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30 Pages·2010·0.1 MB·Indonesian
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1 DALAM MAHKAMAH RAYUAN MALAYSIA (BIDANG KUASA RAYUAN) RAYUAN SIVIL NO: K-03-1-2008 ANTARA ISMAIL BIN ABDULLAH ------ PERAYU DAN TENAGA NASIONAL BERHAD (NO: SYARIKAT 200866-W) ------ RESPONDEN DALAM MAHKAMAH TINGGI MALAYA DI ALOR SETAR DALAM NEGERI KEDAH DARULAMAN MALAYSIA WRIT SAMAN NO: 22-16-2005 ANTARA ISMAIL BIN ABDULLAH ------ PLAINTIF DAN TENAGA NASIONAL BERHAD (NO: SYARIKAT 200866-W) ------ DEFENDAN (menurut tuntutan asal) TENAGA NASIONAL BERHAD (NO: SYARIKAT 200866-W) (Tarik balik dan terbatal oleh Defendan) ------ PLAINTIF DAN (1) ISMAIL BIN ABDULLAH (Dengan Persetujuan terbatal oleh Defendan) (2) PENGARAH TANAH GALIAN NEGERI KEDAH DARULAMAN (Dengan Persetujuan terbatal oleh Defendan) ------ DEFENDAN-DEFENDAN (menurut tuntutan balas) 2 DAN PENGARAH TANAH GALIAN NEGERI KEDAH DARULAMAN ----- PIHAK KETIGA PERTAMA DAN PENTADBIR TANAH DAERAH PENDANG ----- PIHAK KETIGA KEDUA (menurut prosiding pihak ketiga) CORAM: (1) ABDUL MALIK BIN ISHAK, JCA (2) K N SEGARA, JCA (3) ABDUL WAHAB PATAIL, JCA ABDUL MALIK BIN ISHAK, JCA DELIVERING THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT Introduction [1] After having filed his writ and his statement of claim, the appellant (Ismail bin Abdullah) applied for summary judgment against the respondent (Tenaga Nasional Berhad) under Order 14 of the Rules of the High Court 1980 (“RHC”). On 27.11.2006, the deputy registrar allowed the appellant’s summary judgment application. [2] Aggrieved by the decision of the deputy registrar, the respondent filed an appeal to the High Court. On 10.12.2007, the learned Judicial Commissioner (“JC”) allowed the respondent’s appeal. It is 3 against the decision of the learned JC in respect to the Order 14 matter that the appellant appeals to this court. [3] However, on 19.12.2006, the respondent filed an application to amend its statement of defence in enclosure 46 after the deputy registrar had allowed the appellant’s summary judgment application. [4] On 22.2.2007, the application to amend the respondent’s statement of defence in enclosure 46 came up for hearing before the senior assistant registrar (“SAR”). On 12.3.2007, the SAR dismissed enclosure 46. [5] The respondent then appealed to the High Court and, on 6.11.2007, the learned JC allowed the respondent’s application to amend the statement of defence with costs without first hearing the respondent’s appeal against the order granting summary judgment. The background facts [6] Sometime in 1995, the respondent commenced the “wayleave” procedures under section 11(1) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990 against certain portions of lands in Kota Setar, Kuala Muda, Pendang and Kubang Pasu districts in Kedah for purposes of constructing the electricity supply lines from Gurun to the border (Malaysia/Thailand). [7] Two portions of the appellant’s lands in Pendang were affected. The first was at Lot 1026 involving 1.442 acres. The second would be Lot 4 2062 involving 0.820 acres. To achieve its desired purposes, the respondent issued the requisite notices under section 11(2) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990. [8] The appellant as the land owner objected to the “wayleave” exercise in so far as his lands in Pendang were concerned. An enquiry under section 11(6) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990 was then conducted by the District Land Administrator (hereinafter referred to as the “DLA”). By virtue of section 11(7) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990, the DLA authorised the proposed utilisation of the appellant’s portions of the lands by the respondent and the DLA also ordered the respondent pursuant to section 16(1) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990 to pay the appellant compensation in the sums of RM10,124.00 and RM15,310.00 respectively for both portions of the lands respectively. [9] The appellant appealed against the compensation sums ordered by the DLA to the Majlis Mesyuarat Kerajaan Negeri Kedah (hereinafter referred to as “MMK”) pursuant to section 16(2) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990. [10] The MMK acting as the State Authority under sections 11(7) and 16(2) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990 decided in favour of the appellant and varied the order of the DLA by requiring the respondent to pay the appellant the sums of RM247,808.00 and RM557,108.00 5 respectively for the two lots totalling RM804,916.00 as compensation and this information was conveyed through the Pengarah Tanah dan Galian’s (PTG’s) letter dated 28.9.2005 (see pages 501 to 503 of the appeal record at Jilid 3). [11] The respondent refused to pay the sum of RM804,916.00 to the appellant in spite of the notice of demand dated 19.11.2004. The appellant had no choice but to file his writ and his statement of claim seeking for the sum of RM804,916.00 from the respondent. The appellant succeeded in his Order 14 application before the deputy registrar but was unsuccessful before the learned JC pursuant to an appeal by the respondent. Hence, the present appeal before us. Analysis [12] In a summary judgment proceeding, the defendant is required to satisfy the court under Order 14 rule 3(1) of the RHC that there is an issue or question in dispute which ought to be tried or that there ought “for some other reason to be a trial.” [13] The Supreme Court decision in Bank Negara Malaysia v Mohd Ismail & Ors [1992] 1 MLJ 400 is the leading authority on an Order 14 application. Mohamed Azmi SCJ, writing for the majority, had this to say at page 408 of the report: “In our view, basic to the application of all those legal propositions, is the requirement under O 14 for the court to be satisfied on affidavit 6 evidence that the defence has not only raised an issue but also that the said issue is triable. The determination of whether an issue is or is not triable must necessarily depend on the facts or the law arising from each case as disclosed in the affidavit evidence before the court.” [14] Continuing on the same page, his Lordship Mohamed Azmi SCJ said: “Thus, apart from identifying the issues of fact or law, the court must go one step further and determine whether they are triable. This principle is sometimes expressed by the statement that a complete defence need not be shown. The defence set up need only show that there is a triable issue.” [15] Finally, towards the end of the same page, his Lordship Mohamed Azmi SCJ aptly said: “Where the issue raised is solely a question of law without reference to any facts or where the facts are clear and undisputed, the court should exercise its duty under O 14. If the legal point is understood and the court is satisfied that it is unarguable, the court is not prevented from granting a summary judgment merely because ‘the question of law is at first blush of some complexity and therefore takes a little longer to understand’. ” [16] Where the defendant’s defence is unsustainable in law or on the facts an Order 14 application is an expeditious procedure that would enable the plaintiff to dispose of an action and is the best method of saving time and costs. A full blown trial, unnecessary in such circumstances, is avoided. But where there are triable issues, summary judgment would not be an appropriate alternative (Mayban Finance Bhd v. Wong Gieng Suk & Anor [2003] 1 CLJ 27). 7 [17] Roskill LJ in Verrall v. Great Yarmouth Borough Council [1981] QB 202, 218, CA, aptly said: “We have often said in this court in recent years that where there is a clear-cut issue raised in Order 14 proceedings, there is no reason why the judge in chambers–or, for that matter, this court–should not deal with the whole matter at once. Merely to order a trial so that the matters can be re-argued in open court is to encourage the law’s delays which in this court we are always trying to prevent. The first point fails.” [18] Robert Goff LJ in European Asian Bank A.G. v. Punjab & Sind Bank (No. 2) [1983] 1 WLR 642, 654, CA, made the following germane observations: “Moreover, at least since Cow v. Casey [1949] 1 K.B. 474, this court has made it plain that it will not hesitate, in an appropriate case, to decide questions of law under R.S.C., Ord. 14, even if the question of law is at first blush of some complexity and therefore takes ‘ a little longer to understand.’ It may offend against the ‘whole purpose of Order 14 not to decide a case which raises a clear-cut issue, when full argument has been addressed to the court, and the only result of not deciding it will be that the case will go for trial and the argument will be rehearsed all over again before a judge, with the possibility of yet another appeal; see Verrall v. Great Yarmouth Borough Council [1981] Q.B. 202, 215, 218, per Lord Denning M.R. and Roskill L.J. The policy of Order 14 is to prevent delay in cases where there is no defence; and this policy is, if anything, reinforced in a case such as the present, concerned as it is with a claim by a negotiating bank under a letter of credit: compare Bank fur Gemeinwirtschaft Aktiengesellschaft v. City of London Garages Ltd. [1971] 1 W.L.R. 149, 158, per Cairns L.J., a case concerned with a claim on a bill of exchange by a holder in due course.” [19] Thus, where an issue raised in an Order 14 application is one of law and is clear-cut, it should be disposed off forthwith instead of going to trial. 8 [20] And this is the right approach to adopt notwithstanding that, “The effect of Order 14 is to shut the defendant from having his day in the witness box. It is a very special jurisdiction and is only to be invoked in cases where there is no bona fide triable issue” (per Gopal Sri Ram JCA (later FCJ) in Ng Hee Thoong & Anor v Public Bank Bhd [1995] 1 MLJ 281, at page 287). [21] If the point of law is clear and the court is satisfied that it is really unarguable, then leave to defend will be refused (Israel Discount Bank of New York v. Hadjipateras And Another [1984] 1 WLR 137, at 145, CA; [1983] 3 All ER 129, at 135, C.A.). And where the words of the statute under which the action was brought clearly made the defendants liable, the court in Nassau Steam Press v. Tyler And Others [1894] 70 L.T. 376 refused to give leave to defend. [22] Now, this appeal brings into sharp focus the rigours of the Electricity Supply Act 1990 and, in particular, section 16(2) of the same Act which enacts as follows: “Compensation 16. (2) Any person aggrieved with the District Land Administrator’s assessment may within twenty-one days after the assessment appeal to the State Authority whose decision shall be final.” [23] It means what it says. Precisely put: the decision of the State Authority – referring to MMK, shall be final. And in refusing to settle the 9 sum of RM804,916.00 awarded by MMK, the appellant’s remedy was rather simple. It was to file this suit for recovery and that the respondent therefore had no legal defence to the suit but must pay the sum awarded. It is as simple as that. [24] A mandatory interpretation must be accorded to the word “shall” that appears in section 16(2) of the Electricity Supply Act 1990. [25] The House of Lords in Re Racal Communications Ltd [1980] 2 All ER 634 dealt with section 441(3) of the Companies Act 1948 which provides, so far as is material, that the decision of a High Court judge on an application under section 441 for an order authorising the inspection of the company’s books or papers where it is shown that there is reasonable cause to believe that an officer of the company has committed an offence in connection with the management of the company’s affairs and that evidence thereof is to be found in the company’s books or papers “shall not be appealable”, means, according to the House of Lords, what it says, and there is no justification for the view that its operation is restricted to questions of fact so as to give the Court of Appeal jurisdiction to hear an appeal from the decision of the judge on a question of law. The House of Lords also held that in any event, since the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal is wholly statutory and appellate only and since it has no original jurisdiction, the effect of section 31(1)(d) of the Supreme Court of 10 Judicature (Consolidation) Act 1925, which provides that no appeal shall lie from the decision of the High Court or any judge thereof where it is provided by any Act that the decision of any court or judge the jurisdiction of which or of whom is vested in the High Court is to be final, is to deny the Court of Appeal all jurisdiction in connection with such decision whether they relate to issues of fact or of law. Lord Salmon writing a separate judgment for the House of Lords had this to say at page 640 of the report: “I am not at all surprised that s 441(3) laid down that ‘The decision of a judge of the High Court ..... on an application under this section shall not be appealable’. After all, s 441(1) was making available exceptional powers to the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Board of Trade and chief officers of police providing that the High Court judge was satisfied that there was reasonable cause for the exercise of those powers. If he was not so satisfied and refused the application, Parliament, in my respectful view, rightly considered that that should be an end of the matter and that therefore there should be no appeal.” [26] Lord Edmund-Davies, also writing a separate judgment for the House of Lords in Re Racal Communications Ltd (supra) observed at page 641 of the report: “My Lords, the determining issue in this appeal relates to the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal to entertain an appeal against the decision of a High Court judge in a matter declared by statute to be not appealable.” [27] Continuing at page 645, Lord Edmund-Davies aptly said: “But, since the words of ouster in s 441(3) barred an appeal to the Court of Appeal, they had no jurisdiction to consider the matter at all.”

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Mengikut senarai bayaran tambahan yang dikemukakan oleh. MMK kepada PTD functions or organs of Government can be mingled at will. The.
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