In a judgment lasting three
tension-soaked hours, the Appeal Court, Abuja, resolved the controversy
surrounding the governorship ticket of the Ondo Peoples Democratic Party
in favour of Mr. Eyitayo Jegede, sending the PDP supporters in the
40-year-old state into wild jubilation.
The judgment delivered on Wednesday by
the Justice Ibrahim Saulawa-led three-member panel lifted the pall of
uncertainty hanging over the governorship ticket that had pitted
business mogul, Jimoh Ibrahim, against a Senior Advocate of Nigeria,
Eyitayo Jegede.
In the landmark judgment, the Court of
Appeal sitting in Abuja set aside the judgment of the Federal High Court
in Abuja by which the Independent National Electoral Commission had
declared Ibrahim the PDP’s governorship candidate for the November 26
election in Ondo StateThe three-man panel of the appeal court
in a unanimous judgment, upheld the appeal by Jegede, who was earlier
dropped by INEC and replaced with Ibrahim, as the governorship candidate
of the party.
In a separate judgment delivered by the
panel, the appeal court also upheld the appeal by a factional chairman
of the party, Ahmed Makarfi, and the secretary of the faction, Ben Obi,
against the judgment of the Federal High Court, recognising Biyi Poroye
and eight others as state executive members of the party in their
various states.
All the three Justices on the panel,
Justice Saulawa, Justice George Mbaba and Ignatius Agube, agreed on the
decisions reached on the two judgments.
Poroye and others who are backing
Ibrahim as the governorship candidate of the party belong to the Ali
Modu Sheriff faction of the PDP.
Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High
Court, Abuja, had on June 29, 2016, delivered a judgment recognising
Poroye and others as the authentic state executive members of the PDP in
their various states.
Subsequently, the judge, in a
post-judgment ruling delivered on October 14, 2016, ordered INEC to drop
Jegede and substitute him with Ibrahim as the governorship candidate of
the PDP in the election slated for Saturday.
Justice Saulawa, in setting aside the two decisions on Wednesday, described them as “highly misplaced and most fraudulent”.
He resolved all the seven issues
formulated for determination in favour of Jegede, describing the failure
of the judge to grant fair hearing to Jegede, who was not a party to
the suit before the Federal High Court, as “violent attitudinal
disposition to rule of law.”
He said the judge committed a “grave
error by violating the principles of natural justice” which he said
required all parties that could be affected by an order of court to be
heard before judgment was delivered.
Another member of the panel, Justice
George Mbaba, who read the lead judgment on Makarfi’s appeal, also
described Justice Abang’s judgment, as a “charade and fraud”.
Justice Mbaba ruled, “The entire
proceedings leading to the judgment delivered on June 29, 2016, were, in
my view, a fraud and it was intended to defraud the appellants. It
appeared to be arranged by the same people who paraded as the plaintiffs
and tthe defendants.
“The first to ninth respondents (Poroye and others) did not have a proper course of action.”
He noted that Justice Abang was “a willing party to achieve an ignoble goal”.
The appeal court held that Justice Abang
acted without jurisdiction when he made orders against those that were
not parties before him.
The panel also faulted the order granted
in favour of Ibrahim on the grounds that the governorship candidate of
the Sheriff faction was never a party to the suit and the prayer asking
that he be recognised as the governorship candidate was not sought by
the plaintiffs.
Justice Saulawa held that Justice Abang contravened judicial principles by granting an order not sought by the party.
He said Justice Abang, having earlier in
the main judgment delivered on June 29, ruled that the recognition he
granted Poroye and others as state executive members of the party was
with respect to the 2019 general election, the judge on his own, in his
October 14, 2016 ruling, “targeted his orders at the November 26
governorship election”.
“The court mistook his robe for that of
Father Christmas and was handing out orders like Christmas gifts,”
Justice Saulawa ruled.he appeal court also nullified the
primary said to have been conducted by the Poroye-led state executive of
the Sheriff faction of the party which produced Ibrahim as the
governorship candidate of the party in the state.
The appeal court described the primary
that produced Ibrahim as an “illegal contraption” with “no legal effect
or equitable remedy”, adding that the only valid primary could be the
one conducted by the National Working Committee of any political party.
The court also held that the provisions
of section 287 on which the October 14 post-judgment ruling was based
could not be applied for judgment enforcement as Justice Abang did,
describing the proceedings as fraudulent.
The court also dismissed Exhibits B21, B23 and B24 relied on by Abang as inadmissible because they were not properly certified.
Justice Saulawa ruled, “Having come this
far. Having resolved each and all the total number of seven issues in
favour of the appellant, Mr. Eyitayo Jegede (SAN), what else should the
court do?
“Against the background of the
foregoing, there is no gainsaying the fact that the appeal is
meritorious and it is hereby allowed.”
But the court said it could not make any
“consequential order” because Jegede’s lawyer, Chief Wole Olanipekun
(SAN), only prayed the court to allow the appeal and set aside the order
of Justice Abang of the Federal High Court and nothing more.
Justice Saulawa explained that a court
was not allowed to make an order not sought by parties, adding that
Jegede’s prayer in his notice of appeal“is incongruous” with the prayers his lawyers asked the court to grant during hearing.
Justice Saulawa ruled, “The reliefs are
incongruous and rather mutually exclusive. It is the law that the court
does not grant the prayers not sought by parties.”
The Supreme Court had on Tuesday given
the Justice Ibrahim Saulawa panel of the Court of Appeal in Abuja, which
was handling the various cases relating to the dispute over the PDP
governorship ticket in the forthcoming election in Ondo State, the nod
to continue with its proceedings.
In two separate rulings, the five-man
panel of the apex court led by the acting Chief Justice of Nigeria,
Justice Walter Onnoghen, unanimously dismissed the motions asking for a
stay of the appeal court’s proceedings and others seeking an order
disbanding the Justice Saulawa panel.
The two categories of motions dismissed by the apex court on Tuesday were filed by nine applicants led by Poroye.
The apex court arrived at the decisions
when 14 separate appeals relating to the dispute over the PDP’s
governorship ticket for the forthcoming election in Ondo State came up
for hearing on Tuesday.
Other members of the Supreme Court’s
panel – Justices Tanko Muhammad, Kumai Akaahs, Kudirat Kekereekun and
Ejembi Eko – all agreed with the lead rulings readby Justice Onnoghen.
I’ll get judgment at Supreme Court –Ibrahim
Jimoh Ibrahim has reacted to the
judgment which ordered INEC to remove his name as the candidate of the
PDP in Saturday’s governorship election in Ondo State.
Ibrahim said in a statement shortly after the judgment that he was sure of getting justice at the Supreme Court.
He said there was no way the incumbent
Governor of Ondo State, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, would succeed himself by
planting Jegede as his successor.
His statement read in part, “I have read
the decision of the Court of Appeal delivered today (Wednesday). We
have nothing to lose as the Supreme Court sits on the same case
tomorrow. We shall get justice at the Supreme Court and if the PDP wins
Saturday election, we shall have our four-year mandate to rule Ondo
State.
Jubilation
No sooner had the judgment been delivered than wild jubilation broke out among Jegede’s loyalists in Akure.
Hundreds of women stormed the INEC office at Alagbaka, in the state capital to jubilate the ruling.
From Oyemekun Road to NEPA, Arakale,
Alagbaka, Isikan, Oluwatuyi, Ijapo, Stadium Road, Hospital Road, Owode,
Araromi, and Ilesa Garage areas, hundreds of jubilant supporters of
Jegede trooped out singing and dancing.
The supporters, who displayed posters
and campaign banners of Jegede, sang and danced in front of the INEC
office while the armed security operatives deployed there monitored them
closely.
Ibrahim’s party secretariat deserted
The campaign secretariat of Ibrahim was deserted following the ruling by the appeal court.
Our correspondent, who visited the
secretariat around 4pm observed that although few cars branded in the
posters of Ibrahim were parked in the front of the campaign office,
people inside the office were less than 20.
The secretariat of the Poroye-led
executive of the PDP, which is some few metres away from Ibrahim’s
campaign office, was also deserted.
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