Category: Law

  • Alegeh vows to reform electoral process

    President-elect of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Mr. Augustine Alegeh (SAN) has pledged to reform the association’s electoral process to allow for electronic voting.

    Speaking after his election, he said he would work to make running for an NBA office less cumbersome and inexpensive.

    Alegeh was last week elected the 27th NBA President, bringing to a close several months of intrigues ahead of a keenly contested election.

    The NBA Presidency  was this time  zoned to the West, which in NBA nomenclature includes the Midwest. Consequently,  four contestants aspired for the office, namely Alegeh, Mrs Funke Adekoya (SAN), Dele Adesina (SAN), Chief Niyi Akintola (SAN) and Osas Erhabor.

    Other elected officers are: Francis Ekwere (First Vice-President);  Taiwo O. Taiwo (Second Vice-President); Akintokunbo Oluwole (Third Vice-President); Mazi Afam Osigwe (General Secretary); Olatunji Salawu (First Asst. Secretary); Ephraim Adimabua (Second Assistant Secretary); and Amina Ibrahim (Treasurer).

    The rest are Welfare Officer, Mas’ud Alabelewe; Publicity  Secretary, Gbolahan Gbadamosi; Financial Secretary, Kelvin Ejelonu; Asst. Financial Secretary, Cecilia Ugbuji,  and Legal Adviser, Bisi Enoch Ayeni.

    Alegeh’s election marks the emergence of a new power block at the Bar. Even though regional fora adopted candidates for the election, their influence was not readily manifest  like in the past.

    Alegeh had an overwhelming support. He polled 691 votes, followed by Adesina (370), Adekoya (255), Akintola (126) and Erhabor (17).

    Some analysts believe had the Egbe Amofin (Yoruba Lawyers Forum) been able to present a consensus candidate (which would have pitted the West against the Midwest, assuming Alegeh did not step down), it would have avoided the split votes of 768, which is 77 more than what Alegeh polled.

    However, other candidates who contested for the office of  NBA President have sent in their congratulatory massages and pledged to work with Alegeh to move the Bar forward.

    Adesina said: “I wish to say that though the contest was intense, it is now over and a President –elect  has emerged.  There is a clear and present duty on us all to move the Bar forward and advance the course of the legal profession.

    “As a key member of the NBA family, I wish to once again assure our new President, Augustine Alegeh (SAN) of my support and co-operation. In declaring closed my campaign organisation, I thank God for your support. May God bless us all and bless our association.”

    Akintola congratulated Alegah and assured him of his co-operation. He added: “We all have learnt our lessons from the result of this election.”

    Erhabor: “In everything, we give thanks to God Almighty. We congratulate all the contestants and delegates. In a sense, we all have pursued our diverse convictions with courage and audacity. We congratulate in particular, the President- elect, Augustine Alegeh (SAN) and other elected officers, we wish the entire Bar well.”

    Congratulating Alegeh, Adekoya urged him to ensure probity, ethical conduct, policies that are in the best interests of lawyers, as well as holding officers accountable to the highest standards.

    “To the incoming President, I offer my congratulations. May the Almighty be your guide. Our members have spoken and I bow to their will. However, we must continue to interrogate the pressing issues that assail our Bar Association; we must demand probity, ethical conduct, policies that are in the best interests of lawyers, and hold our officers accountable to the highest standards,” Adekoya said.

  • Federal High Court workers may join strike

    There are stong indications  that Federal High Court workers may join the strike by their state high court counterparts under the aegis of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN).

    Workers embarked on the strike to enforce their demand for the financial independence of the judiciary.

    It is also to show solidarity judiciary workers in Rivers State who are protesting the presence of two heads, one appointed by the National Judicial Council (NJC) and the other by the state government.

    It was learnt that JUSUN officials have started mobilisation of their Federal High Court members across the country and have put them on red alert should the federal government fail to meet their demands.

    Since the strike commenced last week, Judges of the High Court of Lagos state, lawyers, police and prison officials for instance, have not been able to access the court rooms.

    As a result, activities had remained  paralysed as no court room was opened for adjudication of cases.

    The two main gates of the headquarters of the High court of Lagos state along Oba Akinjobi road and Old Secretariat road, GRA, Ikeja remained under lock  by the workers to prevent litigants and their counsels from going into the court premises.

    Many cases which ought to have been heard, including high profile ones involving oil marketers, chairman of Bi-Courtney Limited Chief Olawale Babalakin and Chairman, Cross Country Transport Company, Chief Bube Okorodudu were stalled by the workers’ strike.

    Chief  Okorodudu, for instance,  who came to Ikeja High  court last week, in compliance with an order of the court presided by Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo could not gain entrance into the court premises.

    Justice Lawal-Akapo issued a warrant for the arrest of Okorodudu to appear in court yesterday to answer alleged theft charges of N82.8million preferred against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Okorodudu’s counsel  Godswill Mrakpor said his client’s absence from the court was because he travelled out on health grounds.

    He said Okorodudu, immediately on arrival in the country last week  reported himself to the police at Zone 2, Onikan and was in court as ordered by the trial judge.

    Workers at the other divisions of the High Court of Lagos State, including Ikorodu, Lagos and Badagry also locked the gates against judges and lawyers in compliance with the directive of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN).

    JUSUN last week directed its members to shut all courts with the exception of federal courts for failure of the Federal Government to implement the judgment of a Federal High Court on the financial autonomy of the state judiciaries councils.

    In a communique at the end of an emergency meeting,  the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the union, JUSUN also asked Federal judiciary workers to be at alert because they may be requested to join the strike in solidarity with their state counterparts.

    The communique,  jointly signed by the National President of the union, Marwan Adamu, and the General Secretary, Isaiah Adetola, also stated that the national secretariat of the union has taken over the industrial dispute embarked upon by the Rivers state JUSUN recently over leadership crisis.

    JUSUN further described as “unfair” for both the National Judicial Council, (NJC) and the Rivers State Judicial Service Commission (JSC), to issue two separate directives for and against returning to work.

    The union said they had to solidarise with their colleagues as the workers cannot serve two masters at the same time.

    He said the union members in Rivers would not resume unless the critical stakeholders in the state amicably resolve the matter so as to ensure security of the workers.

    According to the communique, “the security and protection of our members is no longer guaranteed in this leadership crisis that engulfed the Rivers State Judiciary in the last one year”.

    It also said: “After the exhaustive deliberation on the refusal/failure of state Governments to respect/implement the Federal High Court Abuja, judgment /orders in respect of financial autonomy of state Judiciaries as well as failure of stakeholders to abide by the decision to set up a technical implementation committee of the FAAC meeting of  June 17, it is resolved by NEC:

    “That all Judiciary staff at state level nationwide should proceed on an indefinite strike with effect from Friday, July 11.

    “That the National secretariat of the union shall notify Federal Judiciary workers to join the action as events unfolds.

    “That the National Executive Committee of the union after a review of events in Rivers state Judiciary also resolved that JUSUN members in the state should continue and sustain their current strike until the major stakeholders, fine an amicable resolution of the leadership crisis in Rivers state judiciary.

    Meanwhile the NEC in session has announced total takeover of action in Rivers State”

  • Nba election: A post-mortem

    Nba election: A post-mortem

    Following the election of  new national officers of the NBA last week, a civil society activist and Chairman National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Prof. Chidi Odinkalu examines the election, the outcome and implication for the legal profession.

    At the end of the contest for the Presidency of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) two years ago, I wrote that “the mechanisms for electing the leadership of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) are out-dated, scandal-prone and liable to whimsical capture”, pointing out that they are “too dependent on government and the elections into leadership at the Bar were too prone to manipulation.” For four days from July 14, 2014, delegates from the various branches of the Bar gathered in Abuja to elect a new leadership. It was also an opportunity to show how the leadership selection processes at the Bar had evolved, if at all.

    At the conclusion of a special conference in Abuja on 15 July 2014, the delegates elected Augustine Oyarekhua Alegeh, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) from the NBA’s Benin Branch, as the new President of the Association. Alegeh polled 691 votes to beat four other candidates for the leadership of the Bar. Three other Senior Advocates on the ballot, namely: Funke Adekoya, Dele Adesina, and Niyi Akintola, polled 370, 255 and 126 votes respectively. Osas Erhabor, former Chair of the Ilesha Branch of the Bar, polled 17 votes. In the ballot for Secretary-General of the Bar, Mazi Afam Osigwe of the Abuja Branch polled 684 votes to beat off the combined challenge of Steve Abar of the Jos Branch who polled 401 votes and Reuben James of the Kaduna Branch who polled 242 votes.

     

    Ethnic Bar Politics

    This was a very keen contest. A slate of five candidates on the ballot for the presidency of the Bar is unprecedented, surely not since the restoration of the NBA in 1998. At the turn of the millennium, the NBA instituted two measures designed to diminish the acrimony and sleights of hand that drove it into near-terminal crisis in Port-Harcourt in 1991. First, in place of universal suffrage for all lawyers, it instituted a delegate-based electoral system. Eligible delegates comprise the 13 elected officers of the Bar, all Senior Advocates of Nigeria, members of the Body of Benchers who are not serving or retired judicial officers, other members of the National Executive Council (NEC) of the NBA, and branch delegates. Each of the 109 branches of the NBA is entitled to send 10 delegates to the election. To account for disparities in the size of branches, branches with more than 100 members are entitled to one additional delegate for every 100 members. This system was designed to give branch delegates a decisive edge in determining who leads the Bar. It also makes the branch chairpersons beautiful brides and brokers of delegates and votes. In the just-concluded elections, there were 1,728 registered delegates. Some were unable to show up for the actual ballot.

    Second, the Bar instituted an informal convention of rotating its Presidency among fields of aspirants confined in succession to the three historic regions of Nigeria at Independence – East, North, and Western regions. This began in 2000. In NBA-speak, this is called “inclusion”. Nigerians understand it more popularly as “zoning”. After two rounds of this rotation among the three regions, the position was to return on this occasion to the Western region. There was a snag though: the three zones invented by the Bar were in arrears of Nigeria’s contemporary political architecture. In 1963, the Mid-Western region was created from the Western Region. By 1967, Nigeria had become 12 States. By the turn of the Millennium, Nigeria’s 36 States were clustered into six, not three geo-political zones, supposedly designed to advance national equity and inclusion. NBA’s own inclusion policy based on three instead of six geo-political zones easily became fraught, fragile and controversial.

    As with the wider politics of Nigeria, the convention of rotating the Presidency of the Bar in this way encouraged the emergence of regional, ethnic, and tribal bar forums. Many people considered the emergence of these ethnic and tribal Bar forums to be contrary to the declared commitment of the Bar to promoting the rule of law on a non-discriminatory basis. It was also seen as injecting narrow ethnic interests into what increasingly became a contest for the capture of the Bar as an influential professional group. Indeed, in 2012, a committee to review the system of leadership selection at the Bar chaired by Prince Lanke Odogiyan, a Life Bencher and former President of the NBA, had recommended the abolition of these sectional forums. The National Executive Committee of the NBA adopted the Odogiyan Committee Report but its recommendations remain shelved.

    For their part, 13 Branches of the NBA from the former Mid-West region (now Delta and Edo States) had always protested the fact that this arrangement was inherently unfair to them. Although they were historically part of the Western Region, the branches in Delta and Edo states were excluded from the forum of NBA’s branches of the old Western Region where the preferred platform for organising was ethnically branded and called “Egbe Amofin”. In Yoruba language, this translates literally into “Group/Forum of people learned in law”.

     

    A showdown on zoning

    The Mid-West Bar chose this most recent contest for the Presidency of the Bar as the moment for an electoral showdown on these claims of injustice. They could not have picked a better moment. According to the conventions of the Bar, the Presidency of the Bar for the two year period beginning 2014 was “zoned” to the old Western Region. Historically, South-West Nigeria produced the first lawyers in the country. It also has the highest concentration of lawyers. At the beginning of this election cycle, it comprised 23 branches. The Mid-West Bar had 13 Branches. If the South-West could produce one candidate, that person was guaranteed to be a winner. But it could not.

    For these elections, the 23 branches of the South-West produced four candidates: Funke Adekoya from the Lagos, Dele Adesina from Ikeja, Niyi Akintola from Ibadan, and Osas Erhabor from Ilesa. Several and successive attempts by the leadership of the Egbe Amofin to “harmonise” the ambitions of the respective candidates proved frustrating and ultimately futile. Each of the candidates had good reasons for putting their ambitions in the laps of the electorate. Propelled by a sense of injustice meanwhile and by deftly exploiting the geo-political alliances with the branches in the States of the Niger Delta and of South-Eastern Nigeria, the Mid-West Bar rallied solidly behind the candidacy of Augustine Alegeh.

    The numbers prove it. Together, the candidates from the South-West polled 762 votes, 71 votes more than Mr. Alegeh. Mr. Alegeh’s candidacy thus benefitted immensely from the uncharacteristically egalitarian outcome of the Egbe Amofin’s efforts to “harmonise” the ambitions of its members ahead of the vote.

     

    Money Talks

    A major reason given for the establishment of the delegate system for electing leadership at the NBA was to reduce costs and expense. If this was the intention, the NBA needs to urgently re-think its rationales. The delegate system has made the elections into offices in the NBA more not less expensive. Long before the election cycle began, candidates invested considerable resources in influencing the creation of new branches, emergence of branch chairmen and determining the composition of branch delegates. Candidates spent freely on the transport, accommodation and subsistence costs of their delegates.

    Arguably, for the first time in the NBA’s history, some candidates deployed private jets as they rushed around the country canvassing for the delegate count to get them across the finish line. In these elections, money spoke very loudly. By some estimates, the NBA’s 2014 elections were the first in which the campaign expenditure easily crossed the One billion Naira mark.

    Many people will wonder why leadership elections in any professional or civic association such as the NBA would be this expensive. Clearly, the NBA is not an ordinary organization. The President of the NBA has huge powers of patronage, with a privilege to nominate members into the boards of choice constitutional and statutory bodies.

    Whether this is sufficient reason for excess of money sloshing around the NBA elections is a different matter. In its 2013 report, the NBA’s Committee on the Professionalization of the Secretariat complained about a disturbing “tendency of the Bar and its leadership sometimes to contract potentially problematic relationships with politically exposed persons (PEPs) who sometimes have partisan interests in compromising an independent Bar.” Quite clearly, the influence of outside money in this leadership contest makes this a clear, present and continuing worry.

     

    Out-dated and Arbitrary Processes

    Defined by this landscape, the outcome of this ballot for the Presidency of the Bar was not entirely unpredictable. Yet, the manner in which the NBA conducts elections saddles the in-coming President with a moral burden from which he can, nevertheless, retrieve an agenda for reform and leadership.

    The concerns first expressed about NBA’s leadership processes in 2012 remain unaddressed. If anything, these elections advertised them on a grand scale. The hallmark of democratic politics is that elections are governed by pre-determined rules designed to guarantee the credibility of outcomes, which are indeterminate. Within the NBA, however, there is ample reason to believe that the rules are indeterminate in order to facilitate outcomes that are designed to be pre-determined. This is not a criticism of any candidate. Rather it speaks to the failures of an Association whose methods and reputation are no longer of any concern to its leadership or membership and whose dominant governance mores now hew closely to the anything-goes predilection of Nigerian politics. This is tragic.

    Many aspects of the just-concluded elections were deeply flawed. Arbitrariness defined the process. To begin with, the NBA’s branch network determines the outcome of the Association’s votes. In 2012, the NBA comprised 100 branches. In the run in to the 2014 ballot, at least nine new branches were created. When branches were last created in 2012, the NBA resolved that the new branches would not be deployed for election purposes. As such, they did not present any delegates to the 2012 elections. In a departure from this precedent, however, all the newly created branches in 2014 fielded delegates to the Special Conference. Although the rules for creating new branches in the NBA are very clear, the criteria for the creation of the new ones and their distribution across the country were unclear. Recollections also differ as to how some of the new branches were created. In the end, an impression may have been created that many of these new branches were primarily created to affect or tilt the electoral calculus with aforethought.

    The Guidelines governing the elections gave the hand-picked Chairman of the NBA’s Electoral Committee plenipotentiary “powers” to fiddle with the rules as he deemed fit and to disqualify candidates on a whim. On the eve of the vote on14 July, the Committee did just that, disqualifying four candidates for different positions in circumstances that appeared opaque at the very best.

    The list of eligible voters was unknown and undisclosed until the delegates converged in Abuja for the accreditation on 14 July, one day before the actual balloting. The best that the outgoing leadership of the Association offered in defence of this was that publication of the NBA’s Roll of voters is not provided for in the rules of the Association. In response to this, one can only hope that the leadership was mis-reported otherwise this would be considered evidence of bad faith or of lack of the capability to organize a credible ballot.

    Balloting was to have ended by noon on 15 July. By this appointed time, however, none of the candidates knew or had access to the list of accredited voters. In effect, it was theoretically possible for voters to have been accredited after the official end of accreditation by 17:00 hours on 14 July. There were credible allegations that this may indeed have happened. It was impossible to verify these allegations before filing this report.

    After voting was supposed to have ended, the Electoral Committee announced that they had accredited 1,481 voters, comprising 142 Senior Advocates; 36 Benchers; 68 co-opted members of the National Executive; and 1,235 branch delegates. This information was, however, provided, long after the fact and in circumstances which sadly leave the leadership of the Electoral Committee open to entirely avoidable allegations of fiddling with the list of accredited voters. The easy thing to have done was to ensure that all the candidates received copies of the list of eligible voters well ahead of time and of the list of accredited voters immediately after accreditation finished. It is indefensible that senior lawyers could justify a system that makes this possible.

     

    HAIL MARY TO THE RAIN MAKER

    This balloting took place in the middle of July, notoriously the heart of the rainy season in Nigeria. Yet, there were no arrangements for covered stands. If it had rained, there would have been no where for anyone to hide and the NBA would have struggled to organize anything. When I pointed this out to someone at the venue, she responded that the NBA must have visited a rain maker. You can imagine how reassured I was by the knowledge that our Bar is fully in tune with Nigeria’s community of shamans and voodoo practitioners.

    Voting delegates travelled to Abuja on 13 July. 14 July was the date set aside for accreditation and final campaign orations. Voting, counting and declaration of results followed on 15 July. The NBA’s travelling voting parties began to disperse from Abuja on 16 July, having spent four days on a voting process that involved a highly educated electorate of a mere 1,728 voters. To call this antediluvian is to be charitable. As we say here though, they all travel with “journey mercies”.

    Even more indefensible, therefore, than the rules and conditions under which the NBA conducts it elections is the fact that lawyers, supposedly the defenders of the rules of electoral democracy in Nigeria, could subject themselves to a leadership contest and ballot under these conditions.

    Despite all these shortcomings – or may be because of them – the NBA has elected a new leadership that deserves a chance to prove that it realizes and relishes the challenges that confront the Bar and the wider country. The biggest of these challenges is a Bar devoid of civic credibility; lacking the moral authority to persuade anyone to its message of promoting the rule of law; in hock to paymasters with an investment in capturing its organs and institutions; and increasingly without a capacity to offer any value to its members. This is a terrible place for any entity to be, least of all the foremost professional association in the country.

    In 2012, at the request of the outgoing Presidency of the NBA, I led a committee to review the professionalism of the NBA’s programming. The Committee’s report, submitted in January 2013, began: “[t]he NBA does not offer a clear value proposition to its members. The absence of a defining value proposition is an existential threat to the NBA and to the effectiveness of its Secretariat. If any other organization or entity can rise to offer to members of the NBA a unifying promise of professional growth or edge, the NBA as we know it could become history. To avoid this possibility, the leadership of the NBA must define a value proposition for our members and, in the Secretariat, evince a programming capability to ensure the realization of this promise.” These provide metrics by which the in-coming leadership of the NBA can measure progress in grappling with the many challenges that bedevil the Association. There is not much time to turn this around. If they fail, it is possible that this could be the last time the NBA would be voting as a unified and united body for its leadership. To the incoming leadership, congratulations are due; to the Bar, goodluck.

    Odinkalu is a member of the National Executive Committee of the NBA and was a delegate to the just-concluded special delegate’s conference of the NBA.

     

  • Court cites council officials for contempt

    Justice Adeniyi  Adebajo of a Lagos High Court has convicted the Ojo Local Government, its chairman and eight others for contempt.

    The council chiefs and other defendants  were charged for contempt  in a suit filed by a Lagos-based businessman, Chief Chika Elile and his company, Chika and Sons Limited.

    The council, its officers and some defendants were charged with  disobeying  an order made on April 15, 2008 over a land at Alaba International Market, Ojo Area of Lagos State.

    Ruling, Justice Adebajo also imposed N7.5 million fine on the council while its four other top officers are to pay N1million each.

    Others  convicted of the charge  were also fined N100,000 each.

    According to the judge, all the defendants must pay  the fines within 30 days of the judgment.

    Earlier, Justice Adebajo, in a suit filed by the businessman, restrained both the state government, the local government, its officers and other defendants in the suit from seeking or making acquisition of the said property in dispute for any purpose whatsoever as it runs contrary to the principle of the plaintiffs’ pendens.

    He restrained the local government from introducing any innovation or interfering with the land the subject matter of various disputes.

    The judge also suspended the Certificate of Occupancy granted to the council during the suits and declared it as of no effect until the final determination of all the  suits.

    The court heard that notwithstanding the service of Forms 48 and 49, the council through its chairman has not budged from its acts of illegality by continuing in triple fold, to disobey the order/judgment of the court up to date.

    The court also noted that  other defendants had placed hoodlums and members of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC)  with dangerous weapons on the land.

  • Impeachment as political whiplash

    Last week, Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa state, finally got the boot from the state house of assembly. According to reports, the former Governor and his party, the All Progressive Congress (APC) instead of being despondent, remain defiant, and have vowed to challenge the governor’s impeachment in court. Their argument is that the process was fraught with irregularities, and had failed to meet the requirement of section 188 of the 1999 constitution, as amended. The party also contends that President Goodluck Jonathan has turned the scepter of impeachment, into a political arsenal, to destroy his political opponents, and that Adamawa is just the first of the several minefields that the PDP led federal government has planted.

    Without doubt, the Governor and his party are entitled to challenge the alleged infractions in court. That will be in tandem with the pronouncement of Chukwuma-Eneh JCA (as he then was),       in Adeleke vs Oyo State House of Assembly, when he held: “The court is empowered by section 1(3) of the constitution to pronounce null and void any acts of the executive or legislature including any purported legislative acts done under section 188 … where the acts are inconsistent with the constitution as the supreme law”. According to the learned Justice, “A legislative act done in the process of removing of governor or deputy governor is legally passed where it has complied strictly with the procedure prescribe under section 188”.

    The inviolable integrity of the constitution was affirmed by the Supreme Court in Attorney General, Abia State vs Attorney General, Federation, by Tobi JSC when he averred: “ The constitution of a nation is the fons et origo, not only of the jurisprudence but also of the legal system of the nation. It is the beginning and the end of the legal system…. In line with this kingly position of the constitution, all the three arms of government are slaves of the constitution, not in the sense of undergoing servitude or bondage, but in the sense of total obeisance and loyalty to it.” So it is the duty of the courts to critically examine the impeachment process in Adamawa state with respect to the provisions of section 188; and where there is any irregularity, the court should not hesitate to shoot down the impeachment, after as Akaahs JCA heldin Dapianlong vs Dariye (No. 1) “The impeachment of a Governor is a serious business and must not be reduced to child’s play.”

    Further down Adamawa, closer to Abuja, the seat of the federal government, controlled by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which is enjoying a sudden risorgemento, the Governor of Nasarawa state, Umaru Tanko Al-Makura, another APC state, has been served impeachment notice by the PDP controlled house of assembly. Again, according to the national chairman of the national opposition party, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, the PDP led federal government has also primed its impeachment arsenal against the governors of Edo, Borno and Rivers state. If the PDP as alleged succeeds in this unconstitutional gambit, then by what may be described as a sleight of hand, the party would have a clear national majority going into the fearful 2015 ‘do or die’ general elections.

    Commentators across the country have been distraught that the present national political odyssey have followed similar trajectory as the previously doomed democratic experiments in the 1960’s and 1980’s. Recall that the Northern Peoples Congress controlling the national legislature in the post-independence parliamentary democracy, increasingly became obsessed with retaining their majority as the 1964 general elections approached, and in their desperation, short-cuts, under-cuts and upper-cuts were employed. Similar tactics were also employed by the National Party of Nigeria, the national ruling party in the second republic, and while the party was able to capture quite a number of states from the opposition parties in the 1983 general ‘landslide’ election, the resultant seismic tremor took decades to settle.

    So, should we carelessly ride on that road again? My contention is that President Jonathan and his party must in the interest of our tottering democracy examine the allegations of the opposition, and if they are responsible for this gale of impeachments, should immediately apply the brakes. While the impeachment of a political office holder is a legitimate political weapon to deal with recalcitrant public officials within a polity, it becomes an undemocratic invasion, when forces beyound the precincts of a polity, induces and enforces impeachment as a means to settle political differences. Indeed President Jonathan, who is from a minority political sub-group, must be careful not to employ any underhand tactics in his political gamesmanship, to avoid the majority learning from him, and resorting to the same game against him in the future.

    Even more pressing is that the resort to impeachment as a political whiplash may so unsettle the polity as to lead to major national crisis. Just as I pen this piece, it was reported that the civil society in Nasarawa state and the leaders of APC across the country were mobilizing to challenge the threat of impeachment against governor Al-Makura. If history is any guide, the crisis that culminated in the Nigerian civil war started with the undisguised attempt of the then majority party, the Northern Peoples Congress, to forcefully expand their political horizon across the country, particularly in the south-west. It will be foolhardy to pretend that the national fault-lines have substantially changed from that of the 1960’s.

    I therefore urge President Jonathan and his party apparatchik not to be cajoled, by the hawks amongst them, into falsely believing that all is well with an obtrusive interference with the political fortunes of any part of the country, in a manner that could trigger national crisis. As former President Obasanjo learnt, Nigeria has its way of dealing with political chicanery.

  • Improper arraignment renders trial a nullity

    The Appellant as second defendant along with Sopuruchi Obed were arraigned before  Justice M. A. Dada of the Lagos State High Court on a two count charge and upon trial, the court in a considered judgment dated  May 28, 2009 found them guilty for the offence of conspiracy and armed robbery and convicted them to death. The offences were contrary to Section 403(4) and 402 (2) of the Criminal Code Cap (17) Vol. 2 Laws of Lagos State, 2003.

    The facts of the case at the trial court are that the appellant along one other, Sopuruchi Obed were charged with conspiracy and armed robbery contrary to Section 403 (A) and 402 (2) (a) of the Criminal Code Cap C17, Vol. 2 Laws of Lagos State, 2003. The appellant and the said Sopuruchi Obed were alleged to have robbed one Mrs. Praise Lawani of various items on September 30, 2004 at Obele Road, off Maigbon, Lagos while armed with a locally made short gun, a knife and eight cartridges. The two accused persons pleaded not guilty to the two count charge and the matter proceeded to trial. The trial court upon due consideration found the two defendants guilty. The appellant dissatisfied with the judgment filed a notice of appeal of six grounds upon which three issues for determination were distilled as follows:

    1. Whether the arraignment of the appellant was not in compliance with the law and consequently the entire trial at the lower court was a nullity?

    2. Whether non-signing of the record of proceedings of the lower court rendered the proceedings of the day a nullity.

    3. Whether the finding of the learned trial judge that the prosecution proved its case as required by law can be supported by the totality of the evidence adduced before the court.

    The issues formulated by the appellant were adopted by the court for determination in this judgment.

    The appellant in arguing issue 1 submitted that the arraignment of the appellant was not properly done and the defect had rendered the trial a nullity. He submitted that the law requires that a charge be read and explained to the accused in a language he understands before he can be called upon to take his plea according to Section 24 of Administration of Criminal Justice Law of Lagos State and 36(6)(a) of the 1999 Constitution. Appellant contended that there was nothing in the record of appeal to show that the charge was read, explained or interpreted to the appellant before the plea was taken. On this issue, he finally submitted that failure to comply with the requirement for a proper arraignment has occasioned a miscarriage of justice and he urged the court to discharge the accused person as it would be unfair to put the appellant through a second trial because the case for the prosecution is weak.

    Addressing this issue, counsel for the respondent submitted that Section 215 of the Criminal Procedure Act and Section 36(6) (a) of the 1999 Constitution provides for how a person accused of an offence shall be brought to court unfettered and the charge to be read over and explained to him in the language he understands to the satisfaction of the court before his plea can be taken. Counsel contended that the provision was not violated by the court and the appellant misconceived what an arraignment is and relied on OGUNYE v. THE STATE (1999) 5 NWLR (Pt. 604) 518 AT 567; (1999) LPELR-2356(SC) where arraignment was explained.

    In deciding this issue, the court stated that it is the requirement of the law that necessary steps to a valid arraignment are complied with as provided in Section 215 of the Criminal Procedure Act. The court further stated that such requirements must co-exist and non compliance will warrant an order of a re-trial as the trial will be vitiated and rendered a nullity. The court held that failure of the trial court to comply with the requirement of Section 215 of the Criminal Procedure Act rendered the arraignment and trial a nullity. The court cited the case of JOSIAH v. THE STATE (1985) 1 NWLR (Pt. 1) 215; (1985) LPELR-1633(SC) where the Supreme Court observed that the condition laid down in Section 215 of the Criminal Procedure Act must be strictly complied with. The court held that the deficiency in the record of appeal concerning arraignment is vital and it has vitiated the trial. The trial was held to be a nullity and this issue was resolved in favour of the appellant.

    On issue 2 , appellant submitted that by virtue of Section 245 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law of Lagos State 2007 which is the same as Section 294 (1) of the Criminal Procedure Act, it requires the trial court to maintain a record of proceedings and the judge must sign the notes for each day. Counsel submitted that this requirement is mandatory and any failure to observe same renders the proceedings of that day null and void. He contended that the additional record were transcribed but were not signed by the trial judge including the proceedings in which the appellant was arraigned.

    The respondent’s counsel submitted that the appellant’s complaint was about the transcribed record of court duly certified as required by law. That Section 145 and 147 of the Evidence Act also prescribes  a presumption of genuineness of a certified document and also that Order 17 Rule (9) (1) (c) of the Rules of the Court allow for the use of transcribed copies of record of proceedings as substitute for Judges Notes. Counsel urged the court to discountenance the argument of the appellant under this issue and find for the respondent.

    On this issue, the court held that the portion complained about are the additional record of appeal and these are the transcripts of the proceedings which are certified by the officer duly authorised. The court stated that it is important to note that the portion of the additional record complained about is not directly the note of the trial judge but transcripts from the recording by an officer authorised to do so and it was duly certified. The court held that the complaint of the appellant lacked merit. This issue was resolved against the appellant.

    The appellant in arguing issue three challenged the finding of the trial court that the prosecution proved its case as required by law. Addressing the issue, counsel for the appellant submitted that the prosecution did not prove the allegation according to law. He relied on the case of ALABI v. STATE (1993) 7 NWLR (Pt. 307) 511; (1993) LPELR-397(SC). Counsel submitted that to answer the issue, the evidence of the two prosecution witnesses will have to be analysed and when that is done, it can clearly be seen that the evidence was hearsay evidence as both PW1 and PW2 told the court that Mrs. Praise Lawani told them what they told the court. The said Mrs. Lawani did not testify. The appellant urged the court to expunge the hearsay evidence of PW1 and PW2 and to discharge the appellant. Counsel submitted there was no evidence Mrs. Praise Lawani existed. She was not called even when she is a vital witness in proof of whether a robbery actually took place. That in the face of the retracted confessional statement and the appellant’s alibi which was established, the prosecution failed to prove that a robbery took place. Appellant’s counsel further submitted that there was no clear identification of the appellant as one of those who participated in the robbery and therefore the court erred in finding that the appellant participated in the robbery. And furthermore that the report by Mrs. Lawani was on suspicion since she did not identify anybody on the day the alleged robbery took place.

    Counsel for the respondent submitted that identification parade is not required where the suspect is caught at the scene of crime or closely connected as in this case. Counsel submitted that prosecution is not bound to call witnesses if it can prove its case by those called, he relied on BELLO SHURUMO v. THE STATE (2010) 19 NWLR 9 (Pt. 1226) 73 AT 94; (2010) LPELR-3069(SC).

    On this issue, the court stated that the police man in the station cannot be a witness to a crime which took place in a different location when he was not at that venue except if he is a spirit. The court stated the settled principle of law that where direct evidence of the commission of a crime is absent, the court can infer from the facts proved the existence of other facts which logically and conclusively establish the guilt of the accused, the Court cited the case of AKPA v. STATE (2008) 14 NWLR (Pt. 1106) 72; (2008) LPELR-368(SC). The court held that there is no direct evidence in this case, neither is there circumstantial evidence that can pin the appellant to the crime without the evidence of a victim on the important aspects of how the offence was carried out.

    On the whole, the court held that the appeal succeeds. The judgment wherein the conviction and sentence of the appellant by the Lagos High court presided over by HON. JUSTICE M. A DADA and delivered on  May 28, 2009 was set aside. The appellant was discharged and acquitted.

     

    •Edited by LawPavillion

    LawPavilion Citation: (2014) LPELR-23124(CA)

     

     

     

     

  • Braithwaite’s N10b suit against bank fixed for Sept. 25

    Braithwaite’s N10b suit against bank fixed for Sept. 25

    Hearing on the N10 billion suit filed by elderstatesman, Dr. Tunji Braithwaite before a Lagos High Court, against Standard Chartered Bank Plc has been fixed for September 25.

    The hearing was stalled last week owing to the absence of the trial judge, Justice Doris Okuwobi, who was reportedly ill. As a result, the court registrar adjourned the matter, alongside other matters, till September 25 on the agreement of the parties.

    At the last hearing, Justice Okuwobi  had  dismissed an application filed by the bank against the plaintiff’s  amended statement of claims for lack of merit.

    In her ruling, Justice Okuwobi stated that she did not see how the issues raised by the claimant had hampered the case.

    She said: “I do not foresee that the defendant/applicant will be denied the right to plead his own case in full and that he will be denied the right to fair hearing. For this reason, this application cannot sail through. Consequently, it is accordingly hereby dismissed.”

    The bank had prayed the court to strike out some paragraphs of the claimant’s reply to the bank’s amended statement of defence.

    The application followed  Dr Briathwaite’s response to the bank’s amended statement of defence in which he raised some vital issuesin support of his position.

    Standard Chartered Bank , responding through its counsel, Adeniyi Adegbonmire, urged the court to strike out certain paragraphs it considered inimical to it, on the ground that the claimant is introducing new facts outside the issue in contention.

    Opposing the motion, counsel to the plaintiff, Razaq Okesiji, had told court that the contents of the claimant’s reply to the defence statement and witness statement on oath are relevant to the subject matter of the suit and necessitated by the averments in the amended statement of the defence as

    well as the documents introduced by the defence, which were not in existence at the time of filing the amended statement of claims.

    He further stated that the claimant had neither departed, contradicted nor added new item to its claim, which should prejudice the defendant.

    Citing  several Supreme Court authorities, Okesiji said  the reply was within the rights of the claimant and that Order 15, Rule 19 of the High Court Rules allows new pleadings to come up in a reply.

    He urged the court to dismiss the defendant application, pointing out that  the paragraphs of the claimant’s reply to amended statement of defence and corresponding paragraphs of the statement on oath which the defendant seeks to be struck out relate to the Environmental Impact Assessment Procedure in Nigeria, and the failure of the defendant to compete therewith, has always been the kernel of the claimant’s case right from the commencement of the suit.

    Dr Braithwaite in the suit is seeking an order declaring as illegal, the erecting a 15-storey commercial building and multi-level car park by the bank in an otherwise residential area in Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The claimant is also uncomfortable with the bank’s installation of giant industrial generators directly opposite his house with the concomitant fumes and noise shattering their air and serenity.

    In view of this, Dr. Braithwaite is praying the court to grant him N10billion in damages and a demolition of the building.

  • Three arraigned for alleged theft

    Three men have been arraigned before a Lagos State magistrate court, Ikeja for stealing and for obtaining N6,697,000 under false pretext.

    The defendant are Ibrahim Sulieman 30 years, Habeeb Quadri 42 years and Rauf Adebayo 44 years.

    They were arraigned before the court presided by magistrate Mrs. E.A. Fabanwo last week on a three count charge of obtaining money under false pretext.

    The Police prosecutor, Inspector A. Samson alleged that the defendants, on May 14 about 10.45am at Ogba conspired to commit felony to wit obtaining money under false pretext and thereby committed an offence and punishable under section 409 of the criminal law of Lagos State of Nigeria 2011.

    According  Inspector Samson, the defendants had under false pretext obtained the sum of N6,697,000 from one Temilola Akintayo to import fabrics for her knowing same to be false and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 312(1a)(3) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State of Nigeria 2011.

    The defendant were also alleged to have stolen N6,697,000 being property of one Temilola Akintayo and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 285(1)of the criminal law of Lagos State of Nigeria 2011.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty when the charges were read to them.

    Magistrate Fabanwo thereafter granted them bail in the sum of N500,000 each and two sureties in the like sum.

    She adjourned the matter till July 22, for hearing.

  • Reina role to be discussed

    Pepe Reina says discussions will take place with Brendan Rodgers to see where he fits in at Liverpool after returning from a season-long loan at Napoli.

    The 31-year-old, who featured 30 times in Serie A during the last campaign, has been linked with a move to a host of European sides but his agent confirmed he is set to remain at Anfield.

    Reina fell out of favour with Rodgers last summer and Simon Mignolet was brought in from Sunderland to become Liverpool’s first-choice keeper, as the Spain international was shipped out to Napoli.

    It remains to be seen if Reina features in Rodgers’ thinking for the new Premier League campaign, but agent Manuel Garcia Quillon is due to meet the Liverpool boss to find out.

    “Without a team? I have one – Liverpool. I have a deal for another two years, even if I’ve not yet spoken with the coach to see what his plans are,” he told El Mundo Deportivo.

    “Now I’m set to end my holidays and my agent is charged to do these things.”

    Reina has also been linked with a switch to Barcelona but that now appears to be unlikely following their capture of Costa Rica goalkeeper Claudio Bravo, who will compete with fellow new arrival Marc-Andre ter Stegen for the number one shirt at the Nou Camp.

    However, Reina admitted that the Spanish giants did show an interest in him before he made the move to Napoli.

    “I have not thought about this a lot this season. Last summer – it’s true – there have been contacts, but during the last season I kept my concentration on Napoli,” he said.

  • Suspense as NBA elects officers today

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) will today in Abuja elect new officers to run its affairs for the next two years. The new officers will be sworn in  on August 31 when the tenure of the incumbent administration will end.

    Apart from the normal anxiety that characterises such elections, today’s election  is expected to throw up a lot of surprises because of intrigues in the build up to the election.

    At the last NBA National Executive Committee (NEC) in Abuja,  NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN) announced the constitution of an electoral committee,  with Okey Amechi (SAN) as the chairman and Mrs. Sefiya  Balarebe as secretary. He also lifted ban on campaigns and rolled out the time table and guidelines  for the Bar elections.

    The guidelines state that nomination shall open from  May 1, and close on  May 31; and that nomination papers shall be enclosed in sealed envelopes and addressed to the secretary of the committee to reach her on or before May 31.

    Screening of nominated candidates by the Electoral Committee took place on July 7 at the National Secretariat of the Association.

    A full list of properly nominated candidates was to be exhibited at a conspicuous place or notice board in or around the Delegates’ Conference Hall not later than a day before the election.

    The guidelines also provided that there would be no pasting of posters, Billboard, Hand bills or any form of campaign materials whatsoever; no souvenirs or gift of any sort is allowed.

    The candidates for the presidency are Mrs Funke Adekoya (SAN), Mr Osas Erhabor, Mr Augustin Alegeh (SAN) and Deacon Dele Adesina (SAN).

    Following the lack of consensus candidate from the Southwest where the election is zoned to, voters will decide who among the candidates will lead the association.