Tag: Court

  • Fed Govt asks court to dismiss Oduah’s suit

    Fed Govt asks court to dismiss Oduah’s suit

    THE prosecution has asked the Federal High Court in Lagos to dismiss a suit by Senator Stella Oduah.

    The Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) prayed the court to strike out a fundamental rights enforcement suit filed by Senator Oduah, the former minister of Aviation.

    Justice Mohammed Yunusa on August 26 granted an interim injunction restraining anti-graft agencies from taking any action against her, pending the determination of her suit.

    It is over the 2013 purchase of two armoured BMW cars by the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) under her watch.

    The case was later transfered to Justice Okon Abang after the court resumed from its vacation.

    Yesterday, a lawyer from the AGF, Mr. T.A. Gazali, said the prosecution filed a preliminary objection to Oduah’s suit.

    Oduah’s lawyer, Ajibola Oluyede (the same lawyer who represents Senator Buruji Kashamu), confirmed receiving the AGF’s preliminary objection, saying he had filed a reply.

    Justice Abang, however, said none of the processes was in the case file passed to him.

    The AGF is challenging the territorial jurisdiction of the Lagos division of the Federal High Court to hear the case on the grounds that the alleged rights violation did not take place in Lagos.

    Justice Abang adjourned till November 24.

  • Court restrains FRC from imposing sanctions on KPMG, partner

    Court restrains FRC from imposing sanctions on KPMG, partner

    The Federal High Court in Lagos has restrained the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC) from imposing any sanction on KPMG Professional Services until the firm’s suit is determined.

    Justice Ibrahim Buba also barred FRC’s Executive Secretary, Mr. Jim Obazee from sanctioning a partner in the firm, Mr. Ayodele Othihiwa.

    The interim injunction was granted on Friday, following an application by the plaintiff’s lawyer, Chuka Ikwuazo of the firm of Aluko and Oyebode.

    The applicants also prayed the court for an accelerated hearing of the suit, which will come up on Thursday.

    KPMG and Othihiwa prayed the court to enforce their rights.

    FRC, in an October 30 letter, conveyed its ‘regulatory decision’ to the applicants, following their role in the financial statements of Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc for 2013 and 2014.

    The council said it had suspended Othihiwa “until the investigation as to the extent of the negligence of KPMG Professional Services is ascertained.”

    KPMG and Othihiwa contended that the FRC decision was published and issued without informing or notifying them of the nature of the allegations made against them, nor were they invited to respond to the allegations.

    They claimed the FRC decision not only violated their right to fair hearing, but flouted Section 62(2) of the FRC Act, which spelt out the procedure to be adopted in investigating a professional body for any ‘complaint or dishonest practice, negligence, professional misconduct or malpractice’.

    The section states that FRC “shall notify the professional, whose conduct, act or omission is under investigation of the nature of the complaint and it shall summon or hear the professional.”

    The applicants argued that FRC and Obazee did not only breach the provision, but they also violated Section 15(2) b of the FRC Act, which states that a Technical and Oversight Committee shall review “sanctions to be meted out to any professional accountant, professional or public interest entity.”

    KPMG and Othihiwa claimed that even where the Technical and Oversight Committee had ratified the decision of the FRC, the council failed to exhaust the provisions of its own law.

    The plaintiff’s motion for interlocutory injunction will be heard on Thursday.

     

     

     

     

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  • Court awards N50,000 cost to Stanbic/IBTC against shareholders

    Court awards N50,000 cost to Stanbic/IBTC against shareholders

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday awarded N50,000 to Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc as punitive cost against its minority shareholders.

    A shareholder, Alhaji Muktar Muktar, on behalf of himself and the Trusted Shareholders Association of Stanbic Holdings Plc, is seeking to be joined as a party to a suit by Stanbic IBTC Holdings against the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRC) and the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP).

    The application was billed for hearing yesterday, but counsel for the shareholders, Elder Paul Ananaba (SAN), sought an adjournment.

    He said he was not ready to move the application and needed more time.

    Besides, he said Stanbic IBTC’s counsel, Prof Fidelis Oditah (SAN, QC), only served him with his reply to the application on Thursday.

    However, Oditah said Ananaba should have communicated to him that he was not ready to argue the application.

    He, therefore, asked for punitive cost of N100,000.

    However, Justice Ibrahim Buba said he would adjourn to enable Ananaba “put in every arsenal he has.”

    Rather than the N100,000 Oditah asked for, he awarded N50,000 in his favour.

    The applicant, in his motion on notice, is seeking an order joining him as a defendant in the suit.

    His prayer is on behalf of the minority shareholders of Stanbic IBTC Holdings.

    Muktar said he and the others are necessary parties to the suit and have interests to protect.

    Last Wednesday, the court restrained the FRC from obstructing the operations of Stanbic IBTC Holdings.

    Justice Ibrahim Buba granted an order of interlocutory injunction restraining it or its officers “from interfering with, or otherwise impeding, obstructing, molesting or hindering” the plaintiffs’ operations.

    Stanbic IBTC said FRC, since August 3, has been investigating its audited accounts for the year ended December 2014.

    The investigations concern liabilities accrued in the plaintiff’s 2014 accounts in respect of franchise fees owed to Standard Bank of South Africa, the registration of which it said has been pending before NOTAP since 2011.

    The plaintiff said FRC labelled the franchise agreement as illegal, and invited IBTC Holdings’ Chief Executive Officers to appear before it.

    Following a meeting on October 16, the council informed the plaintiff that it committed criminal offences and that it would be reported to the the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Securies and Exechage Commission (SEC).

    FRC then asked the entire Stanbic IBTC board to meet with the council “to know the extent of your board involvement” in the matter.

    But the plaintiff contended that the council has no statutory or other powers to summon the plaintiff’s entire board of directors to a meeting in order to determine their complicity or otherwise in any alleged criminal offence.

    In its suit, the plaintiff is asking the court to determine, among others, whether FRC has the power to impose a fine of N1 billion on it.

    FRC had last week sanctioned Stanbic IBTC over its audited accounts for 2013 and 2014.

    It suspended the Financial Reporting Numbers of the bank’s chairman, Mr. Atedo Peterside, and its chief executive, Mrs. Sola David-Borha.

    Justice Buba adjourned to Thursday next week for hearing of the application for “joinder.”

  • Stanbic IBTC: Court declines to grant order against FRC

    Stanbic IBTC: Court declines to grant order against FRC

    A Federal High Court, presided over by Justice Okon Abang yesterday in Lagos refused to grant an order  compelling the  Financial Reporting Council (FRC) of Nigeria Chief Executive Officer Jim Obazee to appear in court to explain why he should not be held for contempt. The court also refused to make an order suspending the decisions by the FRC  against Stanbic IBTC.

    The orders were sought by the shareholders of Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc. They brought the application through the Shareholders Association of Nigeria (SAN), but it could not be heard because a lawyer who represented FRC said he had just been briefed.

    Mr Justice Abang held that the court could not shut out the defendants. He said they must be allowed to file their processes before the court could hear the contempt application.

    Another judge, Mr Justice Ibrahim Buba, had on Wednesday restrained FRC from obstructing the operations of Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc.

    Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc shareholders are urgung the Federal High Court in Lagos to compel Obazee to appear in court to explain why he should not be held for contempt.

    Its former lawyer, Fabian Ajogwu (SAN), was said to have withdrawn.

    The shareholders want the FRC chief sanctioned for enforcing the FRC Guidelines/Regulations for Inspection and Monitoring of Reporting entities despite their pending suit.

    The shareholders said FRC was aware of the suit challenging the financial regulations that formed the basis of which Stanbic IBTC Holdings directors were sanctioned.

    The suit, which was filed by 10 members of SAN led by its chairman Timothy Adesiyan is also challenging the implementation of the FRC Regulations. The other members of SAN are Sulaiman Adenrele, Sunday Ogunnowo, Frederick Oduyemi, Robert Igwe, Bello Owonikoko, Lazarus Onwuka, Tajudeen Adeshina, Peter Okoh and John Ogundipe.

    The plaintiffs in the suit filed in February, are praying the court to determine whether theMinister of Industry, Trade, and Investment can, in the exercise of the powers conferred on him by Section 73 of the FRN Act, 2011 make regulations, proceed to “create new offences and impose sanctions and or penalties and or otherwise expand the scope of the principal Act itself, or lay down entirely new regulations which are not ancillary to the provisions of the Act”.

    The shareholders also want the court to determine whether regulations which set out new offences and sanctions other than those contained in the principal Act, are not ultra vires (beyond) the minister’s powers.

    They sued the Minister of Trade and Investment, FRC, the Attorney-General of the Federation, and the Steering Committee on the National Code of Corporate Governance.

    Yesterday, the defendants’ lawyer Emmanuel Akpudugu prayed the court for more time to respond. He said he had just been briefed on the case and would require a short adjournment.

    The plaintiffs’ lawyer Kemi Pinheiro (SAN), however, urged the court to make a temporary order suspending all the decisions made by FRC while the case was pending.

    According to Pinheiro, the court must make the order because FRC’s decisions were seriously affecting his clients, who are shareholders of Stanbic IBTC.

    He said the Council acted in disregard of the court’s authority, therefore, it should not be allowed to get away with it.

    But Akpudugu stated that the court must hear FRC first before making any order in the interest of justice and fair hearing.

    Justice Abang held that the court cannot shut out the defendants. He said they must be allowed to file their processes before the court can hear the contempt application.

    Justice Buba had granted an order of interlocutory injunction restraining FRC or its officers “from interfering with, or otherwise impeding, obstructing, molesting or hindering” the plaintiffs’s operations.

    FRC had last week sanctioned Stanbic IBTC over its audited accounts for 2013 and 2014.

    It suspended the Financial Reporting Numbers of the bank’s chairman, Mr. Atedo Peterside, and its Chief Executive, Mrs. Sola David-Borha, and others.

    It also barred them from vouching for the integrity of any financial statements in Nigeria, and imposed N1billion fine on the bank.

    FRC said they were suspended for attesting to “misleading” financial statements, and would remain suspended till investigations were concluded.

    It pointed out several inconsistencies in the bank’s reporting, including its alleged failure to disclose what exactly millions of naira grouped under “donations” and “others” were used for.

    The Council instructed Stanbic IBTC directors to withdraw the Financial Statements and restate them in accordance with the provisions of the law.

    But the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had accused FRC of not following due process before imposing sanctions on the bank.

    “Without prejudice to the foregoing financial issues, the CBN is concerned about the apparent failure of the FRC to follow due process as laid down by its own FRC Act and Regulations in arriving at the regulatory decision,” CBN governor Godwin Emefiele had said.

    Justice Abang adjourned to November 20 for hearing

  • Court restrains FRC from obstructing Stanbic IBTC’s operations

    Court restrains FRC from obstructing Stanbic IBTC’s operations

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday restrained the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) of Nigeria  from obstructing the operations of Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc.

    Justice Ibrahim Buba granted an order of interlocutory injunction restraining it or its officers “from interfering with, or otherwise impeding, obstructing, molesting or hindering” the plaintiffs’s operations.

    The judge barred FRC from preventing the plaintiff or its subsidiaries “from carrying on their lawful businesses.”

    Justice Buba also restrained the Council from inviting the entire Stanbic IBTC Holdings’ board of directors to any meeting in connection with the defendant’s statutory investigation of the plaintiff’s statements.

    The orders, the judge said, will subsist “until the hearing and determination of these proceedings.”

    Justice Buba ruled on an motion on notice for orders of injunction against FRCN and the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP).

    The plaintiff said FRC, since August 3, has been investigating its audited accounts for the year ended December 2014.

    The investigations concern liabilities accrued in the plaintiff’s 2014 accounts in respect of franchise fees owed to Standard Bank of South Africa, the registration of which it said has been pending before NOTAP since 2011.

    The plaintiff said FRC labelled the franchise agreement as illegal, and invited IBTC Holdings’ Chief Executive Officers to appear before it.

    Following a meeting on October 16, the Council informed the plaintiff that it committed criminal offences and that it would be reported to the the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Securies and Exechage Commission (SEC).

    FRC then asked the entire Stanbic IBTC board to meet with it “to know the extent of your board involvement” in the matter.

    But the plaintiff contended that the council has no statutory or other powers to summon the plaintiff’s entire board of directors to a meeting in order to determine their complicity or otherwise in any alleged criminal offence.

    Arguing the plaintiff’s application, Prof Fidelis Oditah (SAN) said FRC has been acting beyond its powers.

    For instance, he said SEC issued a public notice suspending the plaintiff’s N18billion right issue that the commission had previously approved, citing a letter received from FRC.

    “On September 15, SEC put on hold the plaintiff’s application to pay scrip dividends out of its 2014 profits, citing a letter received from FRCN,” Oditah said.

    According to him, the Council “is not a prosecutor or a court,” adding that it engaged in a campaign of calumny against the plaintiff.

    The consequence, Oditah said, is that Stanbic IBTC’s share price fell from N23 to less than N19 within a week.

    But FRC’s lawyer, Chief Olusina Sofola (SAN) urged the court not to grant the application because the invitation had been overtaken by events.

    “The day of the meeting has come and gone and they (plaintiff) did not attend. The heavens did not fall. They have not said they are being invited to another meeting. The meeting did not hold, so what is this court being asked to stop?

    “As we speak now, they’re carrying out their business. The letter does not run foul of the law. If they feel we acted outside our powers, they should bring an application to challenge our powers. I urge my lord to dismiss their application,” he said.

    Ruling, Justice Buba held that the application has merit. “There is a strong case for the maintainance of status quo. There is a case made for the grant of the interlocutory injunction,” he said.

    According to the judge, FRC is aware of the suit, therefore, the best thing was for all parties not to take steps that could “undermine” the case in court.

    “The whole essence of having a court of law in any civilised society is to ensure everything is done according to law and not otherwise.

    “No court is will stop a statutory authority from performing its statutory duties.

    “However, the court must emphatically add that where it is alleged that a statutory authority is acting ultra vires its statutory powers, the courts have powers and are imbued with jurisdiction to enquire into whether it true of false,” the judge said.

    He held that “the application has merit and is hereby granted.”

    In its suit, the plaintiff is asking the court to determine among others, whether FRC has the power to impose a fine of N1 billion on it.

    FRCN had last week sanctioned Stanbic IBTC over its audited accounts for 2013 and 2014.

    It suspended the Financial Reporting Numbers of the bank’s chairman, Mr. Atedo Peterside, and its chief executive, Mrs. Sola David-Borha.

    It also barred them from vouching for the integrity of any financial statements in Nigeria.

    FRCN also suspended two other directors – Mr. Arthur Oginga and Dr. Daru Owei – for attesting to what it termed the “misleading” 2013 and 2014 financial accounts of the bank, as well as Ayodele Othihiwa of KPMG Professional Services for his firm’s alleged complicity in the infractions highlighted in the financial reports for the two-year period.

    It based its sanctions on issues raised by the bank’s minority shareholders led by the Mahtani brothers who own the Churchgate conglomerate, to some other regulatory agencies such as NOTAP, SEC and CBN) among others.

    The bank also wants the court to determine whether or not the FRCN has the power to license directors and other office holders of public interest entities and if it can suspend the said licence by suspending a director or other office holder of a public interest entity.

    Justice Buba adjourned to Friday for hearing of a motion to join a shareholder to the suit.

  • Court adjourns Olanusi’s case till Dec 8

    Court adjourns Olanusi’s case till Dec 8

    The Ondo State High Court sitting in Akure, the state capital, yesterday adjourned till December 8 the case by former Deputy Governor Ali Olanusi over his impeachment.

    Olanusi is seeking the nullification of his impeachment on the grounds that due process was not followed.

    His counsel, Olusola Oke, said the procedure of impeachment was against the 1999 Constitution.

    He said he was in court to substantiate the position of the petitioner that his impeachment was a serious business that should be tackled vigorously.

    According to Oke, a former National Legal Adviser of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) now chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Olanusi got the mandate of over 1.6million registered voters to become the deputy governor.

    He insisted that there was no way Olanusi could be removed just like that.

    The counsel said there is freedom of association and as such, there is opportunity for the deputy governor to be in one party and the governor in another party.

    Oke said: “We are contending before the court that Olanusi’s impeachment was stage-managed. The result of which we all know. Only God is allowed to do such things freely.

    “One could imagine an impeachment process carried out in less than 72hours.This is unacceptable and absurd.”

    But the defence counsel and Attorney-General, Eyitayo Jegede, said even if the impeachment process took one day, it had been carried out.

    Justice Rotimi Olamide, after listening to arguments of both parties, adjourned till December 8 for further hearing.

  • Man bags 10 years imprisonment for drug trafficking 

    Man bags 10 years imprisonment for drug trafficking 

    A 38-year-old man, Chibueze Onedigbo, was jailed for 10 years Monday for drug trafficking.

    Justice Musa Kurya of the Federal High Court in Lagos found him guilty of the charge by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    “I am of the view that the prosecution has discharged its burden of proof.  Consequently, I hereby sentence the accused to 10 years imprisonment, from the day of this judgment,” the judge held.

    He said the drug exhibits must be destroyed within 30 days if there is no appeal.

    The convict was arraigned on August 29, 2013.

    He had pleaded not guilty to the charge and was granted bail for N5 million with one surety in like sum.

    The agency said he was arrested at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport.

    About 210 grammes of Cocaine was recovered from him during the outward clearance of passengers on board a Qatar Airline flight.

    The convict had concealed the substance in a black leather bag, which contravened Section 11 (b) of the NDLEA Act, Cap N30 Laws of the Federation, 2004.

  • Synagogue: Court adjourns ruling to November 9

    Synagogue: Court adjourns ruling to November 9

    A Federal High Court in Lagos on Monday fixed November 9 to rule on a suit by an engineer of the Synagogue Church, Mr. Akinbela Fatiregun, seeking enforcement of his rights.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the suit, which was earlier fixed for ruling on a preliminary objection, was adjourned following the absence of the trial judge, Justice Ibrahim Buba.

    The court registrar announced to counsels that the court would not be sitting for the day.

    No reason was given for the adjournment.

    A new date, November 9, was therefore, fixed for the ruling.

    NAN reports that a guest house within the premises of the Synagogue Church collapsed on Sept. 12, 2014, leading to the death of over 100 persons.

    Following the collapse, the Lagos State Government set up a coroner’s inquest to ascertain the cause of death.

    The inquest, presided over by Chief Magistrate Oyetade Komolafe, in its verdict, indicted the church for criminal negligence and recommended that it be prosecuted.

    The coroner also indicted the church’s structural engineers, Mr. Akinbela Fatiregun and Mr Oladele Ogundeji, and recommended that they be investigated and tried for criminal negligence.

    Fatiregun filed the suit to challenge the verdict of the coroner’s court.

    Joined as respondents in the suit are; the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Council of Registered Engineers in Nigeria (COREN), the Attorney General of Lagos State and Chief Magistrate Oyetade Komolafe, the Coroner.

    Fatiregun is seeking an order of perpetual injunction restraining the Commissioner of Police in Lagos from arresting, detaining, investigating or prosecuting him.

    He also wants an order of perpetual injunction to restrain the Lagos State Attorney General or any officer under his authority from initiating or commencing criminal proceedings against him based on the verdict of the coroner.

  • Court adjourns trial of Gaddafi’s son to December

    Court adjourns trial of Gaddafi’s son to December

    The son of deposed Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi appeared in a Tripoli court to face charges of murdering a football player and other crimes before the 2011 revolution that ended his father’s rule.

    The judge adjoined proceedings against Saadi Gaddafi, who was extradited from Niger last year, until Dec. 6 after his attorney asked for more time to examine the case against him and to have access to military prosecutor documents.

    Saadi, dressed in light blue prison garb, sat inside a black caged area of the courtroom.

    In a related development, a Tripoli Court in July sentenced another of Gaddafi’s sons Saif al-Islam and eight other former officials to death for crimes committed during the 2011 uprising against his father, who was later killed by rebels.
    The sentences have not been carried out although the men, including Gaddafi’s ex-spy chief, are in jail.

    Since his capture, Saif had been held by forces in the western city of Zintan by a faction beyond central government control.

    Since Gaddafi’s demise, Libya had fallen into turmoil, with two rival governments and their allied armed factions fighting for control of the country and its oil resources.

    UN talks have so far failed to end the crisis.

  • Money-laundering: Court orders re-opening of frozen account by NDLEA

    Money-laundering: Court orders re-opening of frozen account by NDLEA

    Justice Mohammed Yunusa of the Federal High Court Lagos has ordered the re-opening of a bank account containing fifty eight million, five hundred thousand naira (N58, 500,000) suspected to be proceeds of drugs frozen by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    The account was frozen with the consent of the Attorney General through the Solicitor General in accordance with the NDLEA Act.

    In his ruling on a fundamental right application against the NDLEA, Justice Yunusa ordered the re-opening of the account on the ground that there was no Attorney General at the moment.

    But the Chairman/Chief Executive of the anti-narcotic Agency, Ahmadu Giade described the ruling as unacceptable and promised to appeal it.

    Giade said: “The true position is that narcotic investigations are incomplete until criminal wealth is traced and confiscated”.

    The NDLEA boss added that the support of the judiciary and other stakeholders remain vital to successful anti-money laundering campaign.

    The suspected drug baron, Chukwunwendu Ikejiakwu aka Blessed of Ozubulu, Ekwusigo Local Government Area of Anambra State was charged to court by NDLEA on a 13- count charges involving manufacturing and production of methamphetamine as well as exportation of narcotic drugs, forming and operating a drug trafficking organisation among others.

    The agency freezed the account after securing interim forfeiture on his traced assets.

    It was gathered that while still in prison custody, Chukwunwendu arranged with his wife, Mrs. Ikejiakwu Christiana, to open an account in the name of the wife’s younger sister, Ifeoma Odili.

    Three days after the account was opened, the sister applied to the bank to make the suspect’s a signatory to the account.

    It was learnt that NDLEA got wind of the move and promptly freezed the account with the consent of the Attorney General through the Solicitor General.