Tag: tussle

  • Ogbe-Ijoh kingship tussle: Go to court, Deputy Governor advises aggrieved party

    Ogbe-Ijoh kingship tussle: Go to court, Deputy Governor advises aggrieved party

    Amidst the controversy generated by the crowning of Chief Couple Oromoni as the new Pere of Ogbe-Ijoh, Warri Kingdom,  the Deputy Governor of Delta State, Kingsley Otuaro, has charged aggrieved persons to seek legal redress.

    Although it was gathered the process leading to the crowning of the new Pere of Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom, Pere Amakosu  Mobene III, was concluding before the new administration, Otuaro is accused of influencing the process.

    The apparently unimpressed deputy governor, in a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Communication and Press, Mr Bulou Kosin, cautioned against unfounded allegations, mudslinging and other acts capable of creating bad sentiments.

    The deputy governor denied the allegation and frowned at the antics of his accuser, which a section of the parties believed is aimed at arm-twisting him.

    He said: “The Deputy Governor of Delta State, Barr. Kingsley Otuaro wishes to state that he is in no way party to the alleged selection/appointment of Chief Couple Oromoni, or anybody for that matter, as Pere (King) of Ogbe-Ijoh-Warri Kingdom, against a subsisting court order as claimed in recent media reports.

    “As leaders believed to be respectable, Chief Alfred Yola and Sele Banni and their sponsors, ought to have done the responsible thing by initiating contempt proceedings in court against whoever may have defied such court order, instead of resorting to hurling unsubstantiated allegations, sentiments and blackmail at the Deputy Governor.”

    The leaders of Perebiri Quarters in Ogbe-Ijoh said the Deputy Governor “sent over 200 of his (Otuaro’s) policemen and aides to Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom…against the court directive”.

    But the deputy governor said:  “One wonders where the leaders of Perebiri quarters in Ogbe-Ijoh got their ridiculously staggering number of over 200 security details and aides to the Deputy Governor which he allegedly sent to the said Ogbe-Ijoh event.

    “To begin with, the Deputy Governor does not have such weird number of security details and aides and the entire story is indeed the figment of imagination of mischief makers bent on tarnishing the good reputation of the Deputy Governor. Informed leaders everywhere know that people who have one occasion or the other to celebrate do not need a Deputy Governor before seeking and getting police protection.

    “Despite insults hurled at him, the Deputy Governor, Barr. Kingsley Otuaro, wishes to appeal to the generally good people of Ogbe-Ijoh-Warri Kingdom to embrace peace necessary for the enjoyment of democratic dividends under Governor Ifeanyi Okowa’s SMART agenda of prosperity for all Deltans.”

     

  • 2015: Tussle over ballot boxes shifts to Appeal Court

    2015: Tussle over ballot boxes shifts to Appeal Court

    A Federal High Court in Abuja declared in 2012 that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had since 2011, unlawfully deployed the collapsible ballot boxes in elections. It restrained the commission and its Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, from further using the boxes, except with the permission of the patent right owner, Bedding Holdings Limited (BHL). The court also declared that unathorised use of the boxes will render null and void, the purpose for which the boxes were used. INEC and Jega have appealed against the decision. Parties have equally settled their briefs, awaiting a hearing date. Eric Ikhilae examines issues canvassed by parties and the case’s likely implication for next year’s general elections.

    As the yearly vacation of the Court of Appeal gradually comes to an end,parties in an appeal lodged by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the Court of Appeal, Abuja are anxiously awaiting a hearing date. Parties have settled and exchanged their briefs.

    INEC is by the appeal, seeking to set aside a judgment delivered on June 5, 2012 by Justice Adamu Bello (now retired) of the Federal High Court, Abuja in a suit instituted by a firm, Bedding Holdings Limited (BHL).

    BHL had in 2010 sued INEC, Jega, and five others over the electoral body’s decision to award contracts to three private firms for the purchase of ballot boxes in preparation for the 2011 elections.

    The suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/783/2010 also had as defendants, the Registrar of Patent, Federal Ministry of Commerce and Industry, the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and the three firms – Emchai Limited, Tambco United Nigeria Ltd and Anowat Project and Resources Ltd.

    The plaintiff’s case was that it possessed subsisting patent right over the ballot boxes  which INEC had awarded contracts without its (BHL’s) prior consent, as required by law.

    But, upon overtures by the AGF for an out of court settlement, the court struck out the case on December 16, 2010 following an application to the effect by the plaintiff’s lawyer. BHL returned to court shortly after settlement became impossible. It filed a similar suit, which was marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/82/201.

    In his judgment on June 5, 2012, Justice Bello held, among others, that BHL owns valid and subsisting patent rights over Transparent Ballot Boxes and Electronic Collapsible Transparent Ballot Boxes being used by INEC for elections.

    The judge upheld BHL’s claim to being the bona fide patentee and the exclusive owner of the invention named “Transparent Ballot Boxes” on which it was issued certificate of registration patent rights No. RP12994 and registration of industrial designs rights No. RD5946 by the Registrar of Patents on January 12, 1998.

    The judge also upheld the subsequent certification of an improvement on the invention named “Electronic Collapsible Transparent Ballot Boxes” (with certificate of registration of patent rights No. RP16642 and registration of industrial designs rights No. RD13841 issued on November 27, 2006 which are still valid.

    Justice Bello voided the rights over similar inventions purportedly issued later, by the Registrar of Patent, to three firms – Emchai, Tambco and Anowat.

    He restrained the defendants from further utilising the ballot boxes without the consent of BHL. The judge declared that any unathorised use of the boxes will render null and void, the purpose for which the boxes were used.

    Justice Bello refused a subsequent application for stay of the judgment pending appeal, which INEC and Jega filed. In his ruling on May 28, last year, the judge hinged his refusal on the ground that it was declaratory (as the one by Justice Auta).

    The judge frowned at INEC’s and Jega’s decision to deploy the same ballot boxes in subsequent elections, including the governorship elections in Edo and Ondo states, without the consent of the plaintiff and in disregard of the court’s orders contained in the June 5, 2012 judgment.

    “They (INEC and Jega) conducted the elections on July 14 and October 20, 2012 using the same ballot boxes as averred by the plaintiff/respondent (BHL) in its counter affidavit, which has not been denied by the 6th and 7th defendants (INEC and Jega) in the two further and better affidavits, in total disregard to the injunctive order, the execution of which they now seek to stay by their application.

    “Since the elections have been conducted, the need for staying the execution of the injunctive order granted by the court has abated, at least for now. And even if the need for the order for stay of execution has not abated, the defendants, by proceeding to conduct the two elections, using the same ballot boxes, the use of which was restrained by the court’s judgment, have soiled their hands and cannot therefore seek the indulgence of the court.

    “He, who comes to equity, must come with clean hands. The 6th and 7th defendants have not come with clean hands before the court and cannot, therefore, seek for equitable relief of stay of execution of the order in the judgment.

    “Consequently, I refuse to grant the application, as granting it will be tantamount to the court encouraging further breach of its own judgment order, which subsists until set aside by the Court of Appeal,” Justice Bello said.

    In their appeal numbered: CA/A/535/2012, INEC and Jega are praying the appellate court to set aside the judgment by Justice Bello, arguing among others, that the trial judge erred in granting all the prayers by the plaintiff.

    The appeal was filed for them by a team of seven lawyers, including six Senior Advocates of Nigeria. The SANs include Adegboyega Awomolo, Mrs. V.  O. Awomolo, A. B. Mahmood, Onyechi Ikpeeazu, H. A. Liman and Ahmed Raji.

    The appellant raised five grounds of appeal and distilled two issues for the court’s determination. They challenged the competence of the suit as constituted before the lower court and faulted the decision of the trial judge to grant the plaintiff’s prayers, arguing that the plaintiff did not sufficiently prove its case to have warranted the granting of all the reliefs it sought.

    INEC and Jega equally challenged the plaintiff’s locus standi (its right to sue and be heard). They argued that having failed to show before the trial court that it was a corporate entity, registered by the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), by allegedly not exhibiting its certificate of registration as required by law, BHL (named as the 1st respondent) ought not to have been granted audience by the trial court.

    The appellants also raised the issue of fair hearing, accusing the trial court of denying them their constitutional right to be heard. They denied being served with processes and hearing notices in relation to the case at the trial court. The appellant argued that BHL has not shown anywhere in its pleadings that the appellants were served with the originating summons or any of the hearing notices.

    In challenging the competence of the suit at the lower court, the appellants argued that BHL ought to have initiated the suit by way of writ of summons owing to the contentious nature of the claims, which could only be resolved by the calling of further evidence.

    They further argued: “The grant of declaratory reliefs as sought by the plaintiff (BHL) are not automatic, rather, they are granted based on proof of cogent, credible, sufficient and reliable evidence to show that it (BHL) is entitled to same. This, the respondent failed to do.”

    In its respondent’s brief filed by Karina Tunyan (SAN) and John Okoriko, BHL urged the court to uphold the judgment by the trial court, and “not to disturb the finding of fact reached by the court below” because it proved and established its case with credible affidavit and documentary evidence to the satisfaction of the court.

    “This is particularly so when the respondents, including the appellants, did not file any counter affidavit by way of defence to the 1st respondent’s case at the court below despite being served with the originating summons and the various hearing notice,”  BHL said.

    It argued that since the trial court had delivered its judgment in the case and has become functus officio (it could no longer act on it.), BHL urged the court to disregard the appellants’ argument on whether or not it showed it as a corporate body worthy of being heard.

    It submitted that since the issue about its corporate existence was not raised at the lower court, and the appellants having also failed to include it as a ground of appeal in their notice of appeal, they could no longer raise it.

    On service, the 1st respondent argued that “there is overwhelming documentary and affidavit evidence, by way of numerous proofs of service and publications in the newspapers, to the effect that the appellants were duly served with both the originating processes and hearing notices of this case.

    “In spite of the numerous services of the court processes and hearing notices on the appellants, informing them of the pendency of this suit against them, the appellants refused to appear in court or put up a legal representation in defence of this action against them,” BHL argued.

    There many other pending cases involving INEC, Jega, BHL and some others, most of which are offshoots of the case over ballot boxes.

    There is a pending appeal by INEC and Jega against the January 28, this year judgment in which Justice Ibrahim Auta of the Federal High Court, Abuja awarded about N17.3billion in favour of BHL and against INEC, Jega and three others for infringing the subsisting patent rights of the plaintiff.

    The judgment was on a suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/816/2010, filed shortly after INEC awarded the about N34.5billion contracts for the supply of Direct Data Capturing machines for the registration of voters, preparatory to the 2011 general elections.

    Defendants in the suit included INEC, Jega, the AGF, Haier Electrical Appliance Corporation Limited, Zenox Technologies Limited and Avante International Technology Incorporated.

    The plaintiff had claimed the sole ownership of the subsisting patent rights Nos: RP16642 and RP NG/P/2010/202, and copyrights designs No: RD13841covering its inventions – the Proof of Address System Scheme (PASS) and the Electronic Collapsible Transparent Ballot Box (ECTBB).

    It claimed that a combination of both inventions creates a voters’ register involving “the process and application of DDC machines for the compilation and collection of various bio-data.”

    It said the suit was intended to protect its inventions after INEC proceeded to award the DDC contracts despite having been notified of its subsisting patents and the need to first obtain its consent.

    There are other pending cases in which BHL is among others, seeking to void the elections that produced Adams Oshiomhole (Edo Governor), Olusegun Mimiko (Ondo) and Willie Obiano (Anambra) on the ground that its ballot boxes were used without its consent, in violation of the June 5, 2012 judgment. The cases are before Justice Ahmed Mohammed (also of the Federal High Court, Abuja).

    As the nation prepares for general elections next year, the fear in many quarters is that, beyond the huge public funds being deployed in these legal battles by INEC, no one, as it is the case in actual battle, knows how these cases will end.

    There is also the concern over what will happen should the plaintiff, as has been the case in two instances, succeeds in the cases seeking to void the elections held after the June 5, 2012 judgment, including the 2015 elections.

  • New twists to Ilorin NBA chairmanship tussle

    THE crisis rocking the Nigerian Bar Association’s (NBA) Ilorin Branch took a new dimension yesterday, as two factions made claims and counter-claims to the status of its chairman, Mobolaji Ojibara.

    An anti-Ojibara group, which filed a notice of impeachment against him two weeks ago, claimed to have successfully removed him from office at a congress held yesterday.

    But Ojibara and his group addressed reporters in the state capital to denounce the claim, alleging instead that those behind the move have themselves been suspended from the association indefinitely.

    Former chairman of the branch and one of those affected by the alleged suspension, Mr. Rafiu Balogun however said he was disturbed with what was going on in the association.

    He claimed that contrary to claims by the Ojibara’s group, Article 25 of the NBA Constitution clearly states that congresses cannot be held in August and December.

    Ojibara added that contrary to the claims by his opponents, the congress of the association passed a vote of confidence on him and recommended members of the immediate past executive council of the association led by Balogun, who are believed to be behind the impeachment moves, for investigation by the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC).

    The “sins” of the allegedly suspended members,  the resolution said, include “suspected false and fraudulent accounting and for their respective roles in causing the branch unprecedented financial embarrassment and loss in the guise of reconstruction of the Bar Centre of the branch and or for any other wrongs or offences that may be discovered that have been perpetrated by them.

    The resolution also agreed to forward their names to the association’s disciplinary committee over their alleged conduct in the impeachment saga.

    According to the resolution of the congress which was read to reporters, members of the association also agreed to forward the names of the suspended members to the association’s national secretariat and security agencies for “notification, record and surveillance”.

    But earlier, the anti-Ojibara group had issued a statement after the meeting to announce that it had succeeded in ousting the chairman.

    The four-paragraph statement signed by Assistant General Secretary, Yahaya Alajo, reads:  “The impeachment proceeding against Mr. Mobolaji Ojibara as the NBA Ilorin chairman was considered and resolved today in a General Meeting held at the Bar Centre. The meeting was attended by over 50 members of the association.

    “Dr. Ibrahim Abikan, while at the meeting, addressed the congress, adding that the motion for impeachment earlier moved by 16 members and seconded by 18 members was not opposed by Mr. Ojibara or any other member of the association. It was accordingly resolved that since there was no response to the allegations of financial recklessness, abuse of office and subversion of the bye-law of the association, Mr. Mobolaji Ojibara thereby stand impeached. The session, though rowdy, Mr. Ojibara was successfully impeached.

    “It should be recalled that the grounds of impeachment borders on abuse of office and professional misconduct concerning the misappropriation of the association’s funds among others. It is hoped that with the impeachment of Mr. Ojibara, peace and sanity would be restored in the NBA, Ilorin branch.”

  • Court resolves Odofin farmland tussle

    The nine-year-old  tussle  over Odofin farmland, situated at Sekan Village, on Agoro/Oloba road in Osun State Iwo has been resolved.

    The  resolution of the land crisis is contained in a judgment delivered by  Justice M.A. Adeigbe on July 3 of an Osun State High Court, Iwo.

    The matter was resolved through an out-of-court agreement.

    The claimant in the suit, which started in 2005, was  the Odofin family while the defendants are also members of the Odofin family.

    The defendants were alleged to have trespassed on an 80-hectare land.

    The family sued Messrs Bilawu Akanni, Akibu Alimi, Abdullahi Bilawu and Madam Wosilatu Alimi to court for allegedly trespassing on the Odofin farmland.

    Five persons, including Mr. Lasisi Akanmu, Mr. Lamidi Adisa, Mallam Akibu Atanda, Mr. Muraina Adeleke and Alhaji Taleatu had instituted the case for themselves and on behalf of all members of Odofin family, Iwo, excluding the defendants.

    Three of the claimants – Akanmu, Adisa and Taleatu died during the case.

    This left  the duo of Atanda and Adeleke to continue representing the family members at home and in diaspora.

    After several  adjournments, the parties, however, agreed to an out-of-court settlement, culminating into the terms of settlement.

    According to the terms of settlement, the parties agreed that the land in dispute was a crown land, which can only be administered by the Odofin of Iwoland.

    The terms of agreement was adopted and read as judgment of the court presided by Justice M. A. Adeigbe on July 3.

    In the consent judgment made available to newsmen, last week, the parties agreed  “that the land known as Odofin family land situate, lying and being at Sekan, Agoro/Oloba Village Road, Iwo Osun State bonded in the right by Akinrin family farmland, on the left by Modasa family farmland, in the front by Bamolu family farmland and at the back by Ajigbagun family farmland and more particularly delineated on Plan No. OS/297/2010/DS 01 drawn and signed by A. A. Adeyemi, a Surveyor on 09/03/2010 belongs to Odofin family of Odofin’s Compound, Gidigbo Quarters, Kajola Area, Iwo Town, Iwo Local Government, Osun State.

    “That both plaintiffs and defendants are members of Odofin’s Compound, Gidigbo Quarters, Kajola area, Iwo Town, Iwo Local Government, Osun State.

    “That these terms shall be entered as the judgment of this Honourable Court and parties shall bear their own costs,” the judgment read in parts.

    Earlier, counsel to the two parties, Dr. Kehinde Adekunle and Mr. E. A. Gbadegesin, holding brief for I. T. Tewogbade, informed the court of the amicable resolution.