Whereas the status of association of Dominica with the
United Kingdom is to terminate on 3rd November 1978 and it is necessary to
establish a new constitution for Dominica as a sovereign democratic republic
within the Commonwealth styled the Commonwealth of Dominica:
And whereas the Associated State of Dominica has, by a resolution passed in
the House of Assembly thereof on 12th July 1978, requested and consented to the
making of this Order for that purpose:
Now, therefore, Her Majesty, by virtue and in exercise of the powers vested
in Her in that behalf by section 5(4) of the West Indies Act 1967(a), is
pleased, by and with the advice of Her Privy Council, to order, and it is
hereby order, as follows: --
CHAPTER 1
PROTECTION OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS
Fundamental rights and freedoms.
1. Whereas every person in Dominica is entitled to the fundamental
rights and freedoms, that is to say, the rights whatever his race, place of
origins, political opinions, colour, creed or sex, but subject to respect for
the rights and freedoms of others and for the public interest, to each and all
of the following, namely-
- life, liberty, security of
the person and the protection of the law;
- freedom of conscience, of
expression and of assembly and association; and
- protection for the privacy
of his home and other property and from deprivation of property without
compensation,
the provisions of this Chapter shall have effect for the
purpose of affording protection to those rights and freedoms subject to such
limitations of that protection as are contained in those provisions, being
limitations designed to ensure that the enjoyment of the said rights and
freedoms by any person does not prejudice the rights and freedoms of others of
the public interest.
Protection of right to life.
2.-
- A person shall not be
deprived of his life intentionally save in execution of the sentence of a
court in respect of a criminal offence under the law of Dominica of which
he has been convicted.
- A person shall not be
regarded as having been deprived of his life in contravention of this
section if he dies as the result of the use, to such extent and in such
circumstances as are permitted by law, of such force as is reasonably
justifiable-
- for the defence of
any person from violence or for the defence of property;
- in order to effect a
lawful arrest or to prevent the escape of a person lawfully detained;
- for the purpose of
suppressing a riot, insurrection or mutiny; or
- in order to prevent
the commission by that person of a criminal offence,
or if he dies as the result of a lawful act of war.
Protection of rights to personal liberty.
3.-
- A person shall not be
deprived of his personal liberty save as may be authorised by law in any
of the following cases, that is to say:-
- in consequence of his
unfitness to plead to a criminal charge or in execution of the sentence
or order of a court, whether established for Dominica or some other
country, in respect of a criminal offence of which he has been convicted;
- in execution of the
order of the High Court or the Court of Appeal punishing him for contempt
of the High Court or the Court of Appeal or of another court or tribunal;
- in execution of the
order of a court made to secure the fulfilment of any obligation imposed
on him by law;
- for the purpose of
bringing him before a court in execution of the order of a court;
- upon a reasonable
suspicion of his having committed, to being about to commit, a criminal
offence under the law of Dominica;
- under the order of a
court or with the consent of his parent or guardian, for his education or
welfare during an period ending not later that the date when he attains
the age of eighteen years;
- for the purpose of
preventing the spread of an infectious or contagious disease;
- in the case of a
person who is, or is reasonably suspected to be, of unsound mind,
addicted to drugs or alcohol, or a vagrant, for the purpose of his care
or treatment of the protection of the community;
- for the purpose of
preventing his unlawful entry into Dominica, or for purpose of effecting
his expulsion, extradition or other lawful removal from Dominica or for
the purpose of restraining him while he is being conveyed through
Dominica in the course of his extradition or removal as a convicted
prisoner from one country to another; or
- to such extent as may
be necessary in the execution of a lawful order requiring him to remain
in a specified area within Dominica, or prohibiting him from being within
such an area, or to such extent as may be reasonably justifiable for the
taking of proceedings against him with a view to the making of any such order
or relating to such an order after it has been made, or to such extent as
may be reasonably justifiable for restraining him during any visit that
he is permitted to make to any part of Dominica in which, in consequence
of any such order, his presence would otherwise be unlawful.
- Any person who is arrested
or detained shall be informed as soon as is reasonably practicable and in
any case no later than twenty-four hours after such arrest or detention,
in a language that he understands, of the reasons for his arrest or
detention.
- Any person who is arrested
or detained-
- for the purpose of
bring him before a court in execution of the order of a court; or
- upon reasonable
suspicion of his having committed, or being about to commit, a criminal
offence under the law of Dominica,
and who is not released, shall be brought before a court
without undue delay and in any case not later than seventy-two hours after such
arrest or detention.
- Where any person is brought
before a court in execution of the order of a court in any proceeding or
upon suspicion of his having committed or being about to commit an
offence, he shall not be thereafter further held in custody in connection
with those proceedings or that offence save upon the order of a court.
- If any person arrested or
detained as mentioned in subsection (3)(b) of this section is not tried
within a reasonable time, then, without prejudice to any further
proceedings that may be brought against him, conditions, including in
particular such conditions as are reasonably necessary to ensure that he
appears at a later date for trial or for proceedings preliminary to trial.
- Any person who is unlawfully
arrested or detained by any other person shall be entitled to compensation
therefor from that other person or from any other person or authority on
whose behalf that other person was acting.
- For the purposes of
subsection (1(a) of this section a person charged before a court with a
criminal offence in respect of whom a special verdict has been returned
that he was guilty of the act or omission charged but was insane when he
did the act or made the omission shall be regarded as a person who has
been convicted of a criminal offence and the detention of a person in
consequence of such a verdict shall be regarded as detention in execution
in execution of the order of a court.
Protection from slavery and forced labour.
4.-
- No person shall be held in
slavery or servitude.
- No person shall be required
to perform force labour.
- For the purposes of this
section, the expression "forced labour" does not include-
- any labour required
in consequence of the sentence or order of a court;
- labour required of
any person while he is lawfully detained that, though not required in
consequence of the sentence or order of a court, is reasonably necessary
in the interests of hygiene or for the maintenance of the place at which
he is detained;
- any labour of a
member of a disciplined force in pursuance of his duties as such or, in
the case of a person who has conscientious objections to service as a
member of a naval, military or air force, any labour that person is
required by law to perform in place of such service;
- any labour required
during any period of public emergency or in the event of any other
emergency or calamity that threatens the life and well-being of the
community, to the extent that the requiring of such labour is reasonably
justifiable in the circumstances of any situation arising or existing
during that period or as a result of that other emergency or calamity,
for the purpose of dealing with that situation.
Protection from inhuman treatment.
5.-No person shall be subject to torture or to inhuman or degrading
punishment or other treatment.
Protection from deprivation of property.
6.-
- No property of any
description shall be compulsorily taken possession of, and no interest in
or right over property of any description shall be compulsory acquired,
except where provisions is made by a law applicable to that taking of
possession or acquisition for the payment, within a reasonable time, of
adequate compensation.
- Every person having an
interest in or right over property that is compulsorily taken possession
of or whose interest in or right over any property is compulsorily
acquired shall have a right of direct access to the High Court for-
- determining the
nature and extent of that interest or right;
- determining whether
that taking of possession or acquisition was duly carried out in
accordance with a law authorising the taking of possession or
acquisition;
- determining what
compensation he is entitled to under the law applicable to that taking of
possession or acquisition;
- obtaining that
compensation:
Provided that if Parliament so provides in relation to
any matter referred to in paragraph (a) or (c) of this subsection the right of
access shall be by way of appeal (exercisable as of right at the instance of
the person having the interest in or right over the property) from a tribunal
or authority, other than the High Court, having jurisdiction under any law to
determine that matter.
- The Chief Justice may make
rules with respect to the practice and procedure of the High Court or,
subject to such provision as may have been made in that behalf by
Parliament, with respect to the practice and procedure of any other
tribunal or authority in relation to the jurisdiction conferred on the
High Court by subsection (2) of this section or exercisable by the other
tribunal or authority for the purposes of that subsection (including rules
with respect to the time within which applications or appeals to the High
Court or applications to the other tribunal or authority may be brought).
- No person who is entitled to
compensation under this section shall be prevented from remitting, within
a reasonable time after he has received any amount of that compensation in
the form of a sum of money or, as the case may be, has received any such
amount in some other form and has converted any of that amount into a sum
of money, the whole of that sum of money (free from any education, charge
or tax made or levied in respect of its remission) to any country of his
choice outside Dominica.
- Nothing contained in or done
under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of subsection (4) of this section to the extent that the law
in question authorises-
- the attachment, by
order of a court, of any amount of compensation to which a person is
entitled in satisfaction of the judgement of a court or pending the
determination of civil proceedings to which he is a party; or
- the imposition of
reasonable restrictions on the manner in which any sum of money is to be
remitted.
- Nothing contained in or done
under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of subsection (1) of this section-
- to the extent that
the law in question makes provision for the taking of possession or
acquisition of any property, interest of right-
- in satisfaction of
any tax, rate or due;
- by way of penalty
for breach of any law or forfeiture in consequence of breach of any law;
- as an incident of a
lease, tenancy, mortgage, charge, bill of sale, pledge or contract;
- in the execution of
judgements or orders of a court in proceedings for the determination of
civil rights or obligations;
- in circumstances
where it is reasonably necessary so to do because the property is in a
dangerous state or likely to be injurious to the health of human beings,
animals or plants;
- in consequence of
any law with respect to the limitation of actions; or
- for so long only as
may be necessary for the purposes of any examination, investigation,
trial or inquiry or, in the case of land, for the purposes of the
carrying out thereon of work of soil conservation or the conservation of
other natural resources or work relating to agricultural development or
improvement (being work relating to such development or improvement that
the owner or occupier of the land has been required, and has without
reasonable excuse refused or failed to carry out).
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may be,
the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society; or
- to the extent that
the law in question makes provision for the taking of possession or
acquisition of any of the following property (including an interest in or
right over property), that is to say-
- enemy property;
- property of a
deceased person, a person of unsound mind or a person who has not
attained the age of eighteen years for the purpose of its administration
for the benefit of the persons entitled to the benefit of the persons
entitled to the beneficial interest therein;
- property of a person
adjudged bankrupt or a body corporate in liquidation, for the purpose of
its administration for the benefit of the creditors of the bankrupt or
body corporate and, subject thereto, for the beneficial interest in the
property; or
- property subject to
a trust, for the purpose of vesting the property in persons appointed as
trustees under the instrument creating the trust or by a court or, by
order of a court, for the purpose of giving effect to the trust.
- Nothing contained in or done
under the authority of any law enacted by Parliament shall be held to be
inconsistent with or in contravention of this section to the extent that
the law in question makes provision for the compulsory taking of
possession of any property, or the compulsory acquisition of any interest
in or right over property where that property, interest or right is held
by a body corporate established by law for public purposes in which no
monies have been investigated other than monies provided by any
legislature established for Dominica.
- In this section-
"property" means any land or other thing
capable of being owned or held in possession and includes any right relating
thereto, whether under a contract, trust or law or otherwise and whether
present or future absolute or conditional;
"acquisition" in relation to an interest in or right over property,
means transferring that interest or right to another person or extinguishing or
curtailing that interest or right.
Protection from arbitrary search or entry
7.-
- Except with his own consent,
a person shall not be subject to the search of his person or his property
or the entry by others on his premises.
- Nothing contained in or done
under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question makes
provision-
- that is reasonably
required in the interest of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality, public health, town and country planning, the development and
utilisation of mineral resources of the development and utilisation of
mineral resources or the development or utilisation of mineral resources
or the development or utilisation of any property for a purpose
beneficial to the community;
- that is reasonably
required for the purpose of protecting the rights or freedoms of other
persons;
- that authorities an
officer or agent of the Government of Dominica, a local government
authority or a body corporate established by law for public purpose to
enter on the premises thereon for the purpose of any tax, rate or due or
in order to carry out work connected with any property that is lawfully
on those premises and that belongs to that Government, authority or body
corporate, as the case may be; or
- that authorises, for
the purpose of enforcing the judgement or order of a court in any civil
proceedings, the search of any person or property by order of a court or
entry upon any premises by such order.
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may be,
anything done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
Provided to the protection of law
8.-
- If any person is charged
with a criminal offence, then, unless the charge is withdrawn, the case
shall be afforded a fair hearing within a reasonable time by an
independent and impartial court established by law.
- Every person who is charged
with a criminal offence-
- shall be presumed to
be innocent until he is proved or has pleaded guilty;
- shall be informed as
soon as reasonably practicable, in a language that he understands and in
detail, of the nature of the offence charged;
- shall be given
adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his defence;
- shall be permitted to
defend himself before the court in person or, at his own expense, by a
legal practitioner of his own choice;
- shall be afforded facilities
to examine in person or by his legal representative the witnesses called
by the prosecution before the court, and to obtain the attendance and
carry out the examination of witnesses to testify on his behalf before
the court on the same conditions as those applying to witnesses called by
the prosecution; and
- shall be permitted to
have without payment the assistance of an interpreter if he cannot
understand the language used at the trial.
and the trial shall not take place in his absence unless he so
conducts himself as to render the continuance of the proceedings in his
presence impracticable and the court has ordered him to be removed and the
trial to proceed in his absence:
Provided that the trial may take place in his absence
in any case in which it is so provided by law under which, he is entitled to
adequate notice of the charge an the date, time and place of the trial and to a
reasonable opportunity of appearing before the court.
- When a person is tried for
any criminal offence the accused person or any person authorised by him in
that behalf shall, if he so requires and subject to payment of such
reasonable fee as may be prescribed by law, be given within a reasonable
time after judgement a copy for the use of the accused person of any record
of the proceedings made by or on behalf of the court.
- No person shall be held to
be guilty of a criminal offence on account of any act or omission that did
not, at the time it took place, constitute such an offence, and no penalty
shall be imposed for any criminal offence that is severer in degree or
description than the maximum penalty that might have been imposed for that
offence at the time when it was committee.
- A person who shows that he
has been tried by a competent court for a criminal offence and either
convicted or acquitted shall not again be tried for that offence or for
any other criminal offence of which he could have been convicted at the
trial for that offence, save upon the order of a superior court in the
course of appeal or review proceedings relating to the conviction or
acquittal.
- A person shall not be tried
for a criminal offence if he has been pardoned for that offence.
- A person who is tried for a
criminal offence shall not be compelled to give evidence at the trial;
Provided that nothing in this subsection shall prevent
the prosecution or the court from commenting on his failure to give evidence on
his own behalf or prevent the court from drawing inferences from any such
failure.
- Any court or other authority
prescribed by law for the determination of the existence or extent of any
civil right or obligation shall be established by law and shall be
independent and impartial; and where proceedings for such a determination
are instituted by any person before such a court or other authority, the
case shall be given a fair hearing within a reasonable time.
- Where the existence or
extent of any civil right or obligation has been determined in proceedings
in any court or before any other authority any party to those proceeding
shall, if he so requires and subject to payment of such reasonable fee as
may be prescribed by law, be entitled to obtain within a reasonable time
after the judgement or other determination a copy of any record of the
proceedings made by or on behalf of the court or other authority.
- Except with the agreement of
all the parties thereto, all proceedings of every court and proceedings
for the determination of the existence or extent of any civil right or
obligation before any other authority, including the announcement of the
decision of the court or other authority, shall be held in public.
- Nothing in subsection (10)
of this section shall prevent the court or other adjudicating authority
from excluding from the proceedings persons other than the parties thereto
and the legal practitioner representing them to such extent as the court
or other authority-
- may by law be
empowered to do and may consider necessary or expedient in circumstances
where publicity would prejudice the interests of justice or in interlocutory
proceedings or in the interests of public morality, the welfare of
persons under the age of eighteen years of the protection of the private
lives of persons concerned in the proceedings; or
- may by law be
empowered or required to do in the interests of defence, public safety or
public order.
- Nothing contained in or done
under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in
contravention of-
- subsection (2)(a) of
this section to the extent that the law in question imposes upon any
person charged with a criminal offence the burden of proving particular
facts;
- subsection (2)(e) of
this section to the extent that the law in question imposes reasonable
conditions that must be satisfied if witnesses called to testify on
behalf of an accused person are to be paid their expenses out of public
funds; or
- subsection (5) of
this section to the extent that the law in question authorises a court to
try a member of a disciplined force for a criminal offence
notwithstanding any trial and conviction or acquittal of that member
under the disciplinary law of that force, so, however, that any court so
trying such a member and convicting him shall in sentencing him to any
punishment take into account any punishment awarded him under that
disciplinary law.
- In the case of any person
who is held in lawful detention the provisions of subsection (1),
paragraphs (d) and (e) of subsection (2) and subsection (3) of this
section shall not apply in relation to his trial for a criminal offence
under the law regulating the discipline of persons held in such detention.
- In this section
"criminal offence" means a criminal offence under the law of
Dominica.
Protection of freedom of conscience.
9.-
- Except with his own
consent, a person shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of
conscience, including freedom of thought and of religion, freedom to
change his religion or belief and freedom, either alone or in community
with others, and both in public and in private, to manifest and propagate
his religion or belief in worship, teaching, practice and observance.
- Except with his own consent
(or, if he is a person under the age or eighteen years, the consent of his
guardian) a person attending any place of education, detained in any
prison or corrective institution or serving in a naval, military or air
force shall not be required to receive religious instruction or to take
part in or attend any religious ceremony or observance if that instruction
ceremony or observance relates to a religion which is not his own.
- Every religious community
shall be entitled, at its own expense, to establish and maintain places of
education and to manage any place of education which it maintains; and no
such community shall be prevented from providing religious instruction for
persons of that community in the course of any education provided by that
community whether or not it is in receipt of a government subsidy or other
form of financial assistance designed to meet in whole or in part the cost
of such course of education.
- A person shall not be
compelled to take any oath which is contrary to his religion or belief or
to take any oath in a manner which is contrary to his religion or belief.
- Nothing contained in or
done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with
or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question
makes provisions which is reasonably required-
- in the interests of
defence, public safety, public order, public morality or public health;
- for the purpose of
protecting the rights and freedoms of other persons, including the right
to observe and practise any religion without the unsolicited intervention
of members of any other religion; or
- for the purpose of
regulating educational institutions in the interests of the persons who
received or may receive instructions in them,
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may be,
the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
- References in this section
to a religion shall be construed as including references to a religious
denomination, and cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly.
Protection of freedom of expression.
10.-
- Except with his own
consent, a person shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of
expression, including freedom to hold opinions without interference,
freedom to receive ideas and information without interference freedom to
communicate ideas and information without interference (whether the
communication be to the public generally or to any person or class of
persons) and freedom from interference with his correspondence.
- Nothing contained in or
done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with
or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question
makes provision-
- that is reasonably
required in the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality or public health;
- that is reasonably
required for the purpose of protecting the reputations, rights and
freedoms of other persons or the private lives of persons concerned in
legal proceedings, preventing the disclosure of information received in
confidence, maintaining the authority and independence of the courts or
regulating the technical administration or the technical operation of
telephony, telegraphy, posts, wireless broadcasting or television; or
- that imposes
restrictions upon public officers that are reasonably required for the
proper performance of their functions,
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may be,
the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
Protection of freedom of assembly and association.
11.-
- Except with his own
consent, a person shall not be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of
assembly and association, that is to say, his right to assemble freely and
associate with other persons and in particular to form or belong to trade
unions or other associations for the protection of his interests.
- Nothing contained in or
done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with
or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question
makes provision-
- that is reasonably
required in the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality or public health;
- that is reasonably
required for the purpose of protecting the rights or freedoms of other
persons; or
- that imposes
restrictions upon public officers that are reasonably required for the
proper performance of their functions,
and except so far as that provision or, as the case may be,
the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
Protection of freedom of movement.
12.-
- A person shall not be
deprived of his freedom of movement that is to say, the right to move
freely throughout Dominica, the right to reside in any part of Dominica,
the right to enter Dominica, the right to leave Dominica and immunity from
expulsion from Dominica.
- Any restriction on a
person's freedom of movement that is involved in his lawful detention
shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of this section.
- Nothing contained in or
done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with
or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question
makes provision-
- for the imposition
of restriction on the movement or residence within Dominica of any person
or on any person's right to leave Dominica that are reasonably required
in the interests of defence, public safety or public order;
- for the imposition
of restriction on the movement or residence within Dominica or on the
right to leave Dominica of persons generally or any class of persons in
the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public morality or
public health or in respect of the right to leave Dominica, of securing
compliance with any international obligation of the Government
particulars of which have been laid before the House of Assembly and
except so far as that provision or, as the case may be, the thing done
under the authority thereof is shown not to be reasonably justifiable in
a democratic society;
- for the imposition
of restrictions, by order of a court, on the movement or residence within
Dominica of any person or on any person's right to leave Dominica either
in consequence of his having been found guilty of a criminal offence
under the law of Dominica or for the purpose of ensuring that he appears
before a court at a later date for trial of such a criminal offence or
for proceeding preliminary to trial or for proceedings relating to his
extradition or lawful removal from Dominica;
- for the imposition
of restriction on the freedom of movement of any person who is not a
citizen of Dominica;
- for the imposition
of restrictions on the acquisition or use by any person of land or other
property in Dominica;
- for the imposition
of restrictions upon the movement or residence within Dominica or on the
right to leave Dominica of any public office that are reasonably required
for the proper performance of his functions;
- for the removal of a
person from Dominica to be tried or punished in some other country for a
criminal offence under the law of that other country or to undergo
imprisonment in some other country in execution of the sentence of a
court in respect of a criminal offence under the law of Dominica of which
he has been convicted; or
- for the imposition
of restriction on the right of any person to leave Dominica that are
reasonably required in order to secure the fulfilment of any obligations
imposed on that person by law and except so far as that provision or as
the case may be the thing done under the authority thereof is shown not
to be reasonably justifiable in a democratic society.
- If any person whose freedom
of movement has been restricted by virtue of such a provision as is
referred to in subsection (3)(a) of this section so requests at any time during
the period of that restriction not earlier than twenty-one days after the
order was made or three months after he last made such a request, as the
case may be, his case shall be reviewed by an independent and impartial
tribunal presided over by a person appointed by the Chief Justice from
among persons who are legal practitioners.
- On any review by a tribunal
in pursuance of subsection (4) of this section of the case of any person
whose freedom of movement has been restricted, the tribunal may make recommendations
concerning the necessity or expediency of the continuation of that
restriction to the authority by whom it was ordered and, unless it is
otherwise provided by law, that authority shall be obliged to act in
accordance with any such recommendations.
Protection from discrimination on the grounds of race,
etc. 13.-
- Subject to the provisions
of subsections (4), (5) and (7) of this section, no law shall make any
provision that is discriminatory either of itself or in its effect.
- Subject to the provisions
of subsections (6), (7) and (8) of this section, no person shall be
treated in a discriminatory manner by any person or authority.
- In this section, the
expression "discriminatory" means affording different treatment
to different persons attributable wholly or mainly to their respective
descriptions by sex, race, place of origin, political opinions, colour or
creed whereby persons of one such description are subject to disabilities
or restrictions to which persons of another such description are not made
subject or are accorded privileges or advantages which are not accorded to
persons of another such description.
- Subsection (1) of this
section shall not apply to any law far as that law makes provision-
- for the
appropriation of public revenues or other public funds;
- with respect to
persons who are not citizens of Dominica;
- for the application,
in the case of persons of any such description as is mentioned in
subsection (3) of this section (or of persons connected with such
persons) of the law with respect to adoption, marriage, divorce, burial,
devolution of property on death or other like matters which is the
personal law of persons of that description;
- whereby persons of
any such description as is mentioned is subsection (3) of this section may
be subject to any disability or restriction or may be accorded any
privilege or advantage that having regard to its nature and to special
circumstances pertaining to those persons or to persons of any other such
description, is reasonably justifiable in a democratic society.
- Nothing contained in any
law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contraventions subsection
(1) of this section to the extent that it makes provision with respect to
standards or qualifications (not being standards or qualifications
specifically relation to sex, race, place of origin, political opinions,
colour or creed) to be required of any person who is appointed to or to
act in any office or employment.
- Subsection (2) of this
section shall not apply to anything which is expressly or by necessary
implication authorised to be done by any such provision of law as is
referred to in subsection (4) or subsection (5) of this section.
- Nothing contained in or
Done under the authority of any law shall be held to be inconsistent with
or in contravention of this section to the extent that the law in question
makes provision whereby persons of nay such description as is mentioned in
subsection (3) of this section may be subject to any restriction on the
rights and freedoms guaranteed by sections 7, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of this
Constitution, being such a restriction as is authorised by section 7(2)
section 9(5), section 10(2), section 11(2) or paragraph (a), (b), or (h)
of section (12(3), as the case may be.
- Nothing in subsection (2)
of this section shall affect any discretion relating to the institution,
conduct or discontinuance of civil or criminal proceedings in any court
that is vested in any person by or under this Constitution or any other
law.
Derogation from s.3 s.13 under emergency powers.
14.- Nothing contained in or done under the authority of a law enacted
by Parliament shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of
section 3 or section 13 of this Constitution to the extent that the law authorised
the taking during any period of public emergency of measures that are
reasonably justifiable for dealing with the situation that exists in Dominica
during that period.
Protection of persons detained under emergency laws.
15.-
- When a person is detained
by virtue of any such law as is referred to in section 14 of this
Constitution the following provisions shall apply, that is to say:-
- he shall, as soon as
reasonably practicable and in any case not more than seven days after the
commencement of his detention, be furnished with a statement in writing
in a language that he understands specifying in detail the grounds upon
which he is detained;
- not more than
fourteen days after the commencement of his detention, a notification
shall be published in the Official Gazette stating that he has been
detained and giving particulars of the provision of law under which his
detention is authorised;
- not more than one
month after the commencement of his detention and thereafter during his
detention at intervals of not more than three months, his case shall be
reviewed by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law and
presided over by a person appointed by the Chief Justice from among
persons who are legal practitioners;
- he shall be afforded
reasonable facilities to consult a legal practitioner of his own choice
who shall be permitted to make representations to the tribunal appointed
for the review of the case of the detained person; and
- at the hearing of
his case by the tribunal appointed for the review of his case he shall be
permitted to appear in person or to be represented by a legal
practitioner of his own choice.
- On any review by a tribunal
in pursuance of this section for the case of a detained person, the
tribunal may make recommendations concerning the necessity of continuing
his detention to the authority by which it was ordered but, unless it is
otherwise provided by law, that authority shall not be obliged to act in
accordance with any such recommendations.
- Nothing contained in
subsection (1)(d) or subsection (1)(e) of this section shall be construed
as entitling a person to legal representation at public expense.
Enforcement of protective provisions.
16.-
- If any person alleges that
any of the provisions of sections 2 to 15 (inclusive) of this Constitution
has been, is being or is likely to be contravened in relation to him (or,
in the case for a person who is detained, if any other person alleges such
a contravention in relation to the detained person) then, without
prejudice to any other action with respect to the same matter which is
lawfully available, that person (or that other person) may apply to the
High Court for redress.
- The High Court shall have
original jurisdiction-
- to hear and
determine any application made by any person in pursuance of subsection
(1) of this section; and
- to determine any
question arising in the case of any person which is referred to it in
pursuance of subsection (3) of this section,
and may make such declarations and orders, issue such writs
and give such directions as it may consider appropriate for the purpose of
enforcing or securing the enforcement of any of the provisions of sections 2 to
15 (inclusive) of this Constitution:
Provided that the High Court may decline to exercise
its powers under this subsection if it is satisfied that adequate means of
redress for the contravention alleged are or have been available to the person
concerned under any other law.
- If in any proceedings in
any court (other than the Court of Appeal or the High Court or a
court-martial) any question arises as to the contravention of the
provisions of sections 2 to 15 (inclusive) of this Constitution, the
person presiding in that court may, and shall if any party to the
proceedings so requests, refer the question if it is merely frivolous or
vexatious.
- Where any question is
referred to the High Court in pursuance of subsection (3) of this section,
the High Court shall give its decision upon the question and the court in
which the question arose shall dispose of the case in accordance with that
decision or, if that decision if the subject of an appeal to the Court of
Appeal or to the Judicial Committee, in accordance with the decision of
the Court of Appeal or as the case may be, of the Judicial Committee.
- The High Court shall have
such powers in addition to those conferred by this section as may be
conferred upon it by Parliament for the purpose of enabling it more
effectively to exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon it by this
section.
- The Chief Justice may make
rules with respect to the practice and procedure of the High Court in
relation to the jurisdiction and powers conferred on it by or under this
section (including rules with respect to the time within which
applications may be brought and references shall be made to the High
Court).
Interpretation and savings.
17.-
- In this Chapter, unless the
context otherwise requires-
"contravention" in relation to any
requirement, includes a failure to comply with that requirement, and cognate
expressions shall be construed accordingly;
"court" means any court of law having jurisdiction in Dominica other
than a court established by a disciplinary law, and includes the Judicial
Committee and in section 2 and 4 of this Constitution a court established by a
disciplinary law;
"disciplinary law" means a law regulating the discipline of any
disciplined force;
"disciplined force" means-
a.
a naval, military or air force;
b.
the Police Force;
c.
a prison service; or
d.
any such other force or service as amy be prescribed by Parliament.
"legal practitioner" means a person entitled
to be in or to enter Dominica and entitled to practice as a barrister in
Dominica or, except in relation to proceedings before a court in which a
solicitor has nor right of audience, entitled to practise as a solicitor in
Dominica;
"member"" in relation to a discipline force, includes any person
who, under the law regulating the discipline of that force, is subject to that
discipline.
- In this Chapter
"period of public emergency" means any period during which-
- Dominica is engaged
in any war; or
- there is in force a
proclamation by the president declaring that a state of public emergency
exists; or
- there is in force a
resolution of the House supported by the votes of not less than two
thirds of all the members of the House declaring that democratic
institutions in Dominica are threatened by subversion.
- A proclamation made by the
President shall not be effective for the purposes of subsection (2) of
this section unless it is declared therein that the President is
satisfied-
- that a public
emergency has arisen as a result of the imminence of a state of war
between Dominica and a foreign state or as a result of the occurrence of
any earthquake, hurricane, flood, fire, outbreak of pestilence, outbreak
of infectious disease or other calamity whether similar to the foregoing
or not; or
- that action has been
taken or is immediately threatened by any person of such a nature and on
so extensive a scale as to be likely to endanger the public safety or to
deprive the community, or any substantial portion of the community, of
supplies or services essential to life.
- A proclamation made by the
President for the purposes of this section-
- shall, unless
previously revoked, remain in force for twenty-one days or for such
longer period, not exceeding six months, as the House may determine by a
resolution supported by the votes of a majority of all the members of the
House;
- may be extended from
time to time by a resolution of the House passed in like manner as is prescribed
in paragraph (a) of this subsection for further periods, not exceeding in
respect of each such extension a period of six months; and
- may be revoked at
any time by a resolution supported by the votes of a majority of all the
members of the House of Assembly.
- A resolution passed by the
House for the purposes of subsection (2) of this section may be revoked at
any time by a resolution of the House supported by the votes of a majority
of all the members thereof.
- In relation to any person
who is a member of a disciplined force of Dominica, nothing contained in
or done under the authority of the disciplinary law of that force shall be
held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of any of the provisions
of this Chapter other than sections 2, 4 and 5 of this Constitution.
- In relation to any person
who is a member of a disciplined force of a country other than Dominica
that is lawfully present in Dominica, nothing contained in or done under
the authority of the disciplinary law of that force shall be held to be
inconsistent with or in contravention of any of the provisions of this
Chapter.
CHAPTER II
THE PRESIDENT
Establishment of office.
18.-
- There shall be a President
of Dominica who shall be elected by the House and shall hold office for a
term of five years.
- The President shall have
such functions as are prescribed by this Constitution and such additional
functions (if any) as may be prescribed by Parliament:
Provided that no such additional functions shall be
conferred upon him without his consent signified by writing under his hand
addressed to the Speaker.
Elections
19.-
- Whenever the office of
President is vacant or the term of office of the President is due to
expire within not more than ninety days, the Prime Minister shall consult with
the Leader of the Opposition as to their joint nomination of a suitable
candidate for election as President.
- If the Prime Minister and
the Leader of the Opposition submit to the Speaker by writing under their
hands a joint nomination of a candidate for election as President to which
that candidate has consented, the Speaker shall inform the House of the
nomination, and declare that candidate to have been duly elected without
putting the question to the vote.
- If the Prime Minister is
unable to agree with the Leader of the Opposition as to their joint
nomination of a candidate for election as President, he shall notify the
Speaker to that effect and the Speaker shall inform the House accordingly.
- The Prime Minister or the
Leader of the Opposition or any three member of the House may, during the
period expiring fourteen days after the day on which the House has been so
informed, submit to the Speaker by writing under their hands nominations
of candidates for election as President and the Speaker shall at the first
meeting of the House after the expiration of that period and before the
House proceeds to any other business inform the House of the nominations
he has received and to which the candidates concerned have consented.
- An election of the
President at which the candidates shall be those of whose nomination the
House has been informed by the Speaker, shall thereafter be held at the
meeting of the House referred to in subsection (4) of this section (or if
proceedings under section 22 of this Constitution are pending before the
Court of Appeal, at a meeting of the House held as soon as is practicable
after those proceedings) and the Speaker shall declare the candidate who
has at that election received the votes of a majority of all the members
of the House to have been duly elected:
Provided that when the question of the election of
the President is put to the vote, the votes shall be given by ballot in such
manner as not to disclose how any particular member of the House votes.
5A. Where the only candidate for election under
subsection (5) of this section does not receive the votes of a majority of all
the members of the House, the Speaker shall inform the House accordingly and a
new election shall be held to which the provisions of subsection (4) and (5), mutatis
mutandis, apply.
- Where a person consents to
be nominated for election as President he shall do so by writing under his
hand addressed to the Speaker.
- A person who has been
declared to have been duly elected as President under this section shall
assume office as such on the day after the day on which his predecessor
vacates the office of President or, if that office is already vacant, he
shall assume office on the day after the day on which he was declared to
have been duly elected.
Qualifications for office nomination.
20.-
- A person shall be qualified
to be nominated for election as President if, and shall not be so
qualified unless, he is a citizen of Dominica of the age of forty years or
upwards who at the date of his nomination has been resident in Dominica
for five years immediately preceding his nomination.
- For the purposes of
subsection (1) of this section a person shall be deemed to reside in
Dominica if he holds an office in the service of the Government, or is employed
with any intergovernmental organisation or institution of the
Commonwealth Caribbean or any international organisation or institution of
which Dominica is a member and lives outside Dominica because he is
required to do so for the proper discharge of his functions.
- Parliament may, by
resolution supported by the votes of not less than three-fourths of
all the elected members of the House waive the residence qualification
laid down in subsection (1) of this section with respect to any
particular person to be proposed for nomination.
Disqualifications for elections and holding office.
21.-
- A person shall not be
qualified to be elected as President if-
- he has already held
the office of President for two terms; or
- he is disqualified
to be elected or appointed as a Representative or Senator by virtue of
subsection (1)(a), (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of section 32 of this
Constitution or by virtue of any law enacted in pursuance of subsection
(2), (3) or (5) of that section.
- A person shall not be qualified
to hold the office of President if he holds any other office or emolument
whether in the public service or otherwise nor engage in any other
occupation for reward.
Determination of questions as to qualifications.
22.-
- The Court of Appeal shall
have jurisdiction to hear and determine any question whether any person is
qualified to be nominated for election, or elected, as President.
- An application to the Court
of Appeal for the determination of any question under this section may be
made by the Attorney General or by any other member of the House and, if
it is made by a member other than the Attorney General, the Attorney
General may intervene and may then appear or be represented in the
proceedings.
- The powers, practice and
procedure of the Court of Appeal in respect of any application for the
determination of any question under this section, including (without
prejudice to the generality of the force going) the time in which and the
conditions upon which an application may be made, shall be regulated by
such provisions as may be made by Parliament.
- No appeal shall lie from
any decision of the Court of Appeal under this section.
- A certificate under the
hand of the Speaker stating that a person was declared to have been duly
elected under section 19 of this Constitution shall be conclusive evidence
of the fact so stated and shall not be questioned in any court of law.
- In the exercise of his
functions under this section, the Attorney General shall not be subject to
the directions or control of any other person or authority.
Tenure of office.
23.-
- Subject to the provisions
of this section and of section 25 of this Constitution, the President
shall vacate his office at the expiration of a term of five years from the
date on which he was declared to have been duly elected.
- Where a person is elect to
fill a vacancy in the office of President occurring before the expiration
of the term of office of his predecessor he shall hold office only for the
unexpired portion of that term.
- Parliament may extend the
term of office of the President under subsection (1) or (2) of this
section for a period nor exceeding six months in order to avoid the
holding of an election to the office of President during a period while
Parliament is dissolved or at a time within one month before the beginning
or one month after the end of such a period.
Removal from office.
24.-
- The President may be
removed from office under section 25 of this Constitution where-
- he wilfully violates
any provision of the Constitution;
- he behaves in such a
way as to bring his office into hatred, ridicule or contempt;
- he behaves in a way
that endangers the security of Dominica;
- because of physical
or mental incapacity, he is unable to perform the functions of his
office;
- any circumstances
arise that, if he were not President, would cause him to be disqualified
to be elected as such by virtue of subsection (1)(b) of section 21 of
this Constitution; or
- he is appointed to
any such office, or engages in any such occupation, as is referred to in
subsection (2) of that section.
Procedure for removal from office.
25.-
- The office of the President
shall become vacant if-
- the House (acting
upon a motion signed by not less than one third of all the members of the
House proposes the removal of the President from office on grounds of
complaint specified with full particulars in the resolution;
- a tribunal
consisting of the Chief Justice and two other judges of the Supreme Court
appointed by the Chief Justice, being as far as practicable the most
senior judges, investigates the complaint and makes a report on the facts
thereof to the House; and
- the House, after
considering the report, by resolution supported by the votes of not less
than two-thirds of all the members of the House declares that the
President shall be removed from office.
- Parliament may make
provision with respect to the powers, practice and procedure of tribunals
established for the purpose of subsection 1(b) of this section and,
subject as aforesaid, any such tribunal may by regulation or otherwise
regulated its own procedure.
- Where a resolution is
passed in accordance with subsection (1)(a) of this section, the President
shall forthwith cease to perform the functions of this office; but he may
resume the performance of those functions if, after the House has
considered a report made to it under subsection (1)(b) of this section, no
such resolution as is referred to in subsection (1)(c) of this section is
passed.
Oath.
26.- A person elected to hold the office of President or designated or
elected to act as president shall before entering upon the duties of the office
of President take and subscribe the oath of office, such oath being
administered by the Chief Justice or such other judge of the Supreme Court as
may be designated by the Chief Justice.
Protection in respect of legal proceedings.
27.-
- Whilst any person hold
office or is acting as President no criminal proceedings shall be
instituted or continued against him in respect of anything done or omitted
to be done by him either in his official capacity or in his private
capacity and no civil proceedings shall be instituted or continued in
respect of which relief is claimed against him in respect of any thing
done or omitted to be done in his private capacity.
- Where provisions is made by
law limiting the time within which proceedings of any description may be
brought against any person, the period during which any person has held
office or acted as President shall ot be taken into account in calculating
any period of time described by that law which determines whether any such
proceedings as are mentioned in subsection (1) of this section may be
brought against that person.
Acting President.
28.-
- Whenever the holder of the
office of President is unable to perform the functions of his office by
reason of his absence from Dominica, by reason of illness of by reason
that he is suspended from the exercise of those functions under section
25(3) of this Constitution, those functions shall be performed-
- by such person as
may with his consent have been designated in that behalf by the holder of
the office of President, acting after consultation with the Prime
Minister and the Leader of the Opposition, by writing under his hand; or
- if there is no
person so designated or if the person so designated is unable to act, by
such person as may have been elected in that behalf by the House in
accordance with the like procedure as is prescribed by section 19 of this
Constitution for the election of the President.
- A person shall not be
qualified to act as President unless he is qualified to be elected as, and
to hold the office of President:
Provided that the Speaker or the Deputy Speaker may act
as President, in which case he shall cease to perform the functions of this
office during any period during which he is so acting.
- A person acting as
President under this section shall cease to act when he is notified-
- that another person
has been designated or elected to act; or
- that the holder of
the office of President is about to resume the performance of the
functions of his office.
CHAPTER III
PARLIAMENT
Part 1
Establishment of Parliament
Composition
29.-There shall be a Parliament of Dominica which shall consist of the
President and a House of Assembly.
Composition of House of Assembly.
30.-
- The House shall consist of-
- such number of
Representatives as corresponds with the number of constituencies for the
time being established in accordance with the provisions of section 57 of
this Constitution, who shall be elected in accordance with the provisions
of section 33 of this Constitution;
- nine Senators
appointed or elected in accordance with the provisions of section 34 of
this Constitution.
- If a person who is not a
member of the House is elected to be Speaker he shall, by virtue of
holding the office of Speaker, be a member of the House
- At any time when the office
of Attorney General is a public office, the Attorney General shall, by
virtue of holding or acting in that office, be a member of the House.
Qualifications for Representatives and Senators.
31.-
- Subject to the provisions
of section 32 of this Constitution, a person shall be qualified to be
elected as a Representative if, and shall not be so qualified unless, he-
- is a citizen of
Dominica of the age of twenty-one years or upwards;
- has resided in
Dominica for a period of twelve months immediately before the date of his
nomination for election or is domiciled and resident in Dominica at that
date; and
- is able to speak
and, unless incapacitated by blindness or other physical cause, to read
the English language with a degree of proficiency sufficient to enable
him to take an active part in the proceedings of the House.
- Subject to the provisions
of section 32 of this Constitution, a person shall be qualified unless,
he-
- is a Commonwealth
citizen of the age of twenty-one years or upwards;
- is Domiciled and
resident in Dominica at the date of his appointment or nomination for
election; and
- is able to speak
and, unless incapacitated by blindness or other physical cause, to read
the English language with a degree of proficiency sufficient to enable
him to take an active part in the proceedings of the House.
Disqualifications for Representatives and Senators.
32.-
- A person shall not be
qualified to be elected or appointed as a Representative or Senator
(hereinafter in this section referred to as a member) if he-
- is by virtue of his
own act, under any acknowledgement of allegiance, obedience or adherence
to a foreign power or state;
- is a minister of
religion;
- is an undischarged
bankrupt, having been adjudged or otherwise declared bankrupt under any
law in force in Dominica;
- is under sentence of
death imposed on him by a court of law in any part of the Commonwealth or
is serving a sentence of imprisonment (by whatever name called) exceeding
twelve months imposed on him by such a court or substituted by competent
authority for some other sentence imposed on him by such a court, or is
under such a sentence of imprisonment the execution of which has been
suspended;
- subject to such
exceptions and limitations as may be prescribed by Parliament, has an
interest in any government contract and has not, within seven days of his
nomination as a candidate for election or, as the case may be, at least
seven days before the date of his prospective appointment, disclosed the
nature of the contract and of his interest therein by means of a notice
published in the Official Gazette and in a daily or weekly newspaper
circulating in Dominica; or
- holds or is acting
in the office of President.
- If it is so provided by
Parliament, a person shall not be qualified to be elected or appointed as
a member if he holds or is acting in any office that is specified by
Parliament and the functions of which involve responsibility for, or in
connection with, the conduct of any election of members or the compilation
of any register of votes for the purpose of electing Representatives.
- If it is so provided by
Parliament, a person who is convicted by any court of law of any offence
that is prescribed by Parliament and that is connected with the election
of member or who is reported guilty of such an offence by the court trying
and election petition shall not be qualified, for such period (not
exceeding seven years) following his conviction or, as the case may be,
following the report of the court as may be so prescribed, to be elected
or appointed as a member.
- A person shall not be
qualified to be elected as a Representative if he is a Senator or is
nominated for election as a Senator; and a person shall not be qualified
to be appointed or elected as a Senator if he is a Representative or is
nominated for election as a Representative.
- If it is so provided by
Parliament and subject to such exceptions and limitations (if any) as
Parliament may prescribe, a person shall not be qualified to be elected or
appointed as a member if-
- he holds or is
acting in any office or appointment (whether specified individually or by
reference to a class of office or appointment);
- he belongs to any of
the armed forces of Dominica or to any class of person that is comprised
in any such force; or
- he belongs to any
police force or to any class of person that is comprised in any such
force.
- In subsection (1) of this
section-
"government contract" means any contract made
with the Government or with a department of the Government or with an officer
of the Government contracting as such; "minister of religion" means
any person in holy orders and any other person the functions of whose principal
occupation include teaching or preaching in any congregation for religious
worship.
- For the purposes of
paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of this section-
- two or more
sentences of imprisonment that are required to be served consecutively
shall be regarded as separate sentences if none of those sentences
exceeds twelve months, but if any one of such sentences exceeds that term
they shall be regarded as one sentence; and
- no account shall be
taken of a sentence of imprisonment imposed as an alternative to or in
default of the payment of a fine.
Election of Representatives.
33.-
- Each of the constituencies
established in accordance with the provisions of section 57 of this
Constitution shall return one Representative to the House who shall be
directly elected in such manner as may, subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, be prescribed by or under any law.
- Every Commonwealth
citizen of the age of eighteen years or upwards who possesses such
qualifications relating to residence or domicile in Dominica as
Parliament may prescribed shall, unless he is disqualified by Parliament
from registration as a voter for the purpose of electing Representative,
be entitled to be registered as such a voter in accordance with the
provisions of any law in that behalf, and no other person may be
registered.
- Every person who is
registered as aforesaid in any constituency shall, unless he is
disqualified by Parliament from voting in that constituency in any
election of Representative, be entitled so to vote, in accordance with
the provisions of any law in that behalf, and no other person may so
vote.
- In any election of
Representative the votes shall be given by ballot in such manner as not to
disclose how any particular person votes.
Appointment or election of Senators.
34.-
- Of the Senators-
- five shall be
appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Prime Minister; and
- four shall be
appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Leader of the Opposition;
Provided that, if it is so prescribed by Parliament,
the Senators shall, instead of being appointed under the foregoing provisions
of this section, be elected, in accordance with such provision as may be made
by Parliament in that behalf.
- Where Parliament makes
provision for voting for the purpose of electing Senators, the persons
entitled to vote shall be the person entitled to vote for the purpose of
electing Representatives and no other persons and the votes shall be given
by ballot in such manner as not to disclose how any particular person
votes.
Tenure of office of Representatives and Senators
35.-
- A representative or a
Senator (hereinafter in this section referred to as a member) shall vacate
his seat in the House at the next dissolution of Parliament after his
election or appointment.
- A Senator appointed in
accordance with the provisions of paragraph (a) of section 34 of this
Constitution shall vacate his seat in the House if his appointment is
revoked by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Prime Minister, and a Senator appointed in accordance with the provisions
of paragraph (b) of that section shall vacate his seat in the House if his
appointment is revoked by the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Leader of the Opposition.
- A member shall also vacate
his seat in the House-
- if he is absent from
the sitting of the House for such period and in such circumstances as may
be prescribed in the rules of procedure of the House;
- in the case of a
Representative, if he ceases to be a citizen of Dominica or, in the case
of a Senator if he ceases to be a Commonwealth citizen;
- subject to the
provisions of subsection (4) of this section, if any other circumstances
arise that, if he were not a member, would cause him to be disqualified
to be elected or appointed as such by virtue of subsection (1) of section
32 of this Constitution or by virtue of any law enacted in pursuance of
subsection (2), (3) or (5) of that section;
- if he is elected to
be President; or
- if (not being the
Speaker or the Deputy Speaker) he is elected to act as President.
- If any circumstances
such as are referred to in paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of this
section arise because any member is under sentence of death or
imprisonment, adjudged to be of unsound mind, declared bankrupt or
convicted or reported guilty of an offence relating to elections and if
it is open to the member to appeal against the decision (either with the
leave of a court of law or other authority or without such leave), he
shall forthwith cease to perform his functions as a member but, subject
to the provisions of this section, he shall not vacate his seat until the
expiration of a period of thirty days thereafter.
Provided that the Speaker may, at the request of
the member, from time to time extend that period for further periods of thirty
days to ever, that extensions of time exceeding in the aggregate one hundred
and fifty days shall not be given without the approval, signified by
resolution, of the House.
- If, on the
determination of any appeal, such circumstances continue to exist and no
further appeal is open to the member, or if, by reason of the expiration
of any period for entering an appeal or notice thereof or the refusal of
leave to appeal or for any other reason, it ceases to be open to the
member to appeal, he shall forthwith vacate his seat.
- If at any time
before the member vacates his seat such circumstances aforesaid cease to
exist, his seat shall not become vacant on the expiration of the period
referred to in paragraph (a) of this subsection and he may resume the
performance of his functions as a member.
Speaker.
36.-
- When the House first meets
after any general election of Representatives and before it proceeds to
the despatch of any other business, it shall elect a person to be the
Speaker of the House; and if the office of Speaker falls vacant at any
time before the next disolution of Parliament, the House shall, as soon as
practicable, elect another person to that office.
- The Speaker may be elected
either from among the members of the House who are not members of the
Cabinet or Parliamentary Secretaries or from among persons who are not
members of the House:
Provided that a person who is not a member of the House
shall not be elected as Speaker if-
- he is not a
Commonwealth citizen; or
- he is a person
disqualified to be elected or appointed as a Representative or Senator by
virtue of subsection (1) of section 32 of this Constitution or by virtue
of any law enacted in pursuance of subsection 82), (3) or (5) of that
section.
- No business shall be
transacted in the House (other than the election of a Speaker) at any time
when the office of Speaker is vacant.
- A person shall vacate the
office of Speaker-
- in the case of a
Speaker who was elected from among the members of the House-
- if he ceases to be
a member of the House:
Provided that the Speaker shall not vacate his office by reason only
that he has cease to be a member of the House on a dissolution of
Parliament, until the House first meets after the dissolution; or
- if he becomes a
member of the Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary;
- in the case of a
Speaker who was elected from among persons who were not members of the
House-
- when the House
first meets after any dissolution of Parliament;
- if he ceases to be
a Commonwealth citizen;
- if any
circumstances arise that would a cause him to be disqualified to be
elected or appointed as a Representative or Senator by virtue of
subsection (1) of section 32 of this Constitution or by virtue of any
law enacted in pursuance of subsection (2), (3) or 85) of that section;
or
- if he is elected to
be President.
- If, by virtue of section 35(4)
of this Constitution, the Speaker (being a Representative or a Senator) is
required to cease to perform his functions as a member of the House he
shall also cease to perform his functions as Speaker; and if the Speaker
resumes the performance of his functions as a member of the House, in
accordance with the provisions of that section, he shall also resume the
performance of his functions as Speaker.
- At any time when, by virtue
of section 28(2) or section 35(4) of this Constitution, the Speaker is unable
to perform the functions of his office, those functions shall, until he
vacates his seat in the House or resumes the performance of the functions
of his office, be performed by the Deputy Speaker or, if the office of
Deputy Speaker is vacant or the Deputy Speaker is required to cease to
perform his functions as a member of the House by virtue of section 28(2)
or 35(4) of this Constitution, by such member of the House (not being a
member of the Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary) as the House may elect
for the purpose.
Deputy Speaker.
37.-
- When the House first meets
after any general election of Representatives and before it proceeds to
the despatch of any other business except the election fo the Speaker, the
House shall elect a member of the House, who is not a member of the
Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary, to be Deputy Speaker of the House,
and if the office of Deputy Speaker falls vacant at any time before the
next dissolution of Parliament, the House shall, as soon as convenient,
elect another member of the House to that office.
- A person shall vacate the
office of Deputy Speaker-
- if he ceases to be
a member of the House;
- if he becomes a
member of the Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary; or
- if he is elected to
be Speaker.
- If, by virtue of section
35(4) of this Constitution, the Deputy Speaker is required to cease to
perform his functions as a member of the House he shall also cease to
perform his functions as Deputy Speaker resumes the performance with the
provisions of the section, he shall also resume the performance of his
functions as Deputy Speaker.
- At any time when, by
virtue of section 28(2) or section 35(4) of this Constitution, the Deputy
Speaker is unable to perform the functions of this office, those functions
shall, until he vacates his seat in the House or resumes the performance
of the functions of this office, be performed by such member of the House
(not being a member of the Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary) as the
House may elect for the purpose.
Responsibility for elections.
38.-
- The Electoral Commission
shall be responsible for the registration of voters for the purpose of
electing representatives and for the conduct of elections of
Representatives and Senators and shall have such powers and other
functions relating to such registration and elections as may be prescribed
by law.
- In the discharge or its
functions the Electoral Commission shall be assisted by a Chief Elections
Officer, whose office shall be a public office, and the Commission may
give such directions as it considers necessary or expedient to the
Officer, who shall comply with such directions or cause them to be
complied with.
- For the purposes of the
exercise of his functions under subsection (2) of this section, the Chief
Elections Officer may give such directions as he considers necessary or
expedient to any registering officer, presiding officer or returning
officer relating to the exercise by that officer of his functions under
any law regulating the registration of voters or the conduct of elections,
and any officers to whom directions are given under this subsection shall
comply with those directions.
- The Electoral Commission
may make such reports to the President concerning the matters for which it
is responsible under his section, or any draft bill or instrument that is
referred to it under section 51 of this Constitution, as it may think fit
and if the Commission so request in any such report other than a report on
a draft bill or instrument that report shall be laid before the House.
- Without prejudice to the
provisions of subsection (2) of this section, in the exercise of his
functions under this section the CHief Elections Officer shall not be
subject to the directions or control of any other person or authority.
- The Question whether the
Chief Elections Officer has acted in accordance with the directions of the
Electoral Commission shall not be enquired into in any court of law.
Clerk of House and his staff.
39. -
- There shall be a Clerk of
the House
- The office of the Clerk of
the House and the offices of the members of his staff shall be public
offices
Determination of questions of memberships
40.-
- The High Court shall have
jurisdiction to hear and determine any question whether-
- any person has been
validly elected as a Representative or Senator;
- any person has been
validly appointed as a Senator;
- any person who has
been elected as Speaker from among persons who were not members of the
House was qualified to be so elected or has vacated the office of
Speaker; or
- any member of the
House has vacated his seat or is required, under the provisions of
section 35(4) of this Constitution, to cease to perform any of this
functions as a member of the House.
- An application to the High
Court for the determination of any question under subsection (1)(a) of
this section may be made by any person entitled to vote in the election to
which the application relates or by any person who was a candidate at that
election or by the Attorney General and, if it is made by a person other than
the Attorney-General, the Attorney-General may intervene and may then
appear or be represented in the proceedings.
- An application to the High
Court for the determination of any question under subsection (1)(b) or
subsection (1)(c) of this section may be made by any elected member of the
House or by the Attorney-General and, if it is made by a person other than
the Attorney-General, the Attorney-General may intervene and may then
appear or be represented in the proceedings.
- An application to the High Court
for the determination of any question under subsection (1)(d) of this
section may be made-
- by any elected
member of the House or by the Attorney-General; or
- in the case of the
seat of an elected member of the House, by any person registered in some
constituency as a voter for the purpose of selecting Representatives,
and, if it is made by a person other than the
Attorney-General, the Attorney-General may intervene and may then appear or be
represented in the proceedings.
- The circumstances and matter
in which and the imposition of conditions upon which any application my be
made to the High Court for the determination of any question under this
section and the powers, practice and procedure of the High Court in
relation to any such application shall be regulated by such provision as
may be made by Parliament.
- An appeal shall lie as of
right to the Court of Appeal from any final decision of the High Court
determining such a question as is referred to in subsection (1) of this
section,
- No appeal shall lie from
any decision of the Court of Appeal in exercise of the jurisdiction
conferred by subsection (6) of this section and no appeal shall lie from
any decision of the High Court in proceedings under this section other
than a final decision determining such a question as is referred to in
subsection (1) of this section.
- In the exercise of his
functions under this section, the Attorney-General shall not be subject to
the direction or control of any other person or authority.
Part 2
Legislation and procedure of Parliament
Power to make laws.
41.- Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, Parliament may make
laws for the peace, order and good government of Dominica.
Alteration of Constitution and Supreme Court Order.
42.-
- Parliament may alter any of
the provisions of this Constitution or of the Supreme Court Order in the
manner specified in the following provisions of this section.
- A bill to alter this
section, Schedule 1 to this Constitution or any of the provisions of this
Constitution specified in Part I of that Schedule or any of the provisions
of the Supreme Court Order specified in Part II of that Schedule shall not
be regarded as being passed by the House of Assembly unless on its final
reading in the House the bill is supported by the votes of not less than
three-quarters of all the elected members of the House; and a bill to
alter any of the provisions of this Constitution or, as the case may be,
of the Supreme Court Order not so specified shall not be regarded as being
passed by the House unless on its final reading in that House the bill is
supported by the votes of not less than two-thirds of all the elected
members of the House.
- A bill to alter any of the
provisions of this Constitution or the Supreme Court Order shall not be
submitted to the President for his assent-
- unless there has
been an interval of no less than ninety days between the introduction of
the bill in the House of Assembly and the beginning of the proceedings in
the House on the second reading of the bill; and
- if the bill provides
for the alteration of this section, Schedule 1 to this Constitution or
any other provisions of this Constitution or the Supreme Court Order
specified in that Schedule Court Order specified in that Schedule, unless
after it has been passed by the House the bill has been approved on a
referendum, held in accordance with such provision as may be made in that
behalf by Parliament, by a majority of the votes validly cast on that
referendum.
- The provisions of paragraph
(b) of subsection (3) of this section shall not apply in relation to any
bill to alter-
- section 106 of this
Constitution in order to give effect to any agreement between Dominica
and the United Kingdom concerning appeals from any court having
jurisdiction in Dominica to the Judicial Committee;
- any of the
provisions of the Supreme Court Order in order to give effect to any
international agreement to which Dominica is a party relating to the
Supreme Court or any other court (or any office or authority having
functions in respect of any such court) constituted in common for
Dominica and for other countries also parties to the agreement.
- Every person who, at the
time when the referendum is held, would be entitled to vote for the
purpose of electing Representatives shall be entitled to vote on a
referendum held for the purposes of this section in accordance with such
procedure as may be prescribed by Parliament for the purposes of the
referendum and no other person shall be entitled so to vote.
- In any referendum for the
purposes of this section the votes shall be given by ballot in such manner
as not to disclose how any particular person votes.
- The conduct of any
referendum for the purposes of this section shall be the responsibility of
the Electoral Commission and the provisions of sections 38 and 51 of this
Constitution shall apply in relation to the referendum and legislation
relating thereto as they apply in relation to the exercise of their
functions with respect to elections of Representatives and legislation relating
thereto.
-
- A bill to alter any
of the provisions of this Constitution or the Supreme Court Order shall
not be submitted to the President for his assent unless it is accompanied
by a certificate under the hand of the Speaker that the provisions of subsections
(2) and (3) of this section have been complied with.
- The certificate of
the Speaker under this subsection shall be conclusive that the provisions
of subsections (2) and (3) of this section have been complied with and
shall not be enquired into in any court of law.
- In this subsection
references to the Speaker shall, if the person holding the office of
Speaker is for any reason unable to perform the functions of his office
and no other person is performing them, include references to the Deputy
Speaker.
- In this section and
Schedule 1 to this Constitution references to any of the provisions of
this Constitution or the Supreme Court Order include references to any law
that alters that provision.
Freedom of Speech.
43.- Without prejudice to any provisions made by Parliament relating to
the powers, privileges and immunities of the House and its committees, or the
privileges and immunities of the members and officers of the House and of other
persons concerned in the business of the House or its committees, no civil or
criminal proceedings may be instituted against any member of the House for
words spoken before, or written in a report to, the House or a committee
thereof or by reason of any matter or thing brought by him therein by petition,
bull, resolution, motion or otherwise.
Oath by members.
44.-
- Every member of the House
shall, before taking his seat in the house, take and subscribe before the
House the oath of allegiance but a member may before taking that oath take
part in the election of the Speaker.
- Any person elected to the
office of Speaker shall, if he has not already taken and subscribed the
oath of allegiance under subsection (1) of this section, take and
subscribe that oath before the House before entering upon the duties of
his office.
Presiding.
45.- There shall preside at any sitting of the House-
- the Speaker;
- in the absence of the
Speaker, the Deputy Speaker; or
- in the absence of the
Speaker and the Deputy Speaker, such member of he House (not being a
member of he Cabinet or a Parliamentary Secretary) as the House may elect
for that purpose.
Voting.
46.-
- Save as otherwise provided
in sections 17(2), 17(4), 19(5), 25(1) and 42(2) of this Constitution, any
question proposed for decision in the House shall be determined by a
majority of the votes of the members present and voting:
Provided that question of no confidence in the
Government shall be determined by a majority of the votes of all the elected
members of the House.
- A question shall not be
regarded as having been validly determined by a vote in the House unless
at least twelve members, or such greater number of members as Parliament
may prescribe, take part in the voting.
- The references to all the
members of the House in sections 17(2), 174), 19(5) and 25(1) of this
Constitution shall not include the Speaker if he was elected from among
persons who were not members of the House.
- A Speaker who was elected
from among the members of the House or another member presiding in the House
shall not vote unless on any question the votes are equally divided, in
which case he shall have and exercise a casting vote:
Provided that in the case of the question of the final
reading of such a bill as is referred to in section 42(2) of this Constitution
he shall, if he is an elected member of the House, have an original vote but no
casting vote.
- A Speaker who was elected
from among persons who were not members of the House shall have neither an
original nor a casting vote.
- If, upon any question
before the House, the votes of the members are equally divided and no
casting vote may be exercised, the motion shall be lost.
Effect of vacancies, etc.
47.- The House may act notwithstanding any vacancy in its membership
(including any vacancy not filled when the House first meets after any general
election of Representatives or Senators) and the presence or participation of
any person not entitled to be present at or to participate in the proceedings
of the House shall not invalidate those proceedings.
Penalty for sitting if unqualified.
48.-
- Any person who sits or votes
in the House knowing or having reasonable grounds for knowing that he is
not entitled to do so shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine
not exceeding one hundred dollars, or such other sum as may be prescribed
by Parliament, for each day on which he so sits or votes in the House.
- Any prosecution for an
offence under this section shall be instituted in the High Court and shall
not be so instituted except by the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Mode of exercise of legislative power.
49.-
- The power of Parliament to
make laws shall be exercised by bills passed by the House and assented to
by the President.
- When a bill is submitted to
the President for assent in accordance with the provisions of this
Constitution he shall signify that he assents.
- When the President assents
to a bill that has been submitted to him in accordance with the provisions
of this Constitution the bill shall become law and the President shall
thereupon cause it to be published in the Official Gazette as law.
- No law made by Parliament
shall come into operation until it has been published in the Official
Gazette but Parliament may postpone the coming into operation of any such
law and may make laws with retrospective effect.
Restrictions with regard to certain financial measures.
50.- Except on the recommendation of the President signified by a
Minister, the House shall not-
- proceed upon any bill
(including any amendment to a bill) that, in the opinion of the person
presiding, makes provisions for any of the following purposes:-
- for the imposition
of taxation or the alteration of taxation otherwise than by reduction;
- for the imposition
of any charge upon the Consolidated Fund or any other public fund of
Dominica or the alteration of any such charge otherwise than by
reduction;
- for the payment,
issue or withdrawal from the Consolidated Fund or any other public fund
Dominica of any monies not charged thereon or any increase in the amount
of such payment, issue or withdrawal; or
- for the composition
or remission of any debt due to the Government; or
- proceed upon any motion
(including any amendment to a motion) the effect of which, in the opinion
of the person presiding, would be to make provision for any of those
purposes.
Scrutiny of electoral legislation:
51.- Every proposed bill and every proposed regulation or other
instrument having the force of law relating to the registration of electors for
the purpose of electing Representatives or to the election of Representatives
and Senators shall be referred to the Electoral Commission and to the Chief
Elections Officer at such time as shall give them sufficient opportunity to
make comments thereon before the bill is introduced in the House or, as the
case may be, the regulation or other instrument is made.
Regulation of Procedure in House.
52.- Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, the House may
regulate its own procedure and may in particular make rules for the orderly
conduct of its own proceedings.
Part 3
Summoning, prorogation and dissolution
Sessions.
53.-
- Each session of Parliament
shall be held at such place within Dominica and shall commence at such
time as the President may by Proclamation appoint.
- There shall be a session of
Parliament once at least in every year, so that a period of six months
shall not intervene between the last sitting of the House in one session
and the first sitting thereof in the next session.
Prorogation and dissolution.
54.-
- The President may at any
time prorogue or dissolve Parliament.
- Subject to the provisions of
subsection (3) of this section Parliament, unless sooner dissolved, shall
continue for five years from the date of the first sitting of the House
after any dissolution and shall then stand dissolved.
- At any time when Dominica is
at war, Parliament may extent the period of five years specified in
subsection (2) of this section for not more than twelve months at a time:
provided that the life of Parliament shall not be
extended under this subsection for more than five years.
- In the exercise of his
powers to dissolve Parliament, the president shall act in accordance with
the advice of the Prime Minister:
Provided that if the office of the Prime Minister
is vacant and the President, acting in his own deliberate judgement, considers
that there is no prospect of his being able within a reasonable time to appoint
to that office a person who can command the support of the majority of the
elected members of the House, the President shall dissolve parliament.
- If, after a dissolution of
Parliament and before the holding of the general election of
Representatives, the Prime Minister advises the President that, owing to
the existence of a state of war or of a state of emergency in Dominica, it
is necessary to recall parliament, the President shall summon the
Parliament that has been dissolved to meet, but, unless the life of
Parliament is extended under the provisions of subsection (3) of this
section, the general election of Representatives shall proceed and the
Parliament that has been recalled shall, if not sooner dissolved, again
stand dissolved on the date appointed for the nomination of candidates in
that general election.
Holding of elections.
55.-
- A general election of
Representatives or, where provision has been made by Parliament for the
election of the Senators, a general election of Senators shall be held at
such time within three months after any dissolution of Parliament as the
President may appoint for that election.
- As soon as practicable
after the holding of any general election of Representatives the President
shall, unless provision has been made by Parliament for their election,
proceed to the appointment of he Senators in accordance with the provisions
of section 34 of this Constitution.
- Where the seat of a
Representative or Senator falls vacant otherwise than by reason of a
dissolution of the House-
- if the vacant seat
is that of a Representative, a by-election shall be held;
- if the vacant seat is
that of a Senator who has been appointed, an appointment shall be made;
or
- if the vacant seat
is that of a Senator who has been elected, such electoral proceedings as
may be prescribed shall be taken,
to fill the vacancy within three months of the occurrence of
the vacancy unless the House is sooner dissolved.
Part 4
Constituency Boundaries and Electoral Commissions
Constituency Boundaries Commission and Electoral Commission.
56.-
- There shall be a
Constituency Boundaries Commission and an Electoral Commission for
Dominica each of which is hereinafter in this section referred to as a
Commission).
- The Constituency Boundaries
Commission shall consist of
- the Speaker, as
chairman;
- two members appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime
Minister; and
- two members appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Leader of
the Opposition.
- The Electoral Commission
shall consist of-
- a chairman appointed
by the President, acting in his own deliberate judgement;
- two members appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime
Minister; and
- Two members appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the leader of
the opposition:
Provided that for the purpose of paragraph (b) or (c) of this subsection
(and without prejudice to the provisions of section 63(2) of this
Constitution), the President shall act in his own deliberate judgement
and without the advice of the Prime Minister or, as the case may be, the
advice of the Leader of the Opposition, if, having requested that advice,
he does not receive it within thirty days.
- A person shall to be
qualified to be appointed as a member of a Commission if he is a member of
the House or a public officer not, in the case of the chairman of the
Electoral Commission, unless he holds one of the specified qualifications
and has held one or other of those qualifications for a total period of
not less than seven years.
- Subject to the provisions of
this section, a member of a Commission who has been appointed shall vacate
his office-
- When the House first
meets after the next dissolution of Parliament after his appointment;
- if any circumstances
arise that, if he were not a member of the Commission, would cause him to
be disqualified for appointment as such.
- A member of a Commission who
has been appointed may be removed from office but only for inability to
discharge the functions thereof (whether arising from inability to
discharge the functions thereof (whether arising from infirmity of mind or
body or any other cause) or for misbehaviour, and shall not be so removed
except in accordance with the provisions of this section.
- A member of a Commission who
has been appointed shall be removed from office by the President if the
question of his removal from office has been referred to a tribunal
appointed under subsection (8) of this section and the tribunal has
recommended to the President that he ought to be removed from office for
inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- If the Prime Minister, in
the case of a member of the Constituency Boundaries Commission appointed
in accordance with paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of this section, to the
Leader of the Opposition, in the case of a member of that Commission
appointed in accordance with paragraph (c) of that subsection, represents
to the President or if, in the case of the chairman of the Electoral
Commission, the President, acting in his own deliberate judgement, and, in
the case of any other member of that Commission, the President, acting
after consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the
Opposition, considers that the question of removal of a member of the
Commission from office for inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour ought
to be investigated, then-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal, which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members, selected by the Chief Justice, from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction appeals from any such court;
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to the President whether the member of the Commission ought
to be removed from office for inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- A Commission may regulate
its own procedure, and, with the consent of the Prime Minister, confer
powers and impose duties on any public officer or on any authority of the
Government of Dominica for the purpose of the discharge of its functions.
- A Commission may, subject to
its rules of procedure, act notwithstanding any vacancy in its membership
and its proceedings shall not be invalidated by the presence or
participation of any person not entitled to be present at or to
participate in those proceedings:
Provided that any decision of the Commission shall
require the concurrence of a majority of all its members.
- In the exercise of its
functions under this Constitution a Commission shall not be subject to the
direction or control of any other person or authority.
Part 5
Delimitation of constituencies
Review of constituency boundaries.
57.-
- The Electoral Boundaries
Commission (hereinafter in this section referred to as the Commission)
shall, in accordance with the provisions of this section, review the
number and boundaries of the constituencies into which Dominica is divided
and submit to the President reports either-
- Showing the
constituencies into which it recommends that Dominica should be divided
in order to give effect to the rules set out in Schedule 2 to this
Constitution; or
- stating that, in his
opinion, on alterations required to the existing number or boundaries of
constituencies in order to give effect to those rules.
- Reports under subsection
(1) of this section shall be submitted by the Commission at intervals of
not less than two nor more than five years.
- As soon as may be after the
Commission has submitted a report under subsection (1)(a) of this section,
the Prime Minister shall lay before the House for its approval the draft
of an order by the President for giving effect, whether with or without
modifications, to the recommendations contained in the report, and that
draft order may make provision for any matters that appear to the Prime
Minister to be incidental to or consequential upon the other provisions of
the draft.
- Where any such draft order
gives effect of any such recommendations with modifications, the Prime
Minister shall lay before the House together with the draft order a
statement of the reasons for the modifications.
- If the motion for the
approval of any draft order laid before the House under this section is
rejected by the House, or is withdrawn by leave of that House, the Prime
Minister shall amend the draft order and lay the amended draft before the
House.
- If any draft order laid
before the House under this section is approved by resolution of the
House, the Prime Minister shall submit it to the President who shall make
an order in terms of the draft; and that order shall come into force upon
the next dissolution of Parliament after it is made.
- The question of the
validity of any order by the President purporting to be made under this section
and reciting that a draft thereof has been approved by resolution of the
House shall not be enquired into in any court of law.
- Parliament may provide for
an appeal to the High Court against a recommendation or statement made to
the President by the Commission in pursuance or paragraph (a) or (b) of
subsection (1) of this section.
CHAPTER IV
THE EXECUTIVE
Executive authority of Dominica.
58.-
- The executive authority of
Dominica is vested in the President.
- Subject to the provisions
of this Constitution, the executive authority of Dominica may be exercised
by the President either directly or through officers subordinate to him.
- Nothing in this section
shall prevent Parliament from conferring functions on persons or
authorities other than the President.
Ministers of the Government.
59.-
- There shall be a Prime
Minister of Dominica, who shall be appointed by the President.
- Whenever the President has
occasion to appoint a Prime Minister he shall appoint an elected member of
the House who appears to him likely to command the support of the majority
of the elected members of the House.
- There shall be, in
addition to the office of Prime Minister, such other office of Minister of
the Government as may be established by Parliament or, subject to the
provisions of any law enacted by Parliament, by the President, acting in
accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister.
- Appointments to the office
of Ministers, other than the office of Prime Minister, shall be made by
the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister,
from among the members of the House:
Provided that not more than three Ministers shall
be appointed from among Senators who have been appointed as such.
- If occasion arises for
making an appointment to the office of Prime Minister or any other
Minister while Parliament is dissolved, then, notwithstanding the
provisions of subsections (2) and (4) of this section (but subject to the
provision to subsection (4)), a person who was an elected member of the
House immediately before the dissolution may be appointed as Prime
Minister or any other Minister and a person who was a Senator immediately
before the dissolution, having been appointed as such, may be appointed as
any Minister other than Prime Minister.
- The President shall remove
the Prime Minister from office if a resolution of no confidence in the
Government is passed by the House and the Prime Minister does not within
three days either resign from his office or advise the President to
dissolve Parliament.
- If, at any time between
the holding of a general election of Representatives and the first meeting
of the House thereafter, the President considers that in consequence of
changes in the membership of the house resulting from that election and of
any general election of Senator the Prime Minister will not be able to
command the support of the majority of the elected members of the House
the President may remove the Prime Minister from office.
- The office of any Minister
shall become vacant-
- if the holder of
the office ceases to be a member of the House otherwise than by reason of
the dissolution of Parliament;
- in the case of the
Prime Minister, if, when the House first meets after the dissolution of
Parliament, he is not then an elected member of the House; or
- in the case of any
other Minister, if when the House first meets after the dissolution of
Parliament, he is not then a member of the House.
- if, by virtue of
section 35(4) of this Constitution, he is required to cease to perform
his functions as a member of the House.
- The office of a Minister
other than the Prime Minister shall become vacant-
- if the President,
acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister, so directs;
- if the Prime
Minister resigns from office within three days after a resolution of no
confidence in the Government has been passed by the House or is removed
from office under subsection (6) of this section; or
- on the appointment
of any person to the office of Prime Minster.
- In the exercise of the
power conferred upon him by subsections (2), (5) and (7) of this section
the President shall act in his own deliberate judgement.
Cabinet of Ministers.
60.-
- There shall be a Cabinet of
Ministers for Dominica which shall consist of the Prime Minister and the
other Ministers.
- At any time when the office
of Attorney-General is a public office, the Attorney-General shall, by
virtue of holding or acting in that office, be a member of the Cabinet in
addition to the Ministers.
- The functions of the
Cabinet shall be to advise the President in the government of Dominica and
the Cabinet shall be collectively responsible to Parliament for any advice
given to the President by or under the general authority of the Cabinet
and for all things done by or under the authority of any Minster in the
execution of his office.
- The provisions of
subsection (3) of this section shall not apply in relation to-
- the appointment and
removal from office of ministers, temporary Ministers and Parliamentary
Secretaries, the assignment of responsibility to any Minister under
section 61 of this Constitution, or the authorisation of another minister
to perform the functions of the Prime Minster during absence or illness;
- the dissolution of
Parliament; or
- the matters referred
to in section 73 of this Constitution (which relate to the prerogative of
mercy).
Allocation of portfolios to Ministers.
61.- The President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime
Minister, may, by directions in writing, assign to the Prime Minster or any
other Minster responsibility for any business of the Government, including the
administration of any department of government:
Provided that responsibility for finance shall be assigned to a Minister who
is an elected member of the House.
Performance of functions of Ministers during absence or illness.
62.-
- Whenever the Prime Minister
is absent from Dominica or by reason of illness is unable to perform the
functions conferred upon him by this Constitution, the President may
authorise some other Minster to perform those functions (other than the
functions conferred by this section) and the Minister may perform those
functions until his authority is revoked by the President.
- Whenever a Minster other
than the Prime Minster is absent from Dominica but by leave of the
President is not performing the functions of his office or by reason of
illness is unable to perform those functions, the President may authorize
some other Minister to perform those functions or may appoint a member of
the House of Assembly to be a temporary Minister in order to perform those
functions; and that Minister or temporary Minister may perform those
functions until his authority or, as the case may be, his appointment is
revoked by the President:
Provided that the office of a temporary Minister
shall become vacant if any circumstances arise that, if he were a Minister,
would cause him to vacate office as such.
- The powers of the President
under his section shall be exercised by him in accordance with the advice
of the Prime Minister:
Provided that if the President, acting in his own
deliberate judgement, considers that it is impracticable to obtain the advice
of the Prime Minister owing to his absence or illness he may exercise those
powers without that advice and in his own deliberate judgement.
Exercise of President's functions.
63.-
- In the exercise of his
functions the President shall act in accordance with the advice of the
Cabinet or a Minister acting under the general authority of the Cabinet
except in cases where he is required by this Constitution or any other law
to act in accordance with the advice of, or after consultation with, any
person or authority other than the Cabinet:
Provided that the foregoing provisions of this
subsection shall not apply where the President is authorised to act in his own
deliberate judgement in accordance with the following provisions of this
Constitution-
- section 56 (which
relates to the Constituency Boundaries Commission and the Electoral
Commission);
- sections 59 and 62
(which relate to Ministers);
- section 66 (which
relates to the Leader of the Opposition);
- section 85 (which
relates to the appointment, etc., of public officers);
- section 87 (which
relates to the Chief Elections Officer);
- section 93 (which
relates to the Public Service Board of Appeal); and
- section 108 (which
relates to the Parliamentary Commissioner).
- During any period in which
there is a vacancy in the office of Leader of the Opposition by reason of
the fact that no person is both qualified for appointment to that office
in accordance with this Constitution and willing to accept appointment, or
if the President, acting in his own deliberate judgement, considers that
it is not practicable for his to ovtain the advice of the Leader of the
Opposition within the time within which it may be necessary for him to
act,, he may act without that advice and in his own deliberate judgement
in the exercise of any power conferred upon him by this Constitution in respect
of which it is provided that he shall act on the advice of, or after
consultation with, the Leader of the Opposition.
- Nothing in subsection (1)
of this section shall require the President to act in accordance with the
advice of the Cabinet or a Minister in exercise of the functions conferred
upon him by the following provisions of this Constitution;
- the provision to
section 54(4) (which requires the President to dissolve Parliament in
certain circumstances);
- section 59(6) (which
requires the President to remove the Prime Minister from office in
certain circumstances);
- section 64 (which
entitles the President to information);
- sections 56(5),
66(4), 84(6), 87(7), 88(8), 89(7), and 108(7) (which require the
President to remove the holders of certain offices from office in certain
circumstances).
President to be informed concerning matters of
government.
64.- The Prime Minister shall keep the President fully informed
concerning the general conduct of the government of Dominica and shall furnish
the President with such information as he may request with respect to any
particular matter relating to the government of Dominica.
Oaths to be taken by Ministers; etc.
65.-A Minister or a Parliamentary Secretary shall not enter upon the
duties of his office unless he has taken and subscribed the oat of allegiance,
the oath of office and the oath of secrecy.
Leader of the Opposition.
66.-
- There shall be a Leader of
the Opposition who shall be appointed by the President.
- Whenever there is occasion
for the appointment of a Leader of the Opposition the President shall
appoint the elected member of the House who appears to him most likely to
command the support of a majority of the elected members of the House who
do not support the Government: or, if no elected member of the House
appears to him to command such support, the elected member of the House
who appears to him to command the support of the largest single group of
members of the House who do not support the Government:
Provided that if a member of the House was elected
at a general election in which he stood as a supporter of a political party and
the majority of members of the House elected at that time (whether as
Representatives or Senators) stood as supporters of that party, he shall, so
long as he remains a member of the House by virtue of that election, not be
eligible for appointment as Leader of the Opposition.
- If occasion arises to
appoint a Leader of the Opposition during the period between a dissolution
of Parliament and the day on which the ensuing election of Representative
is held, an appointment may be made as if Parliament had not been
dissolved.
- The office of Leader of the
Opposition shall become vacant-
- if he ceases to be a
member of the House otherwise than by reason of a dissolution of
Parliament;
- if, when the House
first meets after a dissolution of Parliament, he is not then a member of
the House;
- if, under the
provisions of section 35(4) of this Constitution, he is required to cease
to perform his functions as a member of the House; or
- if he is removed
from office by the President under the provisions of subsection (4) of
this section.
- If it appears to the
President that the Leader of the Opposition is no longer able to command
the support of a majority of the elected members of the House who do not
support the Government or (if no elected member of the House appears to
him to be able to command such support) the support of the largest single
group of members of the House who do not support the Government, he shall
remove the Leader of the Opposition from office.
- The powers of the President
under this section shall be exercised by him in his own deliberate
judgement.
Parliamentary Secretaries.
67.-
- The President, acting in
accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister, may appoint
Parliamentary Secretaries from among the members of the House to assist
Ministers in the performance of their duties:
Provided that, if occasion arises for making an
appointment while Parliament is dissolved a person who was a member of the
House immediately before the dissolution may be appointed as a Parliamentary
Secretary.
- The office of a
Parliamentary Secretary shall become vacant-
- if the President,
acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister, so directs;
- if the Prime
Minister resigns from office within three days or a resolution of no
confidence in the Government has been passed by the House or is removed
from office under section 59(6) of this Constitution;
- upon the appointment
of any person to the office of Prime Minister;
- if the holder of the
office ceases to be a member of the House otherwise than by reason of a
dissolution of Parliament;
- if, when the House
first meets after the dissolution of Parliament, he is not then a member
of the House; or
- if, by virtue of
section 35(4) of this Constitution, he is required to cease to perform
his functions as a member of the House.
Permanent secretaries.
68.- Where any Minister has been charged with responsibility for any
department of government, he shall exercise general direction and control over
that department of government shall be under the supervision of a public
officer whose office is referred to in this Constitution as the office of a
permanent secretary;
Provided that two or more government departments may be placed under the
supervision of one permanent secretary.
Secretary to the Cabinet.
69.-
- There shall be a Secretary
to the Cabinet whose office shall be a public office.
- The Secretary to the
Cabinet, who shall have charge of the Cabinet Office, shall be
responsible, in accordance with such instructions as may be given to him
by the Prime Minister, for arranging the business for, and keeping the
minutes of, the Cabinet and for conveying the decisions of the Cabinet to
the appropriate person or authority and shall have such other functions as
the Prime Minister may direct.
Constitution of offices, etc.
70.- Subject to the provisions of this Constitution and of any other
law, the President may constitute offices for Dominica, make appointments to
any such office and terminate any such appointment.
Attorney General.
71.-
- There shall be an
Attorney-General who shall be the principal legal adviser to the
Government:
- The office or
Attorney-General, shall be either a public officer of the office of a
Minister.
- At any time when the office
of Attorney-General is a public office the same person may, if qualified,
be appointed to hold or act in the office of Attorney-General and the
office of Director of Public Prosecutions.
- Where the offices of
Attorney-General and Director of Public Prosecutions are held by the same
person the following provisions of this Constitution shall have effect as
if references therein to the Director included references to the
Attorney-General, that is to say, sections 86, 88(5), (6), (7), (8), (9)
and (109, 96(3) and 121(8)(a); but the provisions of this subsection shall
be without prejudice to the powers of Parliament or, subject to the
provisions of any law enacted by Parliament, the President to determine
that the office of Attorney-General shall be the office of a Minister.
Control of public prosecutions.
72.-
- There shall be a Director
of Public Prosecutions whose office shall be a public office.
- The Director of Public
Prosecutions shall have power in any case in which he considers it
desirable so to do-
- to institute and
undertake criminal proceedings against any person before any court of law
(other than a court-martial) in respect of any offence alleged to have
been committed by that person;
- to take over and
continue any such criminal proceedings that have been instituted or
undertaken by any other person or authority; and
- to discontinue at
any stage before judgement is delivered any such criminal proceedings
instituted or undertaken by himself or any other person or authority.
- The powers of the Director
of Public Prosecutions under subsection (2) of this section may be
exercised by him in person or through other persons acting under and in
accordance with his general or special instructions.
- The powers conferred on the
Director of Public Prosecutions by paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection
(2) of this section shall be vested in him to the exclusion or any other
person or authority:
Provided that where any other person or authority
has instituted criminal proceedings, nothing in this subsection shall prevent
the withdrawal of those proceedings, to any other court (including the Judicial
Committee) shall be deemed to be part of those proceedings:
Provided that the power conferred to the Director
of Public Prosecutions by subsection (2)(c) of this section shall not be
exercised in relation to any appeal by a person convicted in any criminal
proceedings or to any case stated or question of law reserved at the instance
of such a person.
- In the exercise of the
powers vested in him by subsection (2) of this section, the Director of
Public Prosecutions shall ot be subject to the direction or control of any
other person or authority:
Provided that the powers vested in him by paragraph
(c) of that subsection (2) shall e exercised by him in accordance with such
general or special directions (if any) as the Attorney-general may give him.
Prerogative of mercy.
73.-
- The president may-
- grant a pardon,
either free or subject to lawful conditions, to any person convicted of
any offence;
- grant to any person
a respite, either indefinite or for a specified period, of the execution
of any punishment imposed on that person for any offence;
- substitute a less
severe form of punishment for any punishment imposed on any person for
any offence; or
- remit the whole or
any part punishment imposed on any person for any offence or of any
penalty or forfeiture otherwise due to the Government of Dominica on
account of any offence.
- The powers of the President
under subsection (1) of this section shall be exercised by him in
accordance with the advice of such Minister as may from time to time be
designated by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Prime Minister.
Advisory Committee on Prerogative of Mercy.
74.-
- There shall be an Advisory
Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy for Dominica (hereinafter in this
section referred to as the Committee) which shall consist of-
- the Minister for the
time being designated under section 73(2) of this Constitution, who shall
be chairman;
- the
Attorney-General; and
- not more than four
other members appointed by the President by writing under his hand.
- A member of the Committee
appointed under subsection (1)(c) of this section shall hold his seat
thereon for such period as may be specified in the instrument by which he
was appointed:
Provided that his seat shall become vacant-
- in the case of a
person who at the date of his appointment was a Minister, if he ceases to
be a Minister; or
- if the President, by
writing under his hand, so directs.
- The Committee may act
notwithstanding any vacancy in its members or the absence of any member
and its proceedings shall not be invalidated by the presence or
participation of any person not entitled to be present at or to
participate in those proceedings.
- The Committee may regulate
its own procedure.
- In the exercise of this
functions under this section, the President shall act in accordance with
the advice of the Prime Minister.
Functions of Advisory Committee.
75.-
- Where any person has been
sentenced to death (otherwise than by a court-martial) for an offence, the
Minster for the time being designated under section 73(2) of this
Constitution shall cause a written report of the case from the trial judge
(or the Chief Justice, if a report from the trial judge cannot be
obtained) together with such other information derived from the record of
the case or elsewhere as he may require, to be taken into consideration at
a meeting of the Advisory Committee he shall decide in his own deliberate
judgement whether to advise the President to exercise any of his powers
under section 73(1) of this Constitution.
- The Minister for the time
being designated under section 73(2) of this Constitution may consult with
the Advisory Committee on the understanding that he shall not be obliged
to act in accordance with the recommendation of the Committee.
CHAPTER V
FINANCE
Consolidated Fund.
76.- All revenues or other moneys raised or received by Dominica (not
being revenues or other moneys that are payable, by or under any law for the
time being in force in Dominica, into some other fund established for a
specific purpose) shall be paid into and form a Consolidated Fund.
Withdrawals from Consolidated Fund or other public funds.
77.-
- No moneys shall be
withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund except-
- to meet expenditure
that is charged upon the Fund by this Constitution or by any law enacted
by Parliament; or
- where the issue of
those moneys has been authorised by an appropriation law or by a law made
in pursuance of section 79 of this Constitution.
- Where any moneys are
charged by this Constitution or any law enacted by Parliament upon the
Consolidated Fund or any other public fund, they shall be paid out of that
fund by the Government to the person or authority to whom payment is due.
- No moneys shall be
withdrawn from any public fund other than the Consolidated Fund unless the
issue of those moneys has been authorised by or under any law.
- Parliament may prescribe
the manner in which withdrawals may be made from the Consolidated Fund or
any other public fund.
Authorisation of expenditure from Consolidated Fund by
appropriation law.
78.-
- The Minster for the time
being responsible for finance shall cause to be prepared and laid before
the House of Assembly before, or not later than forty-five days after, the
commencement of each financial year estimates of the revenues and
expenditure of Dominica for the financial year.
- When the estimates of
expenditure (other than expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund by
this Constitution or by any law enacted by Parliament) have been approved
by the House of Assembly, a bill, known as an appropriation bill, shall be
introduced in the House, providing for the issue from the Consolidated
Fund of the sums necessary to meet that expenditure and the appropriation
of those sums, under separate votes for the several services required, to
the purposes specified therein.
- If in respect of any
financial year it is found-
- that the amount
appropriated by the appropriation law to any purpose is insufficient or
that a need has arisen for expenditure for a purpose to which no amount
has been appropriated by that law; or
- that any moneys have
been expended for any purpose in excess of the amount appropriated to
that purpose by the appropriation law or for a purpose to which no amount
has been appropriated by that law.
a supplementary estimate showing the sums required or spent
shall be laid before the House and, when the supplementary estimate has been
approved by the House, a supplementary appropriation bull shall be introduced
in the House providing for the issue of such sums from the Consolidated Fund
and appropriating them to the purposes specified therein.
Authorisation of expenditure in advance of appropriation.
79.- There shall be such provision as may be made by Parliament under
which, if the appropriation law in respect of any financial year has not come
into operation by the beginning of the financial year, the Minister for the
time beng responsible for finance may authorise the withdrawal of moneys from
the Consolidated Fund for the purpose of meeting expenditure necessary to carry
on the services of the Government of Dominica until the expiration of four
months from the beginning of that financial year or the coming into operation
of the law, whichever is the earlier.
Contingencies Fund.
80.-
- There shall be such
provision as may be made by Parliament for the establishment of a Contingencies
Fund and for authorising the Minister for the time being responsible for
finance, if satisfied that there has arisen an urgent and unforeseen need
for expenditure for which no other provision exist, to make advances from
that Fund to meet that need.
- Where any advance is made
from the Contingencies Fund, a supplementary estimate shall as soon as
possible be laid before the House and when the supplementary estimate has
been approved by the House, a supplementary appropriation bill shall be
introduced as soon as possible in the House for the purpose of replacing
the amount so advanced.
Remuneration of certain officers.
81.-
- There shall be paid to the
holders of the offices to which this section applies such allowances as
may be prescribed by or under a law enacted by Parliament.
- The salaries and allowances
prescribed in pursuance of this section in respect of the holders of the
offices to which this section applies shall be a charge on the Consolidated
Fund.
- The salary prescribed in
pursuance of this section in respect of the holder of any office to which
this section applies and his other terms of service (other than allowances
that are not taken into account in computing, under any law in the behalf,
any pension payable in respect of his service in that office) shall not be
altered to his disadvantage after his appointment.
- When a person's salary or
other terms of service depend upon his option, the salary or terms for
which he opts shall, forth purposes of subsection (3) of this section, be
deemed to be more advantageous to him than any other for which he might
have opted.
- This section applies to the
offices of the President, member of the Public Service Board of Appeal,
the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Director of Audit, the
Parliamentary Commissioner, the Deputy Parliamentary Commissioner and the
Chief Elections Officer.
- Nothing in this section
shall be construed as prejudicing the provisions of section 95 of this
Constitution (which protects pensions rights in respect of service as a
public officer).
Public debt.
82.-
- All debt charges for which
Dominica is liable shall be a charge on the Consolidated Fund.
- For the purposes of this
section debt charges include interest, sinking fund charges, the repayment
or amortization of debt and all expenditure in connection with the raising
of loans on the security of the Consolidated Fund and the service and
redemption of the debt created thereby.
Audit of public accounts, etc.
83.-
- There shall be a Director
of Audit whose office shall be a public office.
- The Director of Audit
shall, at least once in every year, audit and report on the public
accounts, of Dominica, the accounts of all officers and authorities of the
Government, the accounts of all courts of law in Dominica (including any
accounts of the Court of Appeal or the High Court maintained in Dominica),
the accounts of every Commission established by this Constitution and the
accounts of the Parliamentary Commissioner and the Clerk of the House.
(3) The Director of Audit and any officer
authorised by him shall have access to all books, records, returns, reports and
other Documents which in his opinion relate to any of the accounts referred to
in subsection (2) of this section.
- The Director of Audit shall
submit every report made by him in pursuance of subsection (2) of this
section to the Minister for the time being responsible for finance who
shall, not later than seven days after the House of Assembly first meets
after he has received the report, lay it before the House.
- If the Minister fails to
lay a report before the House of Assembly in accordance with the
provisions of subsection (4) of this section the Director of Audit shall
transmit copies of that report to the Speaker of the House who shall, as
soon as practicable, present them to the House.
- The Director of Audit shall
exercise such other functions in relation to the accounts of the
Government or the accounts of other authorities or bodies established by
law for public purpose as may be prescribed by or under any law enacted by
Parliament.
- In the exercise of his
functions under subsection (2), (3), (4) and (5) of this section, the
Director of Audit shall not be subject to the direction or control of any
other person or authority.
CHAPTER VI
THE PUBLIC SERVICE
Part 1
The Public Service Commission
Public Service Commission.
84.-
- There shall be a Public
Service Commission for Dominica (hereinafter in this section referred to
as the Commission) which shall consist of-
- a chairman and
deputy chairman appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Prime Minister;
- two members
appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Prime Minister, from amongst persons selected by the appropriate
representative body; and
- not more than three
other members appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Prime Minister;
provided that the Prime Minister shall consult the Leader of
the Opposition before tendering any advice to the President for the purposes of
paragraph (8b) or (c) of this subsection.
- A person shall to be
qualified to be appointed as a member of the Commission if-
- he is, or has at any
time during the five years immediately preceding his appointment been, a
member of the House;
- he is, or has at any
time during the year preceding his appointment been a judge or the
Supreme Court or a public officer.
- A member of the Commission
shall not, within the period of three years commencing with the day on which
he last held or acted in the office of member of the Commission, be
eligible for appointment to or to act in any public office.
- Subject to the provisions
of this section, the office of a member of the Commission shall become
vacant-
- at the expiration of
three years from the date of his appointment; or
- if any circumstances
arise that, if he were not a member of the Commission, would cause him to
be disqualified to be appointed as such under subsection (2) of this
section.
- A member of the Commission
may be removed from office only for inability to exercise the function of
this office (whether arising from infirmity of body or mind or any other
cause) or for misbehaviour and shall not be so removed except in
accordance with the provisions of this section.
- A member of the Commission
shall be removed from office by the President if the question of his
removal from office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under
subsection (7) of this section and the tribunal has recommended to the
President that he ought to be removed from office for inability as
aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- If the Prime Minister
represents to the President that the question of removing a member of the
Commission under this section ought to be investigated, then-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members, selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction in appeals from such a court,
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether the member ought to be removed under this
section.
- If the question of removing
a member of the Commission has been referred to a tribunal under this
section, the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime
Minster, may suspend that member from the exercise of the functions of his
office and any such suspension may at any time be revoked by the
President, acting in accordance with such advice as aforesaid, and shall
in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal recommends to the
President that member should not be removed.
- If the office of chairman
of the Commission is vacant or if the holder of that office is for any
reason unable to exercise the functions of this office, then, until a
person has been appointed to and has assumed the functions of that office
or until the person holding that office has resumed those functions, as
the case may be, they shall be exercised by the deputy chairman or, if the
office of deputy chairman is vacant or the holder of that office is for
any reason unable to exercise the functions of his office, by such other
member of the Commission as may for the time being be designated by the
President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister.
- If at any time there are
less than two members of the Commission besides the chairman or if any
such member is acting as chairman or is for any reason unable to exercise
the functions of this office, the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Prime Minister may appoint a person who is qualified to be
appointed as a member of the Commission to act as a member, and any person
so appointed shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (4) of this
section, continue to act until the office in which he is acting has been
filled or, as the case may be, until the holder thereof has resumed his
function or until his appointment to act has been revoked by the
President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister.
- A member of the Commission
shall not enter upon the duties of his office until he has taken and
subscribed the oath of allegiance and the oath of office.
- The Commission shall, in
the exercise of its functions under this Constitution, not be subject to
the direction or control of any other person or authority.
- The Commission may by
regulation or otherwise regulate its own procedure and, with the consent
of the Prime Minister, may confer powers or impose duties on any public
officer or on any authority of the Government of Dominica for the purpose
of the exercise of its functions.
- The Commission may, subject
to its rules of procedure, act notwithstanding any vacancy in this
membership or the absence of any member and its proceedings shall not be
invalidated by the presence or participation of any person not entitled to
be present at or to participate in those proceedings:
Provided that any decision of the Commission shall
require the concurrence of a majority of all its members.
- In this section "the
appropriate representative body" means such body as is designated by
the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minster,
as the principal body in Dominica representing the interests of public
officers (other than police officers).
Appointment, etc., of public officers.
85.-
- The power to appoint
persons to hold or act in offices in the public service (including the
power to confirm appointments), and, subject to the provisions of section
93 of this Constitution, the power to exercise disciplinary control over
persons holding or acting in such officers and the power to remove such
persons from office shall vest in the Public Service Commission.
- The Public Service
Commission may, by directions in writing and subject to such conditions as
it thinks fit, delegate any of its powers under subsection (1) of this
section to any one or more members of the Commission or, with the consent
of he Prime Minister, to any public officer.
- The provisions of this
section shall not apply in relation to the following offices, that is to
say-
- any office to which
section 86 of this Constitution applies;
- the office of Chief
Elections Officer;
- the office of
Director of Public Prosecutions;
- the office of
Director of Audit;
- any office to which
section 90 of this Constitution applies; or
- any office in the
Police Force.
- No person shall be
appointed under this section to or to act in any office on the President's
personal staff except with the concurrence of the President, acting in his
own deliberate judgement.
- Before any of the powers
conferred by this section are exercised by the Public Service Commission
or any other person or authority in relation to the Clerk of the House or
a member of his staff, the Commissioner or any other person or authority
shall consult with the Speaker.
- Before any of the powers
conferred by this section are exercised by the Public Service Commission
or any other person or authority in relation to member of the staff of the
Parliamentary Commissioner of the Chief Elections Officer, the Commission
or that person or authority shall consult the Commissioner or, as the case
may be, the Officer.
- A public officer shall not
be removed from office or subject to any other punishment under this
section on the grounds of any act done or committed by him in the exercise
of a judicial functions conferred on him unless the Judicial and Legal
Services Commission concurs therein.
Part 2
Appointments, etc., to particular offices
Appointment, etc., of permanent secretaries and certain other officers.
86.-
- This section applies to the
offices of Secretary to the Cabinet, permanent secretary, head of a
department of government, deputy head of a department of government, clerk
of the House, any office for the time being designated by the Public
Service Commission as an office of a chief
professional adviser to a department of government
and any office for the time being designated by the Commission, after
consultation with the Prime Minister, as an office the holders of which are
required to reside outside Dominica for the proper discharge of their functions
or as an office in Dominica whose functions relate to eternal affairs.
- The power to appoint
persons to hold or to act in offices to which this section applies
(including the power to confirm appointments), and subject to the
provisions of section 93 of this Constitution, the power to exercise disciplinary
control over persons holding or acting in such officers and the power to
remove such persons from office shall vest in the President, acting in
accordance with the advice of the Public Service Commission:
Provided that-
- the power to appoint
a person to hold or act in an office of permanent secretary on transfer
from another such office carrying the same salary shall vest in the
President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister;
- before the Pubic
Service Commission tenders advice to the President with respect to the
appointment of any person to hold an office to which this section applies
(other than an appointment to an office of permanent secretary on
transfer from another such office carrying the same salary) it shall
consult with the Prime Minister and if the Prime Minister signifies his
objection to the appointment of any person to the office, the Commission
shall not advise the President to appoint that person.
- References in this section
to a department of government shall not include the department of the
Attorney-General, the department of the Director of Public Prosecutions,
the department of the Director of Audit, the department of the
Parliamentary Commissioner, the department of the Chief Elections Officer
or the Police Force.
Chief Elections Officer
87.-
- The Chief Elections Officer
(hereinafter in this section referred to as the Officer) shall be
appointed by the President, acting after consultation with the Electoral
Commission.
- If the office of the
Officer is vacant or if the holder of that office is for any reason unable
to exercise the functions of his office, the President, acting after
consultation with the Electoral Commission, may appoint a person to act in
that office.
- A person shall not be
qualified to be appointed to hold the office of the Officer unless he
holds such qualifications (if any) as may be prescribed by Parliament.
- A person appointed to act
in the office of the Officer shall, subject to the provision of
subsections (5), (7), and (8) of this section, cease so to act-
- when a person is
appointed to hold that office and has assumed the functions thereof or,
as the case may be, when the person in whose place he is acting resumes
the functions of that office; or
- at such earlier time
as may be prescribed by the terms of his appointment.
- Subject to the provisions
of subsection (6) of this section, the Officer shall vacate his office
when he attains the prescribed age.
- A person holding the office
of the Officer may be removed from office only for inability to exercise
the functions of this office (whether arising from infirmity of body or
mind or any other cause) or for misbehaviour and shall not be so removed
except in accordance with the provisions of this section.
- The officer shall be
removed from office by the President if the question of his removal from
office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under subsection (8) of
this section and the tribunal has recommended to the President that he ought
to be removed for inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- If the President, acting in
his own deliberate judgement, considers that the question of removing the
Officer under this section ought to be investigated, then-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members, selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction in appeals from such a court;
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether the Officer ought to be removed under this
section.
- If the question of removing
the Officer has been referred to a tribunal under this section, the
President, acting in his own deliberate judgement, may suspend the Officer
from the exercise of the functions of his office and any such suspension
may at any time be revoked by the President, acting as aforesaid, and
shall in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal recommends to the
President that the Officer should not be removed.
- The President's age for the
purposes of subsection (5) of this section is the age of fifty-five years
or such other age as may be prescribed by Parliament;
Provided that any law enacted by Parliament, to the
extent to which it alters the prescribed age after a person has been appointed
to be or to act as Officer, shall not have effect in relation to that person
unless he consents that it should have effect.
Director of Public Prosecutions.
88.-
- The Director of Public
Prosecutions shall be appointed by the President, acting in accordance
with the advice of the Public Service Commission.
- If the office of Director
of Public Prosecutions is vacant or if the holder of that office is for
any reason unable to exercise the functions of his office, the President,
acting in accordance with the advice of the Public Service Commission, may
appoint a person to act as Director.
- Before tendering advice for
the purposed of subsection (1) or (2) of this section the Public Service
Commission shall consult the Prime Minister.
- A person shall not be
qualified to be appointed to hold the office of Director of Public
Prosecutions unless he holds one of the specified qualifications and has
held one or other of those qualifications for a total period of not less
than seven years.
- A person appointed to act
in the office of Director of Public Prosecutions shall, subject to the
provisions of subsections (6), (8), (9) and (10) of this section, cease so
to act-
- when a person is
appointed to hold that office and has assumed the functions thereof or,
as the case may be, when the person in whose place he is acting resumes
the functions of that office; or
- at such earlier time
as may be prescribed by the terms of his appointment.
- Subject to the provision of
subsection (7) of this section, the Director of Public Prosecutions shall
vacate his office when he attains the prescribed age.
- A person holding the office
of Director of Public Prosecutions may be removed from office only for
inability to exercise the functions of his office (whether arising from
infirmity of body or mind or any other cause) or for misbehaviour and
shall not be so removed except in accordance with the provisions of this
section.
- The Director of Public
Prosecutions shall be removed from office by the President if the question
of his removal from office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under
subsection (9) of this section and the tribunal has recommended to the
President that he ought to be removed for inability as aforesaid or for
misbehaviour.
- If the Prime Minister of
the chairman of the Public Service Commission represents to the President
that the question of removing the Director of Public Prosecutions under
this section ought to be investigated then-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members, selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction in appeals from such a court;
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether the Director ought to be removed under this
section.
- If the question of removing
the Director of Public Prosecutions has been referred to a tribunal under
this section, the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Public Service Commission, may and any such suspension may at any time be
revoked by the President, acting in accordance with such advice as
aforesaid and shall in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal
recommends to the President that the Director should not be removed.
- (*) The Prescribed age for
the purposes of subsection (6) of this section is the age of fifty-five
years or such other age as may be prescribed by Parliament:
Provided that any law enacted by Parliament, to the
extent to which it alters the prescribed age after a person has been appointed
to be or to act as Director of Public Prosecutions, shall not have effect in
relation to that person unless he consents that it should have effect.
(* Act N. 21 of 1984 has impliedly amended section 88 (11) of the
Constitution by prescribing the age of which the Director of Public Prosecution
shall vacate his office to be sixty-five years).
Director of Audit.
89.-
- The Director of Audit shall
be appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Public Service Commission.
- If the office of Director
of Audit is vacant or if the holder of that office is for any reason
unable to exercise the function of his office, the President, acting in
accordance with the advice of the Public Service Commission, may appoint a
person to act as Director.
- Before tendering advice for
the purposes of subsection (1) or subsection (2) of this section, the
Public Service Commission shall consult the Prime Minister.
- A person appointed to act
in the office of Director of Audit shall, subject to the provisions of
subsections (5), (7), (8) and (9) of this section cease so to act-
- when a person is
appointed to hold that office and has assumed the functions thereof or,
as the case may be, when the person in whose place he is acting resumes
the functions of that office; or
- at such earlier time
as amy be prescribed by the terms of his appointment.
- Subject to the provisions
of subsection (7) of this section the Director of Audit shall vacate his
office when he attains the prescribed age.
- A person holding the office
of Director of Audit may be removed from office only for inability to
exercise the functions of his office (whether arising from infirmity of
body or mind or any other cause) or for misbehaviour and shall not be so
removed except in accordance with the provisions of this section.
- The Director of Audit shall
be removed from office by the President if the question of his removal
from office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under subsection (8)
of this section and the tribunal has recommended to the President that he
ought to be removed for inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- If the Prime Minster of the
chairman of the Public Service Commission represents to the President that
the question of removing the Director of Audit under this section ought to
be investigated-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and nor less than
two other members selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction in appeal from such a court;
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether the Director ought to be removed under this
section.
- If the question of removing
the Director of Audit has been referred to a tribunal under this section
the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Public Service
Commission, may suspended the Director of Audit from the exercise of the
functions of his office and any such suspension may at any time be revoked
by the President, acting in accordance with such advice as aforesaid, and
shall in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal recommends to the
President that the Director should not be removed.
- The Prescribed age for the
purposed of subsection (5) of this sections the age of fifty-five or such
other age as may be prescribed by Parliament:
Provided that any law enacted by Parliament to the
extent to which it alters the prescribed age after a person has been appointed
to be or to act as Director of Audit, shall to have effect in relation to that
person unless he consents that it should have effect.
Appointment, etc., of magistrates, registrars and legal
officers.
90.-
- This section applies to the
offices of magistrate, registrar of the High Court and assistant registrar
of the High Court and to any public office in the department of the
Attorney-General (including the public office of Attorney-General) or in
the department of the Parliamentary Commissioner, the department of the
department of the Director of Public Prosecutions (other than the office
of Director) for appointment to which persons are required to hold one or
other of the specified qualifications.
- The power to appoint persons
to hold or act in offices to which this section applies (including the
power to confirm appointments) shall vest in the Public Service
Commission:
Provided that before exercising the powers
conferred by this section in any case the Public Service Commission shall
consult the Judicial and Legal Services Commission.
- Subject to the provisions of
section 71(4) of this Constitution, the power to exercise disciplinary
control over persons holding or acting in officers to which this section
applies and the power to remove such persons from office shall vest in the
Judicial and Legal Services Commission.
Provided that before exercising the powers
conferred by this subsection in any case the Judicial and Legal Services
Commission shall consult the Public Service Commission.
Part 3
The Police
Police Service Commission.
91.-
- There shall be a Police
Service Commission for Dominica which shall consist of-
- a chairman and a
deputy chairman appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Prime Minister;
- two members
appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the
Prime Minister, from amongst persons selected by the appropriate
representative body; and
- not more than three
other members appointed by the President, acting in accordance with the
advice of the Prime Minister;
provided that the Prime Minister shall consult the Leader of
the Opposition before tendering any advice to the President for the purposes of
paragraph (b) or (c) of this subsection.
- The provisions of section
84 of this Constitution (other than subsections (1) and (15)) shall apply
in relation to the Police Service Commission as they apply in relation to
the Public Service Commission.
- In this section "the
appropriate representative body" means such body as is designated by
the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister,
as the principal body in Dominica representing the interests of police
officers.
Appointment, etc., of police officers.
92.-
- The power to appoint a
person to hold or act in the office of Chief of Police or Deputy Chief of
Police and, subject to the provisions of section 93 of this Constitution,
the power to remove the Chief of Police or Deputy Chief of Police from
office shall vest in the President, acting in accordance with the advice
of the Prime Minister, given after consultation with the Leader of the
Opposition and the Police Service Commission.
- The power to appoint
persons to hold or act in offices in the Police Force below the rank of
Deputy Chief of Police (including the power to Confirm appointments), and,
subject to the provisions of section 93 of this Constitution, the power to
exercise disciplinary control over persons holding or acting in such
offices and the power to remove such persons from office shall vest in the
Police Service Commission.
- The Police Service
Commissions may, by directions in writing and subject to such conditions
as it thinks fit, delegate any of its powers under subsection (2) of this
section in respect of officers below the rank of sergeant or of persons
holding or acting in those offices to any one or more members of the
Commission or, with the consent of the Prime Minister, to the Chief of
Police or any other officer of the Police Force.
- A police officer shall not
be removed from office or subjected to any other punishment under this
section on the grounds of any act done or omitted by him in the exercise
of any judicial function conferred on him unless the Judicial and Legal
Services Commission concurs therein.
Part 4
The Public Service Board of Appeal
Public Service Board of Appeal.
93.-
- There shall be a Public
Service Board of Appeal for Dominica (hereinafter in this section and in
section 94 of this Constitution referred to as the Board) which shall
consist of-
- one member appointed
by the President, acting in his own deliberate judgement, who shall be
chairman;
- one member appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime
Minister; and
- one member appointed
by the President, acting in accordance with the advice of the appropriate
representative body.
- A person shall not be
qualified for appointment as a member of the Board if he is a member of
the House and a person shall not be qualified for appointment under
paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of this section unless he is or has been a
public officer.
- Subject to the provisions
of this section, the office of a member of the Board shall become vacant-
- at the expiration of
three years from the date of his appointment; or
- if any circumstances
arise that, if he were not a member of the Board, would cause him to be
disqualified to be appointed as such under subsection (2) of this
section.
- A member of the Board may
be removed from office only for inability to exercise the functions of his
office (whether arising from infirmity of body or mind or any other cause)
or for misbehaviour and shall not be so removed except in accordance with
the provisions of this section.
- A member of the Board shall
be removed from office by the President if the question of his removal
from office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under subsection (6)
of this section and the tribunal has recommended to the President that he
ought to be removed from office for inability as aforesaid or for
misbehaviour.
- If the President considers
that the question of removing a member of the Board under this section
ought to be investigated, then-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members, selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or of a court having jurisdiction in appeals from such a
court; and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether that member ought to be removed under this
section.
- If the question of removing
a member of the Board has been referred to a tribunal under this section,
the President may suspend that member from the exercise of the functions
of his office and any such suspension may at any time be revoked by the
President and shall in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal
recommends to the President that member should not be removed.
- If at any time any member
of the Board is for any reason unable to exercise the functions of his
office, the President may appoint a person who is qualified to be
appointed as a member of the Board to act as a member and any person so
appointed shall, subject to the provision of subsection (4) of this
section, continue to act until the holder thereof has resumed his
functions or until his appointment to act has been revoked by the
President.
- In the exercise of the
Powers conferred upon him by subsections (6), (7) and (8) of this section
the President shall, in the case of a member of he Board appointed under
paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this section, act in accordance with
the advice of the Prime Minister and shall in any other case act in his
own deliberate judgement.
- The Board shall, in the
exercise of its functions under this Constitution, not be subject to the
direction or control of any other person or authority.
- In this section " the
appropriate representative body" means the body designated under
section 84
- of this Constitution.
Appeals in discipline cases.
94.-
- This section applies to -
- any decision of the
President, acting in accordance with the advice of the Public Service
Commissioner the advice of the Police Service Commission, or any decision
of the Public Service Commission or of the Police Service Commission, to
remove a public officer form office or to exercise disciplinary control
over a public officer (including a decision made on appeal from or
confirming a decision of any person to whom powers are delegated under
section 85(2) or 92(3) of this Constitution);
- Any decision of any
person to whom powers are delegated under section 85(2) or 92(3) of this
Constitution to remove a public officer from office or to exercise
disciplinary control over a public officer (not being a decision which is
subject to appeal to or confirmation by the Public Service Commission or
the Police Service Commission);
- such decisions with
respect to the discipline of any military, naval or air force of Dominica
as may be prescribed by Parliament.
- Subject to the provision of
this section, an appeal shall lie to the Board from any decision to which
this section applies at the instance of the Public Officer or member of
the naval, military or air force in respect of whom the decision is made.
- Upon an appeal under this
section the Board may affirm or set aside the decision appealed against or
may make any other decision appealed against or may make any other
decision which the authority or person from whom the appeal lies could
have made.
- Every decision of the Board
shall require the concurrence of a majority of all its members.
- Subject to the provisions
of subsection (4) of this section, the Board may by regulation make
provisions for
- the procedure of the
Board;
- the procedure in
appeals under this section; or
- excepting from the
provisions of subsection (2) of this section decisions in respect of
public officers holding offices whose emoluments do not exceed such sums
as may be prescribed by the regulations or such decisions to exercise
disciplinary control, other than decisions to remove from office, as may
be so prescribed.
- Regulations made under this
section may, with the consent of the Prime Minister, confer powers or
impose duties on any public officer or any authority of the Government of
Dominica for the purpose of the exercise of the functions of the Board.
- The Board may, subject to
the provisions of this section and to its rules of procedure, act
notwithstanding any vacancy in its membership or the absence of any
member.
Part 5
Pensions
Pensions laws and protection of pensions rights.
95.-
- The law to be applied with
respect to any pensions benefits that were granted to any person before
the commencement of this Constitution shall be the law that was in force
at the date on which those benefits were granted or any law in force at a
later date that is not less favourable to that person.
- The law to be applied with
respect to any pensions benefits (not being benefits to which subsection
(1) of this section applies) shall-
- in so far as those
benefits are wholly in respect of a period of service as a judge or
officer of the Supreme Court or a public officer that commenced before
the commencement of this Constitution, be the law that was in force at
such commencement; and
- in so far as those
benefits are wholly or partly in respect of a period of service as a
judge or officer of the Supreme Court or a public officer that commenced
after the commencement of this Constitution, be the law in force on the
date on which that period of service commenced,
or any law in force at a later date that is not less
favourable to that person.
- Where a person is entitled
to exercise an option as to which of two or more laws shall apply in his
case, the law for which he opts shall, for the purposes of this section,
be deemed to be more favourable to him than the other law or laws.
- All pensions benefits shall
(except to the extent to the extent that they are by law charge upon and
duly paid out of some other fund) be a charge on the Consolidated Fund.
- In this section
"pensions benefits" means any pensions, compensation, gratuities
or other like allowances for persons in respect of their service as judges
or officers of the Supreme Court or public officers or for the widows,
children, dependants or personal representatives of such persons in respect
of such service.
- References in this section
to the law with respect to pensions benefits include (without prejudice to
their generality) references to the law regulating the circumstances in
which such benefits may be granted or in which the grant of such benefits
may be refused, the law regulating the circumstances in which any such
benefits may be refused, the law regulating the circumstances in which any
such benefits that have been granted may be withheld, reduced in amount or
suspended and the law regulating the amount of any such benefits.
Power to withhold pensions, etc.,
96.-
- Where under any law any
person or authority has a discretion-
- to decide whether
or not any pensions benefits shall be granted; or
- to withhold, reduce
in amount or suspend any such benefits that have been granted,
those benefits shall be granted and amy not be withheld,
reduce in amount or suspended unless the Public Service Commission concurs in
the refusal to grant the benefits or, as the case may be, in the decision to
withhold them, reduce them in amount or suspend them.
- Where the amount of any
pension benefits that may be granted to any person is not fixed by law,
the amount of the benefits to be granted to him shall be the greatest
amount for which he is eligible unless the Public Service Commission
concurs in this being granted benefits of a smaller amount.
- The Public Service
Commission shall not concurs under subsection (1) or subsection (2) of
this section in any action taken on the ground that any person who holds
or has held the office of judge of he Supreme Court, Director of Public
Prosecutions, Director of Audit or Chief Elections Officer has been guilty
of misbehaviour in the office unless he has been remove from that office
by reason of such misbehaviour.
- Before the Public Service
Commission concurs under subsection (1) or subsection (2) of this section
in any action taken on the ground that any persons who holds or has held
any office to which, at the time of such action, section 90 of this
Constitution applies has been guilty of misbehaviour in that office, the
Public Service Commission shall consult the Judicial and Legal Services
Commission.
- In this section
"pensions benefits" means any pensions, compensation, gratuities
or other like allowances for persons in respect of their service as judge
or officers of the Supreme Court or public officers or for the widows,
children, dependants or personal representatives of such persons in
respect of such service.
CHAPTER IX
PARLIAMENT COMMISSIONER
Appointment, etc., of Commissioner
108.-
- There shall be a
Parliamentary Commissioner for Dominica who shall be an officer of
Parliament and who shall not hold any other office of emolument whether in
the public service of otherwise nor engage in any other occupation for
reward.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall be appointed by the President, acting after
consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition, for
a term not exceeding five years.
- Before entering upon the
duties of his office, the Parliamentary Commissioner shall take and
subscribe the oath of office before the Speaker.
- Subject to the revisions
subsection (7) of this section the Parliamentary Commissioner shall vacate
his office at the expiration of the term for which he was appointed:
Provided that he shall vacate his office-
- if with his consent
he is nominated for election as a Representative or Senator; or
- if he is appointed
to any other office of emolument or engages in any other occupation for
reward.
- If the office of
Parliamentary Commissioner becomes vacant, an appointment to fill the
office shall be made within ninety days of he occurrence of the vacancy;
Provided that the House may by resolution extend
that period for further periods not exceeding in the aggregate one hundred and
fifty days.
- A person holding the office
of Parliamentary Commissioner may be removed from office only for
inability to exercise the functions of his office whether arising from
infirmity of body or mind or any other cause) or for misbehaviour and
shall not be so removed except in accordance with the provisions of this
section.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall be removed from office by the President if the question
of his removal from office has been referred to a tribunal appointed under
subsection (8) of this section and the tribunal has recommended to the
President that he ought to be removed for inability as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
- If the President, acting
after consultation with the Prime Minister and the Leader of the
Opposition, considers that the question of removing the Parliamentary
Commissioner under this section ought to be investigated-
- the President shall
appoint a tribunal which shall consist of a chairman and not less than
two other members selected by the Chief Justice from among persons who
hold or have held office as a judge of a court having unlimited
jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters in some part of the
Commonwealth or a court having jurisdiction in appeal from such a court;
and
- the tribunal shall
enquire into the matter and report on the facts thereof to the President
and recommend to him whether the Commissioner ought to be removed under
this section.
- If the question of removing
the Parliamentary Commissioner has been referred to a tribunal this
section, the President, acting after consultation with the Prime Minister
and the Leader of the Opposition, may suspend the Commissioner from the exercise
of the functions of his office and any such suspension may at any time be
revoked by the President, acting as aforesaid, and shall in any case cease
to have effect if the tribunal recommends to the President that the
Commissioner should not be removed.
Deputy Parliamentary Commissioner and staff.
109.-
- There shall be a Deputy
Parliamentary Commissioner and the provisions of section 108 of this
Constitution shall apply in relation to the Commissioner and his office as
they apply in relation to the Parliamentary Commissioner and his office.
- The Deputy Parliamentary
Commissioner shall assist the Parliamentary Commissioner in the
performance of the functions of his office and whenever that office is
vacant or the holder of the office is for any reason unable to perform
those functions, the Deputy Parliamentary Commissioner shall perform those
functions.
Functions of Commissioner.
110.-
- Subject to the provisions
of this section and sections 111 and 112 of this Constitution, the
principal function of the Parliamentary Commissioner shall be to
investigate any decision or recommendation made, including any advice
given or recommendation made to a Minister, or any act done or omitted by
any department of government or any other authority to which this section
applies, or by officer or members of such a department or authority, being
action taken in exercise of the administrative functions of that
department or authority.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall be provided with a staff adequate for the efficient
discharge of his functions and the offices of the members of his staff
shall be public offices.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner may investigate any such matter in any of the following
circumstances-
- where a complaint is
duly made to the Commissioner by any person alleging that the complainant
has sustained an injustice as a result of fault in administration;
- where a member of
the House request the Commissioner to investigate the matter on the
ground that a person or body of persons specified in the request has or
may have sustained such injustice; and
- in any other
circumstances in which the Commissioner considers that he ought to
investigate the matter on the ground that some person or body of person
has or may have sustained such injustice.
- The authority other than
departments of government to which this section applies are-
- local authorities
other bodies establishment for purposes of the public service or of
political government;
- authorities or
bodies the majority of whose members are appointed by the President or be
a Minister or whose revenues consist wholly or mainly of moneys provided
out of public funds;
- any authority
empowered to determine the person with whom any contract shall be entered
into by or on behalf of the Government; and
- such other
authorities as may be prescribed by Parliament.
Restrictions on matters for investigation.
111.-
- In investigating any matter
leading to, resulting from or connected with the decision of a Minister,
the Parliamentary Commissioner shall not inquire into or question the
policy of the Minister in accordance with which the decision was made.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall have power to investigate complaints of administrative
injustice under section 110 notwithstanding that such complaints raise
questions as to the integrity or corruption of the public service or any
department or office of the public service, and may investigate any
conditions resulting from, or calculated to facilitate or encourage,
corruption in the public service, but he shall not undertake any
investigation into specific charges of corruption against individuals.
- Where in the course of an
investigation it appears to the Parliamentary Commissioner that there is
evidence of any corrupt act by any public officer or by any person in
connection with the public service, he shall report the matter to the
appropriate authority with his recommendation as to any further
investigation he may consider proper.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall not investigate-
- any action in
respect of which the complaint has or had
- a remedy by way of
proceedings in a court of law; or
- a right of appeal,
reference of review to or before an independent and impartial tribunal
other than a court of law; or
- any such action, or action
taken with respect to any matter, as is described in Schedule 3 to this
Constitution.
- Notwithstanding the
provisions of subsection (4) of this section the Parliamentary
Commissioner-
- May investigate a
matter notwithstanding that the complainant has or had a remedy by way of
proceedings in a court of law if satisfied that in the particular
circumstances it is not reasonable to expect him to take or to have taken
such proceedings;
- Is not in any case
precluded from investigating any matter by reason only that it is open to
the complainant to apply to the High Court for redress under section 16
of this Constitution (which relates to the enforcement of the fundamental
rights and freedoms).
Discretion of Commissioner.
112.- In the determining whether to initiate, continue or discontinue an
investigation, the Parliamentary Commissioner shall, subject to the provision
of sections 110 and 111 of this Constitution, act in his discretion, the
Commissioner may refused to initiate or may discontinue an investigation where
it appears to him that-
- a complaint relates to
action of which the complainant has knowledge for more than twelve months
before the complaint was received by the Commissioner;
- the subject matter of the
complaint is trivial;
- the complaint is frivolous
or vexatious or is not made in good faith; or
- the complainant has not
sufficient interest in the subject matter of the complaint.
Report on investigation.
113.-
- Where a complaint or request
for an investigation is duly made and the Parliamentary Commissioner
decides not to investigate the matter or where he decides to discontinue
an investigation of the matter, he shall inform the persons who made the
complaint or request of the reasons for his decision.
- Upon the completion of an
investigation the Parliamentary Commissioner shall inform the department
of government of the authority concerned of the result of the
investigation and if he is of the opinion that any person has sustained an
injustice in consequence of a fault in administration, he shall inform the
department of government of the authority of the reasons for his opinion
and make such recommendations as he thinks fit.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner may in his original recommendations, or at any later stage if
he thinks fit, specify the time within which the injustice should be
remedied.
- Where the investigation is
undertaken as a result of a complaint or request, the Parliamentary
Commissioner shall inform the person who made the compliant or request of
his findings.
- Where the matter is in the
opinion of the Parliamentary Commissioner of sufficient public importance
or where the Commissioner has made a recommendation under subsection (2)
of this section and within the time specified by him no sufficient action
has been taken to remedy the injustice, then the Commissioner shall make a
special report to the House on the case.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall make annual reports to the House on the performance of
his functions which shall include statistics in such form and in such
detail as may be prescribed of the complaints received by him and the
results of his investigations.
Power to obtain evidence.
114.-
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall have the powers of the High Court to summon witnesses
to appear before him and to compel them to give evidence on oath and to
procedure documents relevant to the proceedings before him and all persons
giving evidence at those proceedings shall have the same duties and
liabilities and enjoy the same privileges as in the High Court.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner shall have power to enter and inspect the premises of any
department of government or any authority to which section 110 applies, to
call for, examine and where necessary retain any document kept on such
premises and there to carry out any investigation in pursuance of his
functions.
Prescribed matters concerning Commissioner.
115.-
- There shall be such
provision as may be made by Parliament-
- for regulating the
procedure for the making of complaints and request to the Parliamentary
Commissioner and for the exercise of his functions;
- for conferring such
powers on the Commissioner and imposing duties on persons in connection
with the due performance of his functions; and
- generally for
facilitating the performance by the Commissioner of his functions.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner may not be empowered to summon a Minister or a Parliamentary
Secretary to appear before him or to compel a Minister or a Parliamentary
Secretary to answer any question relating to any matter under
investigation by the Commissioner.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner may not be empowered to summon any witness to procedure any
Cabinet papers or to give any confidential income tax information.
- No complainant may be
required to pay any fee in respect of his complaint or request or for any
investigation to be made by the Parliamentary Commissioner.
- No proceedings, civil or
criminal, may lie against the Parliamentary Commissioner, or against any
person holding an office of appointment under him, for anything he may do
or report or say in the course of the exercise or intended exercise of the
functions of the Commissioner under this Constitution, unless it is shown
that he acted in bad faith.
- The Parliamentary
Commissioner, and any person holding office or appointment under his, may
not be called to give evidence in any court of law, or in any proceedings
of a judicial nature, in respect of anything coming to his knowledge in
the exercise of his functions.
- Anything said or any
information supplied or any document, paper, or thing produced by any
person in the course of any enquiry by or proceedings before the
Parliamentary Commissioner under this Constitution shall be privileged in
the same manner as if the enquiry or proceedings were proceedings in a
court of law.
- No proceedings of the
Parliamentary Commissioner may be held bad for want of form, and, except
on the ground of lack of jurisdiction, no proceedings or decision of the
Commissioner shall be liable to be challenged, reviewed, quashed or called
in question in any court of law.
CHAPTER X
MISCELLANEOUS
Declaration of republic.
116.- Dominica shall be a sovereign democratic republic.
Supreme law.
117.- This Constitution is the supreme law of Dominica and, subject to
the provisions of this Constitution, if any other law is inconsistent with this
Constitution, this Constitution shall prevail and the other law shall to the
extent of the inconsistency, be void.
Functions of President.
118.-
- Any reference in this
Constitution to the function of the President shall be construed as a
reference to his powers and duties in the exercise of the executive
authority of Dominica and to any other powers and duties conferred or
imposed on him as President by or under this Constitution or any other
law.
- Where by this Constitution
the President is required to perform any function after consultation with
any person or authority he shall not be obliged to exercise that functions
in accordance with the advice of that person or authority.
- Where by this Constitution
the president is required to perform any functions in accordance with the
advice of or after consultation with, any person or authority, the
question whether the President has so exercised that function shall not be
enquired into in any court of law.
Resignations.
119.-
- The president may resign
his office, and a representative or senator may resign his seat, by
writing under his hand addresses to the Speaker and the resignation shall
take effect, and the office or seat shall accordingly become vacant, when
the writing is received by-
- the Speaker;
- if the office of
Speaker is vacant of the Speaker is for any reason unable to perform the
functions of his office and no other person is performing them, the
Deputy Speaker; or
- if the office of
Deputy Speaker is vacant or the Deputy Speaker is for any reason unable
to perform the functions of his office and no other person is performing
them, the Clerk of the House.
- The Speaker or the Deputy
Speaker may resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the
house and the resignation shall take effect, and the office shall
accordingly become vacant, when the writing is received by the Clerk of
the House.
- Any person who has been
appointed to an office established by this Constitution (other than an
office to which subsection (1) or (2) of this section applies) or any
office of Minister or temporary Minister established in accordance with
section 59(3) or 62(2) of this Constitution may resign that office by
writing under his hand addressed to the person or authority by whom he was
appointed and the resignation shall take effect, and the office shall
accordingly become vacant-
- at such time or on
such date (if any) as may be specified in the writing; or
- when the writing is
received by the person or authority to whom it is addressed or by such
other person as may be authorised to received it,
whichever is the later;
Provided that the resignation may be withdrawn
before it takes effect if the person or authority to whom the resignation is
addressed consents to its withdrawal.
Reappointment and concurrent appointments.
120.-
- Subject to the provisions
of section 21(1) of this Constitution, where any person has vacated any
office established by this Constitution or any office of Minister or
temporary Minister established under this Constitution, he may, if
qualified, again be appointed or elected to hold that office in accordance
with the provisions of this Constitution.
- Where this Constitution
vest in any person or authority the power to make any appointment to any
office, a person may be appointed to that office, notwithstanding that
some other person amy be holding that office, when that other person is on
leave of absence pending the relinquishment of the office; and where two
or more persons are holding the same office by reason of any appointment
made in pursuance of this subsection, then, for the purposes of any
function conferred upon the holder of that office, the person last
appointed shall be deemed to be the sole holder of the office.
Interpretation.
121.-
- In this Constitution,
unless the context otherwise requires-
"Commonwealth citizen" has such meaning
as Parliament may by law prescribe;
"Dominica" means the Commonwealth of
Dominica;
"Dollars" means Dollars in the currency
of Dominica;
"financial year" means any period of
twelve months beginning on 1st July in any year or such other date as may be
prescribed by law;
"the Government" means the Government of
Dominica;
"the House" means the House of Assembly;
"the Judicial Committee" means the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council;
"law" includes any instrument having the
force of law and any unwritten rule of law and "lawful" and lawfully
shall be construed accordingly;
"Minister" means a Minister of the
Government and includes a temporary Minister;
"Parliament" means the Parliament of
Dominica;
"oath" includes affirmation;
"oath of allegiance" means such oath of
allegiance as may be prescribed by law;
"oath of office " means, in relation to
any office, such oath for the due execution of that office as may be prescribed
by law;
"oath of secrecy" means such oath of
secrecy as may be prescribed by law;
"the Police Force" means the Dominica
Police Force and includes any other police force established to succeed to the
functions of the Dominica Police Force;
"public office" means any office of
emolument in the public service;
"public officer" means a person holding
or acting in any public office;
"the public service" means subject to the
provisions of this section the service in a civil capacity of the Government;
"session" means the period beginning when
the House first meets after Parliament has at any time been prorogued or
dissolved and ending when Parliament is prorogued or when Parliament is
dissolved without having been prorogued;
"sitting" means the period during which
the House is sitting continuously without adjournment and includes any period during
which it is in committee;
"Speaker" and "Deputy Speaker"
means the respective persons holding office as Speaker and Deputy Speaker of
the House.
- In this Constitution,
references to an office in the public service shall not be construed as
including-
- references to the
office of the Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the House of Assembly, the
Prime Minister or any other Minister, a temporary Minister; a
Parliamentary Secretary or a member of the House, the Parliamentary
Commissioner of the Deputy Parliamentary Commissioner;
- references to the
office of a member of any Commission established by this Constitution or
a member of the Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy or a
member of the Public Service Board of Appeal;
- references to the
office of judge or officer of the Supreme Court;
- save in so far as
may be provided by Parliament, references to the office of a member of
any other council, board, panel, committee or other similar body (whether
incorporated or not) established by or under any law.
- In this Constitution-
- references to the
Supreme Court Order include references to any law in force in Dominica
altering that Order;
- references to the
Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the High Court and the Judicial and
Legal Service Commission are references to the Supreme Court, the Court
of Appeal, the High Court and the Judicial and Legal Services Commission
established by the Supreme Court Order;
- references to the
Chief Justice have the same meaning as in the Supreme Court Order;
- references to a
judge of the Supreme Court are references to a judge of the High Court or
the Court of Appeal and, unless the context, otherwise requires, include
references to a judge of the former Supreme Court of the Windward Islands
and Leeward Islands; and
- references to
officers of the Supreme Court are references to the Chief Registrar and
other officers of the Supreme Court appointed under the Supreme Court
Order.
- In this Constitution
"the specified qualifications" means the professional
qualifications specified by or under any law in force in Dominica, one of
which must be held by any person before he may apply under that law to be
admitted to practice as a barrister or a solicitor in Dominica.
- For the purposes of this
Constitution, a person shall not be regarded as holding an office by
reason only of the fact that he is in receipt of a pension or other like
allowance.
- In this Constitution,
unless the context otherwise requires, a reference to the holder of an office
by the term designating his office shall be construed as including, to the
extent of his authority, a reference to any person for the time being
authorised to exercise the functions of that office.
- Except in the case where
this Constitution provides for the holder of any office thereunder to be
such person holding or acting in any other office as may for the time
being be designated in that behalf by some other specified person or
authority, no person may, without his consent, be nominated for election
to any such office or be appointed to or to act therein or otherwise be
selected therefor.
- References in this
Constitution to the power to remove a public officer from his office shall
be construed as including references to any power conferred by any law to
require or permit that officer to retire from the public service:
Provided that-
- nothing in this
subsection shall be construed as conferring on any person or authority
the power to require the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Director of
Audit of the Chief Elections Officer to retire from the public service;
and
- any powers
conferred by any law to permit a person to retire from the public service
shall, in the case of any public office who may be removed from office by
some person or authority other than a Commission established by this
Constitution, vest in the Public Service Commission.
- Any provision in this
Constitution that vests in any person or authority the power to remove any
public officer from his office shall be without prejudice to the power of
any person or authority to abolish any office or to any law providing for
the compulsory retirement of public officers generally or any class of
public office on attaining an age specified by or under that law.
- Where this Constitution
vests in any person or authority the power to appoint any person to act in
or to exercise the functions of any office if the holder thereof is
himself unable to exercise those functions, no such appointment shall be
called in question on the grounds that the holder of the office was not
unable to exercise those functions.
- No provisions of this
Constitution that any person or authority shall not be subject to the
direction or control of any other person or authority in the exercise of
any functions under this Constitution shall be construed as precluding a
court of law from exercising jurisdiction in relation to any question
whether that person or authority has exercised those functions in
accordance with this Constitution or any other law.
- Without prejudice to the
provisions of section 32(2) of the Interpretation Act 1889(a) (as applied
by subsection (14) of this section), where any power is conferred by this
Constitution to make any order, regulation or rule or give any direction
or make any designation, the power shall be construed as including the
power, exercisable in like manner and subject to the like conditions, if
any, to amend or revoke any such order, regulation, rule direction, or
designation.
- In this Constitution
references to altering this Constitution or any other law, or any
provision thereof, include references-
- to revoking it,
with or without re-enactment thereof or the making of different
provisions in lieu thereof;
- to modifying it
whether by omitting or amending any of its provisions or inserting
additional provisions in it or otherwise; and
- to suspending its
operation for any period or terminating any such suspension.
- The Interpretation Act
1889 shall apply, with the necessary adaptations, for the purpose of
interpreting this Constitution and otherwise in relation thereto as it
applies for the purpose of interpreting and in relation to Acts of the
Parliament of the United KingDom.