NJC panel to grill Judge Sept.
Following recent
conflicting rulings over the governorship tussle in Abia State and the
leadership crises rocking the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, by Justice
Okon Abang of the federal High Court Abuja, the National Judicial
Council, NJC, has commenced discreet investigations on the judge.
Justice
Abang is to face an NJC panel September. A highly placed Judiciary
source at the weekend told Nigerian Pilot Sunday that some chieftain of
the leading opposition party, PDP, have petitioned the Chief Justice of
Nigeria, CJN, Justice Mahmud Mohammed and the NJC over alleged
misconduct and abuse of office by Justice Abang.
According to the
source, the NJC has already commenced secret investigation following
the controversy in the botched convention of the PDP and the ruling that
led to the sacking of Abia governor ,Okezie Ikpeazu, who was restored
by the Appeal Court Thursday last week.
The source further
added that the NJC in its September meeting will constitute a full blown
panel that will grill the embattled controversial judge.
The
Court of Appeal, Abuja division, restored Dr Okezie Ikpeazu as the duly
elected governor of Abia State just as the court set aside the judgment
of justice Okon Abang of the federal high court which on June 27th
removed the governor from office.
Justice Abang removed
Ikpeazu from office on account of supplying false information to obtain
his party nomination for the 2015 governorship election.
The
appellate court however, voided the legal action of justice Abang on the
grounds that the originating summons relied upon by the judge to give
the judgment did not comply with any known law in the country .
Justice Ibrahim Shata Bdliya who delivered one of the lead judgments in
an appeal filed by Ikpeazu, held that Justice Abang erred in law by
assuming jurisdiction in an originating summons that was not signed by
any identifiable legal practitioner among the three lawyers that issued
the said summons.
In the unanimous judgment of the court, the
federal high court judgment delivered on June 27th was said not to have
been competent, having been based on an originating summons that was
invalid, null and void.
Apart from not signing the originating
summons, the appeal court held that the suit filed by Dr. Samson Ogah
did not disclose any cause of action because it was filed even before
the appellant (Ikpeazu) submitted his documents to the Independent
National Electoral Commission, INEC.
Justice Bdliya agreed with
counsel to the governor, Chief Wole Olanipekunsan, that it was not the
duty of the court to begin to search for the signatory to the
originating summons to authenticate it as required by law.
Besides,
the appeal court also held that although the originating summons was
later amended, but said that an amended originating summon has no
capacity to cure a defective and incurably bad originating summons being
the foundation of the suit.
The appeal court further agreed with
Olanipekun SAN that Justice Abang erred in law by making findings at
the interlocutory level of case by taking a stance on issues in the main
suit.
“He ought not to have given the final findings at the
interlocutory level and his conclusion at the interlocutory level was a
breach of fair hearing against the appellant (Ikpeazu) who was not given
opportunity to use the substantive suit to prove his case.
The
court also upheld the submission of Olanipekun SAN that because of the
circumstances of the issues in the suit, the suit ought to have been
instituted through the use of writ where witnesses can be called to make
clarifications on the the disputed issues, rather than using
originating summons that does not require the calling of witnesses.
In
another Judgment by Justice Helen Morenikeji Ogunwumiju, the appellate
court held that Justice Abang raped democracy in his order that the INEC
should issue a certificate of return to Dr. Samson Ogah when there was
no evidence of forgery of criminality against the appellant.
According
to the court, the judgment of Justice Abang was grossly erroneous
because it was based on inadequacy of tax receipt that cannot be visited
on the appellant (Ikpeazu).
“After reading through the
judgment several times, I was amazed at how the trial Judge arrived at
his conclusion of perjury against the appellant when there was no
evidence of forgery. To say the least, his findings are ridiculous.
“The
Judge must have sat in his chamber, unilaterally assessed and computed
the tax of the appellant and came to the conclusion that he did not pay
the required tax. But let me say that courts are not allowed to
speculate as the trial Judge has done in the instant case.
The
trial Judge spoke from both sides of his mouth when in one breath, he
claimed that he based his findings on supply of false information and in
another breath, he came to the conclusion that the appellant in this
matter committed perjury, even when there was no allegation of forgery
and no allegation that he did not pay tax.
Justice Ogunwumiju
also agreed with Olanepekun SAN, that the Federal High Court Judge
turned the head of the law upside down in his conclusion that it was the
appellant that should bear the burden of proof on the allegation made
by Ogah.
“With respect, we disagree with him (Judge) in this
conclusion because it is the person that makes allegation of falsehood
that must prove it.”
The Appeal Court also held that Justice Abang erred when he imported the phrase ‘as at when do’ into the PDP 2014 guidelines.
“The
Judge would not have imported the phrase into his findings if he had
seen the copy of the PDP guideline. In this case, he violated the PDP
guideline”.
“From whatever angle one looks at the judgment of
the trial Judge, the decision of his court was grossly erroneous. The
inadequacies of the tax receipt cannot be visited on Ikpeazu who scored
the highest votes in the 2015 governorship elections as doing so will
amount To Molest of democracy.”
In all, the appeal court set
aside the judgment of Justice Abang delivered on June 27 for being a
nullity and a miscarriage of justice that must not be allowed in law.
The court also awarded various sums of money against Ogah as cost.
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