Remembering Mr.​ Justice Anthony Yeboah

Remembering Mr.​ Justice Anthony Yeboah

On 4th October 2019, the day on which new lawyers were called to the Ghanaian Bar, the Bar and Bench lost one its brightest light – Justice Anthony Yeboah. I have appeared before him on several occasions. And I have since spoken to others who have appeared before him. And they are all unanimous on one point: he was such a brilliant judge. I remember a colleague making a submission before him and throwing in the words “My Lord, this is a very clear matter”. Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah calmly replied: “Be careful with this. You will never know if a judge is a Scalia or a Sotomayor”- a timely reminder that what the law is, sometimes depends on the judge.

Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah was born in April 1957 in Kumasi. He attended St. Hubert Seminary, Kumasi; and St. Peters Secondary School. He later went to the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in languages. He also went to the Ghana Law School where he won the overall best student in drafting and conveyancing. He practised with Dadson & Associates; Hayfron Benjamin and Co, and George Sarpong Legal Services, Kumasi. In 2009, he joined the bench as a high court judge. 

For the few years before his elevations to the Court of Appeal, he was stationed at the Human Rights Court 2 in Accra. And from his desk emerged some bold and unchallenged decisions which have had significant impact on human rights law in particular and public law in general. 

A few of these cases will do. First, The Commissioner, CHRAJ & 2 Ors v. Ghana National Fire Service & Attorney-General[1]. This case concerned two women dismissed from the National Fire Service because of some regulation that prohibited women in the service from getting pregnant in the first three years of their employment. There was no way such a provision was going to be upheld in his court. He called it what it was: “Discriminatory”. Mr. Justice Anthony Yeboah ordered that the women who had been dismissed from the GNFS for becoming pregnant within the first three years of their employment be reinstated to the employment of GNFS without prejudice to any benefits that accrued to them during the period of dismissal. He also made an order for payment of all arrears of their salaries and benefits that accrued to them during the period of dismissal as well as compensation in the sum of GHS 50, 000 each to them for the trauma and inevitable inconvenience of the wrongful dismissal.

In the absence of comprehensive legislation on the right to information and disclosure of public documents, Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah was willing to go the full haul to give meaning and flesh to the scant constitutional provision on the right to information. 

The first of such was Lolan Kow Sagoe-Moses & 6 Ors  v The Honourable Minister & Anor[2]. This case involved an action by a civil society organisation, Citizens Ghana Movement to request documents bordering on a public bus branding deal entered between the Government of Ghana and a private entity, Smartys’ Branding. His Lordship granted the application for the disclosure of the documents. Commenting on the right to information, Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah noted [in response to an argument that there was no inherent right to information in the absence of specific legislation]: 

“It is a right that is primarily inherent in the person as a human being and secondarily constitutional. The right is virtually boundless unless the state takes steps to limit, through legislation, its scope, reach or mode of application. It is not the legislation that vests the right in the individual; the individual has the right to information as both a human right and a constitutional right. The individual does not need a Freedom of Information Act to enjoy the right to information in Ghana”. 

In drawing the boundaries between when a court will grant a disclosure and when it would not, his Lordship noted that there was the need to distinguish between matters that are “of public interest” and those that are “in the public interest”. According to him, “an issue may be of public interest for being sensational without being in the public interest understood in terms of national interest, national economy, public order, national security and public morality.” 

Then there is another case involving Citizens Ghana Movement and the Ministry of Communications. Similarly, the case concerned the disclosure of some contractual documents entered into between the Ministry of Communication and a private entity. Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah ordered the release of those documents. 

In Lolan Ekow Sagoe-Moses & Anor v Mrs Charlotte Osei[3], Mr. Justice Anthony Yeboah was confronted with the question of whether the Electoral Commission could compel the various political parties to file their returns. The action was initiated by a member of the Citizen Ghana Movement seeking amongst others a mandamus to compel the Electoral Commission requesting political parties to publish a notice asking them to submit their accounts for onward publication to the public. Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah, in response to the Electoral Commission’s helpless posture regarding the non-compliance of the law by the various political parties noted: 

“Clearly, the Commission has the rule-making powers to prescribe sanctions for non-compliance with the requirement to file accounts. What is the justification for the failure to prescribe sanctions and enforce them? The Commission ought not to be allowed to rely on their unjustifiable omission to prescribe sanctions to justify the failure of the political parties to obey the law.” 

His lordship directed that the Electoral Commission (a) publishes a demand notice requesting political parties to submit its statement of accounts, and (b) publish the statement of account for the information of the public. Significantly, his Lordship stated that the Applicants were entitled to the copies of the statement of assets and liabilities by all registered political parties. 

In another decision involving the Electoral Commission, Mr. Justice Anthony Yeboah had no qualms in upholding the right of Ghanaians abroad to vote[4]. The Applicants in this matter were Ghanaians ordinarily resident in the United States of America. Their problem was that the Electoral Commission was not enforcing the Representation of People (Amendment) Act, 2006 (Act 699). Act 699 permits Ghanaians resident abroad to be registered and vote. It was the case of the Applicants that the Electoral Commission had denied them the right to enjoy this right. And the Electoral Commission did not deny this charge. Its answer to the charge was that the implementation of this provision comes at a huge cost to the state and also requires careful planning and methodical execution such as placing officials at various posts outside the country. 

His Lordship would have none of that. In his view, the Electoral Commission was not interested in finding a solution but only interested in the “recitation of challenges as excuses for not performing its constitutional function as assigned under Act 699…”. He brushed aside the Electoral Commission’s argument that it was an independent body and could not be directed by any other person as to how to perform its functions. He noted that: 

“the independent status of the [Electoral Commission] does not make it immune from action for declaring that it has exceeded its authority or acted in a manner that having regard to its unreasonableness, irrationality or unfairness cannot be accorded the sanction of legality in view of Article 23 and 296 of the Constitution.” 

For him, the courts could intervene in the affairs of the Electoral Commission to ensure that it stays within the boundary of the law. He concluded that the Electoral Commission deliberately and wilfully refused to implement the reforms required to allow Ghanaians living outside Ghana to vote. For him, in just the same way that the exercise of power must be explained, deliberate non-exercise of power must also be explained.  For him, “It appears outrageous for the Electoral Commission to justify its delay and inaction on the ground of want of a solution to the so-called challenges in the face of the available wealth of information on the law and practice of diaspora voting.” And one last quote: 

“An administrative body established by law and funded with the resources of the State cannot be allowed to be whistling down the lane, kicking an empty can and telling itself that a decade is not enough to figure out how to comply with Act 699”

Finally, in Addo v The Attorney-General & Anor[5], the applicant was arrested for child pornography and defilement. According to the Applicant, “the police have been uncompromisingly making the effort to ‘access the content of the laptop and mobile phone’ and had on several occasions ‘taken the Applicant together with the said laptop and mobile phone to a number of so-called IT experts in many places in Accra and elsewhere to have them help the Police access the content of the said laptop and mobile phone.’” The key question is whether the police can by themselves search an item or device either used or associated with the commission of a crime (without a warrant issued under the hand of a magistrate). The answer was a resounding “no”. Whiles recognizing that law enforcement agencies have the power to access electronic gadgets for investigating crime, Mr Justice Anthony Yeboah pointed out that in situations where there was no chance of the crime item being lost or tampered with, the right thing to do was to get a warrant under the hand of a magistrate. He went on to assert that: 

“… if the suspect or accused would be presumed innocent at the trial, then she must be equally presumed innocent at the criminal investigation; if the suspect or accused cannot be compelled to testify at the trial, then she ought not to be compelled to give any statement or information at the criminal investigation (and this is what the caution that is administered to a suspect or accused is about); and if the suspect or accused is not to be compelled to self-incriminate, then she should not be compelled to disclose any information that she does not voluntarily wish or consent to disclose.”

He went on to say: 

“It follows, in my respectful view, that any conduct of the police investigator that has the tendency to undermine the intended and constitutionally-required fair-trial of the suspect or accused ought not to be countenanced as it amounts to inchoate infringement of the right to a fair trial, particularly the presumption of innocence and the right not to self-incriminate.” 

He disagreed with counsel for the Applicant that the police seizure of the Applicant’s phone and laptop amounted to a breach of the Applicant’s right to property as the “… right to privacy, like the right to property, may equally be limited or restricted by a law that is necessary for a democracy”.

He was a judicial activist and a dye-in-wool human rights judge who was mindful of the need for social justice. It comes as little surprise that he titled his book “The Alchemy of Social Justice.” In his own words, the “Alchemy of Social Justice” is a:

 “three-tier attempt, first to evaluate the judicial attitude of the Supreme Court of Ghana to the doctrine of political question and social justice within the framework of the DPSP; second, to propose a judicial approach to the management of the constitutional template (DPSP), and third to generate public interest in the project to transform the Ghanaian political state into a free and just society.” 

It was his view that Article 13 of the 1960 constitution was an example of a directive principle of state policy in its seminal stage of development and that the Re Akoto & 7 Others case was a lost opportunity in Ghana’s search for social justice and accountability. 

The avid jazz and chess enthusiast left behind a wife and five children. Our sincere condolences to his family and may his soul rest in peace. 


[1]Unreported judgment of the High Court, Accra, Human Rights Division, in Suit No. HR 0063/2017 delivered on 23 April 2018

[2]Unreported judgment of the High Court, Accra, Human Rights Division, in Suit No. HR 0027/2015 delivered on 13 April 2016

[3]Unreported judgment of the High Court, Accra, Human Rights Division, in Suit No. HR 0057/2017 delivered on 9 February 2018

[4]Unreported judgment of the High Court, Accra, Human Rights Division, in Suit No. HR 003/2017 delivered on 18 December 2017

[5]Unreported judgment of the High Court, Accra, Human Rights Division, in Suit No. HR 0080/2017 delivered on 30 March 2017.

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Samuel Alesu-Dordzi is an Editor of the Ghana Law Hub.

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