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Wednesday, July 23, 2025

State to compensate car dealer for wrongful seizure of 29 vehicles

by

168 days ago
20250205
High Court Judge Frank Seepersad

High Court Judge Frank Seepersad

Derek Achong

Se­nior Re­porter

derek.achong@guardian.co.tt

The State is set to pay sig­nif­i­cant com­pen­sa­tion to a used-car deal­er af­ter the de­ten­tion of 29 ve­hi­cles by the po­lice for sev­er­al years. 

The Of­fice of the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al agreed to pay com­pen­sa­tion to Han­nah Bovell and Jean Pierre’s Au­to Sup­plies and Ser­vices Lim­it­ed yes­ter­day as their case was set to go on tri­al be­fore High Court Judge Frank Seep­er­sad.

The tri­al was set to go ahead un­de­fend­ed as the AG’s Of­fice failed to meet a dead­line giv­en by Jus­tice Seep­er­sad for fil­ing wit­ness state­ments in the case.

The com­pen­sa­tion is now ex­pect­ed to be as­sessed by a High Court Mas­ter at a lat­er date. 

Bovell ini­ti­at­ed le­gal ac­tion af­ter she took con­trol of the com­pa­ny when her hus­band, Jean Pierre As­see, who found­ed it, died in ear­ly 2016. They claimed that be­tween 2013 and 2019, the used ve­hi­cles val­ued at $1,837,000 were seized by the po­lice and de­tained at sev­er­al po­lice sta­tions and an im­pound lot in Sea Lots. 

Bovell sought in­for­ma­tion on the ve­hi­cles from the po­lice, and eight were re­leased to her. She was un­able to track down some of the ve­hi­cles, and three were re­port­ed­ly hand­ed over to un­known third par­ties. She then filed the law­suit in re­la­tion to the ve­hi­cles, which she claimed were be­ing un­law­ful­ly de­tained. 

Bovell and the com­pa­ny claimed that they suf­fered a loss of in­come as the com­pa­ny had en­tered in­to “work-to-own” arrange­ments in re­la­tion to some of the ve­hi­cles.

“As a con­se­quence of the wrong­ful de­ten­tion and/or con­ver­sion of the 29 ve­hi­cles, the claimants suf­fered loss of earn­ings since they were not able to sell these ve­hi­cles for which they had al­ready ex­pend­ed mon­ey to pur­chase,” their lawyers said. 

“The claimants al­so suf­fered con­se­quen­tial loss of use and earn­ings as a re­sult of the de­pre­ci­a­tion and de­te­ri­o­ra­tion of the ve­hi­cles that have been ex­posed to the el­e­ments for years,” they added. 

They al­so claimed that the T&T Po­lice Ser­vice (TTPS) was in clear breach of its own Stand­ing Or­ders by fail­ing to keep ac­cu­rate and up-to-date records in re­la­tion to the ve­hi­cles. 

In late 2023, the AG’s Of­fice ap­plied to have the claim struck out on the ba­sis that it was filed out­side the four-year statu­to­ry lim­i­ta­tion pe­ri­od for bring­ing such cas­es. It al­so claimed Bovell and the com­pa­ny failed to prove that they were the le­git­i­mate own­ers of the ve­hi­cles. 

The ap­pli­ca­tion was re­ject­ed by Jus­tice Seep­er­sad, who ruled that it was “de­void of mer­it.” He ruled that the AG’s Of­fice had not demon­strat­ed that any oth­er par­ty had bet­ter ti­tle to the ve­hi­cles.

“The court al­so takes ju­di­cial no­tice of the fact that a re­gret­table prac­tice does ex­ist where­by peo­ple buy ve­hi­cles and do not trans­fer same to ob­vi­ate trans­fer charges or where used car deal­ers would buy ve­hi­cles and on­ly trans­fer them when they are resold,” Jus­tice Seep­er­sad said. “As a con­se­quence, in many in­stances, the on­ly ev­i­dence to es­tab­lish proof of own­er­ship or an in­ter­est in such a ve­hi­cle is a re­ceipt,” he added. 

Bovell and her com­pa­ny were rep­re­sent­ed by Ar­den Williams and An­toinette Lu­cas-An­drews.


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