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CCJ rules that Trust Company (Guyana) Limited must register with Guyana Securities Council

Last Updated on Friday, 30 July 2021, 16:23 by Denis Chabrol

In a judgment released on Thursday the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) dismissed the appeal of the Trust Company (Guyana) Limited in the matter of Trust Company (Guyana) Limited v Guyana Securities Council [2021] CCJ 11 (AJ).

The Court affirmed the orders of the Guyana Court of Appeal. The CCJ heard the appeal on 20 April 2021.

The Guyana Securities Council (GSC) is responsible for regulating the securities market in Guyana. In 2010, the GSC wrote to Trust Company (Guyana) Limited (“Trust”) saying that it was a public company that should be registered with the GSC. Trust denied that it was a public company and refused to register. It subsequently filed an action in the High Court, seeking declarations that it was a private company and not a public company. Trust was unsuccessful at the High Court and before the Court of Appeal.

The main issue before the CCJ involved the interpretation of the Securities Industry Act . The Act provides that where a company issues a security which is owned by more than 50 persons, it is a public company. The Act also provides that a ‘share’ is a type of security. In 2009, Trust had issued shares to 60 persons. The Court had to determine whether the issuance of shares to over 50 persons made Trust a public company within the provisions of the Act, and if so, whether Trust was compelled to register with the GSC under section 56(1) of the Act.

The CCJ, in a judgment authored by Justice Rajnauth-Lee, decided that, having regard to the plain meaning, the entire context and the main objectives of the Act, Trust was a public company, as it had issued ‘shares’ that were owned by more than fifty (50) persons. Having regard to the policy, clear purpose and entire scheme of the Act, the Court was also satisfied that the legislature in Guyana intended that by virtue of section 56(1) all public companies are to be treated as reporting issuers.  As such, they are required to register with the GSC, whether they existed at the time the relevant legislation came into effect, that is 22 July 2002, or were established or became public companies after that date.

Trust’s appeal was therefore dismissed. The Court was presided over by the Hon. Mr Justice Saunders, President and the Hon. Justices Wit, Rajnauth-Lee, Burgess and Jamadar. The Appellant was represented by Mr Timothy M Jonas SC and the Respondent by Mr CA Nigel Hughes and Mr Stephen Roberts.