Tag: Court

  • Governors return Excess Crude Account battle to Supreme Court

    Governors return Excess Crude Account battle to Supreme Court

    Governors are back at the Supreme Court over their disagreement with the Federal Government on the Excess Crude Account.

    The move for an out-of-court settlement between the two parties has failed again.

    The Supreme Court had advised the parties to seek an out-of-court settlement as the governors challenged the Federal Government’s deduction from the Excess Crude Account, which they are urging the apex court to declare as illegal.

    At a meeting on Wednesday the Nigeria Governors’ Forum resolved that the states should return to the Supreme Court.

    But the National Economic Council (NEC), the country’s highest economic organ chaired by the Vice President with governors as members, yesterday advised the governors to choose dialogue.

    The Supreme Court advised the parties to reach a truce by September or it will rule on the matter.

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, who is the Forum’s chair, said “the governors have decided to head back for the court to enforce the Federal Government’s adherence to the Constitution”. He read the communiqué of the meeting.

    Some of the Governors at the meeting are: Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti), Babatunde Fashola (Lagos), Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), Danbaba Suntai (Taraba), Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Sullivan Chime (Enugu) and Abdulfatai Ahmed (Kwara).

    Many states were represented by their deputy governors. In all, 20 states were represented.

    The decision may also endanger the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) set up by the government to replace the account. SWF, like its predecessor, is facing some challenges as the governors are skeptical about its operations.

    The account was created by former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration in 2004 to act as a buffer during low oil prices.

    The account was to save money in excess of the budgeted benchmark price of crude oil.

    The states argue that the account is illegal and that the Federal Government did not seek their input before establishing it.

    But the Federal Government claims the account is being kept as a stabilisation fund to protect the country against global economic crisis as witnessed between the 2008-2009 global meltdown.

    The governors also decried the process whereby it is only the federal government that has control over the use of the fund.

    The acrimony between the federal and state governments has been on since 2007.

    The governors approached the Supreme Court, asking for a refund of their shares of the federation revenue which have been used to fund the fuel subsidy regime, among other things.

    The governors urged the Supreme Court to immediately halt the continued deduction of funds it claims it is using to finance the fuel subsidy and other deductions from the Federation Accounts.

    Briefing State House correspondents at the end of yesterday’s NEC meeting, Ahmed said council encouraged both parties to continue the consultations towards working out an amicable solution.

    He said: “After considering a report by the Committee on the out-of-court settlement on the excess crude account litigation on the extent of the ongoing negotiations between the Federal and state governments, NEC encouraged the counsel of both parties to continue the consultations towards working out an amicable solution.”

    Ahmed, who was accompanied to the briefing by his Gombe counterpart, Ibrahim Dankwambo and the Minister of National Planning, Dr Shamsuddeen Usman, however said the council’s position was advisory.

    He said the council’s position remained that if an out-of-court settlement could still be explored, the parties should go ahead in the negotiation.

    NEC also considered a presentation by the new Performance Measurement and Results delivery System in Nigeria by Shamsudeen, which has begun at the federal level with the recent signing of Performance Contracts between Mr. President and the Ministers and its extension between Ministers/Heads of Agencies and Permanent Secretaries.

    The NEC noted the need to cascade the New Performance Management system to sub-national level to harmonise performance management and tracking system and adopted a roadmap presented by the National Planning Minister to that effect.

    NEC agreed that the States should Establish a Functional Monitoring and Evaluation Department to coordinate the implementation of the Framework and support Performance Management;Conduct Sensitisation/Induction workshops for all Commissioners, Permanent Secretaries, Heads of Agencies and Parastatals and Directors; Governors Forum to adopt as part of Peer Review Mechanism; The National Planning Commission to co-ordinate the production of templates and provide overall technical support.

  • Reason behind slow trial of ex-governors’

    Reason behind slow trial of ex-governors’

    CORRUPTION, not dearth of judges is behind the slow trial of former governors and prominent Nigerians, a civil society organisation – the Nigerian Voters Assembly, said yesterday.

    The organisation, in a statement by its President, Mashood Erubami, yesterday faulted claims by the panel of judges that insufficient judges and investigators as well as manual methods of handling judicial procedures are responsible for the delay in dispensing the cases involving such individuals.

    It stated that the country has enough laws and judges to try corruption cases where the political will is there to do justice, saying that there are well-trained investigators in addition to the courts and judges but that their effectiveness is allegedly due to an unholy alliance between the government and the court.

    The statement reads: “Contrary to the reasons given by the National Judicial Policy Committee on why the trial of some ex-governors, ministers and other Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) is slow, saying that inadequacy of judges, dearth of trained investigator and prosecutors was responsible, corruption is really at the root of the dragging.

    “The reluctance of government at all levels to make scape goats of those that are politically exposed, is one good reason why those who steal and should be prosecuted and put behind bars are walking free on the streets without shame.”

    Citing the example of the corruption case against former governor of Delta State, James Ibori, the Voters Assembly said while Ibori escaped justice in Nigeria, it did not take the judiciary of the United Kingdom (UK) a long time to bring the former governor and his accomplices to book.

    “How many years did it take the London metropolitan police and the courts in England to investigate and bring ex-governor James Ibori and his accomplices to account?

    “How many times has the same convicted Ibori escaped justices in Nigeria before he was finally nailed in London – a country where the law rules?

    “Trend of politics in Nigeria have revealed that the list of politically exposed persons in Nigeria has remained and lengthening by the day, yet none of them has been seriously convicted.

    “The Nigeria laws are being continuously misinterpreted infavour of fraudsters why innocent Nigeria continues to suffer degradation and monumental” poverty as a result.

    “It has been further revealed that the main reason why all the Chief Judges from the states were made members of the committee as now revealed and it was to prepare the ground for soft landing of most of the Graft Masters who in the first instance appointed most of the Chief Judges in their various states.

    “It is therefore unfortunate that this is the way corruption is seen by the panel and is recommended to be dealt with.

    “The incapacity of the judicial system to dispose of cases of corruption speedily is now better explained by the increasing bribery funds being credited into the account of judges to subvert the course of justice.” The statement added.

    The Voters Assembly also faulted the statistics to support the dearth of judges in Nigeria, saying not all 160 million Nigerians are criminal or have cases in court at the same time.

    “The statistics of 4000 judges to 160 million Nigerians as given by the judicial policy committee is a fraud because not all 160 million Nigerians are criminal and would be criminal at the constant rate of criminalities in Nigeria.

    “Therefore, if the statistics of 4000 judges is placed on the number of real criminals in Nigeria it will reveal the indolence of some judges and the level of corruption alliance between some judges, the prosecutors, investigators and the criminals which have been responsible for the slow adjudication process and triumphs of darkness over the light of justice.” The statement argued.

    On the remedies suggested by the panel, the group said: “The remedy as suggested by the committee is not in the adoption of alternative Dispute Resolution Mechanism, because crime of corruption is not a civil matter; it is a crime which must be resolved in favour of the victim through diligent prosecution and just sentencing.

    “Suggesting non-adversarial approach and alternative dispute resolution as an option to resolve criminal cases like corruption is a deliberate attempt to suplantant justice and detain justice.

    “There have been over whelming evidence adduced before the various courts hearing these corruption cases but due to deliberate indulgent prosecution by the EFCC and ICPC prosecutors and unnecessary but conscious long adjournment by some of the judges, which has help to the case drag creating the doubt about the capacity of the judicial system to hear and dispose of the cases as speedily as possible. This obviously has put the integrity and reliability of the judiciary at stake as justice delayed is justice denied.

    “What the country needs is a special court headed by known upright Nigeria Judges serving or retired to speed up the prosecution of the corrupt in the society, so that the victims of corruption and financial crimes can sleep with their two eyes closed.”

  • Court to rule on PDP, Ondo CJ suit Friday

    Court to rule on PDP, Ondo CJ suit Friday

    An Akure State High Court will on Friday rule on a suit filed by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against the Chief Judge, Justice Sehinde Kumuyi, and Governor Olusegun Mimiko.

    The PDP took the action over the duo’s alleged involvement in the internal affairs of the party.

    Justice Kumuyi was alleged to be a card-carrying member of the Labour Party (LP) and accused of attending the party’s meeting, according to a letter written by the former Chairman of the party, Dr. Olaiya Oni.

    The PDP is praying the court to bar Kumuyi from presiding over any of its cases at the High Court or assigning same to any judge.

    The party averred that the CJ breached his oath of office when he allegedly joined the LP and had a meeting with Mimiko, where it was reportedly decided that the Kumuyi should grant certain orders to destabilise the party.

    At the resume hearing of the matter yesterday, the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Eyitayo Jegede (SAN), opposed the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter on the ground that the action ought not to start with an originating summons.

    Justice B. F. Adeyeye adjourned the matter till Friday for ruling on jurisdiction.

     

  • Failure of trial court to be addressed by parties  on issues of non-suit …

    Failure of trial court to be addressed by parties on issues of non-suit …

    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NIGERIA HOLDEN AT ABUJA ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2012 BEFORE THEIR LORDSHIPS

    WALTER SAMUEL NKANU ONNOGHEN JUSTICE, SUPREME COURT
    JOHN AFOLABI FABIYI JUSTICE, SUPREME COURT
    SULEIMAN GALADIMA JUSTICE, SUPREME COURT
    NWALI SYLVESTER NGWUTA JUSTICE, SUPREME COURT
    MARY UKAEGO PETER-ODILI JUSTICE, SUPREME COURT
    SC.70/2005
    BETWEEN
    1. KWASI KARKARI ADESEI
    2. JAMES ADJEI ….APELLANTS
    AND
    JOHN ADEBAYO
    (Substituting the deceased,) ….RESPONDENT
    AMOS ADEBAYO

    JUDGMENT
    (Delivered by Mary Ukaego Peter-Odili, JSC) By a writ of summons and statement of claim filed by the respondent to this appeal at the Gboko High Court against the appellants as defendants claiming the following reliefs:
    (i) A declaration that he is the sole proprietor of the School called Gboko International Nursery and Primary School.
    (ii) An order of the court directing an audit of the  school finances between January 1995 till  judgment.
    (iii)An order directing the defendant to refund any unaccounted moneys spent by them.
    The appellants as defendants at the High
    Court entered appearance to the suit of
    the respondent and filed a joint statement of defence and counter-claim against the respondent. In the counter- claim of the appellants, they claimed the following reliefs:
    (i) That the defendants are the founders of Gboko International Nursery/Primary School and as such entitled to be declared joint owners of the  said school;
    (ii) A declaration that the plaintiff is an employee of the  Defendants as nominal proprietor of the school
    (iii) An order directing the plaintiff to render account of the differences of N11,000 and N33,000 which he did not bank as directed by the school.
    (iv) An injunction restraining the plaintiff by himself, heirs, servants, agent or whosoever from further interference with defendant’s smooth administration of the school.
    (v) Any other order(s) this Honourable Court may deem fit to make in the circumstances.
    The brief facts as put forward by the appellants and which were not far from the findings of the two courts below are that the appellants are Ghanaians resident in Nigeria and sometime in October 1991, founded a school called Gboko International Nursery and Primary School.  The appellants subsequently invited the respondent in 1992 to join them in the running of the school, when they had problems with the Benue State Government.
    Somewhere along the line the respondent went to the Gboko High Court
    At some point the parties amended their pleadings at the High Court before the pleadings of the parties were finally settled.
    The matter proceeded to trial and the learned trial judge delivered his judgment on  October 14, 1999 and non-suited the plaintiff/respondent’s claim as well as the defendant/appellant’s counter-claim.  In the non-suiting, the trial judge had not given the parties opportunity to be heard before the order of non-suit. The respondent and the appellants being dissatisfied appealed and cross-appealed against the judgment of the trial judge to the Court of Appeal, Jos.
    The Court of Appeal sitting in Jos in a judgment delivered on March 19, 2003 allowed the appeal of the respondent and dismissed the cross-appeal of the appellants. It is against the decision of the court below, Jos that the appellants have appealed to this court by a notice of appeal filed on June 17, 2003.
    On the 25/10/11 date of hearing the appellants through counsel Sylva Ogwemoh adopted their joint brief of arguments filed on 15/1/2010 and deemed filed on 18/1/2010. In the brief were crafted two issues for determination viz:
    (i)   Was the Court of Appeal right to have dismissed the cross-appeal of the appellants after having found as a fact that the order of non-suit made by the trial court was made without an opportunity given to the parties to be heard on the issue of non-suit?(Ground 6 of the Notice of Appeal).
    (ii) Was the Court of Appeal right to have entered judgment in favour of the respondent on the totality of the evidence before the court? (Grounds 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the Notice of Appeal).
    The respondent, through learned counsel, A. G. Ayua adopted their filed on 8/3/2010 and also adopted the issues as formulated by the appellants.
    Learned counsel for the appellants along the issues couched submitted that the Court of Appeal ought not to have dismissed the cross-appeal after holding that the non-suit order of the court of trial would not stand the order having been made without taking addresses from counsel on the issues of non-suit which that court had raised suo motu. He cited:
    Craig v Craig (1966) ALL NLR 165 at 169;
    Osayi v Izozo (1969) ALL NLR 150 at 152;
    Anyaduba v NRTC Ltd (1992)
    5 NWLR (Pt.243) 535 at 559 – 560.
    He went on to say that the failure of the trial court to hear the parties on the issue of non-suit before it was made amounted to a breach of the fundamental constitutional right to fair hearing as guaranteed order section 36(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999.
    For the appellants was further contended that the Court of Appeal in an apparent exercise of its powers under Section 15 of the Court of Appeal Act, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 entering judgment in favour of the respondent was a decision not deserved or supported by available evidence. That the court of Appeal clearly substituted its own views on the facts for those of the trial court. That the interference with the findings was erroneously made. He referred to the cases:
    Ebba v Ogbodo (1984) 1 SCNLR 272;
    Balogun v Agboola (1974) 1 AUNIR (Pt.2) 66;
    Nwosu v Board of Customs & Exercise (1988) 5 NWLR (Pt,93) 225;
    Nneii v Chukwu (1996) 10 NWLR (Pt.378) 265;
    Ajadi v Okenihun (1985)1 NWLR (Pt.3) 384;
    Oroke v Ede (1964) NNLR 118;
    Ngwu v Onuigbo (1999) 13 NWLR (Pt.636) 512 at 523;
    Ogbechie v Onochie (1988) 1 NWLR (pt.70)370;
    Oyewole v Akande (2009) 15 NWLR (Pt. 1163) 119.
    On their own part learned counsel for the respondent submitted that the Court of appeal was right to have dismissed the cross-appeal of the appellants herein. That the court below was also right to have exercised its powers under Section 15 of the Court of Appeal Act, 2004 in reviewing and re-evaluating the evidence of the parties before the trial High court and at the end dismissed the counter-claim and found for the respondent to whom, the Court of Appeal amended the judgment and upheld the respondent ownership claim to the school subject matter of the dispute. In support learned counsel had cited  several cases viz:
    J.M.Din v African Newspapers of Nig. Ltd (1990) 5 SCNJ 209 at 217;
    Asafa Foods Factory Itd v Alraine (2002) 10 NSCQR (Pt.1) 553;
    Dabup v Kolo (1993) 12 SCNJ 1 at 10;
    Adeyemi v Olakunri(1999) 12 SCNJ 224;
    Chief A. a. Fagunwa v Chief N. Adibi {2004}7 SCNJ 208;
    Balogun v Akanji (1988) 2 SCNJ 104; S.15 Court of Appeal Act, 2004.
    Having stated the summary of the submissions of counsel either way, I would like to start with a. brief excerpt of the judgment of the trial court which is as follows:
    “In the situation at hand since none of the  parties who claimed ownership exclusively of the other has established such ownership I  should dismiss their claims but I have seen that such a final action by the court will work hardship on the parties because a dismissal of an action raises certain estoppels. I think the ideal (sic) order to make is an order of non- suiting which is a final decision of the court to the effect that none of the parties has won.”
    On that decision the Court of Appeal in refusing the non-suit had this to say:
    “The requirement that counsel should be heard before an order of non-suit is made is no longer merely desirable. It is not only prudent but important. The consequences of failure to hear the counsel before an order of non-suit is made is that the order non-suiting the claim would be set aside, except it is very obvious and incontestable on the evidence before the trial . court and the law applicable therein that an order of non-suit is the only order it would make in the case in the exercise of its discretion.”
    From the above and what was before the court of trial and later at the Court of Appeal were undisputed facts that the appellants herein established the school sometime in 1991 and being Ghanaians, the Benue State Government under its Ministry of Education had it closed  as an illegal enterprise based on improper constitution of the indigeneity of the proprietors.
    To survive as an establishment the appellants in 1992 invited the respondent to partner with them under the guise of his being a teacher and also to sign and put forward his name as proprietor, he being a Nigerian. The school functioned with these disparate configurations and not surprising one party and this time, the respondent took a writ of summons claiming sale ownership. The conclusion of the trial court  clearly stemmed from a difficulty on this partnership where each party claimed sale ownership and nothing else, which situation brought about the non-suit of the trial court without first getting a hearing in that regard from the parties.
    On appeal, while acknowledging and rightly in my humble view that failure of the trial court to be addressed by the parties on the issue of non-suit which that court raised suo motu was fatal to the order.
    This court had laid down this rule from way back and it still remains the position. See Craige v Craig (1966) ALL NLR 165 at 169; Osayi v Izozo
    (1969) ALL NLR 150 at 152; Anyaduba v. NRTC ltd(1882)  5 NWLR (Pt. 243) 535
    Getting the matter of the question raised in the second issue as to  whether the Court of Appeal was right to have granted judgment in  favour of the respondent and awarded him the sole ownership of the property in the face of the available evidence and the clear findings of the learned trial Judge in that regard. The Court of Appeal had held as follows:
    “However, on the totality of the evidence before the court, in particular the evidence of the plaintiff/appellant who gave evidence as
    PWl, PW2, PW4, PW6 and Exhibits 1, 2, 4, 5,
    6A, 6B, lOA, lOB lOD, lOE, 11, 16 and even 18,
    18A, 18B, it IS my view that the plaintiff/appellant proved by preponderance of evidence that he is the sole proprietor of the said school. In that regard, I think the cross- appeal lacks merit and is accordingly dismissed.
    In the final analysis, the main appeal by the plaintiff /appellant succeeds and it is hereby allowed … Judgment is entered for the plaintiff/appellant in terms of the reliefs claimed in paragraph 18 of the amended statement of claim filed before the lower court.”
    From what the Court of Appeal did it is easy to see not only that he interfered with the evaluation and findings of the trial court without justification since what was on ground did not bear out to the path chartered by the Appeal Court and to the conclusion it came to. I see it necessary to quote the salient part of the judgment of the court trial in contradistinction to what happened on appeal and it is thus:
    “The plaintiffs’ claim that the old school which was In existence was closed down by Government and that the school as it now exists was solely established by him. I see this attempt as an effort by a drowning man to save his head. The evidence before me does not support that assertion. Presently the name of the school is the same, the operators are the same and there is no evidence that the school actually ceased functioning at any particular time. Moreso that Exhibit “18B post dates the period of the blacklisting of the school and all other activities in the running of the school in which the defendants participated post dated the period the school was blacklisted.
    From all I have stated so far in this judgment and from the entire evidence before the court in this proceedings it is not difficult to deduce a joint ownership of the school by the plaintiff and the defendants. Accordingly it is my opinion based on all the contributions made in the establishment and the running of the school Gboko International Nursery/Primary School as exposed by the entire evidence before me I do not agree with the plaintiff’s claim that he is the sole owner of the school. I also do not agree that the defendant own the school exclusively of the plaintiff. I see evidence of joint ownership as between the plaintiff and the defendants unfortunately all the parties are so selfish that none of them pleaded joint ownership of all the parties to this suit.”
    The Court of Appeal had fallen into certain error as entering into the trial of the case when it went on its own evaluation of the evidence including ascribing probative value to the evidence of the witnesses, a domain of only the trial court. See Ogbeche v Onochie (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt.70) 370; Ovewole v Akande (2009) 15 NWLR (Pt.1163) 119; Ebba v Ogbodo (1984) 1 SCNLR 272; Nneji v Chukwu (1996) 10 NWLR (Pt. 378) 265.
    The court below finding for respondent came from wrong premises as that court allowed itself to be persuaded that because the documents of re-application for the re-opening of the school bore the name of the Nigerian associate, of the appellants and that is the respondent, the respondent above must be the single owner. The court cannot ignore the relationship between the parties and how they came to work together. There must be a holistic appraisal of how the institution came to be and that the trial court made a good showing of.
    The morality or rightness of the arrangement between the parties is not what is before court, all that is the concern of the court is that there was joint ownership and then what next.
    In conclusion therefore since none of the parties had made a claim even if in the alternative upon which a clear relief can be rested the only option is a declaration that the appellant and respondent are joint owners of the school subject matter of this dispute.
    From the above and the fuller details of my learned brother, N. S. Ngwuta JSC I allow the appeal and order that the school is jointly owned by the parties.
    I abide the consequential orders in the lead judgment.
    REPRESENTATION
    Sylva Ogwemoh, Usman Mohammed Enesi, Albert Attah Agada for the appellant.
    A. G. Ayua for the respondent.
  • Court orders release of Ondo ACN members

    Court orders release of Ondo ACN members

    AN Akure High Court, presided over by Justice B. F. Adeyeye, has ordered the release of two arrested Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) members. They were arrested in the convoy of the party’s governorship candidate, Mr Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN), and arraigned for alleged robbery and unlawful possession of firearms.

    The ACN legal team, led by Titiloye Charles and Victor Olatoyegun, approached the court to bail the accused after the Chief Magistrate Court in Akure declined jurisdiction on the matter.

    It ordered that the accused, Folagbade Dapo and Oluwasola Sunday, be remanded in Olokuta Prison. Akeredolu’s convoy was attacked by suspected Labour Party (LP) thugs on July 28. Rather than arrest the thugs, the police arrested the ACN members.

    The police anti-robbery unit, however, washed its hands off the matter, saying it was not properly investigated and that it should be withdrawn.
    The Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Eyitayo Jegede, took over the matter.

    He averred that the accused have a case to answer. The Justice Commissioner issued a legal advice, which directed the trial of the accused for alleged robbery.

  • Court stays order on Umeh

    Court stays order on Umeh

    An Enugu State High Court yesterday refused to vacate the exparte order it made on July 25 restraining the National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Victor Umeh, from convening the national, state or local government executive committee meeting of the party.

    The court presided over by the state’s Chief Judge, Justice Innocent Umezulike, gave the interim order following a suit filed by a member of the party, Mr. Ichie Okoli.
    Okoli alleged that Umeh was occupying the office illegally and his actions were capable of causing anarchy in the party.

    Yesterday, Justice Umezulike refused to vacate the order on the grounds that it was pending before another court. He said Umeh has approached the Court of Appeal, sitting in Enugu, praying it to vacate the interim order.

    Justice Umezulike said: “I am bound to wait for the decision of the Court of Appeal as to whether the interim order was right or wrong. I should not be seen to be locking horns with the Appeal Court in this matter.”

    He said the court would continue to entertain the originating summon, which sought to explain some sections of APGA’s Constitution. The Court adjourned the case till September 24 for final arguments in the originating summons.

    Umeh had told the court through his counsel that the plaintiff lacked locus standi in the matter, adding that APGA was not a party in the suit. He also argued that the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the suit, insisting that it was APGA’s domestic matter.
    But the plaintiff, in his counter motion, said he wanted the court to interpret the provisions of APGA’s constitution as it relates to the plaintiff and the defendant.
    Okoli said Umeh’s tenure expired in 2010, but the embattled chairman has continued to remain in office without organising a convention.

    The interim order aborted the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting slated for Abuja on August 1. The meeting has not been rescheduled due to the order.

  • Zimbabwean PM defies court, goes ahead with wedding

    Zimbabwean PM defies court, goes ahead with wedding

    THE Zimbabwean prime minister went ahead with wedding celebrations yesterday despite a court ruling that cancelled his marriage license on allegations that he would be committing bigamy.
    Morgan Tsvangirai, 60, and his bride exchanged vows and rings at a luxury convention facility in Harare but did not sign the legal marriage register.
    A court on Friday declared Tsvangirai already married under tribal law after seeing video footage of traditional bride price being paid last November to the family of another Zimbabwean woman. Polygamy is recognized in tribal law but not in Zimbabwe’s national laws.
    The Herald newspaper, controlled by loyalists of longtime President Robert Mugabe, yesterday accused widower Tsvangirai of promiscuity and said errors of judgment in a string of alleged affairs made him unfit to lead the country.
  • Court orders man to refund N6m to customer

    A Magistrate’s Court in Yaba, Lagos, has convicted a businessman, Mike Agunobi, of defrauding his customer, Ifeanyi Luke Okeke, of N6 million.
    Chief Magistrate C.T. Adesola-Ikpatt, in a judgment last week, ordered Agunobi to refund the money to Okeke within six months or serve four years in prison.
    The magistrate also ordered Agunobi to pay N100,000 as fine or serve two years in prison for issuing several dud cheques to his victim.
    Agunobi was arraigned in 2008 on a 10-count charge. He was charged with obtaining under false pretence and issuing several dud cheques knowing fully well that he had no money in those accounts.
    According to the charge, the convict, who claimed to be the managing director of MIM Pharmacy Industry Limited, was said to have between January 2006 and June 2007, with the intent to defraud, obtained N6 million from Koil Pharmacy Industry Limited (owned by Okeke).
    He was said to have falsely claimed that his company would deliver to Koil Pharmacy, Penicillin Ointments worth N6m, “a representation he knew to be false, thereby committing an offence punishable under Section 419 of the Criminal Code, Cap C17, Volume II laws of Lagos State of Nigeria, 2003.”
    Agunobi was also said to have issued several dud cheques to Koil Pharmacy “knowing fully well that there was no sufficient fund in the accounts, thereby committed an offence under Section 419(A) (1) Cap C17 vol. 11 laws of Lagos State of Nigeria 2003.”
    Magistrate Adesola-Ikpatt condemned the convict’s conduct and held further that she believed it will be more beneficial to the complainant if the fund is recovered.
    “I am of the opinion that what the complainant would desire most in the circumstance of this case is the return of his money the defendant defrauded him of.
    “It will also afford the defendant (Agunobi) the opportunity to retrace his steps and see to the development and growth of his company and that of the nation,” the magistrate held.
    She further held that it was important that entrepreneurs and owners of young businesses and ventures should be accorded safe environment to transact their businesses.
    According to the magistrate, there was need to restore credibility and trust in the way businesses are conducted in the country. She noted that N6m was a large sum of money for a struggling business to loose, in view of the harsh economic condition and unfavourable environment in which businesses operate in the country.