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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Mohamed v Breish & Ors [2020] EWHC 696 (Comm) (25 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/696.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 696 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DR ALI MAHMOUD HASSAN MOHAMED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR ABDULMAGID BREISH (2) DR HUSSEIN MOHAMED HUSSEIN ABDLMORA (3) MESSRS MARK JAMES SHAW and SHANE MICHAEL CROOKS (4) THE LIBYAN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY (5) DR MOHSEN DERREGIA |
Respondents |
____________________
for the Applicant
Shaheed Fatima QC and Eesvan Krishnan (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP)
for the First Respondent
Thomas Sprange QC and Kabir Bhalla (instructed by King & Spalding International LLP) for the Second Respondent
Felicity Toube QC (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP)
for the Third Respondent
James Collins QC and Felix Wardle (instructed by Farrer & Co) for the Fifth Respondent
The Fourth Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 2, 3, 4, 5 December 2019; 13, 14 February 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Andrew Baker :
Introduction
The Parties' Positions
i) if the Benghazi Board of Trustees was appointed after 19 April 2017, that was a purported appointment only and conferred on the Benghazi Board of Trustees no power to appoint an LIA Chairman, since the GNA was by then (if not earlier) the government of Libya with the power under Article 6 of Law 13 to appoint a Board of Trustees to the LIA;
ii) if the Benghazi Board of Trustees was appointed prior to 19 April 2017, it was superseded by Resolution 12 (whether or not, as the other active parties would I think all say, such an earlier appointment of the Benghazi Board of Trustees would anyway also have been a purported appointment only).
i) there is, he says, ongoing uncertainty, instability and dysfunction in Libya, including (but not limited to) the possible prospect of regime change pursuant to the military efforts of the 'Libyan National Army' formed and commanded by Gen. Khalifa Haftar;
ii) there are, he suggests, reasons to question Dr Mahmoud's suitability as LIA Chairman; and/or
iii) Resolution 12 and/or Resolution 1 may come to be cancelled on account of what he says is a defect under Libyan law affecting them that is different to the points raised by Mr Breish. Dr Hussein does not claim to have proceedings on foot in Libya in which Resolution 12 and/or Resolution 1 may be cancelled on that basis or, so far as I can tell, any present intention to bring any.
The Experts
Sources of Libyan Law
i) Article 2(3) of Law 6 of 1992 establishing the Department of Law as a department of government gives it competence to interpret laws, regulations and decisions. Article 2(5) of Law 6 gives it competence to issue legal opinions on submissions made to it by various types of party.
ii) Pursuant to Article 8 of Law 6, Resolution 356 of 1993 of the then General People's Committee established implementing regulations for Law 6. Article 6 of Resolution 356 defines the competences of the Legal Opinion Section of the Department of Law to include competence: to issue legal opinions on matters presented to it (Article 6(a), reflecting Article 2(5) of Law 6); and "to interpret issued laws, regulations and resolutions as required thereunder" (Article 6(b), reflecting Article 2(3) of Law 6).
iii) Article 6(b) goes on to provide that "The Legal Opinion Section's interpretation shall be binding, provided such interpretation is not contradictory with the principles of the Supreme Court". Dr Abdou and Mr Elmssallati disagreed about the scope of that provision. Dr Abdou's view was that where, to provide a legal opinion on a point referred to it under Article 6(a), the Legal Opinion Section had to take a view on the law that involved interpreting primary or secondary legislation, that view was a binding interpretation under Article 6(b). Mr Elmssallati took the view that Article 6(a) and Article 6(b) were different functions and that taking a view on the proper meaning of legislation within an opinion under Article 6(a) was not the same as issuing an interpretative ruling under Article 6(b).
iv) Mr Elmssallati had a distinguished career as a senior Libyan government lawyer, albeit never at or with responsibility for the Legal Opinion Section of the Department of Law. It might be thought, as Ms Fatima QC suggested, that if Mr Elmssallati's view on Article 6(b) were correct, he of all the experts would have had experience of seeing that operate in practice. But he could not recall a single instance of seeing what, in that view, he would regard as a binding interpretative ruling by the Legal Opinion Section. He was obviously familiar, by contrast, with Law Department Fatwas being issued under Article 6(a) for the purpose of which those preparing the opinion at the Legal Opinion Section would have had to take an interpretative view (although it took a while to get confirmation of that from Mr Elmssallati, I think that was language or terminology issues rather than evasiveness); and I understood them to be issued not infrequently as and when matters were submitted.
v) It would not be easy to resolve that difference between the experts, if it mattered. There is a question, not addressed by the evidence, of the subject matter (and therefore the meaning and effect) of "as required thereunder" in Article 6(b). There is a question of what precisely is meant by the Legal Opinion Section's interpretation being "binding" (including upon whom), if it extends to legal opinions issued under Article 6(a). In any event, I did not understand it to be suggested that a view taken by the Legal Opinion Section in a Fatwa would ever tie the hands of the Supreme Court; and in considering 'from abroad' as I do what Libyan law is or may be, I am entitled to consider it as it would or might be assessed by that Court. As will be seen below, I have not found it necessary to reach a final conclusion on any of these points.
The Issues
i) Issue 1
As a matter of Libyan law following the Libyan revolution in 2011, are references in Law 13 to the General People's Committee of the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya to be interpreted as references to the executive authority and Government of Libya from time to time and, mutatis mutandis, are references to the Secretary of the General People's Committee and the General People's Committee Secretaries to be interpreted as references to the equivalent posts within that executive authority and Government?
As I explained in my February 2019 judgment, Issue 1 arises because: Article 6 of Law 13 provides that the LIA is to have a Board of Trustees formed by a resolution of the General People's Committee, and that the Board of Trustees is to be composed of "the Secretary of the General People's Committee as Chairman and the membership of the General People's Committee Secretaries of the general people's committee for planning, finance, economy and trade, the Governor of the Central Bank of Libya and a number of experts within the [LIA's] areas of work"; but following the fall of Col. Gaddafi there is no General People's Committee (etc.) as thus mentioned.
ii) Issue 2
If by Resolution 12 the GNA was seeking to achieve the same outcome (control over the LIA and the appointment of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman) that it sought, unsuccessfully, to achieve by Decree 115 (the effect of which had been suspended by the Libyan courts) and Resolution 29 (which was being challenged by Mr Breish before the Libyan courts), was Resolution 12 invalid as an 'abuse of power' under Libyan law, as alleged by Mr Breish?
Mr Breish's allegation in that regard is that by issuing Resolution 12, in the stated context of ongoing legal challenges to previous instruments seeking to achieve the same outcome, the GNA abused its power. Decree 115, dated 15 August 2016, was issued by the PC. It purported to establish an Interim Steering Committee for the administration of the LIA. Mr Breish brought proceedings in Libya seeking to annul Decree 115 in which on 2 January 2017, by way of interim relief, the Tripoli Court of Appeal suspended it. By Resolutions 28 and 29, dated 11 January 2017 and issued by the PC, the PC purported (respectively) to 'repeal' Decree 115 and to replicate its effect by an Interim Committee for the administration of the LIA. In reaction to the suspension of Decree 115 and the issuance of Resolution 29, the Head of the Libyan Audit Bureau, by letter dated 1 February 2017, urged Prime Minister al-Sarraj (in his capacity as President of the PC) to cause the Council of Ministers of the GNA, as the body the Audit Bureau considered had the power under Article 6 of Law 13 to do so, to appoint a Board of Trustees that could in turn appoint a Board of Directors under Article 10 of Law 13. On 2 April 2017, Mr Breish brought proceedings in Libya seeking to annul Resolution 29, and he says those proceedings have since been amended to encompass a challenge to Resolution 12 and Resolution 1 that is still pending. On 24 May 2017, the Libyan Supreme Court upheld the interim suspension of Decree 115; Resolution 12 was issued the following day.
iii) Issue 3
Was Resolution 12 issued by the Council of Ministers of the GNA or by the PC?
Mr Breish put this point of fact in issue, and Dr Hussein positively averred that Resolution 12 had been issued by the PC, but it transpired that there had been a translation error. Prior to the hearing in December, a revised translation of Resolution 12 was obtained, which was agreed, and so it became common ground that Resolution 12 was issued by the Council of Ministers of the GNA. That means that if Dr Mahmoud is correct about Article 6 of Law 13 (Issue 1), then the Board of Trustees that appointed him by Resolution 1 was itself appointed, by Resolution 12, by the body with the requisite power of appointment (i.e. to appoint a Board of Trustees), because of my determination last year that in this court, for the purpose of applying Article 6 of Law 13, the executive authority and government of Libya in May 2017 was the GNA.
iv) Issue 4
What is the effect, if any, under Libyan law of Resolution 1 having appointed (or purported to appoint) five rather than seven members to the Board of Directors of the LIA?
v) Issue 5
Is there a requirement under Libyan law for a handover between outgoing and incoming chairmen of the LIA; and, if so, what is the effect, if any, of an absence thereof in this case in respect of Dr Mahmoud as incoming Chairman?
vi) Issue 6
Does (a) the valid appointment of a Board of Trustees of the LIA terminate the appointment of any prior Board of Trustees and/or (b) the valid appointment of a Chairman of the LIA terminate the appointment of any prior Chairman?
Dr Mahmoud's case is that Issue 6 (both parts) falls to be answered in the affirmative. He raised that as an element of his primary case that the Issues were intended to test, because he could say, if right about it, that (i) any argument over the validity of Mr Breish's (or Dr Derregia's) historic appointments as LIA Chairman, or over which (if any) later contender prior to Dr Mahmoud had become validly appointed, would be moot, for the Applications, and (ii) it did not matter, for the Applications, when the Benghazi Board of Trustees was appointed, as on no view could Dr Hussein have been validly appointed (see paragraph 12 above). In the event, that Issue 6 falls to be answered in the affirmative was the common view of all the experts. (Mr Collins QC for Dr Derregia suggested that this was 'qualified' in Mr al-Ahmar's case by his view that Dr Derregia has a claim that may result in his future reinstatement. But a true analysis is that that view does not qualify the answer to Issue 6, it merely gives rise to Dr Derregia's distinctive argument on Issue 7, below.)
viA) Issue 6A
If:
(i) the HoR became and remains the valid, lawful and only legitimate legislature of Libya and the legitimate expression of the democratic will of the Libyan people following the June 2014 elections, and has been the only legitimate legislature of Libya since that time, as recognised by the Libyan Political Agreement ("the LPA");
(ii) the LPA is incorporated into Libyan law or has effects or consequences as a political agreement so as to impose obligations on the organs of the Libyan State party to it; and
(iii) the GNA has not been granted a vote of confidence by the HoR pursuant to Articles 1(3), 3 and 13 of the LPA,
(1) does the LPA, Law 4 of 2014 and/or Law 10 of 2010 impose an obligation on the GNA PC (a) to consult, coordinate and/or otherwise seek consensus with the HoR in respect of the appointment of an LIA Board of Trustees and/or its Chairman under Article 6 of Law 13 and/or (b) to present any proposed Board of Trustees and/or Chairman to the HoR for approval;
(2) if so, what is the effect, if any, on the lawfulness/validity of Resolution 12 under (a) Article 2 of Law 88 of 1971 and/or (b) Article 181 of Law 12 of 2010; and
(3) in any event, are the issues set out in (1) and (2) above, or is either of them, precluded in this court by the application of the 'one voice' doctrine?
The somewhat involved premise is needed to serve the present purpose of testing whether matters that would be contentious and might add substantially to the burden of the Applications need to be decided. Issue 6A(3) was included because Dr Mahmoud pleaded that Dr Hussein's case under Issue 6A(1)/(2) falls foul of the 'one voice' doctrine and my rulings as to its meaning and effect within the Applications. However, in my judgment, that is a bad plea. It is not contrary to 'one voice' (or my application of it to the facts of this case) to advance a proposition that under Libyan law the power of appointment vested in the executive under Article 6 of Law 13 must be exercised in a particular way, or only after some particular process has been followed (e.g. a process of consultation). Remembering that Article 6 mandates ex officio membership of the LIA Board of Trustees for specified government ministers and the Governor of the Central Bank, but allows the appointment in addition of experts in the LIA's area of operations, suppose a Libyan statute provided, in terms or in effect, that the Article 6 power was only to be exercised after notifying the HoR of any additional members (experts) to be appointed. It would not upset 'one voice', my application of it to the facts, or the answer to Issue 1, for Dr Hussein to ask the court to find that requirement and explore the impact, if any, upon the current validity of Dr Mahmoud's appointment, of the GNA's failure to comply with it. Whether any such requirement existed and its impact if it did would be questions governed by Libyan law affected by 'one voice' (if at all) only if and to the extent that, in identifying or applying relevant rules of Libyan law, it was necessary to say who was the government (or duly constituted government) of Libya, that being something to be discerned in this court by 'one voice'.
viB) Issue 6B
What is the effect, if any, under Libyan law of the fact that Resolution 1 did not specify the remuneration granted to members of the LIA Board of Directors purportedly appointed thereby?
viC) Issue 6C
Is there a requirement under Libyan law that a resolution recording a decision such as Resolution 1 issued by a committee such as the Board of Trustees of the LIA should name the members of that decision-taking committee? If so, what is the effect, if any, under Libyan law of the fact that Resolution 1 did not expressly name the members of the LIA Board of Trustees?
vii) Issue 7
What, if any, final relief on the Applications can and should be granted (leaving aside the question of what consequential directions should be given) upon the basis of the answers to Issues 1 to 6C above and the court's previous Judgments and Orders in the Applications [i.e. my 'one voice' rulings]?
Issue 1: A = B?
Law 13
Article 2:
The LIA shall be regulated and organized according to the provisions hereof.
Article 3:
The LIA shall have a corporate personality and an independent financial capacity and shall report to the GNA. The LIA may undertake all actions and dispositions necessary to achieve its objectives and carry out its activities according to the provisions hereof.
Article 4:
The LIA's head office and legal domicile shall be situated in the city of Tripoli. The Board of Directors may establish domestic or international branches or offices as necessary.
Article 5:
The LIA aims to directly or indirectly invest the Investment Fund abroad on the grounds of economic feasibility in diverse economic areas to contribute to the development and diversity of the resources of the national economy and to achieve the best financial returns to support the public treasury; to secure the future of the upcoming generations and to mitigate the impact of income and other State revenue fluctuations. Upon the approval of the GNA, the LIA may also invest part of the Investment Fund domestically.
The LIA shall receive the Investment Fund and shall be responsible for its investment and reinvestment in favour of the State in order to secure the financial resources necessary to achieve economic development for the Libyan people and to maintain the Libyan people's economic welfare and prosperity in the future. To that effect, the LIA may:
7. take any actions or other functions assigned to the LIA by virtue of a resolution of the GNA and in line with the LIA's objectives stipulated herein;
Article 6:
The LIA shall have a Board of Trustees which will be formed by a resolution of the GNA. The Board of Trustees shall be composed of the Prime Minister as Chairman and the membership of the Ministers of Planning, Finance, Economy and Trade, the Governor of the Central Bank of Libya, and a number of experts within the LIA's areas of work.
Article 8:
3. The meetings of the Board of Trustees shall be deemed validly held if attended by the majority of board members, including the Chairman or his deputy in case of absence;
4. The Board of Trustees shall issue its resolutions by the vote of the majority of the members present. In case of a tie in the voting, the Chairman of the meeting shall have the casting vote;
Article 9:
Following receipt of the annual report from the Board of Directors, the Board of Trustees must prepare a report including:
(a) the LIA's investment performance and an evaluation of such performance ;
(b) the Board's compliance with the controls and restrictions provided for herein.
The report provided for herein shall be sent to the GNA for discussion. Such report or a summary thereof may be posted on the LIA's website.
Article 10:
The LIA shall have a Board of Directors of seven members, including the Chairman and his deputy, with academic and practical expertise in different fields of management and investment of funds and assets, to be appointed by resolution of the Board of Trustees for a period of three years. Any or all of the members may be reappointed for similar period(s). The remuneration granted to them in their capacity as board members shall be determined by the same resolution.
Article 31
No withdrawals may be made from the LIA's Investment Funds except within the limits of the net annual proceeds on its investments without impairing its assets at any time and to such extent as may be approved in the State's general budget each year.
In such case, withdrawal shall be made by resolutions issued by the GNA.
Presumed Validity
i) Resolution 12 was issued in abuse of power by the GNA, to circumvent judicial scrutiny of its actions. Hence Issue 2.
ii) Resolution 1 was defective in constituting a five-member Board of Directors of the LIA when Article 10 of Law 13 specifies a seven-member Board of Directors. Hence Issue 4.
iii) There is a binding administrative custom under Libyan law requiring a handover to an incoming LIA Chairman that did not occur when Dr Mahmoud took over. Hence Issue 5.
iv) Resolution 1 was defective in failing to specify the remuneration granted to the members of the LIA Board of Directors appointed thereby in their capacity as such. Hence Issue 6B.
v) Resolution 1 was defective in failing to name the members of the Board of Trustees by which it was issued. Hence Issue 6C.
i) Resolution 12 is susceptible to challenge under Libyan law because the GNA thereby appointed an LIA Board of Trustees without consulting with the HoR "in the appointment process" or presenting the proposed Board of Trustees to the HoR for approval.
ii) Resolution 1 is susceptible to challenge under Libyan law because the LIA Board of Trustees appointed by Resolution 12 thereby appointed a Board of Directors, including Dr Mahmoud as Chairman, without consulting the HoR "in the appointment process" or presenting the proposed candidates to the HoR for approval.
i) Resolution 12, having been issued in May 2017 by the GNA as the body with the power under Article 6 of Law 13 to appoint an LIA Board of Trustees, had valid legal effect to constitute the Board of Trustees appointed by it as a Board of Trustees for the LIA with the power under Article 10 of Law 13 to appoint a Chairman. It was still in place, having not been withdrawn by the GNA, superseded by legislation or set aside by the Libyan administrative courts, in July 2017, when that Board of Trustees issued Resolution 1.
ii) Resolution 1, therefore, was issued by a validly constituted LIA Board of Trustees with power under Article 10 of Law 13 to appoint an LIA Chairman. It had valid legal effect to appoint Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman, as it did, and that effective appointment subsists, Resolution 1 having not been withdrawn, superseded or set aside.
i) The doctrine was identified and explained by Mr Elmssallati in his main expert report. He cited an authoritative statement of the doctrine by the Libyan Supreme Court in Administrative Appeal Nos.9/27 and 8/28 in 1983, which is in the following terms:
"One of the basics of administrative jurisprudence and justice is that an administrative decision is assumed to be valid as soon as it is issued and can, therefore, be executed immediately. Such execution shall not be precluded by the fact that the party concerned has objected to the decision, even if the objection takes the form of an appeal seeking revocation of the decision. Although this rule is dictated by the nature of things, claiming the opposite will definitely result in an unacceptable situation, namely complete paralysis of the administrative entity, as most of its activities are based on administrative decisions. Nevertheless, the legislator provided for this rule explicitly in Article 7 of Law No. 88 of 1971 concerning Administrative Courts."
Article 7 of Law 88 states that filing a challenge does not suspend the 'enforcement' of the challenged decision, but then gives the Libyan administrative courts power to suspend enforcement pending final determination of the challenge if such interim suspension is requested in the statement of claim and if the effects of enforcement would be irreversible. The existence and terms of this provision presuppose and confirm that, unless suspended by the courts, a challenged action is indeed effective, and so Law 88 amounts to legislative confirmation of the doctrine; and that is the sense of the last sentence in the passage quoted above from the Supreme Court's judgment.
ii) Mr Elmssallati also opined in his primary expert report that the doctrine applied also where the basis of challenge to the administrative decision was a constitutional claim within the exclusive competence of the Libyan Supreme Court (or a claim under Article 181 of Law 12 of 2010) and not only where the challenge was properly to be brought under Law 88 of 1971.
iii) Mr Elmssallati's evidence on the doctrine was not challenged by any party in cross-examination. It was agreed in writing prior to the hearing in December by Dr Abdou and Mr al-Ahmar. Dr Abdou reconfirmed his agreement when cross-examined by Mr Pymont QC.
iv) It was not so clear on the written evidence whether Dr Jumali also agreed. However, Mr Sprange QC did not explore this aspect at all with Mr Elmssallati in cross-examination; and Dr Jumali endorsed the doctrine and its implications, as put to him by Mr Pymont QC, save only for a qualification that, in his opinion, it could not apply, or would not be applied, where there were competing administrative decisions and applying the presumption of validity to both would lead to an irreconcilable conflict. That is not this case, given the experts' agreement upon Issue 6 and paragraph 12 above. That is to say, this is not a case where there are or might be two instruments simultaneously having presumptively valid but inconsistent legal effect.
v) Mr Sprange QC's written closing submissions, with respect, failed in that regard to take account of Dr Jumali's oral evidence, maintaining a submission that a legally defective administrative decision is "void ab initio, and not merely voidable at the instance of a Libyan court decision" (plainly using that terminology as an English lawyer would). But that was not Dr Jumali's position, taking account of his oral evidence. In fact, the written evidence said to found the submission in the first place did not do so anyway, as in truth it only made good the necessary limitation upon any presumed validity to which I referred earlier (paragraphs 29-30 above).
i) By the answer I have now given to Issue 1, the power to appoint an LIA Board of Trustees under Article 6 of Law 13 was in 2017 (and is today) vested in the government of the day in Libya ('A = B').
ii) By the answer I gave to determine the preliminary issues in February 2019 (and my finding that nothing has changed since), that government has been the GNA since at least 19 April 2017, and still today is the GNA ('B = C').
iii) Therefore, given the answer I have now given to Issue 3, Resolution 12 was issued in May 2017 by the body with the power to appoint an LIA Board of Trustees.
iv) Applying the presumption of validity, therefore:
a) the LIA Board of Trustees appointed by Resolution 12 had vested in it the power under Article 10 of Law 13 to appoint an LIA Chairman, and other members, to the LIA Board of Directors when, in July 2017, it issued Resolution 1 purporting to do so; and
b) the LIA Chairman (Dr Mahmoud) and other members of the Board of Directors appointed by Resolution 1 were validly appointed as such.
v) Since Issue 6 is to be answered in the affirmative a valid (including presumptively valid) appointment terminates any prior appointments and there has been no subsequent appointment by a body with power to appoint (see paragraph 12 above), Dr Mahmoud remains validly in post as LIA Chairman today, subject only to (vi) below.
vi) On the assumptions made for Issue 6A, the Eleventh Amendment, as primary constitutional legislation coming after Resolution 1, could in theory have operated so as to override Resolution 1 or otherwise terminate Dr Mahmoud's appointment.
Law 88
i) lack of competence a decision made in excess of the legal authority of the decision-making body;
ii) defect of form a breach of a mandatory rule stipulating procedural or formal requirements for the taking of an administrative decision (a ground of challenge that was also referred to as 'procedural deficiency', but I shall not use that label because, bearing in mind always the danger of subtle shifts in meaning through translation, I think it does not convey in English as well as does 'defect of form' what in my judgment the experts were describing and could therefore appear to create an overlap with the next ground of challenge that I do not think the experts were suggesting);
iii) violation of law a failure to act in accordance with applicable laws and regulations;
iv) abuse of power a use of administrative power for an impermissible purpose or contrary to the public interest;
v) lack of cause administrative decisions made without proper cause.
Issue 2: Abuse of Power?
i) does not answer Issue 2 but seeks instead to raise a different factual basis for considering a suggestion of abuse of power; and
ii) is not open to Mr Breish, in opposition to the Applications, without amending his statement of case.
i) On the agreed expert evidence, it was not an abuse of power that Resolution 12 was issued by the GNA at a time when a legal challenge to Decree 115 and/or Resolution 29, issued by the PC, continued, if (as alleged by Mr Breish) the motive behind Resolution 12 was for the GNA to establish control over the LIA and the appointment of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman.
ii) Under Law 13, as it applied when Resolution 12 was issued and applies today, the LIA was and is answerable to the GNA, the governance structure being that of a Board of Directors answerable to a Board of Trustees answerable to the GNA. Therefore, it was and is a proper motive for the GNA, by appointing a Board of Trustees, to establish in that way control over the LIA.
iii) It has been and remains no part of Mr Breish's case (even as it would be amended by the case set out in the supplementary note) that it is not a proper purpose for the GNA to wish to see Dr Mahmoud appointed as LIA Chairman. The power of appointment of the Chairman rests with the Board of Trustees, not directly with the GNA; but that Board is to consist, first and foremost, of the Prime Minister and four designated Ministers of the GNA, plus the Governor of the Central Bank, possibly with no obligation to appoint additional members albeit Resolution 12 did in fact do so; if there is a governmental preference for a particular individual to be appointed, there is thus built into Law 13 an effective governmental ability to see that individual appointed. If that preference were itself unreasonable or corrupt, no doubt it could be challenged through a challenge to the instruments by which it was given effect; but again that is not any part of the case that has been alleged here.
iv) The result is that the answer to Issue 2 is 'No', even without the presumption of validity. It was not an abuse of power for the GNA to issue Resolution 12 if its purpose in doing so was to achieve control over the LIA and the appointment of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman not successfully achieved by Decree 115 and Resolution 29. That answer is not affected by the fact that Resolution 12 was issued in the context of ongoing legal challenges to Decree 115 and Resolution 29.
v) Mr Breish's desire, intimated by the supplementary note and developed in argument, to advance a different basis upon which, so he would allege, Resolution 12 might be amenable to cancellation as an abuse of power, likewise does not affect the answer to Issue 2, because it does not stick to the premise stated within Issue 2. It is therefore, in truth, only apt to be considered really as an aspect of Issue 7. However, since I have been dealing here with the abuse of power doctrine, it will be convenient to indicate the views I have formed on the prospective merit of Mr Breish's possible further case before turning to Issue 4.
Issue 4: Five Directors
" Article (1)
The Board of Directors of the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) is and hereby nominated and shall be formed as follows:
1. Dr. ALI M HASSEN MOHAMMED Chairman & Executive Manager
2. Eng. ABDELAZIZ KHALED ALABALI Member
3. Mr. HADI NAJMEDDIN COOBAR Member
4. Mr. KHALED KH HUSSIN TAHIR Member
5. Mr. AHMED ABDALLA AMMAR ABDALLA Member
Article (2)
This resolution shall come into force as from the date of its issue; any provision in contravention thereof shall be repealed and all bodies concerned shall put it into effect."
There is no dispute but that the first-named individual is Dr Mahmoud as happens not infrequently, the rendering of individual names into English is not always consistent in the evidence.
Issues 6B & 6C: Other Defects?
i) there was no requirement under Libyan law that Resolution 1 name the members of the Board of Trustees;
ii) the fact that Resolution 1 did not name the members of the Board of Trustees therefore has no relevant effect, and in any event could not affect its current validity or, therefore, the current authority of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman.
i) The effect of the fact that Resolution 1 did not specify the remuneration granted to the members of the LIA Board of Directors appointed by it is that Resolution 1 suffered from a defect of form, for the purpose of Article 2(5) of Law 88 of 1971.
However
ii) Resolution 1 would not be liable to be cancelled on that ground, and in any event that defect of form does not affect the current validity of Resolution 1 or, therefore, the current authority of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman.
Issue 5: Handover
i) a fixed general practice consistently and regularly followed by the administrative body (the actus reus or 'material element'); and
ii) an established common belief within the administrative body that the practice must be followed as a matter of obligation (the mens rea or 'moral element').
i) Between 2006 and 2012 (inclusive) there was no relevant process of handover.
ii) In February 2013, when Dr Derregia was asked to step down in contentious circumstances, there was a handover of some kind by him to Mr Hebri, but only after Dr Derregia became content to recognise Mr Hebri's incoming authority, and what exactly was involved I cannot say.
iii) In July 2014 Mr Breish, having had Mr Hebri hand over to him in June 2013 somewhat formally, with someone from HR present, chose to conduct a relatively detailed, formal, documented handover to Mr Benyezza, in the presence of the Secretary to the Board of Directors, when Mr Breish chose to step down pending resolution of the issue over his entitlement to be appointed and he (Mr Breish) accepted and recognised Mr Benyezza's authority to take over temporarily.
iv) There was no handover by Mr Benyezza to Mr Bouhadi, since Mr Bouhadi's authority was not recognised by Mr Benyezza.
v) There was a handover back from Mr Benyezza to Mr Breish, when the latter's entitlement to be appointed was confirmed by the courts. That handover was a degree more formal again than when Mr Breish had stepped aside temporarily ((iii) above); but that is readily explicable by the fact that Mr Breish was taking up the reins again without any fresh or amended appointment resolution from the Board of Trustees and by way of implementing a court ruling.
vi) There was no handover by Mr Breish to Dr Mahmoud, since Mr Breish did not recognise Dr Mahmoud's authority. Dr Mahmoud nonetheless in fact underwent a form of handover process, but conducted by a handover committee as Mr Breish refused to participate.
i) At its highest, Mr Breish's case rests upon that same misguided belief. It does not, even on its own terms, speak the language of perceived obligation. It is easy to imagine that senior LIA staff, if asked whether they would expect an incoming Chairman whose appointment and authority was recognised by the outgoing Chairman to receive some kind of briefing or handover from the latter as part of getting down to work, might well all say they would. It is obviously a sensible idea and a good professional courtesy. That does not come close to evidencing a perceived obligation.
ii) There is nothing in the factual account of handovers past, such as it is, that evidences clearly or at all a perception of obligation.
iii) In relation to that factual account, indeed, Mr Breish does not even say that when he himself participated in more or less formalised handovers, he regarded doing so as a matter of obligation. Nor does he say anyone at the LIA suggested to him that there was a requirement for him to do what he did or anything like it.
i) There is no requirement under Libyan law for a handover between outgoing and incoming chairmen of the LIA.
ii) Even if there had been such a requirement, it would have no effect on the validity of Dr Mahmoud's appointment as LIA Chairman by Resolution 1, if otherwise valid, that there was no handover to him by an outgoing LIA Chairman. That is quite apart from the presumption of validity, the effect of which in any event would be that a lack of any handover (if there had been a customary handover requirement) would not affect the current validity of Resolution 1 or, therefore, the current authority of Dr Mahmoud as LIA Chairman.
Issue 6A
i) mandates that there be a resolution of the GNA to form the LIA Board of Trustees there is nothing to 'consult, coordinate or seek consensus about' there;
ii) mandates further that the Prime Minister will be Chairman of the Board of Trustees, joined by the Ministers of Planning, Finance, Economy and Trade and by the Governor of the Central Bank, as to which again there is nothing to 'consult etc' about;
iii) provides for there also to be on the Board of Trustees, "a number of experts within the LIA's areas of work".
i) GP12, as one of those principles, is "Commitment of the [HoR], State Council and [GNA] as well as other institutions that stem from this Agreement to upholding the principle of consensus during the performance of its functions and the promotion of cooperation and coordination between them in order to ensure proper conduct of the democratic process as well as integration and balance between all authorities."
ii) GP3, also one of those principles, is "Commitment to the respect of the principle of separation of the three powers, legislature, executive, and judicial."; so also GP11, "Commitment to the executive authorities and powers granted to the [GNA] and the role of the State Council, as well as their contribution to the political process in accordance with this Agreement."
iii) GP31, also one of those principles, is "Recognition of the importance of the continuing independence and integrity of the economic and oversight sovereign institutions."; and GP32, "Preservation of natural wealth, national resources as well as the state's financial and economic institutions that belong to all Libyans, and investing them for the benefit of the people and future generations. It shall not be permissible to control or dispose of them unless by official state authorities and in accordance with the relevant Libyan legislations in force; and they shall not be made involved in any political conflict."
i) Since 2010, under Law 13, appointing an LIA Chairman (which is what the Applications ultimately concern) has been a matter for the LIA Board of Trustees, under Article 10. Nothing in the LPA sought to alter or affect that in any way.
ii) Likewise since 2010, constituting the LIA Board of Trustees has been a matter for the executive, although the only decision to be made there is whom to appoint as additional (expert) members (perhaps also whether to appoint any such members), as the primary membership of the Board of Trustees is mandated by Article 6. Nothing in the LPA sought to alter that or to give the HoR any role in relation to it. The decision on the preliminary issues in the Applications determined that for these purposes the relevant executive is and since at least 19 April 2017 has been the GNA.
iii) Pending adoption of a permanent Constitution, the GNA is required to have at the forefront of its mind the priorities referred to in Article 61 of the LPA when exercising governmental powers including the power of appointment to the LIA Board of Trustees. It would be meaningful in concept to put forward a complaint against Resolution 12 that those priorities had not been taken into account or given proper prominence when the GNA decided to appoint Messrs Al-Houderi and Ben Zahra. But there is no suggestion, in opposition to the Applications, that any such complaint might run on the facts.
iv) Dr Hussein's interest, and supposed challenge to Resolution 12, has been and has avowedly been throughout to seek to suggest that the HoR as the lawfully elected legislature should have been involved, one way or another, in the process by which, ultimately, Dr Mahmoud was appointed as LIA Chairman. That, with respect, has been shown to be a futile interest, and hopeless challenge, if Dr Mahmoud is right (as Dr Hussein accepted he is) on Issue 1 and my decision on the preliminary issues is right (as Dr Hussein has had to accept, subject to the Appeals).
"This constitutional amendment shall come into force from the date of its issuance [i.e. 26 November 2018]. Any provision contrary thereto shall be repealed. This amendment shall not give any legitimacy to any legal entities, capacities or posts that have arisen before it and were not included in the constitutional declaration. It shall be published in the official gazette."
Issue 7
i) A declaration in each receivership that Dr Mahmoud has been from 15 July 2017, and remains, validly appointed as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the LIA, with authority to exercise control over the receivership property.
ii) An order in each receivership discharging it, "with all necessary consequential orders and directions (including an order that the assets in the hands of [the Receiver and Manager] thereunder be transferred at the direction of [Dr Mahmoud])".
i) the purposes for which the receivership was authorised;
ii) the extent to which those have been achieved or overtaken;
iii) whether, if those purposes have not yet been achieved or overtaken, it is necessary to continue the receivership to achieve them;
iv) whether the additional cost of continuing the receivership is expected to be proportionate to the likely benefit of doing so.
Conclusions