
said conviction whereas the
said Court considers the said appellant may in lieu
of payment at and upon his said conviction of the said sum be ordered to enter
into a recognizance of bail himself in the sum of $.........:........ and with
................ Surety/ies each the sum of $ .......:
........... to prosecute
his said appeal before the Court of Appeal.
The said ....................
and ............... of ................. and ........... of ..............
personally come before me
this .............. day of ................, 19.....,
and severally acknowledge themselves to owe to Her Majesty the Queen the several
sums following that is to say the said .................... the sum of
$...........:......., the said .......... Sum of $..........:
........ of good
and lawful money of Fiji to be made and lawful money of Fiji to be made and
levied of their goods and chattels,
lands and tenements respectively to the use
of Her Majesty the Queen her heirs and successors if ................ now before
the
said Court fail in the condition endorsed hereon.
Taken and
acknowledged before me on the day and year above
mentioned.
Appellant
Surety
Surety
Chief Registrar, Supreme Court.
CONDITION
The condition of the above-written recognizance is such
that if the said shall prosecute his appeal before the Court of Appeal and
abide
by the judgment of the said Court then this recognizance to be void, or else to
stand in full force and effect.
___________
FORM
12
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
IN THE COURT OF
APPEAL
Cr. App. No.................. of 19.......
REGINA v.
I hereby give you notice that a judge of the Court of
Appeal having considered your application for-
(a) leave to appeal;
(b) extension of time within which notice of appeal or of application for leave to appeal may be given;
(c) legal aid to be assigned to you;
(d) permission to you to be present at the hearing of your appeal .................. has refused the applications marked ...................... (and has granted the applications marked .......................).
If you desire to
have the above-marked applications which have been refused determined by the
Court of Appeal, you are required to
fill up the enclosed form
and return it
to me.
Dated this ................. day of ....................... ,
19.........
To: the abovenamed ........................ the
appellant.
__________
FORM
13
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
IN THE COURT OF
APPEAL
Cr. App. No. ................ of 19 .....
REGINA v.
NOTICE
OF APPEAL BY APPELLANT FROM JUDGE
UNDER
SECTION 35
To: The Registrar of the Court of Appeal.
I,
............................ having received your notification that my
applications for-
(a) leave to appeal;
(b) extension of time within which notice of appeal or of application for leave to appeal may be given;
(c) legal aid to be assigned to me;
(d) permission to me to be present on the hearing of my appeal, have been refused, do hereby give you notice that I desire that the said applications shall be considered and determined by the Court of Appeal (and that as I am not legally represented I desire to be present at the determination of my said applications).
Dated this .................
day of ................, 19.....
Appellant or his Barrister and Solicitor.
___________
FORM
14
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
To: The Controller of Prisons.
Whereas
........................ has duly appealed to the Court of Appeal against his
conviction for ...................... and sentence
of
............................ and having applied to the said Court has been
granted bail by the said Court pending the determination
of the said appeal and
whereas I have been given to understand that the said ..................... is
now in your lawful custody
in ........................... prison under the said
conviction and sentence and whereas I have the recognizances of the said
...........................
and his sureties and the same are in due form and in
compliance with the Order of the Court admitting the said ......................
to bail:
Now I do give you notice that if the said
............................. do remain in your custody under the said
conviction and sentence
and for no other cause you shall on receipt of this
notice suffer him to go at large.
And this notice shall be your authority
in that behalf.
Dated this ................. day of
........................., 19.............
Registrar of the Court of Appeal
___________
FORM
15
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
IN THE COURT OD
APPEAL
Cr. App. No. ......................of
19................
REGINA v.
ORDER TO WITNESS TO ATTEND BEFORE EXAMINER
To
|
Of
|
.
|
Whereas on good cause shown to the Court of Appeal you
have been ordered to be examined as a witness upon the appeal of the abovenamed
and your deposition to be taken for the use of the said Court:
This
is to give you notice to attend at .......................... on the ..........
day of ....................., 19........ before
........................... at
................ o’clock in the ........... noon.
You are also
required to have with you at the said time and place any books papers or other
things under your control or in your possession
relating to the said appeal of
which you may have had notice so to produce.
Dated this ..............
day of ............... , 19........
Registrar:
________
FORM
16
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
IN THE COURT OF
APPEAL
Cr. App. No......... of 19.....
NOTICE
TO APPELLANT SENTENCED TO FINE, OF BREACH OF
HIS
RECOGNIZANCES
REGINA v.
To the abovenamed ..........................
appellant.
Whereas you were convicted on the ....................... day
of .................., 19......, of the offence of ....................
and were
sentenced to the payment of a fine of $.............. and in default of such
payment to imprisonment, and under the Court
of Appeal Rules you entered into
recognizances in the sum of $ ..........with sureties in the sum of $ .......
each to prosecute
your appeal and whereas 30 days have elapsed since your said
conviction and no notice of appeal has been served by you, now I give
you notice
that unless you attend at the sitting of the Court of Appeal to be held at
.................... on the .................
day of ......................,
19..........., at ............ o'clock in the forenoon and then show good cause
to the contrary, the
Court may order an estreat of your recognizances and those
of your sureties or may otherwise deal with you according to law.
Dated
this .................. day of ................., 19.......
Registrar
____________
FORM
17
COURT OF APPEAL RULES
IN THE COURT OF
APPEAL
Cr. App. No. ......... of 19......
NOTICE FOR SURETY FOR APPELLANT ON BREACH OF RECOGNIZANCES
REGINA v.
To:
|
Of
|
.
|
Whereas you, the abovenamed, became duly bound on
recognizances as surety for that the said ................... having been
convicted
of .................... and for his said offence fined the sum of
$................., should duly prosecute an appeal in relation
to his
conviction before the Court of Appeal and whereas the said
.......................... has not so prosecuted his appeal, now
I hereby give
you notice that at the sitting of the Court of Appeal on the ..................
day of ............................
next your recognizances may be ordered to be
estreated unless you then show good cause to the contrary.
Dated this
....................... day of ..................., 19......
Registrar
---------------------------------------------
RULES FOR THE PROSECUTION BY PERSONS UNDER SENTENCE OF DEATH OF PETITIONS FOR SPECIAL LEAVE TO APPEAL TO THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
Notification 21st May, 1969.
Date appointed for execution of sentence
1. The date
appointed for the execution of a sentence of death will normally allow an
interval of not less than twenty-one and not more
than twenty-five days between
sentence and the last day for lodging an appeal to the Court of, appeal or, in
the event of an appeal,
the dismissal of the appeal and the date of
execution.
Notice
of intention to petition for special leave to
appeal
to the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council
2. -
(1) If he intends to apply for
special leave, the applicant should as soon as possible and in any case within
the period prescribed in
paragraph (2) notify his intention to the
Governor-General through his legal representative or, if personally, through the
officer
in charge of the prison where he is confined.
(2) The period
prescribed for notification under paragraph (1) is ten clear days after
notification that the Governor-General has
not granted a pardon o r respite, or,
in the event of an appeal to the Court of Appeal, fourteen days after the
dismissal of the
appeal, if the latter should be longer.
Postponement of execution following notice under rule 2
3. On receipt of
a notification under rule 2, the applicant will be informed that the execution
will be postponed for twenty-one days,
during which period the applicant must
furnish the Governor-General with proof that the necessary instructions, papers
and funds
have been sent to a solicitor practising in London, the instructions
and funds by air mail and the papers by registered ordinary
mail; and also where
the application is to be made in forma
pauperis that the procedure relating to such applications as set our in
rule 4 (c) has been complied
with.
The necessary papers to be forwarded
4. The necessary
papers alluded to in rule 3 should include-
(a) three copies, one being a certified copy, of the record of the trial including any documentary exhibits and the judgment and order of the Court; and
(b) if there has been an appeal, three copies, one being a certifies copy, of the record of the proceedings on appeal including the judgement and order of the Court; and
(c) in the case of a person intending to petition in forma pauperis-
(i) an affidavit stating that he is not worth £100 in the world except his wearing apparel and that he is unable to provide sureties, and
(ii) a certificate of counsel that he has reasonable grounds of appeal.
Necessary funds
5. The necessary
funds (except where an application is made in
forma pauperis) will be at least
£11550 if one counsel is engaged, but, if more than one counsel is engaged
or if the record is bulky, £15750
to £210 will be needed
Costs etc., on dismissal
6. A petitioner
in forma pauperis may, if his petition
is dismissed, be excuse from paying most of the costs usually chargeable, but he
may nevertheless be required
to pay the London solicitor's out of pocket
expenses and an allowance, on a prescribed scale, towards their office
expenses.
Solicitors not bound to accept case
7. Solicitors in
England are not under any obligation to accept a case
inform pauperis.
Name, etc., of solicitor to be supplied
8. When
furnishing the required proof, the name and address of the solicitor) in London
to whom papers and funds have been despatched
must be supplied to the
Governor-General.
Action where rule 3 not complied with
9.-(1)
If the proof required by the provisions of rule 3
is not furnished to the
Governor-General before the expiration of the period of twenty-one days referred
to in that rule, the execution
will not be further postponed unless the Governor
- General considers that there are special reasons that would justify
exceptionally
an extension of the date for furnishing such proof. The applicant
or his advisers will be informed by the Governor-General of the
new date by
which the required proof must be furnished.
(2) If the proof required by
the provisions of rule 3 is furnished within the period of twenty-one days
referred to in that rule or
on or before such date as the Governor-General may
have fixed under the provisions of rule 10, execution will be postponed.
Action when execution further postponed
10. If the
execution is to be further postponed, the Governor-General will inform the
applicant or his advisers of the date by which
the application for special leave
to appeal should be lodged in the Privy Council Office.
Cases in which execution will not be postponed
11. If the
Governor-General is informed by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office-
(a) that the application for special leave has not been lodged by the date fixed;
(b) that the application has been dismissed by the Judicial Committee;
(c) that the appeal has been dismissed by the Judicial Committee;
the execution will
not be further postponed, subject, however, to the power of the Governor-General
to exercise the Prerogative of
Mercy.
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney-General.
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