Tag: Ikeja High Court

  • Businessman sentenced to seven years in prison for fraud

    A 44-year-old businessman, Odibo Kronaghea, was on Wednesday sentenced to seven years imprisonment at an Ikeja High Court, for defrauding a client of N2million.

    The report shows that Kronaghea and his company, Confido Consult Services Ltd, were charged by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on a three-count charge of obtaining money under false pretences and issuance of dud cheques.

    He was convicted by Justice Kudirat Jose on a charge of obtaining money under false presences, but was acquitted in two charges of issuance of dud cheques.

    While sentencing Kronaghea, Justice Kudirat Jose said: “The defendant is hereby convicted of the offence of obtaining under false pretences.

    “He is hereby sentenced to seven years in prison.”

    Justice Jose also convicted Kronaghea’s company, Confido Consult Services Ltd on the charge of obtaining under false pretences, fining the company N50, 000.

    She ordered the convict and the company to pay the complainant, Mr Judgewell Effiong, the sum of N966, 000 which is the outstanding proceeds of the crime.

    According to Mr Abba Mohammed, the prosecuting counsel for the EFCC, the convict committed the offence on Aug. 26, 2008 in Ikeja, Lagos.

    “Kronaghea, falsely represented to the complainant that he was a fund manager and capital market operator, convincing him to invest N2million into a phoney investment scheme.

    “On April 16 and April 22, 2010 in an effort to refund Effiong the defrauded funds, he issued cheques with numbers 00000022 and 00000023, respectively.

    “Each of the cheques were for N100,000 but there were insufficient funds in his Guaranty Trust Bank account with account number – 2824225110.

    “The offences are contrary to Sections 1 (3) of the Advanced Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act 2006 and Section 1 (1) of the Dishonoured Cheques Act of 2004,” Mohammed said

     

  • Delta govt paid N24million into Justice Ajumogobia in 2011 – Witness

    Delta govt paid N24million into Justice Ajumogobia in 2011 – Witness

    An Ikeja high court heard Friday that the Delta State Government credited the current bank account of Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia twice in August 2011 to the tune of N24 miilion.

    A former customer relations officer with Access Bank Plc, Clement Okaranwolu who disclosed this at resumed proceedings before Justice Hakeem Oshodi said on Friday that the state credited the judge’s account with N15million on August 5, 2011and with N9million on August 29, 2011.

    Okaranwolu, who said he was the account officer to the judge, further stated that N15million was paid into the account with an Oceanic Bank cheque while the N9million was lodged in with a Zenith Bank cheque.

    Justice Ofili-Ajumogobia, a serving judge of the Federal High Court, is facing a 30 count charge offence before the court for alleged bribery and unlawful enrichment alongside a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Chief Godwin Obla.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had accused the judge of receiving a total of $793,800 in several tranches from different sources between 2012 and 2015 “so as to have a significant increase in your assets that you cannot reasonably explain the increase in relation to your lawful income.”

    Led in evidence by the EFCC prosecutor, Rotimi Oyedepo Okaranwolu is the fourth prosecution witness told the court that apart from the naira account, the judge also owned two dollars accounts into which lodgments were constantly made by herself and other individuals.

    The witness said one Ken Mozia paid in $20,000 on May 7, 2008 into the judge’s domiciliary account, numbered 0002130929; Tony Iwobi, who paid $10,000 into the account on April 16, 2008; Ali D, who paid in $10,000 on June 16, 2007;  Subedetu, who paid in $3,000 on April 12, 2011; and AB/GT which paid in $9,900 on April 30, 2013.

    The witness, who was presented with the judge’s statements of accounts, also pointed out to the court several $10,000 lodgments which Justice Ofili-Ajumogobia made by herself and by sending others, including the witness himself and one Donald Ofili adding that $10,000 was the maximum daily deposit allowed.

    He said that the two dollar accounts received a total credit of $693,000 deposited by the judge and other individuals between 2007 and 2011.

    The witness also pointed out names of individuals who credited the judge’s account to include one Ayegba Abdullahi who credited the account with N1million on August 17, 2011; Mrs. Bola Latinwo who paid N700,000 and N500,000 into the account on October 5 and November 20, 2011 respectively.

    Justice Oshodi has adjourned further proceedings in the matter till April 28, 2017.

     

  • Man bath Wife with acid, sentenced to death

    An Ikeja High Court on Thursday sentenced a businessman, Suleiman Olalekan, to death by hanging for killing his 22-year-old wife, Chika Egbo, by bathing her with acid.

    Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo sentenced Olalekan to death after finding him guilty of a two-count charge of murder and grievous bodily harm.

    Lawal-Akapo, while pronouncing the sentence, said: “The defendant is found guilty of murder, the defendant, Suleiman Olalekan, will be hanged by the neck until you are dead.

    “May the Lord have mercy on your soul.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Olalekan, a graduate of Mechanical Engineering from the University of Ibadan, bowed his head and remained expressionless when the sentence was pronounced on him before a crowded courtroom.

    Olalekan’s trial started at the High Court on Dec. 9, 2014.

    During the trial, the prosecution led by Mr Adeniji Kazeem, the Lagos State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, said Olalekan committed the offence on Nov. 5, 2012.

    “The accused at 1.35 p.m. on the said day at Bakare Street, Ikotun, a Lagos suburb, allegedly caused the death of Chika Egbo by bathing her with acid.

    “He also caused the grievous bodily harm of one Mr Sunny Daniel, a commercial motorcyclist,” he said.

    According to the prosecution, the convict and the deceased got married and had a daughter, who is currently four years old.

    “The accused and the deceased were having problems in their relationship; the accused lured the deceased who had moved to Enugu back to Lagos under the guise that he wanted her to visit his mother.

    “When she came to Lagos, he and the deceased hailed a commercial motorcycle which was to convey them to his mother’s house.

    “While the motorcycle was on motion, the accused brought out a container of acid and poured it on Egbo’s head,” he said.

    According to the prosecution, Suleiman was caught while trying to flee the crime scene by passers-by and sympathisers.

    “The attack left Egbo’s head badly disfigured and unrecognisable as well as leaving severe burns on her shoulders, breasts and private parts.

    “Daniel, the commercial motorcyclist, was also grievously injured during the attack and almost lost an eye.

    “Egbo succumbed to her injuries at the Burns Unit of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) on Dec. 20, 2014,” Kazeem said.

    The offence contravened Sections 221 and 243 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2011.

    Suleiman, who pleaded not guilty during the trial on Nov. 24, 2016 and said that Egbo got doused in acid during a scuffle between him and her lover at a hotel room.

    “On Nov. 5, 2012, a friend informed me that Chika was in a hotel room with a lover.

    “I went to the hotel and knocked on the door and Chika opened the door and a man called Emeka was lying on the bed in the room.

    “A scuffle broke out between me and Emeka; Chika and Emeka brought out acid to pour on me but Chika was injured in the acid attack.

    “Daniel, the motorcyclist, was injured while conveying Chika to the hospital,” he claimed.

    But Justice Lawal-Akapo, while pronouncing the verdict, debunked Suleiman’s claims.

    “I closely watched the demeanour of the accused while he gave his evidence, he was panting and fidgeting. I believe his testimony was filled with falsehood.

    “I believe he poured the acid on the deceased which led to her death and the three ingredients of murder have been established.

    “The defendant put up the defence of provocation and strenuously admitted it in his defence.

    “However, in his statement to the police when the incident was still fresh in his memory, he did not raise the issue of provocation.

    “In his confessional statement, he admitted that a battery charger sold the acid to him for N1,500 after he told the battery charger that he needed the acid for an experiment.

    “A scenario of provocation did not arise while they were in motion on the motorcycle.

    “He also did not bring up the defence of provocation during his oral testimony,” Lawal-Akapo said.

  • Subsidy scam: Collapsed oil magnate still in hospital

    Subsidy scam: Collapsed oil magnate still in hospital

    Mrs Ada Ugo-Ngali, the Managing Director of Ontario Oil and Gas Limited, anad the co-defendant of Mr. Walter Wagbatsoma, the Chairman of the company, standing trial for N1.9 billion oil subsidy fraud, was absent in court on Monday.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Ugo-Ngali was rushed to hospital on Friday after slumping in the dock when her sentence was about to be read to out by Justice Lateefa Okunnu of the Lagos High Court, Ikeja.

    Okunnu had found Wagbatsoma and Ugo-Ngadi guilty of an eight–count charge bordering on conspiracy, obtaining property by false pretences, forgery and uttering brought against them by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The conviction of the duo is the first of its kind since the prosecution of oil subsidy fraud began in 2012.

    Wagbatsoma has been in recent months absent in court as he was reportedly held by the Interpol during a trip to Germany on June 6, 2016.

    He is currently being held in the United Kingdom on charges relating to a 12 million pounds National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) Trust Fund fraud.

    During Monday’s proceedings, a medical certificate was presented to the court by the defence counsel and the counsel to the EFCC, Mr Rotimi Jacob, gave the court a status update on the case.

    Jacob said: “On Friday when the convict left the court, she was taken to a private clinic which the prison officials were not comfortable with.

    “Information that I got was that she was doing well and men of the EFCC were there to watch her from Friday to Sunday.

    “Her private doctor had assured us that she would be discharged on Saturday but she was transferred to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) on Sunday.

    “My Lordship should take this medical report on its face value, the co-convict (Wagbatsoma) took off to Germany despite the fact that there are able medical doctors here.

    “This might be a ploy to avoid going to prison, the prison officials said that since the convict is in a government hospital, the men of the EFCC should withdraw and they did.”

    The EFCC prosecutor urged the judge to make an order for an independent assessment and should pronounce a sentence in respect of the company.

    Counsel to Ugo-Ngali, Mr Y.A Kadiri, however, opposed to the EFCC’s referring to his client as a convict.

    “Before the law, my client is still a defendant and not a convict.

    “I have read through Section 278 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (ACJL) and it does not seem to make provisions for sentencing where the defendants are not present in court,” he told the court.

    Justice Okunnu noted the lacuna in the law and that since Ugo-Ngali was a representative of Ontario Oil and Gas Ltd and was not in court, she would not sentence the company in absentia.

    “The medical report from Havana Specialist Hospital dated Jan. 15, 2017 must be accompanied with an affidavit sworn to by the medical director of the hospital.

    “The medical attendant at LASUTH must swear to an affidavit as to her medical condition, the affidavits must be filed within a day.

    “The Commissioner of Police is hereby directed to keep her under watch.”

    The case has been adjourned to Jan. 18 for sentencing hearing.

  • Car dealer jailed five years for stealing N9.5m

    Car dealer jailed five years for stealing N9.5m

    An Ikeja High Court, Lagos Thursday sentenced a car salesman, Michael Ugochukwu Nkwocha, to five years in prison for stealing N9, 500,000 from his uncle, Mr. Patrick Ekeh, resident in the United States of America (USA).

    Justice Kudirat Jose found Nkwocha guilty on a count of stealing contrary to Section 39 of the Criminal Code Law of Lagos State, 2011, following over two years of trial.

    Nkwocha was arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on December 13, 2013 on charge No. ID/435C/13.

    The commission said sometime in January 2011, he converted the N9.5m, property of Ekeh, with intent to defraud.

    Nkwocha pleaded not guilty and was granted N2,000,000 bail.

    During trial, EFCC witness, Mrs. Francisca Okorafo, testified that she was the complainant’s elder sister and that he shipped cars to her in Nigeria from the US.

    Okorafo said because of an educational programme she was running at the time, she handed over the car sales business to their cousin, Nkwocha.

    The court heard that between 2008 and 2010, Ekeh shipped over 28 vehicles to Nkwocha in Lagos.

    After an audit in 2010, Nkwocha could not account for four vehicles: two Honda Accord cars, one Infinity and a Toyota Land Cruiser Sports Utility Vehicles (SUV).

    Another EFCC witness, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Sunday Afolayan told the court that during interogation, Nkwocha admitted selling the four vehicles for N10, 500,000 out of which he reportedly gave someone N3, 500,000 without Ekeh’s permission.

    Mrs. Anita Imo was prosecution counsel while Mr. G. T. Agbaeren represented the defendant.

  • Synagogue: Court to rule April 19

    Synagogue: Court to rule April 19

    Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of an Ikeja High Court will  on April 19 decide whether or not to stay proceedings in the ongoing proceedings initiated by the Lagos state government against the registered trustees over the September 12, 2014 building collapse at Synagogue Church of all Nations.
    The decision of the court was sequel to various applications filed by the defendants before the  court seeking to s‎tay proceedings pending the determination of their appeals at the Court of Appeal.
    The September 12, 2014 collapse of the six-storey guest house led to the death of 116 persons, 85 of whom were South Africans. 

    In line with the recommendation of the coroner court, the state government had filed 11‎1 count charge against the engineers who designed the guest house; Oladele Ogundeji and Akinbela Fatiregun, their companies; Hardrock Construction and Engineering Company and Jandy Trust Limited alongside the trustees of SCOAN .

    The defendants are yet to be formally arraigned before the court as several applications were filed against their trial.
    At the resumed hearing on Friday, counsel to  Fatiregun, Mrs Titi Akinlawon (SAN) in an application dated March 3 prayed for an order adjourning further hearing pending the determination of her application before the Court of Appeal.

    Akinlawon said: “The essence of the application for adjournment is that the High Court ruled that the hearing notices served on the fifth defendant was proper, a ruling we are appealing at the higher court.”We also have before the court an application for a stay of proceedings to await the decision of the  Court of Appeal.

    “On this strength, I appeal that an adjournment be granted by this court.”

    Counsel  to Ogundeji and Jandy Trust Limited, Chief E.L Akpofure (SAN) in an application dated February  17 objected to the inclusion of Jandy Trust Limited as one of the defendants.

    Akpofure said “The issue here is very narrow, there is no evidence against the second defendant (Jandy Trust Limited), the second defendant was never mentioned by the witnesses for the state.

    “There is nowhere where it was stated that the second defendant was awarded the building contract.

    “The argument of the state that the trial of the second defendant to go on holds no water.

    “I urge your lordship to quash this information relating to the second defendant as there was no mention of my client in the proof of evidence.”

    Counsel to the trustees of SCOAN,  Mr Lateef Fagbemi (SAN) agreed with the submission of Akpofure that Jandy Trust Limited should be excluded from the charge.

    He said “I will submit that the concept of justice has no sentimental connotation, there have been no mention of the second defendant in the proof of evidence.”

    However, Mrs Idowu Alakija, the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) objected to the applications of the defence to adjourn the matter.

    She said: “Section 273 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (ACJL) 2011 guides the proceedings of this court.

    “It’s ordinary and natural application disallows a stay of proceedings on criminal matters to be entertained before any judgment be given.

    “The rules of the Section are clear, the provision may seem novel, but it was created to stop frivolous cases and applications until judgment is given.

    “Since we filed the information,  so many applications have been filed by the defence, some were successful while others were withdrawn.

    “In finality, I submit that the rules guiding the proceedings in this court is the ACJL 2011 and we are urging your Lordship to dismiss the application of the fifth defendant.”

    After taking the submissions of counsels in the matter, ‎, the judge said “This trial is adjourned to Tuesday, April 19, 2016 for ruling.”
  • Police raid Psquare’s Omole residence

    Police raid Psquare’s Omole residence

    Hardly had the dust over the rift between Peter of Psquare and his brothers; Paul and Jude settled when the iconic music family is faced with another messy , bothering on alleged breach of contract.
    Residents of Omole Estate woke up Friday morning to the invasion of the Square Villa, home of Psquare, by policemen, purportedly carrying out a court order to reclaim about N8million said to have been paid to Psquare for a show they eventually turned down.
    A leader of the delegation who spoke exclusively to NET said they were carrying out an order passed by the Ikeja High Court, Lagos. “Psquare were paid over 8million Naira for a show and they didn’t show up for the show. Our job here is to enforce the court injunction and retrieve the cash. Right now they say they are trying to transfer the money and that’s why we are waiting.”
    Although the group neither showed the court injunction to the NET correspondent nor revealed the name of the client, an eye witness said the singers appeared beaten by the situation which attracted a mammoth to their residence.
    Paul was seen driving out of the Sqaure Ville in a tinted BMW, refusing to speak to anyone. There were indications the singer was going to sort out the refund rather than allow further molestation.
    Recall that few days ago, Peter started a Twitter rant, calling it quits with their elder brother and manager, Jude. The matter appeared to subside after Paul took sides with Jude.
    Peter had gone ahead to reveal more bitter secrets, including how Jude hijacked reggae star, Cynthia Morgan from him.
  • Court dismisses Ajudua’s bail application

    Lagos socialite Fred Ajudua yesterday lost his bid for bail at an Ikeja High Court.

    Justice Kudirat Jose held that Ajudua failed to convince the court that he would not abscond if granted bail.

    Ajudua is standing trial for allegedly defrauding two Dutch businessmen, Remy Cina and Pierre Vijgen of $1.69 million.

    Though the judge held that there is proof of Ajudua’s illness, she said she could not grant him bail because his application lacked merit.

    Ajudua attached to his application, medical reports from the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    Justice Jose noted that Ajudua was admitted in LUTH on August 3, 2013 and was treated for hypertension, traumatic haematuria and enlarged prostate gland, which arose from having only one kidney.

    His doctors, she said, had also prescribed further treatment and possible corrective surgery to address his failing health.

    The reports, she said, did not show that Ajudua cannot be treated in prison.

    The judge said Ajudua also failed to convince the court that he would not interfere with witnesses if granted bail.

    “The applicant (Ajudua) has not shown to the court why he was not able to come to his trial between 2006 and 2013. He did not respond to the allegation that he had tampered with a witness in the trial. Due to his absence, the matter has been stalled since 2006,” Jose said.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arraigned Ajudua and one Charles Orie before Justice Joseph Oyewole in 2006 for allegedly defrauding Cina and Vijgen.

    They were re-arraigned before Justice Jose on February 5, 2014, following the transfer of the case from Justice Oyewole.

    Justice Jose adjourned the case till April 28.

  • Who owns the land?

    Who owns the land?

    Before an Ikeja High Court, Lagos State, is a litigation on a 26,486-hectare land involving a popular television evangelist and a military officer. The preacher is asking the court to decide the ownerhip of the land in dispute on the Lekki-Epe Expressway, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos, in his favour; so is the officer. While the case is on, court orders are said to have been flouted, reports SEYI ODEWALE.

    The sleepy, bushy and serene settlements of Ofiran and Aiyeteju villages in the neighbourhood of the Lekki Free Trade Zone (LFTZ) could have remained in oblivion, despite the rate of development in the Lekki/Ajah corridor of Lagos State, but for the litigation on a parcel of land. The suit involves a real estate firm, Meridian Properties Limited, linked to a popular television evangelist and Senior Pastor, Kings International Christian Centre (KICC), Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo who has been served an Order of Cmmittal to prison proceedings for allegedly disobeying the order of an Ikeja High Court, Lagos Judicial Division to maintain the status quo on the land pending the determination of the substantive suit on a disputed land in the villages. Ashimolowo, who is said to be a director on the board of the firm and the claimant in the suit, allegedly flouted the court order.

    He was said to have been served forms 48 and 49 (notice of consequence of disobedience to court order and notice to show why order of committal) shoukl not be made against him, for not complying with the order of the court in the suit filed by his company.

    The firm is said to have sought the leave of an Ikeja High Court in the Lagos Judicial Division presided over by Justice Atinuke Ipaye to stop an Army Captain, E. Ugoh, attached to the Army School of Logistics, Ikeja, Lagos State from trespassing on its 26,486 hectares of land in Ofiran Village, on the Lekki/Epe Expressway, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos State.

    The said land, the firm claimed, was acquired in stages from land owning families of the village and let into possession and “had since remained in effective possession from time of purchase from sometimes in 2003 till date.”

    Meridian Properties Limited, through its counsel, Dapo Opakunle explained how the land was acquired. It said in its claim that 50 acres were bought from the Ilari Ogun family of Ofiran Village in Ibeju-Lekki Local Government Area of Lagos State at N30 million; eight acres were also said to have been bought from the Oduntan family of the same village at N12.6 million; six acres were equally bought at N15 million from the Kafaru family of the same village and three acres from Alimi family of Igando Onnudu Town, Ibeju-Lekki at N5.4 million.

    Upon buying the land, according to the firm’s counsel, “the claimant was put into immediate possession and had since been exercising full rights of ownership of the subject matter of this suit till date.”

    The land in question, according to the firm, was covered by Survey Plan No OJL/56a-c/89 dated 10th of September, 1989, signed by a licensed surveyor, O.A Ojo.

    The firm averred in its 26-paragraph claim, among others, that in its bid to construct housing units to be called Baron Estate on the said land, it cleared the place and commenced work on the site. However, the firm said sometime in February this year construction workers on the land were accosted and chased away by Captain Ugoh’s men, who later erected a “Military Zone Keep Off” sign on the land.

    But the sign was removed, according to the firm, and work continued on the land. “The claimant is not aware that the Military Barracks and formation close to the area have anything to do with the claimant’s land and so the claimant removed the sign post and continued its construction work.”

    The firm said it was shocked on March 1, this year, to see the said land invaded by soldiers, caterpillars and bulldozers to demolish structures being built on the land.

    With all these claims, the firm has sought the order of the court in a two-paragraph declaration that: “It is the bona fide owner of the land measuring 26,486 hectares situate at Ofiran Village, which is covered by various Deeds of Assignments and Memorandum of Sale and represented in Survey Plan no OJL/56a-c/89 dated the 10th day of September, 1989, signed by Surveyor O.A Ojo. It said the act of entering its land by the defendant without its consent or authority and subsequent demolition of its structures, properties and fence without a court order is unlawful and a trespass by the defendant.

    It then asked for the “order of the court to award N50 million damages against the defendant for trespassing and demolition of its properties; award another N50 million against the defendant as specific damages for destroying its properties and a perpetual order of injunction to restrain the defendant, his privies, assigns, workmen or any person whosoever, from acting for him from further entering or trespassing the said land.”

    The defendant in his statement of defence denied every claim by the claimant, from paragraph 1 to 26. He went further to correct the claim that the said land is located in Ofiran.

    “The defendant states in further denial of paragraph 3 of the statement of claim that the land in dispute is located at Alfa Alamo in Aiyeteju Village, Lagos-Epe Express Road, Ibeju/Lekki Local Government, Lagos and not Ofiran.”

    The Captain in his 17-paragraph defence said, among others, that “the land previously belonged to his late father, Mr. Nze Vitalis Ugoh; that his father bought the land from Oyafunke family in 1990 after he had relocated from Maroko and Oyafunke family of Aiyeteju Village issued him a receipt; that the land was surveyed by W.T Adeniji, a surveyor and boundary marks and pillars were erected on the land with Survey Plan no WAT/LA/1095/96 inscribed on them.”

    He also said that “his late father relocated to his village in 1993 as a result of old age and handed over the land to him and the Power of Attorney in respect of the property.”

    He said upon enquiry from the Oyafunke family from whom his father bought the land, he discovered that the Ofiran Village from whom the claimant alleged that it bought the land in dispute from, has no land on the Lagos-Epe Expressway.

    “The defendant states that upon enquiry from Oyafunke family, he discovered that the Ofiran Village from whom the claimant alleged that it purchased the land in dispute has no land along the Lagos-Epe Expressway. The Ofiran Village is about four kilometres away from the land in dispute. The vast area of land along the Lagos-Epe Expressway belongs to Oyafunke family of Aiyeteju Village, while the Ofiran land is located in the interior behind Aiyeteju Village,” the statement of defence said.

    But while the two parties were advancing their claims and defences, 11 other persons in a motion on notice, applied to be joined as applicants. They are Chief Ganiyu Raji (Baale of Ofiran); Alhaji Adio Shittu; Mr Olusegun Busari and Mr Ganiyu Tijani for themselves and on behalf of Ilari Ogun family.

    Others are: Pa Sule Kafaru, head of Kafaru family, representing himself and the family; Mr Lasisi Olooto; Mr Muyideen Tijani, representing himself and Alimi family; Mr Omodele Oyafunke; Mr Theophilus Oyafunke and Chief Taiwo Oyafunke representing themselves and the Oyafunke family.

    In their 31-paragraph affidavit to support their motion they said around 2001/2002 one Alhaji Olatunji Adenuga, who claimed to be a surveyor, approached them for a survey to be carried out on their land in Ofiran Village. Ofiran Village, according to them, is behind Aiyeteju Village, towards Marine River.

    The man, they said, later told them about a man who was interested in their land.

    “Alhaji Olatunji Adenuga later told us about a prospective buyer of land in person of Adedeji Obisanya. We welcome the idea, but when he said that they needed 50 acres of land along Lagos-Epe Express Road, we told him that we do not have land along the Express road. The small land we have is behind the land in dispute and which is for our farming and personal use only,” they said.

    They continued: “Alhaji Olatunji Adenuga pointed to the land where we assembled for that meeting in Alfa Alamo, but we told him that the land belongs to Aiyeteju Village as Ofiran Village does not have land along the Express road, but farm land behind the express road.”

    These persons said they later discovered that the prospective buyer that Alhaji Adenuga was representing was the claimant. The said Adenuga was later reported dead some months later.

    They also said they told the claimant’s representative that Ofiran Village does not have up to 50 acres of land on the expressway

    “We informed the claimant that the land along the express road belonged to Aiyeteju Village and that Ofiran Village land is located behind Aiyeteju

    They further said they “never assigned or handed over any land to the claimant in this case. We did not sign any Deed of Assignment in favour of the claimant The land in dispute does not belong to Ofiran Village and Ofiran Village did not sell the land to the claimant; the signatures of the Applicants (their signatures) on the Deeds of Assignment pleaded by the claimant, particularly, that of the 1st Applicant, were forged; the Ofiran land, which the claimant negotiated for is different from the land in dispute and the land is far away from the land in dispute and the claim by the claimant that the Ofiran Village sold the land in dispute to the claimant is false and fraudulent because the land in dispute does not belong to Ofiran Village, but belongs to Oyafunke family of Aiyeteju Village.”

    The claimant, it was said, flouted the orders of the court asking the parties to maintain the status quo. It went ahead to develop the land which necessitated the issuance of form 48 by the court. Justice Ipaye had ordered on July 3, this year, “that an order for the accelerated hearing of the claims be and is hereby made in lieu of the Motion on Notice for temporary restraining order dated 08/03/13; it is further ordered that parties maintain status quo before the beginning of hostilities namely: the claimant being in possession shall remain in possession and maintain her presence on the subject property as delineated on Survey Plan No 03l/56 A-C 89 Dated 10/09/1999 prepared by a licensed Surveyor, O.A Ojo.

    While adjourning the case, the 11 applicants that wished to be joined in the suit were also asked to keep off the land pending the hearing and determination of the claims.”

    The grounds upon which Pastor Ashimolowo was issued forms 48 and 49 are that, despite the forms served on him, the firm still continued with its construction on the property, “the subject matter of the suit, in flagrant disobedience of the status quo order made by the court.”

    The case has since been assigned to Justice Morenike Obadina for further adjudication.