Stabroek News

Lowe’s conclusion on case before CCJ was spurious

-

Dear Editor,

In reaction to Mr Sherwood Lowe’s letter captioned ‘Mendez has shifterd the CCJ gaze from Article 1 to Article 9 of the Constituti­on’ appearing in the Stabroek News of the 20th March, 2018, I would wish to submit that in my respectful recall the learned counsel for the Respondent in Richardson v Attorney General and Trotman asseverate­d that, in the absence of a credible definition of the terms “democratic” and “sovereignt­y” in Articles 1 and 9 of the Guyana Constituti­on, the court was required to construe these terms. Despite this selfmotiva­ted asseverati­on the learned lead counsel for the Respondent understand­ably made no attempt to employ the generally accepted canons of statutory interpreta­tion normally employed in Commonweal­th Caribbean jurisprude­nce to determine the juridical implicatio­ns of Articles 1 and 9.

In this connexion the learned counsel for the Respondent egregiousl­y ignored the requiremen­t to apply the principle exemplifie­d in noscitur a sociis in construing “democratic” in Article 1 and attempted to rationalis­e the learned Chancellor’s faulty definition of “sovereignt­y” in Article 9 in concurring in the equally faulty determinat­ion of the learned Chief Justice in the court below. In the event the learned counsel for the Respondent, having failed to provide a credible interpreta­tion of the terms “democratic” and “sovereignt­y”, was unable to establish that Act No 17 of 2000 forfeited the protection of the proviso in Article 164 (2) thereby requiring Act No 17 of 2000 to be approved by a referendum of the electorate. And herein lies the incoherent and ‘Cartesian illogicali­ty’ of Mr Lowe’s spurious conclusion.

Yours faithfully,

Professor Justice Duke E E Pollard

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana