Tag: Court

  • Court vacates order on girl in Etsu Nupe’s palace

    The Sharia Court 1, Bida yesterday vacated its order granting the custody of Charity Uzoechina to the Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar.

    The Sharia Court Judge, Adamu Idris, yesterday ruled that since the plaintiff was an adult, she was free to live wherever she desired.

    The whereabouts of Miss Uzoechina was unknown at the time of filing this report. It was not clear if she had left the palace of the Etsu Nupe.

    The vacation of the order was not unconnected with the intervention of the Presidency, which made the Niger State government convene a meeting on Wednesday at the Government House, Minna.

    Miss Uzoechina, 25, has been living at the palace of Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar on the order of a Sharia Court since March.

    It is believed that the government may eventually take custody of the ladysince the Sharia Court has vacated the order, which placed her in the Etsu Nupe’s custody.

    The acting state governor, Musa Ibeto, met with the Etsu Nupe, the National Secretary of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Pastor and Mrs Uzoechina, their daughter, former Governor Abdulkadir Kure and some senior security officers.

    Speaking with reporters after the meeting, Ibeto said the meeting was to reunite the girl with her family in a way that she would be confident that no harm would befall her.

    Ibeto said in Niger State, religion was not a problem because there was harmonious religion relationship and peaceful coexistent of the adherents of the two major religions.

    The counsel to Pastor Uzoechina, Femi Ikotun, who attended the meeting, said it was agreed that the order should be vacated from Sharia Court in Bida, adding that “we have already applied for it to be vacated”.

    Pastor Uzoechina, in an interview with The Nation last Thursday, said: “If she has converted to Islam, must she practise at the Etsu Nupe’s palace? They should not separate my daughter and me…I can’t kill my daughter. We need her at home. We are missing her.”

    The Bida Emirate, in a statement, said Miss Uzoechina approached the monarch for protection following her change of faith from Christianity to Islam on February 15.

    In interviews with two newspapers, Miss Uzoechina was quoted as saying she was not forced to embrace Islam, adding that she was praying for her parents to see that her new-found faith was the way to go.

  • UNIPORT Four: Court arraigns suspects

    A Rivers State High Court in Port Harcourt, the state capital, yesterday arraigned 12 persons, following their roles in the killing of the four undergraduate students of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT), at Umuokiri Aluu in Ikwerre Local Government last October.

    Lawal Segun, Lucky Orji, Ikechukwu Louis Amadi (aka Kapoon), David Chinasa Ogbada, Abiodun Yusuf, Joshua Ekpe, Abang Cyril, Hassan Welewa, Okoghiroh Endurance, Ozioma Abajuo and Chigozie Evans Samuel have been in custody since last year in connection with the murder.

    The prosecution led by the Solicitor-General and Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Justice, Rufus N. Godwins, at the sitting yesterday included John Ayuwu (aka Johny Barbar), bringing the number to 12.

    They pleaded not guilty to the two-count charge of murder and negligence.

    Godwins told Justice Latan Nyordee that the accused committed the offence contrary to sections 319(1) and 515 of the Criminal Code Law of Rivers State (1999).

    The accused were represented by counsel. The third and eight accused, who did not have legal representation at the last sitting, were represented by a team from the Legal Aid Council, led by Jane Frances Bianeyi.

    After the plea, the prosecutor adopted the criminal indictments with proofs of evidence filed against the accused and expressed the readiness to call its first witness but it urged the court to remand the accused in custody.

    Counsel for the first accused Joshua Kehinde told the court that the crime for which the accused are charged are mere allegation, adding that in law they are innocent until proven otherwise.

    He told the court that he had filed bail application for his client and was ready to move the motion.

    However, Justice Nyordee adjourned the matter till August 15 for hearing on bail applications, when he discovered that some lawyers were yet to file theirs and some files were yet to be received by the prosecution.

    Seven are being charged for murder; others are charged with negligence.

    Those being tried for murder are Lawal Segun, Lucky Orji, Ikechukwu Louis Amadi (aka Kapoon), David Chinasa Ogbada, Abiodun Yusuf, Joshua Ekpe, Abang Cyril and John Ayuwu.

    Hassan Welewa, Okoghiroh Endurance, Ozioma Abajuo and Chigozie Evans Samuel are charged with negligence.

    Ugonna Obuzor (18), Toku Lloyd (20), Chiadika Biringa(20) and Tekena Elkanah(21) were lynched and set ablaze by an angry mob in Allu community near UNIPORT on October 5, last year, for alleged stealing.

    Eighteen persons, including their colleagues and a woman, were initially arrested in connection with their deaths. However, seven were exonerated and 11 indicted.

    Women from Okrika, the town of Elkannah and Toku, stormed the court yesterday to demand for justice.

    The over-100 women, dressed in black, marched under the umbrella body of Wakrike Ijaw Women of Nigeria.

    They stormed the second floor of the three-storey building of the court room at 8am and sat on the floor of the corridor till about 3pm when the court session ended.

    Their president, Mrs. Gift Amagi, said: “We are mothers and grandmothers. We feel the pains of those four youths who were killed.

    “We are also here to observe the proceedings of the trial and to ask the judiciary and government to ensure that justice prevails.”

    Also the chairman, Joint Campaign Committee of Nigeria Association of Nigeria Students (NANS), Lah Amabu, said: “The position of NANS remains that justice be done, to serve as a deterrent to others and NANS cannot compromise on this.”

  • ‘Supreme Court ruling on Lagos hotel binding on courts’

    THE government of Lagos State has said the ruling of the Supreme Court validating the state’s Hotel Licensing Law as amended and the Hotel Occupancy and Restaurant Consumption Law of Lagos State is binding on courts.

    The Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Ade Ipaye, who spoke in an interview at the Lagos House, Ikeja, said the Supreme Court’s decision in those two cases would supersede any pending court action.

    He added: “It is important to make it clear that if anybody pretends not to know which government should regulate tourism, then the person needs to refer to the decision of the Supreme Court in those two cases. The decision is binding on all authorities, persons and courts in Nigeria.”

    Mr. Ipaye said there were two cases determined by the Supreme Court on July 19, with one instituted by the Federal Government in the Attorney-General of the Federation versus the Attorney-General of Lagos State seeking to invalidate the Hotel Licensing Law of Lagos State as amended and the Hotel Occupancy and Restaurant Consumption Law of Lagos State.

    The other case, the commissioner added, was filed by the Attorney- General of Lagos State against the Attorney- General of the Federation and sought to invalidate the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation Act to the extent that it intruded into the jurisdiction of the states and sought a declaration from the Supreme Court that it is the House of Assembly that has the exclusive jurisdiction to legislate on tourism matters with the exception of the regulation of tourism traffic.

    Reacting to a question on whether the state would seek a reimbursement of the revenue it lost to the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC) in the past six years, the Commissioner for Tourism and Inter-Governmental Relations, Mr. Disun Holloway, said the essence of the ruling was not about the amount to be collected or that was collected.

    He went on: “It is about how we will regulate and make sure that the tourism and hospitality industry performs.

    So, it is not about the collection of funds. Government has spent a lot of money to prepare for the industry. So, without collecting money from the industry, we have spent a lot to make sure the industry runs well. It is not about reimbursement.

    “As far as we are concerned, it is about how we would take the opportunities coming up. In the rest of the world, there are some places that have conflicts. How can we redirect the tourist traffic to us? This is the essence of what we are doing.”

     

     

     

  • Supporters urged to pray for  Akeredolu’s victory at Supreme Court

    Supporters urged to pray for Akeredolu’s victory at Supreme Court

    Supporters of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Ondo State have been urged to remain steadfast in the struggle to ensure a positive change in governance.

    They were also enjoined to unite and pray for justice at the Supreme Court following the petition filed by the party and its governorship candidate in last year’s governorship election, Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu.

    The Appeal Court sitting in Akure upheld the verdict of the lower tribunal in favour of Dr. Olusegun Mimiko as winner of the October 20, 2012 governorship poll.

    Speaking with leaders and supporters of ACN in the 15 wards of Akoko South West Local Government at Akungba-Akoko, a chieftain of the party, Otunba Gboyega Adefarati, said ACN has the administrative virtues to bring about positive change to the state.

    He lamented the harrowing experience of indigenes, stressing that with determination, perseverance and prayer, Ondo State would soon join other Southwest states to enjoy good governance.

    The meeting, which coincided with the 2013 Akungba Day, was attended by elders and leaders of the party, local government executives, ward chairmen and women and youth leaders.

    The Chairman of the Leader’s Forum in Akoko Southwest Local Government, Mr. Foluso Babadele, hailed the party leaders for their steadfastness, commitment and support for Akeredolu.

    He lauded its National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande and National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, for their support, particularly during the last governorship poll.

    Babadele said the party’s structure, which helped it to win election in the local government in the October 20, 2012 poll was still intact.

    The host, who is the son of former Governor Adebayo Adefarati and ACN House of Representatives candidate for Akoko South West/East in the 2011 National Assembly election, appreciated the party leaders in the area, who encouraged him to launch his campaign for the 2015 House of Representatives election.

    He noted that the Court of Appeal judgment had raised fundamental issues and he hoped that the Supreme Court would do justice. He added that after darkness, light would emerge.

    According to him, election is a process and not an event and a compromised voter register cannot produce a legitimate election result.

    He said: “The issue of personal ambition is not now. When we get to the river, we shall cross it. What is paramount to me now is how to join other ACN leaders to build a formidable party that will win future elections.”

    The ACN chieftain urged party supporters to rally round Akeredolu in his struggle to get justice at the Supreme Court.

     

  • ‘Courts have power to formulate issues for parties

    The learned Justices of the Court below assumed the role of a trial judge whose primary duty it is to assess or evaluate evidence of parties and ascribe probative value.

    ii. The lower court aptly noted that ‘’The appellant accused the 2nd respondent of usurping the powers of the 1st respondent …’’ but simply affirmed the finding of the trial judge thus: The 1st defendant is a statutory body. That being so, it must necessarily function through its officers who are human beings’’ when there was no evidence on record to the effect.

    iii. The appellant’s evidence on record that 2nd respondent usurped the powers of the 1st respondent and acted without due authorisation was ignored by the lower court.

    iv. The Lower Court also uncritically affirmed the conclusion of the trial court that ‘’the acts of the 2nd defendant in the present case can therefore be attributed to the 1st defendant and that there is no evidence before me that all that the 2nd defendant did in these present case were done in his private capacity “ when there was evidence on record that there was no delegation of power by the 1st respondent to the 2nd respondent.

    v. The findings fail to show an appreciation of the pleadings as well as the appellant’s complaint in EXHIBIT “F”.

    Ground four:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held that the 2nd defendant was properly struck out from the suit as an unnecessary party.

    Particulars of error

    The learned Justices of the court of Appeal unjustifiably failed to:-

    a. look at the pleadings and evidence before the court which overwhelmingly challenged the vires of the 2nd respondent in the whole disciplinary action challenged.

    b. Consider the matter on the rules of court on joinder of parties under Order 12 Rule 3 Federal High Court Rules 2000.

    c. Properly consider S.137 of the Evidence Act relating to burden and standard of proof.

    Ground Five:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law by holding that the 2nd respondent did not usurp the powers of the 1st respondent and that the plaintiff/appellant was given a fair hearing by the 1st respondent thereby affirming the trial court’s decision on the point.

    Particulars of error

    i. Against the evidence on record, the learned Justices of the Court of Appeal:

    a.Held that the appellant was given opportunity to exculpate himself but he failed to do so.

    b. Failed to appreciate the plaintiff appellant’s pleadings and evidence that the 2nd defendant who was his co-employee usurped the Powers of the first respondent and without lawful authorisation disciplined him by issuing the controversial exhibits.

    c.Wrongly held that the 2nd respondent acted on behalf of the 1st respondent when there was no evidence of authorisation by delegation of powers to him as well as approval of his actions including the recommendations in exhibits M, M1, M2 & M1-3 by the 1st respondent.

    ii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal unjustifiably refused to consider the case of Katto v. CBN (1991) 9 NWLR (Pt.214) submitted by Counsel on the manner of proof of authorisation or delegation of powers by way of minutes of meetings and decisions of the 1st respondent.

    iii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal placed undue construction on and drew wrong conclusions from the plaintiff/appellant’s Exhibits’M”’M1″’M2″ and M-M3′.

    iv. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal unjustifiably failed to consider the authority of Haruna v. University of Agriculture, Makurdi (2005) 2 NWLR (Pt.912) 233 cited by counsel in oral elaboration with respect to the issue of composition of the Disciplinary Panel vis-a-vis fair hearing.

    Ground Six:

    The learned Justices of the Court below erred in law by failing to appreciate the appellant’s case as in his pleadings first before affirming the judgment of the trial court that appellant failed to prove his case and that he was given a fair hearing by the 1st respondent.

    Particulars of error

    i. The court confessed that it “cannot comprehend what the plaintiff is complaining about apart from his allegation that the 2nd defendant has no power to query him after the Audit Investigation Panel indicted him” thereby undermining the pleadings before the court.

    ii. The court below failed to appreciate the facts and hold that on the state of the law in S.137 of the Evidence Act, the appellant proved his case.

    Ground Seven:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held that “the complaint of lack of fair hearing by the learned trial judge has not been made out’’ and that they “cannot see how the learned trial judge breached the principle of fair hearing by not calling upon counsel to address him on the two issues formulated” suo motu.

    Particulars of error

    i.“The learned Justices of the Court below aptly observed:-

    (a). That “the trial judge can formulate pertinent issues for determination provided they are related to the pleadings and evidence canvassed before the court” but failed to hold that the two issues formulated by the trial judge were not related to the pleadings and evidence before him.

    ii.The conclusion of the court below failed to follow the dictum in Agbeje v. Ajibola (2002) NWLR (Pt.750) 127 that where issues formulated suo motu “raise any issue which the parties did not advert their minds to, then the court must invite the parties to address on such issues raised suo motu before reaching a decision”.

    iii.The learned Justices of the Court below failed to hold that the issue of whether the plaintiff discharged the burden of proof raised suo motu by the trial judge became the kernel of the case and as such must be guided by the law in lrom v. Okimba (1998) 56/57 LRCN 3077 that a court must invite the parties to address him when the issue raised suo motu becomes the kernel of the case.

    GROUND EIGHT:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law in finding that:-

    “The complaint of the appellant on the composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee of any consequence”, and that “Although the Deputy Governor General Administration is the chairman of the Central Disciplinary Committee, he has power to delegate his authority to the Director of Personnel to preside over meetings.”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The finding failed to advert to and consider the:-

    a. The demands of S.36 (1) of the Constitution as to incidence of independence and impartiality in deciding fair hearing of the Appellant.

    b. Decision in Haruna v. University of Agriculture, Makurdi (2005) 2 NWLR (Pt.912) 233 which was cited during oral expatiations on the brief in court.

    c. The uncontroverted oral evidence of the appellant that he appeared before selected committees of 2nd defendant against the detail of Exhibit “D” on disciplinary procedure of 1st respondent.

    ii. There was no pleading or evidence on record on why the Central Disciplinary Committee that tried Appellant was not the Standing Committee but one Selected by the 2nd Defendant.

    iii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal speculated and conjectured on why the Deputy Governor (General Administration) as Chairman was not on the panel and whether his power was delegated to the 2nd Defendant.

    iv.There was no evidence on record of actual delegation of the 1st Respondent’s power to the 2nd Defendant.

    GROUND NINE:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held severally that:-

    a. “lt is clear that it was the Central Disciplinary Committee that investigated the allegations made against the Appellant and the number required to form a quorum was complete”.

    b.The constitution of that committee cannot be impugned in anyway because their composition was in accordance with chapter 6 Clause 10 of Exhibit “D”.

    c.The composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee and the actions taken by the Director of Personnel are in accordance with Exhibit D and everything was properly done as prescribed by Exhibit “D”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    1.The learned justices of the Court of Appeal failed to:- a.advert to the pleadings and consider the Appellant’s evidence on record that he “appeared before a selected Disciplinary Committee not the Standing Disciplinary Committee’.

    b. relate chapter 6 clause 10 of Exhibit “D’’ to the facts and evidence on record.

    c. Consider the submissions and judicial authorities advanced on the point of quorum and approval of actions of a delegate vis-a-vis fair hearing of the Appellant.

    GROUND TEN:

    The learned justices of the Court below erred in law when they held that “by the tone of Exhibit “F” the Appellant had no iota of doubt that the query (Exhibit “E”) which was issued to him had the stamp and authority of the 1st Defendant. Similarly the letter of suspension (Exhibit “C’’) the invitation to appear before the Central Disciplinary Committee (Exhibit “L1”) the one summoning him to appear before the Inter-Departmental Committee (Exhibit “J”) emanated from the 1st Defendant/Respondent”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The pleadings and evidence on record (oral and documentary) before the court particularly the evidence of DW1 is that “Exhibit “E” was issued from the Personnel Department which office has the responsibility of handling staff matters.

    ii.The finding failed to look at the manner Exhibit ‘’E’’ “G” ‘L1″, ‘’L’’ and “J” were signed and follow the judicial authorities on the point.

    iii. The learned trial judge took evidence did not make the finding but merely stated that “the acts of the 2nd “Defendant can be attributed to the 1st Defendant” which finding the learned justices affirmed.

    iv.The learned justices of the Court of Appeal: a. failed to hold that the 2nd Defendant has no power in the disciplinary process save only to communicate disciplinary measures taken by the 1st Defendant against staff.

    b. Noted that the Appellant “described the actions taken by the 2nd Defendant as unauthorized and done without lawful authority” but failed to decide the point on the evidence on record.

    GROUND ELEVEN:

    The learned Justices of the court of Appeal erred in law by holding that “it was therefore an afterthought for the Appellant to allege in paragraph 15 of the Amended statement of claim that the 2nd Defendant has removed or caused to be removed all available documents he would have used for his defence.”The Appellant turned tacitum to accuse the 2nd Defendant of removing the document’’. “A clear case of grave misconduct was established against the appellant and instead of bracing up against the situation, he turned round to accuse the 2nd Defendant as the architect of his misfortune”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The findings did not arise from the pleadings neither from the findings of the trial court.

    ii. The Court below failed to evaluate the evidence but read exhibit ‘F’ in isolation and drew wrong conclusions about the LPOS.

    iii. It is clear that it was the Central Disciplinary Committee that investigated the allegations made against the Appellant and the number required to form a quorum was complete.

    iv. The constitution of that committees cannot be impugned in anyway because their composition was in accordance with chapter 6 clause 10 of Exhibit “D”.

    v. Since he denied that the signatures on the LPOS were his own, he had a duty to produce the originals.

    vi. Failed to consider the totality of the Exhibit ‘F’ and the oral evidence of the Appellant on his general complaint.”

    If I may come again, I have deliberately set out the eleven grounds of appeal raised against the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the appeal for what they are worth particularly in a case of this nature based on the objection taken against each one of them. They each of them, speak for themselves. No doubt they are prolix and proliferated and one cannot help raising the question of tautology against the manner of couching them. In so many respects these shortcomings have been the bane of the appellant’s case at the trial court and in the appeals and so much so as portraying a confused state of affairs of what his case has been as pleaded and as found by the lower courts as per the pleadings on which issues have been joined as the appellant shunts his case from pillar to post, thus making nonsense of the principle of pleadings and accepted evidence which are the means of crystallising the issues in a matter between the parties in civil matters. See: Okolo v. Union Bank (2004) 1 SC (Pt.1) 1 which case has made the point that litigation must follow some restrictive order and not open-ended to save the time of the court as well as the litigants themselves. It is in this respect that I approve and adopt the crucial finding of the court below as expressed poignantly to the effect that appellant has totally misconceived his case.

    The appellant has complained of not having been arraigned before appropriate standing Committees of the Central Bank of Nigeria by the bank i.e. 1st respondent but before adhoc committees that have been constituted by a bizarre procedure contrived by the 2nd respondent against which the appellant has complained as a clear usurpation and abuse of power of the 1st respondent and should never have been held as “proper” by the two lower courts. The appellant has put the respondents to the burden of failing to identify one by one how the said sixteen grounds attacked in these respects are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita and that in consequence of failing to do so as the onus is by law placed on the respondents, would without more, he has urged, result in overruling the preliminary objection and upholding the said grounds as competent grounds in law. See: Briggs v. Chief Land Officer (supra) & Ogbechie v. Onochie (supra). The foregoing submission if I may interject here has showed a fundamental flaw of misconception of the appellant’s case in this appeal. The onus is clearly on him to show that the said grounds are of law in order to ignite the jurisdiction of this court. See Section 233(3) (supra).

    Finally, the court is urged to dismiss the objection with costs as lacking in merit and to hear the appeal on the merits.

    The appellant by a strange twist in his submission has urged in the alternative that the court should stay proceedings and give directives as will best meet the justice of the case where it is found that all or any of these grounds are of fact or mixed law and fact and has to that effect urged the court to seriously consider following the approach in Lawson Jackson v. Shell Petroleum Development Co. Ltd. (2002) 7 SC (Pt.11) 112 at 120 – 121 as supported by Order 10 Rule 1(l) of the Rules of the court. And that this has to be so in view of the fact that an appeal with leave is a matter that comes within order 6 Rule 2(1) of the Rules of court. From the forgoing temporary aberrations, there can be doubt that the appellant with respect having departed from concentrating on the nature of his case and the applicable law has gone too casual over the serious discussion of the competency of his grounds of appeal vis-a-vis the provisions of Section 233(3) (supra) and has totally derailed in submitting that the law governing leave to appeal is a matter under Order 6 Rule 2(1). I think that the appellant in the exercise of rambling about in presenting his case in the appeal has thus committed unpardonable error in law in so submitting. I can find no connection between the purport of the provisions of order 6 Rule 2(1) of the Rules of this court and questions raised as to the competency of the said sixteen grounds under Section 233(3) (Supra).

    The instant objection as canvassed by the parties herein (in their respective briefs of argument and oral submissions before this court strikes at the heart of this appeal. It simply means that where the objection is sustained it will leave only ground 7 in the Amended Notice of Appeal as the only competent ground in law to sustain the appeal as the rest of the grounds as urged by the respondents being ex facie bad and incompetent in law have to be struck out as well as the issues for determination erected thereupon. Although it is trite that a single ground of law is sufficient to sustain a Notice of Appeal in an appeal; also, see: Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (1987) 2 NSCC (Vol. 18) 1258 per Nnaemeka Agu JSC. I think that in the sense of the instant preliminary objection it is vital and appropriate in this regard to set out the seventeen grounds of appeal as I have clone above with their prolix particulars of errors in law, even then for ease of reference and more so as the substantive ground of every ground of appeal has to be read and considered conjointly with their respective particulars of error to ascertain the real issue or complaint as encompassed in the said ground. In this regard the court is not to place undue reliance or emphasis on the form or in the manner the ground is couched as the gravamen or form of a ground of appeal for purposes of determining whether a ground is a ground of law or mixed law and facts or facts alone goes beyond the mere words used in couching or preferring the ground to the more serious question of identifying the real issue or the core of the complaint as encompassed in the ground. Clearly It is the real issue or complaint centrally encompassed in a ground on the backdrop of its particulars that decides whether the ground is one of law or not. Where, in short, the ground raises a complaint on an issue of law based upon accepted or admitted facts it is a ground of law requiring no leave of court but where the complaint or real issue is founded on disputed or unascertained facts then it is a ground of mixed law and fact requiring leave of court. See Section 233(3) (supra), and N.N.S. Co. Ltd. vs. Establishment Sima of Vaduz (1990) 7 NWLR (Pt.164) 526. The process of determining the substantive complaint of a ground as in this appeal has been accentuated by the fact, as can be seen from established authorities that the distinction between a ground of law and mixed law and fact may at times be so blurred or thin and so, difficult to ascertain with relative application of the established guiding principles as per settled authorities on the question. lt is a matter that goes beyond a ground of appeal being simply labeled without more as a ground of law by the appellant. A hard scrutiny of the case as per Ehinlanwo v. Oke & Ors. (2008) 6 – 7 SC (Pt.1) 123 has established that a ground of law arises where the court has misunderstood the law or has misapplied the law to the proved and admitted facts. Against the backdrop of the foregoing guidelines I now go on to examine the outstanding eleven grounds of appeal in this matter and in that regard I adopt the three categorization of these grounds of appeal as in the manner the appellant has attempted to tackle them in his brief of argument that is to say as I have adumbrated above:

    (A).Ground 1. The complaint in this regard is that the judgment of the court below amongst other reasons is perverse; being perverse necessarily will involve examining facts and evidence ignored by the court or that the court has taken into account irrelevant matters and has based its decision thereon or has misconceived the thrust of the case of the appellant and as borne out by the particulars of the ground. In the instant ground the particulars have clearly raised the question of improper appraisal or evaluation or assessment of the facts in the pleadings and evidence. See: Udengwu v. Uzuegbu & Ors. (2003) 110 L.R.C.N. 1702. Having thus raised an issue of mixed law and fact it is therefore incompetent for not having firstly sought and obtained leave of court. See section 233(3) of the 1999 Constitution as amended, and Nwadike & Ors. v. lbekwe & Ors. (1987) 11-12 SCNJ 72 at 98 – 99; (1987) 4 NWLR 718.

    (B) As regards Grounds 4, 6, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 17 lumped together and argued by appellant to which with respect I add grounds 5 and 16 apparently for no reason left out of this class. There is a thread of complaint traversing all these grounds as alleged by the appellant and they, each of them, have again showed on the aggregate a failure to apply the law to the unproved and unascertained facts in the pleadings and evidence on the record vis-a-vis Order 12 Rule 3 of the Federal High court Civil Procedure Rules 2000 and section 137 0f the Evidence Act. These grounds have unequivocally raised questions of appraisal or evaluation of the facts and evidence before the trial court as affirmed by the court below. There can be no doubt therefore, that the single complaint running through these grounds has raised a question of mixed law and fact and so these grounds have required leave of court to be competent. In other words, these grounds are incompetent for want of leave of court as prescribed by Section 233(3) (supra). See: Arowolo v. Ademula (1991) 8 NWLR (Pt. 212) 753 at 764 and Nwadike v. lbekwe & Ors” (supra).

    (C) Grounds 8, 9 and 10: simply put the appellant has raised these grounds alleging that by not having been arraigned before the appropriate Central Disciplinary Committees of the Bank by the Bank itself (i.e. the respondent) but before illegal Committees (not the appropriate Standing Disciplinary Committees) of any consequence set up by the machinations of the 2nd respondent in his pursuit to force out the appellant from his employment, the appellant has been denied a fair hearing by default and that the court below has even gone ahead to make the case for the 2nd respondent to justify the same and so that Exhibits E, F, G, L, L1, & J not having come from proper authority the case built thereupon on the facts both oral and documentary has not been decided on the proper evidence before the court. The court is urged to scrutinize the facts and evidence all over again. He relies on Garba v. Unimaid (supra) a case he has misconstrued, with respect, as applying to the facts of this case. It is my view that he has thus raised questions of facts requiring appraisal and evaluation on the record before the court below to find out whether there has been in fact such a denial and so, the grounds do not contravene Section 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution in relation to the appellant; consequently making it incumbent on the appellant to seek leave of court under Section 233(3) (supra). Besides Section 36(1) (supra) arises where the denial of fair hearing has been charged against a court or tribunal established by law and not before domestic or standing/ adhoc tribunals raised departmentally by the parties as the 1st respondent here. See: Bakare v. LSCSC (1992) 8 NWLR (Pt.262) 641 per Nnemeka Agu JSC. The question here therefore cannot be whether the said section has been contravened with regard to the appellant as there is no basis for so conjuring and so, as there is no basis for raising the same as the grounds cannot be raised as of right being of mixed law and fact requiring leave of court under section 233 (3) (supra). In sum these grounds have deviated from the issues on the pleadings and evidence on the record and cannot therefore be allowed to stand as grounds of law appealable as of right.

    Having struck out ail the grounds of appeal but ground 7, it is trite law that the issues for determination ten of them excepting issue No.7 raised in the instant appeal are for not having any legal basis on which to stand incompetent and are hereby struck out. In that regard, specifically issues 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 raised in the appellant’s brief of argument having become otiose are hereby struck out and so also ail the arguments proffered as based on these issues, they also are hereby struck out being incompetent. See: Nonye v. Anyichie (2000) NWLR (Pt.39) 66 at 75, Attorney General Bendel State v. Aideyan (1989) 4 NWLR (Pt.118) 646, Adelaja v. Fanoiki (1998) 2 NWLR (Pt. 131) 137, Ugo v Obiekwe & Anor. (1989) 1 NWLR (Pt.99) 36. I am now left with issue seven to examine in this appeal. Before then let me observe that in fact the appellant has raised no issues for determination from grounds twelve to seventeen inclusive and the consequence in law is settled. He has acted completely by inadvertence in regard to them. They are therefore, in the circumstances, deemed to have been abandoned and for the avoidance of doubt each of them is hereby struck out. See: Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (supra).

    The remaining ground is Ground 7 and the issue raised therefrom is as follows:

    ‘Whether the learned Justices of the court below were right on the facts of the case when they held that ‘the complaint of tack of fair hearing by the trial Judge has not been made out and/or that the learned trial judge did not breach the principle of fair hearing in not calling upon counsel to address him on the two issues formulated suo motu’. This issue relates to ground 7 of the ground of appeal.”

    The appellant in his brief has in regard to this issue challenged the propriety of the trial court in formulating this issue suo motu and deciding it without inviting addresses from the parties to this appeal particularly the appellant and it has been strenuously contended that the appellant’s right to a fair hearing has been seriously compromised/violated thus vitiating the entire trial.

    In the main, the appellant’s case in this respect has made a heavy weather of the fact that not having been invited by the trial court as affirmed by the court below in formulating of the two issues raised suo motu by it and decided them has denied him of the opportunity of expatiating on any areas of his case with respect to the burden of proof and the standard of proof as alleged have been placed on him on the pleadings and by section 136 of the Evidence Act. The appellant is particularly irked that having placed sufficient materials to show who has power to discipline him and who actually has wrongfully disciplined him in the circumstances both on the pleadings and evidence, oral as well as documentary on this question that yet the trial court as affirmed by the court below has wrongly found that he has not discharged the burden of proof arising from the state of the pleadings nor has his case attained the standard of proof on the overall evidence before the court to sustain the same. The court is urged to uphold the appellant’s contention and nullify the trial.

    The respondents have relied on Ebo v. NTA (1996) 4 NWLR (Pt.442) 314 to urge that any court can formulate issues suo motu where the issue formulated by the parties would not advance the interest of justice and that it must be consistent with the grounds of appeal filed since the essence of formulating issue is to bring out the substance of the complaint in a ground of appeal. See: Otuo v. Nteoguilo (1996) 4 NWLR (Pt.440) 56, lncar (Nigeria) Plc. v. Bolex Enterprises Ltd. (1996) 6 NWLR (Pt.454) 318. Further, the respondents have submitted that there is no breach of fair hearing in not calling on the appellant to address it on the two issues so formulated as in that regard the trial court has simply condensed/summarised the issues formulated by both parties to two substantive issues which to all appearances are consistent with the grounds of appeal raised by the appellant. And that as no new issue has been raised the circumstances have made it unnecessary to invite the parties to address the court on the process and it is contended that the exercise does not amount to a denial of fair hearing as what the trial court has done amounts if I may repeat to simply summarising the issues raised by the parties based on the pleadings and the evidence before it. The court is urged to discountenance the complaint as per ground 7 as frivolous. There can be no doubt from the foregoing resume that “fair hearing” has become the whipping principle for counsel trying to catch at a straw to sustain a modicum of standing in a hopeless case where the case is already dead as a dodo. This approach of counsel in general is deprecated. Fair hearing should for what it is and represents in our adjudicative process before the courts be invoked with every sense of seriousness and in appropriate settings. It is not the case in the instant appeal.

    It is noteworthy that this issue as encapsulated herein has been satisfactorily exhausted by the lower court in its decision on the same question, which I uphold in toto. To raise the same issue predicated on a much weaker and stale arguments in this court is highly deprecated particularly as the finding in this respect by the court below is not perverse but founded on accepted and admitted facts and evidence on the record.. The judgment cannot be faulted. Judicial opinions on the question of formulation of issues for determination by courts have been revealed in a plethora of decisions of this court wherefore some have approved the practice as against a group that has disproved the practice, which include such cases as Nwokoro & Ors. v. Onuma & Anor. (1990) 3 NWLR (Pt.136) 22; Adeniran & Anor. v. Interland Transport Ltd. (1991) 9 NWLR (Pt.214); Anie & Ors. v. Chlef Uzorka & Ors. (1993) 8 NWLR (pt.309) 1; Onwo v. Oko & Ors. (1996) 6 NWLR (pt.456) 584; Ogundayin v. Adeyemi (2001) 13 NWLR (pt.730) 403 and Agbaje v. Ajibola (2002) 2 NWLR (Pt.750) 127. On the other side of the cleavage of judicial opinions in approval of the practice are such cases as Labiyi v. Anretiola (1992) 8 NWLR (Pt.258) 139, Ogunbiyi v. lshola (1996) 6 NWLR (pt.452) 12, Erhahon v. Erhahon (1997) 6 NWLR (pt.510) 667 and NEPA v. Isieveore (1997) 7 NWLR (pt-511) 135.

    It is my view that the power of courts to formulate issues for determination at whatever level in the hierarchy of the courts although particularly so in appellate courts (where brief writing is a matter of the Rules of the court) inheres in the court in the interest of justice to enable courts to perform their adjudicative functions in our jurisprudence hence there are no rules of court prohibiting courts from doing so. I think that this discretion imbued with the interest of justice as its focus and premise has to be guided by the facts of each case and this has been the case with regard to the cases cited above. Courts should not make it a point of practice to formulate issues for the parties suo motu and deciding them without calling on both parties to address it in the process as it negates one of the cardinal principles of hearing the parties and providing a level playing ground in a trial of their matter before condemning either of them. Formulating issues by courts should be subjected to the rider of calling upon the parties to address it in such instances before judgment. By this process a modicum of opportunity as it were, is afforded the parties on the question; this accords with a reasonable man’s sense of having justice seen to be done. This is because courts should not be seen to jump pre-emptorily into the arena of contest however tempting the cause as courts have to avoid being muddied in the process of adjudication of cases before them and thus lose their centrality of impartiality as neutral umpires in our adjudicative system. To hold otherwise will undoubtedly unduly shackle the discretion of courts in the adjudicative process as this will not be grounded on any relevant rules of court or substantive law as such. I can find nothing offensive in such exercises. I uphold the intervention in this instant case upon its peculiar facts in the interest of justice. And it is my view that no denial of fair hearing amounting to a miscarriage of justice has thus been occasioned to the appellant.

    In the instant case the trial court as rightly found by the court below has merely condensed/summarised the issues as formulated by the parties to the two issues raised suo motu and has proceeded to decide them one notable point as regards the said issues so formulated is that they are consistent with the grounds of appeal filed by the appellant in the appeal. These issues have unquestionably arisen from the said grounds and have clearly crystallised the substance of the complaint as contemplated in the grounds, the pleadings and evidence before the trial court and on the record before the lower court and have been necessitated in the interest of justice. In short, the trial court has simply condensed/summarized the issues raised by the parties in their cases. Therefore, I do not see any leg on which to stand to upturn the lower court’s decision on this point particularly so, if I may repeat when it has not occasioned a miscarriage of justice. I have made these points to support the opinion that courts have the power to formulate issues for the parties in appropriate cases when the justice of the cases as in this case so demands. It is a power to be sparingly exercised with extreme caution. In Labiyi v. Anretiola (supra) this court has held per Karibi-Whyte JSC that:

    “The court below was free either to adopt the issues so formulated by learned counsel or to formulate such issues that are consistent with the grounds of appeal filed by the Appellant- It is in the observance of this principle in pursuit of the proper administration of justice that the court below considered an appropriate formulation of the issues consistent with the grounds of appeal filed when it was observed that although the grounds of appeal were inelegantly drafted, the complaints therein were clear and not misleading”.

    I am in unison with the reasoning in the above abstract in the judgment of my noble Lord and rely on it to hold in support of my reasoning herein that the appellant on the whole in the instant appeal has failed to nail the denial of fair hearing on the head in regard to his contention of the negation of his rights to a fair hearing in this matter leading to denying him justice in the matter and thus render the trial a nullity.

    Finally on this question I agree with the court below that notwithstanding having formulated the two issues suo motu and deciding them that the appellant’s claim all the same, has not been dismissed after striking out the 2nd respondent from the suit as the trial court has gone on to consider whether or not the appellant has discharged the burden of proof to entitle him to his claim and thereby nullify his dismissal on the ground that the 2nd defendant has not been clothed with the power to act on behalf of the 1st respondent (as its alter ego) in the processes taken in his dismissal and so to arrive at the inevitable conclusion that his dismissal from the employ of the 1st respondent is otherwise wrongful. I resolve this issue against the appellant.

    And being the only issue in the appeal I would have at this stage dismissed the appeal but there are other considerations in the matter. In the result the findings of the lower court as contained in its judgment are approved and the judgment is hereby affirmed by this court.

    The truth of this matter as between the appellant and the 1st respondent is that their employment relationship has subsisted at all material times as a relationship of master/servant created as per by Exhibit ‘A” i.e. the contract of employment into which has been incorporated the provisions of exhibit ‘D’ – again, that is the staff manual of the Central Bank of Nigeria which contains the collective agreements as incorporated into the individual contracts of employment of the 1st respondent’s employees. This is so based on the facts and evidence before the court. Both documents constitute the basis for determining the contractual relationship and the conditions of the appellant’s employment with the 1st respondent here. It is common ground and as rightly found by the two lower courts that the nature of the appellant’s employment does not savour of statutory flavour. In other words, it is entirely founded on Common Law. The necessary implication arising from the parties’ contractual relationship in this matter if I may emphasize is one founded on the common Law and like all genera contracts is determinable by either side as provided in the documents exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’ for breaches of any fundamental conditions as stipulated therein. One basic principle of master and servant relationship is that an employer can summarily dismiss/terminate the employment of his servant for gross misconduct. In the instant matter the 1st respondent reserves that power vis-a-vis the appellant as provided as per clause 6(4) and (5) of Exhibit ‘D’. Following the query Exhibit ‘E’ issued to the appellant on an allegation of fraud which has arisen from failing to maintain proper account records of the distribution of diesel to other locations of the 1st respondents’ points of business activities and has resulted in a heavy financial loss by which the 1st respondent has incurred huge financial deficits. The appellant has answered the query as per Exhibit ‘F’. He has in consequence of his answers appeared before the Central Disciplinary Committee by which it has been established in effect of the appellant having been given an opportunity to exculpate himself from the allegations of fraud. The appellant as I have also found has not been denied a fair hearing in the process of his dismissal upon the charge of gross misconduct leveled against him. I must observe that having dismissed all the grounds of appeal herein the court is obliged to reach these conclusions based on the findings and conclusions of the two lower courts which now stand before this court unchallenged. In other words, he has rightly been dismissed as per Exhibit ‘G’. The appellant’s case of wrongful dismissal has no leg on which to stand to contest it.

    Having in this judgment discountenanced the denial of fair hearing in all its concomitants as raised by the appellant herein thus this matter falls to be considered on whether as per the Exhibits and evidence on the record as accepted by the lower courts the appellant has been properly dismissed from his employment upon his gross misconduct – my answer is in the affirmative. Where his dismissal is founded on the allegation of gross misconduct the appellant is not entitled to any notice or salary in lieu of notice as clearly provided in Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’. And it would be wrong in law to make any awards to him in these regards.

    It is trite that an employer as the 1st respondent here is obliged to follow the right procedure in summarily dismissing his employee, in this case the appellant. The question then is whether his employment on a charge of gross misconduct has been determined as provided in exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’ in this matter, which have laid down the procedure to be followed in doing so. By giving the appellant a query as per Exhibit ‘E’ and followed by the appellant’s answer exhibit ‘F’ and the convening of various Disciplinary Committees to look into the answer as per exhibit ‘F vis-a-vis the allegation of fraud, speak for themselves of having abided with the procedure laid down by exhibit ‘D’ for dismissing an employee. The appellant cannot be heard to complain as he has gotten all he is entitled to under a master/servant relationship at common law.

    Once exhibit ‘G’ has been served on the appellant dismissing the appellant on grounds of gross misconduct he stands effectively dismissed as per the said exhibit and whether or not the dismissal is wrongful to entitle him to damages is the question for this court to resolve in this matter as reinstating him is out of the question. The position is that the two lower courts have not been persuaded that the dismissal of the appellant is wrongful and they are right. There is therefore a concurrent finding on the question.

     

    The appellant has challenged the dismissal as being wrongful; this cannot be so on the peculiar facts of this case; it is clearly found that the appellant has grossly misconducted himself and has gotten what his gross misconduct deserves that is a summary dismissal. His dismissal even though without notice or any payment of salary in lieu of notice is not wrongful and cannot therefore in the circumstances constitute a breach of the conditions of his contract of employment.

    In this respect, I agree and uphold the decisions of the two lower courts that there is no merit in the appellant’s claim and that it should be dismissed. I hereby dismiss this appeal as most unmeritorious. Having taken into account all the surrounding circumstances in this matter I make no order as to costs. Parties to bear their respective costs.

    Appeal dismissed.

    IBRAHIM TANKO MUHAMMAD, JSC: I have read before now, the judgment of my learned brother Chukwuma- Eneh, JSC. I am in agreement with his reasoning and conclusion which I adopt as mine. The Preliminary objection succeeds. The appeal is hereby struck out. I abide by all consequential orders made in the lead judgment.

    SULEIMAN GALADIMA, JSC: I have been obliged with a copy of the draft Judgment of my learned brother CHUKWUMA-ENEH JSC, just delivered. He is thorough in exposing the relevant facts of this case. He has equally dealt with the main issue leading to his reasoning and conclusion dismissing the appeal for being unmeritorious. I concur.

    However I have a word or two on the preliminary objection raised by the Respondents as to the competence of the Appeal. This being a threshold issue it ought to be dealt with first. On 21/12/2011, the Respondents filed Notice of Preliminary Objection to the hearing of this appeal praying the court to strike out grounds Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, and 11 as well as issues formulated thereon, as being incompetent. lt is contended that these grounds are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave has been obtained, as required by S. 233(3) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, (as amended). Before now I have noted that no grounds have been distilled from 12 to 17 of the grounds of Appeal. They serve no purpose in this appeal and are accordingly struck out. In the lead Judgment, my learned brother in this appeal has set out Grounds 1 – 11 of the Appellant’s Grounds of Appeal with their particulars. I have carefully read through them. With exception of Ground 7 all other grounds without any doubt are grounds of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita. These grounds all complain essentially about failure of all the Justices of the Court of Appeal to properly appraise or evaluate or assess the evidence on the record leading them to arrive at the wrong conclusion. On the authority of Ogbechie & Anor V. Onochie & Ors (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt. 23) 484, where the grounds of appeal are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave of either the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court has been obtained, are incompetent and the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction to entertain same. The Appellant has contended that Ground 8 comes within S. 233(2) of the said Constitution, that is, this being ground complaining that there was error of law. The complaint in the said Ground of Appeal is not about the denial of fair hearing by the trial court but about the denial of fair hearing before the Disciplinary Committee of the 1st Respondent (Central Bank of Nigeria) and the failure of the court to properly evaluate the evidence on the record to find as a fact that there was such a denial. It is thus a complaint about a decision touching on the contravention of S. 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution (supra).

    Ground 8 has not arisen from a decision of the court below as to whether any of the provisions of Cap. (iv) of the Constitution has been breached or contravened, same cannot be brought as of right. Ground 8 being of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita does not fall under Cap. (iv) of the Constitution. At best it is mixed law and fact for which leave is required.

    Parties are ad idem that Ground 7 of the ground of appeal which complains about the decision of the Court of Appeal in respect of the complaint of a denial of fair hearing, is a ground of law. Even on this, there is a concurrent finding of fact of the two lower courts to the effect that Appellant’s claim is devoid of merit.

    This Court, as a practice will refuse to interfere with such concurrent findings of the two courts, unless, the Appellant shows that the findings are perverse. Since the Appellant did not demonstrate that the findings of the two lower courts are perverse, he cannot succeed.

    For this little contribution and for detailed and fuller reasoning in the lead Judgment, I too, have to strike out all the grounds of appeal and the issues formulated from them. Appeal on ground 7 is lacking in merit, it is dismissed.

    NWALI SYLVESTER NGWUTA, JSC: I had the privilege of reading in draft the lead judgment just delivered by My Lord, Chukwuma-Eneh, JSC.

    I agree that Grounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the appellant’s grounds of appeal are grounds of either mixed law and facts or facts.

    Section 233 of the Constitution of the Federation 1999 (as amended) provides: –

    “Section 233 (2)

    An appeal shall lie from decisions of the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court as of right in the following cases:

    a. Where the ground of appeal involves question of law alone, decisions in any civil or criminal proceedings before the Court of Appeal;

    b. decisions in any civil or criminal proceedings on questions as to the interpretation or application of this Constitution;

    c. ……… (d) …….. (e) ……… and (f) ……….’’

    Section 233 (3) provides:

    “Subject to the provisions of subsection (2) of this Section, an appeal shall lie from the decisions of the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court with the leave of the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court.”

    (Underlining mine for emphasis).

    None of the appellant’s grounds of appeal on grounds other than law alone falls within the intendment of Section 233 (2) (a)-(f) of the Constitution. The said grounds filed without leave of the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court first sought and obtained are invalid and the Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal on the said grounds. See Nwaolisha v. Nwabufor (2011) All FWLR (pt. 591) 1438.

    It is immaterial that Section 233 (3) of the Constitution does not provide a sanction for its violation. A ground of appeal which is incompetent for any reason is liable to be struck out. A right of appeal or any other right granted by law cannot be exercised without compliance with the law granting the right, or any other law or rule regulating the exercise of the right.

    Appellant’s eleven grounds of appeal (with the exception of ground 7) and the issues distilled from them are incompetent and are hereby struck out.

    Among the diverse curious submissions made by the learned Counsel for the appellant, this one stands out:

    “…the Court, through its Registry, could adopt an administrative procedure of notifying an appellant that he requires the leave of Court for his appeal to lie…”

    With due respect, learned Counsel’s reformation agenda, backed by over 30 years at the Bar, should be directed to the appropriate authority. Be that as it may, the appellant in this case did not settle the processes filed in the appeal. They were settled by his Counsel who is deemed to know that the court is a creation of Statute and in exercise of jurisdiction conferred by law, it has to comply with its rules of procedure. The court does not have to spoon-feed learned Counsel on the law and rules.

    On the issue derived from the surviving ground of appeal, ground 7, there is a concurrent finding of fact of the two Courts below to the effect that appellant’s claim is bereft of merit. This court has no duty, and will decline, to interfere with the concurrent findings of the High Court and the Court of Appeal unless the appellant shows that the findings are perverse. See Okafor v. Idigo (1984) 1 SCNLR 481; Kpomiglo v. Kodadja (1933) 2 WACA 24.

    Appellant did not show that the findings are perverse and his appeal is bound to fail.

    For the above and the more exhaustive reasoning in the lead judgment, I also strike out all the grounds of appeal except ground 7 and the issues distilled therefrom. I dismiss the appeal on ground 7 as bereft of merit.

    Parties are to bear their respective costs.

    STANLEY SHENKO ALAGOA, JSC: I read before now in draft the judgment just delivered by my learned brother C. M. Chukwuma-Eneh, JSC. He has quite comprehensively dealt with the matter.

     

    I have nothing useful to add. I also dismiss the appeal as lacking in merit while I make no order as to costs.

     

    Appearances:

     

    Johnson O. Esezoobo Esq. for Appellant.

     

    Prince Aderemi Adekile Esq. for the Respondents.

     

  • Court stops PDP convention

    Court stops PDP convention

    An Abuja High Court has restrained the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) from holding its planned special convention.

    Justice Suleiman Belgore, in a ruling on Thursday asked the PDP to “allow sanity to reign” and refrain from proceeding with the conduct or convocation of any form of convention “whether special or ordinary,” for the purpose of electing any officer pending the determination of a suit filed by some aggrieved members of the party.

    The ruling was on an interlocutory application by plaintiffs in the substantive suit, who complained against the decision of the party to appoint some people to act in the place of members of the PDP’s National Working Committee (NWC), who resigned midway into the case that challenged the process of their election.

    Justice Belgore refused the applicants’ prayer for interlocutory injunction nullifying the appointment of acting members of PDP’s NWC and restraining the party’s National Chairman, Bamanga Tukur from performing any of the NWC’s functions pending the determination of the case.

    The judge in refusing both prayers, held that they were not part of the issues placed before the court for determination in the originating summons.

    Justice Belgore frowned at the decision of the PDP to take certain steps capable of foisting a state of helplessness on the court. He held that, having submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the court, the party must await the decision of the court on the case.

    The judge held that “it is recklessness of some high degree” for the PDP to have taken steps that could affect the case before the court.

     

     

  • ‘Courts have power to formulate issues for parties where justice so demands’

    When he delegated his dis-

    ciplinary powers to the Disciplinary Board, the Disciplinary Board become a tribunal bound to observe all the Rules of natural justice. But the Board was not independent and some of the members not impartial.”

    Having reflected on the foregoing dicta the appellant has surmised that if he had been arraigned before the appropriate Standing Committee of the Central Bank and by the bank itself for that matter as against the make-believe committees as set out by the subterfuge of the 2nd respondent that his complaints as to their composition etc. would have amounted to a straight case of alleging of denial of a fair hearing. Meaning that his complaints of denial of fair hearing in the circumstances before the instant Disciplinary committees put in place by the 2nd respondent in the disciplinary processes before which he has in fact been arraigned in this matter have arisen by default. He has charged the trial court of having missed this crucial aspect of his case to the effect that the 2nd respondent has at all times at the trial not accounted for himself of the authority for his actions in this matter in other words that he has not discharged the burden of proof put on him by section 137 of the Evidence Act arising from the pleadings and evidence on the record. I will come to deal with the question raised by this thrust of his case anon as it hinges on whether the 2nd respondent is a necessary party when he has acted for the 1st respondent under a false colour of office as alleged by the appellant in the process of dismissing the appellant in this matter. However, I must vouch here that this misconception of the 2nd respondent’s acting in place of the 1st respondent, a corporate entity, has pervaded the appellant’s case in this appeal; thus he has so engrossed himself in pursuing this line of argument that he has glossed over the pertinent law that the 1st respondent has to perform through its accredited officers as the 2nd respondent as one of the Directors in its services.

    I now come to the said grounds of appeal in the storm’s eye in the appeal – the bone of contention in this case. Before then I must observe that I will omit grounds 12 to 17 as they appear to have been abandoned as no issues have been raised from each one of them and they serve no purpose in this appeal. Each of them should therefore be struck out. See: Ojo v. Kamalu (2005) 12 SC (Pt.11) 132, Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (1987) 4 NWLR (Pt-67) 787.

    The said relevant grounds of appeal are set out in extenso as follows:

    Ground one:

    The entire judgment is perverse and erroneous in law in that the court below misunderstood and misapplied the law to the facts admitted or not disputed.

    Particulars of perverseness

    i. The learned justices of the court below wrongly applied the law to the facts of the case in the pleadings and evidence as well as presumed other facts thereby erroneously placing a higher burden of proof on the appellant than is required by the law.

    ii. The lower court erroneously presumed delegation of the disciplinary power of the 1st respondent to the 2nd against the hard facts on record thereby causing a miscarriage of justice.

    iii.The learned Justices of the court below assumed the role of a trial court by purporting to evaluate the evidence and came to the following conclusions not borne out by evidence on record namely:-

    i. “There is no grain of truth in the appellant’s allegation that the Director of Personnel usurped the powers of the 1st respondent to issue the query to him and proceeded without lawful authority to institute a special audit investigation panel”.

    ii. “The composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee and the actions taken by the Director of personnel are in accordance with Exhibit “D” and everything was properly done as prescribed in Exhibit “D”-

    Ground two:

    The learned Justices of the Court below erred in law by affirming all the findings of the trial court that the appellant failed to prove his case or discharge the burden placed on him to entitle him to judgment as well as that the appellant was given a fair hearing by 1st respondent.

    Particulars of error

    i. The learned Justice of the Court below “agreed entirely with the summation of the entire case by the learned trial Judge and (held) that the judgment cannot be faulted” without proper consideration of the pleadings and evidence record.

    ii.Affirmed the trial court’s finding that ’’The 1st defendant complied with the conditions laid down in the staff manual Exhibit “D” when the pleadings and evidence on record were that 1st respondent was not involved in the disciplinary process and did not authorize the actions complained of.

    iii. Over sighted the appellant’s evidence on record and drew wrong conclusions from respondents’ challenged exhibits.

    iv. The findings of the court below undermine or failed to follow the law in Katto v. CBN (1991) 9 NWLR (Pt.214) as well as Haruna University of Agriculture Makurdi (2005) 3 NWLR (Pt. 912) 233 on procedure for ensuring a fair hearing in administrative Tribunal proceedings.

    Ground three:

    The learned Justices of the Court below erred in law by failing to hold that by the unchallenged oral and documentary evidence on record, the appellant proved his case but rather relied on the oral evidence of DW2 who was not called as witness for the 1st respondent and held variously thus: – “The evidence of DW2 debunked the claim of the plaintiff that the 2nd defendant……” and “There is no grain of truth in the appellant’s allegation that the Director of personnel usurped the powers of the 1st respondent to issue the query to him and proceeded without lawful authority to institute a special Audit investigation panel’.

    Particulars of error

    i. The learned Justices of the Court below assumed the role of a trial judge whose primary duty it is to assess or evaluate evidence of parties and ascribe probative value.

    ii. The lower court aptly noted that ‘’The appellant accused the 2nd respondent of usurping the powers of the 1st respondent……’’ but simply affirmed the finding of the trial judge thus: The 1st defendant is a statutory body. That being so, it must necessarily function through its officers who are human beings’’ when there was no evidence on record to the effect.

    iii. The appellant’s evidence on record that 2nd respondent usurped the powers of the 1st respondent and acted without due authorisation was ignored by the lower court.

    iv. The Lower Court also uncritically affirmed the conclusion of the trial court that ‘’the acts of the 2nd defendant in the present case can therefore be attributed to the 1st defendant and that there is no evidence before me that all that the 2nd defendant did in these present case were done in his private capacity “ when there was evidence on record that there was no delegation of power by the 1st respondent to the 2nd respondent.

    v. The findings fail to show an appreciation of the pleadings as well as the appellant’s complaint in EXHIBIT “F”.

    Ground four:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held that the 2nd defendant was properly struck out from the suit as an unnecessary party.

    Particulars of error

    The learned Justices of the court of Appeal unjustifiably failed to:-

    a. look at the pleadings and evidence before the court which overwhelmingly challenged the vires of the 2nd respondent in the whole disciplinary action challenged.

    b. Consider the matter on the rules of court on joinder of parties under Order 12 Rule 3 Federal High Court Rules 2000.

    c. Properly consider S.137 of the Evidence Act relating to burden and standard of proof.

    Ground five:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law by holding that the 2nd respondent did not usurp the powers of the 1st respondent and that the plaintiff/appellant was given a fair hearing by the 1st respondent thereby affirming the trial court’s decision on the point.

    Particulars of error

    i. Against the evidence on record, the learned Justices of the Court of Appeal:

    a. Held that the appellant was given opportunity to exculpate himself but he failed to do so.

    b. Failed to appreciate the plaintiff appellant’s pleadings and evidence that the 2nd defendant who was his co-employee usurped the Powers of the first respondent and without lawful authorization disciplined him by issuing the controversial exhibits.

    c. Wrongly held that the 2nd respondent acted on behalf of the 1st respondent when there was no evidence of authorisation by delegation of powers to him as well as approval of his actions including the recommendations in exhibits M, M1, M2 & M1-3 by the 1st respondent.

    ii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal unjustifiably refused to consider the case of Katto v. CBN (1991) 9 NWLR (Pt.214) submitted by Counsel on the manner of proof of authorisation or delegation of powers by way of minutes of meetings and decisions of the 1st respondent.

    iii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal placed undue construction on and drew wrong conclusions from the plaintiff/appellant’s Exhibits’M”’M1″’M2″ and M-M3′.

    iv. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal unjustifiably failed to consider the authority of Haruna v. University of Agriculture, Makurdi (2005) 2 NWLR (Pt.912) 233 cited by counsel in oral elaboration with respect to the issue of composition of the Disciplinary Panel vis-a-vis fair hearing.

    Ground six:

    The learned Justices of the Court below erred in law by failing to appreciate the appellant’s case as in his pleadings first before affirming the judgment of the trial court that appellant failed to prove his case and that he was given a fair hearing by the 1st respondent.

    Particulars of error

    i. The court confessed that it “cannot comprehend what the plaintiff is complaining about apart from his allegation that the 2nd defendant has no power to query him after the Audit Investigation Panel indicted him” thereby undermining the pleadings before the court.

    ii. The court below failed to appreciate the facts and hold that on the state of the law in S.137 of the Evidence Act, the appellant proved his case.

    GROUND SEVEN:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held that “the complaint of lack of fair hearing by the learned trial judge has not been made out’’ and that they “cannot see how the learned trial judge breached the principle of fair hearing by not calling upon counsel to address him on the two issues formulated” suo motu.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. “The learned Justices of the Court below aptly observed:-

    (a). That “the trial judge can formulate pertinent issues for determination provided they are related to the pleadings and evidence canvassed before the court” but failed to hold that the two issues formulated by the trial judge were not related to the pleadings and evidence before him.

    ii. The conclusion of the court below failed to follow the dictum in Agbeje v. Ajibola (2002) NWLR (Pt.750) 127 that where issues formulated suo motu “raise any issue which the parties did not advert their minds to, then the court must invite the parties to address on such issues raised suo motu before reaching a decision”.

    iii. The learned Justices of the Court below failed to hold that the issue of whether the plaintiff discharged the burden of proof raised suo motu by the trial judge became the kernel of the case and as such must be guided by the law in lrom v. Okimba (1998) 56/57 LRCN 3077 that a court must invite the parties to address him when the issue raised suo motu becomes the kernel of the case.

    GROUND EIGHT:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law in finding that:-

    “The complaint of the appellant on the composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee of any consequence”, and that “Although the Deputy Governor General Administration is the chairman of the Central Disciplinary Committee, he has power to delegate his authority to the Director of Personnel to preside over meetings.”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The finding failed to advert to and consider the:-

    a. The demands of S.36 (1) of the Constitution as to incidence of independence and impartiality in deciding fair hearing of the Appellant.

    b. Decision in Haruna v. University of Agriculture, Makurdi (2005) 2 NWLR (Pt.912) 233 which was cited during oral expatiations on the brief in court.

    c. The uncontroverted oral evidence of the appellant that he appeared before selected committees of 2nd defendant against the detail of Exhibit “D” on disciplinary procedure of 1st respondent.

    ii. There was no pleading or evidence on record on why the Central Disciplinary Committee that tried Appellant was not the Standing Committee but one Selected by the 2nd Defendant.

    iii. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal speculated and conjectured on why the Deputy Governor (General Administration) as Chairman was not on the panel and whether his power was delegated to the 2nd Defendant.

    iv. There was no evidence on record of actual delegation of the 1st Respondent’s power to the 2nd Defendant.

    GROUND NINE:

    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held severally that:-

    a. “lt is clear that it was the Central Disciplinary Committee that investigated the allegations made against the Appellant and the number required to form a quorum was complete”.

    b. The constitution of that committee cannot be impugned in anyway because their composition was in accordance with chapter 6 Clause 10 of Exhibit “D”.

    c. The composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee and the actions taken by the Director of Personnel are in accordance with Exhibit D and everything was properly done as prescribed by Exhibit “D”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    1. The learned justices of the Court of Appeal failed to:-

    a. advert to the pleadings and consider the Appellant’s evidence on record that he “appeared before a selected Disciplinary Committee not the Standing Disciplinary Committee’.

    b. relate chapter 6 clause 10 of Exhibit “D’’ to the facts and evidence on record.

    c. Consider the submissions and judicial authorities advanced on the point of quorum and approval of actions of a delegate vis-a-vis fair hearing of the Appellant.

    GROUND TEN:

    The learned justices of the Court below erred in law when they held that “by the tone of Exhibit “F” the Appellant had no iota of doubt that the query (Exhibit “E”) which was issued to him had the stamp and authority of the 1st Defendant. Similarly the letter of suspension (Exhibit “C’’) the invitation to appear before the Central Disciplinary Committee (Exhibit “L1”) the one summoning him to appear before the Inter-Departmental Committee (Exhibit “J”) emanated from the 1st Defendant/Respondent”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The pleadings and evidence on record (oral and documentary) before the court particularly the evidence of DW1 is that “Exhibit “E” was issued from the Personnel Department which office has the responsibility of handling staff matters.

    ii. The finding failed to look at the manner Exhibit ‘’E’’ “G” ‘L1″, ‘’L’’ and “J” were signed and follow the judicial authorities on the point.

    iii. The learned trial judge took evidence did not make the finding but merely stated that “the acts of the 2nd “Defendant can be attributed to the 1st Defendant” which finding the learned justices affirmed.

    iv. The learned justices of the Court of Appeal:

    a. failed to hold that the 2nd Defendant has no power in the disciplinary process save only to communicate disciplinary measures taken by the 1st Defendant against staff.

    b. Noted that the Appellant “described the actions taken by the 2nd Defendant as unauthorized and done without lawful authority” but failed to decide the point on the evidence on record.

    GROUND ELEVEN:

    The learned Justices of the court of Appeal erred in law by holding that “it was therefore an afterthought for the Appellant to allege in paragraph 15 of the Amended statement of claim that the 2nd Defendant has removed or caused to be removed all available documents he would have used for his defence.”The Appellant turned tacitum to accuse the 2nd Defendant of removing the document’’. “A clear case of grave misconduct was established against the appellant and instead of bracing up against the situation, he turned round to accuse the 2nd Defendant as the architect of his misfortune”.

    PARTICULARS OF ERROR

    i. The findings did not arise from the pleadings neither from the findings of the trial court.

     

    ii. The Court below failed to evaluate the evidence but read exhibit ‘F’ in isolation and drew wrong conclusions about the LPOS.

    iii. It is clear that it was the Central Disciplinary Committee that investigated the allegations made against the Appellant and the number required to form a quorum was complete.

    iv. The constitution of that committees cannot be impugned in anyway because their composition was in accordance with chapter 6 clause 10 of Exhibit “D”.

    v. Since he denied that the signatures on the LPOS were his own, he had a duty to produce the originals.

    vi. Failed to consider the totality of the Exhibit ‘F’ and the oral evidence of the Appellant on his general complaint.”

    If I may come again, I have deliberately set out the eleven grounds of appeal raised against the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the appeal for what they are worth particularly in a case of this nature based on the objection taken against each one of them. They each of them, speak for themselves. No doubt they are prolix and proliferated and one cannot help raising the question of tautology against the manner of couching them. In so many respects these shortcomings have been the bane of the appellant’s case at the trial court and in the appeals and so much so as portraying a confused state of affairs of what his case has been as pleaded and as found by the lower courts as per the pleadings on which issues have been joined as the appellant shunts his case from pillar to post, thus making nonsense of the principle of pleadings and accepted evidence which are the means of crystallising the issues in a matter between the parties in civil matters. See: Okolo v. Union Bank (2004) 1 SC (Pt.1) 1 which case has made the point that litigation must follow some restrictive order and not open-ended to save the time of the court as well as the litigants themselves. It is in this respect that I approve and adopt the crucial finding of the court below as expressed poignantly to the effect that appellant has totally misconceived his case.

    The appellant has complained of not having been arraigned before appropriate standing Committees of the Central Bank of Nigeria by the bank i.e. 1st respondent but before adhoc committees that have been constituted by a bizarre procedure contrived by the 2nd respondent against which the appellant has complained as a clear usurpation and abuse of power of the 1st respondent and should never have been held as “proper” by the two lower courts. The appellant has put the respondents to the burden of failing to identify one by one how the said sixteen grounds attacked in these respects are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita and that in consequence of failing to do so as the onus is by law placed on the respondents, would without more, he has urged, result in overruling the preliminary objection and upholding the said grounds as competent grounds in law. See: Briggs v. Chief Land Officer (supra) & Ogbechie v. Onochie (supra). The foregoing submission if I may interject here has showed a fundamental flaw of misconception of the appellant’s case in this appeal. The onus is clearly on him to show that the said grounds are of law in order to ignite the jurisdiction of this court. See Section 233(3) (supra).

    Finally, the court is urged to dismiss the objection with costs as lacking in merit and to hear the appeal on the merits.

    The appellant by a strange twist in his submission has urged in the alternative that the court should stay proceedings and give directives as will best meet the justice of the case where it is found that all or any of these grounds are of fact or mixed law and fact and has to that effect urged the court to seriously consider following the approach in Lawson Jackson v. Shell Petroleum Development Co. Ltd. (2002) 7 SC (Pt.11) 112 at 120 – 121 as supported by Order 10 Rule 1(l) of the Rules of the court. And that this has to be so in view of the fact that an appeal with leave is a matter that comes within order 6 Rule 2(1) of the Rules of court. From the forgoing temporary aberrations, there can be doubt that the appellant with respect having departed from concentrating on the nature of his case and the applicable law has gone too casual over the serious discussion of the competency of his grounds of appeal vis-a-vis the provisions of Section 233(3) (supra) and has totally derailed in submitting that the law governing leave to appeal is a matter under Order 6 Rule 2(1). I think that the appellant in the exercise of rambling about in presenting his case in the appeal has thus committed unpardonable error in law in so submitting. I can find no connection between the purport of the provisions of order 6 Rule 2(1) of the Rules of this court and questions raised as to the competency of the said sixteen grounds under Section 233(3) (Supra).

    The instant objection as canvassed by the parties herein (in their respective briefs of argument and oral submissions before this court strikes at the heart of this appeal. It simply means that where the objection is sustained it will leave only ground 7 in the Amended Notice of Appeal as the only competent ground in law to sustain the appeal as the rest of the grounds as urged by the respondents being ex facie bad and incompetent in law have to be struck out as well as the issues for determination erected thereupon. Although it is trite that a single ground of law is sufficient to sustain a Notice of Appeal in an appeal; also, see: Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (1987) 2 NSCC (Vol. 18) 1258 per Nnaemeka Agu JSC. I think that in the sense of the instant preliminary objection it is vital and appropriate in this regard to set out the seventeen grounds of appeal as I have clone above with their prolix particulars of errors in law, even then for ease of reference and more so as the substantive ground of every ground of appeal has to be read and considered conjointly with their respective particulars of error to ascertain the real issue or complaint as encompassed in the said ground. In this regard the court is not to place undue reliance or emphasis on the form or in the manner the ground is couched as the gravamen or form of a ground of appeal for purposes of determining whether a ground is a ground of law or mixed law and facts or facts alone goes beyond the mere words used in couching or preferring the ground to the more serious question of identifying the real issue or the core of the complaint as encompassed in the ground. Clearly It is the real issue or complaint centrally encompassed in a ground on the backdrop of its particulars that decides whether the ground is one of law or not. Where, in short, the ground raises a complaint on an issue of law based upon accepted or admitted facts it is a ground of law requiring no leave of court but where the complaint or real issue is founded on disputed or unascertained facts then it is a ground of mixed law and fact requiring leave of court. See Section 233(3) (supra), and N.N.S. Co. Ltd. vs. Establishment Sima of Vaduz (1990) 7 NWLR (Pt.164) 526. The process of determining the substantive complaint of a ground as in this appeal has been accentuated by the fact, as can be seen from established authorities that the distinction between a ground of law and mixed law and fact may at times be so blurred or thin and so, difficult to ascertain with relative application of the established guiding principles as per settled authorities on the question. lt is a matter that goes beyond a ground of appeal being simply labeled without more as a ground of law by the appellant. A hard scrutiny of the case as per Ehinlanwo v. Oke & Ors. (2008) 6 – 7 SC (Pt.1) 123 has established that a ground of law arises where the court has misunderstood the law or has misapplied the law to the proved and admitted facts. Against the backdrop of the foregoing guidelines I now go on to examine the outstanding eleven grounds of appeal in this matter and in that regard I adopt the three categorization of these grounds of appeal as in the manner the appellant has attempted to tackle them in his brief of argument that is to say as I have adumbrated above:

    (A).Ground 1. The complaint in this regard is that the judgment of the court below amongst other reasons is perverse; being perverse necessarily will involve examining facts and evidence ignored by the court or that the court has taken into account irrelevant matters and has based its decision thereon or has misconceived the thrust of the case of the appellant and as borne out by the particulars of the ground. In the instant ground the particulars have clearly raised the question of improper appraisal or evaluation or assessment of the facts in the pleadings and evidence. See: Udengwu v. Uzuegbu & Ors. (2003) 110 L.R.C.N. 1702. Having thus raised an issue of mixed law and fact it is therefore incompetent for not having firstly sought and obtained leave of court. See section 233(3) of the 1999 Constitution as amended, and Nwadike & Ors. v. lbekwe & Ors. (1987) 11-12 SCNJ 72 at 98 – 99; (1987) 4 NWLR 718.

    (B) As regards Grounds 4, 6, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 17 lumped together and argued by appellant to which with respect I add grounds 5 and 16 apparently for no reason left out of this class. There is a thread of complaint traversing all these grounds as alleged by the appellant and they, each of them, have again showed on the aggregate a failure to apply the law to the unproved and unascertained facts in the pleadings and evidence on the record vis-a-vis Order 12 Rule 3 of the Federal High court Civil Procedure Rules 2000 and section 137 0f the Evidence Act. These grounds have unequivocally raised questions of appraisal or evaluation of the facts and evidence before the trial court as affirmed by the court below. There can be no doubt therefore, that the single complaint running through these grounds has raised a question of mixed law and fact and so these grounds have required leave of court to be competent. In other words, these grounds are incompetent for want of leave of court as prescribed by Section 233(3) (supra). See: Arowolo v. Ademula (1991) 8 NWLR (Pt. 212) 753 at 764 and Nwadike v. lbekwe & Ors” (supra).

    (C) Grounds 8, 9 and 10: simply put the appellant has raised these grounds alleging that by not having been arraigned before the appropriate Central Disciplinary Committees of the Bank by the Bank itself (i.e. the respondent) but before illegal Committees (not the appropriate Standing Disciplinary Committees) of any consequence set up by the machinations of the 2nd respondent in his pursuit to force out the appellant from his employment, the appellant has been denied a fair hearing by default and that the court below has even gone ahead to make the case for the 2nd respondent to justify the same and so that Exhibits E, F, G, L, L1, & J not having come from proper authority the case built thereupon on the facts both oral and documentary has not been decided on the proper evidence before the court. The court is urged to scrutinize the facts and evidence all over again. He relies on Garba v. Unimaid (supra) a case he has misconstrued, with respect, as applying to the facts of this case. It is my view that he has thus raised questions of facts requiring appraisal and evaluation on the record before the court below to find out whether there has been in fact such a denial and so, the grounds do not contravene Section 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution in relation to the appellant; consequently making it incumbent on the appellant to seek leave of court under Section 233(3) (supra). Besides Section 36(1) (supra) arises where the denial of fair hearing has been charged against a court or tribunal established by law and not before domestic or standing/ adhoc tribunals raised departmentally by the parties as the 1st respondent here. See: Bakare v. LSCSC (1992) 8 NWLR (Pt.262) 641 per Nnemeka Agu JSC. The question here therefore cannot be whether the said section has been contravened with regard to the appellant as there is no basis for so conjuring and so, as there is no basis for raising the same as the grounds cannot be raised as of right being of mixed law and fact requiring leave of court under section 233 (3) (supra). In sum these grounds have deviated from the issues on the pleadings and evidence on the record and cannot therefore be allowed to stand as grounds of law appealable as of right.

    Having struck out ail the grounds of appeal but ground 7, it is trite law that the issues for determination ten of them excepting issue No.7 raised in the instant appeal are for not having any legal basis on which to stand incompetent and are hereby struck out. In that regard, specifically issues 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 raised in the appellant’s brief of argument having become otiose are hereby struck out and so also ail the arguments proffered as based on these issues, they also are hereby struck out being incompetent. See: Nonye v. Anyichie (2000) NWLR (Pt.39) 66 at 75, Attorney General Bendel State v. Aideyan (1989) 4 NWLR (Pt.118) 646, Adelaja v. Fanoiki (1998) 2 NWLR (Pt. 131) 137, Ugo v Obiekwe & Anor. (1989) 1 NWLR (Pt.99) 36. I am now left with issue seven to examine in this appeal. Before then let me observe that in fact the appellant has raised no issues for determination from grounds twelve to seventeen inclusive and the consequence in law is settled. He has acted completely by inadvertence in regard to them. They are therefore, in the circumstances, deemed to have been abandoned and for the avoidance of doubt each of them is hereby struck out. See: Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (supra).

    The remaining ground is Ground 7 and the issue raised therefrom is as follows:

    ‘Whether the learned Justices of the court below were right on the facts of the case when they held that ‘the complaint of tack of fair hearing by the trial Judge has not been made out and/or that the learned trial judge did not breach the principle of fair hearing in not calling upon counsel to address him on the two issues formulated suo motu’. This issue relates to ground 7 of the ground of appeal.”

    The appellant in his brief has in regard to this issue challenged the propriety of the trial court in formulating this issue suo motu and deciding it without inviting addresses from the parties to this appeal particularly the appellant and it has been strenuously contended that the appellant’s right to a fair hearing has been seriously compromised/violated thus vitiating the entire trial.

    In the main, the appellant’s case in this respect has made a heavy weather of the fact that not having been invited by the trial court as affirmed by the court below in formulating of the two issues raised suo motu by it and decided them has denied him of the opportunity of expatiating on any areas of his case with respect to the burden of proof and the standard of proof as alleged have been placed on him on the pleadings and by section 136 of the Evidence Act. The appellant is particularly irked that having placed sufficient materials to show who has power to discipline him and who actually has wrongfully disciplined him in the circumstances both on the pleadings and evidence, oral as well as documentary on this question that yet the trial court as affirmed by the court below has wrongly found that he has not discharged the burden of proof arising from the state of the pleadings nor has his case attained the standard of proof on the overall evidence before the court to sustain the same. The court is urged to uphold the appellant’s contention and nullify the trial.

    The respondents have relied on Ebo v. NTA (1996) 4 NWLR (Pt.442) 314 to urge that any court can formulate issues suo motu where the issue formulated by the parties would not advance the interest of justice and that it must be consistent with the grounds of appeal filed since the essence of formulating issue is to bring out the substance of the complaint in a ground of appeal. See: Otuo v. Nteoguilo (1996) 4 NWLR (Pt.440) 56, lncar (Nigeria) Plc. v. Bolex Enterprises Ltd. (1996) 6 NWLR (Pt.454) 318. Further, the respondents have submitted that there is no breach of fair hearing in not calling on the appellant to address it on the two issues so formulated as in that regard the trial court has simply condensed/summarised the issues formulated by both parties to two substantive issues which to all appearances are consistent with the grounds of appeal raised by the appellant. And that as no new issue has been raised the circumstances have made it unnecessary to invite the parties to address the court on the process and it is contended that the exercise does not amount to a denial of fair hearing as what the trial court has done amounts if I may repeat to simply summarising the issues raised by the parties based on the pleadings and the evidence before it. The court is urged to discountenance the complaint as per ground 7 as frivolous. There can be no doubt from the foregoing resume that “fair hearing” has become the whipping principle for counsel trying to catch at a straw to sustain a modicum of standing in a hopeless case where the case is already dead as a dodo. This approach of counsel in general is deprecated. Fair hearing should for what it is and represents in our adjudicative process before the courts be invoked with every sense of seriousness and in appropriate settings. It is not the case in the instant appeal.

    It is noteworthy that this issue as encapsulated herein has been satisfactorily exhausted by the lower court in its decision on the same question, which I uphold in toto. To raise the same issue predicated on a much weaker and stale arguments in this court is highly deprecated particularly as the finding in this respect by the court below is not perverse but founded on accepted and admitted facts and evidence on the record.. The judgment cannot be faulted. Judicial opinions on the question of formulation of issues for determination by courts have been revealed in a plethora of decisions of this court wherefore some have approved the practice as against a group that has disproved the practice, which include such cases as Nwokoro & Ors. v. Onuma & Anor. (1990) 3 NWLR (Pt.136) 22; Adeniran & Anor. v. Interland Transport Ltd. (1991) 9 NWLR (Pt.214); Anie & Ors. v. Chlef Uzorka & Ors. (1993) 8 NWLR (pt.309) 1; Onwo v. Oko & Ors. (1996) 6 NWLR (pt.456) 584; Ogundayin v. Adeyemi (2001) 13 NWLR (pt.730) 403 and Agbaje v. Ajibola (2002) 2 NWLR (Pt.750) 127. On the other side of the cleavage of judicial opinions in approval of the practice are such cases as Labiyi v. Anretiola (1992) 8 NWLR (Pt.258) 139, Ogunbiyi v. lshola (1996) 6 NWLR (pt.452) 12, Erhahon v. Erhahon (1997) 6 NWLR (pt.510) 667 and NEPA v. Isieveore (1997) 7 NWLR (pt-511) 135.

    It is my view that the power of courts to formulate issues for determination at whatever level in the hierarchy of the courts although particularly so in appellate courts (where brief writing is a matter of the Rules of the court) inheres in the court in the interest of justice to enable courts to perform their adjudicative functions in our jurisprudence hence there are no rules of court prohibiting courts from doing so. I think that this discretion imbued with the interest of justice as its focus and premise has to be guided by the facts of each case and this has been the case with regard to the cases cited above. Courts should not make it a point of practice to formulate issues for the parties suo motu and deciding them without calling on both parties to address it in the process as it negates one of the cardinal principles of hearing the parties and providing a level playing ground in a trial of their matter before condemning either of them. Formulating issues by courts should be subjected to the rider of calling upon the parties to address it in such instances before judgment. By this process a modicum of opportunity as it were, is afforded the parties on the question; this accords with a reasonable man’s sense of having justice seen to be done. This is because courts should not be seen to jump pre-emptorily into the arena of contest however tempting the cause as courts have to avoid being muddied in the process of adjudication of cases before them and thus lose their centrality of impartiality as neutral umpires in our adjudicative system. To hold otherwise will undoubtedly unduly shackle the discretion of courts in the adjudicative process as this will not be grounded on any relevant rules of court or substantive law as such. I can find nothing offensive in such exercises. I uphold the intervention in this instant case upon its peculiar facts in the interest of justice. And it is my view that no denial of fair hearing amounting to a miscarriage of justice has thus been occasioned to the appellant.

    In the instant case the trial court as rightly found by the court below has merely condensed/summarised the issues as formulated by the parties to the two issues raised suo motu and has proceeded to decide them one notable point as regards the said issues so formulated is that they are consistent with the grounds of appeal filed by the appellant in the appeal. These issues have unquestionably arisen from the said grounds and have clearly crystallised the substance of the complaint as contemplated in the grounds, the pleadings and evidence before the trial court and on the record before the lower court and have been necessitated in the interest of justice. In short, the trial court has simply condensed/summarized the issues raised by the parties in their cases. Therefore, I do not see any leg on which to stand to upturn the lower court’s decision on this point particularly so, if I may repeat when it has not occasioned a miscarriage of justice. I have made these points to support the opinion that courts have the power to formulate issues for the parties in appropriate cases when the justice of the cases as in this case so demands. It is a power to be sparingly exercised with extreme caution. In Labiyi v. Anretiola (supra) this court has held per Karibi-Whyte JSC that:

    “The court below was free either to adopt the issues so formulated by learned counsel or to formulate such issues that are consistent with the grounds of appeal filed by the Appellant- It is in the observance of this principle in pursuit of the proper administration of justice that the court below considered an appropriate formulation of the issues consistent with the grounds of appeal filed when it was observed that although the grounds of appeal were inelegantly drafted, the complaints therein were clear and not misleading”.

     

    I am in unison with the reasoning in the above abstract in the judgment of my noble Lord and rely on it to hold in support of my reasoning herein that the appellant on the whole in the instant appeal has failed to nail the denial of fair hearing on the head in regard to his contention of the negation of his rights to a fair hearing in this matter leading to denying him justice in the matter and thus render the trial a nullity.

     

    Finally on this question I agree with the court below that notwithstanding having formulated the two issues suo motu and deciding them that the appellant’s claim all the same, has not been dismissed after striking out the 2nd respondent from the suit as the trial court has gone on to consider whether or not the appellant has discharged the burden of proof to entitle him to his claim and thereby nullify his dismissal on the ground that the 2nd defendant has not been clothed with the power to act on behalf of the 1st respondent (as its alter ego) in the processes taken in his dismissal and so to arrive at the inevitable conclusion that his dismissal from the employ of the 1st respondent is otherwise wrongful. I resolve this issue against the appellant.

     

    And being the only issue in the appeal I would have at this stage dismissed the appeal but there are other considerations in the matter. In the result the findings of the lower court as contained in its judgment are approved and the judgment is hereby affirmed by this court.

     

    The truth of this matter as between the appellant and the 1st respondent is that their employment relationship has subsisted at all material times as a relationship of master/servant created as per by Exhibit ‘A” i.e. the contract of employment into which has been incorporated the provisions of exhibit ‘D’ – again, that is the staff manual of the Central Bank of Nigeria which contains the collective agreements as incorporated into the individual contracts of employment of the 1st respondent’s employees. This is so based on the facts and evidence before the court. Both documents constitute the basis for determining the contractual relationship and the conditions of the appellant’s employment with the 1st respondent here. It is common ground and as rightly found by the two lower courts that the nature of the appellant’s employment does not savour of statutory flavour. In other words, it is entirely founded on Common Law. The necessary implication arising from the parties’ contractual relationship in this matter if I may emphasize is one founded on the common Law and like all genera contracts is determinable by either side as provided in the documents exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’ for breaches of any fundamental conditions as stipulated therein. One basic principle of master and servant relationship is that an employer can summarily dismiss/terminate the employment of his servant for gross misconduct. In the instant matter the 1st respondent reserves that power vis-a-vis the appellant as provided as per clause 6(4) and (5) of Exhibit ‘D’. Following the query Exhibit ‘E’ issued to the appellant on an allegation of fraud which has arisen from failing to maintain proper account records of the distribution of diesel to other locations of the 1st respondents’ points of business activities and has resulted in a heavy financial loss by which the 1st respondent has incurred huge financial deficits. The appellant has answered the query as per Exhibit ‘F’. He has in consequence of his answers appeared before the Central Disciplinary Committee by which it has been established in effect of the appellant having been given an opportunity to exculpate himself from the allegations of fraud. The appellant as I have also found has not been denied a fair hearing in the process of his dismissal upon the charge of gross misconduct leveled against him. I must observe that having dismissed all the grounds of appeal herein the court is obliged to reach these conclusions based on the findings and conclusions of the two lower courts which now stand before this court unchallenged. In other words, he has rightly been dismissed as per Exhibit ‘G’. The appellant’s case of wrongful dismissal has no leg on which to stand to contest it.

     

    Having in this judgment discountenanced the denial of fair hearing in all its concomitants as raised by the appellant herein thus this matter falls to be considered on whether as per the Exhibits and evidence on the record as accepted by the lower courts the appellant has been properly dismissed from his employment upon his gross misconduct – my answer is in the affirmative. Where his dismissal is founded on the allegation of gross misconduct the appellant is not entitled to any notice or salary in lieu of notice as clearly provided in Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’. And it would be wrong in law to make any awards to him in these regards.

     

    It is trite that an employer as the 1st respondent here is obliged to follow the right procedure in summarily dismissing his employee, in this case the appellant. The question then is whether his employment on a charge of gross misconduct has been determined as provided in exhibits ‘A’ and ‘D’ in this matter, which have laid down the procedure to be followed in doing so. By giving the appellant a query as per Exhibit ‘E’ and followed by the appellant’s answer exhibit ‘F’ and the convening of various Disciplinary Committees to look into the answer as per exhibit ‘F vis-a-vis the allegation of fraud, speak for themselves of having abided with the procedure laid down by exhibit ‘D’ for dismissing an employee. The appellant cannot be heard to complain as he has gotten all he is entitled to under a master/servant relationship at common law.

     

    Once exhibit ‘G’ has been served on the appellant dismissing the appellant on grounds of gross misconduct he stands effectively dismissed as per the said exhibit and whether or not the dismissal is wrongful to entitle him to damages is the question for this court to resolve in this matter as reinstating him is out of the question. The position is that the two lower courts have not been persuaded that the dismissal of the appellant is wrongful and they are right. There is therefore a concurrent finding on the question.

     

    The appellant has challenged the dismissal as being wrongful; this cannot be so on the peculiar facts of this case; it is clearly found that the appellant has grossly misconducted himself and has gotten what his gross misconduct deserves that is a summary dismissal. His dismissal even though without notice or any payment of salary in lieu of notice is not wrongful and cannot therefore in the circumstances constitute a breach of the conditions of his contract of employment.

     

    In this respect, I agree and uphold the decisions of the two lower courts that there is no merit in the appellant’s claim and that it should be dismissed. I hereby dismiss this appeal as most unmeritorious. Having taken into account all the surrounding circumstances in this matter I make no order as to costs. Parties to bear their respective costs.

     

    Appeal dismissed.

     

    IBRAHIM TANKO MUHAMMAD, JSC: I have read before now, the judgment of my learned brother Chukwuma- Eneh, JSC. I am in agreement with his reasoning and conclusion which I adopt as mine. The Preliminary objection succeeds. The appeal is hereby struck out. I abide by all consequential orders made in the lead judgment.

     

    SULEIMAN GALADIMA, JSC: I have been obliged with a copy of the draft Judgment of my learned brother CHUKWUMA-ENEH JSC, just delivered. He is thorough in exposing the relevant facts of this case. He has equally dealt with the main issue leading to his reasoning and conclusion dismissing the appeal for being unmeritorious. I concur.

     

    However I have a word or two on the preliminary objection raised by the Respondents as to the competence of the Appeal. This being a threshold issue it ought to be dealt with first. On 21/12/2011, the Respondents filed Notice of Preliminary Objection to the hearing of this appeal praying the court to strike out grounds Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, and 11 as well as issues formulated thereon, as being incompetent. lt is contended that these grounds are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave has been obtained, as required by S. 233(3) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, (as amended). Before now I have noted that no grounds have been distilled from 12 to 17 of the grounds of Appeal. They serve no purpose in this appeal and are accordingly struck out. In the lead Judgment, my learned brother in this appeal has set out Grounds 1 – 11 of the Appellant’s Grounds of Appeal with their particulars. I have carefully read through them. With exception of Ground 7 all other grounds without any doubt are grounds of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita. These grounds all complain essentially about failure of all the Justices of the Court of Appeal to properly appraise or evaluate or assess the evidence on the record leading them to arrive at the wrong conclusion. On the authority of Ogbechie & Anor V. Onochie & Ors (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt. 23) 484, where the grounds of appeal are of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave of either the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court has been obtained, are incompetent and the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction to entertain same. The Appellant has contended that Ground 8 comes within S. 233(2) of the said Constitution, that is, this being ground complaining that there was error of law. The complaint in the said Ground of Appeal is not about the denial of fair hearing by the trial court but about the denial of fair hearing before the Disciplinary Committee of the 1st Respondent (Central Bank of Nigeria) and the failure of the court to properly evaluate the evidence on the record to find as a fact that there was such a denial. It is thus a complaint about a decision touching on the contravention of S. 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution (supra).

     

    Ground 8 has not arisen from a decision of the court below as to whether any of the provisions of Cap. (iv) of the Constitution has been breached or contravened, same cannot be brought as of right. Ground 8 being of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita does not fall under Cap. (iv) of the Constitution. At best it is mixed law and fact for which leave is required.

     

    Parties are ad idem that Ground 7 of the ground of appeal which complains about the decision of the Court of Appeal in respect of the complaint of a denial of fair hearing, is a ground of law. Even on this, there is a concurrent finding of fact of the two lower courts to the effect that Appellant’s claim is devoid of merit.

     

    This Court, as a practice will refuse to interfere with such concurrent findings of the two courts, unless, the Appellant shows that the findings are perverse. Since the Appellant did not demonstrate that the findings of the two lower courts are perverse, he cannot succeed.

     

    For this little contribution and for detailed and fuller reasoning in the lead Judgment, I too, have to strike out all the grounds of appeal and the issues formulated from them. Appeal on ground 7 is lacking in merit, it is dismissed.

     

    NWALI SYLVESTER NGWUTA, JSC: I had the privilege of reading in draft the lead judgment just delivered by My Lord, Chukwuma-Eneh, JSC.

     

    I agree that Grounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the appellant’s grounds of appeal are grounds of either mixed law and facts or facts.

     

    Section 233 of the Constitution of the Federation 1999 (as amended) provides: –

     

    “Section 233 (2)

     

    An appeal shall lie from decisions of the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court as of right in the following cases:

     

    a. Where the ground of appeal involves question of law alone, decisions in any civil or criminal proceedings before the Court of Appeal;

     

    b. decisions in any civil or criminal proceedings on questions as to the interpretation or application of this Constitution;

     

    c. ……… (d) …….. (e) ……… and (f) ……….’’

     

    Section 233 (3) provides:

     

    “Subject to the provisions of subsection (2) of this Section, an appeal shall lie from the decisions of the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court with the leave of the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court.”

     

    (Underlining mine for emphasis).

     

    None of the appellant’s grounds of appeal on grounds other than law alone falls within the intendment of Section 233 (2) (a)-(f) of the Constitution. The said grounds filed without leave of the Court of Appeal or the Supreme Court first sought and obtained are invalid and the Court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal on the said grounds. See Nwaolisha v. Nwabufor (2011) All FWLR (pt. 591) 1438.

     

    It is immaterial that Section 233 (3) of the Constitution does not provide a sanction for its violation. A ground of appeal which is incompetent for any reason is liable to be struck out. A right of appeal or any other right granted by law cannot be exercised without compliance with the law granting the right, or any other law or rule regulating the exercise of the right.

     

    Appellant’s eleven grounds of appeal (with the exception of ground 7) and the issues distilled from them are incompetent and are hereby struck out.

     

    Among the diverse curious submissions made by the learned Counsel for the appellant, this one stands out:

     

    “…the Court, through its Registry, could adopt an administrative procedure of notifying an appellant that he requires the leave of Court for his appeal to lie…”

     

    With due respect, learned Counsel’s reformation agenda, backed by over 30 years at the Bar, should be directed to the appropriate authority. Be that as it may, the appellant in this case did not settle the processes filed in the appeal. They were settled by his Counsel who is deemed to know that the court is a creation of Statute and in exercise of jurisdiction conferred by law, it has to comply with its rules of procedure. The court does not have to spoon-feed learned Counsel on the law and rules.

     

    On the issue derived from the surviving ground of appeal, ground 7, there is a concurrent finding of fact of the two Courts below to the effect that appellant’s claim is bereft of merit. This court has no duty, and will decline, to interfere with the concurrent findings of the High Court and the Court of Appeal unless the appellant shows that the findings are perverse. See Okafor v. Idigo (1984) 1 SCNLR 481; Kpomiglo v. Kodadja (1933) 2 WACA 24.

     

    Appellant did not show that the findings are perverse and his appeal is bound to fail.

     

    For the above and the more exhaustive reasoning in the lead judgment, I also strike out all the grounds of appeal except ground 7 and the issues distilled therefrom. I dismiss the appeal on ground 7 as bereft of merit.

     

    Parties are to bear their respective costs.

     

    STANLEY SHENKO ALAGOA, JSC: I read before now in draft the judgment just delivered by my learned brother C. M. Chukwuma-Eneh, JSC. He has quite comprehensively dealt with the matter.

     

    I have nothing useful to add. I also dismiss the appeal as lacking in merit while I make no order as to costs.

     

    Appearances:

    Johnson O. Esezoobo Esq. for Appellant.

     

    Prince Aderemi Adekile Esq. for the Respondents.

     

  • ‘Why Nigerian courts exercise universal jurisdiction over war crimes’

    Can Nigeria exercise univer-

    sal jurisdiction over crimes

    against humanity as contained in the Rome Statute?

    No, say experts.

    But Nigerian courts may exercise such universal jurisdiction over war crimes under the Geneva Convention Act because it covers all nationalities, regardless of the place where the offence was committed.

    These were part of the issues discussed at the 7th Training Course on International Criminal Justice and its Administration, organised by the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS) at its University of Lagos (UNILAG), Akoka, Yaba campus.

    The adoption of the Rome Statute in 2002 ushered in a new era in the administration of criminal justice worldwide.

    This Statute established the International Criminal Court (ICC) and vested it with jurisdiction to try a category of offences therein described as crimes against humanity no matter where such crimes are committed.

    As a result of this, many countries of the world have tried and at times convicted non citizens for crimes committed outside their shores.

    NIALS Director-General Prof. Epiphany Azinge (SAN) said not many lawyers were acquainted with the Rome Statute – the law setting up the ICC.

    Besides, all the technicalities, doctrines and principles that characterise the Rome Statute is not taught in any university or faculty of law, nor is it normally part and parcel of programmes mounted by institutions and organisations.

    “The institute has taken it up as our responsibility annually to train new participants and build capacity in this area.

    “We appreciate the fact that increasingly across the world, particularly in Africa, we have been having instances of atrocities committed that all fall within the definition of and characterisation of the Rome Statute either as crimes against humanity or genocide and all the other components that make up the jurisdiction of the ICC.

    “We also train people, including prosecutors, to understand exactly, the principles and doctrines that apply to the ICC and those that can be domesticated as it were, that is, those techniques that can be used internally.

    “But more significantly, we have noticed increasingly that Africans are playing very significant and dominant roles in the ICC and Nigerians have also had their say in the running of the ICC.

    “To that extent, we feel there is need to build capacity in that area and introduce greater number of Nigerians to the workings of the ICC so that we can always replenish our number.

    “In other words, by the time a set of Nigerians leave the ICC as prosecutors, other Nigerians will go in and fill their positions,” Azinge said.

    The NIALS boss spoke on the training’s benefit to participants.

    “The armed forces and other participants are those who would also want to know the limits of the engagements by making sure that they adhere strictly to the rules of engagement as far as warfare or any combat activities are concerned.

    “So, the involvement of the military in our training programme is one that is welcome because naturally it will have to tailor the way the military will behave when they have assignments internationally or locally to make sure that they apply and adhere strictly to the rules of engagement.

    “With all these and all the faculties that are at our disposal, we believe that the programme is one that has been running well and this one will not be an exception.

    “We believe that by the time the participants go, they will be better enriched in knowledge and understanding of the workings of the ICC and of course, the issue of justice system as it affects the ICC and the administration of the ICC in general,” Azinge added.

    Former Dean, Faculty of Law, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Prof. Demola Popoola, said the adoption of the Rome Statute has opened a new chapter in international law .

    “A comprehensive legal and institutional regime now exists in the field of international criminal justice”, he said.

    He quoted former United Naitons Secretary-General Mr. Koffi Annan, as saying that the Rome Statute “will not only affect the conduct of states, but quite importantly as well guide and shape the behaviour of individuals. It is a landmark development in the evolution of international criminal law and the annals of human history.”

    Discussing the sources of international criminal law, Justice of the Court of Appeal, Chima Centus Nweze, said the evolution of the notion of international crimes has an engaging history.

    According to him, historically, the concept of crimes was un-known to classical international law; international torts (also known as “delicts”) being the only form of wrongs recognised by the law of nations.

    “Indeed, the declaration of a ‘war of aggression’ as ‘an international crime’ was only achieved as late as the 1920s.

    “This was followed by attempts at evolving means for ‘ensuring the repression of international crimes’.

    “Even then, the concept of crimes only gained full endorsement in the lexicon of international law when the law accepted the concepts that pirates were ‘enemies of mankind’ and that piracy was ‘an offence against the law of nations.

    “Prior to this, it must be emphasised that domestic law had recorded breath-taking strides in this direction. Thus, there is evidence that the United States of America was a forerunner in this regard,” Nweze said.

    On the charasterictics of international crimes, Nweze said they bear certain peculiar characteristics that distinguish them from ordinary municipal crimes.

    He said they are offences that violate the bristle bond of humanity; hence, an offender is seen as hostis humani generis – an enemy of mankind.

    “The implication of this attribute of international crimes is far, reaching, thus, notwithstanding the similarity in the nomenclature of such offences in international criminal statutes with domestic crimes; their most striking feature is the dissimilarity in their characterisation.

    “Thus, crimes against humanity are distinguished from crimes in domestic penal statutes by the threshold test which requires that they be committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against civilians and that the perpetrator had knowledge of the attack,” Nweze said.

    The Court of Appeal justice, a former university teacher, said the concept of universal jurisdiction is only invoked in relation to international crimes and finds firm roots in customary international law.

    “It’s true meaning, according to Prof. Theodore Meron, is that ‘International law permits any states to apply its laws to certain offences even in the absence of territorial, nationality or other accepted contacts with the offender or the victim.

    “A state exercises universal jurisdiction when it prosecute crimes committed outside its borders, without regard to the nationality of the perpetrator or victim, the location of the crime or other specific link to the prosecuting state.

    “The provenance of the authority for the exercise of universal jurisdiction is purely doctrinal. It is traceable to the principle that every state has an interest in bringing to justice the perpetrators of particular crimes of international concern.

    “As already shown above, the offenses involved in the exercise of this jurisdiction violate the bristle bond of humanity.

    “That is why customary international law permits states to exercise universal jurisdiction over genocide, crimes against humanity and serious war crimes.

    “Universal jurisdiction is exercisable by Nigerian courts over war crimes under the Geneva Convention Acts for it covers persons of all nationalities, regardless of the place where the offence was committed,” Nweze said.

    A former international prosecutor and senior UN lawyer Charles Adeogun-Phillips, said no individual is exempt from ICC prosecution on account of official functions or position in government.

    According to him, the act of aggression can include, among others: invasion, military occupation and/or annexation by use of force, blockage of ports or coasts if it is considered a manifest violation of the UN charter.

    “Except when the situation is referred to the court by the United Nations Security Council, the ICC has no jurisdiction over crimes of aggression committed in the territory of a state which is not a party to the Rome Statue or by its citizens,” the lawyer said.

    He listed crimes against humanity to include murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation or forcible transfer of population, imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty, torture, rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilisation, persecution, enforced disappearance of persons, the crime of apartheid, among others.

     

  • High court registry to get computers

    The Probate Registry of the

    Lagos High Court, Ikeja is

    to have Information Communication Technology (ICT) equipment.

    Lagos State Chief Judge, Justice Ayotunde Philips,  said at a workshop organised by the Probate Reform Committee for the staff of the department that the development represented her commitment to upgrade the judiciary.

    She said the training, which was attended by 50 probate staff, was also part of the plans by her administration to revamp the Probate Department and to keep the staff abreast of modern trends.

    She added that the move would also  reposition them for effective probate duties.

    The Chief Judge expressed conviction that on  conclusion of the on-going reform, issuance of letters of administration to the families of deceased persons who died without a will  and other documents for relatives of those who died with a Will (estate), will be faster.

    “The Lagos State Juidiciary cannot be left behind. The Probate Department is going to be rejuvenated. The department will become ICT compliant so that it will be able to serve the public better”, she said.

    Justice Phillips described the Probate Department as a critical source of revenue for the state government.

    She, therefore,  urged the participants to be consumer-friendly, bearing in mind that they would be dealing with grieving members of the public who had lost their loved ones.

    Chairman of the Reform Committee, Justice Olubunmi Oyewole, said the on-going reform  would amount to “a paradigm shift in the Probate Department and the Lagos State Judiciary at large.”

    Justice Oyewole said the probate section is very critical to the on-going reforms in the Lagos Judiciary, adding  “staff competence and capacity are major factors in the operations of the section”.

     

  • Agbakoba threatens legal action over Christian/Ecclesiastical courts

    Agbakoba threatens legal action over Christian/Ecclesiastical courts

    Former President of the Ni- gerian Bar Association (NBA), Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) has threatened to sue the National Assembly and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) over the non-inclusion of Christian/Ecclesiastical Courts in the constitution.

    In a July 16 letter, titled Establishments of Ecclesiastical Courts, addressed to Senate President David Mark and Attorney-General of the Federation, Agbakoba said though provisions were made for other religions, none was made for Christianity in the Constitution.

    He gave the National Assembly seven days, effective July 16, to address the issues raised in his letter, failing which he will initiate legal proceedings.

    Agbakoba argued that the absence of Christian/Ecclesiastical courts in the Constitution is a violation of Section 42 of the  1999 Constitution which prohibits discrimination on account of religion.

    “I am a Christian and Catholic by faith. I have read the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 and have observed that no provision is made for Christians to have their religious/spiritual affairs adjudicated by persons adequately learned in Ecclesiastical laws/ biblical jurisprudence.

    “Islamic and Customary practitioners are well recognised and accommodated in the Constitution by the establishment of the Customary and Islamic court systems in Sections 260, 265, 275 and 280 but  no corresponding provision is made for Christians or Ecclesiastical Courts.”

    Christians, according to him, are forced to resort to Customary and High Courts which are manned by persons of little or no knowledge of Ecclesiastical law and jurisprudence.

    “This in my view violates Section 42 of the 1999 Constitution which prohibits discrimination on account of religion.”

    Agbakoba asked that provisions should be made for the establishment of Christian/Ecclesiastical Courts, in the present on-going review of the constitution, adding that Nigeria is a multi religious country and faith is personal.

    “I believe matters of faith should not be contained in the Constitution as provided by Section 10 which prohibits state religion.  But if we must retain customary and Islamic law systems, and I have nothing against this, then provision must be made for Christian/Ecclesiastical Courts,” he added.

    The learned Senior Advocate of Nigeria attached a draft bill for the establishment of the Ecclesiastical Court of Appeal for the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, as he claimed to have received it from the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), to the letter sent to the Senate President for the consideration of the Assembly.

    He threatened that he would head for the court if nothing is done within the period of ultimatum given to the Senate on the matter.