Tag: LAW

  • Lawyers urge caution on foreign colleagues

    Lawyers urge caution on foreign colleagues

    AKEYs feature of this year’s Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Section on Business Law (SBL) conference was the international dimension which it took.

    It was as a result of the call by the World Trade Organisation (WTO) for countries to open their gates to lawyer from other jurisdictions to practise law in a globalised world.

    The conference examined other numerous topics, and had the theme: “The role of lawyers in an emerging economy.”

    Lawyers, who spoke to the The Nation after the conference, scored high. They also spoke on how they benefitted.

    NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN)

    NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN) said: “Well, if you had aggregated everything that was said here today, one thing has come out clearly and that is the fact that we have to be careful.

    “As I said, I recognise the fact that in opening the doors, we could actually be opening the doors for jobs for lawyers, We have to be every careful on what we are doing.

    “We have to be sure that the regulatory steps are in place, it is very key and very critical to what we are discussing and I still make my point that there is a reciprocity, if we open our doors for everybody to come and practice law here, do we have such opportunities in their jurisdictions, if that is not addressed, I am afraid that it won’t be an easy sell to Nigerian lawyers.”

    For the chairman of the SBL, Mr. Gbenga Oyebode, the conference was a huge success.

    He said: “The conference has gone extremely well, we have met the usual standards of our conferences and we have also surpassed those standards.

    Oyebode

    Oyebode said: “The conference was very well attended, our keynote speakers sent the massage that we wanted them to send, Governor Kayoed Fayemi of Ekiti State, Mr. Harold Prisner of BLP and our key sessions in the afternoon; firstly, lawyers as catalysts in an emerging economy and the second one about international law firms looking at entering the Nigerian market. The plenary sessions went on extremely well and we surpassed the registration numbers that we had last year, so, I am very happy and enthused.”

     

    Dr. Gbolahan Elias (SAN)

    Chairman of the Conference Planning Committee, Dr. Gbolahan Elias (SAN), said: “ I am highly impressed by the number of people that attended the conference and the quality of presentations, I am indeed impressed.
    “We are happy that so many people have taken off time from their busy schedules to be here with us today, it is indeed  a worthwhile experience, we tried so hard to put up sessions that would have something for everybody.”

    Chaiman, Intellectual Property (IP) committee of the SBL, Mrs. Chinyere Okorocha

    Chaiman, Intellectual Property (IP) committee of the SBL, Mrs. Chinyere Okorocha, said: “I am delighted with the conference, we had a full house, the attendance was fantastic. This year, the Intellectual Property committee has chosen the theme “Intellectual Property issues in an emerging economy.

    “As we all know, intellectual property helps to drive the economy in terms of innovations, new ideas that ultimately can be commercialised and lead to some sort of income generating venture for the nation and help to improve Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), so I had a wonderful panel of experts who did justice to the session ad we eventually had a lot to learn to help the IP world.”

    Mr Tunde Ayeni

    Mr Tunde Ayeni said: “ This is brilliant, it cannot be better than this and I commend the organisers for this fantastic idea, this is what I refer to as a continuous legal education system.

    “ It has really exposed our members, we should really start doing things the way advanced countries do them, especially, if we want Nigeria to be a destination for investment, we must grow our legal system and this is the way to start it.

    “ I am happy with what is going on, and I associate myself with it I associate myself with the people that are involved, I congratulate the NBA President and the team that he has successfully put together to organise this.”

     

    Mr Matthew Egbadon

    Mr Matthew Egbadon said: “We all know the issues that are involved really and there is no doubt that lawyers have a major role to play in an emerging economy.

    “In turning things around in this country, as we aspire to be one of the 20 most prosperous economy in the year 2020, which is just few years away from now, we want to know exactly how ready we are , the number of things that need to be in place for us to attain that and as has been canvassed here since morning, the issue of knowing what the law is at any point in time is critical, certainty of the law, respect for the property of people and of course, respect for contracts, particularly when it involves international practice, these things are critical and a lawyer has a major role to play in ensuring that all these things are done so that if these things are put in place, we will be ready for the 2020 vision.”

    Mr Fubara Anga

    Mr Fubara Anga, who has qualification to practise law in three different jurisdictions, said: “My position is that those doors have to be opened whether we like it or not and my belief is that we should control the speed, the manner and the extent to which the door is opened and if we don’t open the doors, others will open the doors for us.

    “ Even from the panel today, you can see that Nigerians are practising law all over the world, now whether they are Nigerian firms practising law all over the world is a different matter.

    “What we are saying is that the nature of legal practice has become so global and so virtual that even without coming here, foreign lawyers are already practising here or taking a chunk of the legal briefs and not calling it Nigerian law. What I am saying is that the way legal services are delivered have changed and the Bar and Nigerians lawyers have to adapt to the times.”

     

    Former General Secretary, NBA, Ibrahim Eddy Mark

    Former General Secretary, NBA, Ibrahim Eddy Mark said SBL chairman and Council members put up a very good show.

    “ They have done very well and I wish that other Sections will borrow a leaf from them. From the cocktail to the opening session was well attended and the topics which they have chosen for discussion here are very apt.

    “Every lawyer that did not attend this conference has really missed a lot because as I have always said, these Sections and the professionalisation of legal practice is the best thing that has happened to us, this is the kind of conferences that our members should be attending because this is where they can get their optimum best, this is where they can acquire the best continuing legal education.

    “From participation in conferences like this, they will be bold claim that yes, I can now understand Alternative Disputes Resolution Mechanisms (ADR). I can understand aviation law, I can now understand international transactions, I can now understand trans border transactions and so on. It is only when you come to conferences like this that you will be able to know what you are supposed to do because you cannot sit in your law office and think that law practice is all about going to court, coming back and that is the end of things, no.

    “For instance, this morning, they were discussing about the World Trade Organisation (WTO) liberalisation of legal services, how the government will collaborate with the NBA so that we will get the best from this idea of liberalisation of legal services, all their programmes were really very good, it was indeed a very good conference.”

     

    Former President, International Federation of Female Lawyers (FIDA) Mrs Stella Ugboma

    Former President, International Federation of Female Lawyers (FIDA) Mrs Stella Ugboma said it was “a very good conference of international standard”.

    “I have really learnt a lot. As you know, in the past, the SBL has always been very good, so they have not changed.”

     

    Mrs. Mfon Usoro

    Mrs. Mfon Usoro spoke on allowing foreign lawyers practise in Nigeria.

    She said: “At the moment, Nigeria has not scheduled legal services in its schedule of specific commitments under the (WTO) and our Legal Practitioners Act (LPA) requires that somebody should be enrolled as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of Nigeria after passing the Nigerian Law School examinations or by a special warrant before the person can practice law in Nigeria. These are the only people qualified to practice law in Nigeria.

    “But you should note that this law was drafted in 1982 and does not accommodate present day realities because they were not contemplated at that time. At the moment, the reality is that foreign lawyers are providing legal services in Nigeria through cross border, through consumption on board and even through some other ways, but these were not provided in our LPA.

    “I think that what we should do now is to develop the regulations that would be transparent and would put restrictions, limitations on areas that we do not want to grant access and national treatment to foreign legal practitioners, that is the way to go.”

     

    Damian D. Dodo (SAN)

    Damian D. Dodo (SAN) said: “ The biggest impression that I came out with is how well organised the conference has been. That is the matter I was discussing with my brother silk, Mr. Fabian Ajogwu (SAN), just some minutes ago, it shows that some preparations and planning has gone into the whole exercise and we have seen the fruits and the way it has turned out, so, we must commend the SBL for a conference well organised and in which we have very commendable numbers.”

    On his area of particular interest, Dodo said: “It has been in the area of competition law, but unfortunately, I was unable to attend that session today because of other commitments, but since I already have the conference materials with me, I intend to avail myself of the thoughts and perspectives of others who have looked at the issue and hope that it will help us to put in place, the proper regimes that will ensure that there is no dominance in any particular sector by any operator, so that competition becomes a key aspect of our economic and social life.”

     

    Fabian Ajogwu (SAN)

    Fabian Ajogwu (SAN) said: “ First of all, let me commend the organisers of the conference; it was well organised, but, most importantly is seeing globalisation and the impact it has on the way we work as lawyers.

    “We had a lot of things to learn; we have seen that you cannot practise law to the point of excellence in isolation. You have to learn what global best practices are, to improve the standards, emphasis on ethics and excellence in the profession.

    “And, finally, to look in the fields of disputes resolution, how to deal with disputes in terms of arbitration, mediation and conciliation and other modes of Alternative Disputes Resolution Mechanisms (ADR), there is something for ever body in this conference.”

     

     Aniedi Akpabio

    Aniedi Akpabio said: “ I have actually participated in this conference and I am mostly impressed with the quality of presentations from all the speakers. I took part in some sessions on the first day of the conference, one of them talked about the expansion of the frontiers of legal practice in Nigeria and what should be the role of the international law firms and from the presentations, we realised that there is need for collaboration, even if we don’t have competitions between the local and international law firms, there is actually the need for this collaboration for efficiency and high service delivery for our clients.

    “The theme of this conference itself is a very good one, the role of lawyers in an emerging economy and from what we gathered, is evident that there are certain skill that we need to be part of what is happening in the globalised world.

    “We have discovered that to do this, you need an entrenchment of the rule of law, we need law reforms and must ensure the independence of the judiciary.

    We were made to understand in this conference that a situation where you have cases lasting in courts for upwards of 10 years would certainly not encourage foreign investors to come into the country when they are not sure that if their commercial disputes are in court, they will not get justice until after such a long period of time. So, there is a need to develop and guarantee the independence off the judiciary for Nigerian lawyers to play their role in our emerging economy.”

     

     Tare Yeri

    Tare Yeri said having been a member of the SBL for six years, she feels it is a welcome development to the NBA.

    “It is a session that is driving the association to meet its needs in terms of being the largest gathering of commercial lawyers in Sub-Saharan Africa.

    “The different committees have done marvellously well in their respective sessions in terms of taking on relevant topics and highly qualified resource persons to deliver them. All the topics we dealt with and the seasoned resource persons that we brought here really brought out that knowledge and information that really helps young lawyers to grow and become better lawyers that play their roles well in an emerging economy.

    “We have this session on the Presidential Amnesty programme to talk about the value of the programme, the benefits that it has brought to the country regarding peace. Many people have different views about this laudable initiative of the Federal Government but we have seen that it is a welcome development, though it may not be the lasting solution to the Niger Delta problems, it brings the desired peace because a lot of these militants are being taken out of that environment that breeds fear and violence and are taken out to be trained.

    So, I always say that an idle educated mind is better than an idle uneducated man, once you give them that opportunity to be trained and become better persons, in turn, that brings about peace in the society and more income for economic growth and development”

    Former Abia State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Hon. Umeh Kalu

    Former Abia State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Hon. Umeh Kalu said: “Talking about the business session, which this conference is all about, it is the pivot of law practice if one must say. It touches on our economy and how we can go about issues involving the finances of state and commerce generally.

    “It was very well-organised. I am highly impressed with what I saw. I just left the ADR session and I am well impressed with the papers presented, the issues raised and the questions asked in the session.

    ”It is really a very good conference and is really what every lawyer should be involved as an annual event. It will really help not only in law practice, but in the quality of our service delivery to our clients and this will assist in the development of the legal profession in the country.”

     

    Mena Ajakpovi

    Mena Ajakpovi said: “Well, this is an improvement on last year’s conference and the issues that we have canvassed here will be harnessed to drive policies and to give directions to the face of business law practice in Nigeria.”

     

     Mr. Agada Elachi

    Mr. Agada Elachi said: “ The SBL conference has always been the flagship of all NBA activities and this year’s conference is no different. The organisers have done a wonderful job, the leadership of the section has done a fantastic work, bringing together the best brains to come and talk how to move business forward.

    “I had the privilege of going round a number of sessions, the plenary was fantastic, the key note address by the Governor Fayemi of Ekiti State was great, very deep and very intellectual.

    “The session that really stands out for me is that on competition law, it underscores the importance of the passage of a competition law quickly, it also underscores the importance of lawyers paying more attention to bills that go before the National Assembly. Right now there is a bill there that seeks to amend the Customs law which will bring about pure injustice and discouragement of trade and business in Nigeria.”

     Mr. Dele Oye

    Mr. Dele Oye described the conference as an eye-opener for everyone. “It is, indeed, a very rich conference because it touched on very serious national issues, where we have had a convergence of both the regulators and the practitioners meeting together.

    “In the session, which I chaired, the session on competition law, we had the permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Trade and Commerce as one of the speakers and someone from the Bureau of Public Enterprises and we all discussed the issue of competition law and the urgent and imperative need for competition law in Nigeria.

    “We also discussed the recent Customs bill which is currently before the National Assembly and why that bill should not be passed in its current form because it contains a lot of anti competitive provisions which needs to be re examined and amended so that we can have global competitiveness.

    “The bill also has some penal provisions which infringes on the fundamental human rights and also on the rights of other several other laws which gives the duties of several other agencies like that of the Police and other agencies to the customs, so we must find a way out of this and make some of those agencies self regulatory. The NBA has to find a way to stop the bill and ensure that all the critical stakeholders should have an input before the bill is passed.”

     

  • A push for efficient criminal justice system

    The Panel on Implementation of Justice Reform (PIJR) set up by the Federal Ministry of Justice is proposing some changes aimed at ensuring efficiency in the criminal justice system. These are contained in a Bill for a fresh law to guide criminal prosecution. Eric Ikhilae, who was at a workshop held by the panel in Abuja to fine-tune the Bill, reports.

    IT is a fact that the justice administration system suffers from a lot of problems, the major one being delay.

    It takes years for the court to resolve minor disputes that ordinarily not take months.

    The case is even worse where, under the criminal justice process, an accused, with political and economic means, could easily sabotage his/her trial. With funds to hire senior lawyers, such an accused person successfully stalls his/her trial by exploiting existing inadequacies and loopholes in the system, including corruption.

    A recent research has it that it takes an average of 10 years for a case to move from the court of first instance to the Supreme Court. To the effect that when it is decided by the apex court, some of the parties would have either died or the decision becomes a mere academic exercise, because events would have overtaken the case. This development has, undoubtedly resulted in the growing loss of faith in the court system by the people; increasing insecurity and violent crimes and heightening competition for the increasingly dwindling economic opportunities in the land.

    Also, more people are being tempted to resort to self help in the face of an inefficient justice delivery system.

    To reverse this ugly trend, there are calls for an urgent identification of the various problems responsible for the inefficiency of the justice system and the evolution of ways of ensuring its efficiency.

    This is why all eyes are now on the effort by the Federal Ministry of Justice’s Panel on Implementation of Justice Reform (PIJR) to take the necessary measures.

    Already, the panel, headed by Justice Ishaq Bello of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court has identified areas requiring attention, particularly in relation to the criminal justice system. It has also made far-reaching recommendations.

    The panel is working on a Bill to be submitted to the National Assembly to give legal backing to its recommendations.

    The Bill seeks an Act to repeal the Criminal Procedure Act, Cap C4 Law of Nigeria (2004), the Administration of Justice Commission Act, Cap A3 Law of Nigeria (2004) and enact the Administration of Criminal Justice Act 2013.

    The panel has held a workshop in Abuja to put finishing touches to the Bill, before its presentation to the National Assembly. At the event held in conjunction with the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies (CSLS) were Justice Bello, Prof. Yemi Akinseye-George (SAN), Director, Public Prosecution of the Federation, Simon Egele, among others.

    Justice Bello stressed the relevance of an efficient criminal justice delivery system to the nation’s quest for economic growth.

    He observed that the drive by various governments for foreign investment would yield no result in the face of a weak and inefficient justice delivery system. He argued that investors are only attracted to environment where their investments and lives would be safe; civil and criminal cases resolved promptly and where they are sure of redress if wronged.

    Justice Bello, who expressed delight about the work done by his panel so far, said the Bill, when passed into law, has the capacity to ensure efficiency in the criminal justice system. He said the panel is looking towards July this year for the Bill to become an Act.

    “The Act will ensure that the system of administration of justice in Nigeria promotes efficient management of criminal justice institutions; speedy dispensation of justice, protection of the society from crime, and protection of the rights and interests of the defendant and the victim,” he said.

    He explained that the Act will apply to criminal trials and other criminal proceedings in courts and tribunals established by an Act of the National Assembly, except Court Martials.

    Prof Akineye-George, in a presentation, gave a picture of what new ideas the Bill proposes. One of such is the need to reverse the current lop-sided underlying philosophy in criminal trial, where the state assumes prosecutory role and total control of criminal trials, without roles or consideration for the victims.

    The panel identified problems of lack of reliable statistics or data for criminal cases; lack of victims protection, absence of timeliness (undue process delay); poor application of information and communication technology (ICT) in court processes; lack of accountability among relevant agencies involves in criminal justice system – the police, the office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), Federal and states ministries of Justice, prison service, court, among others.

    It also identified weak coordination and interaction between these agencies; congestions in courts and prisons, and mounting unresolved cases.

    As a way out, the Bill has made wide-range recommendations, which when adopted by the Legislature, will transform the criminal justice system.

    As a solution to the problem of inadequate statistics,the Bill is proposing the creation of a central criminal records registry with the police headquarters. Every police station shall replicate this, from where the central registry will be fed with records of cases from the police stations.

    The panel suggested the involvement of victim in the process and that they be restore to their formal state, through compensation, at the completion of the case. To address the problem of delay, the panel is suggesting the attachment of time to the role of each player in criminal trial process. For instance, the DPP is expected to issue its advice within 14 days, parties to a trial are allowed at most, five adjournment per side for the life of the case.

    Also, frivolous request for adjournment shall attract penalty in cost. As part of its witness protection initiative, the panel has recommended the payment of witness’ fare by the court.

    Under the arrangement, a witness is paid what it cost him to transport himself to court every time he/she is invite to testify.

    The amount will be calculated by mileage to be determined from the summons served on such a witness.

    Where a witness os in court an proceedings could not go on owing to the fault of a party, the party will be made to pay the cost of the witness’ transportation for that day.

    The initiative is also intended to enhance witness’ cooperation and motivation.

    The Bill is also proposing the deployment of ICT to aid the process’ speed and efficiency.

    It is suggesting, for instance, electronic recording of police’s interrogation of suspects, court’s proceedings, among others.

    This is partly intended to ensure reduce police’s reliance on torture in eliciting confession from suspects.

    To ensure accountability among relevant agencies, the panel has also suggested that the magistrates or judges involved in criminal trials, engage in periodic visits to detention centres to ensure that prison officials play their roles as required.

    The panel is also proposing the establishment of a coordinating platform, to be known as Administration of Criminal Justice (ACJ) Monitoring Committee, to coordinate the activities of the relevant agencies within the ACJ system.

    As a measure of decongesting the prisons, the Bill is proposing the adoption of alternative to custodial sentence in the mold of non-custodial sentence.

    By this, people with less offences like minor theft, are sentenced to community services as against imprisonment. There are also the recommendations for day-to-day trial in criminal cases; elimination of interlocutory appeal; creating a peg on the number and interval of adjournment that could be granted in the life of a case, among others. Prof Akinseye-George said, when passed, the Act would occasion fundamental changes in criminal justice administration in the country.

    He said what is required now is urgent passage of the Bill by the National Assembly and its prompt replication by the various states in the country. Egele, who was delighted about the steps taken so far, said he believe the various recommendations in the Bill would help in ensuring prompt trial of criminal cases in the country.

     

     

  • How Legislature can be independent, by Tambuwal

    How Legislature can be independent, by Tambuwal

    No legislature can be truly independent if it relies on another branch of government to supply it information, House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal has said.

    He said the legislature cannot wait on another arm to help it analyse data or lead the way in finding solutions to the myriad problems plaguing society.

    “It must insist on participating in the formation of policy and not be a rubber-stamp for executive proposals,” the Speaker said.

    According to him, if Nigeria’s democracy must grow, the challenge is to see how the legislative branch can be developed to remain true to the tenets of representative democracy and the legislative system.

    Tambuwal, a lawyer and member of the Body of Benchers, delivered this year’s Business Lecture of the Island Club. He spoke on the theme: The Legislature and the growth of our democracy.

    According to him, constitutionally, the legislature has three fundamental functions: representation, legislation and what is often referred to as oversight, and for it to be effective, it must be able to perform creditably in the three areas.

    To perform those functions, the Speaker said the legislature must first develop a capacity to think independently, to understand complex issues of governance and policy, and to be capable of verifying information through its own sources and techniques.

    He said any legislature performing its representative functions, therefore, must have first-hand knowledge of the real needs of the people and must be at the forefront of making sure those needs are met.

    He believes it is not only odd, but brazen arrogance for anyone to pretend to know what is good for the country better than those that the people elected to be their voices, their representatives and their mouthpiece.

    Tambuwal said when the House insists on having a say in the determination of constituency projects, the members are merely saying that they have first-hand knowledge of what the people’s needs are more than anyone else.

    This, he explained, is because they represent and interact more intimately with those who will use the infrastructure, services and facilities.

    “When we say the budget for this or that should be raised or lowered, we are not just engaging in idle talk or muscle flexing.

    “We speak because the lives of our people are involved, because we are the voice of those who do not have the financial or political clout to make their words count.

    “We speak because we must, because it is our job to hold brief for the people who elected us to prosecute their case.

    “When we insist on asking how the money appropriated was spent or try to hold some government official to account, we are merely acting as guardians of the commonwealth, and making sure that the people get value for their money so that a nation blessed with such abundance does not continue to remain at the bottom rung where poverty, diseases and death are rampant,” Tambuwal said.

    The Speaker said democracy demands sovereignty of the people and equality before the law, adding that a people cannot be said to be sovereign unless their interests become the foremost reason for governance.

    This, he said, cannot happen unless the arm of government which represents them exercises the latitude to do its work without threat or blackmail.

    “Part of the duty of the legislature is to act as a counterweight and constantly balance the powers of the executive so that we can avoid the problems that will otherwise arise.

    “If we fail to act as a check and a balance, we would be aiding and abetting a crime.

    “There is no way that democracy can thrive unless the three arms of government respect their constitutionally assigned roles and cooperate together for the benefit of our country.

    “As members of the House of Representatives, we shall continue to work towards the sustenance of our hard earned democracy for the benefit of our people,” Tambuwal said.

    At the end of the lecture, the Speaker was conferred with a membership of the Island Club, with number 7620.

    “I accept with a sense of humility to be a member of the Island Club. I will abide by the rules and regulations of the club so long as they don’t conflict with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Tambuwal said.

    Before the lecture, members of the club had jokingly asked him to leave the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and join the newly-formed All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The Speaker said he would put it to a voice vote. Although those in favour of him joining APC were in the majority with the large chorus of “Ayee!” Tambuwal said: “The “Nays” have it.”

    He was also presented with a commemorative plaque to mark the lecture.

    Among lawmakers who accompanied Tambuwal are Yomi Ogunnusi, Rafeequat Onamamiro, Lanre Odubote, Deji Jakande, Moruf Fatai, Minority Leader Femi Gbajabiamila, Jumoke Okoya-Thomas, Babatunde Adewale, Usaman Bawa, Chief Whip Ishaka Bawa, Deputy Minority Whip Garba Muhammed, Adenekan Ifelodun, Victor Ogene, Razaq Bello-Osagie, and Akinloye Hazeez.

    Among Island Club members present were Secretary Diji Vera-Cruz, Treasurer Deacon Femi Aborowa, Social Secretary Aare Kamorudeen Danjuma, Assistant Social Secretary Jide Winsala, among others.

     

     

  • Adoke, others seek mortgage laws reform

    Nigeria’s mortgage laws need reform to bring them up to date with modern needs, experts have said.

    The Attorney-General of the Federation Mohammed Adoke (SAN); Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos, Prof Imran Smith (SAN), and National Legal Adviser of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Dr Muiz Banire said the existing laws were old.

    But the Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Ms Amal Pepple said the government had proposed amendments to some of the laws.

    They spoke in Lagos at the Real Estate Lawyers Association of Nigeria (RELAN) 2013 Summit. It had the theme: Foreclosure Law and processes in Relation to Mortgage Security in Nigeria.

    Other speakers were lawyer and International Land/Mortgage Finance expert Ms. Carol Rabenhorst and Managing Director, Aso Savings and Loans Limited, Mr Hassan Usman.

    Pepple, represented by her ministry’s Director Legal Services Ifenyinwa Njokama, believes even the foreclosure law requires amendment.

    She said: “It is pertinent to inform this august gathering that the Federal Government of Nigeria has proposed amendments to the provisions of the Land Use Act which, amongst others, are considered as inimical to efficient and effective mortgage transactions.

    “The process of obtaining consent, which has been considered lengthy and arduous, results in considerable delays in commercial transactions.

    “The attendant negative effect is discouraging investors as well as retarding mortgage transactions in the country.

    “Most players in the industry are of the view that foreclosure law is not helpful to the lender and weighs heavily against it, thereby giving latitude for borrowers to default in the repayment of their loans.

    “Foreclosure processes are also seen to be cumbersome and time-consuming,” the minister said, adding that the government was working to correct the lapses.

    Adoke, represented by his Special Assistant Victoria Mbu, said housing laws must not be complicated.

    According to him, ease and clarity in the process of enforcing mortgages, particularly the foreclosure process, are significant catalysts for achieving the country’s housing targets.

    The minister of justice said it is, therefore, important that investors are able to take possession of their collateral and recover their loans as quickly as possible.

    “The current complicated procedures in our law courts and the unduly slow pace of proceedings cast a dim pall on the chances of achieving growth in these areas.

    “Several options have been canvassed, such as specialised property courts and the de-mutualisation of mortgages, to facililate non-judicial foreclosure.

    “In my view, there is also need to focus on manpower and technology deficits in land registries and cognate institutions to complement any reform in the legal framework,” Adoke said.

    RELAN President Prof Charles Ilegbune (SAN) said lawmakers must re-examine legislations governing mortgage transactions and foreclosure, adding that global challenges call for innovations.

    “There is no better time in our legal jurisprudence to have such as discourse and reflect on a number of questions.

    “Today, Nigeria is at crossroads of its legislations governing mortgage transactions and foreclosure.

    “Did we have the right legislations in this regard in the light of the Land Use Act and the Lagos State Property and Mortgage Law?

    “Have our recovery modes had the intended effects? How can we secure lasting and sustainable growth in the real estate section while restoring the confidence of investors?

    “The continuous growth in the world’s population and the global economy, as well as the increasing demand for mortgages as a form of secured lending will continue to place a huge demand on real estate transactions,” Ilegbune said.

    Smith, who is RELAN Vice-President, said present foreclosure law paradigms are ill-equipped to address borrower, lender and third party concerns.

    He criticised inadequacies in High Court rules and limitation laws which hamper real estate growth.

    Complications, he said, arise from legal provisions for re-opening of foreclosure proceedings, slow judicial process and co-ownership of property as subject-matter of security.

    The UNILAG law dean called for legislations on anti-deficiency, redemption statutes and foreclosure moratoria, and sought more judicial activism regarding constructive trusts and unjust enrichment.

    “There should be an institution to take records of all foreclosure proceedings. Transactions must be registered,” he said.

    Smith further suggested regulation of foreclosure processes that would take cognizance of the interests of the borrower, lender and the public.

    He believes factors to be taking into account by courts when making order should be streamlined, saying: “The court must be guided.”

    Smith also proposed removal or amendment of Section 22 of the Land Use Act “to exclude foreclosures to obviate any doubts as to its non-applicability.”

    He also wants a revisitation of the application of consent in the Lagos State Property and Mortgage Law.

    Smith said a law should be enacted to regulate foreclosure proceedings to allow a mortgagee to recoup their investment.

    Banire said all property laws need a review, adding that they must address present realities.

    “From the international speaker, we have been able to have some hint about what is obtainable in other jurisdiction which we can take into consideration when reforming our own law.

    “Most of our laws on mortgages are obsolete; most of them. Definitely we need to look at them again,” he said.

     

  • Obi inaugurates judges’ quarters

    Obi inaugurates judges’ quarters

    Anambra State Governor Peter Obi has inaugurated an ultra-modern residential quarters built for judicial officers at Onitsha.

    It is made up of six five-bedroom duplex buildings with boys’ quarters and gate houses reportedly valued at N242, 913,994.

    The Chief Judge, Justice Peter Umeadi, said the house was the first of its kind since the state was created 22 years ago.

    He said the joy of all Anambra people is that beyond the judiciary, the Governor was working in all sectors.

    For better and quicker dispensation of justice, he said a new Judicial Division was bring created.

    Obi said it was in line with his administration’s strategy of working in all sectors simultaneously for ultimate benefit of the people of the State.

    He said more quarters for the judiciary would be built at Awka, assuring that he would deliver that before leaving office.

    The governor said a functional judiciary was necessary for the peace and order in the society.

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Legal Matters, Mr Alex Ejesieme, praised the governor for the gesture.

     

  • Firm seeks dismissal of suit

    An engineering firm, Muslac Techno Company Limited, has urged an Igbosere High Court in Lagos to dismiss a suit filed against it and three others by the Nigerian Wire Industries Plc.

    It said the action is “highly reprehensible, fraudulent, illegal, frivolous, vexatious and incompetent,” and should be dismissed with substantial cost in Muslac’s favour.

    Nigerian Wire is urging the court presided over by Justice Deborah Oluwayemi, to restrain the defendants, including the Inspector-General of Police, from “indulging” in any act capable of restricting the movement of any of its officers.

    It prayed the court to stop the defendants from further investigation, interrogation and invitation of its workers on the basis of fraud, criminal breach of trust and cheating.

    The claimant is seeking a declaration that the transaction between it and Muslac Techno “is one which is not tantamount to, or suggests any criminal activity whereby the Inspector-General of Police can investigate on the basis of fraud being alleged by the second defendant.”

    Muslac Techno is the second defendant in the suit, while Mr Adeniji Kabiru and Somuyiwa Atanda are the third and fourth.

    But Muslac Techno, through its lawyer Mr Theophilus Akanwa, who is Principal Partner of Lagos-based law firm T.C Akanwa & Co, insists Nigerian Wire owes it.

    The firm, in a counter affidavit deposed to by its Project Manager Olugbenga Oketogun, said it reached an agreement with Nigerian Wire for the purchase/sale of 5,711.25 sheets of BRC mesh.

    Following the agreement’s perfection, Muslac Techno, through its First City Monument Bank (FCMB) Plc account, transferred N22,845,000 to Nigerian Wire’s First Bank of Nigeria Plc account.

    The money, the firm said, was for the purchase of the BRC mesh sheet at the official rate of N4,000 each.

    Muslac Techno said rather than abide by the contract, Nigerian Wire has only sold 1,992 sheets of BRC mesh to it since April 5 last year rather than the 5,711.25 sheets.

    Besides, it said all of the 1,992 BRC mesh sheets supplied were transported by a truck belonging to Muslac Techno.

    The firm said it never instructed Nigerian Wire to transfer to the third defendant or anybody the sum of N5,795,000 or any amount at all for the transportation of the products.

    It further stated that there was no contract between it and the claimant for the supply of binding wire, none of which has been sold to it.

    Muslac Techno said its efforts to persuade Nigerian Wire to supply the remaining 3,719.25 sheets of BRC mesh or refund the balance of about N14.8million proved abortive, despite writing a demand letter dated July 13, 2012.

    “The claimant has instituted this suit against the second defendant rather than supply the said products or pay the balance of the money to it,” the firm said.

    Following Nigerian Wire’s refusal to refund the money, Muslac Techno said it petitioned the Inspector-General of Police “to investigate the fraudulent acts of the claimant.”

    “Instead of the claimant to discharge its obligations as per the contract, it has brought this action to use my Lord’s Court as a shield,” Muslac Techno said.

    The firm denied being a customer of the third defendant, saying it did not pay money to Kabiru nor did they enter into any contract.

    “There was no agreement between the claimant and the second defendant (Muslac Techno) that the claimant was to pay part of the money to the third defendant for transportation of the goods,” Muslac said.

    The firm said the Inspector-General of Police (the first defendant) has a legal duty to investigate and question the claimant, particularly with Nigerian Wire’s alleged admission that it received Muslac Techno’s money for the supply of the products but failed to do so or make a refund of the balance.

    According to Muslac Techno, Nigerian Wire’s refusal to supply the materials which were fully paid for, nor make a refund of the money, has caused it severe hardship and huge economic and financial losses since April last year.

    “The claimant’s application and suit is aimed at wasting the precious time of this Honourable Court, frustrate the investigation…and to further cause hardship on the second defendant.

    “It will serve the interest of justice to refuse the claimant’s suit/application with substantial cost in favour of the second defendant,” said Muslac Techno.

    The third defendant, Kabiru, also urged the court to refuse the declarations sought by the claimant.

    He denied parading a false identity card claming to be a Nigerian Wire employee.

    According to him, although his employment with the industry was terminated, he was offered a special distributorship status via an April 23, 2004 letter, which he accepted.

    Justice Oluwayemi adjourned till July 2.

     

  • ‘Courts have power to formulate issues for parties in cases when justice of case so demands’

    Issues:

    Whether the learned Justices of the court below were right on the facts of the case when they held that the complaint of lack 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.

     

    Facts:

     

    The plaintiff (appellant) was employed by the 1st defendant/respondent in 1965 as a Technician and had risen to the post of Assistant Director, Building Engineering Services Department at the time of his dismissal in February 2000. He filed an action against the defendants/respondents in the Federal High Court, Lagos claiming a number of declaratory and injunctive reliefs. Pleadings were filed and exchanged between the parties. At the conclusion of evidence the plaintiff tendered Exhibits ‘A’ to L1′ and the defendants tendered Exhibits ‘M-M3’. The trial court in its judgment dismissed the plaintiff’s claim in its entirety and struck out the 2nd defendant/respondent in the matter. The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal Lagos which in its judgment also dismissed the appeal.

     

    Dissatisfied the appellant has further appealed to this court.

     

    Ratio:

    1. The courts have the power to formulate issues for the parties in appropriate cases when the justice of the case so demands.

    2. This court has no duty 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 (1994) 1 SCNLR 481

    3. A Ground of Appeal which is incompetent for any reason is liable to be struck out.

    4. 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.

    5. Where a Ground of Appeal raises an issue of mixed law and fact it is important that the leave of court must be first sought and obtained. See: Nwadike & ors. v. lbekwe & Ors. (1987) 11-12 SCNJ 72 at 98 – 99; (1987) 4 NWLR 718.

    6. 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. See: Ogbechte & Anor. v. Onochte & Ors (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt. 23)484,

    7. The real issue or complaint centrally encompassed in a ground on the backdrop of its particular decides whether the ground is one of law or not.

    8. It is trite that a single ground of law is sufficient to sustain a Notice of Appeal in an appeal. See: Niger Construction Ltd. v. Okugbeni (1987) 2 NSCC (vol.18) 1258

     

    Notable Dicta

    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(a) (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). PER CHRISTOPHER MITCHELL CHUKWUMA.ENEH

    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.

     

    PER CHRISTOPHER MITCHELL CHUKWUMA.ENEH

    LEGISLATION

     

    SECTION 233(3) OF THE 1999 CONSTITUTION AS AMENDED

     

    SECTION 36(1) OF THE 1999 CONSTITUTION AS AMENDED

     

    ORDER 12 RULE 3 OF THE FEDERAL HIGH COURT CIVIL PROCEDURE RULES 2000

     

    SECTION 137 0F THE EVIDENCE ACT

     

    ORDER 10 RULE 1(1) OF THE SUPREME COURT RULES.

     

    ORDER 6 RULE 2(1) OF THE SUPREME COURT RULES

     

    Judgment:

     

    CHRISTOPHER MITCHELL CHUKWUMA-ENEH, JSC- The plaintiff (appellant) has been employed by the 1st defendant/respondent in 1965 as a Technician and has risen to become Assistant Director, Building Engineering Services Department by the time of his dismissal in February 2000. He has filed this action against the defendants/respondents in the Federal High Court, Lagos claiming as per the amended statement of claim a number of declaratory and injunctive reliefs.

    Pleadings have been filed and exchanged between the parties. At the conclusion of evidence at the trial the plaintiff alone has testified in person and has tendered Exhibits ‘A’ to L1′ and the defendants have called two witnesses and have tendered Exhibits ‘M – M3’.

    The crucial documentary exhibits in this matter inter alia include:

    ‘(1) Exhibit ‘A’ – Letter of appointment dated 25/5/1965; Exhibit C – Letter of appointment to the post of Assistant Director dated 29/1/99; Exhibit D – staff manual for Central Bank of Nigeria; Exhibit E – Query letter dated 19/3/99; Exhibit F – Response to the Query dated 23/8/99; Exhibit G – Letter of suspension dated 14/11/99; Exhibit K – Letter of Dismissal from the Bank’s Services dated 1/2/2000.

    Exhibit M1 – Main report of the Central disciplinary committee held between 8th and 21st September 1999. Exhibits M-M3 report on Special investigation for the period of October, 1998 – February 1999. Exhibit M3 – Report of the Central Disciplinary Committee dated 14/9/1999.”

    The parties have made written submissions as directed by the court. The trial court in its considered judgment has dismissed the plaintiff’s claim in its entirety; in doing so it has struck out the 2nd defendant/respondent in the matter.

    Dissatisfied with the judgment the plaintiff has appealed the case to the Court of Appeal Lagos which in its judgment also has dismissed the appeal. Wherefore the instant appeal to this court as per the Amended Notice of Appeal filed on 28/10/2001 of 17 (seventeen) grounds of appeal. The plaintiff and the defendants are in this appeal the appellant and respondents respectively.

    In accordance with the Rules of this court the parties have filed and exchanged their respective briefs of argument. The appellant has distilled 11 (eleven) issues for determination by this court as follows: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. They read as follows:

    1. Whether the entire judgment is not perverse in law. This issue relates to ground one.

    2. Whether the learned justices of the Court of Appeal were right when they affirmed the findings of the trial court and also held that the appellant was given a fair hearing by the 1st respondent who was alleged not to be involved in the disciplinary process. This issue relates to ground two.

    3. Whether the learned justices of the Court below were right when they held that the evidence of DW2 debunked appellant’s case and that there was no truth in the appellant’s allegation that 2nd defendant usurped the powers of the 1st Respondent. This issue is relative to ground three.

    4. Whether the learned Justices of the court below were right when they held that the 2nd Respondent was properly struck out from the suit. This issue relates to ground four of the Ground of Appeal.

    5. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below were right when they held that the 2nd respondent did not usurp the powers of the 1st respondent and that the appellant was given a fair hearing. This relates to ground five.

    6. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below properly appreciated the appellant’s case before affirming the findings of the trial court. This issue relates to ground six of the Ground of Appeal.

    7. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below were right on the facts of the case when they held that “The complaint of lack 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 seven of the grounds of Appeal.

    8. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below were right when they held that the appellant’s complaint of composition of the Central Disciplinary Committee is of no consequence and that the quorum was complete, Constitution of the committee cannot be impugned and finally that the composition of the CDC and actions taken by the Director of Personnel are in accordance with Exhibit “D’’.

     

    9. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below were right when they concluded on the basis of Exhibit ‘F’ alone that appellant knew that Exhibit E, G, L1 and J as well as the summoning of the appellant to the IDC emanated from 1st Respondent. This relates to ground ten.

    10. Whether the conclusion of the learned Justices of the Court below are supported by the facts and evidence on record. This relates to ground eleven of the Grounds of Appeal.

    11. Whether the learned Justices of the Court below were right when they held that the appellant was given every opportunity to exculpate himself from blame but he could not offer any tangible defence. Furthermore, the plaintiff never alleged lack of fair hearing against the Central Disciplinary Committee or/Inter-Departmental Committee set up by the Management of the 1st Defence.” This relates to ground 12 of the Grounds of Appeal.

    I do not think that in the event of the far reaching consequences of upholding the respondents’ preliminary objection to the instant sixteen grounds of appeal but ground 7 that it serves any useful purpose to set out the immediate sixteen grounds of appeal in extenso so challenged by the respondents by way of preliminary objection here vis-a-vis the issues raised for determination in the appeal itself; unless and until firstly their respective fates as competent grounds of appeal have been decidedly settled one way or the other as most of them speaking pre-emptorily are bound to fall by the way side upon the backdrops of the frontal objection taken by the respondents for their non-compliance with Section 233(3) of the 1999 Constitution as amended. The provisions of section 233(3) supra require that every ground of appeal not involving questions of pure law shall lie from the decision of the Court of Appeal to this Court not as of right but with leave of court (of either the court below or this court) where the ground of appeal involves questions of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita. See: Ehinlanwo v. Oke & 2 Ors. 6 – 7 SC (Pt.11) 123. In reply to the preliminary objection the appellant has filed a reply brief which has been deemed so filed and served on21/1/2013.

    The respondents however have before now given a notice of preliminary objection wherefore they have contended that sixteen grounds of appeal out of the seventeen grounds of appeal raised in this appeal (i.e. but ground 7) are incompetent being at best grounds of appeal on mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave of court has been firstly sought and obtained as prescribed by section 233 (3) of the 1999 Constitution as amended. In that vein, simply put, that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain all the grounds of appeal raised in this appeal but ground 7 as contained in the amended Notice of Appeal – in the premises, it is trite law that an appeal will be sustained by one competent ground of law contained in the Notice of Appeal. The respondents have incorporated their preliminary objection against the said sixteen grounds and the arguments thereon in their respondents’ brief of argument adopted at the oral hearing of the appeal. The appellant has responded to the preliminary objection in the appellant’s reply brief of argument deemed so filed and served on 21/1/2013 and I will grapple with this question anon.

     

    I must observe that based on a plethora of authorities, an appellate court wilt take a point of law raised by way of preliminary objection as a threshold question provided it will be decisive of the question of competency of the appeal. See: Foko v Foko (1968) NMLR 441 and the court will rightly strike out any grounds of appeal that is ex facie bad or incompetent. See: Ogbonnaya wosu v. Reuben Ugwuzor 7 ENLR-47. That said, I now proceed to examine the case for and against the preliminary objection raised in this matter.

     

    The respondents’ case on the preliminary objection is contained in their amended respondents’ brief of argument deemed so properly filed and served on 2/5/2012 and is succinct and it is to the effect that all the grounds of appeal from one to seventeen excepting ground seven are grounds of mixed law and facts or facts, simplicita. The contend that the said grounds have complained in the major of failure of the lower court to properly appraise, or evaluate or assess the evidence on the record leading to the only conclusion in dismissing of the plaintiff’s claim the lower court having failed to do so. Relying on Ogbechie & Anor. v. Onochie & Ors. (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt-23) 48 they have proffered that these grounds of appeal having raised questions of mixed law and facts or facts simplicita for which no leave of court has been firstly sought and obtained as prescribed by Section 233(3) supra are incompetent and consequently, that this court has been robbed of the power to entertain any of them. They have singled out ground 8 of the pack to specifically argue that the alleged denial of fair hearing before the Disciplinary Committee of the Central Bank of Nigeria coupled with the failure of the court below to evaluate the evidence on the record, which in that regard the appellant has construed as amounting to a denial of fair hearing have stemmed from a total misconception of the purport and import of the principles of fair hearing as contemplated in Section 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution as amended albeit as interpreted as per the decision in the case of Bakare v. L.S.C.S.C. (1992) 8 NWLR (Pt.262) 64 and that these surmises will only properly arise where such denial of fair hearing has occurred before a court or tribunal established by law and not before an ordinary, Standing Disciplinary Committee of the Central Bank of Nigeria indeed for being an adhoc committee in every respect, not being a court or tribunal established by law. They have conceded that only ground 7 is a competent ground of law complaining of denial of fair hearing by the trial court as affirmed by the lower court.

     

    In the alternative, that is to say, without any prejudice to the foregoing argument, the respondents have raised two issues for determination in the appeal itself in the event of being overruled on the preliminary objection as follows:

     

    Issue No.1

     

    “Whether the Justices of the Court of Appeal were right that the appellant was not denied fair hearing by the approach of the learned trial Judge in formulating issues for determination without calling Counsel to address it.”

     

    Issue No.2

     

    ‘Whether the lower court was right in all the circumstances in dismissing the appeal filed by the appellant.”

     

    The appellant on his part with regard to the preliminary objection has contended that each of the sixteen grounds of appeal has raised a different distinct and indeed a specific complaint predicated upon the lower court’s decision as against the respondents alleging that all the grounds speaking generally represent a failure to properly appraise or evaluate or assess the evidence on the record whether oral or documentary before the lower courts. He has opined that whether a ground is one of law or mixed law and facts or facts simpticita is determined by the principle as laid down in O. D. Briggs v. The Chief Land Officer of Rivers State of Nigeria & 3 Ors. (2005) AFWLR (Pt.268) 1626 at 1641 D-F that is it is relevant to construe the substantive ground with its particulars of error as alleged. Applying the said principle to the instant grounds the appellant having categorized the instant grounds of appeal under three subheads has argued that ground one has complained of the judgment of the lower court as perverse being ‘patently erroneous, against the weight of evidence and unsupportable by the submissions”, and has relied on Udengwu v. Uzuegbu & Ors. (2003) 110 L.RC.N. 1702 for so submitting. And that the particulars in respect of ground one have done no more than describe, emphasize or amplify the nature of the sole complaint raised in the said ground one. He has strangely enough in a moment of truth opined that this is the gist of the appellant’s complaints in all the other grounds being questioned in the appeal.

     

    On grounds 2,3,5 and 9 the appellant has argued that the trial court has “failed to apply the facts correctly to the circumstances of the case” which have led the court to place wrongly the burden of proof on the appellant, and again, which definitely have otherwise misguided the court to a finding that the appellant has not proved his case that is to say as regards the burden of proof and the standard of proof the law have placed on him; he refers to Board of Customs & Excise v. lbrahim Barau (1982) 10 SC.48 at 137, and Ogbechie & Anor. v. Onochie (supra). The appellant has charged the trial court as affirmed by the lower court of failing in its primary duty for not scrutinising the consequences of these grounds as regards the contentious question of whether the 2nd respondent, a co-employee has properly acted in this case on behalf of the 1st respondent as its alter ego or as a busybody operating under a selfish agenda to oust the appellant from his lawful employment; in support references have been made to Ebe Uka v. Chief Kalu Irolo (2002) 7SC (Pt.11) 77 at 103 and lbenye v. Agwu (1998) 11 NWLR (Pt.574) 372 at 392.

     

    On grounds 4, 6, 7 , 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 17, it is argued that grounds 4, 6, 11 and 12 particularly have complained that the court below has failed to apply the law to the facts as averred in the pleadings and on the evidence and again on the trial court having failed to do so; and thus has failed to advert to the requirement in this regard as per the provisions of order 12 Rule 3 – Federal High court Civil Procedure Rules 2000 and Section 137 of the Evidence Act. It is alleged that there is no credible evidence that the 2nd respondent, a co-employee, has been clothed with the necessary authority to carry out all the actions complained herein against him as encompassed in grounds 6, 9, 11,12, 13,14 and 15; in the result that the appellant has charged the court below of having abandoned the real issues as complained in these grounds to engage as alleged in ground 6 on extraneous matters as regards questions of Master/Servant relationship between the appellant and the 1st respondent. On this submission, one wonders whether the appellant has a firm grip of his case as per his pleadings and evidence before the trial court. He has complained of a failure of duty to appreciate a fact or resolve a point or of shying away from the case as a complaint of law in that the 2nd respondent has no power to query him, to constituting of disciplinary committee, as well as his arraignment, suspension to dismissal which postulations he has submitted have been regrettably misconceived by the respondents in challenging these grounds by the instant preliminary objection. And that on the backdrops of the core complaints clearly registered in grounds 4, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 17 that they are all grounds of law and sustainable of the amended Notice of Appeal.

     

    On ground 5, 9 and 10: It is argued that within the meaning of Section 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution that the Standing Committee of the Central Bank of Nigeria before which organ, the appellant ought to have rightfully been arraigned that is to say, in an appropriate case is a Tribunal established by law; and has relied for so contending on Garba v. Unimaid (1986) 2 SC. 128 at 186 and to the effect that the proposition has been settled by the finding therein and I quote that:

     

    ‘When the Vice Chancellor assumed the disciplinary powers under S.17 of the Act, he became not a court but a tribunal established by law acting in a quasi-judicial capacity……” But he was not independent and not impartial.

     

    When he delegated his disciplinary 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.

     

  • Estate subscribers seek N5b compensation over demolition of houses

    The Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) has been faulted over its demolition of about 500 houses in Minanuel Estate in Abuja.

    Subscribers to the estate on Airport Road, demolished last October by FCDA officials, who allegedly acted with the support of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA), said due process was not followed in the demolition.

    Their lawyer, Chris Uche (SAN), argued last week, at the resumed hearing of his clients’suit instituted by the subscribers, that the demolition was “punitive, discriminatory and inhuman”.

    He further argued that the Minanuel Estate project was singled out for demolition. He noted that other similar ongoing estate projects in the area were not demolished.

    Uche cited the Royal Fort Estate, Set Time Estate and NNPC Cooperative Society Ltd Estate that were not demolished.

    He spoke while cross-examining a defence witness, Abubakar Suleiman before Justice Danladi Senchi of the FCT High Court, Wuse.

    Sulaiman, a Zonal Land Manager FCDA, who had earlier admitted seeing some approval documents in relation to the Minanuel Estate project, denied seeing letters conveying approval for the development of the estate.

    He also denied that the demolition was discriminatory. He said other estates in the area were spared on the intervention of the National Assembly.

    The subscribers have denied a claim by the defence that it served them with notices of demolition.

    They also opposed move by defence lawyer, Joe Gadzama (SAN), to tender documents to support its claim, arguing that the documents were not pleaded.

    Led in evidence by Gadzama, FCDA’s District Officer in Charge of Town Planning, Adamu Garba, told the court that his colleagues served “Stop Work”, “Quit” and “Demolition” notices on Minanuel estate owners long before the demolition was effected.

    Gadzama sought to tender invoices for advertorials published by his client in some national dailies and on a radio station, in respect of the estate.

    His move was opposed by Uche, who argued that the documents were not pleaded.

    On Thursday, Justice Senchi admitted the documents and photographs on the ground that they were relevant to the case.

    The plaintiffs, who named FCDA, FCTA and FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed as defendants, are among others, seeking N5billion compensation.

     

  • Obi inaugurates judges’ quarters

    Anambra State Governor Peter Obi has inaugurated an ultra-modern residential quarters built for judicial officers at Onitsha.

    It is made up of six five-bedroom duplex buildings with boys’ quarters and gate houses reportedly valued at N242, 913,994.

    The Chief Judge, Justice Peter Umeadi, said the house was the first of its kind since the state was created 22 years ago.

    He said the joy of all Anambra people is that beyond the judiciary, the Governor was working in all sectors.

    For better and quicker dispensation of justice, he said a new Judicial Division was bring created.

    Obi said it was in line with his administration’s strategy of working in all sectors simultaneously for ultimate benefit of the people of the State.

    He said more quarters for the judiciary would be built at Awka, assuring that he would deliver that before leaving office.

    The governor said a functional judiciary was necessary for the peace and order in the society.

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Legal Matters, Mr Alex Ejesieme, praised the governor for the gesture.

     

  • Govt plans law to woo foreign investors

    Lawyers and other professionals attended the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Section on Business Law (SBL) International Conference in Lagos last week. Legal Editor JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU, ADEBISI ONANUGA, JOSEPH JIBUEZE and PRECIOUS IGBONWELUNDU report.

    Is the country’s economy still emerging? Why have its citizens remained largely poor? Why is wealth concentrated in few hands? What role can lawyers play in an emerging economy?

    These were some of the questions speakers sought to answer at the Seventh edition of the Annual Business Law Conference of the Section of Business Law (SBL) of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos with the theme: The legal profession in an emerging economy.

    Speakers included NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN); Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN); Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, who declared the conference open; Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio; Chairman of the Section on Business Law, Mr Gbenga Oyebode and the Chairman International Issues Committee of the Law Society of England and Wales, Mr Harold Paisner, who delivered the keynote address.

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Miriam Aloma Mukhtar, was represented by Justice Mahmud Mohammed of the Supreme Court; the Chief Judge of Lagos State, Justice Ayotunde Phillips was represented by the Head Judge, Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade.

    Adoke, represented by Dr. Taiwo Ogunleye, said the Federal government was planning a new legislation to help bring foreign investment into the country.

    He said his office is collaborating with the Ministry of Trade and Investment and other stakeholders in reviewing relevant Business and Investment Laws to draft a legislation aimed at simplifying the legal regime for doing business and reduce legal impediments to the inflow of investments and the smooth running of business in the country.

    He said he had through an Eight- Point Strategy Plan articulated wide ranging reforms in the justice sector identified as needful for the improvement of business and investment laws, policies and regulations in Nigeria.

    “We are living witnesses to the positive impact of democratic governance on the polity and its salutary effect on Nigeria’s investment climate, particularly the concerted reform initiatives being implemented at the Federal and state levels to make our investment climate not only conducive for business but competitive for the reception of foreign investment,” he said.

    According to him, there is no doubt that a nation’s legal system provides the context, the means and methods of regulating business practices as well as defines the parameters within which companies and individuals conduct business transactions

    He said: “The legal system specified both the rights and obligations of parties who are involved in business transactions and prescribes the methods of legal redress to those who believe they are entitled to some type of recourse in the legal system.”

     

    The role of lawyers

     

    Fayemi said the legal profession has a big role to play in entrenching the rule of law and fighting bribery and corruption if Nigeria must join the emerging economies of the world.

    He believed that there are certain provisions in our law that has not been helpful to investment climate and challenged lawyers to rise up to the occasion adding that our laws should be developed in tandem with the situations around us if the country must be in the league of emerging economies of the world.

    The governor remarked that the Vision 20: 2020 programme of the Federal Government is not just a wishful thinking, but that there are grounds for the country to nurse such aspirations.

    According to him, there is for the country to improve on those factors that make investors prefer other climes other than Nigeria.

    Mr Paisner said bribery and corruption undermine not just democratic values, but also public accountability and the rule of law, adding that this is why national and international efforts to combat the vices are important for emerging economies.

    Paisner observed that in many emerging economies, problems arise where laws poorly drafted give regulators too wide a discretion without adequate accountability to interprete and apply the law.

    “So lawyers do have a role to play in promoting good economic growth whether as private practitioner or as members of the judiciary.

    “They should uphold corporate governance and investors, keep corruption and money laundering under check and they should hold government to account over the provision of legal frame work that guarantees access to justice, enforcement of contracts, protection of private property rights,” he said.

    The Chairman International Issues Committee of the Law Society of England and Wales, who described lawyers as major catalyst of growth in emerging economies of the world, counselled Nigerian lawyers to broaden their educational background by combining law degree with business degree, stressing that a good legal education and training equips lawyers to become good policy makers, legislators and regulators in emerging economies.

    Wali said the section on business law was introduced as a platform for professionalising the Bar in Nigeria, adding that the section also accommodates lawyers who desire to specialise in the profession.

    The NBA President called for the strengthening of sections and committee system in the association so that lawyers can avail themselves of the opportunities they provided to specialise in diverse areas of professional practice.

    Wali frowned at the politicalisation of some NBA’s committee activities by chairmen with ambitions for future political offices at the Bar.

    He warned that overheating of the system has negative effect on the programme of the Bar and that henceforth, it will not be tolerated.

    Oyebode said there was a correlation between good governance and the emerging economies.

    He said Nigeria can only witness growth in her economy if human rights are respected, corruption is eradicated and rule of law is allowed to reign supreme in the country.

    Oyebode stressed that there was the need for legal practitioners to be attuned with development around the world to be in good position to provide good legal advice to their clients.

    Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Access Bank Plc, Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, urged lawyers to see the legal profession as business that can help grow the economy.

    He said doing so would help “accelerate” the rate at which those at the top, such as Senior Advocates, “pull up those at the bottom.”

    Aig-Imoukhuede, who spoke at the closing session, said the legal profession, in resolving disputes, should also focus on how to create wealth.

    “I find that the legal profession seems to be more active in issues of dispute resolution, so this is the first time I am seeing lawyers putting interest in economic issues.

    “It is important that lawyers understand the political economy and basis micro-economics. I would love to come next time as a partner in one of your law firms,” Aig-Imoukhuede said.

    Akpabio said the impressive growth of emerging economies creates new demands for legal services.

    “Law, as we know, is undeniably the foundation for the promotion of business. Business is all about transaction, agreement, policy formulation and regulations and all these fall within the ambit of the legal profession.

    “Beyond this, the provision of professional advice to clients regarding issues like intellectual property law, employment law, tax law, securities law, anti-trust law, outsourcing and laws pertaining to the sale of goods, etc is also the prerequisite of the legal profession in an emerging economy.

    “The legal profession had traditionally operated primarily within the confines of individual nations, but, with globalisation, economic and cultural relations have transcended nations and are affected by multiple legal orders.

    “An emerging economy, therefore, needs to implement and institutionalise a rule of law regime to attract foreign investors as well as protect its interests and that its citizens in the global market place.”

     

    An expert in admiralty law, Ame Ogie, said to develop admiralty practice and the law relating to carriage of goods by sea, there is an urgent need for the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court to identify Judges who have some experience in admiralty practice or who are disposed towards admiralty practice and are willing to learn.

    “The bulk of admiralty/maritime matters should be assigned to these judges who can be further trained by attending seminars and by retired judges of the FHC who have experience in admiralty/maritime matters.

    “Admiralty practice, unlike others areas of practice, has international ramifications which affects every aspect of the nation’s economy,” he said.

    An energy law expert, ‘Sina Sipasi, criticised certain clauses and provisions of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), especially the provision of a Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Agency to regulate both the technical and commercial activities of the downstream sector.

    “These clauses can scare gas utilities that have based the economics of their projects on the pricing policy and pricing regulations.

    “If these provisions refer to the existing policy and regulations, then the provisions are unnecessary.

    Instead, the provisions could be drafted in a way that will preserve the existing pricing framework,” he said.

    He identified challenges faced by the energy sector as including no clear licensing regime for downstream gas; no stable legal framework to underpin policy objectives and achievements made so far, and an overstretched regulator.

    Speaking on aviation, Assistant Chief Legal Officer, Regulatory Matters, Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Ahmadu Diemkwap Ilitrus, said the laws obligate airlines to display at their check-in desk a written statement of passenger’s rights in the event of any unusual development.

    “If you are denied boarding or your flight is cancelled or delayed for at least 1 hour, ask the airline officials for a written statement of your rights particularly with regards to compensation or assistance,” he said.

    The Commissioner for Insurance, National Insurance Commission, Mr Fola Daniel, said it plays a valuable role in an emerging economy.

    He said it enables entrepreneurship and innovation; aids risk transfer, and allows individuals to save and invest for their future.

    “With society facing huge challenges, the role of insurance becomes ever more vital.

    “It is of utmost importance that lawyers realise the potential role of insurance and take them into account when running their practices, dealing in their business transactions and advising their clients,” he said.