Tag: Supreme Court

  • Update: Supreme Court upholds Wike,  Amosun, Umahi’s elections

    Update: Supreme Court upholds Wike, Amosun, Umahi’s elections

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the elections of Nyesom Wike, Ibikunle Amosun and Dave Umahi as governors of Rivers, Ogun and Ebonyi States respectively.

    The court in three unanimous judgments in the appeals filed by Wike, his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), set aside the concurrent judgments of the Rivers State governorship election tribunal and the Court of Appeal, Abuja.

    The appeals were all heard by a seven-man panel headed by the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mahmud Mohammed.

    Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, who read the lead judgments in the three appeals, upheld the return of Wike as winner of the election.

    “I find and hold that this appeal is meritorious and it is allowed. The judgment of the lower court delivered on the 16th of November 2015 and the judgment of the tribunal delivered on 24th October 2015 are hereby set aside.

    “The petition of the petitioners is dismissed. The return of Nyesom Wike as governor of Rivers State by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is restored,” she stated.

    Justice Kekere-Ekun said she will provide reason for her decision on February 12.

    Justices Mohammed, Ibrahim Mohammed, Sylvester Ngwuta, Kumai Akaahs and Amiru Sanusi, who were members of the panel agreed with Kekere-Ekun’s lead judgment.

    The candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dakuku Peterside and his party had gone before the Rivers State governorship election tribunal to challenge Wike’s return by INEC as the winner of the April 11, 2015 governorship election in the state.

    The tribunal, which sat in Abuja, ruled in favour of the petitioners and voided the election on grounds of widespread violence and non-compliance with the Electoral Act.

    It ordered a rerun election within 90 days.

    The apex court also dismissed the appeal by the PDP governorship candidate in Ogun State, Adegboyega Isiaka.

    Isiaka had challenged the judgments of the Court of Appeal and Ogun State governorship election tribunal, which both upheld the election of Ibikunle Amosun as governor of Ogun State.

    Justice Akaahs, who read the lead judgment, held that the appeal lacked merit and dismissed it.

    The court equally dismissed the appeal filed by governorship candidate of Labour Party in Ebonyi State, Edward Nkwegu.

    Justice Chima Centus Nweze, who read the lead judgment, held that the preliminary objection raised by Umahi succeeds in part.

    He resolved the two issues on the main appeal against the appellant.

    “No merit in this appeal. Umahi is the duly elected governor of Ebonyi State. Reasons will be given on Friday, January 29,” Justice Nweze held.

     

  • Supreme Court upholds Wike’s election

    Supreme Court upholds Wike’s election

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the election of Nyesom Wike as governor of Rivers State.

    Wike, who was the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the April 11, 2015 governorship election in Rivers State, had approached the apex court after the Appeal Court upheld the decision of the state election petitions tribunal which had earlier nullified his victory in the poll.

     

     

  • Supreme Court to rule on Rivers, Ogun elections

    The Supreme Court will later on Wednesday deliver judgment in the Rivers and Ogun State governorship elections.

    Details later…

     

  • Delta APC: we have faith in Supreme Court

    The Delta State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has expressed confidence in the Supreme Court to overturn the Court of Appeal judgment which upheld the election of Senator Ifeanyi Okowa as the governor.

    APC candidate, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor, is challenging Okowa’s Appeal Court victory at the Supreme Court.

    Delta APC Chairman, Prophet Jones Erue, in a statement in Asaba, the state capital, said he was shocked by the Appeal Court’s judgment, despite the overwhelming evidence that Okowa did not win the election.

    He urged APC supporters to keep the peace, adding that the state would soon witness a new dawn.

    According to him, the election matter will be pursued with vigour and will hopefully be brought to a legal conclusion in APC’s favour.

    Erue said: “We are law-abiding citizens, but we received this judgment of the Appeal Court with shock. We will not abdicate our right to fair hearing as we are convinced we will find justice at the Supreme Court based on the merit of our arguments in the case in question.

    “We stand by our desire for a new Delta State, led by APC, where every Deltan will begin to live with a new sense of purpose and direction; a new Delta filled with hope for the future and driven by the power of change.”

    The APC chief accused the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration in the state of wasting resources.

    “For instance, it has aggregated an over-bloated cabinet with hundreds of idle and needless aides in the Executive and Legislative arms, which will drag the state’s economy down to a dangerous precipice at this critical period of dwindling resources,” Erue said.

    He assured that an APC administration would accelerate the state’s development through a well-refined “strategic vision”, “governance-with-a-heart” and “prudent assignment” of the state’s limited resources.

  •  Will Saraki get reprieve at Supreme Court?

     Will Saraki get reprieve at Supreme Court?

    The Supreme Court will, on February 5, decide whether the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) can try Senate President Bukola Saraki for alleged false asset declaration. ADEBISI ONANUGA reviews the case.

    On February 5, the Supreme Court will decide whether the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) can adjudicate on the criminal proceedings instituted against Senate President Bukola Saraki for alleged false declaration of assets by the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB). Being the highest court in the land, its decision on the matter is crucial. It will determine whether CCB can proceed in the matter.

    The Senate president had approached the Supreme Court following the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division’s split decision which dismissed his appeal over his trial before the CCT. Presiding Justice A. A. Adumien Moore and Justice Mohammed Mustapha dismissed the appeal; Justice Joseph Ekanem delivered a dissenting judgement.

    Saraki is praying the apex court to set aside the criminal charges. His contention is that the CCT is not competent to try him.  He argued that it is constitutionally mandated that any CCT panel must comprise three members as against the two which the tribunal set up to try him is composed of, among other issues.

    Because of the serious constitutional issues raised by Saraki’s counsel Joseph Daudu (SAN),   the Supreme Court has empanelled the full court of seven justices to adjudicate on the matter.

    If the apex court goes by the majority decision of the Court of Appeal, it will uphold the trial of  the Senate President by the CCT. The court, in reference to section 28 of the Interpretation Act will also hold that the tribunal led by Justice Danladi Umar could sit with the chairman and one other member and restate the position of the lower court that the CCT and CCB Act and the Constitution did not  talk about a quorum.

    But in the matter of the minority decision of the Court of Appeal, the apex court will have to contend with three key issues viz: the interpretation of paragraph 15 (1) of the Fifth Schedule of the 1999 Constitution regarding the composition of the tribunal; the issue of whether the CCT is a court of criminal jurisdiction  as well as finding answer as to whether a lawyer in the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) can file charges at the tribunal without the AGF’s express authorisation as contained in Section 174 (1) of the 1999 constitution, as amended.

    Paragraph 15 (1) of the Fifth Schedule provides that the CCT shall consist of a Chairman and two members. It reads: “There shall be established a tribunal to be known as Code of Conduct Tribunal which shall consist of a Chairman and two other persons”.  And in respect of the number of persons making up the tribunal, Section 20 (2) of the CCB and CCT Act, simply says “consist of” and not “quorum”.

    Since its judgment of last October 30, there have been diverse opinion from legal minds on the decision, most of them centering on whether or not the CCT is a court of records, whether or not it has power to try criminal matters  and whether or not it is inferior to a high court.

    For instance, a retired justice of the Supreme Court, Justice A. G. Karibi-Whyte in his analysis of the provisions said it appears from the enabling law that the jurisdiction of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT)is confined and limited to the conduct clearly outlined in paragraphs 1 – 13 of the Fifth Schedule.

    He noted: “It is pertinent to observe that the law which enables the CCT to try persons who have contravened the provisions of the Code have carefully avoided the use of the expression ‘criminal’ to describe the conduct so punished.  It does not contemplate any other conduct.  Rather it provides in paragraph 18(3) that the sanctions in paragraph 18 (2) may be imposed, without prejudice to the penalties in any law where the conduct is also a criminal offence.”

    He said the expression, public officer, public office have also been defined.  On the limited jurisdiction of the CCT, Justice Karibi-Whyte said: “Its jurisdiction is limited to the subject matter listed therein and a prescribed by the National Assembly. “The Code of Conduct Tribunal has not been vested with exercise of criminal jurisdiction even by implication of the scope allowed in the sanction it can impose.”

    A former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) president Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) referred to Section 6 of the Constitution which listed the superior courts and emphasised that the CCB and the National Industrial court are not listed.

    He concluded that since CCB is not listed as a superior court, then it is an inferior court, adding that because of its being an inferior court, it is amenable to the judicial review jurisdiction of a superior court of record, such as the Federal High Court.

    But to another lawyer, Vincent Okwechime, whether or not the CCT established under Section 15 of Part 1 of the Fifth Schedule to the 1999 Constitution is an inferior court is debatable.

    “It seems to me that the CCT is also a Superior Court of Record with specific jurisdiction in certain matters, viz, violations of the Conduct of Conduct prescribed for public officers outlined in the self-same Fifth Schedule. In this regard, it seems to be a Superior Court of Record similar to and having coordinate jurisdiction with the High Courts (including the Federal High Court) established in Chapter VII. Accordingly, the CCT is not a mere administrative/quasi-judicial body like the NJC and other such institutions established by various schedules to the Constitution,” he argued.

    Okwechime wondered where a High Court would derive its power to interfere in proceedings of the CCT. He said the only conceivable provision that may considered as according such powers to high courts is Section 46 of Chapter IV on Fundamental Rights which empowers such courts to entertain matters in which the applicant is alleging past, actual or potential breaches of his/her fundamental rights.

    He contended that  the case against anyone in the CCT has nothing to do with fundamental rights. To him, the assertion of a fundamental right is no defence to a charge before the CCT nor can a court empowered under Section 46 use that section of the Constitution as a cover for interfering in the functions of the CCT.

    According to him, the CCT is a court of coordinate jurisdiction empowered by Section 46. He said litigants, aided and abetted by some courts, hide under section 46 to frustrate legitimate trials. He contended, however, that the same method cannot be used against the CCT using the instrumentality of a High Court or Federal High Court.

  • Supreme  Court affirms death sentence on man

    Supreme Court affirms death sentence on man

    The Supreme Court of Nigeria has sentenced to death one Nonso Okeke for the murder of Chinwe Ofomatu in 2004.

    In a judgement last Friday by the apex court, it affirmed the death sentence passed on Okeke by a Lagos High Court in 2010 for the murder of Ofomatu.

    A statement yesterday by the Lagos State Ministry of Justice and signed by the Director, Public Relations, Bola Akingbade, said that in the lead judgement delivered by Justice Musa  Muhammed, the apex court held that the appeal of Nonso Okeke lacked merit.

    The Supreme Court dismissed the accused objection and upheld the decision of the lower courts.

    During hearing, the Lagos State Attorney General was represented by the Director of Public Prosecution, (DPP), Mrs. Idowu Alakija and Justin Jacobs, who urged the Supreme Court to dismiss the appeal and uphold the judgment of the lower courts.          Okeke was accused of the murder of Chinwe Ofomatu on October 28, 2004 at her residence House 18, A Close, Road 403 Festac town.

    He was arraigned on a two-count charge of conspiracy to murder and murder contrary to sections 324 and 319(1) of the Criminal Code Law Cap 17 Laws of Lagos State 2003

    The Lagos State High Court convicted and sentenced Okeke to death as charged.

    Dissatisfied with the judgement, the convict appealed to the Court of Appeal, which again upheld his conviction by the lower court.

    The appellant proceeded to the Supreme Court of Nigeria, which also confirmed the death sentence passed on him.

  • Supreme Court affirms death sentence for murder accuse

    The Supreme Court on Friday upheld the judgment of a Lagos High Court sentencing a man, Nonso Okeke to death for murder of one Chinwe Ofomatu on October 28, 2004.

    The Appeal Court according to a statement by the state Deputy Director, Public Affairs in the Ministry of Justice, Bola Akingbade had earlier affirmed the judgment of the lower court.

    Okeke was convicted by the Lagos High Court on April 13, 2010 for the offence of conspiracy to commit murder and murder of Ofomatu at her residence in House 18, A Close, Road 403, Festac Town.

    He was found guilty of the allegations, convicted and sentenced to death by the Court.

    Specifically, Okeke was convicted and sentenced to death by the trial court for conspiracy and murder contrary to Sections 324 and 319(1) of the Criminal Code Act Cap 17, Laws of Lagos State, 2003.

    Dissatisfied, Okeke approached the Court of Appeal in Lagos and asked that the judgment of the lower court be upturned.

    But the appeal failed as the appellate court dismissed the application.

    Again, Okeke took his case before the Supreme Court in Abuja and asked that the judgments of the lower courts be upturned.

    While arguing the case before the apex court, the Lagos State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Adeniji Kazeem had urged the court to dismiss the appeal and uphold the judgments of the lower courts.

    Kazeem, who was represented by the Lagos State Director of Public Prosecution, Mrs. Idowu Alakija and Mr Justin Jacobs had argued that the appeal was devoid of merit, and ought to be dismissed.

    In its judgment, the apex court upheld the arguments canvassed by the State Government, and held that the appeal of Nonso Okeke lacked merit.

    The court, in the lead judgment delivered by Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammed thereafter dismissed the appeal and upheld the decision of the lower courts.
    In its judgment, the apex court upheld the arguments canvassed by the State Government, and held that the appeal of Nonso Okeke lacked merit.

    The court, in the lead judgment delivered by Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammed thereafter dismissed the appeal and upheld the decision of the lower courts.

  • Ikpeazu, Otti: Who wins at Supreme Court?

    Ikpeazu, Otti: Who wins at Supreme Court?

    There is anxiety in Abia State as the governorship battle shifts to the Supreme Court. JOSEPH JIBUEZE reviews the Court of Appeal’s judgment, which nullified Governor Okezie’s Ikpeazu’s election, and the  expectation of the two parties at the apex court.

    There was jubilation in Abia State when the Court of Appeal sitting in Owerri, on December 31, last year, declared the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) governorship candidate, Dr Alex Otti, as winner of the election and supplementary poll held on April 11 and 25.

    The court, presided over by Justice Oyebisi Omoleye, nullified the declaration of Okezie Ikpeazu as winner of the elections. Otti and APGA were the appellants. Ikpeazu, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) were the respondents.

    In arriving at the decision, the appellate court held that Otti scored the majority of lawful/valid votes cast and satisfied the constitutional requirements of one quarter of votes in at least two-thirds of the 17 Local Government Areas (LGAs).

    On that basis, the court held that Otti “is hereby returned as the duly elected governor of Abia State.” Also, on the panel were Justice Chinwe Iyizoba, Justice Samuel Oseji, Justice Tijani Abubakar and Justice Jamilu Tukur.

    Justice Omoleye added: “It is hereby ordered that the Certificate of Return already issued to the first respondent, Okezie Ikpeazu, by the third respondent (INEC) is set aside.

    “It is further ordered that the third respondent, INEC, shall forthwith issue the Certificate of Return to the first appellant, Alex Otti, as the winner of the Abia State governorship elections conducted on the 11th and 25th April 2015.”

    Seventeen issues were raised in the appellant’s brief of argument filed on December 4, 2015. Among the issues were whether in the light of the Electoral Act, the approved regulations and manual for election and evidence on record, the learned tribunal judges were not wrong when they failed to set aside Ikpeazu’s return as winner.

    Otti and APGA also urged the court to determine whether, having regard to the pleadings and the evidence on record, the tribunal was not wrong in holding that the petitioners’ claims were not grantable. They also asked whether the tribunal was not wrong in failing to resolve the issue relating to who, between Otti and Ikpeazu, scored the majority of lawful votes cast in the election, an issue that was properly raised before the tribunal and supported by evidence.

    It was the appellant’s contention that Section 140 (3) of 2010 Electoral Act states that if a tribunal or court determines that a candidate who was returned as elected was not validly elected on the ground that he did not score the majority of valid votes cast, the tribunal shall declare as elected the candidate who scored the highest number of valid votes and who satisfied constitutional requirement.

    To be declared the governor, a candidate must satisfy two conditions, namely: the constitutional requirement of spread in two/third of the Local Government Areas, and the highest number of lawful votes – which refers to those cast in accordance with the Electoral Act.

    Conversely, an invalid vote cannot be used to compute the number of votes cast in an election. In HDP vs Obi (2012) 1 NWLR (PT 1282) 464, invalid means is defined as “without validity, efficacy weight or cogency and having no effect.” According to the court, computing an invalid vote “will be like counting both the living and the dead in a census exercise.” The court also compared an invalid vote to a child asking the mother “to add chaff that has been sifted from the wheat into the wheat meal on the fire.”

    Otti and APGA’s prayer was that the votes recorded for Obingwa, Osisioma and Isiala Ngwa were characterised by malpractices, and were therefore invaalid and should be cancelled. The appellate court agreed with the submission, contrary to the tribunal’s position that there was a rerun in those areas and that Otti and APGA participated.

    The tribunal had ignored exhibits showing over-voting and other irregularities. It ruled that having gone through a rerun, all exhibits tendered by Otti’s witnesses would not to be considered. The tribunal, therefore, did not look at documents tendered by the appellants to show substantial non-compliance and over-voting.

    The law is that once over-voting is established, results of those areas must be cancelled, and if the leading candidate has enough spread constitutionally, he will be declared winner. This is because there is no rule that everybody must participate in an election. Even, if election did not hold in those areas, results will still be declared.

    Otti’s lawyers referred to precedents, such as the case of Aregbesola vs Oyinlola, in which 10 LGAs where over-voting occurred were cancelled and Rauf Aregbesola was returned after more than 300,000 votes were invalidated; as well as the case of Agagu vs Mimiko, in which the result for wards in Ese Odo, Okitipupa and Akoko Northeast were nullified and Olusegun Mimiko was declared the winner.

    Other precedents include Fayemi vs Oni, in which results were also invalidated and Kayode Fayemi was returned as having scored the majority of lawful votes, and INEC vs Oshiomole, in which results for Etsako Central, Akoko Edo LGA and several wards were cancelled yet Oshiomole was declared governor. Otti’s lawyers argued that it is only when there is no winner of majority votes and with constitutional spread that rerun can be ordered.

    On whether Otti’s reliefs were grantable, the appellate court said it found it quite perplexing that the tribunal, instead of reading and considering carefully the pleadings and evidence adduced in Otti’s petition and determining all the issues raised, seemed more concerned with getting rid of as many of the reliefs as possible by striking them out for one “unacceptable” reason or the other.

    “All the reasons given are untenable and at the end of the day amount to depriving the appellants of fair hearing guaranteed under the Constitution. These generalisations that the claims of the appellants/petitioners were not grantable without giving plausible and definite reasons are unacceptable in law. The view of the tribunal that the claims of the appellants were not grantable is clearly misconceived in law and facts,” Justice Omoleye said.

    On the issue of over-voting, the appellants had complained that the tribunal wrongly concluded that there was proper accreditation of votes and that there were other modes of accreditation recognised by INEC.

    Upholding the appellants’ arguments, the appeal court held: “The finding of the tribunal that the card reader data is not the primary and sole source and record of number of accredited voters was wrong.”

    On annulment of elections in Obingwa, Isiala Ngwa North and Osisioma, the appellate court faulted the tribunal for not going ahead to consider the appellants’ grievances on merit after holding that the State Returning Officer had no power to annul and de-annul the election results.

    “In what appeared to be a conscious resolve to avoid and evade the determination of the petition on the merit, the tribunal chose to embark on swinging forward and backward, delving into imaginations that results were cancelled and elections declared inconclusive and that re-run elections were held in the disputed three LGAs. The conclusion does not represent the correct position of the law, based on the evidence before the tribunal,” the Court of Appeal held.

    The appellate court found that the results from the LGAs tally with the appellants’ grievance that they do not represent the correct outcome of the election. The appellate court said ordering of fresh election could only arise where a clear winner did not emerge after deduction of illegal votes.

    Having established that there was over-voting in Isiala Ngwa, Obingwa and Osisioma, the court said the entire votes recorded there would be deducted from the overall result declared by INEC.

    The Court of Appeal held: “Following the deductions of the unlawful votes garnered from the disputed three LGAs, the first appellant (Otti) having scored 164,332 valid votes, as opposed to the first respondent (Ikpeazu) who scored 115,444 votes, ought to have been declared the winner of Abia State Governorship elections conducted on April 11 and 25, 2015.”

    The Court of Appeal, therefore, set the tribunal’s judgment aside.

    It held: “Having resolved all the above issues other than the issue relating to the powers of the Returning Officer with regards to cancellation and de-annulment of election results in favour of the appellants, we hereby hold that this appeal has merit and out to succeed.

    “The appeal is accordingly allowed. The judgment of the tribunal delivered on November 3, 2015 is hereby set aside.”

    Lawyers have hailed the judgment, saying it was well considered. A lawyer, who prefers not to be named, said: “From the evidence presented to the Appeal Court, it is easy to see how it arrived at the decision”.

    Some lawyers, however, preferred to await the Supreme Court judgment. “I am now counsel in the matter, hence cannot comment again,” said constitutional lawyer Sebastine Hon (SAN).

     

     

  • Breaking News: Supreme Court upholds Ortom’s election

    Breaking News: Supreme Court upholds Ortom’s election

    The Supreme Court on Friday upheld the election of Governor Samuel Ortom as governor of Benue state.

    In his ruling which lasted about 10 minutes, Justice Sylvester Ngwuta dismissed the appeal brought by Terhemen Tazoor, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate in the April 11, 2015 governorship election.

    Details later…

  • Peterside: Supreme Court’ll reaffirm Appeal Court’s verdict

    Peterside: Supreme Court’ll reaffirm Appeal Court’s verdict

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State in the April 11 election, Dr. Dakuku Adol Peterside, has said members of the party and other lovers of democracy are confident that the Supreme Court will reaffirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal which sacked Governor Nyesom Wike.

    Peterside, a former member of the House of Representatives, spoke at the weekend at APC’s Rivers Southeast Senatorial District’s meeting at Senator Magnus Abe’s office at Bori, the traditional headquarters of the Ogoni and the seat of Khana Local Government Area.

    Besides Abe, who represented the district at the Seventh National Assembly, other party chieftains at the meeting included State APC Chairman Chief Davies Ikanya; the Director-General of Peterside’s Greater Together Campaign Organisation, Chief Victor Giadom and the party’s Deputy National Secretary, Orji Ngofa.

    Peterside assured that the APC was prepared for the governorship rerun, as ordered by the Appeal Court.

    The election is expected to hold between February and March.

    Wike, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, was sacked by the Election Petitions Tribunal in Abuja on October 24, last year.

    The Court of Appeal, Abuja, on December 16, last year, affirmed the tribunal’s judgment.

    But the governor immediately directed his lawyers to go to the apex court.

    Peterside said: “We are confident that the Supreme Court will reaffirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which also affirmed the verdict of the Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal in the first instance. I am convinced, like any Rivers person, that the Supreme Court will nullify the 2015 governorship election in Rivers State.

    “The APC is looking forward to participating in free and fair rerun, where the winner of each ballot will be determined by the actual votes cast by the electorate…’’