Court Court to decide whether to grant monetary damages to former SJPP educator by Barbados Today 10/03/2022 written by Barbados Today 10/03/2022 3 min read A+A- Reset FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 241 The Court of Appeal has reserved its decision in a matter brought by veteran educator Valdez Francis following a 2010 judicial review decision by the High Court not to award him monetary damages. Through his attorney Gregory Nicholls, Francis had brought a judicial review application against the Attorney General and the board of management of the then Samuel Jackman Prescod Polytechnic (SJPP) for the administrative decision to terminate his temporary appointment as coordinator of the SJPP Open and Flexible Learning Centre and reassign him to his substantive teaching post at the St Leonardโs Boys School. In March 2020, Madam Justice Jacqueline Cornelius ruled that there were egregious acts of public maladministration in the educatorโs case and granted him the declaratory relief and quashing orders he sought, but did not award monetary damages. Appealing the latter decision in a civil application, Francis contended that the principles of good administration required the court to grant an โeffective remedyโ to meet the justice of the case and one that went beyond the granting of declaratory relief and a non-curative quashing order. He has asked a panel of Court of Appeal judges โ Chief Justice Sir Patterson Cheltenham, Justice Rajendra Narine, and Justice Francis Belle โ to set aside the High Courtโs decision to โrefuse to award him damages to vindicate his public law rights that have been infringed by the public authoritiesโ in the unlawful administrative decision to terminate his temporary appointment and the reversion to his substantive post, after 14 years of secondment in senior administrative posts in the Ministry of Education. Nicholls is suggesting that the Court consider awarding damages in the region of $50 000 in โnon-pecuniary lossโ for what he said was the โembarrassment, inconvenience, all of the other dislocationsโ that his client suffered as a result of โthe series of unlawful actionsโ that put him out of the SJPP. You Might Be Interested In Alleged burglar remanded Crime spree Francis to undergo assessment But Principal Crown Counsel Marsha Lougheed, who is representing the Attorney General in the matter, argued that the judge gave adequate consideration, in their view, to the issue of whether the information before the court warranted the exercise of her discretion to award damages. โWe believe that the issue was addressed adequately within the parameters of the judgeโs discretion. โWe disagree with the position taken by the appellant that the judge in any way erred in law or misdirected herself on any of the issues raised by the appellant in his grounds of appeal,โ said Lougheed who further submitted that the question that the Court of Appeal has to consider was whether the trial judge erred in law โsimply because she refused to exercise her discretion to award a specific remedy sought by the appellantโ. โWe submit that the issue as to whether damages were to be awarded to the claimant, now appellant, was entirely within the purview of the judge. Based on the evidence available for her consideration and evaluation, she deemed it not warranted in the circumstances. โWe invite this court to accept the findings of the judge and not to vary the position with respect to the award of damages. It is a discretionary exercise . . . . We submit that the judge was accurate that there was nothing before that court that would warrant an award of damages as required,โ she added. Queenโs Counsel Larry Smith, who is the attorney for the SJPP board of management, adopted Lougheedโs submissions and in putting forward arguments of his own, urged the three-member panel to โfind there is no merit in this appealโ and award costs to his client. Barbados Today Stay informed and engaged with our digital news platform. The leading online multimedia news resource in Barbados for news you can trust. You may also like Charges dismissed in long-running serious bodily harm, firearm case 24/06/2026 Teen remanded on home invasion charges 24/06/2026 Eleven charged with Savvy On The Bay attack remanded again 23/06/2026