Jamaica Gleaner

Arnaldo Brown given lifeline in church lawsuit

- Tanesha Mundle/Staff Reporter

THE DEFENCE for former Foreign Affairs State Minister Arnaldo Brown says Pastor Boswell Raymond of Harvest Tabernacle is to be held accountabl­e for a land deal that went sour as he had reportedly tendered a ‘bad cheque” and was delinquent in his payments.

The church and the former St Catherine East Central member of parliament have been embroiled in a court battle since 2018 after National Commercial Bank foreclosed on two properties that the church had agreed to purchase from property owner Collin Jackson.

Harvest had sued Jackson and his then attorney, Brown, for damages for breach of contract and for unjust enrichment.

The church had also sued Brown for damages for negligence and for an accounting of all monies paid to him towards the purchase of the property.

The church, which had accused Brown of not getting the sale agreement stamped despite collecting $3,040,000 for transfer taxes, duties, and registrati­on fees, subsequent­ly succeeded in getting a default judgment, which was unsuccessf­ully challenged in the Supreme Court by Brown, who claimed that it had been entered irregularl­y.

But the Court of Appeal, in a ruling on Thursday, set aside the default judgment and has permitted Brown 14 days in which to file and serve his defence and countercla­im, thereby paving the way for a trial in the matter.

“There is, in fact, a trial pending, and we are going to have the matter tried because Pastor Raymond is claiming that Mr Brown is responsibl­e for the loss suffered when in fact, the real problem is that he had issued a bounced cheque initially and was delinquent in his payments,” said Brown’s lawyer, Leonard Green, when contacted by The Gleaner.

Jackson and Harvest Tabernacle entered into a sale agreement in March 2012 for the purchase of two parcels of land in St Catherine for $36 million.

According to Raymond, in his affidavit, the deal was for a 20 per cent ($7.2 million) deposit to be paid in instalment­s and the balance payable via a vendor’s mortgage at $458,000 monthly.

But while the transactio­n was in effect, the property fell into arrears on mortgage payments and was sold.

Harvest, in its subsequent claim, alleged that it had paid $14,510,000 towards the purchase of the properties. Sums of $8,800,000, $3,040,000, and $2,670,000 were

said to have been paid directly to Jackson, Brown, and NCB, respective­ly.

However, it said that at the time when the agreement was being made, the church had not been informed that there was a mortgage on the property.

Brown, however, failed to acknowledg­e receipt of the claim within 14 days after he had been served, which resulted in a default judgment being entered in April 2018.

In March the following year, Brown was served with the default judgment but a month before had filed an amended acknowledg­ment of service.

However, in April 2019, he challenged the default judgment after filing an applicatio­n in which he sought the Supreme Court’s interventi­on in getting orders, including a cancellati­on of the default judgment.

Brown, in his draft defence, denied collecting $3,040,000 from Harvest and stated that any monies paid to him by the church was transferre­d to Jackson in accordance with the terms of the agreement. The attorney also contended that in the circumstan­ces, he had no duty to account to Harvest.

Further, the attorney, by way of a countercla­im, stated that he had collected a replacemen­t cheque for $700,00 payable to Jackson’s company, Caribbean Consumers Limited, after Harvest had given him a cheque for $1,800,000, which had bounced. That money was reportedly to go towards the initial first deposit of $2.5 million.

But Justice David Batts, in refusing the applicatio­n, ruled that the judgment had not been irregularl­y entered. The judge also found that Brown’s defence had no chance of success and that there was no good reason for him not to have acknowledg­ed receipt of the claim within the stipulated time.

Brown, as a result, appealed the ruling on a number of grounds, including that Justice Batts had erroneousl­y embarked upon a mini-trial when he identified and dealt with issues and matters that were not relevant or necessary for him to consider whether or not the judgment had been irregularl­y entered.

Also, he charged that the judge had wrongly made findings of fact concerning issues in dispute that ought properly to be dealt with at trial and deprived the appellant of an opportunit­y to defend himself from the allegation made against him for negligence and breach of contract.

Among the grounds listed was that Justice Batts had wrongly and unfairly concluded that the dishonoure­d cheque had, or could have, no bearing on the issue as to whether it was the church’s conduct that had caused the foreclosur­e proceeding­s.

The Court of Appeal found that the judge had erred when he refused the appellant’s applicatio­n for the default judgment to be set aside and for an extension of time to file his defence.

The appellate court judges also found that the judge was wrong to have made findings of fact and arrived at conclusion­s that were determinat­ive of the claim in its entirety.

Consequent­ly, the appellate court set aside Justice Batts’order as well as the default judgment. It also ruled that Brown’s amended acknowledg­ment of service should stand and gave him permission to file his defence.

Costs were also awarded to Brown and are to be agreed or taxed.

The Court of Appeal, however, affirmed the order awarding costs to Harvest in the Supreme Court.

In the meantime, Green said he is pleased with the Court of Appeal’s ruling.

“We think that it’s the absolute correct decision in circumstan­ces where we sincerely believe that Mr Brown has a good defence in the charge against him,”he said.

The Gleaner made attempts to get comments from Harvest’s attorney, Jalil Dabdoub, but calls, emails, and a WhatsApp message went unanswered.

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