Chief Mark Olugbemi Obada & Ors. V. Military Governor Of Kwara State & Ors. (1994) LLJR-SC

Chief Mark Olugbemi Obada & Ors. V. Military Governor Of Kwara State & Ors. (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

BELGORE, J.S.C.

The plaintiffs in the trial court are the appellants here as they were in the Court of Appeal, Kaduna branch. They all come from a village called Ponyan, then in Kwara State but now in Kogi State. Their complaint is that they have three ruling house who in rotation supply the Chief (Oba) of the town.

The ruling houses, according to them, are ILARO, OTUN AND ODO-OJA. The first two had supplied the last two Chiefs and it was then the turn of Odo-Oja to nominate a Chief and that the kingmakers, who the then appellants claim to be, nominated one D. L. Obasa as Oba of Ponyan. This name, as a formality was forwarded to kwara State Government for approval. But contrary to this advice to Government, the “first and second defendants” appointed the third respondent.

Chief Ezekiel Omoboye Omopariola as Oba of Ponyan by Edict No 2 of 1988, an Edict the plaintiffs claim to be aware of only in Court at Lokoja on 23rd March, 1988. As a result the plaintiffs/appellants had to amend their Statement of Claim, It appears that there was a previous ruling in the same matter against the appellants at the same Lokoja High Court on this subject matter which they never appealed. The present appeal therefore arose out of a new cause whose claims are as follows:

“Whereof the plaintiffs claim against the defendants jointly or severally as follows:

“1. A declaration that under Kwara State Edict No. 3 of 1988 the plaintiffs having paid N10,000 are entitled to challenge the validity of the appointment of the 3rd defendant as Oba of Ponyan by the 1st and 2nd defendants.

  1. A declaration that the appointment of the 3rd defendant as Oba of Ponyan by the 1st and 2nd defendants is null and void and of no effect.
  2. A declaration that the appointment of Mr. D. L. Obasa as Oba of Ponyan by the kingmakers of Ponyan village is valid and subsisting.
  3. A declaration that the three Ruling Houses in Ponyan are ILARO, OTUN AND ADO-OJA and not Omo-Agbon, Omo-oga and Ishima.
  4. An injunction restraining the 3rd defendant from parading or presenting himself as the Oba of Pony an village in Oyi local Government Area of Kwara State or from performing any functions relating to or connected with the Oba of Ponyan stool.”

Against this the defendants/respondents raised preliminary objections in their statement of defence that

“1. the High Courts Jurisdiction has been ousted by virtue of S.5 Decree No. 1 of 1984 and Ss. 1, 2(b) (1) of Decree No. 13 of 1984.

  1. the High Court of Kwara State, sitting at Lokoja judicial Division, had on 3rd May, 1988, ruled that it had no jurisdiction in a similar matter by the appellants and that they have not appealed against that decision. A similar ruling on identical points of law by the Kwara High Court was upheld by Court of Appeal in appeal No CA/K/150/86 on 7th June, 1988.”

Learned trial Judge decided that he had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit and relied on the Decree No.1 of 1984. An appeal was lodged at Court of Appeal, Kaduna branch which dismissed the appeal and affirmed the decision of High Court of Kwara State. For clarity, the following grounds of appeal were filed:

“GROUNDS OF APPEAL

  1. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law by affirming the trial court’s decision that the court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the appellants’ claims.

Particulars

(i) The appellants have legal right under Kwara State Edict No.3 of 1988 to challenge the validity of the appointment of the 3rd respondent after complying with the conditions thereunder.

(ii) Kwara State Edict No. 3 of 1988 is not inconsistent with any Decree or the unsuspended provisions of the 1979 constitution.

(iii) The respondent cannot challenged the validity of Kwara State Edict No. 3 1988 which conferred legal right on the citizens of Kwara State by virtue of Decree No. 1 of 1984.

(iv) Under Decree No. 1 of 1984 the 1st respondent has power only to make amend, or repeal an Edict but not to challenge its validity.

(v) Under Decree 1 & 13 of 1984 the Kwara State Edict No 2 of 1988 can be challenged if the appellants can pin-point its inconsistencies with the Decree or the unsuspended provisions of the 1979 constitution of Nigeria and the court has jurisdiction to look into such inconsistencies.

(vi) It is the plaintiffs’ claim which determines the jurisdiction of the court without recourse to the defendants answer.

(vii) The Court of Appeal misconstrued Decree No. 13 of 1984.

  1. The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law when they held that the trial court was right by not making a ruling on the payment of non-refundable N10,000 made by the appellants.

Particulars

A court must resolve and make findings on all the issues that arise for determination before it.

  1. RELIEFS SOUGHT FROM SUPREME COURT

To allow the appeal and order the High Court to hear the case on its merits.”

On these grounds of appeal the appellants formulated the following issues for determination:

“ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION

The issues for determination are respectfully formulated as follows:

Whether the Court of Appeal Kaduna was right in holding that the trial court was right by not making any finding on the payment of non-refundable N10.000 made by the appellants.

2.(a) Without even canvassing issue of inconsistencies whether the appellants cannot succeed on a lone ground that having paid nonrefundable sum of N10.000 under Kwara State Edict No.3 of 1988 they are entitled to challenge the appointment of the 3rd respondent as Oba of Ponyan. And also, whether a Governor can challenge in a Court of Law the validity of an Edict promulgated by him.

IN THE ALTERNATIVE

(b) Whether the simpliciter rule that an Edict cannot be challenge applies to this case having regard to the pleadings and inconsistencies of Edict No.2 of 1988 with Decree No.1 of 1984 and unsuspended provisions of the 1979 Nigerian Constitution raised by the appellants.”

On the issues, one has to have a look at what has been the effect of Chiefs (Appointment and Deposition) (Amendment) Edict 1988 of Kwara State amending an Edict No.8 of 1985 by inserting a new section 15 reading as follows:

“15.(1)Where the Military Governor or the appointing authority has approved the appointment of a person as a Chief, any person who intends to challenge the validity of such appointment shall first deposit with the State Accountant-General a non-refundable sum often ten thousand Naira.

(2) Where the Military Governor or the appointing authority has not approved any appointment to a vacant chieftaincy stool, any aggrieved person who institutes any court action in connection with the vacant chieftaincy stool and join the State Government or any of its agency as a party to any such court action shall first deposit with the State Accountant-General a non-refundable fee of ten thousand Naira.”

The argument of the appellants is that having paid a non-refundable fee of ten thousand Naira to the State Accountant-General. it was in law entitled to be heard on its action in court. The contention is that once the deposit is made, the parties action must be heard irrespective of any law or even the constitution. This to my mind, is stating too wide the intendment of the Section 15 Chiefs (Appointment and Deposition) Law as amended (Supra). All laws in this country flow from the Constitution and any law inconsistent in any part with the Constitution is void to the extent of such inconsistency. Military Governor, Ondo State & Anor. v. Victor Adegoke Adewunmi (1985) 3 NWLR (Pt.13) 493: (1988) 6 SCNJ 151. 163 (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt.82) 280; Garba v. Governor of Kaduna State & Anor. (1986) 4 NWLR (Pt.373). That is the position normally in a democratic form of Government whereby the constitution is supreme. In the abnormal situation of a military regime a different situation arises where the Constitution itself is subordinate to the Decree of Federal Military Government and in some cases even to the Edict of a State Government. The Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree (No.1 of 1984) in section 5 thereof provides:

“5. No question as to the validity of this or any other Decree or of any Edict shall be entertained by any court in Nigeria’”

The provision of this section may sound wide considering the supremacy given to an Edict of a State Government. But it is not so wide as provisions of the same Decree No. 1 say:

“2 (2) The Military Governor of a State-

(a) shall not have power to make laws with respect to any matter included in the Exclusive legislative List: and

(b) except with prior consent of Federal Military Government shall not make any law with respect to any matter in the Concurrent Legislative List relating to Federal Legislative Powers set out in the second column of part II of the second schedule of the Constitution.

(3) Subject to subsection (2) above and to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1979, the Military governor of a state shall have power to make laws for the peace, order and good government of that state.

(4) If any law-

(a) ……………………..

(b) made after that date (i.e. 31st December, 1983) by the Military Governor of a State is inconsistent with any law –

(i) Validly made by the National Assembly before that date or having effect as if so made, or

(ii) Made by the Federal Military Government on or after that date, the law made as mentioned in sub-paragraph (i) and (ii) above shall prevail and the State law shall, to the extent of inconsistency, be void.”

It is upon the foregoing that the Court of Appeal held in Governor of Ondo State & Anor v. Adewunmi (supra) that the Edict No 11 of Ondo State 1984 in section (117) thereof pointedly violated the Constitution a decision the Supreme Court upheld in 1988 and reported in (1988) 3 NWLR. Part 82. at page 280, a decision of the full court. Chief Adebiyi Adejumo v. H.E. Col Mobolaji Johnson (1972) 3 SC. 47. In the instant appeal, what was challenged is not ouster clause by virtue of first issue for determination, but the fact that the court ought to have assumed jurisdiction to try the matter as if the payment of a prescribed fee bought off instantly the lack of jurisdiction. Section 15 of Chiefs (Appointment and Deposition) Law of Kwara State is a condition precedent for litigation on chieftaincy matters in Kwara State and it relates only to fees to be paid. The courts below (High Court of Kwara and Court of Appeal) have had occasions to pronounce on the validity of this section. What is before this court is that the Court of Appeal ought to have pronounced on: this with great respect is not a ground of appeal but a mere speculative adventure. The belief by the appellants that by merely fulfiling the conditions in Edict No.2 of 1988 they automatically must be heard is erroneous.

All that the payment of fee N10,000.00 is for is to have access to the court to be heard. It is a different thing if once the access is thus procured for the court to have jurisdiction to look into the cause of action. No action could be filed without payment of a fee and it is after an action is filed that the preliminary issue of jurisdiction can be raised. Being a fundamental matter, issue of jurisdiction must be addressed at the earliest opportunity, for any hearing proceeded upon without jurisdiction is a wasteful exercise. It is however possible that issue of jurisdiction may in certain matters, not be clear, but once it arises it must be addressed by either or all the parties and by the court suo motu and in the process hearing the parties on it before proceeding further. Oredoyin v. Arowolo (1989) 4 NWLR (Pt.114) 172. Oloba v. Akereja (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt.84) 508. The issue is so important that to fail to address it at the earliest stage may, if court has not got the jurisdiction, render the entire proceedings null and void. It is a substantive matter that must be addressed promptly, Ojokolobo v. Alamu (1987) 3 NWLR (Pt.61) 377: Chacharos v. Ekimpex Ltd. (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt.68) 88.

To return to the Edict No.2 of 1988 by the Governor of Kwara State, is the Governor competent to make the Edict The Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree, No.1 of 1984. provides in section 2(3) as follows:

“2(3) Subject to subsection (2) above and to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria the Military governor of a State shall have power to make laws for the peace, order and good government of that state,”

The Section 2 of the Decree No. 1 of 1984 has earlier been quoted in full in this judgment. What is the effect of Edict No.2 of 1988. It is pertinent to be quoted in full:

‘The Military Governor of the KWARA STATE OF NIGERIA HEREBY MAKES THE FOLLOWING Edict:-

Whereas the Oyi Traditional Council has after consultation with the leaders of the Ponyan Ruling Houses recorded in writing a declaration of what in its opinion is the customary law relating to the selection of the Oba of Ponyan and has submitted such declaration to the Military Governor, together with recommendation regarding the selection of a new Oba of Ponyan.

AND WHEREAS the military Governor is satisfied that the recommendation and the declaration relating to the selection of the Oba Ponyan from one of the three Ruling Houses (Ebis) are neither repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience nor incompatible in its terms or by necessary implication, with any enactment.

NOW THEREFORE, in exercise of the powers conferred on me by Section 75 of the Local Government Edict, 1976 and section 3 of the Chiefs Appointment and Deposition Law and of all other powers enabling me in that behalf, I Group Captain Ibrahim Alkali, Military Governor, Kwara State of Nigeria hereby make the following Edict:-

  1. This Edict may be cited as the Oba of Ponyan (Chief E.O. Omopariola) (Appointment etc.) Edict, 1988 and shall deemed to have come into force on the 3rd day of January, 1988.
  2. Chief Ezekiel Omoboye Omopariola, is hereby appointed the Oba of Ponyan with effect from 16th December, 1987.
  3. The declaration of Customary Law contained in the Schedule to this Edict shall be the Customary Law relating to the selection of the Oba of Ponyan where such selection is to be made from anyone of the three Ruling Houses (Ebis).

SCHEDULE

There are three Ruling houses (Ebis). namely-

(i) the omo Agbon (Jakan):

(ii) the Omo Oga (Lagun) current Ruling House:

and

(iii) the Ishima (Were-oba).

and the appointment of the Oba of Ponyan shall continue to be made in rotation from these three Ruling Houses (Ebis).

(2) When the post of Oba of Ponyan becomes vacant, such vacancy shall be declared by the Shaba who under normal circumstances would be the Oba’ s successor.

(3) The Shaba shall thereafter assume the responsibility for the administration of the town until he is formally confirmed or otherwise as the Oba of Ponyan by the Ponyan Kingmakers.

(4) The Council of Princes which consists of members drawn from the following ruling Houses (Ebis), namely-

(i) Omo Agbon (Jakan);

(ii) Omo Oga (Lagun); and

(iii) Ishima (Were-Oba).

shall invite, collate and screen nominations from the royal household including the incumbent Shaba and forward particulars of same to the kingmakers

  1. (1) The Kingmakers shall consist of-

(i) Chief Olukotun from Omo-Agbon (Jakan)

(ii) Chief Okohi from Omo-Oga (Lagun); and

(iii) Chief Akogun from Ishima (Were-Oba)

  1. It shall be the duty of the Kingmakers-

(i) to screen the nominated candidates in order to ascertain their suitability or otherwise:

(ii) Consult other Senior Chiefs and Elders from the three Ruling Families and formally present the nominated candidate:

perform all the necessary traditional rituals:

(iii) forward the recommendations with authenticated minutes.

(iv) to the Traditional Council.

When the Oyi Traditional Council receives a nomination from the Kingmakers and the candidate is in all respects considered suitable and therefore recommendable, the Oyi Traditional Council shall then take steps to inform the Local Government Area in writing. The Oyi local Government Area shall thereafter issue the appointment papers and announce the appointment in the news-media.”

The Edict is a sort of double barrel proclamation of the Native Law and Custom of Ponyan on appointment of their Chief after necessary investigations have been made and the acceptance of traditional Council of Oyi’s recommendation approved the appointment of a new Chief. The Edict, to my mind, was properly made by the Military Governor of Kwara State as by doing so he has not contravened any part of the Constitution, Chieftaincy matters are with in the powers of State government and unless the exercise of the powers is inconsistent with the Constitution as it is now, it cannot be challenged. The Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree No.1 of 1984 provides in Section 5 as follows:

“5. No question as to the validity of this or any other Decree or any Edict shall be entertained by any Court of law in Nigeria”

This is part of the Military Governor’s power to make laws for the peace, order and good government with the state he rules. Unless the exercise of the power is inconsistent with a Federal military Government Decree and Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree 1984, there shall he no question a, to the validity of a Military Governor’s Edict in any court of law, That is the purport of Federal Military Government (Supremacy and Enforcement of Powers) Decree (No.13) of 1984;

“WHEREAS the military revolution which took place on 31st December 1983 effectively abrogated the whole pre-existing legal order in Nigeria except what has been preserved under the Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree 1984;

AND WHEREAS the military revolution aforesaid involved an abrupt political change which was not within the contemplation of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1979 (thereafter in this Decree referred to as the Constitution”);

AND WHEREAS by the Constitution suspension (Suspension and Modification) Decree 1984 aforesaid there was established a new government known as the “Federal military Government”‘ with absolute power, to make laws for the peace, order and good government of Nigeria or any part thereof with respect to any matter whatsoever and, in exercise or the said powers, the said Federal Military Government permitted certain provisions of the said Constitution to remain in operation:

AND WHEREAS by section 5 or the said Constitution (Suspension and Modification) Decree 1984, no question as to the validity or any Decree (in so far as by section 2(4) thereof the provisions of the Edict are not inconsistent with the provisions of a Decree) shall be entertained by any court of law in Nigeria:

AND WHEREAS by section 1(2) of the said Constitution and Modification) Decree 1984 provisions of a Decree shall prevail over those of the unsuspended provisions of the said Constitution:

Now, THEREFORE, THE FEDERAL MILITARY GOVERNMENT hereby decrees as follows:-

1(1) The preamble hereto is hereby affirmed and declared as forming part of this Decree.

(2) It is hereby declared also that-

(a) for the efficacy and stability of the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and

(b) with a view to assuring the effective maintenance of the territorial integrity of Nigeria and the peace, order and good government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria-

(i) no civil proceedings shall lie or be instituted in any court for or on account of or in respect of any act, matter or thing done or purported to be done under or pursuant to any Decree or Edict and if any such proceedings are instituted before, or on after the commencement of this Decree the proceeding, shall be discharged and made void.

(ii) the question whether any provision of Chapter IV of the Constitution has been, is being or would be contravened by anything done or proposed to be done in pursuance of any Decree or an Edict shall not be inquired into in any court of law and. Accordingly, no provision of the Constitution shall apply in respect of any such question.

  1. This Decree may he cited as the Federal Military Government (Suspension and Enforcement of Powers) Decree 1984″.

Even though the Edict No.2 (supra) have not got ouster provisions, by the nature of the exercise of his powers therein, just as in Edict No. 3 (supra), the Edicts are within the ambit of law, order and good government that the Military Governor can make laws for Governor of Ondo State and Anor v. Adewunmi (supra) is not on all fours with this. Chiefs Edict (Ondo State) No. 11 of 1984 is a completely different type of legislation and in S.11 (5) & (7) thereof it blatantly ousted the jurisdiction of any court. The Edict No.11 was declared unconstitutional and rightly so. Much care and prudence went into Kwara State Edicts No.2 and No.3 of 1988.

I find no reason whatsoever to interfere with the decision of the lower courts and this appeal is accordingly dismissed. I award N1,000.00 as costs against the appellants.


SC.131/1990

Monday Chukwu V. The State (1994) LLJR-SC

Monday Chukwu V. The State (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

ADIO, J.S.C.

The charge preferred against the appellant at the High Court, Imo State, Owerri Judicial Division, was murder contrary to section 319 of the Criminal code, Cap. 30 of the Laws of Eastern Nigeria, 1963, applicable in Imo State. The allegation against him was that he, on the 6th day of September, 1980, along Owu Mbaise Road in Owerri Judicial Division unlawfully murdered one Vincent Chukwu.

When the charge was read and explained to the appellant, for his plea, he pleaded:

“I murdered him by right.”

The learned trial Judge, in view of the plea of the appellant, entered a plea of “not guilty” for the appellant. The evidence led by the prosecution was that on the 6th day of September, 1980, at about 5.30 p.m., the 1st P.W., was going from her home in Ikeduru to a maternity home in Mbaise when she saw the appellant hiding in a bush. The deceased was riding a bicycle towards the place where the appellant was hiding. When the deceased got there the appellant came out of the bush and attacked the deceased with a stick. The deceased fell down and the 1st P.W., ran home for assistance. The corpse of the deceased was found at the scene of the incident and was removed to the hospital for post-mortem examination. The deceased was the father of the 1st P.W. and the appellant was her uncle. He (the appellant) was a brother of the deceased.

The appellant, in his statement to the police, Exhibit “A”, and in his oral evidence in the court, agreed that he attacked the deceased. He gave reasons for the aforesaid attack and he alleged that it was the deceased who first attacked him.

There was evidence that the appellant was once mentally ill and that he had been cured since 1977 when he returned home. Since then it did not appear that there was a relapse.

The learned trial Judge, after due consideration of the evidence before him, found the appellant guilty of the charge and sentenced him to death. He held that the death of the deceased was caused by the act of the appellant. He considered whether any of the usual defences, such as provocation, self-defence and insanity, was available to the appellant and came to the conclusion that none of them was available to him. Dissatisfied with the judgment of the learned trial Judge, the appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal which dismissed the appeal. He has further appealed to this court.

In accordance with the rules of this court, the parties duly filed and exchanged briefs. Two issues were identified for determination in the appellant’s brief and two issues were identified for determination in the respondent’s brief.

The two issues for determination identified in the appellant’s brief, which were based on the grounds of appeal, as suitably amended, are sufficient for the determination of this appeal. They are follows:-

(1) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in endorsing the way in which the learned trial Judge dealt with the plea of the appellant.

(2) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the decision of the learned trial Judge that there was no evidence that the appellant was mentally ill at the time that he killed the deceased.

The question under the first issue is whether the Court of Appeal was right in endorsing the way in which the learned trial Judge dealt with the plea of the appellant. The learned trial Judge caused the charge to be read and explained to the appellant. That was on the 30th September, 1983 and the following was the plea of the appellant as recorded by the learned trial Judge:

” murdered him by right.”

The learned trial Judge entered a plea of “not guilty”‘ and ordered that the appellant, who alleged that he could not financially afford a counsel, should be assigned a counsel to defend him. That was the end of that aspect of the matter as far as the proceedings before the learned trial Judge were concerned.

The Court of Appeal gave consideration to the foregoing aspect of this appeal and Onu. J.C.A .. (as he then was) reading the lead judgment stated inter alia, as follows:-

“I will begin the consideration of this appeal by saying that the duty of a court is to record the evidence and events in proceedings before it including the recording of the accused person’s plea in the exact words of the accused …. This accords with what obtains in sections 156 and 157 (1) of the Criminal Procedure Code, applicable in the Northern States of Nigeria, the former which is in pari materia with the provisions of section 215 of the Criminal Procedure Law, Cap, 31 of the Laws of Eastern Nigeria 1963 applicable to Imo State. Be that as it may, I take the firm view and so agree with the respondent’s submission that this duty to record everything does not override the practice of entering a plea of ‘Not guilty’ in a capital offence irrespective of overt admission by an accused that he committed the offence”.

After stating that the procedure adopted by the learned trial Judge did not breach the rule of fair hearing as defined in section 33 of the 1979 Constitution. His Lordship pointed out that the appellant had not shown how the plea of the appellant as recorded had affected the mind of the learned trial Judge in his judgment. On the question whether or not the appellant was fit to plead, His Lordship stated, inter alia as follows:-

“On fitness of the appellant mentally to stand his trial, no reason was adduced and nothing on the record suggests, that he was either mentally impaired or that he was unfit to plead. Hence, the test was inapplicable. See Iboko v. The State (1965) NMLR 384 … A trial Judge need not carry out an investigation on the mental condition to determine the sanity or insanity of an accused if there is no reason to make him suspect that the accused is of unsound mind……… Hence, the presumption of sanity, in my view, prevailed and all I can venture to say about the plea in the exact words of the appellant recorded at his trial simply amounts to justification in self defence rather than even a plea of guilty as canvassed by the appellant and therefore does not raise the issue of a plea of “guilty” and ‘not guilty’ all in a wrap or at a go.”

The submission in the appellant’s brief was that the learned trial Judge erred in law in recording the exact statement of the appellant. when he was asked to plead to the charge. instead of entering a plea of not guilty which would have warranted the application of or compliance with section 217 of the Criminal Procedure Law, Cap. 31 of the Laws of the Eastern Nigeria, 1963. The appellant complained that the Court of Appeal erred in law in endorsing what the learned trial Judge did and in using the legal principle applicable to a civil matter to determine a criminal case and in applying the provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code of Northern Nigeria to a criminal case to which the Criminal Procedure Law of Eastern Nigeria, 1963, applied. Finally, it was submitted that the Court of Appeal failed to appreciate that the irregularity in the recording of the plea of the appellant by the learned trial Judge affected the mind of the Judge and led him to return a verdict of guilty in the case.

In the view of the appellant, the learned trial Judge treated the plea of the appellant as a plea of guilty.

The submission in the respondent’s brief was that the Court of Appeal was right in endorsing the act of the learned trial Judge in recording verbatim what the appellant stated in response to his being asked to plead to the charge, and in entering a plea of ‘not guilty’ for him and that by allowing the trial of the appellant to proceed on that basis the learned trial Judge had enabled the provision of section 217 of the Criminal Procedure Law to be complied with. It was also argued that a trial Judge was not under any obligation to investigate the fitness of an accused to stand his trial where there was no reason to suspect that the accused was insane.

One really can’t see the substance in the complaint against the recording, verbatim, by the learned trial Judge, which was endorsed by the Court of Appeal, of what the appellant said in response to his being requested to plead to the charge that was read and explained to him. It was not shown in what way the recording, verbatim, of the appellant’s plea had adversely affected the appellant or prejudiced his case. The situation is the same in relation to the entering of a plea of “not guilty” by the learned trial Judge for the appellant in the circumstance and which was endorsed by the Court of Appeal. On the question of the fitness of the appellant to plead, the provisions in Part XXIV of the Criminal Procedure Law, Cap. 31 of the Laws of Eastern Nigeria, 1963, applicable in Imo State and dealing with recording of plea are relevant. In particular, the provisions of sections 215, 217 and 220 thereof are as follows:-

“215. The person to be tried upon any charge or information shall be placed before the court unfettered unless the court shall see cause otherwise to order and the charge or information shall be read over and explained to him to the satisfaction of the court by the registrar or other officer of the court, and such person shall be called upon to plead instantly thereto, unless where the person is entitled to service of a copy of the information he objects to the want of such service and the court finds that he has not been duly served therewith.

  1. Every person by pleading generally the plea of not guilty shall without further form be deemed to have put himself upon his trial.
  2. If the accused person when called upon to plead shall stand mute of malice or will not and cannot answer directly when called upon to plead to the charge the court shall enter or cause to be entered a plea of not guilty on behalf of such person and the plea so entered shall have the same force and effect as if such person had actually pleaded the same, or else the court shall thereupon proceed to try whether the accused person be of sound or unsound mind in accordance with the provisions of Part XXV and if he shall be found to be of sound mind shall proceed with his trial.”

There is nothing irregular if, pursuant to the provisions of section 215, the plea of an accused to a charge is recorded verbatim by the learned trial Judge. That will, apart from other things, be fair to all concerned (the prosecution and the defence) and will prevent any controversy in the future about what exactly the accused said in response to the request to him to plead to the charge. It is not unusual that some accused persons, instead of making the usual and straightforward plea of “guilty” or “not guilty”, engage in making pleas which could not be regarded as direct answer to the charge. In such cases, the provision of section 220 is inter alia, that a plea of ‘not guilty’ should be entered on behalf of such an accused person and that the plea so entered shall have the same force and effect as if such person had actually pleaded the same. Where that is the case, the provision of section 217 of the Law will become applicable and it is that every person by pleading generally the plea of not guilty shall without further form be deemed to have put himself upon this trial.

Pleas which could not be regarded as direct answers to the charge take various forms. There was the once notorious or popular plea of “guilty with explanation.” It has been found that in some cases, the explanation, subsequently given after a plea of “not guilty” has been entered for such an accused, in fact, showed that the accused was innocent. See R. v. Ingleson, (1915) 1 K.B. 512. Each case depends upon its own facts and circumstances. What the accused says in response to his being requested to plead to the charge, instead of a plea of “guilty” or “not guilty” depends on the impression that he wants to give to the court. He may want to give the impression that he was justified in doing what he did. He may be merely play – acting as in Eledan v. The State, (1964) All N.L.R 138 or be really insane. It is only where a Judge, holding a trial, has reason to suspect that the accused is of unsound mind and consequently incapable of making his defence that the Judge is required by section 223 of the Criminal Procedure Law, in the first instance, to investigate the fact of such unsoundness of mind. In law, every person is presumed to be sane. In the present case, there was evidence that the appellant was once insane and there was also evidence that he had been cured long before the day of the incident and had returned home. There was no evidence of a lapse.

Indeed, the statement, Exhibit “A”, which he made to the police soon after the time of the incident showed that he alleged certain reasons for doing what he did. Whether those reasons were true or genuine is a different matter. The appellant stated in the statement, inter alia. as follows:-

“I was the person who killed my Senior brother Vincent Chukwu (m) of the same address by giving him first blows all over his body including his chest while riding his bicycle along Owu Mbaise road. The reason why I killed him was because he has (sic) earlier showed (sic) me some planks which he deceased will (sic) use in bury me. Moreover, there was a day the deceased my brother tied me with a rope then I managed and loose the rope. Nobody helped me to loose the rope. When I regained freedom, the deceased Mr. Vincent Chukwu went and took a cutlass in order to matchet me, but I managed to ran (sic) away. He the deceased went out and I went along Owu Mbaise road and waylaid him. Immediately I saw him riding on his bicycle, I had to give him first blows till he died. When he (sic) saw that he was dead, I returned home where by people arrested me and tied both my hands and legs. I have to add that these my relations who arrested me are as follows: Michael Nwaneze, Christopher Opara, Longinus Ugwoji and Peter Ukadiala, that is all I know.”

If the reasons alleged by the appellant for the killing of the deceased are considered along with his answer in response to his being asked to plead to the, charge and with other circumstances of the case, it is quite clear or obvious that the appellant intended to give the impression that he was justified in killing the deceased or he must merely be play-acting. He was certainly of sound mind and was consequently capable of making his defence. The Court of Appeal was, therefore, right in endorsing the way in which the learned trial Judge dealt with the plea of the appellant. There was no miscarriage of justice as a result of the error, if any, committed by the Court of Appeal in dealing with this aspect of the matter.

I now come to the question raised under the second issue which is whether the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the decision of the learned trial Judge.

That there was no evidence that the appellant was mentally ill at the time that he killed the deceased. The learned trial Judge decided, and the Court of Appeal affirmed the decision that the defence of insanity was not available to the appellant. The Court of Appeal. on the point, stated, inter alia. as follows:-

“In the instant case, evidence disclosed that sometime around 1976, (appellant in his testimony put it at around 1978, the appellant was mentally ill and that he was treated by a native doctor); further, that since his return he had behaved normally until about two days to the killing of the deceased; i.e, 16th September, 1980, when there was a quarrel between the appellant and the deceased. Nothing was said by way of defence or evidence (medical or otherwise) at the trial of the appellant’s unsoundness of mind … In which case, it needs to be stressed that the respondent’s act constituted an act of revenge (for which motive is inferable. See R. v. Blake (1942) 8 W.A.C.A. 118.”

The submission, in the appellant’s brief, was that throughout the trial of the appellant his mental state was in doubt and that the Court of Appeal wrongly placed a very high burden of proving insanity on the appellant. It was the submission of the respondent that every person is presumed to be of sound mind until the contrary is proved as provided in section 27 of the Criminal Code and that the onus of proving insanity was on the appellant. It was also submitted that there was no evidence of abnormal behaviour on the part of the appellant at the time of the incident or shortly before it or even at the trial nor, was there any evidence of a relapse of the illness of the appellant.

The onus of proving insanity as a defence is on the accused since there is a presumption that every person is sane, and to have been sane at any time in question, until the contrary is proved. See section 27 of the Criminal Code. The burden is discharged if the accused adduces evidence to show that it was probable that he was insane at the time when the offence was committed. See Udofia v. The State, (1981) 11-12 S.C. 49; Ejinima v. The State, (1991) 6 N.W.L.R. (Pt.200) 627 and Arisa v. The State (1988) 3 N.W.L.R. (Pt.83) 386 at p.400. However, one could not, in fairness to the accused, strictly limit the inquiry into the question whether the defence of insanity was available to the accused to the date on which the accused allegedly killed the deceased. Acts of the accused immediately before and after the date of the actual commission of the alleged offence are relevant. See Kure v. The State, (1988) 1 N.W.L.R. (Pt.71) 404; and Asanya v. The State, (1991) 3 N.W.L.R. (Pt.180) 422. In Kure’s case the accused was in psychiatric hospital for treatment for nine months immediately after the alleged offence. In the present case, the evidence before the court was that the appellant had mental illness but that he had been cured some years before the incident in question, He had returned home and there was no evidence of a relapse immediately before, on the day of the incident or immediately after he committed the offence, The offence was committed on the 6th of September, 1980, and on the following day, that is 7th September, 1980 the appellant made a written statement (Exhibit “A”) to the police. What the appellant said in the statement was coherent and there was nothing therein to suggest that he was insane, Further, there was no evidence that the person who obtained the statement from the appellant had difficulty in doing so.

The fact that an accused had received treatment for mental illness or for insanity in the past may or may not be relevant for the purpose of determining whether the defence of insanity is available to him. It may not be relevant if the treatment was given a long time before the commission of the offence. See Udofia’s case, supra: and Sanusi v. The State. (1984) 10 S.C. 166.

Further, whereas in this case, the accused gave reasons for committing the offence, the reasons should be given due consideration and if they are incompatible with a person whose mind is unsound, the accused has not established the defence of insanity. See Abu v. The State. (1976) 5 S.C. 21. Some of the reasons alleged by the appellant in his statement were that the deceased showed him (appellantt) some planks which the deceased would use to bury the appellant and at another time the deceased wanted to inflict injury on the appellant with a matchet but the appellant managed to escape.

When he testified orally, the appellant told the court that it was the deceased who first hit him with his bicycle. When he asked the deceased why he did that, the deceased continued to hit and beat him. So, he (appellant) was provoked and he hit the deceased with his hand and the deceased fell down. There was nothing in the reasons given by the appellant in his written statement (Exhibit “A”) or his oral evidence capable of giving the impression or of making the court suspect that the appellant was insane. The Court of Appeal was, therefore, right in affirming the decision of the learned trial Judge that there was no evidence that the appellant was mentally ill at the time that he killed the deceased.

The appeal lacks merit and the judgment of the Court of Appeal is hereby affirmed. The appeal is hereby dismissed.

UWAIS, J.S.C: I have had the privilege of reading in draft the judgment read by my learned brother Adio, J.S.C. I entirely agree. Accordingly, the appeal lacks merit and it is hereby dismissed. The judgment of the Court of Appeal is hereby affirmed.


SC.211/1992

Princewill V. The State (1994) LLJR-SC

Princewill V. The State (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

IGUH, J.S.C.

The appellant, Jeminabo A. Princewill, was on the 8th day of March, 1985 arraigned before the High court of Rivers State holden at Port Harcourt, charged with the offence of murder contrary to section 319 of the Criminal code. The particulars of the offence charged are as follows:-

“That you, Jeminabo Adokiye Princewill, on the 24th day of December, 1982 at 37, Ibadan Street, Waterside, Port Harcourt in the Port Harcourt Judicial Division murdered Ebitenyefa Clifford”.

The appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge and the case proceeded to trial.

The substance of the case as presented by the prosecution is that the deceased at all material times was the wife of the appellant. At about 8 p.m. of the 24th December, 1982, P.W4. Okoritei Amachree, who is the appellant’s brother heard him ask the deceased for his key. The deceased replied that she misplaced the key whereupon the appellant ordered her to move to the window and open it. The deceased had put one leg on the window in an attempt to enter the room when the appellant struck her with a piece of plank about two feet long, alleging that she, the deceased, had stolen and sold all his glasses. On noticing what had happened, one Perere Stanley went immediately and reported to P.W.1. Chief Princewill, the father of the appellant, that the appellant was killing his wife. P.W.1 came out and saw the appellant on top of the deceased beating her. When P.W.1 tried to intervene, the appellant, threatened to deal with him.

According to P.W.4, the appellant threw bottles at co-tenants who tried to come to the scene. P.W.1 was obliged to lodge a report at the Borokiri Police Station and subsequently at the Central Police Station, Port Harcourt. The D.P.P. and 14 Policemen who accompanied him to the scene saw the appellant’s door padlocked and returned to the station.

It seemed that P.W.1 on a closer look into the appellant’s room saw him and also noticed that his wife was dead. Following this discovery, the appellant’s house was surrounded by people, some of whom were knocking at his door. It was at this stage that the appellant escaped through his back window and disappeared. The appellant’s door was forced open and the dead body of his wife was seen inside the room in a pool of blood. Consequently P.W.1 returned to the Central Police Station, Port Harcourt and reported a case of murder.

Another batch of policemen visited the scene. They included the D.P.O., P.W.5 Inspector Wadai Ibetei who was the Investigating Police Officer (I.P.O.) and others. At the scene, P.W.1 took them to the back of the appellant’s room.

There, they saw blood stains which were trailed right into the appellant’s room.

They also saw the deceased lying dead on the floor of the appellant’s room with wounds on her head and bruises on her back. The deceased’s sister, Joyce Ogilogi, who is P.W.2 was also at the scene. The I.P.O. in company of other policemen including one Assistant Superintendent of Police (A.S.P), Robinson Obuebite, who is a relation of the deceased, P.W.1 and P.W.2 conveyed the dead body of the deceased to the General Hospital, Port Harcourt for autopsy.

On the 26th December, 1982, P.W.3, Dr. Dax Uzu, performed a postmortem examination on a certain dead body whose name he could not remember. According to him, the deceased was identified to him by one Joyce. The body was that of a young woman with multiple abrasions on the face and around the neck. She had lenial fracture of the parietal skull. The fracture measured 3-4 centimetres in length. Underlying this fracture was extensive cerebral contusion associated with haemorrhage. In his opinion, the cause of death was due to cerebral contusion and haemorrhage, P.W.S was present when the post mortem examination was performed by P.W.3, P.W.2, Joyce Ogilogi denied however that she was present when post mortem examination on the deceased was performed by P.W.3.

Following some information received by the Police, P.W.5 with three other policemen proceeded to Iwofe village where the appellant was sighted inside an uncompleted building. They surrounded the building. The appellant when he came out and saw them attempted to escape by running but he was pursued, arrested and taken to the Central Police Station, Port Harcourt. He was charged and cautioned and he volunteered the statement Exhibit B. In it, the appellant claimed that it was while he was fighting with the deceased that she fell on top of an iron and fainted. He admitted that it was himself that killed the deceased. Exhibit B was confirmed as a true and voluntary statement of the appellant to the police before a Superior Police Officer. In his viva voce evidence before the court, however, the appellant alleged that the deceased met her death when in state of intoxication she jumped out of their window and hit her head against some sticks used for the embankment.

The learned trial Judge, Ungbuku. J., as he then was, after a review of the evidence on the 2nd day of March, 1987 found the appellant guilty of murder as charged and sentenced him to death by hanging.

Dissatisfied with this judgment of the trial court, the appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division, against his conviction and sentence.

On the 6th day of July, 1992, the Court of Appeal unanimously dismissed the appeal and affirmed the conviction and sentence passed on the appellant by the trial court. It is against that judgment of the lower court that the appellant has now further appealed to this court.

The appellant on the 22nd day of July, 1992 filed an omnibus ground of appeal and this reads as follows:-

‘That my conviction and sentence by the Hon. High Court Judge and confirmed by the judges of Court of Appeal is unreasonable, unwarranted and cannot be supported having regard to the evidence”.

Both the appellant and the respondent filed and exchanged their respective written briefs of argument. In the appellant’s brief, the under-mentioned issue was formulated for the determination of this court, namely:-

“Was the Court of Appeal legally justified based on the evidence to affirm the conviction and sentence of the appellant”.

The respondent, for its own part, identified a similar issue in its brief for determination. This is couched as follows:-

“Whether the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the conviction and sentence of the appellant by the trial court”.

At the hearing of the appeal on the 5th day of May, 1994 both learned counsel for the parties adopted their briefs and made oral submissions in amplification thereof.

The main thrust of the appellant’s complaint is that there was no conclusive proof the corpse examined by P.W.3 during his post mortem examination was the body of Ebitenyefa Clifford in respect of which the appellant was tried and convicted. It is the argument of learned counsel for the appellant, E.C. Ukala Esq. that any doubt as to the body examined and for which the appellant stood could be fatal to the prosecution’s case. He explained that the learned trial judge in his judgment conceded that failure to identify the body examined by the Doctor as that of the person allegedly murdered by the appellant is a fatal omission. He pointed out that in order to make up for this omission, the learned trial judge resorted to a combination of some pieces of evidence which, at best, merely tended to suggest that the body examined by P.W.3 could be that of the deceased. He submitted that the Court of Appeal rightly observed that in the face of the denial by P.W.2. Joyce Ogilogi, that she identified the body of the deceased to the Doctor, the evidence of the said Doctor and P.W. 5 to the contrary is valueless. He claimed that it was unfortunate for the trial court to have come to the conclusion which was accepted by the Court of Appeal that there is ample evidence from which the prosecution established that the body examined by the Doctor (P. W.3) was that of the deceased. Learned appellant’s counsel next referred to what he described as discrepancies between the injuries on the body of the corpse examined by P.W.3 as against the injuries on the body of the deceased as testified to by P.W.5. He also referred to some discrepancies in connection with the mode the deceased was dressed.P.W.5 testified that the deceased was dressed in blouse and wrappers whereas P.W.3 claimed that the body which he examined in the mortuary was dressed in a skirt and blouse. Learned counsel submitted that in the absence of any evidence, the trial court was not entitled to speculate, as he did, on the possibility of a change in the deceased’s dress or hairdo. He concluded by stressing that there was no conclusive evidence that the appellant caused the death of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford or that the corpse examined by P.W.3 was that of the said Ebitenyefa Clifford.

Learned counsel for the respondent, I.I.D. Opuminji. Esq, in his brief contended that the issues now under consideration are exactly the same two issues canvassed both before the trial court and the court below in respect of which concurrent findings have been made against the appellant. These are firstly, the question of the identity of the corpse examined by P.W.3 and secondly, whether there is any nexus between the death of the deceased and the appellant. He conceded that there was a serious lapse in the identification of the deceased at the post mortem examination on her body. He pointed out that it was P.W.5 who in company of P.W.2, the deceased’s relation, A.S.P. Robinson Obuebite and other policemen conveyed the body of the deceased to the mortuary. He observed that it is noteworthy that P.W.5 was present when P.W.3 performed post mortem examination on the body of the same corpse. He therefore submitted that there is ample evidence in support of the concurrent findings of the trial court and the court below to the effect that the body P.W.3 examined was that of the deceased. He referred to the seeming discrepancies in the prosecution’s case with regard to what the deceased wore and her hairdo and dismissed these as immaterial as fading human memory with lapse of time must be recognised.

On the second arm of the issue under consideration, learned counsel submitted that the cause of death of the deceased was established by the post mortem report of P.W.3 and the direct evidence of P.W.1 and P.W 4. He referred to the appellant’s statement to the police, Exhibit B, wherein he admitted that it was himself that killed the deceased. Learned counsel concluded his arguments as follows:-

“In the premises, the respondent submits that on the issue of there being a causal link between the death of the deceased and the appellant, both the High Court and the Court of Appeal made concurrent findings that the unlawful act of the appellant caused the death of Ebitenyefa Clifford. And since there is no miscarriage of justice, the Supreme Court is urged to uphold the said findings. It is further submitted that the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the conviction and sentence of the appellant by the trial court”.

He therefore urged the court to find that this appeal lacks merit and should be dismissed.

On the issue of the identity of the deceased, it cannot be overemphasized that where evidence of an autopsy is called by the prosecution, failure to identify the body on which the post mortem examination was carried out by the Doctor as the body of the person allegedly killed by the accused person in cases of homicide is a fatal omission. Such evidence is not only necessary but vital as otherwise the accused may not have been conclusively connected with the killing of the deceased person named in the charge for whose murder he is standing trial. The matter will of course, be different if there is other cogent and conclusive evidence which identifies the deceased as the person named in the charge as killed by the accused person. It is therefore one of the essential elements the prosecution must prove conclusively in homicide cases that the body examined during the post mortem examination is that of the deceased named in the charge. Where, however the corpus delicti is not discovered or there was no autopsy on the deceased’s body, the prosecution, to succeed, must identify the deceased named in the charge as the person allegedly killed by the accused person. See R. v. Momodu Laoye (1940) 6 WACA. 6; State v. Nicholas Uzoagwu & Ors (1972)2 E.C.S.L.R. (Pt. II) 429.

This is vital so as to eliminate any possible mistake in convicting an accused person over a death he is not connected with and it will also ensure that no miscarriage of justice arises at the trial. Where however the totality of the evidence of the prosecution shows unmistakeably that the body on whom a Doctor performed a post mortem examination was that of the deceased, a separate witness on the issue of the deceased’s identity, though desirable, is not a necessity, see Ukwa Enewoh v. State (1990)4 NWLR (Pt. 145) 469. So too, where there is positive evidence that the deceased named in the charge had died but the body was not discovered or there was no autopsy on the dead body, the accused may still be convicted of murder based on his confessional statement or other circumstantial evidence which conclusively points to the fact that the accused caused the death. See Edim v. State (1972) 4 SC 160, Efe v. State (I 976) II SC 75;Ogundipe v. Queen (1954) 14 WACA 458; Ukorah v. State (1977) 4 Sc. 167; and Ariche v. State (1993) 6 NWLR (Pt.302) 752. I will now examine the extent to which the prosecution established the identity of the corpse on which P.W.3 performed his post mortem examination.

On the evidence of the Doctor, it was P.W.2, Joyce Ogilogi, the sister of the deceased, who identified the body to him as that of the deceased’s Ebitenyefa Clifford, P.W.2, on the other hand, testified that she joined in conveying the body of her deceased sister to the mortuary, that the Doctor examined the body but that she was not present at the post mortem examination. There is therefore a lacuna in the evidence of the prosecution as to who identified the body examined by P.W.3 as that of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford.

As if this unfortunate avoidable situation was not complicated enough, P.W.4 claimed that the body of the deceased was dressed in a brown lace blouse with a wrapper and that her hair was plaited. P.W.3, on the other hand, testified that the woman on whom autopsy was performed wore a dark blue skirt and a blouse and that her hair was permed. It seems to me plain that, in the face of the above contradictions, a reasonable doubt is bound to exist in the mind of any impartial tribunal on the question of whether the body on which the autopsy was carried out was indeed that of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford for which the appellant was convicted.

I must, in this connection, observe that where, as in the present case, there are contradictions in the evidence of the prosecution witnesses on material facts as pointed out above, such contradictions ought to be explained to the satisfaction of the court by the prosecution in default of which the court cannot speculate on possible explanations which are not supported by any evidence. See State v. Ibong Udo Okoko & Anor (1964) 1 All NLR 423; R. v. Gabriel Adagu Wilcox (1961) 1 All NLR 631; (1961) 2 SCNLR 296 and Iteshi Onwe v. State (1975) 9-11 SC.23 at 31. See too Arehia v. State (1982) 4 sc. 78 at 88-89; Boy Muka & Ors v. State (1976) 9-10 SC. 305; Onubogu v. State (1974) 9 SC. 1 at 23-24 and Akosile v. State (1972) 5 S.C. 332 at 333.

The contradiction set out above received considerable attention from the learned trial judge who in accepting the fact that the body on which P.W.3 performed post mortem examination was that of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford observed as follows:-

“The first issue raised by the learned defence counsel, is the identity of the deceased. He drew the attention of the court to contradictions in the evidence of the Doctor P.W.3 on one side and that of P.W.4 and the accused on the other side and on what the deceased put on that day. Both the accused and P.W.4 in their testimony in court said the deceased had a blouse and wrappers on. P.W.3 said the woman on whom he performed the post mortem examination had a blouse and skirt on.

There is no contradiction that is worth contending here. Both P.W. 4 and the accused were not present at the mortuary when the Doctor P.W.3 examined the deceased. It is possible for them (P.W.4 and accused) to say what deceased had on before the incident but they cannot say what was put on her thereafter. It is in evidence that before his escape, the accused himself had tried to change her dress in the room. P.W.5, the I.P.O. testified that he saw the deceased lying dead on the floor with only brassier and under skirt. That it was P.W.2, who put clothes on her before he (P.W.5) carried the body to the hospital. Similar observation is made about the hairdo of the deceased. Both P.WA and the accused said the deceased had her hair plaited. P.W.3 said the deceased’s hair was permed.

I again do not see any contradictions here. P.W.3 has just given evidence of how he saw the deceased at the mortuary. None of the other two persons was in the mortuary at the time he P.W.3, examined her. It is not an impossibility that her hair was loosened because of the head injuries before she was taken to the mortuary.”

There can be no doubt from various areas of the above observations of the learned trial judge that he appreciated the seriousness of the issue under consideration. He was “however able to rationalise the situation as a result of which he came to the conclusion that the body on which P.W.3 performed autopsy was that of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford. He carried out this rationalisation by offering explanations which ex facie appear ingenious and plausible but are totally unsupported by any evidence. I think it is in this unfortunate exercise, if I may say with profound respect, that the learned trial judge slipped and fell into a serious error in law. This is because it is not the function of a trial Judge by his own exercise or ingenuity to supply or imagine evidence or to work out the mechanics or mathematics of arriving at answers which only evidence tested under cross-examination can supply. See too George Ikenye & Another v. Akpala Olume & Ors (1985) 2 NWLR (Pt. 5) 1. I may mention that the court below in its judgment also set out the above observations of the learned trial judge and agreed with the same.

I can only emphasize, with due respect, that the exercise embarked upon by the learned trial judge as aforementioned is a definite and serious error of law. I will now consider the question whether this error of law has occasioned any miscarriage of justice to warrant a reversal of the judgment of the court below.

It cannot be disputed that the best, and perhaps, the simplest way of establishing the identity of a deceased person, the subject of a charge of murder or manslaughter, is evidence of identification by someone who knew the deceased while he was alive. No such evidence was called by the prosecution in the present case. But as I have already observed, evidence that a witness identified the body of a deceased person to a Doctor at a post mortem examination on such a body is not a sine qua non in all murder cases.

If there is evidence from which it can be inferred conclusively that the corpse examined by the Doctor is that of the deceased named in the charge, the evidence of the person said to have identified the corpse is certainly not indispensable. Indeed a conviction for murder is sustainable in cases where the corpus delicti is not discovered, that is to say, where the dead body of the person murdered is not recovered, so long as there is positive and conclusive evidence that the deceased named in the charged was killed by the prisoner. In short, the need to identify the body of a deceased person to a Doctor in a post mortem examination is not really a sine qua non in all murder cases. See Edim v. State (1972)4 SC. 160; Ndu v. State (1990) 7 NWLR (Pt. 164) 550 at 571; Enewoh v. State (1990) 4 NWLR (Pt. 145) 469 at 477 and R. v. Onufrejezyk (1955)1 Q.B. 388. I will now consider whether from the totality of the evidence led in this case, there is sufficient evidence which conclusively establishes that the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford was unlawfully killed by the appellant under circumstances which make it unnecessary for the prosecution to call further evidence of her identification.

It must in all fairness be said that the learned trial Judge was completely right when in reconciling the apparent contradiction as to how the deceased was dressed observed that P.W.4 was not present at the mortuary when P.W. 3 examined her body. He thus observed that it was possible for the said P.W.4 to describe what the deceased wore at the time of the assault on her by the appellant but not how she was dressed when her body was taken to the mortuary. This is particularly so because there was evidence that the appellant himself tried to change the deceased’s dress in his room after her death and that the body of the deceased had only brassier and pant at the time the appellant bolted away from his room and disappeared. It was P.W.2 who dressed the body of her late sister before P.W.5 and others conveyed it to the hospital. I am therefore prepared to endorse the finding of the learned trial judge as affirmed by the court below that the seeming discrepancy on the issue of the deceased’s mode of dress cannot be said to be any matter of great moment in this case.

In the second place, the learned trial judge accepted the evidence of both P.W.1 and P.W.4 who saw the vicious violent attack on the person of the deceased by the appellant. P.W.4 also saw the appellant hit the deceased with a piece of plank about two feet long. The deceased virtually died on the spot. Both P.W.1 and P.W.4 knew the deceased and the appellant very well and are infact related to each other. P.W.1 is the father and father-in-law of the appellant and deceased respectively. P.W.4, on the other hand, is the brother and brother-in-law of the appellant and the deceased respectively. There is evidence that they all lived in the same premises at all material times. There is also Exhibit B, the voluntary statement of the appellant to the Police which was confirmed before a Superior Police Officer, Mr. Franklyn Lele. In it the appellant admitted that he killed his wife. He said –

“I also told Tonye Princewill that I killed my wife. It was myself that killed my wife Ebitenyefa Clifford. As…I was beating her, she fell and hit her head on a piece of iron and died. My father came when my wife was at the point of death…”

The learned trial judge was satisfied from the totality of the evidence before the court that the deceased died a violent death as a direct result of the appellant’s violent attack on her. The Court of Appeal, rightly in my view, affirmed these findings. A close study of the record of proceedings reveals that there is abundant evidence in support of the proof of the death of the deceased’s Ebitenyefa Clifford in the hands of the appellant.

There is also no doubt that the facts of this case as presented to and accepted by the court are such that it is clearly unnecessary for the prosecution to call further evidence in proof of the identity or the death of the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford.

In the circumstance, it seems to me that the speculative aspects of the decision of the trial court as affirmed by the court below notwithstanding, no miscarriage of justice was thereby occasioned as the death and identity of the deceased are otherwise satisfactorily established in the case.

The second arm of the sole issue that arises for determination is whether there is conclusive evidence that the appellant caused the death of the deceased. In this regard, it is trite law that to secure a conviction for murder, the prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that the death of the deceased was caused directly or indirectly by the act of the accused. It is incumbent on the prosecution to establish not only that the act of the accused could have caused the death of the deceased but that in actual fact the deceased died as a result of the act of the accused to the exclusion of all other possibilities. See State v. Christopher Omoni (1969) 2 All NLR 317; Valentine Adie v. State (1980) 1-2 SC, 116 at 122-123, R. v. Johnson Nwokocha (1949) 12 W.A.C.A. 453 at 455 and R. v. Izobo Owe (1961) 1 All NLR 680.

There can be no doubt that the best possible way of establishing the cause of death is by medical evidence. But it is equally true that the cause of death may be inferred from the circumstances of a case by the court. In other words, where the victim died under circumstances which leave no doubt as to the manner and cause of death, medical evidence may be dispensed with. Thus where a person is attacked with a lethal weapon and he died on the spot, it is reasonable to infer that the injury inflicted on him caused the death. See Bakuri v. State (1965) NMLR 163. Where however the circumstances of the death are not of that nature, the prosecution must establish the cause of death beyond reasonable doubt. See too Kato Dan Adamu v. Kano Native Authority (1956) I F.S.C. 25; (1956) SCNLR 65 and State v. Bakuri (1965) NMLR 163. But much as medical evidence is described to prove the cause of death in homicide cases, it is not a sine qua non as the same may be established by sufficient evidence, other than medical evidence, showing beyond reasonable doubt that such death resulted from the acts of the accused complained of. See Azu v. State (1993) 6 NWLR (Pt. 299) 303; Akpuenya v. State (1976) 11 SC. 269 at 278, Lori v. State (1980) 8-11 SC 81 at 97; Essien v. State (1984) 3 SC 14 at 18; State v. Edobor (1975) 9-11 SC.69 and Edim v. State (1976)4 SC. 160 at 162. What has to be decided however is whether from the legal point of view, the death of the deceased was caused by the injuries he sustained through the act of the accused and not whether from the medical point of view the deceased’s death was caused by such injuries. See Archibong Effiong Effanga v. State (1969) 1 All NLR 339.

In the present case, there is abundant evidence which the trial court accepted as established to the effect that the appellant violently attacked the deceased and hit her with a piece of plank. The deceased apparently died on the spot. The appellant was seen in his room with the dead body of the deceased who had head injuries. It is also established that the said appellant escaped through the window of his room and fled to Iwofe village when sympathisers tried to break into his room to arrest him. He remained at Iwofe until he was finally arrested by the Police.

The learned trial judge after a painstaking evaluation of the facts and circumstances of how the deceased met her death rejected the accused’s story that the deceased jumped to her death and accepted the prosecution’s version of the case holding as follows:-

“A proper appraisal of the facts and circumstances so far reviewed convince me that the injuries the deceased had were not self inflicted. I believe that the said injuries were by direct acts of the accused. I further accept as proved that the deceased died as a result of the head injury inflicted by the accused.”

A little later in his judgment, the learned trial judge continued as follows:”

These same facts and circumstances can also justify a finding of guilt even without medical evidence there is evidence which I have accepted as true that the accused beat and gave head injuries to the deceased. There is the undisputed evidence that the deceased bled from the said injury and died on the spot………………… I find that the deceased Ebitenyefa Clifford, died a death of violence as a direct result of the accused’s action of beating her and inflicting on her, a serious head injury. This finding is independent of any medical evidence in view of the eye-witnesses account as to how the deceased came by her death.”

The Court of Appeal in reviewing the above facts and the circumstances of the case described the findings of the trial court as “sound” and concluded as follows:-

“Giving the foregoing circumstances, it would have been perverse for the learned trial judge not to have found the appellant guilty.”

I endorse the above observations of both courts below and hold that there is abundant conclusive evidence on record which establish that it was the intentional and unlawful act of the appellant that caused the death of the deceased. Accordingly it is my firm view that the sole issue for determination in this appeal must be answered in the affirmative.

On the whole, I find no merit in this appeal and it is accordingly dismissed.

The conviction and death sentence passed on the appellant by the trial court and affirmed by the court of appeal is hereby further affirmed.


Other Citation: (1994) LCN/2625(SC)

National Bank Of Nigeria Ltd. V. P.B. Olatunde & Co. Nigeria Ltd. (1994) LLJR-SC

National Bank Of Nigeria Ltd. V. P.B. Olatunde & Co. Nigeria Ltd. (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

OGWUEGBU, J.S.C.

The defendants awarded a building construction contract of their bank building at Ilorin, Kwara State to the plaintiffs for the sum of N451,857,22. The contract was stated to be in writing. By a letter dated 13th April, 1981 written by the agent of the defendants – Architects Co-design, the contract sum was revised from N451,857.22 to N1,047,637.06. There is the Bill of Quantities which was admitted in evidence as “Exhibit 4.”

The defendants paid the sum of N977,460.83 in respect of Valuation Certificates numbers 1 to 26. On the whole, Architects Co-design issued a total of 27 Valuation Certificates.

Clause II of Exhibit 4 (Bill of Quantities) provides that the defendants could alter and vary the contract and payments for work done under the contract was to be made upon the issuance of Valuation Certificates from time to time by the defendants’ Architects and Quantity Surveyor. The plaintiffs maintained that Valuation Certificate No. 27 issued to him was for N294,552.25 and that this amount had been paid. The defendants however, contended that although that amount is reflected on the Valuation Certificate No. 27, it was wrong because the authorised contract sum is N1,047,637.06 and the sum of N977,460.83 having been paid, the balance due to the plaintiffs is N70,176.25. This was the cause of action. The defendants therefore admitted liability in the sum of N70,176.25. Had the defendants paid the sum of N294,552.25 certified in Valuation Certificate No.27, they would have paid a total of N1,272,013.08 (N977,460.83 plus N294,552.25) as against the contract sum of N1,047,637.06.

The learned trial Judge in a reserved judgment held that the plaintiffs were only entitled to the sum of N70,176.25 as admitted by the defendants plus interest at 10% on the sum found due. The plaintiffs were dissatisfied with the judgment and appealed to the Court of Appeal Kaduna Judicial Division.

The court below held that neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants ought to be awarded judgment on the basis of the findings of the learned trial Judge. It set aside the decision of the trial Judge and made an order for a retrial.

The defendant appealed against the decision of the Court of Appeal and the plaintiffs also cross-appealed. I will from now refer to the defendants as defendants/appellants and the plaintiffs as plaintiffs/respondents in this judgment.

From the grounds of appeal filed by both parties, the appellants identified the following issues for determination at page 2 of their brief of argument filed on 15:12:88:

“(i) Could the Court of Appeal validly reverse the Ilorin High Court decision which was supported by evidence.

(ii) Was it proper of the Court of Appeal to have ordered a retrial when the Court of Appeal agreed that it appeared the balance due was N70,176.23.

(iii) Was it right to hold that the particulars of errors in issuance of certificate number 27 was not stated in the appellant’s (N.B.N. Ltd) pleading in view of paragraphs 2-6 of the statement of defence, and

(iv) Was the Court of Appeal right to hold that Exhibit 1A, tendered by the respondent herein (P.B. Olatunde & Co. (Nig.) Ltd.), did not bind the respondent herein.”

The plaintiffs/respondents on 6/12/88 filed a brief of argument in respect of their own appeal. At page one of the said brief, the only issue for determination is:

“Whether it is proper for the Court of Appeal to order a retrial in this case when the Court had held that variation was properly authorized and that Exhibit 7A (Certificate No. 27) was not faulted.”

On 10:1:89, the plaintiffs/respondents filed another brief of argument titled “brief of Argument For Cross-Respondent.” In it, the following issues are identified as arising from the grounds of appeal filed by the plaintiffs/respondents in their cross-appeal:-

“(i) What is the duty of an appeal court if it finds the judgment of the trial court perverse

(ii) Is the order of retrial made by the Court of Appeal proper considering the fact that the Court of Appeal has held that Exhibit 7A (Certificate No.27) cannot be impugned and that indeed extra (sic) jobs were done which is reflected on Exhibit 7A (Certificate No. 27) and which were not paid for

(iii) Was it right to hold that the particulars of error in issuance of certificate No. 27 was not stated in the appellant’s (N.B.N. Ltd.) pleading in view of paragraphs 2-6 of her Statement of Defence.

(iv) Was the Court of Appeal right to hold that Exhibit 1A which was pleaded and tendered by the respondent herein (P.B. Olatunde & Co.) did not bind the respondent therein.”

In what is titled “Additional brief for N.B.N. Ltd.” filed on 3:2:89, the defendants/appellants formulated two issues for determination, namely:-

“(i) How is the final certificate to be arrived at according to Exhibit 4 the Bill of Quantities and

(ii) Was the Court of Appeal right in reversing the High Court’s decision that P.B. Olatunde & Co. Nig. Ltd. (respondent) was entitled to only N70,176.23 i.e. Revised contractual sum less payments made on certificates 1-26.”

Both parties filed two briefs each in respect of the two appeals hence the multiplicity of issues for determination whereas a brief of argument by each opposing party would have taken care of both appeals. I think it is a tidier and neater practice which should be adopted in future except where the circumstances of the particular case dictate otherwise. It seems to me from the four sets of issues formulated by the parties, the main issues raised in this appeal can be categorised as follows:-

  1. Did the plaintiffs/respondents prove at the court of trial that they are entitled to the amount claimed on Certificate No. 27 having regard to their pleading and evidence
  2. Were there variations of the contract in accordance with Exhibit 4 and if so whether Exhibit 7A reflected the final contract sum.
  3. Whether the order of retrial made by the court below was proper having regard to all the circumstances of the case.

At the hearing of the appeal both learned counsel adopted and relied on their respective briefs of argument. There was little or no additional points highlighted by both learned counsel at the hearing. One has to fall back on the briefs of argument filed.

In a rather very sketchy briefs of argument filed by the learned counsel for the defendants/appellants, the following points were canvassed:-

(1) The court below was in grave error to have set aside the judgment of the trial court which was supported by evidence adduced in the said court and the court below should not have substituted its own views of the facts for those of the learned trial Judge.

(2) There was no basis for an order of retrial because the court below applied the formula in Clause 30(6) of Exhibit 4 and found that the sum of N70,176,23 would be the only permissible balance due to the plaintiffs/respondents as there was no pleading or evidence to support the purported balance of N294,552.25. Counsel cited and relied on the cases of Okeowo & Ors. v. Migliore & Ors. (1979) 11 S.C.138 at 201; Adeyemo v. Arokopo (1988) 6 SCNJ. 1 at 13 (1988) 2 NWLR (Pt.79) 703 and Umar v. Bayero University, Kano (1988) 7 SCNJ 380 at 387 (1988) 4 NWLR (Pt.86) 85.

(3) The totality of the judgment of the court below is to the effect that the decision of the trial court was based on the pleadings and evidence adduced by the both parties an that decision should not have been disturbed.

(4) Exhibit 7A (Certificate No. 27), was issued in error as it was contrary to the express terms of the Bills of quantities (Exhibit 4) which stipulated that the final certificate is to be arrived at by subtracting what had been paid (Certificates Nos. 1 to 26) from the final contractual sum.

(5) The agents had power to authorise variations and to quantify the values of such variations but they cannot change the terms of the Bills of Quantities which provides that variations must be specified and quantified in writing as stipulated in Exhibit 4 and that Exhibit 1A contained provision for contingencies which covered Exhibit X.

We were urged to allow the defendants’ appeal, dismiss the plaintiffs’/respondents’ cross-appeal and affirm the decision of the learned trial Judge.

In the briefs of argument filed on behalf of the plaintiffs/respondents, learned counsel submitted that where an appeal is against the weight of evidence or that it is perverse, an appellate court “must make up its own mind on the evidence, not disregarding the judgment appealed from but carefully weighing and considering it and not shrinking from overruling it, if, on full consideration, it comes to the conclusion that the judgment is wrong.” He rested his submission on Macaulay v. Tukuru (1881-1911) 1 NLR. 35; Lion Buildings Ltd. v. M.M. Shadipe (1976) 12 S.C.135 at 153 and Ikpaloka & Ors. v. Umeh & Or. (1976) 9-10 S.C. 269 at 300- 301. He said that the evidence before the court is documentary and does not involve the question of assessing the demeanour of the witnesses but of drawing inferences from admitted documentary evidence. He referred to the case of Shell B.P. v. Cole & Ors. (1978) 3 S.C.183 at 194 and that the Court of Appeal is in as much as good position as the trial court to deal with the facts and make proper findings from the admitted documents.

He further submitted that Exhibit 7A (Certificate No. 27) part of the facts pleaded in paragraphs 12 and 13 of the amended Statement of Claim, that Certificate No.27 was admitted in evidence as Exhibit 7A and that the court below accepted that the figure N1,748,771.73 was well demonstrated by the pleading and the evidence.

It was the contention of the plaintiffs/respondents’ counsel that the plaintiffs claimed the sum of N464,246.10 in their Writ of Summons and N294,552.25 in the amended Statement of Claim because the defendants/appellants paid the amount on Certificate No. 26 after the Writ of Summons was filed. It was therefore not necessary for the plaintiffs to plead the sum of N1,748,771.73 in any other way since that is not the amount of money they were claiming and in any case, there is no dispute about the contents of Certificates No. 1 to 26 as both parties agreed both in their pleadings and evidence that the amount in Certificate Nos. 1-26 had been settled.

Learned counsel further submitted that it was not necessary to tender Certificate No. 1-26 since both parties have agreed on those points. The cases of Lewis & Peat Ltd. v. Akhimien (1976) 7 S.C.157 and Akintola v. Solano (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt.24) 589 were cited.

As to the variations made, counsel said that they were properly made and that the court below held that after the revised contract sum of N1,047,637.06, some variations were carried out that were not paid for and that Exhibit 7A clearly demonstrated the variation properly made and showed how the contract sum of N1,748,771.73 was arrived at. Since the court below held that the amount stated in Exhibit 7A is conclusive of the outstanding money due on the contract and that it was not issued in error, the court below should have entered judgment for the plaintiffs in the sum of N294,552,25 claimed on Certificate No.27 (Exhibit 7A).

In his further submission on Exhibit 7A, learned counsel stated that the court below found that it was valid and binding as no fraud, mistake or collusion was alleged by the defendants and that Exhibit ‘X’ is a variation made subsequent to the revised sum of N1,047,637.06.

Learned counsel also submitted that after evaluating the evidence before the trial court, the proper order which the court below should have made is not that of a retrial. He urged the court to nullify the order of retrial made by the court below and enter judgment for the plaintiffs for the sum of N294,552.25 which they claim.

The determination of issue number one above will involve the consideration of the pleadings of both parties and the evidence led in proof of the facts pleaded. The relevant averments in the plaintiffs: amended statement of claim are paragraphs 3 to 15 which are reproduced hereunder:-

“3. By a letter dated 19th January, 1978 the defendant awarded the construction of its Bank Building at Ilorin to the plaintiff for the sum of N451,857.22. The plaintiff hereby pleads Architects Co. Design letter to the plaintiff and shall rely on the same.

  1. By another letter dated 13th April, 1981 written by Architects Co. Design, servant or Agent of the defendant, the contract sum was revised from N451,857.22 to the sum of N1,047,637.06. The plaintiff hereby pleads the said letter.
  2. The said contract was reduced to writing and signed by parties which the plaintiff hereby pleads.
  3. By Clause II of the said contract agreement, otherwise known as Bills of Quantities the defendant could alter and vary the contract.

The plaintiff hereby pleads the following documents relating to variation of the said contract:-

  1. Archodes letter dated 28th April, 1978 copied to the plaintiff.
  2. Archodes letter dated 7th March, 1979 addressed to the plaintiff.
  3. Defendant’s letter to the plaintiff No. AP/L/41 (1) Vol.II/80 of 7th February, 1979.
  4. Archodes’s letter to the plaintiff dated 14th January, 1980.
  5. Defendant’s letter copied to the plaintiff and dated 27th November, 1980.
  6. Archode’s letter to the plaintiff dated 18th February, 1982.
  7. Plaintiff’s letters to the defendant or their agents Architect Co-Design Span Group on the said contract dated 31/10/78, 21/2/19, 21/1/80, 10/7/82, 24/8/82, and 14/1/83.

6(a) The plaintiff further pleads letters from Architects Co-Design to the plaintiff dated 9th December, 1981 and 25th April, 1983 relating to variation of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant.

  1. The plaintiff shall also rely on the minutes of site meetings held between the plaintiff, the defendant and the defendant’s agents on 6th July, 1979, 3rd August, 1979, 7th September, 1979, 1st February, 1980, 2nd May, 1980, 4th July, 1980, 1st August, 1980 and 5th September, 1980.
  2. The plaintiff has since completed the contract and handed over the building to the defendant since the 20th January, 1984. The plaintiff hereby pleads his handling over note dated 13th December,1983 but signed for and on behalf of the defendant on 20th January, 1984.
  3. That the plaintiff was paid his entitlement under the agreement after the Architects and Quantity Surveyors who were employed by the defendant were satisfied with the amount and standard of plaintiff’s work.
  4. That the Architects as well as the Quantity Surveyors issued Valuation Certificate to show that the plaintiff was entitled to whatever was due to him.
  5. The plaintiff shall rely on the Valuation Certificate Nos. 1-27 jointly issued by Architects Co-design of 50 Olowu Street, Ikeja, Lagos and Span Group Quantity Surveyor’s & Construction Consultants of 8A Bobs Kazeem Street, Obanikoro, Ikorodu Road, Lagos.
  6. By reason of the variation ordered by the Architect and the Quantity Surveyors, the contract sum rose to the sum of N1,234,719.73k.

The plaintiff hereby pleads Architects Co-design letter on 1st July, 1984 to the defendant in respect of certificate No.27 for the sum N294,552.25.

  1. The plaintiff have (sic) so far been paid amounts specified in all the valuation certificate Nos. 1-26 and has certificate No. 27 of 17th July, 1984 for the sum of N294,552.25k still outstanding.
  2. The defendant has refused to settle the balance of N294,552.25k despite repeated demands by the plaintiff.
  3. Wherefore the plaintiff claims from the defendant the sum of N294,552.25k plus 10% of the said sum from the 31st of January, 1984 to the date of judgment.”

(Italics are mine for emphasis only).

The defendants admitted paragraphs 1 to 9 in their paragraph 1. Paragraphs 1 to 6 of their statement of defence read:-

“1. The defendant admits paragraphs 1-9 of the statement of claim.

  1. The defendant denies paragraphs 10-15 of the Statement of Claim and requires strict proof thereof.
  2. In further answer to paragraphs 10-15 of the Statement of Claim the defendant avers;

(a) that the revised contractual sum was N1,047,637.06;

(b) that by a letter Ref. No. AP/L.41(1) Vo1.V/29 of 18th March, 1981, the defendant made it clear that the revised sum could not be exceeded and

(c) the plaintiff was duly informed of the limitation. The defendant pleads (i) the aforesaid letter of 18/3/81 from Property & Estate Manager of the defendant to Architect Co-Design and (ii) a letter from Architects Co-Design dated 13/4/81 to the plaintiff.

  1. The defendant also pleads the letter from Spanqants Associates dated April 11, 1985, to the plaintiff which shows that the defendant had paid on Certificates 1-26 the sum of N977 ,460.83.
  2. The defendant avers that the plaintiff was wrongly issued certificate No.27 for N294,552.25k by the Quantity Surveyor whereas the plaintiff is entitled to only N1,047,637.06 – N977,460.83 i.e. N70, 176.23, and the plaintiff is aware of the error.
  3. Wherefore the defendant avers that the plaintiff is entitled to only N70,176.23 in respect of Certificate No.27 and not N294,552.25 as falsely stated in Certificate No.27.”

There are a lot of flaws in the case presented by the plaintiffs. The alleged contract agreement which was in writing and signed by both parties was pleaded in paragraph 5 of the amended Statement of Claim but was not tendered at the trial. What is contained at pages 1 to 2A of Exhibit 4 is a pro-forma contract agreement titled “Articles of Agreement.” It was not executed by the parties. Had this been done, Exhibit 4 would have qualified as the written agreement referred to in the said paragraph of the amended statement of claim.

It is in evidence that both parties signed an agreement which is in the possession of the defendants/appellants and notice to produce the same at the trial was given to them. It was not produced and the plaintiffs/respondents proceeded to tender Exhibit 4 (the Bills of Quantities). Pages 1 to 2A Exhibit 4 contain a blank “Articles of Agreement.” Those pages do not quantify as secondary evidence of the written agreement.

Exhibits 1 and 1A on the other hand are no substitutes for the written contract. They only revised the contract sum from N451,857.22 to N1,047,637.06 and are relevant for that purpose only.

The Bills of Quantities which were admitted in evidence as Exhibit 4 described in detail every item of works to be done. They are usually referred to in the contract agreement and form part of it. They are mere estimates and specifications of the work to be done and they cannot exist without the contract agreement.

The plaintiffs also averred in paragraphs 10 to 13 of their amended statement of claim that they were issued 27 Valuation Certificates by the Architects and Quantity Surveyors employed by the defendants showing that they are entitled to whatever was due to them; that they would rely on the Valuation Certificates; that they had been paid the amounts specified in Valuation Certificate Nos. 1 to 26 and that Certificate No. 27 for N294,552.25 was still outstanding. In paragraph 12 of the amended statement of claim they averred that the contract sum rose to N1,234,719.73 by reason of variations ordered by the Architects and Quantity Surveyors. Exhibit 7A showed the sum of N1,748,771.72 as the final contract sum.

This amount was not pleaded. Certificate Nos. 1 to 26 were not tendered either. The defendants/appellants averred in paragraphs 4 and 5 of their statement of defence that they paid the sum of N977 ,460.83 on Valuation Certificate Nos. 1 to 26; that Certificate No.27 for the sum of N294,552.25 was wrongly issued by the Quantity Surveyors and that the plaintiffs were entitled to only N1,047,637.06 minus N977 ,460.83 i.e. N70,176.23.

The plaintiffs/respondents did not in their amended statement of claim state the amount they have received on Certificate Nos. 1 to 26 to be able to arrive at the balance shown in Exhibit 7A – Certificate No.27. However, under cross-examination by the learned counsel for the defendants/appellants, the Managing Director of the plaintiffs/respondents who testified as P.W.1 said:-

“I agree the contract sum is N1,047,637.06.

On Certificate 1-26 I have been paid N977 ,460.83.

I do not agree that the balance due to be paid is N70,176.23.” (see page 22 lines 2 to 5 of the record of appeal).

So, they agreed with the appellants’ pleading as well as their evidence that the sum of N977,460.83 had been paid to them on Certificate 1 to 26. They failed to prove how they arrived at the sum of N294,552.25 which according to them was outstanding on the contract.

The material documents pleaded by defendants were not produced and tendered. See Okubule v. Oyagbola (1990) 4 NWLR (Pt.147) at 723 and Bello v. Fayose & Ors. (1994) 2 NWLR (Pt.327) 404 at 418. But for the admission made by the defendants/appellants in their pleading and evidence to the effect that the plaintiffs were entitled to only N1,047,637.06 minus N977,460.83 i.e. N70,176.23, the plaintiffs’ claim would have failed in toto.

The court below came to the conclusion that from whatever angle the issue was examined, the state of the parties pleadings could not justify or support the contract sum of N1,748,771.72 in Exhibit 7A nor could it satisfactorily displace the pleaded contract sum of N1,234,719.73 and I agree with it. The order for a retrial made by the court below after coming to the above conclusion is manifestly wrong having regard to the above conclusion.

An order of retrial is made where there has been a serious irregularity in the original trial or where the rules of fair hearing under S.33(1) of the Constitution appears to have been violated. See Okorodudu v. Ejuetami (1967) NMLR 282; Adio v. Attorney-General, Oyo State ( 1990) 7 NMLR (Pt.163) 448. The discretion whether or not to order a retrial is that of the Court of Appeal and this court will not interfere even if it might have exercised it differently unless this court comes to the conclusion that the court below exercised its discretion on wrong principles, for example, if the exercise of it was manifestly wrong, arbitrary, reckless, injudicious or contrary to justice. See Imonikhe & Or. v. Attorney-General. Bendel State & Ors. (1992) 6 NWLR (Pt.248) 396 at 408; University of Lagos & Ors. v. Olaniyan & Ors. (1985) 1 NWLR (Pt.1) 156.

In the result, I am of the view that the appeal of the defendants should be allowed and it is hereby allowed. The appeal of the plaintiffs is dismissed. The judgment of the court below is set aside and the judgment of the High Court is affirmed. The defendants/appellants are entitled to the costs of this appeal in the sum of N1,000.00 in this court and N300.00 in the court below respectively.


SC.272/1988

Jimoh Akinfolarin & Ors. V. Solomon Oluwole Akinnola (1994) LLJR-SC

Jimoh Akinfolarin & Ors. V. Solomon Oluwole Akinnola (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

IGUH, J.S.C.

In the Ondo Judicial Division of the High Court of Justice, Ondo State, the plaintiffs, who are now the appellants, for themselves and on behalf of the Ansar-Ud-Deen Society, Ode, Ondo caused a writ of summons to issue against the respondent who therein was the defendant claiming, as subsequently amended, as follows:-

“(1) A declaration of title under Native Law and Custom to a piece of land situate and being at mile 2 Ondo Okitipupa Road and more particularly shown on Plan No. L & L/A3635 and Plan No. OB 4105;

(2) N200.00 being general damages for trespass to the said plaintiffs’ land; and

(3) A perpetual injunction restraining the defendant, his servants and/or agents from committing further trespass on the land.”

Pleadings were ordered in the suit and were duly settled, filed and exchanged.

At the subsequent trial, all three plaintiffs testified on their own behalf and called witnesses. The defendant also testified in his defence and called witnesses. At the conclusion of hearing, the learned trial Judge in a reserved judgment which was delivered on the 5th day of September, 1979, found for the defendant and dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims in their entirety.

Being dissatisfied with this judgment, the plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Appeal, Benin City Division, which in an unanimous decision on the 4th day of May, 1988 dismissed the appeal and affirmed the judgment of the trial court.

The plaintiffs have now further appealed to this court against the said decision of the Court of Appeal. I shall hereinafter refer to the plaintiffs and the defendant in this judgment as the appellants and the respondent respectively.

I think it is desirable at this stage to recapitulate the facts of this case. In doing so, I shall adopt the facts as ably set out in the judgment of the Court of Appeal which are as follows:-

“The land in dispute belonged originally to the Oloka Chieftaincy family of Ondo under customary law. Chief Oloka of Oka was and is still the accredited head of the family. In 1950 there was a vacancy in the Oloka Chieftaincy following the death of the then Oloka of Oka. There was a protracted dispute in the family as to succession to the vacancy. One Theophillus Adegoju claimed to have been rightfully appointed to the office by the family while S.A. Akinboye also laid claim to a similar appointment. There were thus rival claims to the title.

The Oloka Chieftaincy is a recognised minor Chieftaincy with the Osemawe of Ondo as the prescribed authority who had (and presumably still has) the power to approve the appointment of an Oloka. On 14th July, 1956, the Osemawe of Ondo approved the appointment of S.A. Akinboye as the new Oloka of Oka.

On 10th April, 1954, Theophilus Adegoju and some members of the Oloka family made a grant of the land in dispute to the Ansar-Ud-Deen Society of Ondo (hereinafter is referred to as the Society) for the erection of a school. The appellants claimed that the Society went into possession and exercised acts of ownership on the land by clearing it and planting cassava therein; they also erected a signboard on the land. Following the reconstruction on the Ondo – Ore highway, part of the land granted to the Society was encroached upon by the road and the society reported this to Adegoju who with some members of the Oloka family on 27th December, 1973 executed an agreement (Exhibit A) in favour of the Society confirming the 1954 grant but in respect of the land remaining after deducting the part encroached upon by the new highway.

Meanwhile in May, 1973. Chief S. A. Akinboye the Oloka of Oka and head of the Oloka family together with some other members of the family sold under customary law, the land in dispute in two lots to the respondent and executed two agreements dated 14th May, 1973 and 24th May, 1973 (Exhibits K and K1) in his favour. The respondent claimed he went into possession cleared the land and planted therein cassava, maize and pineapple and later surveyed the land. He denied seeing any survey pillars or signboard on the land at the time of the sales to him.”

It is necessary to observe that from the pleadings and evidence before the court the following facts are not in dispute between the parties namely:-

1, That the land in dispute originally belonged to the Oloka family.

  1. That the land said to have been trespassed upon by the respondent is part and parcel of the land claimed by the appellants.
  2. That both parties claimed the land through the Oloka family, and
  3. That Chief Oloka, otherwise known as the Oloja of Oka is the traditional head of the Oloka Chieftaincy family.

It is also pertinent to point out that the learned trial Judge after a thorough consideration of the evidence adduced before the court found the following facts established, namely:-

  1. That the appellants were not in possession of the land in dispute at the time of the institution of this action on the 27th day of May, 1974.
  2. That it was the respondent who from the 20th May, 1973 at the least was in possession of the land in dispute.
  3. That Chief Theophilus Adegoju whom the appellants claimed was the Oloja of Oka and the head of the Oloka family was never at any time the head of the Oloka family either before or after the 14th July, 1956.
  4. That Chief S. A. Akinboye’s appointment as the Oloja of Oka and the head of the Oloka family was duly approved by Oba Osemawe of Ondo on the 14th July, 1956.
  5. That the said Oba Osemawe of Ondo as the prescribed authority under the law was the proper person with the requisite power to approve the appointment of the Oloja of Oka.
  6. That whoever was so appointed and approved by the Osemawe of Ondo as the Oloja of Oka was also recognised as the traditional head of the Oloka family.
  7. That there was an interregnum in the Oloka Chieftaincy between 1950 and the 14th July, 1956 on which latter date Chief Akinboye’s appointment was approved by the Osemawe to fill the vacancy.
  8. That neither Adegoju nor Akinboye had any valid claim to the headship of the Oloka family during the period of the interregnum,
  9. That the grant or disposition of the land in dispute to the appellants in 1954 and in 1973 by Adegoju was void ab initio as he was not the head of the family, and
  10. That between 1950 and the 14th July, 1956, there were two factions in the Oloka family built around the two contenders to the vacant Chieftaincy stool and that the rival groups operated side by side as the Oloja of Oka.

I should observe that there was abundant evidence before the trial court in support of the above findings which the Court of Appeal fully endorsed. Having set out the salient facts of this case, I will now proceed to consider this appeal on its merits.

Pursuant to the rules of this court, the parties, through their respective counsel, filed and exchanged their written briefs of argument. In the appellants’ brief, the following issues are set out as arising in this appeal, namely:-

“(1). Whether from the facts and issues joined by the plaintiffs and the defendant in this case, the point as to the headship of Oloka family in 1954 when the grant of the land in dispute was made to the plaintiffs was not directly in issue in this case so as to raise the question of family status for determination. If the answer is in the affirmative, whether the trial High Court had jurisdiction to determine the issue of family status so raised.

(2) Whether Exhibit E, a judgment of the Ondo State High Court relied upon by the Courts below against the appellant was not a nullity on the ground that the judgment was given without jurisdiction.

(3) Whether the respondent had locus standi to submit the issue of the headship of Otoka family in 1954 for determination by the trial court.

(4) Whether, in the absence of a substantive head of a family, the principal members of the family cannot transfer a valid title in the family property.”

The respondent, for his own part, submitted that all the four issues formulated for determination by the appellants are totally misconceived and mainly academic having regard to the specific findings of facts made by the trial court and endorsed by the Court of Appeal. He set out one single issue which, in his view, is enough to determine the appeal. This issue reads as follows:-

“Whether the appellants bought the land in dispute in 1954 or in 1973 from the Oloka family with the consent of the head of the Oloka family.”

A close study of the question posed in the respondent’s brief shows that it is sufficiently encompassed by the issues raised by the appellants in their brief of argument. Accordingly, I shall in this judgment adopt the set of question set out in the appellants’ brief.

At the oral hearing of the appeal, learned counsel for the appellants, proffered oral arguments in further elucidation of the submissions contained in their written brief. Learned counsel for the respondent, Prince Olu Mafo, who settled the respondent’s brief of argument was absent in court although served with hearing notice for the hearing of the appeal. The respondent however adopted the brief of argument filed by his learned counsel in the appeal.

The main thrust of the appellants’ complaint all the first issue is that the headship of the Oloka family in 1954 when the grant of the land in dispute was made to the appellants was directly in issue in this case and that this raised the question of family status for determination by the trial court. It was therefore contended that the learned trial Judge had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit by virtue of the proviso to Section 9(1) of the High Court Law of Western Nigeria Cap. 44, 1959 Laws of Western Region. It was argued that the question whether Chief Adegoju was the head of the Oloka family in 1954 was not a triable issue before the trial court as it concerned a matter relating to “family status” and that the Court of Appeal erred in law by holding that the trial court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit.

It was submitted on behalf of the respondent in his written brief that the headship of the Oloka family was not the paramount or primary issue in the case on hand and that this was merely incidental to the main issue which was a declaration of title to the land in dispute damages for trespass and an injunction.

I think it is right to observe that this issue of jurisdiction was never raised before the trial court. It is however a fundamental issue which can be raised at any stage of the proceedings up to the final determination of an appeal by the highest court of the land. See Owoniboys Technical Service Ltd. v. John Holt Ltd. (1991) 6 NWLR (Pt.199) 550: Osadebay v. Attorney-General Bendel State (1991) 1 NWLR (Pt. 169) 525: Petrojessical Ent. Ltd. v. Leventis Tech. Co. Ltd (1992) 5 NWLR (Pt. 244) 675; Okesuji v. Lawal (1991) 1 NWLR (Pt.170) 661: Adegoke v. Adibi (1992) 5 NWLR (Pt. 242) 410 at 420 etc. I will therefore dispose of this issue of jurisdiction.

Section 9(1) of the High Court Law. Cap. 44, Laws of Western Nigeria 1959 which was applicable at the time the cause of action arose in this case (See Mustapha v. Governor, Lagos State (1987) 2 NWLR (Pt.58) 539 at 549, and Uwaifo v. A.G. Bendel State (1982) 7 S.C. 124 provides as follows:-

“9(1) To the extent that such jurisdiction may be conferred by the Regional Legislature, the jurisdiction by this Law vested in the High Court shall include all her Majesty’s civil jurisdiction which at the commencement of this law was, or at any time afterwards may be exercisable in the Western Region for the judicial hearing and determination of matters in difference, or for the administration or control of property and persons, and also all her Majesty’s criminal jurisdiction which at the commencement of this law, was, or at any time afterwards may be there exercisable for the repression or punishment of crimes or offences or for the maintenance of order, and all such jurisdiction shall be exercised under and according to the provisions of this Law and not otherwise:

Provided that, except in so far as the Governor may by order in council otherwise direct and except in suits transferred to the High Court under the provisions of Section 28 of the Native Courts Ordinance the High Court shall not exercise original jurisdiction in any matter which is subject to the jurisdiction of a customary court relating to marriage, family status, guardianship of children and inheritance or disposition of property on death.”

It seems to me clear from the above proviso that the High Court of the former Western Nigeria was precluded from exercising original jurisdiction in all matters which are subject to the jurisdiction of the customary court relating to marriage, family status, guardianship of children and inheritance or disposition of property on death. Where, however, a claim is within the substantive enactment that is to say, within the terms of subsection (1) of Section 9 aforesaid, the High Court is not precluded from adjudicating thereon merely because in the course of such an adjudication, it becomes necessary to make some incidental or casual inquiry into any of the matters classified in the proviso in issue, See Aderemi v. Opeyori (1976) 9-10 S.C. 31.

In the first place, it is a fundamental principle of law that it is the claim of the plaintiff which determines the jurisdiction of a court entertaining the same. See Ajaka Izeikwe & Ors v. Nnadozie (1952) 14 WACA 361 at 363 and Adeyemi v. Opeyori (supra) at p. 51. In the case on hand, the appellants have claimed a declaration of title to land, damages for trespass and injunction. It seems to me indisputable that not one of the reliefs claimed raises ex facie any issue which can possibly be construed as ousting the jurisdiction of the High Court within the frame work of section 9 of the said High Court law. The appellants from their claims as formulated did not seek for any declaration in the matter of the “family status” of Chief Samuel Akinboye and/or Theophilus Adegoju. I therefore accept the respondent’s contention that the trial court ex facie had ample jurisdiction to entertain the appellants’ claims. I am further in agreement from the reliefs claimed that the question of “famlly status” was not directly or fundamentally in issue in the claims. It was only an incidental or casual issue which emerged in the determination of the fundamental question relating to title to land, damages for trespass and injunction which are the claims before the trial court.

The case of Nwafia v. Ububa (1966) NMLR 219 referred to by learned counsel for the appellants is worthy of comments and must be distinguished from the present action. In that case, the plaintiff claimed in the High Court of Eastern Nigeria that he was entitled in accordance with customary law to occupy and possess the, house known as “Uno Obu” with its appurtenances called “Ilo Obu”, both of which by custom and as a matter of right must be under the management and control of the Okpala or the eldest surviving male child in the line of descent of the family. It seems to me plain from the very nature of the claim before that court that an issue relating to family status arose in that case as a fundamental and not an incidental issue for determination. That issue was the primary and the only issue which exfacie called for determination in the suit and arose directly from the very nature of the relief claimed. On appeal, it was held by this court that the only issue which called for determination in the suit was as follows:-

“Is the plaintiff the Okpala of the Dunu family In other words, is he the surviving eldest male child of Dunu. This undoubtedly is an issue relating to family status …………..”

The Nwafia v. Ububa, suit (supra), must be distinguished from the present case where any question of family status was merely incidental in the consideration of the appellants’ claims. The court below so held and I have no reason to disagree with it on the point. I am satisfied on the strength of the authorities that the jurisdiction of the High Court was ousted by the proviso to Section 9(1) of the High Court Law only where the issue of family status was the fundamental issue before the court. I agree with the view of the Court of Appeal that the headship of Oloka family was only an incidental issue in this case especially in the fact of Exhibits J and J1 whereby the appointment of Chief Samuel Akinboye as the Oloja of Oka had long been duly approved by the prescribed authority, the Osemawe of Ondo with effect from the 14th July, 1956. It seems to me fully established that the question of who the Oloja of Oka and head of the Oloka family was had long been settled with effect from the 14th July, 1956 and was not a fundamental issue for determination in this action. In the circumstance, the first issue must be resolved in favour of the respondent.

I now turn to the second issue which questions whether Exhibit E, a judgment of the Ondo High Court in Suit No. AK/58/64 relied on by the courts below against the appellants was not a nullity on the ground that it was given without jurisdiction. It is the contention of the appellants that Exhibit E is a nullity and consequently that all reliance placed on it by the lower courts are nullities. They argued that since the main issue decided in Exhibit E by the High Court was the issue of the status of Akinboye and Adegoju in Oloka family, the judgment in that suit was delivered without jurisdiction in that it is caught by Section 9(1) proviso of the High Court Law of Western Nigeria.

For the respondent, it was contended that the issue of who at all material times was the Oloka of Oka was settled as long ago as the 14th July, 1956 by the prescribed authority and that the point was no longer open to any dispute. Exhibit E is a declaratory action between Chief Samuel Akinboye, the Oloja of Oka as the plaintiff and Theophilus Adegoju as the respondent in respect of the Oloka family landed property, account of all monies received by the defendant in respect of the said property and perpetual injunction. It was submitted that all the High Court of Ondo State did in Exhibit E was to affirm the approval of Chief Samuel Akinboye as the Oloja of Oka by the prescribed authority with effect from the 14th July, 1956.

I have closely considered the arguments of learned counsel in this regard and wish to observe that the question posed by the second issue aforementioned appears to me mainly academic. In the first place, there is unchallenged evidence before the trial court to the effect that Chief Akinboye’s appointment under customary law as the Oloja of Oka was duly approved by the prescribed authority since the 14th July, 1956. In this regard, the Court of Appeal before which the same was canvassed dismissed the same as follows:-

“The issue of headship of the family either before or after 14th July, 1956 could not have been raised bonafide by Adegoju whom as I have held earlier, is estopped from denying that Chief Akinboye became Oloka and head of the family from 14th July, 1956. To still refer to himself as the Oloka and head of family even in 1973 shows how mischievous Adegoju was. Adegoju could not have been head of the family unless he was approved by the Osemawe as the Oloja (otherwise known as Oloja of Oka). The learned trial Judge found and quite rightly in my view, that there was an interregnum lasting from 1950 to 14th July, 1956 when Chief Akinboye was approved as the Oloja thereby rejecting Adegoju’s evidence that he was ever approved by the Osemawe as the Oloja of Oka. The family therefore had no head of family during that period of interregnum. To hold that each time before 1/10/79 there was a case in which the validity of a grant of Oloka family land was in issue and Adegoju, inspite of Exhibits E and H, claimed headship of the family, the jurisdiction of the trial High Court was ousted is to stretch the proviso to Section 9(1) to absurdity. For as long as Adegoju persisted in making his claim to headship of the family in any suit for so long would a trial High Court be obliged to pronounce on it not as a fundamental but an incidental issue. For the issue of the headship of the family was no longer open to question since 14th July, 1956 when the Osemawe in exercise of his power as the prescribed authority, resolved the rivalry between Adegoju and Akinboye for that title by approving the latter as the Oloka.”

I am with respect in complete agreement with the above observations of the Court of Appeal and fully endorse them. I accept the view of the Court of Appeal to the effect that Adegoju’s claim to headship of the family in the suit was baseless and rightly rejected by the Ondo State High Court in Exhibit E, not as a fundamental but as an incidental issue in the suit. In my opinion, once it was established that Chief Akinboye had been dully approved as the Oloka by the prescribed authority, the issue of his status as the head of the Oloka family was no longer in issue and he was entitled to judgment in respect of his claims in Exhihit E. The Ondo State High Court therefore acted within its jurisdiction in Exhibit E and its judgment was neither invalid nor a nullity.

In the second place, even if Exhibit E were to be a nullity, and I do not so hold, it is the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction and may therefore not be ignored or discountenanced without its being firstly set aside. An order made by a court of competent jurisdiction even in ignorance of some essential fact which went to the validity of the order was not void or a nullity and the order stood and could not be discountenanced or ignored until it was set aside. See Oba Lawani Aladegbemi & Anor v. Oba John Fasanmade (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt. 81) 129. In other words, an order or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction remains valid and binding unless and until it is set aside by the trial court itself where it acted without jurisdiction or by an appeal court.

In the Oba Aladegbemi’s case, (supra), Kayode Eso, J.S.C. at page 155 of the report put the matter as follows:-

“………….but more importantly is the fact that Lord Denning never said as is often claimed that a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction could be ignored if it is found for any reason to be void without its being first set aside. He never said so and in my humble view if he had, it is with utmost respect not the law, for a court of competent jurisdiction, not necessarily of unlimited jurisdiction (and I will come to this anon) has jurisdiction to decide a matter rightly or wrongly. If that court never had jurisdiction in the matter, then its decision is without jurisdiction void but then should a court of law not even decide the point That is, the court without jurisdiction decided without jurisdiction Should the decision just be ignored. Surely it would not make for peace and finality which a decision of a court seeks to attain. It would, at least, be against public policy for persons without the backing of the court to pronounce a court’s decision a nullity, act in breach of the decision whereas others may set out to obey it. In my respectful view, it is not only desirable but necessary to have such decisions set aside first by another court before any act is built upon it despite the colourful dictum of the Law Lord in U.A.C. v. Macfoy, (supra),”

In the same case, Oputa, J.S.C. at page 162 of the report advanced his own contribution on the issue as follows:-

“The point that it needs an order of court to set aside even a judgment that is a nullity was brought out in Craig v. Kanseen (1943) All ER 108 at 111 per Green, M.R.:-

“An order which can properly be described as a nullity is something which the person affected by it is entitled ex facie debito justitiae to have set aside. As far as the procedure for having it set aside is concerned the court in its inherent jurisdiction can set aside its own order and an appeal is not necessary”

Whether the court sets aside its own order or an appellate court does it, the point being made is that there must be an application to a court to have the order set aside otherwise the order subsists – Gratton Isaac v. Emery Robertson (1984) 3 WLR 705. Therefore the ruling of Hedges, J. even if it was a nullity (which infact it was not) had to be set aside by a court and since Hedges, J. was no longer around, by an appellate court.”

Quite recently, in the case of Victor Rossek & Ors v. A.C.B. & Ors (1993) NWLR (Pt. 312) 382, this court, in a full panel, had cause to consider this aspect of the law. It reiterated in clear terms that there is an unqualified obligation on the part of every person against whom an invalid judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is given to obey it unless and until it is set aside by the trial court itself where it acted without jurisdiction or by an appeal court. In his own contribution. Bello, C.J.N., stated the law as follows:-

“I entirely agree with Chief Ajayi, SAN that a judgment of a court of law is presumed valid and the parties concerned are not only bound to obey it but the authorities charged with responsibility for the enforcement of judgments are also obliged to enforce it unless it is declared a nullity or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. It has never been the law of Nigeria as some of our judges, like judicial robots, have been parroting the dicta of Lord Denning in Macfoy v. U.A.C. (supra) that there is no need for an order of a court which is void to be set aside by a court and thereby implies that all and sundry have the right to disobey the order. It is not also the law of England: Isaac v. Robertson (supra).

It has never been the law that a party may review a judgment, regard it a nullity and disobey it. A prisoner who thinks that his conviction was a nullity cannot with impunity walk out of prison. Similarly, a judgment debtor cannot lawfully resist execution because he considers the judgment against him was null and void. Thus, a judgment of a court of law remains valid and effective unless it is set aside by an appeal court or by the lower court itself if it acted without jurisdiction or in the absence of an aggrieved party: Williams v. Sanusi (1961) All NLR 334 at 337; (1961) 2 SCNLR 129; Ojiako v. Ogueze (1962) 1 All NLR 58 at 61; Adebayo v. Shonowo (1969) 1 All NLR 174 at 194; Ajao v. Alao (1988) 5 NWLR (Pt. 45) 802 at 823; Yonwuren v. Modern Signs (Nig) Ltd. (1985) 1 NWLR (Pt. 2) 244; Odiase v. Agho (1972) 1 All NLR 170 at 176 and Melifonwu v. Egbuyi (1982) 9 S.C. 145”

I think it right to refer also to the lead judgment of Ogundare, J.S.C. in the said case of Rossek v. A.C.B. Ltd. (supra) where at page 434 of the report he restated the law on the issue as follows:-

“Chief Ajayi, SAN, contends that a judgment remains valid until otherwise so declared. Chief Solesi, for the 1st defendant, however contends that a judgment that is a nullity remains so ab initio and does not require an order of court to so declare it.

After examining the authorities, cited by the learned Senior Advocate, I must say I agree with him only to the extent that a judgment remains binding until it is set aside by a competent court. Hadkinson v. Hadkinson (1952) P. 285 (1982) 2 All ER 567, 569. To hold otherwise is to do the party against whom judgment has been obtained with the discretion to decide, in his wisdom, that the judgment is invalid and not binding on him. This, to my mind, is an invitation to anarchy. I do not understand the law to be so. And the often quoted dictum of Lord Denning, MR in Macfoy v. U.A.C. Ltd (1961) 3 All ER 1169 at 1172 (1962) A.C. 152 to the effect that:

“If an act is void, then it is in law a nullity. It is not only bad, but incurably bad. There is no need for an order of the court to set it aside. It is automatically null and void without more. ado, though it is sometimes convenient to have the court declare it to be so.”

is no more that an obiter given per incuriam – See Isaac v. Robertson (1984) 3 All ER 140 at 143 per Lord Diplock. While I agree with the noble Master of the Rolls in his exposition of the distinction between acts that are void and those that are voidable, it is my humble view that his pronouncement (if it was meant to extend to a judgment or order of a court) that there would be no need for an order of court to set aside a void judgment cannot be correct; it is against the weight of judicial opinion. With profound respect, I do not subscribe to such view ……..There is always a presumption of correctness in favour of a court’s judgment And until that presumption is rebutted and the judgment is set aside, it subsists and must be obeyed ……….”

It therefore seems to me crystal clear that a party who is aware of an order or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, whether valid or null, regular or irregular cannot be permitted to disobey or discountenance it unless and until such an order or judgment is duly set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. See too Craig v. Kanseen (1943) 1 All ER 108 at 111. Exhibit E has not been set aside or declared null and void by any court of competent jurisdiction. Accordingly it must enjoy the legal presumption of regularity and must remain valid and binding on the parties concerned and their privies until it is set aside by the due process of the law.

In the circumstance and for all the reasons that I have given above, issue two is resolved against the appellants.

The third issue poses the question whether the respondent has locus standi to submit the issue of the headship of the Oloka family as at 1954 for determination by the trial court It is the contention of learned counsel for the appellants that the respondent has no locus standi to raise the issue of the headship of Oloka family as he was not and did not claim to be a member of the said Oloka family nor did he have an interest in the Chieftaincy dispute in question.

A close study of the pleadings filed by the parties as amended discloses in clear terms that the respondent at no time submitted the issue of the headship of the Oloka family for determination by the trial court This issue, as I have already observed earlier on in this judgment, was long settled in 1956 when the appointment of Chief Samuel Akinboye as the Oloja of Oka was approved by the prescribed authority, the Osemawe of Ondo, pursuant to the provisions of the Chiefs Law. The issue merely arose incidentally in the resolution of facts in respect of the competing claims of the parties as to who had good title to the land in dispute.

The appellants had in their amended statement of claim averred that they obtained their grant of the land in dispute with the approval of the head and the principal members of the Oloka family. This averment of fact was duly traversed by the respondent in his amended statement of defence. The respondent further proceeded, as he was entitled to do, to plead relevant facts in rebuttal of the said averments of the appellants. It seems to me clear that all the respondent did in his pleadings was to set out material facts in proof of his assertion that he purchased the land in dispute from the Oloka family with the consent of the recognised Oloja of Oka and head of the Oloka family. This, he was perfectly entitled to do. It ought also to be stressed that the respondent from his pleadings and evidence before the trial court never invited the court to determine who the Oloja of Oka was in 1956, as a main issue but merely contended that he purchased the land in dispute from the recognised Oloja of Oka and head of the Oloka family. With respect to learned counsel for the appellants, it is my view that the arguments advanced in support of issue three under consideration are entirely academic and inapplicable to the main issue in controversy between the parties in the case.

The Court of Appeal in dealing with the same issue of locus standi disposed of the matter as follows:-

“It is contended by learned counsel for the appellants that the respondent had no locus standi to raise the issue of headship of the Oloka family as he was not a member of that family. I have examined the amended statement of defence, particularly paragraphs 5-7 earlier quoted by me. What the respondent did in those paragraphs was to set out the factual situation necessary to give validity to the sales to him of the two lots of the Oloka family land and to establish that the issue of the headship of the Oloka family was no longer open to question. As a purchaser of land from the family he was entitled to plead the facts set out in paragraphs 5-7 more so that the appellants in their pleadings held out someone else as head of the family at the time of the sales to the respondent. I therefore find no substance in the appellants’ contention on this point. I hold that ground 3 fails.”

I agree with the above observation of the Court of Appeal and fully endorse the same. Accordingly issue three is hereby resolved in favour of the respondent.

Issue four questions whether in the absence of a substantive head of a family, the principal members thereof may not transfer a valid title in the family property. The main submission here is that where there is no head of family, the principal members may validly alienate family property on behalf of the family.

I must, again with respect, confess that this issue seems to me entirely academic, highly speculative and totally irrelevant and unrelated to the appeal under consideration. In this regard, it cannot be over emphasised that it is an elementary and fundamental principle of the determination of disputes between parties that judgment must be confined to the issues raised by the parties. It is not competent for a court suo motu to make a case for either or both of the parties and then proceed to give judgment on the case so formulated contrary to the case of the parties. See Commissioner for Works Benue State & Anor v. Devcon Development Consultants Ltd & Anor (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt. 83) 407; Nigerian Housing Development Society Ltd & Anor v. Yaya Mumuni (1977) 2 S.C. 57; Adeniji & Ors v. Adeniji & Ors (1972) 1 All NLR (Pt. 1) 278 and A.C.B. Ltd v. Attorney-General Northern Nigeria (1969) NMLR 231.

In the second place, parties are bound by their pleadings and evidence which is at variance with the averments in the pleadings goes to no issue and should be discountenanced by the court. See Emegokwue & Ekpenyong & Ors v. Chief Ayi (1973) 3 E.C.S.C.R. 411; (1973) 1 NMLR 372; Kalu Njokwu & Ors v. Ekwu Eme & Ors (1973) 5 S.C. 293; National Investments and Property Co. Ltd. v. Thompson Organisation Ltd. (1969) 1 All NLR 138 at 142 and Oredoyin v. Arowolo (1989) 4 NWLR (Pt. 114) 172.

Thirdly, a court of trial must limit itself to the issue raised by the parties in their pleadings as to act otherwise might well result in the denial to one or the other of the parties of the right to fair hearing. See Metalimpex v. A .G. Leventis & Co. Ltd. (1976) 2 S.C. 91; Kalio v. Daniel-Kalin (1975) 2 S.C. 15; George v. Dominion Flour Mills Ltd. (1963) 1 SCNLR 117; Oniah v. Onyia (1989) 1 NWLR (Pt. 99) 514; Shell BP Ltd v. Abedi (1974) 1 All NLR (Pt. 1) 13 and Alhaji Ogunlowo v. Prince Ogundare (1993) 7 NWLR (Pt. 307) 610 at 624. In other words, it is not open to a party to rely on material facts which he should have but had not pleaded at the trial because the other side had, owing to their absence from the pleadings, lost the opportunity of calling evidence to controvert them. See too J.O. Idahosa & Anor v. D.N Oronsaye (1959) 4 F.S.C. 166, 1959 SCNLR 407.

The gravamen of the appellants’ case from their pleadings is that they obtained a grant of the land in dispute from the head of the Oloka family and the principal members thereof.

This averment was controverted by the respondent and it was solely on this point that the parties joined issue with regard to their competing claims to title to the land in dispute. It was neither raised in their pleading nor was it suggested by the appellants all through the trial of the suit that where there is no head of family, the principal members of such a family may under some customary or other law validly alienate family property on behalf of the family. I agree with the submission of learned counsel for the respondent in his brief to the effect that whether or not in the absence of a substantive head of family,the principal members can transfer a valid title in the family property is a non-issue as this was not the appellants’ case. While it may be acceptable as an academic exercise to theorise and speculate, the rules of court governing pleadings do not recognise such an adventure.

In dealing with this issue which was also raised before it, the Court of Appeal inter alia stated as follows:-

“It was submitted that it was competent for the Oloka family to have transferred title in the land in dispute to the appellants in 1954 even where it was held that neither Adegoju nor Akinboye was the head of the family at that time.

That may well be but as pointed out earlier in this judgment, this is not appellants’ case. It was not pleaded nor evidence led to the effect that on the death of the former Oloka the members of the family met and either appointed an acting head or a committee of managers of the family property. There was evidence to this effect in Aromire v. Oresanya (1938) 14 NLR 116 (supra) but there was no such evidence. In Lukan v. Ogunsusi (supra). The latter case was a take over of power from the head of family just as in this case when in December 1973, Adegoju and his supporters executed Exhibit A in favour of the appellants. The conveyance the ‘rebels’ executed in Lukan v. Ogunsusi was held to be void. So also is Exhibit’ A’ in this case.

Parties must confine themselves to issues raised in their pleadings and it is therefore not now open to the appellants to rely on the rights of members of a family to deal in family property where there is no head of family:- See: James v. Mid-Motors (1978) 11 and 12 S.C. 31.”

I am in agreement with the above view of the Court of Appeal which are fully justified by the relevant issues and the evidence before the trial court.

In conclusion, it seems to me clear that the alleged grants of the land in dispute to the appellants in 1954 and in 1973 were made without the knowledge and consent of the recognised head of the Oloka family. The principles governing the grant or sale of family land are so notorious that I need not set them out here again.

It is enough for the purpose of this appeal to state that a grant or sale of family property by the principal members of the family without the consent of the head of the family is void ab initio. See Agbloe v. Sappor 12 WACA 187.

It is not in dispute that between 1950 and 1956, there was no Oloja of Oka and Chief Theophilus Adegoju who along with others purportedly made the alleged grant of the Oloka family land as the head of the family was infact not the head of the Oloka family. On the other hand, it is established that the head of the said family, Chief Samuel Akinboye, the Oloja of Oka, along with the principal members of the family duly made a grant of the land in dispute in 1973 to the respondent under customary law. Under the circumstance, it seems to me that there was abundant evidence before the trial court upon which the appellants’ claims against the respondent were dismissed in their entirety.

This appeal is totally devoid of substance and it is accordingly dismissed with N1,000.00 costs to the respondent against the appellants.


SC.444/1989

Alhaji A. Aliyu V. Dr. John Adewunmi Sodipo (1994) LLJR-SC

Alhaji A. Aliyu V. Dr. John Adewunmi Sodipo (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

OGUNDARE, J.S.C.

The Ifadu Alase family of Ojuwoye in Mushin district of Lagos State owned a large area of land at Idiroko near Maryland Ikeja. Some years ago the said family sold a part of their land to one Fashola (who had since died) under customary law. In 1956 the children of Fashola sold portion of their father’s land which he bought from Ifadu Alase family to the plaintiff, Dr. John Adewumi Sodipo and joined the accredited representatives of the Ifadu Alase family in conveying the land to Dr. Sodipo.

It appears that at the time the conveyance was executed the plan attached to it and showing the delimitations of the land sold to Dr. Sodipo was not counter-signed by the Surveyor-General of Western Region as required by section 3 of the Survey Law of Western Region of Nigeria Cap. 121 then applicable in the area where the land is situate. The conveyance was presented for registration at the Registry office in Ibadan. According to the evidence of the surveyor who surveyed the land at the instance of Dr. Sodipo and who presented the Deed on registration at Ibadan, the Registrar of Deeds on noticing that the attached plan to the Deed of conveyance was not counter-signed by the Surveyor-General returned the same to the Surveyor for counter-signature of the Surveyor-General.

The surveyor later procured the counter-signature of the Surveyor-General and returned the deed to the Registrar of Deeds who thereafter registered it as No.19 at page 19 in Vol.145 of the Lands Registry Ibadan. Dr. Sodipo took possession of the land jointly conveyed to him by the families of Ifadu Alase and Fashola. After the land had been conveyed to Dr. Sodipo and he had taken possession, he noticed in 1957 that one Sinotu trespassed on the land and he sued her and had judgment given in his favour. In 1961, he partitioned the land into three pieces marked A, B and C. He fenced round the whole land and built on a portion of it.

Portion A was subsequently leased to a construction company which appeared not to have gone into possession. Sometime in 1976 Dr. Sodipo noticed that some workmen came on portion A and commenced building thereon. On enquiry made by him he discovered that it was one Lt. Col. A. Aliyu that was developing the land. He challenged Lt. Col. Aliyu who claimed that the land was sold and conveyed to him by one Yesufu Salami Okunade, the head of the Abdul Salami Okunade family or Fashola family. When Lt. Col. Aliyu would not desist from continuing with his building on the land, Dr. Sodipo instituted the action leading to this appeal, claiming:

“1. A declaration that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of all that piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being at Idiroko Village, Ikorodu Road in Ikeja Division of Lagos State which land is more particularly described and delineated on the plan attached to a Deed of Conveyance in favour of the plaintiff dated the 30th day of June, 1951 and was registered as No.19 at page 19 in Volume 145 of theLand Registry in Ibadan now in Lagos.

  1. N200 damages against the defendant for trespass committed on the land by the said defendant, his agents, servants and/or privies during the period of January to September 1976.
  2. A perpetual injunction restraining the defendant, his agents servants and/or privies from committing further Acts of trespass on the land.”

Pleadings having been ordered, filed and exchanged the action proceeded to trial. The learned trial Judge in a considered judgment found in favour of the plaintiff and entered judgment for him in terms of his claims with costs. Being dissatisfied with this judgment, the defendant Lt. Col. Aliyu (also known as Alhaji A. Aliyu) appealed unsuccessfully to the Court of Appeal (Lagos Division). Being dissatisfied with the judgment of the Court of Appeal, he has further appealed to this court, with leave of this court, upon three original and three additional grounds of appeal. The additional grounds are numbered 4-6. Both parties filed and exchanged their respective Briefs of Argument and in the defendant/appellant’, Brief, the following questions are set down for determination:

“1. Whether the survey plan attached to Exhs. 8 and 2 was valid and admissible in evidence without the counter signature of the Surveyor General when Exhs. 8 and 2 registered by the Registrar of Deeds and the effects of its inadmissibility under Laws of Western Nigeria 1959 Cap. 121 and Cap. 56 if that Law was the applicable law at the time (Ground 1).

  1. Whether Exhs. 8 and 2 clearly show the land conveyed to the plaintiff/respondent without the plan annexed to it. (Ground 1).
  2. Whether the defendant/appellant and his witnesses proved in their evidence the fraud alleged. (Ground 1).
  3. Whether the importation of evidence on processes by which Exhs. 8 and 2 went through made by the Court of Appeal was wrong in law and adversely affected the judgment of that court (Grounds 4 and 5).
  4. Whether the Court of Appeal was right in upholding the decision of trial Judge that Exh. 4 proved acts of ownership in the absence of execution by a third party or the lessee therein stated (Ground 3).
  5. Whether the Court of Appeal was right in agreeing with the trial court that the evidence of the defendant and his witnesses did not show that the land sold to the plaintiff/respondent did not include the land in dispute i.e. that the land sold to the plaintiff/respondent was less than what the plaintiff/respondent claimed and registered in Exhs. 8 and 2 with the plan. (Ground 6).
  6. Whether considering the totality of the evidence before the trial Judge, the Court of Appeal was right in dismissing the appeal. (Ground 7).”

The plaintiff/respondent on his part set out in his Brief two issues, to wit:

“1. Whether the parcel of land sold to the plaintiff by the Fashola family was as extensive as claimed in Exhibits 2 and 8 or whether the grant was enlarged by the fraud allegedly perpetrated by the plaintiff.

  1. Whether the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the decision of the lower court granting judgment in favour of the plaintiff.”

The issues set out in the appellant’s Brief are rather prolix while those formulated by the respondent do not meet all the issues raised in the grounds of appeal. The issues raised by the appellant can be classified as hereunder:

  1. Whether Exhibits 2 and 8, the Deed of conveyance relied on by the plaintiff for his title, were rightly admitted;
  2. If the deed was rightly admitted, what is the weight to be attached to it:
  3. Whether defendant proved the fraud pleaded by him; and
  4. Whether plaintiff established enough acts of ownership to entitle him to judgment.

Admissibility of Exhibits 2 and 8

This perhaps is the crucial issue in this appeal. The two exhibits are the original and copy of the Deed of conveyance whereby Ifadu Alase family and Fashola family allegedly transferred title to the plaintiff in respect of the land in dispute. I say “allegedly” because the case of the defendant was that these two families did not grant to the plaintiff as much land as was shown on the plan attached to the Deed of conveyance. The plaintiff pleaded as follows:

“3. The plaintiff is the lawful owner of a parcel of land situate, lying and being at Idiroko near Maryland Ikeja by virtue of a Deed of Conveyance dated the 30th day of June, 1956 registered as No.19 at page 19 in Volume 145 of the Lands Registry at Ibadan now in Lagos.

  1. The plaintiff avers that the original owners of the land in dispute are the Ifadu Alase family of Ojuwoye Mushin, who sold and conveyed the said land to him in 1956.
  2. The plaintiff states that the accredited representatives of the said family and Fashola’s children such as, Aina Edu Alashe, Moriamo Ibironke Ayilago, Salu Oke Ajaiye, Ogundimo Oyatogun Anjorin, Fatumo Omopariola Fashola, Muniratu Omotayo Fashola, and Yesufu Salami Fashola otherwise known as Yesufu Salami Okunade executed the said Deed of Conveyance in respect of this land in his favour in 1956.

x x x x x x x x

  1. The plaintiff avers that as soon as he bought the said parcel of land he commissioned a Licensed Surveyor Mr. S. Akanbi Alaka to survey the land which he did and produced plan No.AL.68/1956. A dated the 15th day of June, 1956 which is attached to the Conveyance executed in favour of the plaintiff by the Ifadu Alase family on the 30th day of June, 1956.
  2. The plaintiff avers that the parcel of land conveyed to him by Ifadu Alase family and the children of Fashola in 1956 a portion of which is now in dispute is properly and accurately delineated on the said Survey plan by the pillars Nos. DB.630, DB.3299, DB. 3300, DB.3301, DB. 3302, Y. 1485, Y. 1486, S. 807 and S. 806 inclusive which Survey Plan is numbered AL 68/1956, a copy of which is attached and marked ‘A’.”

The defendant, on the other hand, pleaded in paragraphs 19-23 of his amended statement of defence in the following manner:

“19. At the trial of this action the defendant will contend that Plan No.AL/68/56 is not a PLAN and is not in existence on the 23rd of June, 1956.

  1. At the trial of this action the defendant will contend that plaintiff was and is never in possession of portion A plan No.LA/99/1961.
  2. At the trial of this action the defendant will contend that the plaintiff is not the owner of the parcel of land on which the defendant erected his building.
  3. The defendant will also contend that the portion on which the defendant erected his buildings was not part of the portion sold to the plaintiff by Alashe and Okunade family.
  4. With further reference of the purported Deed of Conveyance of plaintiff referred to in paragraph 3 of the plaintiff’s statement of claim, the defendant avers that the said deed of Conveyance is tainted with fraud:

PARTICULARS OF FRAUD

a. The Deed of Conveyance was executed on 23/6/56 and not on 30/6/56 as claimed by the plaintiff.

b. The plan referred to in the habendum clause of the Deed of Conveyance was not in existence on the 23/6/56.

c. The plan was not physically attached to the Deed of Conveyance on 23/6/56 at the time of the execution of the Deed of Conveyance.

d. The plan covered a greater area of land than members of Okunade family agreed to sell to the family.

e. The plaintiff alone prepared the so called deed of Conveyance and brought it to the vendors for their signature/ thumb impressions.”

At the trial, the plaintiff gave evidence and deposed inter alia as follows:

“The land in dispute is part of a vast area of land measuring about 3.4 acres. The land is in the left side of the main road on going to Lagos from Maryland. I am the owner of the land in dispute. In 1956 I made contact with one Fashola Family, whose family representatives were (1) Fatimo Fashola (2) Muniratu Fashola and (3) Yesufu Salami Fashola otherwise known as Yesufu Salami Okunade. These people took me to the persons who they say were the original owners of the land in dispute. The persons were of Ifadu Alase Family. I met four persons, who were the accredited representatives of the Ifadu Alase Family. I remember that one of these four persons is Aina Edu Alase. He is the oldest. I can not remember the names of the other persons.

The representatives of Fashola family showed the land to me. I requested one Alhaji S. A. Alaka to carry out the survey of the area. He was to produce the plan of the area. I instructed my counsel to prepare the Conveyance Deed of the area. My Solicitor who prepared the conveyance was late K.A. Kotun. The conveyance was executed in a Magistrate Court before a Chief Magistrate late A. Mumuni in Lagos.

After the execution of the conveyance I fenced the land, planted some vegetables ort the land.” Further in his evidence he added:

“I remember I have told court that I have asked one Alaka to prepare a plan in respect of the land. The plan was prepared and if I see it, I can recognise. The original copy of the plan has been tendered in one other suit in another court. I can recognise a certified true copy of the plan. Here it is.”

A copy of the Deed of Conveyance was admitted in evidence as exhibit 2. Cross examined by learned counsel for the defendant the plaintiff testified thus:

“The late Fashola never told me that only plots B and C and a portion behind these plots that were sold to me. I do not agree that the plan attached to Exhibit 2 was not in existence when Exhibit 2 was executed.”

To further questions the plaintiff answered:

“I can see Exhibit 2 and I repeated the site plan was physically attached to it by the time it was executed.

I do not agree that the area of land sold to me by the Fashola Family was not as large as the one shown on Exhibit 2. I agree I instructed my lawyer to prepare Exhibit 2.”

P.W.3. Alhaji Salisu Akanbi Alaka is the Licensed Surveyor who prepared, on the instruction of the plaintiff, the plan attached to the Deed of Conveyance. He testified thus:

“I remember I received instructions about the land in dispute from the plaintiff. He instructed me to survey his Estate which included the land in dispute. I did so. I produced a plan. The plan I produced is the one now attached to Exhibit 2. The plan attached to Exhibit 2 was made in 1956. It was the first one. The number on the plan is AL/68/1956 dated 15.6.56. I went on the land before I prepared Exhibit 2.

When I got to the land it was bushy. There was no structure or any building on the land at that time. Because the plaintiff is my friend, I sent Exhibit 2 together with the site plan to Ibadan Land Registry for Registration. It was registered. It was returned to me and I returned it to the plaintiff. The plan now attached to Exhibit 2 was the one that was with it to Ibadan.

When the Deed and the plan got to Ibadan the Registrar of Deeds requested for the counter signature of the Surveyor-General. The counter-signature was done before the Registration.” Cross-examined, witness deposed thus:

“I did not know anything about the land in dispute until the plaintiff instructed and took me there to survey it. None of the vendors was present when the plaintiff showed me the land to survey it. I know that with the provision of the Survey land at my time a prepared site plan must be counter signed by the Surveyor-General. At that I prepared the plan Exhibit 2, in 1956, the law was on that it must be counter signed. Exhibit 2 is stamped at the stamp Duty Office but I did not take it there for the stamp duty. I took Exhibit 2 to Ibadan for registration. I did not take it there myself but I sent it through someone. The Registration stamp is on Exhibit 2 and the date is also there as 10/7/56.

I can not remember whether or not Exhibit 2 has been counter-signed by the Surveyor-General at the time I sent it for registration in Ibadan. I can see on Exhibit 2 that it was countersigned on 6/8/56. The site plan was already attached to Exhibit 2 when I sent the Deed for registration at Ibadan.

I can see this document. It is a certified true copy of the Deed I sent to Ibadan for registration and I can see the plan attached to it. I compare it with the plan on Exhibit 2 and say that it is the same plan as that in Exhibit 2.”

To further questions the witness answered:

“I agree that at the time I surveyed the land in dispute in 1956 there was a thorough fare between the land I surveyed and Okupe land, in the area.

On Exhibit 2, I showed an adjoining land to the plaintiff land I surveyed. The adjoining land bears registration No.AL/63/50. The registration number is alright I did not survey the land in 1950. I only showed the number as an information on my plan Exhibit 2. My number on exhibit 2 is AL/68/56. I now say that I surveyed the adjoining land for another person in 1950 and that is the reason why it bears my registration number. In 1956 when I surveyed plan in the same area, I showed it as information.”

Plaintiff also called Chief Karimu Ajayi the Alase, who was at the time of the trial, the head of the Ifade Alase family. He confirmed in his evidence that the deed of Conveyance to the plaintiff was executed in his presence and before a Magistrate by the then head and principal members of the Ifadu Alase family and that the deed was read over to the signatories before execution. He testified that the land in dispute belonged to the plaintiff and claimed that he knew the land. He affirmed under cross-examination that he was in the court room when the Conveyance was read and interpreted to the parties before it was executed by them and that he followed the parties into the Magistrate’s chambers. He testified that the extent of the land sold to the plaintiff was about 4 acres. He deposed thus:

“I know the extent of the land and I know that is about 4 acres. It was only the size owned by the Fashola and this is 4 acres that was sold to the plaintiff by them. The land sold to the plaintiff is about 4 acres. The land of the Alashe family in the area is a large one. I bow that it is the whole 4 acres of the land that was sold to the plaintiff. ”

The original Deed of Conveyance to the plaintiff was admitted in evidence through one Alhaji Jimoh Farry an exhibits clerk in the High Court of Lagos, and was marked exhibit 8.

The defendant testified in his defence and claimed that he bought the land in dispute through one Yesufu Okunade in 1976. Yesufu Okunade was the same person as Yesufu Fashola a member of the Fashola family. Yesufu Okunade executed the deed of conveyance in favour of the defendant. A copy of the deed was tendered and admitted in evidence and marked exhibit 10. The land was vacant at the time the defendant was put in possession by Yesufu.

D.W.2 who claimed that he worked with a lawyer, testified how he and Yesufu Okunade took the defendant to the land in dispute which was later sold to the defendant by Okunade. Testifying further he said: “I know that plaintiff has property opposite the land in dispute. It is the Fashola family that sold the land to the plaintiff. It was in 1956 that plaintiff was sold the land. I was present at the transactions and I know the portion actually sold to the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s land is on the left hand side of the area in which the land in dispute is situated.”

D.W.3 in his own evidence testified inter alia thus:

“I am familiar with the survey laws in the old Western Region of Nigeria. I know that a plan is considered ready when it has been signed by a surveyor and countersigned by the Surveyor-General. ”

This same witness admitted that the area edged red on the plaintiff’s plan was the same as the area verged red, the plan attached to the plaintiff’s Deed of Conveyance, Exhibit 8. The last witness for the defendant is one Chief Micheal Akinola, a member of the Alase family.

He testified thus:

“I knows the plaintiff and I know the defendant. I know the land in dispute between them. The land in dispute is situated on Ikorodu Road. The land is now divided into two by a road. Dr. Sodipo’s portion is on the right hand side while that of Colonel Aliu is in the left.”

I have set out the evidence given by the witnesses for both parties in order to show whether or not it is established

(1) that the plan attached to exhibit 8 (as well as exhibit 2 shows a larger area of land than was admittedly sold and conveyed to the plaintiff by the Ifedu Alase Fashola families;

(2) whether fraud pleaded by the defendant was proved.

The issue of the admissibility of exhibit 8 (as well as exhibit 2) was hotly contested by learned counsel for the defendant in his final address at the trial. It was learned counsel’s submission that at the time of the execution of the Deed of Conveyance, the plan attached to it not having been countersigned by the Surveyor-General as required by section 27 of the Surveyor Law Cap. 121 Laws of Western Nigeria, the Deed of Conveyance was not admissible. He cited the case of Awomuti v. Salami (1978) 3 SC.105 at 109 in support of his contention. He further submitted that the plan could not have been the plan attached to the Deed at the time of its execution and cited Idowu Alashe & Ors. v. Sanya Olori-Ilu (1964) 1 All NLR 390; (1965) NMLR 66 at page 71 in support of his submission. Learned Counsel observed that the plan did not carry the endorsement of the Magistrate before whom the Deed was executed. He referred to other defects in exhibit 8 such as that the commencement date was put at 30th June, 1956 whereas the plan was not counter signed until 6th August, 1956. It was counsel’s submission that with these defects, it should be inferred that exhibit 8 did not contain the plan now attached to it and that, therefore, there was uncertainty as to what land was actually sold to the plaintiff. On the issue of fraud pleaded in paragraph 23 of the amended statement of defence, counsel was of the view that if the particulars of the fraud given in the pleadings were found to be proved, then the validity of exhibit 8 could not be sustained. He cited a number of authorities in support.

Learned counsel for the plaintiff for his part, submitted that the plan attached to exhibit 8 was in existence before the Deed was executed. He contended that it was for the defence to prove the contrary and submitted that there was no evidence that the plan was not in existence at the time of the execution of exhibit 8. Learned counsel conceded certain defects such as (a) that the plan was not countersigned before the Deed was submitted for registration, (b) that exhibit 8 did not bear the date on which it was registered and (c) that the date on it was the date it was presented for registration; he however, submitted that on the authority of Mrs. Bucknor-Maclean & Anor v. Inlaks Ltd. (1980) 8-11 S.C.1, all these defects were cured by the registration of the Deed, exhibit 8.

The learned trial judge observed, and quite rightly in my view, that the principal issue joined between the parties was the authenticity or otherwise of exhibit 8 especially of the plan attached to it and put the onus on the plaintiff not only to show that exhibit 8 was properly executed but that everything connected with it was admissible. After a review of counsel’s submissions and authorities cited, the learned trial Judge found :

“The evidence of 1st plaintiff witness and 4th plaintiff witness show that exhibit 2 was executed. Despite the rigorously (sic) cross-examination of 4th plaintiff witness by the defence as to where exhibits 2 was executed, I believe plaintiff s evidence and that of 4th plaintiff witness that exhibit 2 was executed.

“He also found, after a review of the evidence, as follows:

“I believe the plan of the plaintiff’s land in this case possesses these characteristics.

‘draw or attached hereto and therefore edged “RED”.

I believe and I so find that the Magistrate must have read this part of the Habedum in the Deed and he must have seen the plan there before appending his signature. The plan is dated and signed by the surveyor as 15/6/56, exhibit 2 to which it is attached is executed by the magistrate as shown by the date and signature of the Magistrate to be 23/6/56. The endorsement by the magistrate on Exhibit 2 also shows the illiterate jurat as all the signatories thereon the thumb impression. I believe therefore and I so find as evident by the facts before me that the plan as exhibit 2 was there when exhibit 2 was executed by the Ifadu Alashe family and Fashola Okunade families before the Magistrate in June,1956.” (Italics is mine).

He finally made this finding of fact-

“I believe exhibit 2 was properly executed. It complied with the provision of the Registration of Land Ordinance 1948 with regard to its being executed before Magistrate and its registration was done in accordance with the law, the plan attached to exhibits 2 has been found to be so annexed at the time of execution and registration,” (Italics is mine)

It was on these findings that he finally entered judgment for the plaintiff.

On appeal to the Court of Appeal, learned counsel for the defendant/ appellant once again vigorously fought the issue of the admissibility of exhibit 8. Learned counsel for the plaintiff/respondent before that court submitted the case of Kola James v. Chiefs S.O. Lanlehin (1985) 7 S.C. (Pt.1) page 404; (1985) 2 NWLR (Pt.6) 262 has put an end to the arguments of learned counsel for the appellant. Ademola J.C.A. in the lead judgment of the Court of Appeal observed:

“On the attack made on the plan attached to Exhibit 8 by the appellant in his brief, I am in complete agreement with the respondent contention that the appellant has confused the issue of admissibility of Exhibit 8 under the Land Instrument Registration Law with the question of admissibility of the plan per se under the Survey Law; hence the appellant’s reliance on the case of Gilhert Akinduyin Awoti v. Alhaji Jimoh Salami (1978) 3 SC page 105 at page 110 and other cases noted above in his brief. I think the matter has been settled beyond any shadow of doubt by the judgment of this court in Chief S. O. Lanlehin v. Kola James reported FAC/L/157/83 delivered on 26th day of March, 1984 where I said as follows:

‘It is clear that what the court was dealing with there is not the admissibility of the document of conveyance there (Exh. E) but the worthlessness weight to be attached to Exhibit E there as admitted. Worthlessness presupposes the recognition of the existence of a thing. You cannot talk of an inadmissible document being worthy or worthless. I do not read the Awomuti’s case as deciding that the Exhihit E there is inadmissible or the plan attached to it. Much is being read into that case by the learned counsel here. The problem here is the admissibility of the conveyance of 1920 which was registered and pleaded in the Statement of Claim. It is a matter governed entirely by Section 15 of the Land Instrument Registration Law. The Section 23 of the Survey Act has no part in this. Alashe & 2 others v. Olori -Ilu & Others (supra) is not applicable here to the plan attached to conveyance. The admissibility of a plan was a straight issue in the Alashe’ s case as plan sought to be tendered there contravened sections 23 of the Survey Act (Cap 194). The Land Instrument Registration Law was not even considered or mentioned in the Alashe’s case.’

The above statement is very much apposite here. This judgment was upheld on appeal in Kole James v. Chief S. O. Lanlehin (1985)7 SC. Page 404 where Bello J.S.C., (as he then was), said as follows:-

“In my view, the decision of the Court of Appeal is in accord with the judgment of this court in Erinosho v. Owokoniran (1965) NMLR 479 wherein it was held that non-compliance with the requirements of the Survey Act did not render a plan annexed to a registered instrument inadmissible in evidence. My learned brother, Karibi Whyte J.S.C. has stated fully his reasons for holding that the plan attached to the registered conveyance in the case on appeal before us is admissible. I adopt his reasons on the issue of its admissibility.” These judgments, in my view are complete answers to the contentions of the appellant in this appeal.”

The same arguments are again raised in the further appeal by the defendant to this court.

I shall now examine the cases relied on both parties. In Exhibit 8, the two families of Ifadu Alashe and Fashola conveyed unto the plaintiff “ALL that piece or parcel of land situate lying and being at Idiroko Village, Ikorodu Road, Ikeja District together with all the rights, easements and appurtenances or reputed to be appurtenant thereto and which is more particularly described and delineated with its dimensions and abuttals on the plan drawn or attached hereto and thereon edged Red”. The courts below found, and I am not persuaded to disagree with them, that the Plan No. AL.68/1956 was the plan attached to Exhibit 8 at the time of its execution. It is not in dispute that the plan was not counter-signed by the Surveyor General of the Western Region at the time of the execution of Exhibit 8. It is contended for the defendant that this lapse rendered the plan inadmissible under the Survey Law of Western Nigeria and that this admissibility also extended to Exhibit 8, the Deed. Reliance is placed on the case of Awomuti v. Salami (supra).

Learned counsel for the plaintiff contends that the fact that Plan No. AL.68/1956 attached to Exhibit 8 was not countersigned by the Surveyor-General at the time of the execution of the Deed would not affect the admissibility of the deed and relies on Kole James v. S. O. Lanlehin (Supra).

Now section 3 of the Survey Law of Western Nigeria applicable in this case provided as follows:

“3(1) No map, plan or diagram of land-

(a) if prepared after the 1st day of June, 1918, shall be accepted for registration with any registrable instrument which is required by any written law to contain a map, plan or diagram; and

(b) if prepared after the 20th day of October, 1897, shall, save for good cause shown to the court, be admitted in evidence in any court,

unless the map, plan or diagram-

(i) has been prepared and signed by a surveyor or is a copy of a map, plan or diagram so prepared and signed and is certified by a surveyor as being a true copy; and

(ii) has been examined by the Survey Department and bears the counter signature of the Surveyor-General.”

Sections 3 dealt with the admissibility in evidence of maps, plans or diagrams of land prepared after 1897. The admissibility in evidence of instruments affecting land was, however, governed by a different law. It was the Land Instruments Registration Law. I shall set out the relevant sections of the latter Legislation relating to registration of instruments. These were:-

3(1) There shall be in the Region a land registry with an office or offices at such place or places as the Governor may from time to time direct.

  1. No instrument executed in Nigeria after the commencement of this Law, the grantor, or one or more of the grantors, whereof is illiterate, shall be registered unless it has been executed by such illiterate grantor or grantors in the presence of a magistrate or justice of the peace and is subscribed by such magistrate or justice of the peace as a witness thereto.

10 (1) No instrument executed after the commencement of this law, other than a power of attorney, shall be registered unless it contains a proper and sufficient description, and, subject to the regulations, a plan, of the land affected by such instrument.

The decision of the registrar as to the adequacy of the description and plan of any land in any instrument for the purpose of identification shall be final, subject to any order of the High Court.

(2) No Crown grant executed after the 1st June, 1918, and no instrument executed after the said date affecting land the subject of a Crown grant executed after the said date shall be registered unless the plan of the land affected by such Crown grant or instrument is signed by a surveyor and is countersigned by the Survey-General or is a copy of a plan so signed and countersigned.

(3) No instrument executed after the 1st June, 1918, having thereon or attached thereto a plan of the land affected shall be registered unless the plan is signed by a surveyor or is a copy of a plan which has been signed by a surveyor.

(4) In this section the terms “surveyor” and “Surveyor-General” have the meanings assigned to those terms by the Survey Law.

  1. No instrument shall be pleaded or given in evidence in any court as affecting any land unless the same shall have been registered in the proper office as specified in section 3.’

The provisio is omitted as it is not relevant here. In Awomuti v. Salami (supra) this court held that a defective plan attached to a deed of conveyance and the conveyance to which it was attached are both worthless. This court in that case, however, came to its decision without the benefit of arguments (defendant’s counsel conceded the point) and without considering either the land Instrument Registration Law or an earlier decision of this court in Erinsho v. Owokoniran (1965) NMLR 479 where this court had held that:

(1) Once an instrument is registered under the Land Instruments Registration Law or Act, it should be admitted in evidence as a registered instrument. If, however, the plan annexed thereto is in fact defective in any way, a different question will arise as to its evidential value;

(2) When a plan is tendered as a plan issues as to its admissibility will be governed by sections 3 of the Survey Law or section 23 of the Survey Act (both provisions are in pari materia)

At page 484 Idigbe J.S.C. delivering the judgment of the court had observed:

“In this court learned counsel for appellant has argued that since the deed of conveyance was duly registered the provisions of Cap. 56, Land instruments Registration Law Western Nigeria (see Vol. 3, 1959 edition of the Laws of Western Region) became applicable and not the Survey Law Cap. 121 aforesaid; he therefore submitted that the document should have been received in evidence by virtue of the provisions of sections 16 of Cap. 56 aforesaid. We think that it should be pointed out that the Laws Cap. 56, Land Instruments Registration Law, and Cap. 121 the Survey Law -are clearly intended for different purposes. Section 3 of Cap. 121 is intended to control the admission in evidence of all plans, maps or diagram of land prepared after 1987;

Cap. 56 is clearly intended, among other things, to control the admission in evidence of instruments – defined in section 2 of that law- which were registered after 1925 the commencement date of that law (see sections 10 and 16 of Cap. 56). The document in question (Exh. 6 rejected) comes within the definition of the term ‘instrument’ in section 2 of Cap. 56 aforesaid. Even if Cap. 56 applied to it, all questions relating to the adequacy or sufficiency of the plan annexed to that instrument are matters within the competence of the Registrar appointed by the Governor under section 4 of that law subject, of course, to any order of the High Court (section 10(1) Cap. 56 refers). Therefore it would appear that once the instrument is registered under Cap. 56 it should be admitted, as a registered instrument, in evidence (see section 16 cap. 560); if, however, the plan annexed thereto is in fact defective in any way a different question will arise as to its evidential value. When a plan is tendered in evidence as a plan, issues as to its admissibility will be governed by section 3 of Cap. 121 aforesaid, if that plan was prepared after 1897. In the present case, the instrument (Exh.6 rejected) was registered in 1917, and as already pointed out, Cap. 56 cannot apply to it, since the document was already registered when that Law Cap.56 came into force (Sec. 10(1) Cap. 56 refers). In our view the learned trial Judge erred when he refused to admit the document which was offered in evidence as a conveyance Blaize got from Morinatu Oladiran.”

In Kola James v. Chiefs S.O. Lanlehin (supra) this court reaffirmed its earlier decision in Erinosho v. Owokoniran and went on to distinguish Alase v. Olori-Ilu (1965) NMLR 66 relied on in Awomuti v. Salami. In Alase v. Olori-Ilu what was sought to be tendered in evidence but rejected was a plan per se that did not conform with the provisions of the Survey Law. Commenting on the decision in Erinosho v. Owokoniran Obaseki J.S.C. in Kola James v. Chief Lanlehin (supra) observed at page 409 of the Report that:

“This decision saves the court the confusion of its role as a court hearing evidence in a disputed land matter with the role of a registrar considering whether the plan attached to an instrument is adequate for the purpose of registration. The roles are quite distinct, and, but for the decision-making process, quite different.”

In Kola James v. Chief S.O. Lanlehin (supra) the facts are almost on all fours with the facts here except that in that case the learned trial Judge admitted in evidence the deed of conveyance but rejected the plan attached to it that was not signed by the surveyor that made it nor countersigned by the Surveyor-General as required by the Survey Law. On appeal to the Court of Appeal (Lagos Division) that court allowed the appeal and admitted the plan as well as in evidence. On further appeal to this court, the decision of the Court of Appeal was affirmed. Karibi-Whyte J.S.C. delivering the lead judgment of the court in the case explained the decision of this court in Awomuti v. Salami and Alase v. Olori-Ilu. He observed at pages 441-444 thus:

“Surely it cannot be contested that a registrable instrument validly registered is not rendered inadmissible in evidence merely because a defective plan was annexed to it. The converse seems to be the contention of counsel for the appellants who relies on Awomuti v. Salami & Ors. (1978) 3 S.C.105 for his submission. On a careful reading and analysis of the judgment in Awomuti v. Salami (supra), that case decided no such principle of law. It was obvious in that case that their Lordships were not questioning the admissibility of the conveyance, Exhibit E, in respect of which there seemed to be no doubt, being a registered registrable instrument. What the opinion expressed amounted to was the weight to be attached to the conveyance which was described as worthless by Kayode Eso, J.S.C. at p.110. In Awomuti v. Salami & Ors. (supra) the conveyance was registered and was admitted in evidence. There was no reference to any feature on the land by means of which the land would have been identified by means of the conveyance. The conveyance merely referred to the plan. The plan which was conceded by counsel as having not been countersigned by the Director of Surveys at the time of the registration of the deed of conveyance was held to be inadmissible. The deed of conveyance was described as worthless because-

‘Apart from referring to the inadmissible plan, there is no reference to any feature on the land by means of which the land would have been identified with the deed of conveyance.'(see p.110).

It is important to state that Their Lordships considered Exhibit E, the deed of conveyance and actually admitted it in evidence. But with respect to the plan annexed, it was observed that the plan was countersigned by the Director of Surveys on 13th July, 1956, whereas the deed of conveyance was executed on the 15th March, 1956. The court then agreed with counsel for the appellant that ‘this shows clearly that at the time of the execution of Exhibit E, the plan (If any) attached to it cannot be the plan now attached to the certified true copy of the Deed.’ (See p.109). Concisely stated the true reason for rejecting the plan was that the plan now attached to the deed of conveyance was not the plan attached to it at the execution.

The case is therefore different from the case of Alase v. Ilu (supra) where only the plan was in issue, or the instant case where the only issue is that the plan attached was not signed and countersigned as required by section 3 of the Survey Law, Cap. 132. It is also different from Lydia Erinosho v. Owokoniran (supra) where the instrument was executed together with the plan attached. There is therefore no conflict between Awomuti v. Salami (supra) and Erinosho v. Owokoniran (supra). I think the observation of the Court of Appeal on the Awomuti case was correct when it said, at p.150:

‘It is clear that what the court was dealing with there is not the admissibility of the document of conveyance there (Exh.E) but the worthlessness of the Exh. so admitted. It was a matter of weight to be attached to Exhibit E there as admitted. Worthlessness presupposes the recognition of the existence of a thing. You cannot talk of an inadmissible document being worthy or worthless.’ Awomuti v. Salami (supra) cannot be read to mean that a registered instrument will be rendered inadmissible in evidence merely because there is annexed to it a plan which at the time of its execution did not comply with the mandatory statutory requirements for its admissibility in evidence. Alase v. Olori-Ilu (supra) relied upon by counsel for the appellant did not in fact arise.” I pause here a little to compare the facts in Awomuti v. Salami with the facts in the case on hand. It would appear on the surface that the facts are the same but while in Awomuti the trial court held that “at the time of execution of Exhibit E, the plan (if any) attached to it can not be the plan now attached to the certified true copy of the deed”, in the case on hand there is the definite finding of the two courts below (and I agree with that finding on the evidence) that the plan No. AL.68/1956 was attached to Exhibit 8 at the time of its execution. There is thus this difference, and an important one for that matter, between this case and Awomuti’s case. The facts in the present case are akin to the facts, as regards the execution of the deed of conveyance, in Akano Fashina Agboola v. Angeline Abimbola (1969) 6 NSCC 263; (1969) 1 All NLR 287 where a plan attached to a conveyance was not countersigned at the time of its execution but four months afterwards. Application for registration of the grantee’s title was made to the Registrar of Titles and this was objected to. The objection was upheld. On appeal to the High Court, the Registrar’s decision was upheld. But on further appeal to this court, it was held, per Coker Ag. CNJ at page 296 that:

“The Registrar seemed to have exaggerated the effect of the lateness of getting the plan attached to Exhibit D counter- Signed by the Director of Federal Surveys in pursuance of the provisions of the Survey Act. Clearly on the fact of it and as indeed was found by the Registrar, the plan was made by the appellant’s surveyor on the 3rd July, 1963. The conveyance was executed on the 9th July, 1963, so that when exhibit D was executed the plan was already in existence although not yet counter-signed. The requirements for countersignature relate to matters of evidence and the production of the document in evidence and a non-compliance, at any rate at that stage, with the Survey Act does not render the plan void or useless.”

I need add that where a plan is tendered per se but does not conform with the requirements of section 3(b) of the Survey Law (or Act), it may nevertheless be admitted in evidence “if good cause (is) shown to the court” for non-compliance. In the case on hand, Exhibit 8 had attached to it at the time of its execution a plan duly signed by a surveyor (P.W.3) thus complying with the provisions of section 10(3) of the Land Instruments Registration Law and as registered by the Registrar under section 10(1) of the Law.

Even assuming that the counter-signature of the Surveyor General is a sine qua non to the admissibility of Plan No. AL.68/1956 attached to Exhibit 8, the fact that it was subsequently counter- signed by the Surveyor-General before the final registration of Exhibit 8 would cure whatever defect there might be. Lack of counter-signature does not render the plan void. I have support for this view in the decision of this court in Ojiako & Ors. v. Ogueze & Ors (1963) 1 SCNLR 112; (1962) 1 All NLR 58 (Reprint) where this court allowed the tendering party to obtain the necessary counter-signature and to produce the plan later as additional evidence. Brett, FJ. said at page 63 of the Report:

“After the appeal had been adjourned for judgment, it was observed that the plaintiff’s plan, Exhibit A, had not been countersigned by the Director of Survey, as required by S.23 of the Survey Act. This section is mandatory and the court is obliged to take the point of its own motion. As, however, the plan was filed in May 1955, when ignorance of S.23 of the survey Act was general, I would follow the course adopted in a number of previous appeals by reopening the appeal and adjoining it for six weeks to give the plaintiffs the opportunity of having their plan countersigned and filing a motion to produce it as additional evidence. If this is done and the motion is granted I would dismiss the appeal with costs assessed at 25 guineas.”

This was precisely what the Registrar did in the case on hand when he allowed P.W.3 to take away Exhibit 8 for counter-signature of the Surveyor-General on the plan attached to it before its final registration. Ojiako & Ors. v. Ogueze & Ors. (supra) is a case where the plan was tendered per se and its admissibility coming under the Survey Law or Act- a worse case than here.

After a careful consideration of the arguments proferred by learned counsel for the parties, I am satisfied that the lower court was right in its conclusion that the plaintiff’s Deed of conveyance was admissible. There was substantial compliance with the statutory requirements for its registration and the Registrar’s exercise of his discretion to register it has not been set aside by any order of a high court- see section 10(1) of the Land Instruments Registration Law.

Other Issues

I must say that the defendant led no evidence whatsoever in support of the plea of fraud raised in paragraph 23 of his amended Statement of Defence. He seems to rely on the defects appearing on the face of Exhibit 8. There is no evidence from which one could hold that those defects were as a result of fraud perpetrated by the plaintiff or any other person. The evidence of P.W.3 the Surveyor who prepared the plan attached to exhibit 8 and who was responsible for presenting the Deed for registration remains unchallenged. The evidence of this witness was accepted by the learned trial Judge and it has not been satisfactorily shown before us that the evidence was not worthy of any credit. That evidence explained convincingly most of the particulars of fraud given in paragraph 23. It is not in dispute that the Deed, exhibit 8 was executed on the 23rd of June, 1956 and from the evidence of P.W.3 the plan attached to the deed was in existence before that date. The unchallenged evidence of the plaintiff and P.W.3 is to the effect that the plan was attached to the Deed at the time of its execution. No evidence has been led to show that the Ifadu Alase/Fashola families sold to the plaintiff land lesser in extent than was shown on the plan attached to exhibit 8. On the contrary, the evidence of P.W.4, the head of the Ifadu Alase family was to the effect that the land sold to the plaintiff was about 4 acres in area and that it was the totality of Fashola family’s land in the area. With all these pieces of evidence the defendant’s plea of fraud was not borne out and was rightly rejected by the courts below.

In the absence of any evidence challenging the correctness or authenticity of exhibits 8 and the plan attached thereto I must hold that the courts below are right to give it due weight and to find in plaintiff’s favour on the strength of it.

On the authority of Idundun v. Okumagba (1976) 1 NMLR 200; (1976) 9/10 S.C. 227 exhibit 8 is sufficient evidence to support the award of title in plaintiff’s favour. Plaintiff has, however, further shown that since going into possession, he has exercised acts of ownership on the land. One of these is the successful action he instituted against Madam Sinotu in 1957 when the latter came on the land. He was not challenged on this. It is significant also to note that his ownership of portion B and C of exhibit 3 was not challenged. He claimed that he leased out portions to a construction company which never took possession. I will not give much weight to this but on the welter of evidence on the record, the courts below are right in holding that the plaintiff established sufficient acts of ownership to entitle him to judgment. It must be remembered that the land in dispute is in an urban area and the acts of ownership that will suffice to establish title to it will not necessarily be the same were the land an agricultural land, for instance.

From all I have been saying above, I must conclude that this appeal fails and it is hereby dismissed by me. The two courts below came to the right decision on the evidence before them and I hereby affirm their decision. I award N1,000.00 costs of this appeal to the plaintiff/respondent.


Other Citation: (1994) LCN/2636(SC)

Augustine Nwangbomu V. The State (1994) LLJR-SC

Augustine Nwangbomu V. The State (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

BELGORE, J.S.C.

The appellant, Augustine Nwangbomu was to marry one Juliana Igwe, a child. It seems that by custom of Ezza in Abakaliki she had to stay with the proposed husband for a while to decide whether they could live together as husband wife. Juliana Igwe (P.W.9) ran back home several times – about fourteen or fifteen times according to her Uncle Michael Onele, P.W.8. The appellant was apparently unhappy at the prospect of losing Juliana.

Michael Onele (P.W.8), a teacher got home from school and saw the appellant in their compound. The appellant told P.W.8 he had come to effect a settlement on the matter of Juliana and himself. Juliana was very young at the time, perhaps about 12 or 13 years. P.W.8 pleaded with the appellant to allow the girl to mature; the appellant apparently took offence for this simple advice. As P.W.8 was moving away from him the appellant attacked him (P.W.8) with a matchet at his back, neck, ear, right shoulder and on the head. P.W.8 raised an alarm and the appellant told him nobody would save him as he was going to kill him. P.W.8 was saved by the coming out of Juliana, the P.W.8’s mother and his wife.

Before P.W.8 came on the scene, the appellant had spoken to Juliana (P.W.9) and she told him the Obaji Oyibo (Juliana’s mother) had gone to the farm and that P.W.8 was away to school where he was a teacher. When P.W.8 arrived and appellant attacked him with matchet, P,W.9 ran out with the others and saw the appellant running away with a matchet. P.W.8 was having several matchet cuts on him and had to be taken to the hospital.

A little after this at the rice farm of Obaji Oyibo where she was with farm hands including Nwokporo Nweke (P.W.4), Nwafor Ochiagu (P.W.3), Ovu Onele (P.W.5) and Nwoja Odoh (P.W.6); suddenly they heard someone shouting and threatening he would kill anybody he met at the farm. All the others escaped and only Obaji Oyibo was not seen again alive as her corpse was found. According to medical evidence, she was at the time of her death about thirty-five years old and was carrying a five months pregnancy. She had a deep wound at the nape of the neck, five centimetres deep and eleven centimetres long. The wound penetrated the lower cervical vertebra. She died of haemorrhage due to a deep wound on the neck. Nobody who heard the threatening voice at the farm of the deceased waited to see who was threatening; they ran away leaving the deceased alone behind.

There was thus no direct evidence of who attacked the deceased with a sharp object that killed her except the appellant in his voluntary statement to the police. He was cautioned by the investigating police officer and he volunteered a statement (Exhibit B & B1) that infer alia says as follows:

“It is true that I killed Obaji Oyibe with a matchet. My annoyance is that Obaji and Michael Nwigwe and Ezaka Nwigwe conspired within themselves and took my wife from me. The name of my wife is Juliana Augustine. Obaji Oyibe is the mother of my wife while Michael is her uncle and Ezaka is the grandmother of my wife Juliana. Again that after I reported the matter to the police and the police told us to go and settle at home, we went home and instead of settling the matter as was directed by the police, Obaji was abusing me saying that since police have set her free, she was no more giving me one kobo.

Moreover, I understood that the above mentioned people i.e. Obaji Oyibe, Michael Nwigwe and Ezaka Nwigwe went to make charm so that before 31st December, 1983 I will die and they will get a chance to give out my wife to another person to marry. Since I discovered this, I felt sick in as much, I did not attend Eke market on two occasions. I could remember that the sickness which swoll (sic) my right leg and my waist started on or about 1st December, 1983 and up till now I am still suffering it. At about early November, 1983 when I went to collect Juliana’s locker from school Michael met me in the school where the headmaster and other teachers were and told me that he is planning for me with his people that I am going to suffer. This same Michael and Obaji instead of looking for settlement they encouraged Juliana not to marry me again.

Having considered all these things, I made up my mind to go and receive my money from them. When I reached their compound, Michael was not in so I waited until he came back from school. When I told him that I came to collect my wife he, Michael told me that Joseph Elom is the care taker and I should meet him with six cartons of beer and goat or any other thing he must have told me before I will come to meet him again. Having heard this, and other things from Michael I come to believe that they have really planned for me so I gave him matchet cut about three times and he fell down. I fell down too and was still there until (sic) they wanted to kill me before I ran away with the matchet I used. Before I left I have heard an information that Obaji went to farm so I ran through that direction and incidentally met her in the farm and gave her matchet cuts one on her neck and the other on her head. She then fell down and I ran away. One Eda Igide ‘m’ who is a brother to Ezaka was the person who said that the case which I reported to police will not be withdrawn so that any day they see me in their house they will kill me. It was Obaji who told me this and not Eda himself. That was the day I went to collect locker when she was telling me about the charm they have prepared for me. When police came to my house and arrested me, I showed them the matchet which I used in killing Obaji Oyibe.”

(Sgd.)

Augustine Nwangbomu.

9/12/83

Statement was recorded by me in English language read over to maker in same language and he signed it as correct.

(sgd.)

Chiegbu Cpl. 60454

9/12/83.

Thus, by this voluntary statement, the appellant confessed that he first attacked P.W.8, and having heard that Obaji Oyibo (deceased) was at the farm he ran there and found her alone and killed her with the matchet.

At the trial, appellant attempted to resile on his voluntary statement. Exhibit B and B1. He admitted he made a statement but that he never said all that was recorded. Thus the making of the statement rather than its voluntariness was in issue. Learned trial Judge ruled and admitted the statement. Trial Judge after a review of the evidence in the case, especially the complete denial of any knowledge of how the deceased died and the denial by appellant that he never even visited the compound of the deceased where P.W.8 and P.W.9 also lived on the 8th December, 1983, found the appellant guilty of the offence of murder under S.319(1) Criminal Code Law (Laws of Eastern Nigeria, 1963) Cap. 43 Vol.II He was sentenced to death. On appeal, Court of Appeal, Enugu Branch dismissed the appeal; thus the appeal to this court.

There is only one ground, the general ground of appeal. There are raised three issues for determination in the appellant’s brief of argument, to wit:

“ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION

(1) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in affirming the decision of the trial Judge in admitting Exh. B, B1 as a statement made and signed by the appellant, and if the trial court wrongly admitted Exh. B. B1 whether there was sufficient evidence to support the conviction.

(2) Whether there was enough cogent and compelling circumstantial evidence to support the conviction.

(3) Whether the prosecution has discharged the onus of proof beyond reasonable doubt.

All that happened right at the trial court was that the appellant resiled on his voluntary statement to the police whereby he confessed to killing the deceased. According to the counsel for the appellant ”There was a cloud of mystery surrounding” the statement which is marked Exhibit Band B1. It is difficult to find the mystery as trial Judge and Court of Appeal considered the issue which is that of fact. Trial court believed the appellant made the statement, and his denial was held to be an afterthought. Court of Appeal held the “denial of the appellant signing the statement is a matter of fact which the trial court ought to have resolved in one way or the other. It could not have attracted trial within trial ……….as the appellant never objected that the statement was involuntarily obtained from him.”

An accused person can resile on his statement to police officer in one of two ways, Either that he never made the statement at all, in which case it is a matter of fact to be resolved by the evidence before court; or that he made the statement or signed it but not voluntarily.

In the former case, the mere denial by an accused of having made a statement confessing to the crime charged is a question of fact that trial court must decide. It does not make the statement inadmissible, it must however be considered along with the entire evidence and circumstances of the case for the weight to be attached to it. For example, in cases where the accused merely challenges the correctness of the statement as recorded or the signature or thumb impression, that will be a question of fact to be decided by the court of trial, but not an issue for the procedure known as “trial within trial,” – See Obidiozo v. The State (1987) 4 NWLR (Pt.67) 748, 751; Akinfe v. The State (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt.85) 729: Ojegele v. The State (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt.71) 414; Section 27, Evidence Act). Thus confession is relevant and admissible. In the latter case of the statement being challenged not on the ground of it not having been made but that it was not voluntary as in Section 28, Evidence Act which provides:

“28. A confession made by an accused person is relevant in a criminal proceeding, if the making of the confession appears to the court to have been caused by any inducement, threat or promise having reference to the charge against the accused person, proceeding from a person in authority and sufficient, in the opinion of the court, to give the accused person grounds which would appear to him reasonable for supposing that by making it he would gain any advantage or avoid any evil of a temporal nature.”

The court in that case has more investigation to conduct before it decides whether the statement was made voluntarily or not a trial within trial must be held. In a trial within trial the onus is on the appellant to establish evidence whereby it will be shown that either by inducement, threat or promise having regard to the charge the accused person faces, and proceeding from a person in authority as to give him reason to believe that he would gain advantage from the evil now confronting him. Evidence will then be led by the accused to establish the involuntariness of the statement and prosecution will lead evidence to rebut whereby the judge will rule on voluntariness. It is thus not in every case the accused challenges his statement confessing the commission of the offence that a trial within trial must be held; it is only held; where the issue is voluntariness but not the making of the statement simpliciter. It is therefore not required in law to hold trial within trial to test a confession unless the issue of voluntariness is clearly raised. [See R. v. Kassi & 6 Ors. 5 WACA 154; R. v. Onabanjo 3 WACA 43; R. v. Igwe (1960) 5 FSC 55; 1960 SCNLR 511 Queen v. Eguabor (1962) 1 All NLR 287,292; (1962) 1 SCNLR 409 Obidiozo v. State (1987) 4 NWLR 748, 760, 761-763.]

In this case there is clear and cogent evidence leading to conclusion that the appellant did murder Obaji. He first attacked P.W.8 and inflict matchet cuts on him, he was lucky to survive; he at that scene promised to kill the deceased, P.W.9 having earlier told him that the deceased was in her farm. The appellant’s confession clearly stated where he met the deceased and killed her. Trial court believed these scenerio, Court of Appeal had no reason to interfere or disturb these findings of fact. The concurrent findings of the lower courts on the fact as they now stand hardly need the interference of this court.

Though this court has not been asked to consider the effect of an accused person who earlier confessed to police but resiled in the witness box at trial, it is pertinent to restate the present position of this court. Two cases seemed to have caused great confusion on the doctrine of inconsistency in a witness’ evidence; to wit Oladejo v. The State (1987) 3 NWLR (Pt.61) 419, and Asanya v. The State (1991) 3 NWLR (Pt.180) 422 tending to posit that an accused person resiling on his extra-judicial statement to the police should have his entire evidence regarded as unreliable.

In such a case both the evidence in court and the confession should be regarded as unreliable. However, considering S.28 Evidence Act (Supra) and the case of Egboghonome v. The State (1993) 7 NWLR (Pt.306) 383, this court has defined a clearer path. An accused person’s confession is relevant and should not be disregarded merely because he later resiles on it, what is important is the weight the trial Judge will attach to such confession and retraction. The overwhelming evidence in this case now on appeal is that the accused not only threatened to kill the deceased but actually killed her and confessed doing so even though he later resiled on this.

For the foregoing reasons, I find no merit whatsoever in this appeal. I hereby dismiss it and affirm the decision of Court of Appeal which upheld the decision of the trial High Court which convicted the appellant of the offence of murder and sentenced him to death.


SC.288/1991

Sunday Baridam Vs The State (1994) LLJR-SC

Sunday Baridam Vs The State (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

IGUH, JSC 

The appellant, Sunday Baridam, was on the 21st day of July, 1986 arraigned before the high court of Rivers State, holden at the Bon, charged with the offence of murder contrary to section 319 of the Criminal Code. The particulars of the offence charged are as follows:-

‘That you, Sunday Baridam, on the 29th day of July, 1984 at Bionu Village in the Bori judicial Division, murdered Mayii Topie.”

The appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge; and the trial proceeded

The prosecution called five witnesses at the trial. The appellant testified in his own defence but called no witnesses.

The substance of the case as presented by the prosecution is that the appellant under the pretext that his motor cycle had broken down went to the house of PW.2, Doctor Gbarade, a motor cycle mechanic on the 29th July, 1984 at about 8.00 p.m and invited him out to repair it. Unsuspectingly, PW.2 assembled his tools and followed the appellant. Some 200 yards from the house of pw.2, the appellant accusedhimof befriending the appellants girlfriend. P.W.2, manhandled him and slapped his face. Inspite of the denial, the appellant further stabbed p.w.2, in his chest with a knife whereupon p.w.2, raised an alarm which attracted the attention of his deceased sister, Mayii Topie. As soon as the deceased rushed out to see what was happening,the appellant turned on her and stabbed her also in the chest and ran away. PW.2, thereafter, fell down unconscious but the deceased died on the spot.

The matter was reported to the police.

The appellant in his own defence denied stabbing or killing the deceased. He also denied stabbing PW.2 or any other person. He never went to the house PW.2 on the material date nor did he invite PW.2 to repair his motorcycle. He did not even seethe deceased on the fateful day. According to the appellant, he was riding his bicycle to Bionu village to see his girl friend at about 8.00 p.m. on the material date. On the way at a round-about, he ran into a crowd that neither Aspersed nor gave him free passage even though he ran is bell. The crowd asked whom he was. He called his name but they retorted by saying he had come again to carry his girl friend. The crowd attacked and stabbed him with a dagger. In the course of beating him, he pulled out his pen knife. PW.2 tried to recover the knife from him but was injured in the process. The appellant escaped to the police station to make a report. He was at the station when PW.3 came to report the incident.

The learned trial judge, Ichoku, J. after a meticulous and painstaking review of the evidence on the 11th April, 1988 found the appellant guilty 3f murder as charged. He was accordingly convicted and sentenced to death by hanging.

Dissatisfied with this judgment of the trial court, the appellant appealed to the court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division, against his conviction and sentence. On the 25th January, 1991 the court of Appeal unanimously dismissed the appeal and affirmed the conviction and sentence passed on the appellant by the trial court. It is against that judgment of the lower court that the appellant has now further appealed to this court.

The appellant filed only one original ground of appeal. This was on the 22nd February, 1991 and it reads as follows:-

‘That my sentence and conviction by the Hon. High Court judge and confirmed by the Hon. Justices of the Court of Appeal are altogether unreasonable, unwarranted and cannot be supported in law, having regard to the weight of evidence.’

It has been laid down repeatedly that a ground of appeal which complains that the decision of the lower court is ‘altogether unreasonable, unwarranted and cannot be supported having regard to the weight of the evidence”, is not a valid or proper ground of appeal in criminal cases where the required onus of proof on the prosecution is beyond reasonable doubt. What an appellant appealing against his conviction on the facts in a criminal case is required under the law to allege is that the verdict is altogether unreasonable, unwarranted and cannot be supported having regard to the evidence.

See Samuel Aladesuru and others v. The Queen (1955) 3 WLR 515, Akanbi Enitan and others v. the State (1986) 3 NWLR (pt. 30) 604 at 608 and Wankey v. The state (1993) 5NWLR. (Pt.295) 542 at 551. It is therefore clear that the above original ground of appeal filed by the appellant is erroneous on point of law and patently incompetent.

The appellant, however, subsequently obtained the leave of this court to file and argue five additional grounds of appeal. These were duly filed pursuant to the order of court.

Both the appellant and the respondent filed and exchanged their respective written briefs of argument. The respondent in his own brief argued that the competence of the additional grounds of appeal depended on the existence of a valid original ground of appeal to which the new grounds are additional and can therefore be added to. Then respondent then contended that in as much as the ground of appeal filed by the appellant is incompetent, the additional grounds must also be regarded as incompetent as one cannot amend nothing or add something to nothing pursuant to the principle, ex nihilo nihil fit.

There can be no doubt that there is tremendous force in this argument of learned counsel for the respondent. The courts, however, have in appropriate cases shifted away from the narrow technical approach to justice but rather pursue the course of substantial justice particularly in cases of appeals against conviction where the capital punishment is involved. Accordingly this court has been very liberal in allowing additional or amended grounds of appeal in cases of appeals against conviction carrying a death sentence where the sole original ground is not a proper ground of appeal. See Akanbi Enitan &others v. The State, supra, at page 609. The present appeal being one against a conviction for the offence of murder which carries capital punishment and additional grounds of appeal having been filed pursuant to the leave of this court, I am prepared to hold that the said additional grounds of appeal are not incompetent but valid.

At the hearing of the appeal before us on the 4th November, 1993, learned counsel for the appellant, Chief M. Ozekhome adopted his brief dated 20th October, 1992 and made oral submissions in amplification thereof. Although the respondent filed its brief and was duly served with hearing notice, it was not represented at the hearing of this appeal.

In the appellants brief, the following four issues were formulated for the determination of this court, namely:-

“1. Whether the judgment of the Bori High Court in Rivers State delivered on the 11th day of April, 1988, and affirmed by the court of Appeal (Port Harcourt Division) on the 25th day of January, 1991, by which the appellant was found guilty of murder and sentence to death, is not perverse or that justice was not miscarried.

2. Whether the defence of self-defence is available to the Appellant and that he established same on record.

3. Whether the trial High Court judgment affirmed by the Court of Appeal is safe and satisfactory and ought not to be set aside by the Supreme Court when:

(i) The police investigation leading to the prosecution and conviction was shoddy and wholly unsatisfactory, for the police ought to have taken or recorded the complaint of the appellant on the day of the alleged incident when the Appellant went to the police station to report the attack on him by PW.2 and others, but because PW.3 is an influential and powerful traditional ruler in the community, he (P.W.3) at the police station accused the Appellant of the murder of the deceased and the police believed PW.3, without allowing the Appellant to report the attack on his person.

(ii) The police failed to call a vital and crucial witness, one Dumere Nwako, whose evidence could have decided the case one way or the other.

(iii) There is manifest evidence that the trial High Court judge shut his eyes to proved facts in favour of the Appellant, and the Court of Appeal erroneously affirmed this.

4. Whether on the totality of the evidence before the trial High Court and on record, the Respondent discharged the onus of proof beyond reasonable doubt as required by section 137 of the Evidence Act.’

Before us, however, learned counsel for the appellant conceded that issue number four raise in his brief did not appear to relate to any of the valid grounds of appeal before the court. Although it might have related to the original ground of appeal or ground five of the additional grounds of appeal, these grounds, as I have observed, are erroneous on point of law as they both allege that the judgment of the trial court is altogether unreasonable, unwarranted and cannot be supported having regard to ‘the weight of evidence”. See too Adio v. The State (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt.24)581. Accordingly the said original ground of appeal and ground five of the additional grounds of appeal must be and are hereby struck out as incompetent.

It is trite law that an appellate court can only hear and decide on issues raised in the grounds of appeal filed before it and that an issue which is not covered by the grounds of appeal must be struckout as incompetent. See lbe v. The State(1992) 5 NWLR. (Pt.244) 642 at p.647, Imo v. The State (1991)9 NWLR. (Pt.213); Ogundiyan v. The State (1991) 3 NWLR (Pt. 181) 519. Issue number 4 in the Appellants brief does not relate to any of the the grounds of appeal before the court and must be and is hereby struck out as incompetent.

The respondent formulated three issues for determination in its brief. A close study of these three issues shows that there are sufficiently encompassed by the remaining three issues raised by the appellant in his brief of argument. Accordingly I shall in this judgment confine myself to the first issue raised in the appellants brief of argument for determination.

With regard to the first issue, learned counsel for the appellant argued that the affirmation by the Court of Appeal of the appellants conviction and sentence is not only perverse but contrary to law and amounts to a miscarriage of justice. A decision is perverse where the trial judge takes into account matters which he ought not to have taken into account or where he shuts his eyes to the obvious or to proved facts in favour of a party, or distorts the facts or evidence in the case so as to tilt the scale of justice in favour of a party. See Adimora v. Ajufo & other (1988)3 NWLR. pt. 80) 1.

Learned counsel for the appellant however failed to substantiate in what respect the decisions of the trial court or the court below were perverse, or contrary to law or amounted to a miscarriage of justice. Two versions of the incident that resulted in the death of the deceased were presented before the court. These were those of PW.2 (the star witness) and the appellant. The learned trial Judge in arriving at his findings, elaborately reviewed both versions and had good and cogent reasons for accepting the account of the incident as presented by PW.2. He rejected the appellants version which he rightly described as materially inconsistent with and contradictory to his statement to the police (Exhibit A) In his judgment, the trial court observed inter alia as follows: –

‘The evidence of the only eyewitness is that of PW.2 who was also a victim…………. His evidence is quite clear as to what happened that day. Then putting the story of the accused and that of PW.2 side by side, there is no dispute that the accused came to Bionu that day around 8.00 p.m. at about the time of the incident.

From the evidence of PW. 1, PW.3 and PW.5, it is clear that the scene of incident was not at any road junction but rather near the house of the mother of the deceased ……… it is interesting to note that under cross-examination, the question was always that Doctor and his friend attacked and damaged the accused motor cycle and not bicycle. It is also note worthy that the accused at the Police Station, Lumene, was reporting that Doctor and Mayii fought him …………………………”

A little later in his judgment, the learned trial Judge continued as follows:-

‘I have stated that the evidence of PW.2 was quite simple and direct. The accused came to him to come and repair his motorcycle. The motor cycle, the accused said, could not move and PW.2 had to collect his tools and went along with him. He lived alone in the house.

On going about 200 yards away from his house, the accused held his shirt and questioned him that he was told he was befriending his girl friend. This, PW.2 denied and accused then slapped his face and he shouted and his sister, Mayii Topie, heard his voice and came out. The accused then brought out the dagger and stabbed him and he shouted that accused had stabbed him with dagger and then the deceased ran down and as asked PW.2 what happened, what happened and accused then stabbed her and ran away. Then he, PW.2, did not know himself and then fell down. They were all picked up and taken to the Police Station, Lumene, and from there to the Bori Police Station and Hospital and to Port Harcourt Hospital where PW.2 was treated.

The accused had shown not to be a truthful witness. His testimony before this court, namely, his evidence in-chief and under cross-examination has shown very serious inconsistencies…………………………….  In this court, the accused denied seeing the deceased but in his statement to the Police, he admitted stabbing the deceased. On the foregoing, I have no hesitation and in fact no doubt in my mind in believing the simple and straightforward story of PW. 2 as the exact story of what happened  that day. The accused was but trying to make up a story that Doctor and Mayii fought him……………………………….”

I have given a very close study to the above findings of the learned trial Judge and it seems to me beyond dispute that they are amply supported by abundant evidence before that court. The Court of Appeal did also accept these findings of the trial court the following passage of its judgment, namely:-

‘Put very briefly, the evidence was that the appellant lured out PW.2, made false accusations and stabbed him. He turned on the deceased and stabbed her when she came out to see what was happening………………………………………….. In my opinion, he was rightly convicted upon the evidence of murdering the deceased  ……………………………………”

It is settled law that this court will not normally interfere with the concurrent findings of the two lower courts unless there is some miscarriage of justice or a violation of some principles of law or procedure. See Ugwumba v. The State (1993) 5 NWLR (Pt.296) 660 at 671, Osayame v. The State (1966) NMLR 388, Sanyaolu v. The State (1976) 6 SC 37, Nwachukwu v. The State (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt.25) 765, Onuoha v. The State (1988) 3 NWLR (Pt.83)460 and Wankey v. The State (1993) 5 NWLR (Pt.295) 542 at 552. There is in this case no miscarriage of justice or a violation of any principles of law or procedure. I can find no justification for interfering with the concurrent findings of the trial court and the court below on the facts of this case. The said findings are amply supported by evidence before the court. I must therefore resolve the first issue for determination against the appellant.

The second issue questions whether the defence of self defence is available to the appellant and whether the same was established by him. There can be no doubt that self defence in an appropriate case is a complete answer to a charge of murder or manslaughter. The appellant, to avail himself of this defence, however, must show that his life was so much endangered by the act of the deceased that the only option that was open to him to save his own life was to kill the deceased. He must show that the did not want to fight and that he was at all material times prepared to with draw. See Stephen v. The State (1986) 5 NWLR (Pt.46) at 987.The defence of self defence will only fail if the prosecution shows beyond reasonable doubt that what the accused did was not done by way of self defence. The onus is on the prosecution to disprove the accuseds defence of self defence and not on the accused to establish his plea. See Iteshi Onwe v. The State (1975) 9-11 S.C 23, R v. Oshunbiyi (1961)2 SCNLR 147;(1961) 1 All NLR 453 and Ahusimen Omoregbe v. The State (1977) 3 FCA. 151.

In the present case, it is plain to me that the learned trial Judge thoroughly considered the appellants plea of self defence and arrived at the conclusion that it did not arise in the proceedings. Having reviewed the evidence on both sides, the learned trial Judge concluded as follows:-

‘I have stated that the story of PW.2, as was substantially corroborated by the accused himself and the evidence of PW. 1, PW.3, PW.4 and P.W.5, all go to show that the story the accused was putting up was but a made up story and very unreliable ……………… From the story and account of PW.2 which I believe, there is thus no issue or question of self defence. The accused was not in any way acting in self defence but rather the accused set out to PW.2 and enticed him out of his house under the pretext he was going to repair his motor cycle.

On the way, about 200 yards from PW.2s house, the accused held his shirt and twisted it, slapped him after asking if it was true that PW.2 was befriending his girl friend. PW.2 denied and the accused stabbed him and while PW.2 shouted, the deceased rushed down and was asking what happened, what happened and the accused then stabbed her. On the above, facts which I believe as opposed to the inconsistent stories and different versions of the account as put up by the accused, there is no question of self defence. The accused knew what he was doing and acted promptly. No one attacked him for him to defend himself. He was all the time the one who attacked PW.2 and the deceased and it was the attack that resulted to the death of the deceased. The question of self defence is thus ruled out.’

The Court of Appeal in the lead judgment of Omosun, JCA with which Ogundare and Onu, JCA., as they then were concurred, in dealing with this issue of self defence which was also raised before it stated as follows:-

I say without hesitation that the learned Judge gave adequate consideration to the issue of self defence. The finding is amply supported by evidence. The appellant was neither apprehensive of death or grievous harm to make him fight back, Regina v. Onyeamizu (1958) NNLR. 93 at page 94 to 95. The evidence supported the conviction.’

I am in entire agreement with the above observation of the Court of Appeal which are supported by abundant evidence before the trial court.

I think it pertinent at this stage to observe that evidence which is properly rejected by a trial court cannot be ground or form the basis of the defence of self defence or indeed, any other defence for that matter. See Bakare v. The State (1987) 1 NWLR (Pt.52) 579. Whether or not a given defence is or may be available to an accused person must be decided against the background of accepted facts or evidence. Evidence that has been properly considered and rejected is of no value or consequence and must accordingly be discountenanced. Once, as in the instant case, the evidence upon which the defence of self defence in issue was founded was sufficiently considered by the trial court and rightly rejected upon good and cogent reasons, such rejected evidence cannot form the basis of the defence.

From the evidence of PW.2 as to what led to the death of the deceased which the trial court believed and that of the appellant which the court rejected, it is clear that no question of self defence arises in this case. The appellant was at no time acting in self defence but rather set out to lure PW.2 out on the pretext that his motor cycle broke down and needed to be repaired, PW.2, not realising the appellants real intention, unsuspectingly followed him. On the way and without any justification whatever, the said appellant attacked PW.2 and stabbed him. He also attacked and stabbed the deceased who rushed out to the scene in answer to the distress alarm of PW.2. The deceased died on the spot. In the circumstance, the second issue for determination in this appeal must again be resolved against the appellant.

With regard to the third issue, the appellant has questioned whether the trial courts judgment affirmed by the Court of Appeal is safe and satisfactory and ought not to be disturbed by this Court having regard to three alleged circumstances. The first of such circumstances is the appellants claim that the police investigation of the case was “shoddy and wholly unsatisfactory.’

I have given a close study to this claim by the appellant but find myself unable to agree from printed record of appeal that there was anything wrong, unsatisfactory or abnormal with the police investigation of this case. All that happened in this case from the evidence before the trial court is that the appellant, having trickishly lured out PW.2, stabbed him on the road. PW. 2 raised an alarm which attracted the deceased to the scene. The deceased when she got to the scene was asking what the matter was when she was also attacked and stabbed by the appellant. She died on the spot.

The appellant thereafter went to the Lumene Police Station and lodge the report of an attack on himself. PW.3 who immediately rushed to the scene as a result of the cries of villagers following the in under, also made for the Police Station where he made a report of the incident. The Police duly investigated the case and the appellant was subsequently charged for the murder of the deceased. I am in agreement with the contention of learned respondents counsel that there is nothing in the police investigation of this case which may even remotely be described as shoddy or unsatisfactory.

It was further submitted on behalf of the respondent that the Prosecution failed to call one Dumere Nwako, a witness whose testimony, the appellant alleged, would have decided that case one way of the other. In the first place, I am unable to accept that the said Dumere Nwako is a relevant or material witness and that failure to call her is fatal to the prosecutions case. On the facts of this case as accepted by both the trial court and the court below, only P.W.2 witnessed the incident which led to the stabbing and eventual death of the deceased. It cannot therefore be right that the testimony of the alleged Dumere Nwako would have settled any material issue in respect of the case one way or the other.

Secondly, the prosecution is only enjoined by the law to call witnesses sufficient to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt but need not make a case for the defence. See Insusa Saidu v. The State (1982) 4 S.C. 41 at 68. It need not also call a host of witnesses on the same point although on a vital point where one witness can settle it one way or the other, he should be called. Se R. v. George Kuree 7 WACA. 175 at 177, Inspector-General of Police v. M. and K. And Another(1958) WLR 241. and Onah v. The State (1985) 3 NWLR (Pt. 12) 236 at 237. The prosecution has the discretion in a criminal case to call whichever witnesses it considers necessary to prove the offence charged but must call vital witnesses whose evidence may determine the case one way or the other. Where, however, it fails to call such a vital witness whose testimony may decide the case one way or the other, it will be presumed that had the witness been called, his evidence would have been unfavorable to the prosecution which failed to call him. See Onah v. The State (supra) and Adamu v. Attorney-Geneal Bendel State (1986) 2 NWLR (Pt.22) 284.

On the accepted facts of this case, only P.W.2, the deceased and the appellant were present when the deceased was stabbed, the alleged Dumere Nwako who did not witness the incident cannot therefore be a material witness on any vital point which could settle the case one way or the other.

It was additionally contended on behalf of the appellant that the said Dumere Nwako ought again to have been called by the prosecution for the purpose of corroborating the evidence of P.W.2, I have already stated that Dumere Nwako, on the accepted facts of the case, did not witness the incident and was therefore not a material witness. At all events, the evidence of the one credible witness which is accepted and believed by the trial court is sufficient to justify a conviction unless, of course, such a witness is an accomplice in which case his testimony would require corroboration. See Igbo v. The State (1975) 9-11 SC. 129 at 136 and Ali & Another v. The State (1988) 1 SCNJ 18 at 30. P.W.2 was clearly not an accomplice on the facts of this case. His evidence before the trial court was of such high quality and cogency that the trial Judge accepted the same in its entirety.

I agree with the submission of learned respondents counsel that the court below was perfectly entitled to affirm the conviction of the appellant in this case which was primarily based on the evidence of P.W.2.

It was finally argued on behalf of the appellant that the learned trial Judge shut his eyes to proved facts in favour of the appellant and that the court below erroneously affirmed the decision of the trial court. I need only say from a close study of the record of proceedings that no fact were proved as alleged in favour of the appellant whose testimony the learned trial Judge rightly rejected. I accept the submission of learned respondent counsel that the prosecution fully discharged the onus placed upon it by law in this case and that the judgment of the trial court which was affirmed by the Court of Appeal is entirely sound and satisfactory and ought not to be set aside. The third issue for determination is therefore resolved against the appellant.

On the whole, I find no merit whatsoever in this appeal and it is accordingly dismissed. The conviction and death sentence passed on the appellant by the trial court and affirmed by the Court of Appeal is hereby further affirmed.


Other Citation: (1994) LCN/2651(SC)

Ogbuokwelu V Umeanafunkwa (1994) LLJR-SC

Ogbuokwelu V Umeanafunkwa (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

ONU, J.S.C. 

This appeal is from the decision of the Court of Appeal sitting in Enugu dated 16th January, 1992 and which upset the judgment of Obiesie,J., sitting at the Anambra State High Court holden in Onitsha and delivered on October 13,1989.

The reliefs sought by the plaintiffs, now respondents against the defendants, herein appellants in the trial Court were:-

(1) N100,000.00 special and general damages for trespass into a piece or parcel of land which the respondents called Abubo Land, the particulars of special damages having been specified and calculated to amount to N11,820.00. It arose from an alleged destruction of economic and seasonal crops by the use of a bull-dozer and a carterpillar by the appellants and

(2) Perpetual injunction.

As both sides in their pleadings (which were ordered, duly filed and exchanged) asserted ownership of the land in dispute which the appellants for their part said went by the name Oheba, title was perforce put in issue.The trial Judge in a considered judgment held that the respondents failed to prove both title and exclusive possession. He therefore dismissed the suit. The respondents’ appeal from that decision to the Court of Appeal having succeeded, wherein an order of retrial was made, the appellants have appealed to this Court upon a Notice of Appeal containing four grounds.

The background facts of the case as presented by both parties in the two lower courts very ably set out by the Court of Appeal sitting in Enugu and upon which I can hardly improve, are as recapitulated briefly hereunder:-

The respondents as representatives of the people of Iruama Village in Unubi Town sued the appellants of Irueze (Urueze) Village in Ekwulumili, though in their individual capacities. However, by the nature of the defence, the appellants appears by and large to represent the alleged eight families which they say own the land in dispute.

The respondents’ case is that the land in dispute (Abubo Land) is in Iruama Village while the appellants who call it Oheba Land say that it is in Urueze Village. It is the respondents’ assertion in paragraph 5 of their Statement of Claim that they share a common boundary on the west with the appellant’s Urueze Village and that this boundary is marked by “Abubo Stream and Njeaba Stream,” and a valley connecting these streams” while “Along that valley are Ukpaka tree, dried Edo tree, Cheleku tree, Ube Okpoko tree and Egbu tree.” The appellants first made some denials but in further answer in paragraph Sea) of their Further Amended Statement of Defence averred that their “Oheba land” now in dispute which forms part of a large portion of their land also called Oheba, is bounded to the North- West by Ubi Ada and Njeaba Streams across which is the land of defendants’ people, to the East by the land of Unubi people, the plaintiffs, to the South by the Uku-Umuojima Stream across which is the land of the plaintiffs and to the West by the other portions of Oheba land but not in dispute.” The two parties would by this seem to have clearly a common boundary between them.

The respondents relied on traditional history which goes thus:

The Unubi Village was founded by a hunter from Akuabuba Village in Ezinifite called Okweagu. That he settled in a farm hut from where he went hunting. That farm hut in their language is called “uno-ubi” and from it the name Unubi received its derivation. That Okweagu had five sons among whom was Nkwukwo, the eldest:Okweagu shared his land among his five sons and the land in dispute formed part of Nkwukwo’s share. Nkwukwo had two sons one of whom was Ezeobosi, the elder of the two. That Nkwukow shared his land between the two sons, and Ezeobosi’s share which became known as Iruama Village encompasses the land in dispute. Ezeobosi had five sons, namely Ezeokana, Ezenobi, Onu, Ezeoha and Ezeanamelu. It is the descendants of these men who form Iruama Village today. Each of the men got a portion of Iruama Village where they inhabited but left some portion as communal land where they farm with the descendants of these families who now inhabit lruama Village. Evidence was led along this traditional history.

The appellants on the other hand, in their pleading, relied on traditional history thus:

Ekwulu, a sheep rearer (or shepherd) and a farmer came from Agukwu Nri in Njikoka in search of green pasture. He settled in a place where there were seven streams and a great pond. He had four sons, among whom was Urueze who was the third in seniority. Ekwulu shared his land among his four sons. Oheba land which they called the land now in dispute formed part of Urueze’s share. Urueze had eight children, namely, Nenugha, Umenwunne, Ezenwabachili, Umealor, Okpe, Umungwu, Ezengu and Amakom.

Urueze shared his land among his eight children each of whom got a share of Oheba land on which they have farmed from time immemorial and in respect of which each sub-family which sprang from each of those children exercised maximum acts of possession.

Each side led evidence in support of the traditional history pleaded and acts of possession. The learned trial Judge in a considered judgment dismissed the respondents’ claims in their entirety. The respondents appealed to the Court of Appeal which held (per Uwaifo, J.C.A., and concurred in by Awogu and Oguntade, J.J.C.A) that the way the trial Judge dealt with the issues and evidence before him was inadequate and erroneous, adding that while the respondents gave evidence strictly in accordance with their pleadings, the appellants’ left some holes to pick in the evidence of witnesses as well as in the consideration of the case by the trial Judge generally and specifically. The Court below therefore proceeded to allow the respondents’ appeal and accordingly ordered a retrial of the suit.

Aggrieved by this decision the appellants have appealed to this court on a Notice of Appeal (See pages 233 – 236 of the Record) containing four grounds. The respondents cross-appealed. Briefs of argument were filed and exchanged pursuant to the rules of Court. Two issues were submitted on behalf of the appellants as arising for determination, namely:

  1. Was the Court of Appeal right in this case to embark on a fresh appraisal and re-evaluation of the evidence adduced at the trial
  2. Was the Court of Appeal right to set aside the judgment of the trial court in this case and to order a retrial of the case.

Only one issue was formulated on behalf of the respondents cross-appellants to wit:

“Was the Court of Appeal right in this case to embark on a fresh appraisal and re-evaluation of the evidence adduced at the trial.”

At the hearing of this appeal on 14th February, 1994, learned Senior Advocates who had pitched camps on either side adopted their respective briefs of argument. They each further expatiated on them. Although a cross-appeal was filed at the instance of the respondents in relation to the retrial order made by the court below, I will first of all deal with the appellants’ appeal which deals with whether the Court of Appeal was right to embark on fresh appraisal or re-evaluation of the evidence adduced at the trial.

Mr. Egonu, S.A.N., after stating that in this appeal the defendants/appellants filed their brief dated 30th November, 1992 on 3rd December, 1992, pointed out that the same went for their respondents’ brief to the cross-appeal dated 30th November, 1992 and filed on 3rd December, 1992. He thereafter remarked that on 14 April, 1993 this court had granted to the appellants extension of time within which to file their brief and to deem same as duly filed. A similar extension having been granted to them as respondents to file their brief to the cross-appeal, learned Senior Advocate indicated that he adopted his arguments therein. The claim before the trial court being that for damages for trespass and injunction, learned Senior Advocate submitted, title was as a result put in issue, adding that it was therefore incumbent on the respondents to prove their exclusive possession. The respondents, he pointed out, based their claim on traditional history and acts of recent possession and at the end of the day, the learned trial Judge dismissed their case.

Upon their appeal to the court below, that court allowed the respondents’ appeal and ordered a retrial. After referring us to several passages in the Record of proceedings and how he dealt extensively with the issues contained in his brief, learned Senior Advocate indicated how the learned trial Judge disbelieved the evidence of P.W.3 and P.W.5 in his findings of fact. After pointing out how there was no conflict in the evidence of D.W.7 and 1st defendant/appellant in relation to Oheba land and Ekwulu and as to his (Ekwulu’s) four sons to whom land was granted, he argued that these are brought out clearly in paragraph 3(a) and 3(b) of the Amended Statement of Defence at Page 30 of the Record. Hence, he contended, it was wrong of the court below to say that that piece of traditional evidence was not pleaded.

With regard to the cross-appeal, learned Senior Advocate after placing reliance on the brief of the respondents thereto, argued that the Court below could not and did not make findings of acts of recent possession. Here again, learned counsel submitted, that criticism by the court below that the evidence of witnesses was not properly evaluated by the trial court was wrong, moreso that such evaluation touched on matters of credibility over which an appellate court had no right to interfere. The criticism of the trial court by the court below for referring to the case Ekpo v. Ita (1932) 11 N.L.R. 68, he added, was misconceived in that there was no way the trial court should not have talked of acts of possession. Chief Williams, learned Senior Advocate for the respondents/cross-appellants who relied on their brief entirely, submitted that the first point to show that the court below was right to set aside the decision of the trial court, is to be found at Page 197, lines 18-26 and Page 128 lines 1-10 and line 15 to end of the page. After referring us to other passages to buttress his argument, he maintained that as that Court (the trial court) was using the wrong approach, the court below was right to order a retrial. Elaborating, learned counsel stated that their criticism of the trial court’s decision stems from the western boundary stream called Abubo Stream, adding that the land in dispute is the land to the North edged red. Their case, he asserted, is whether the trial court made the finding as they claimed it to be or as they (respondents) claimed it to be. The court below, he submitted, referred to the evidence proffered by witnesses, adding that on the question of boundary, only the respondents/cross-appellants rendered unchallenged evidence, and that significantly while the respondents/cross appellants talked of “igbandu” – peaceful settlement, the appellants denied its existence though capitulating by admitting it during the course of the case. After referring us to the evidence of D.W.1 at Pages 107-110, learned counsel submitted that the conflict between the evidence of D.W.1 and D. W.7 appeared clear. Reference was in conclusion made to paragraph 5(a) of the Statement of Claim which learned Senior Advocate said amounted to some admission.

Learned Senior Advocate for the appellants in reply said in respect of paragraph 5(a)(ibid) that it and their plan along with his submission thereon, was also explicit.

By the nature of the two sets of issues submitted for the determination of this court by both parties, I deem the consideration of the two submitted at the instance of the appellants together to effectually dispose of the appeal.

Now, in the trial court, the respondents claimed damages for trespass and injunction against the appellants and relied on their traditional history and acts of possession in proof of their case. In such a situation and even though the respondents did not claim declaration of title, they had put their title in issue and were bound to prove their title to the land in dispute. See Abotche Kponuglo v. Adja Kodadja (1934 – 35) 2 WACA. 24, Ogunde v. Ojomu (1972) 4 S.C. 105 at 106. It ought to be borne in mind from the onset that each of the five well-settled legal ways of proving title to land is independent of the other. See D.O. Idundun & Ors. v. Daniel Okumagba & Ors. (1976) 1 NMLR. 200; (1976) 10 S.C. 227; Nwosu v. Udeaja (1990) 1 NWLR (Pt. 125) 188 at 218 and Ladejobi v. Shodipe (1989) 1 NWLR (Pt. 99) 596 at 606.

The learned trial Judge, as transpired in the instant case, dealt with the issue of the traditional histories postulated by the parties in both their pleadings and evidence – for which see page 128, lines 5 to 31 and page 129, lines 1 to 26 of the Record of proceedings and resolved the same against the respondents. The learned trial Judge on the point had this to say, inter alia;

“Evidence given by the parties indicate that both relied on traditional history and acts of ownership, numerous and positive and extending over a long period of time.

Evidence of traditional history given by them have already been summarised at the early part of this judgment. There is conflict in the evidence given in this aspect. On the plaintiffs’ side, 1st plaintiff on record gave evidence of traditional history while on the defendants’ side, Chief G.O. Umeanodi the Obi of Ekwubumili i.e. D.W.7 and the 1st defendant on record aged 85 years put across their own version of traditional history. In considering the two versions put across that of the defendants is lucid “straight as a pole” and very satisfactory while the plaintiffs’ story is disjoined (sic), incomprehensible and improbable. In this aspect one has to bear in mind that old men and traditional rulers are by their status in the community not only in a position to know the truth but also find it difficult to twist the truth. D.W.7 and 1st defendant were unshaken during cross-examination. Vide Nwawuba v. Enemuo (1988) 2 NWLR (Pt.78) 581, Page 595 per Nnaemeka-Agu, J.S.C. As stated by Lord Dening in Kojo II v. Bonsie (1957) 1 W.L.R. 1223, 1227:-

“The best way to test the traditional history is by reference to the facts in recent years as established by evidence and is by seeing which of the two competing histories is more probable.”

As observed by Aniagolu, J.S.C., in Ikpang v. Edoho (1978) 2 L.R.N. 29, 40.

“It is therefore for the trial court to determine,

(a) did his ancestors in fact tell him that story

(b) is the story true”

(italicised sentence above is mine)

In the italicised sentence, the learned trial Judge acknowledges that there was a conflict in that aspect of the case presented by both parties. What he should thereafter have proceeded to do was to apply the principle enunciated in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra) to resolve it. That test or principle for which there was unfortunately non-application by him in the instant case but which I consider not fatal to the appellant’s case as I shall seek to show hereunder, does not simply consist of a straight forward resort to belief or disbelief of witnesses. Rather, where as in the instant case, there is admittedly conflict of traditional histories and one side or the other must be mistaken, yet both may be honest in their belief, demeanour is little guide to the truth. The best way to test one traditional history against the other is by reference to the facts in recent years as established by evidence and by seeing which of the two competing histories is more probable.

The learned trial Judge after what I may call glossing over the principle, thereupon considered at Page 129 lines 27 – 31 and Page 130, lines 1 – 26 the case of the respondents in relation to acts of possession which he correctly, in my view, resolved against them and went on to hold:

“From the above analysis, the defendants have established to my utmost satisfaction that they have been on this land right from the time Ekwulu entered the land in dispute followed by his children and now current defendants. They have been in possession and have exercised all rights of ownership of the land they call Oheba. In such circumstances, there is nothing to convince me that the plaintiffs have been in possession of the land in dispute for any period of time. Evidence adduced by the defendants outweigh that of the plaintiffs and the defendants have established that they are true owners of the land in dispute …”

Thus, when the court below went on to hold, among others that –

“The learned judge was no doubt unfair to the plaintiffs. Having purported to prefer the traditional history of the defendants there was no basis upon which to apply the principle stated in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra). He made a very unimpressive effort to do this by resorting to Ekpo v. Ita II (1932) NLR. 68 contrary to what was observed by the Supreme Court in Balogun v. Akanji (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt. 70) 301 at 322 – 323 …”

Such observation cannot be said to be justified. It was while the learned trial Judge was considering the case of the respondents in relation to acts of possession vide Page 129, lines 31 and Page 130, lines 1 – 26 of the Record that he alluded to the case of Ekpo v. Ita (supra) and not as the court below says, in relation to their (respondents’) case based on traditional history.

That said and being of the firm view that there was a body of evidence upon which the trial court came to the view that the respondents failed to prove their case. This court sitting on appeal would appropriately apply the principle in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra). The principle, properly stated is that whereas in the instant case, there are two competing histories relating to land in dispute and it is difficult to determine which is more probable, resort to the demeanour of the parties and their witnesses is not the best guide; the duty of court is to test the two stories by reference to acts in recent times. See Agedegudu v. Ajenifuja & Ors. (1963) 1 All NLR 109 at 115; (1963) 1 SCNLR 205 which is distinguishable from the case in hand in the sense that while in the Agedegudu case (supra) the trial Judge ran into difficulty about which story is worthy of credence and indeed confessed his inability to know which side to believe, in the instant case, the learned trial Judge having arrived at the view that there was a conflict in the two competing traditional histories proffered in evidence, failed or omitted to say which of them in relation to the recent act of possession established from primary facts, was more probable. The court below having equally failed to do the latter act but rather proceeded to order a retrial, this court sitting on appeal would and indeed should correct the omitted or non-applied principle. This is because the learned trial Judge having had no difficulty in the instant case in finding against the respondents or to use words of Olatawura, J.S.C., in Oyiho Iriri v. Eseroraye Erhurhobara & Anor. (1991) 2 N.W.L.R. (Pt. 173) 252 that he (the learned trial Judge) not being “at cross-roads with conflicting traditional history,” his task of resolving whose story of the parties was more probable, became a foregone conclusion. Accordingly, I hold in substitution for the omission to apply the principle by the trial court, which the court below wrongly criticised and refused to correct, that the appellants’ history all told, is the more probable.

Furthermore, the learned trial Judge in what in my view amounted to his quest at testing the two stories (of traditional evidence) which one must realize constitute hearsay upon hearsay in not having the sanctity of truth although the witnesses may have been testifying truthfully about the information handed down to them, no doubt had at the forefront of his mind acts in recent times performed and adduced by these witnesses in relation to the land in dispute, when he arrived at the following inescapable findings of facts:-

Firstly, the learned trial Judge in his judgment at Page 128 of the Record disbelieved the evidence of the respondents’ witnesses to wit: P.W.4, P.W.5 and P.W.6 and he gave his reasons for so doing.

Secondly, P.W.4, Ezembanasor Obi, who was from Umudiniala, Amife, Osumenyi testified at Page 75 of the Record that the family in Osumenyi having boundary with the land in dispute was the Umuoman family and this showed clearly that he had no land sharing a common boundary with the land in dispute. The cross-examination of this witness at Pages 75 – 76 depicted a bundle of contradictions, thus proving him to be a liar.

Thirdly, P.W.5 Mark Okeke, a native of Akwa Ihere admitted under cross-examination at Page 77 of the Record that he had never been to another town in his life, forgetting that he had earlier in examination in chief said that he worked on the land in dispute as a labourer and that he lived in the house of one Ume Uzeogbu Ihemeje on that land.

Fourthly, P.W.6, Ignatius Unokaeje, a School Teacher, though a native of Iruama Village, Nkwukwo, Unubi, was at the time of the alleged trespass resident at Umunya. He testified at Page 78 of the Record as to how he returned to Unubi and was there on school days – Thursday and Friday the 25th and 26th September, 1981 respectively, because he was told his father’s house was to be destroyed. Then came his made up story at Page 80 of the Record of the discussion he allegedly had with the grantee of the Irueze family who was then preparing to erect a factory on the land in dispute.

On the printed record alone therefor, P.W. 4, P.W. 5 and P. W. 6 had been depicted as not being witnesses of truth; hence the learned trial Judge was justified in his conclusion as to their credibility. When therefore the court below in its judgment held at Page 205 of the Record that the learned trial Judge failed to evaluate the evidence of acts of possession given on behalf of the respondents, it is with utmost due respect wrong.

Fifthly, 1st respondent who was 46 years old in November, 1986, testified as to the setting up of the western boundary of the land in dispute between the respondents and the appellants in 1926. Having been born in 1940 he could not possibly give evidence on the setting up of any purported boundary of the land in dispute in 1926. His evidence on the matter amounted to hearsay and so proved nothing. The admission by P.W.2, Nwaokafor Okoli, that there was no dispute between the respondents and the appellants in 1926 also showed that the story about the setting up of the alleged western boundary was not true.

On the other side of the coin is the consideration of the appellants’ case. The evidence of traditional history as given by the 1st appellant can be gleaned at Pages 102 and 103 of the Record. The passages of traditional history quoted by the court below at Pages 194 and 195 respectively are partly incorrect whereas portions of the traditional history given in evidence by D.W.7, Chief George Okoli Umeanodie, and the 1st appellant were also omitted. The court below at Pages 195 to 196 of its judgment set out what it described as deficiencies whereas there are no such deficiencies. For instance, it was not the evidence of D.W.7 that Ekwulu first came to Oheba. The sum total of his evidence showed that Ekwulu founded Ekwulu town -later called Ekwulu-Atulu and now Ekwulimili and that Oheba land is part of the said town. Paragraph 3, 3(a) and 3(e) of the Further Amended Statement of Defence constituting pleadings along which lines the appellants have evidence are explicit enough to invoke any doubt. They state:-

“3. The defendants expressly deny paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Statement of Claim and further aver that the area the plaintiffs are laying claim to is known as and called by the defendants from time immemorial Oheba in Urueze Village, Ekwulimili and had ever since been occupied by the defendants’ ancestors and their successors in title as residential and farm lands and the ruines of these residential houses are still visible on the land and particularly shown in the Survey Plan No. NLS/AN/99/8e attached and filed with the Statement of Defence.

3(a) The defendants’ Oheba land now in dispute originally belonged to Ekwulu,the ancestor of the defendants who was a renowned Shepherd and farmer from Agukwu Nri in Njikoka and from whom the defendants inherited the land …………

3(e) Before his death, Ekwulu shared his lands among his four sons. The Oheba land now in dispute forms part of Urueze’s share of Ekwulu’s land.”

D.W.7 testified that Ekwulu shared his land amongst his children who no doubt were his four sons referred to in the pleadings above. 1st appellant so testified, leaving no room for any discrepancy.

The Court below then went on to criticise the evidence of D.W.4 and 5 and the method the trial Judge adopted in its evaluation. It is pertinent to point out that Exhibit ‘D’, the appellants’ plan which lends support to the evidence of D.W. 4, shows the ruins of the two houses erected by her husband, Onyeachu Ezeagu; the latter and his first wife, were living in their house on the Western boundary of the land in dispute. D.W. 4 had said she lived in her mud house to the east for 12 years and after the death of her father-in-law moved from that house with her husband to live in her father-in-Iaw’s compound. This was long before the Nigerian Civil War (1967 – 70) since her husband died during the Civil War.

It is pertinent to note that D.W.4 gave evidence in the trial court on 26th February, 1988 while Exhibit D was made on 20th January, 1983. It would naturally not call for explanation why a mud house that had been occupied for 12 years and left vacant for more than 11 years will go into ruins. If D.W.4’s husband had lived in his house on the western boundary of the land in dispute as depicted on Exhibit D long before he married her and the house built on the eastern boundary for D.W.4 was built more than 21 years before the institution of the Suit giving rise to this appeal, clearly the two houses constitute evidence of ownership of the land in dispute by the appellants. Moreover, it was shown that it was Nkwukwo’s portion to his eldest son, Ezeobosi’ s that is the land in dispute.

Furthermore, it was common ground between the parties that the Army farmed on the land in dispute during the Nigerian Civil War. The only point disputed was who donated the land to the Army. P.W.5 Edmund Ifeoku provided the answer when in his testimony he said inter alia thus:

“As the war progressed we concentrated on Land Army. It means mobilisation of the town people to farm on any piece of land donated by the natives themselves ………

We had farms at Nnewi proper, Akpaukwu, Ekwulumili and Amechi. The Ekwulumili farm was at Oheba land donated by Urueme family. I know the names of two of them called Umenadozie and Umeorumili. These people are here in court. 1st defendant on record identified as U. Ogbuokwelu.”

While Exhibit A, the respondents’ plan shows ruins of wall fencing where late Onyeachu Ezeagwu allegedly was about to build a house but stopped because he went beyond the boundary on the west, to the east what one sees are three spots called “Positions of Plaintffs Farm Hut Scrapped out by (Defendants) (Cause of Action)”.

As for the Ngwu Shrine, only Exhibit D depicting the Ngwu tree close to ruins of D.W.4’s husband’s mud wall fence to the east is clearly shown. There is besides, no dispute in the two lower courts as the identity of the land in dispute. See Ibuluya v. Dikibo (1976) 6 S.C. 97 at 107; Akpagbue v. Ogu (1976) 6 S.C. 63 at 80 and Mathew Akubueze & Ors. v. Ozonwanne Nwakuche (1959) 4 FSC 262. There was therefore no need for the learned trial Judge to make specific findings as to the boundary which is explicit on Exhibit D.

What should be borne in mind in this case is that the onus was throughout on the respondents to prove their case. This they failed to do and their case was, rightly in my view, dismissed. The court below as is evident from its judgment, in my respectful view, approached the appeal before it as if the onus was on the appellants to prove their defence. There was no basis for the court below to have embarked on a re-evaluation or re-appraisal of the evidence adduced at the trial or for disturbing the findings and conclusions of the learned trial court, short of what I have said on the misapplication of the principle in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra). The learned trial Judge saw and heard the witnesses testify in the case and had the primary duty to make primary findings of fact on the evidence adduced before him. See Asani Balogun & Ors. v. Alimi Agboola (1974) 1 All NLR (Pt. 2) 66 at 73 and Oyibo Iriri & Ors. v. Eseroraye Erhurhobara & Anor (supra). In the latter case, where the situation considered is similar to the one in the instant case, my learned brother Belgore. J.S.C., cautioned at Page 273 of the Report as follows:-

“The line of authorities in this court on all this important point is inexhaustible and all tend to emphasise that an appellate court should be wary of interfering with the findings of fact by the trial court. This is in accord with common sense and common sense and justice must be inseparable partners, in that the trial court has too many advantages that an appellate court does not have. The trial court hears the evidence of the parties and their witnesses. This opportunity allows the trial court to assess the witnesses whose evidence-in-chief, answer to cross-examination and re-examination give the court the opportunity to assess each witness for demeanour, truthfulness, credibility and reliability. No appellate court has this opportunity as that court sees only the written record. The appellate court can therefore not substitute its eyes, ears and mind for that of the trial court in assessing the evidence. Therefore, believing or disbelieving a witness or a piece of evidence is in the exclusive competence of the trial court and where such belief and disbelief is clearly supported by evidence on record, the appellate court should not interfere in such a finding. See Fabunmi v. Agbe (1985) 1 NWLR (Pt. 2) 299.”It is settled law that it is where a trial court has made improper use of the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witnesses i.e., where the finding of the lower court is not supported by the printed record or the finding is not the proper conclusion or inference to be drawn from the evidence, that the Court of Appeal will and must in the interest of justice, interfere by altering, reversing or setting aside such perverse findings of the lower court. See Kuforiji & Anor. v. V.Y.B. (Nig.) Ltd. (1981) 6- 7 S.C. 40 at 85; Chief Frank Ebba v. Chief Warri Ogodo (1984) 1 SCNLR 372; (1984) 4 S.C. 84 at 98 – 112 and Fabunmi v. Agbe (supra). Furtherstill, the learned trial Judge in his judgment had held at Page 128 of the Record and in accordance with the evidence adduced before him that P.W. 4, P.W. 5 and P.W 6 were not witnesses of truth. This is a finding touching on the credibility of these witnesses and yet the court below interfered with it. This, it was not justified in doing in view of the warning this court has given in Motunwase v. Sorungbe (1988) 5 NWLR (Pt. 92) 90 to the effect that –

“In matters of credibility based on demeanour of witnesses, a Court of Appeal cannot and ought not interfere – as it did not have the advantage of seeing such witnesses testify. If what is involved are findings based on inferences which the learned trial Judge has drawn from the evidence, the Court of Appeal is in as good a position as the trial court and can make its own findings if in its view the findings made by the learned trial Judge are wrong.” See also Nnajiofor & 5 Ors. v. L.Ukonu & 2 Ors.(1985) 2 NWLR (Pt.9) 686 at 688.

As what arose in the instant case did not involve findings based on inferences the court below was wrong to embark on re-evaluation or re-appraisal of the evidence adduced at the trial. Hence, it was in error to have set aside the judgment of the learned trial Judge and to have ordered a retrial of the case. In the premises, this appeal must perforce succeed and it is allowed by me with costs assessed at N1,000.00 to the appellants.

I will now proceed to consider the cross-appeal of the respondents in which the sole issue submitted by learned Senior Advocate, Chief Williams, on their behalf for our determination, is:

“Was the Order ‘for a retrial’ by the Court of Appeal the proper Order to make having regard to its findings on the facts and circumstances of this case”

Only one issue for determination too was formulated on behalf of the appellants by Mr. Egonu, S.A.N. It states:

“Even if the Court of Appeal was right in its criticism of the findings and conclusions of the learned trial Judge, could it on the facts and circumstances of this case have entered judgment for the plaintiffs/appellants in this case”

The Claims of the respondents against the appellants were for damages for trespass and injunction as hereinbefore stated. The learned Senior Advocate, Chief Williams on respondents’ behalf has adopted the reasoning and conclusion arrived at by the court below with regard to evidence led at the trial of this case. After adverting our attention to the passage in the judgment of the court below at Pages 205 and 206 and that the court below properly relied on the case of Lawal v. Dawodu (1972) 1 All NLR (Pt. 2) 270 at 286, where it was held inter alia-

“Nevertheless, the area is one in which the Court of Appeal is at least equally qualified and competent and indeed is often required to exercise jurisdiction in certain, albeit exceptional, circumstances.

A trial judge, however learned, may draw mistaken conclusions from indisputable primary facts and may indeed wrongly arrange or present the facts on which the foundations of the case rest. In those circumstances, it would be completely inviduous to suggest that a Court of Appeal should not intervene and do what justice requires but should abdicate its own responsibility and rubber stamp an error however glaring”. (italic is mine for emphasis).

It is therefore learned Senior Advocate’s submission that the respondents’ case does contain “exceptional circumstances” which, in the instant case, impose on the court below the duty to intervene and make its own inferences from the evidence led at the trial. In support of this proposition learned counsel relied on the following portion of the judgment of the court below, to wit;

“The learned Judge in the present case failed to adopt this approach when he was faced with two conflicting traditional histories. He regarded the history narrated by the defendants as lucid and ‘straight’ as a pole’ to recall his very words which he himself put in quotes and that it described the plaintiffs’ story as disjointed, incomprehensible and most improbable. There was absolutely nothing to support these views. If anything, the defendants’ story as given by D.W.7 and 1st defendant lacked that straightness of a pole assigned to it by the learned Judge in at least three aspects ….” The court then went on to hold inter alia that:

“In contrast, one cannot find any such deficiencies or any other in the plaintiffs’ traditional history. The learned Judge was no doubt unfair to the plaintiffs. Having purported to prefer the traditional history of the defendants there was no basis upon which to apply the principle stated in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra). He made a very unimpressive effort to do this by resorting to Ekpo v. Ita II (1932) NLR 68 contrary to what was observed by the Supreme Court in Balogun v. Akanji.”

After demonstrating from the passage where the court below held that it was:

“satisfied that the learned Judge approached this case and the evidence adduced in a most erroneous and unsatisfactory manner. He failed to ascertain the common boundary between the two villages, an issue clearly apparent from the pleadings and evidence.”

The case of Omoregbe v. Edo (1971) 1 All NLR 282 at 289 – 290 was called in aid and we were urged to allow the appeal, the retrial order appealed from set aside and on order entering judgment for the respondents substituted therefor.

Now, the court below has held that the learned trial Judge, faced with two conflicting traditional histories, had failed to apply the test or principle enunciated in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra) in order to determine as between the two conflicting traditional histories which was more probable. As pointed out elsewhere in this judgment, the leaned trial Judge who saw and heard the witnesses for both parties testify, disbelieved the respondents. And as I went on to say, but for the omission by the learned trial Judge to apply the principle in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra) and which I showed could be rectified by this court sitting on appeal, there was ample evidence adduced before the learned trial Judge from which to arrive at the view that of the two conflicting histories, one was more probable in fulfillment of the said principle. The law is that it is where evidence of traditional history is inconclusive that the trial court is estopped from accepting one set of evidence against other conflicting set of evidence. If the evidence of traditional history is conclusive, a trial judge is entitled to accept it as against evidence of traditional history which is in conflict and which is not supported by evidence of recent acts of possession. See Olujebu of Ijebu v. Oso the Eleda of Eda (1972) 5 SC. 143 at 151 and F. M. Alade v. Lawrence Awo (1975) 4 SC. 215 at 228. Indeed a trial court is entitled to reject evidence of traditional history which is ex facie incredible. See Iriri v. Erhurhobara (supra) at Page 269. Where, as in the instant case, there was admittedly conflict of traditional histories, one side or the other must be mistaken, yet both may be honest in its belief. In such a case, demeanour is little guide to the truth. The best way to test the traditional history is by reference to the facts in recent years as established by evidence and by seeing which of the two competing histories is more probable. The principle having been hereinbefore stated and put in proper perspective, one is left to consider such facts in recent years as established by evidence and seeing which of the two competing histories is more probable. The court below held that the appellants led evidence on acts of possession but that “the learned trial Judge brushed all these aside unevaluated.” With utmost due respect this observation of the court below cannot be correct and a few instances, at the risk of repetition, will do to exemplify my stand on this.

P.W.4, who hailed from Umudiniala, Amife, Osumenyi testified at Page 75 that the family in Osumenyi having boundary with the land is dispute was the Umuomam family and this showed clearly that he had no land sharing a common boundary with the land in dispute. The ensuing cross-examination of this witness at Pages 75 and 76 showed a bundle of contradictions. Hence, he was a proven liar.

P.W.5, a native of Akwa Ihere, testified when cross-examined at Page 77 of the Record, that he had never been to another town in his life, forgetting that earlier in examination-in-chief, he stated that he worked on the land in dispute as a labourer and that he lived in the house of one Ume Uzoegbu Ihemeje on the land.

P.W.6, a School Teacher, though a native of Iruama Village Nkwukwo, Unubi, was at the time of the alleged trespass resident at Umunya. He testified at page 78 of the Record that he returned to Unubi and was there on School days, Thursday and Friday 25th and 26th September, 1981 because he was told his father’s house was to be destroyed. Then came his made-up story at Page 80 of the Record of the discussion he allegedly had with the grantee of the Irueze family who was preparing to erect a factory on the land in dispute. Surely all these could not establish acts of possession in support of the respondents. Hence their case only merited to be dismissed and not a retrial order which can only be made where the trial court fails to resolve the conflict or contradiction in evidence. See Jude Ezeoke & Sons v. Moses Nwagbo & Anor. (1988) 2 NWLR (Pt. 72) 616 at 629 following R. G. Okuwobi v. Jimoh Ishola (1973) 3 S.C. 43 at 47 – 48 and Total Nigeria Ltd. v. Wilfred Nwako (1978) 5 S.C. 1 at 14. See also Idika v. Erisi (1988) 2 NWLR (Pt.78) 563 at 576,

While Exhibit D, the appellants’ plan depicts clearly the two ruins of Onyeachu Ezeagwu’s houses to the east and west respectively of the disputed land’s boundary indicating exercise of ownership thereof, Exhibit A, the respondents’ plan, is devoid of such features excepting that in two portions on the eastern part it depicts that appellants once had huts thereon though they (respondents) had established their farms in those places after scrapping the huts, thus symbolizing their act of trespass.

Despite the criticisms of the learned trial Judge set out elsewhere in this judgment by the court below, that court could not justifiably enter judgment for the appellants nor can the order for a retrial as set out in their sale issue for determination be acceded to. This is because a retrial is ordered inter alia where a trial Judge fails to take advantage of this seeing and hearing the witnesses, notwithstanding that the record showed there to be ample evidence before him. See Chief James Okpiri v. Chief Igoni Jonah & 4 Ors.(1961) 1 All NLR 102 at 105 and Chief J.S. Ekpere & Ors. v. Chief Odaka Aforije & Ors. (1972) 1 all NLR. (Pt.1) 220. In the instant case, the respondents cannot be said to have adduced such ample evidence through their witnesses to warrant a retrial order being made for failure to appraise the evidence of their witnesses. Hence their case failed.

In result, the cross-appeal of the respondents fails and it is accordingly dismissed with costs assessed at N1,000 in favour of the appellants.

UWAIS, J.S.C: I have had the opportunity of reading in draft the judgment read by my learned brother Onu, J.S.C. I entirely agree that the appeal be allowed and the cross-appeal be dismissed.

Both the appellants, as plaintiffs and the respondents, as defendants, by their pleadings set up conflicting traditional history. The learned trial judge failed to apply the principle laid down in the case of Kojo II v. Bonsie (1957)1 W.L.R. 1223 at p.1227 to resolve the conflict in the traditional history of the parties. The evidence to rely on in resolving the conflict was available before the learned trial court. Consequently, the Court of Appeal was wrong to order a retrial since it was in a position to resolve the conflict. The respondents relied on acts of possession by pleading that they had ruins of houses on the land in dispute. They showed the ruins on the plan which they tendered in evidence and led evidence in support of the pleading. There was no similar averment by the appellants. Nor did the appellants establish any act of possession. By applying the test in Kojo II v. Bonsie (supra) the respondents were therefore entitled to succeed in the High Court. In my opinion, the Court of Appeal was wrong in setting aside the judgment of the learned trial judge and ordering a retrial in the High Court.

It is for these and the reasons in the judgment of any learned brother Onu, J.S.C., that I too will set aside the decision of the Court of Appeal and restore the decision of the High Court. I abide by the order contained in the said judgment.

UWAIS, J.S.C. (Pronouncement): The Honourable Justice Olajide Olatawura, who sat with us on the 14th of February, 1994 to hear this appeal, retired on the 3rd of May, 1994. Before his retirement, he took, part in the conference which we held on the 23rd day of February, 1994 on the appeal and he was of the opinion that the appeal should be allowed and the cross-appeal be dismissed.

In accordance with the provisions of the proviso to section 258 subsection (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1979 Cap. 62 of the Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 1990 and the decision of this Court in A.-G. of Imo State v. A.-G. of Rivers State, (1983) 8 S.C. 10 at pp. 10 – 12; (1983) 2 SCNLR 108.

I hereby pronounce the opinion of Hon. Justice Olajide Olatawura that the appeal be allowed and the cross-appeal be dismissed for the reasons contained in the judgment read by my learned brother Onu, J.S.C., the draft of which he read before his retirement.


Other Citation: (1994) LCN/2635(SC)

Union Bank Of Nigeria Ltd. V. Professor Albert Ojo Ozigi (1994) LLJR-SC

Union Bank Of Nigeria Ltd. V. Professor Albert Ojo Ozigi (1994)

LawGlobal-Hub Lead Judgment Report

ADIO, J.S.C.

The respondent, a customer of the appellant, in 1982, obtained a loan of N250,000.00 from the appellant to enable the respondent complete a restaurant in Ilorin. The terms under or subject to which the loan was granted were set out in two deeds of mortagage, Exhibits 5 and 6. He was making payment to the appellant until 1988 when there was a disagreement between the appellant and the respondent on the question of the rate of the interest chargeable on the loan.

The respondent was of the view that the rate was 11% throughout the period of repayment and, for that reason, the balance of the loan-outstanding was N116,076,10. The appellant maintained that the rate of the interest chargeable was not fixed. It was empowered by the mortgage agreements to stipulate the rate of interest from time to time and pursuant to the exercise of that power, the appellant had from time to time, after the granting of the loan, stipulated rates of interest higher than 11% as a result of credit guidelines issued by the Central Bank of Nigeria to commercial banks. Consequently, the balance outstanding on the loan granted to the respondent was N353,632.09. The disagreement could not be resolved. So, the respondent instituted an action against the appellant in the High Court, Kwara State, Okene Judicial Division, in which he claimed the following reliefs:-

“(1) A declaration that the defendants are only entitled to charge on any loan overdraft or banking facilities granted to the plaintiffs banking interest prevailing as at the time the plaintiff was granted the said loan, overdraft and/or banking facilities.

(2) A declaration that the defendants cannot unilaterally and arbitrarily increase the banking interest payable on the loan, overdraft or banking facilities granted to the plaintiff without the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff.

(3) A declaration that the plaintiff having paid over a sum of N229,000.00 out of a total loan of N250,000.00 granted to him by the defendants sometime in 1982 cannot be owing the defendants a staggering amount of N353,632,09 or anything in the neighbourhood of that amount.

(4) A declaration that the plaintiff having paid a total sum of N261,632.50 as at 15:11:88 to the defendant on the principal loan/overdraft of N250,000.00 based on the agreed 11% interest rate, he (the plaintiff) is only indebted to the defendant in the sum of N116,076.10 as at the said 15th November, 1988.

(5) Pursuant to sub-paragraph (4) Supra, an order permitting the plaintiff to settle the said outstanding indebtedness of a sum of N116,076.10 to the defendant by monthly instalment of a sum of N3,500.00.

(6) An order of injunction restraining the defendants either by themselves, agents, servants, privies or through any person however (sic) from selling, alienating or advertising for sale the plaintiff’s landed property ……unless and until the plaintiff’s indebtedness to the defendant is determined and thereafter unless and until the plaintiff defaults in meeting the monthly instalmental payment as prayed for.”

The parties duly filed and exchanged pleadings. The evidence led by the respondent was that before he was granted the loan, he had a discussion or negotiated with Assistant General Manager, Operations, Union Bank in Lagos and the rate of interest they agreed was 11%. The aforesaid Assistant General Manager gave him (respondent) a memorandum containing the terms agreed upon during the discussion or negotiation and he gave the said memorandum to the appellant as requested. An extra copy of the memorandum was given to the respondent for his own use. The position of the appellant was that the terms regulating the rate of interest were in clause 3 of each of the two mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) and not in the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’. Evidence, was led to show that the prime Drate of interest was not fixed. It ranged from 13 1/2% in 1984, 13% in 1986, 15% in 1987, 21% in February, 1988, 18 1/4% from March, 1988 to 19 3/4% from September, 1988 to January, 1989.

After consideration of the evidence before him and the submissions of the learned counsel for the parties, the learned trial Judge granted the first four reliefs claimed by the respondent. He rejected the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, because it was inadmissible on the ground that it could not vary or contradict the provisions of the mortgage deeds, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’, executed by the appellant and the respondent in relation to the transaction between them.

The learned trial Judge however, accepted the oral evidence of the respondent as to what he negotiated with the Assistant Manager of the appellant’s bank in Lagos, which allegedly fixed the rate of interest at 11% per annum. Dissatisfied with the Judgment of the learned trial Judge, the appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal which dismissed the appeal of the appellant. The Court of Appeal held that the mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) did not contain terms specifying the rate of interest chargeable on the loan. It upheld the finding of the learned trial Judge based on the oral evidence of the respondent that the rate agreed upon during the negotiation between him and the Assistant General Manager of the Union Bank in Lagos was 11% per annum throughout the period of the repayment of the loan. The court was of the view that the appellant could not unilaterally increase the interest rate, thus affirming the view of the learned trial Judge that the appellant could not increase the rate of interest without the consent of or notice to the respondent. In the view of the court of Appeal, the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) which allegedly contained, inter alia, the particulars of the negotiation between the respondent and the Assistant Manager, Operations Lagos, on the loan, subsequently granted to the respondent and which was rejected by the learned trial Judge as inadmissible, was not only relevant but also admissible. The court was also of the view that as the respondent had discharged the burden of adducing evidence in support of his case, the burden shifted to the appellant. As the evidence led by the appellant was unsatisfactory the learned trial Judge was right in granting the reliefs claimed by the respondents in items 1 to 4 of his claim.

Dissatisfied with the judgment of the Court of Appeal, the appellant has further appealed to this court. In accordance with the rules of this court, the parties duly filed and exchanged briefs. The appellant, in its brief of argument, identified two issues for determination while the respondent, in his own brief, also identified two issues. The issues identified in the appellant’s brief, which were based on the grounds of appeal, are more comprehensive and are sufficient for the determination of this appeal. They are as follows:-

‘1. Whether the plaintiff in the court below, discharged his burden to prove his case by credible evidence to justify the affirmation by the Court of Appeal of the first, second, third and fourth reliefs granted to the plaintiff/respondent by the trial court.

  1. Whether, on a proper construction of Clause 3 of Exhibits 5 and 6 (Deeds of legal mortgage) the mortgagee (the appellant herein) had an obligation to notify the mortgagor (respondent herein) of the change in interest rates from time to time, and whether the failure of the appellant to give such notice justified the nullification by the Court of Appeal of the variation of interest rate in Clause 3.

I shall consider the questions raised under the two issues together. I have already set out in brief the evidence led by the respondent for the purpose of proving his claim and the evidence led by the appellant in defence. The respondent told the court how he came to the conclusion that the rate of interest chargeable on the loan granted him by the appellant was 11% per annum flat rate. It was fixed. He was not told that the rate could be increased without his consent or knowledge and he was not notified of any increase. The basis of his conclusion was that the rate was what was agreed upon by him and the Assistant General Manager, Operations. Lagos, during the negotiation between them before the loan was granted to him. Details of the matters on which they negotiated were set out in a memorandum which the said Assistant General Manager sent through the respondent to the appellant and a copy of which was given to the respondent. The memorandum is Exhibit ‘1’.

It is necessary to first of all deal with the issue of the rate of interest that was chargeable on the loan given to the respondent. In this connection, the respondent relied on the copy of the said memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, and on the oral evidence of the contents thereof given by him. He used the fixed rate of 11% per annum to calculate the total amount payable by him, subtracted the amount he had paid so far, and stated what was outstanding. The contention of the appellant was that the rate fluctuated as the appellant was empowered by clause 3 of the mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’), which were the loan agreements, to stipulate the rate of interest from time to time. The learned trial Judge rejected Exhibit ‘1’ because it was inadmissible but accepted the respondent’s oral evidence of the negotiation which fixed the rate at 11% per annum. In upholding the finding, the Court of Appeal stated, inter alia, as follows:-

‘It was then submitted that clause 3 in Exhibits 5 and 6 contained no clear provision as to the rate of interest payable. And this view, is supported by page 7 of the appellant’s brief where it was submitted that the trial Judge ought to have applied the rate of interest given in evidence by DW 1 instead of implying strange rate of interest not intended by the parties. Also the failure of the appellant to call Alhaji Maiyaki Usman to rebut the evidence of the plaintiff was fatal to the defendant’s case under section 148(d) of the Evidence Act ……..it follows that the inference of 11% per annum should be drawn in favour of the respondent……… I have given the briefs and record of this appeal deep thought. One of the difficulties in this appeal is the finding of the lower court against the admissibility of that Exhibit 1, a directive from the Assistant General Manager, Union Bank Headquarters, Lagos that their Lokoja Branch Manager should charge the prime rate plus 2% which he totalled 11 % on the loan between the parties:……..

Thus in this case, the negotiations for the loan agreement was evidenced by Exhibit 1 dated December 28, 1981 which was a letter under the hand of the Assistant General Manager, Lagos Operation, Union Bank, Headquarters, 40 Marina, Lagos and addressed to the Manager, Lokoja Branch ………

………..A copy was also sent to the Area Manager, Ibadan, Exhibit 1 is not only relevant, but also admissible.”

It was argued for the appellant that the two mortgage deeds executed by the respondent in relation to the loan transaction contained the terms upon which the loan was granted. None of the parties could, therefore, call Alhaji Usman who wrote the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, to give evidence of the particulars of the preliminary oral negotiation or agreement between him and the respondent. It was also contended that neither the oral evidence of the respondent or of any witness nor the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, which contained the particulars of the alleged negotiation was admissible to contradict the provisions of clause 3 of the mortgage deed (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) relating to the rate of interest payable on the loan. It was, therefore, argued that the Court of Appeal erred in law in basing its decision on the said memorandum which had been rejected by the learned trial Judge when there was no appeal against the rejection. Further, it was argued that the Court of Appeal erred in law in raising the issue of the admissibility of Exhibit ‘1’ suo motu and deciding it without hearing the parties and that, in any case, Exhibit ‘1’ was an internal memorandum which was not addressed to the appellant. The learned counsel for the respondent argued that the only evidence on the rate of interest payable on the loan was the oral evidence of the respondent on the 11% per annum which, according to the respondent, was agreed upon by him and the Assistant General Manager, Lagos during the alleged negotiation. Exhibit ‘1’ contained the particulars of what were discussed or agreed upon during the said negotiation. Finally, it was submitted that even ifit was wrong for the Court of Appeal to admit the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, the admission alone could not be a ground for reversing the decision of the court because it did not occasion a miscarriage of justice.

The first question, which comes to mind, is how the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, containing details of the alleged negotiation between the respondent and the Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, became Exhibit ‘1’ and how did it come before the Court of Appeal so as to warrant the Court of Appeal holding that it was not only relevant; it was admissible When the document was tendered before the learned trial Judge, the learned counsel for the appellant objected to its admissibility. Before the learned trial Judge ruled on the objection, the learned counsel for the appellants withdrew his objection. He stated that the withdrawal of his objection did not mean that the document was admissible in evidence or that it could be used to vary the contents/terms of a contract to which it was extraneous. The leaned trial Judge made a note of what the learned counsel for the appellant said and received the memorandum as Exhibit ‘1’. The fact that the document was before the Court of Appeal as Exhibit ‘1’ in this case, to a large extent, misled the Court of Appeal in reaching the decision it reached in relation to the memorandum. Be that as it may, the whole of the record of proceedings in this case was before the Court of Appeal and that court should have discovered that the learned trial Judge subsequently, in his judgment, gave consideration to the admissibility or otherwise of the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) and came to the conclusion that it was not admissible and rejected it. In the first place, the attitude which the learned counsel for the appellant adopted in the matter was irregular. A counsel has to take a definite stand. He cannot sit on the fence as the law does not permit such a thing. He must make his view known before the case is fixed for judgment. What is open to a counsel when a document is tendered by the other party is to raise an objection if he opposes the admissibility of the document and if he has no objection he should say so. It will then be for the court, if there is an objection to the admissibility of the document, to give a ruling. If the objection is upheld the document should be rejected and marked, ”rejected”. It should not be marked as an exhibit, and, while it remains rejected, the document is irrelevant and its contents cannot be used for the determination of any issue in the case by either the trial court or by an appellate court. There is nothing in the record of appeal showing that there was an appeal to the Court of Appeal against the ruling in the Judgment of the learned trial Judge rejecting the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) on the ground that it was inadmissible. For as long as there was no such appeal, the Court of Appeal erred in law in reopening the issue of the admissibility of the document and in ruling that the document was relevant and admissible. If there is no appeal against the ruling of a trial court rejecting a document as being inadmissible or if there is such an appeal which is unsuccessful, then the document or the contents thereof cannot be properly used or relied upon in the determination of any relevant issue in the case.

The respondent, for the contention that the rate of the interest, chargeable or agreed upon, in relation to the said loan was 11% per annum and no more, relied on his oral evidence on the matters on which he and the Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, negotiated, and on the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’ containing particulars of the said negotiation sent by the Assistant General Manager to the appellant through him (respondent) and a copy of which was given to him. The learned trial Judge rejected the said memorandum when he stated, inter alia, in his judgment as follows:-

”Therefore, I agree with the learned counsel for the defendant that the memorandum Exhibit’1′ is extrinsic to the agreement between the parties and, consequently, that document cannot be relied upon to determine the rate of interest governing the transactions between the parties.”

Though the learned trial Judge rejected Exhibit’1′ (the memorandum) he eventually accepted the oral evidence of the respondent about the aforesaid negotiation between the respondent and the Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, set out in writing in Exhibit’1′, for the determination of the rate of interest as 11% per annum. The learned trial Judge stated further in his judgment, inter alia, as follows:

”Apart from Exhibit’1′ on which the plaintiff relied which I have found is inadmissible to vary or contradict the mortgage deeds the plaintiff also insisted that he came to an agreement with the defendant’s Assistant General Manager, Operations, Alhaji Maiyaki Usman, with whom he settled on the 11 % fixed rate of interest. That evidence was not contradicted by the defendant who was in a position to do so ……….Therefore, I find as a fact that the rate of interest on the loan agreement between the parties was settled at 11% per annum and I imply that rate into the two mortgage deeds, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’ to interpret clause 3 of each Deed.”

The Court of Appeal not only endorsed the use which the learned trial Judge made of the oral or parol evidence of the respondent about the matters allegedly agreed upon during the alleged negotiation between him and the said Assistant General Manager, Lagos, the Court of Appeal went further to hold that the memorandum, in which the details of the alleged negotiation were set out in writing, was not only relevant but also admissible. The general rule is that where the parties have embodied the terms of their contract in a written document, extrinsic evidence is not admissible to add to, vary, subtract from or contradict the terms of the written instrument. See S.132(1) of the Evidence Act; and Olaloye v. Balogun (1990) 5 NWLR (Pt.148) 24. In the present case, the relevant agreements were the mortgage deeds, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’, which contained, inter alia, provisions concerning the amount of the loan, its period of repayment and made provision for the determination of the rate of interest payable on the loan. I have pointed out that the memorandum, Exhibit ‘1’, irregularly found its way to the Court of Appeal as an exhibit and that it was, in any case, wrong, in law, for the Court of Appeal to hold that the document was relevant and admissible. Further, the law is that the operation of the parol evidence rule is not limited to oral evidence. It extends to extrinsic evidence in writing, such as drafts of agreement, preliminary agreements and letters relating to previous negotiations. Generally, evidence is not admitted as to what passed between the parties before the execution of a written agreement or during its preparation. Exhibit’1′ constituted an extrinsic evidence intended to be used to contradict the mortgage deeds and was, for that reason, not admissible.

The next question, for consideration, is whether if the aforesaid memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) was not admissible, the respondent could properly give oral evidence of its contents, that is, matters which the respondent and the said Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, discussed and agreed upon about the loan during the alleged negotiation between them. The answer to the question is in the negative. This is because where a written agreement on a matter exists, evidence

of a preliminary oral agreement cannot be introduced. See Eke v. Odolojin (1961) 1 All NLR 404. In Macaulay v. NAL Merchant Bank Ltd. (1990) 4 NWLR (Pt.144) 283, the appellant was granted a loan by the respondent and, according to the relevant loan agreement, repayment was to be effected in full within four years from either the rental income on the buildings which were to be completed with the loan or from any other sources. As there was default in payment of the loan, the respondent sued the appellant for the balance. The appellant filed a defence but the respondent still filed a motion, supported by an affidavit, that final judgment be entered for it. In the affidavit filed by the appellant, he deposed that there was a mutual agreement between the parties (not recorded in the loan agreement) that time was not of the essence of the contract and that the respondent made him to understand that the loan was to be repaid within four years of completing the buildings and letting them out to tenants. The learned trial Judge, for that reason, held that the appellant should be let in to defend the action because there was a dispute about the terms of the loan. On appeal to the court of Appeal, the ruling of the learned trial Judge was reversed because, on the construction of the relevant clause in the loan agreement, the appellant did not raise any defence to the claim either in the statement of defence or in the affidavit in support of the statement of defence. On further appeal to the Supreme Court, Agbaje, J.S.C., stated, at p. 311, inter alia, as follows:-

”As I have said above the defendant has himself admitted in his affidavit that the terms and conditions of the loan agreement between him and the plaintiff have been reduced into writing. In the circumstances and having regard to the provisions of section 131(1) of the Evidence Act can the defendant be heard to say that besides these written terms and conditions there is other evidence of the terms of the loan agreement I have no difficulty at all in answering the question in the negative. So in my judgment, it is only the written conditions and terms of the loan agreement that are evidence of the terms and conditions.”

The Court of Appeal erred in endorsing the 11% per annum flat rate of interest chargeable on the loan, granted by the appellant to the respondent, implied by the learned trial Judge into the written agreements, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’. The Court of Appeal also erred in affirming the modification, by the learned trial Judge, of the terms of the deeds of mortgage, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’, by the oral evidence of the respondent on the alleged negotiation between the respondent and Assistant General Manager, Operations, ofthe Union Bank in Lagos. The same reason given by the learned trial Judge for rejecting the memorandum also applied to the oral evidence of its contents.

There was also the question that it was the Court of appeal that suo motu raised or re-opened the issue of admissibility of the memorandum (Exhibit’1′)and determined the aforesaid issue without giving the learned counsel for the parties an opportunity of making submissions. It is wrong for an appellate court to raise an issue suo motu and determine the issue without giving the parties or their counsel the opportunity to argue the point. See Ejowhomu v. Edok-Eter Ltd. (1986) 5 NWLR (Pt.39) 1.

It is necessary, at this stage, to consider whether the admission of the memorandum (Exhibit’1′) and/or of the oral evidence of its contents occasioned a substantial miscarriage of justice. The error of law committed by the Court of Appeal, in the circumstance, was fatal in the sense that it occasioned a substantial miscarriage of justice in that without the admission of the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) and/or of the oral evidence of the contents thereof on the alleged negotiation, the bottom would have been knocked off the respondent’s case. On that ground alone, he could not have been able to succeed in his claim, as he had done, as there would have been no other evidence to support his contention that the rate of interest was 11% per annum and that the balance that he claimed to be outstanding was, in fact, the amount outstanding. The amount which, according to the calculation made by the respondent, was outstanding was about one third of the amount which the appellant said was outstanding. A decision of a lower court on any point will be reversed by the appellate court where error of law committed by the lower court is fatal because it has occasioned a substantial miscarriage of justice. See Udeze v. Chidehe (1990) 1 NWLR (Pt.125) 141. If the error of law is the wrongful admission of evidence, the appellant must show that, without the admission of the evidence, the decision would have been otherwise. See ldundun v. Okumagha (1976) 9-10 S.C.227. There is no doubt, therefore, that the error of law committed by the Court of Appeal occasioned a substantial miscarriage of justice and that without the admission of the aforesaid evidence, the decision of the Court of Appeal would have been otherwise. Further, if by disregarding the offending evidence of the alleged negotiation, Exhibit ‘1’, and the oral evidence of the respondent of the content thereof, there was no other evidence on which the finding that the rate of interest on the loan was 11% per annum could be based, then the finding could properly be set aside because an appellate court has power to reverse a finding of fact made by the trial court which is not supported by evidence. See Fatunde v. Onwoamanam (1990) 2 NWLR (Pt.132) 322. –

Having dealt with one major aspect of the evidence led by the parties, that is, whether the evidence of previous alleged negotiation, oral or written, between the respondent and the Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, was or was not admissible, to vary, alter, or contradict the relevant provisions in clause 3 of Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’, the question raised under the second issue becomes relevant as it was the second or another major aspect. The position of the appellant was that the relevant provisions on the rate of the interest payable on the loan in question in this case were contained in clause 3 of Exhibit ‘5’ and ‘6’ and that under the provisions the appellant was empowered to stipulate the rate of interest and, in doing so, the appellant might increase it from time to time, as had been done in this case. The appellant was not under any obligation to hold prior consultation with or to give prior notice of such increases to the respondent. The respondent contended that the appellant had no power to increase the rate of the interest payable on the loan unilaterally, that is, without prior consultation with or notice of such increase being given to the respondent. In rejecting the appellant’s contention, the Court of Appeal stated, inter alia, as follows:-

”Also no evidence was led as to any banking practice, usage or custom which gave the appellant the right to unilaterally vary upwards interest rate, …….

The word ”stipulated” according to the Concise Oxford Dictionary means: mention or insist upon as essential part of agreement; demand as part of a bargain or agreement, the appellant therefore had an obligation under clause 3 to notify the mortgagor or plaintiff/respondent of the change in and demand interest rates from time to time starting with the offer of 11% in Exhibit 1. Failure to do this nullifies the variation of interest rate clause and fixed the rate at 11% per annum.-

The issue raised, in this connection, is how to interprete the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage deeds. The provision is as follows:-

”All interest payable on the money hereby secured shall accrue due from day to day at the rate from time to time stipulated by the bank and may be capitalised at such intervals as the bank may from time to time prescribe but not more often than monthly and added to the moneys hereby secured and shall thereupon bear interest accordingly at the rate aforesaid.”

The submission made for the appellant, in this connection, was that if the relationship of a banker and a customer was altered into that of a mortgagee and a mortgagor by the taking of a mortgage (as in the present case) interest must be calculated according to the terms of the mortgage. The parties (appellant and respondent) should be presumed to have intended what they, in fact, stated in the mortgage deeds so that the provision in clause 3 thereof which was clear and unambiguous must be construed as they stood. The appellant contended also that the provision should be given its ordinary meaning and that there was, therefore, no necessity for importing into the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements extraneous matters, such as the requirement that the appellant must obtain prior consent of and give prior notice of increase in the rate of interest to the respondent. For that reason, it was contended further that the purported nullification, by the Court of Appeal, of the rates of interest stipulated by the appellant in the exercise of the power conferred by clause 3 of the mortgage agreements was wrong in law. It was contended for the respondent that failure of the appellant to produce the Central Bank guidelines which warranted the increase in the rate of interest from time to time by the appellant was fatal to the appellant’s case. It was also contended that there was no evidence of any banking practice, usage or custom which supported the increase of the rate of interest by the appellant unilaterally. Finally, it was argued that it would be unreasonable to hold that clause 3 of the mortgage agreements implied a carte blanche on the part of the appellant to vary the interest rate at will.

I have read the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements set out above, and it is my view that it is plain, clear and unambiguous. Where a document is clear, the operative words in it should be given their simple and ordinary grammatical meaning. On the application of the provision, the following evidence of the D.W.1 is relevant:

“The interest varies from time to time as directed by the Central bank e.g. 11/1/88 September, 1984 the prevailing interest rate was 13 1/2%. From September, 1984 to August 1986 – 13%. September, 1986 to August 1987 it rose to 15%.. September, 1987 to February, 1988 – 21% March, 1988 to August, 1988 – 18 3/4 and September, 1988 to January, 1989 or today 19 3/4%. The rates were fixed by the Central Bank.”

If the prevailing interest rates (prime rates) fixed by the Central Bank vary from time to time, then the interest rates stipulated by the appellant, that was under obligation as a bank to comply with the Central Bank guidelines, in the matter, could not be fixed: it had to vary from time to time in response to the Central Bank guide-lines. That was the process provided for in Clause 3 of the mortgage agreements, Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’. The provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements can be relied upon to stipulate rates of interest in response to the C.B.N.’s guidelines on the matter. There can be no question of fixing arbitrary rates of interest or rates of interest contrary to the C.B.N.’s guidelines. The necessary guidelines on the rate of interest on loans are given by the Central Bank from time to time generally and not to a particular bank or in relation to a particular loan transaction. The general rule is that where the words of any instrument are free from ambiguity in themselves, and where the circumstances of the case have not created any doubt or difficulty as to the proper application of the words to claimants under the instrument or the subject matter to which the instrument relates, such an instrument is always to be construed according to its strict, plain and the common meaning of the words themselves. In the circumstance, it was therefore, wrong to import into the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) extraneous matters such as the requirement that the appellant must obtain the prior consent of or given prior notice of increase in the rate of interest on the loan to the respondent. This is because, generally, if the conditions necessary for the formation of a contract are fulfilled by the parties thereto, they will be bound by it. It is not the function of a court to make a contract for the parties or to rewrite the one which they have made. See Oyenuga v. Provisional Council of the University of Ife (1965) NMLR 9. In certain special circumstances, a court may intervene and imply a term into an agreement. The circumstances in this case did not warrant such an intervention because the assumption of the learned trial Judge, affirmed by the Court of Appeal, that the provision in the mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) could not enable the rate of interest to be determined as it was ambiguous, was erroneous and not correct. In other words, the words in a document must first be given their simple and ordinary meaning and under no circumstances may new of additional words be imported into the unless the document would be by the absence of that which is imported impossible to understand. The presumption is that the parties have intended what they have in fact said so that their words must be construed as they stand. See Solicitor-General, Western Nigeria v. Adebonojo (1971) 1 All NLR 1978. What happened in the case was that the 1st respondent was granted a scholarship by the Government of Western State of Nigeria. As a result he and his guarantors executed a bond in which he undertook that upon passing the relevant examinations he would serve the Government for a period of five years in any capacity considered appropriate by the Government. The respondent passed the relevant examination and returned to Nigeria but he was not given the necessary certificate because he had not spent the stipulated period on the course. The Government gave him an appointment which, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, was considered appropriate. He was not satisfied. He resigned the appointment before the expiration of five years. The Government consequently sued him and his guarantors for the refund of the amount spent on him pursuant to the grant of the scholarship. The learned trial Judge found that the 1st respondent committed a breach of the bond by resigning his appointment before the expiration of the period stipulated in the agreement and entered judgment for the Government.

On appeal to the then Western State Court of Appeal by the respondents, the court allowed the appeal and set aside the judgment of the learned trial Judge. The Western State Court of Appeal held, inter alia, that to be appropriate, any capacity in which the 1st respondent was called upon to serve by virtue of the relevant clause of the agreement must be reasonable. Dissatisfied with the judgment, the Government appealed to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Western State Court of Appeal, and restored the judgment ofthe learned trial Judge. In allowing the appeal, the Supreme Court stated, inter alia, as follows:-

”Now we have already set out the provisions of clause 4(a) of exhibit C and in the events which had happened it is easy to see why a consideration of that clause has become a matter of paramount relevance. To us, this clause clearly stipulates that after qualification the first defendant could be offered employment by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Western State in a capacity considered suitable by the regional government.

”In his consideration of that clause and his application of it to the facts of this case, Delumo, J. had held that according to the provision of the clause it is the regional government that would decide the capacity which is appropriate.”

On the other hand, the Western State Court of Appeal took the view that the word ”reasonable” and (the ”concept of reasonableness”) should be imported into the contracts of the parties for the purpose of construction. Neither of the parties to Exhibit C (and Exhibit H) contemplated that the word should be included in their agreement and throughout Exhibit C (and Exhibit H) that word was not even breathed. It is obvious from the confusion that arose in the Western State Court of Appeal itself that the court was in difficulty to ascertain the real position into which the word ”reasonable” could or should be fixed ………It is the alphabet of his study to any lawyer that in the construction of documents the words must first be given their simple and ordinary meaning and that under no circumstances may new or additional words be imported into the unless the documents would be by the absence of that which is imported impossible to understand.”

The provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements is clear and unambiguous. It is possible to understand and apply it as it stands. There was, therefore, no necessity to import new or additional words into it to require prior consultation with, or the giving of prior notice of increase in rates of interest on the loan in question to the respondent. Therefore, failure of the appellant to hold prior consultation with or to give prior notice to the respondent about increase in rates of interest on the loan could not, as the Court of Appeal held, result in the nullification of the interest rates stipulated under the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements.

The result of the consideration, above, of the two major aspects is that the rate of 11% per annum which the respondent purported to use for the determination of his indebtedness to the appellant was wrong because (a) what the respondent discussed or agreed with the Assistant General Manager, Operation, Lagos, during an alleged negotiation before the appellant granted the loan to the respondent was not admissible for the purpose of altering, modifying or contradicting the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements; (b) it was not legally right to import into the provision of the clause 3 of the mortgage agreements, a requirement that the appellant must obtain the respondent’s prior consent or give prior notice of increase of the rate of interest to the respondent. The foregoing two major aspects of the matter must be borne in mind for the determination of the question whether the respondent discharged the onus of proving his case so as to justify the affirmation, by the Court of Appeal, of the judgment of the learned trial Judge granting items (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) of the respondent’s claim.

What really happened before the learned trial Judge was that he rejected the memorandum containing the particulars of the alleged negotiation between the respondent and the Assistant General Manager, Operation, Lagos, because it was inadmissible. However, the learned trial Judge accepted the oral evidence of the respondent on the alleged negotiation and, particularly, that aspect of it fixing the rate of interest payable on the loan as 11% per annum. In the view of the learned trial Judge, there was no evidence led by the appellant contradicting or challenging the allegation of the respondent that it was 11% per annum that he and Assistant General Manager agreed upon during the alleged negotiation. In the circumstance, the learned trial Judge implied the rate of 11% per annum into the provisions of the two mortgage deeds. The rate of 11% per annum was used for the purpose of determining the total indebtedness of the respondent. The balance outstanding was determined by subtracting what he had paid from the total indebtedness. The foregoing was the basis upon which the learned trial Judge held that the respondent had discharged the onus of proving his case and gave judgment for the respondent in relating to items (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) of his claim. The Court of Appeal considered the various issues involved and the conclusions of the learned trial Judge on them. The court then stated, inter alia, as follows:

”In the face of the unsatisfactory evidence led by the defence and the detailed credible evidence of the plaintiff on the loan, year by year repayments, interests and outstanding balance from 1982 to 1988 which at 11% fixed rate showed the plaintiff paid N257,400.33k to the Bank and by his calculation only owed the bank N116,076.10k, the learned trial Judge granted all the reliefs sought by the plaintiff …….

Applying all these principles the plaintiff in the court below, having set up a credible case by discharging the burden of proof on him under section 136 of the Evidence Act, which was not demolished under cross-examination, the onus shifted on the defendant to explain that it applied clause 3 properly to the transaction which it failed to do.”

It was pointed out, in the appellant’s brief, that it was not correct to hold that the evidence led by the appellant was unsatisfactory, that the appellant did not lead any evidence on the initial rate and the subsequent rates of interest, or that the evidence of the respondent that the rate of interest was fixed at 11% per annum was unchallenged. The appellant referred to the evidence of the D.W.1. that the initial rate stipulated under the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage agreements was 13 1/2% per annum and the witness gave evidence of the different rates stipulated from time to time. It was then contended that the evidence adduced by the respondent could not, in the present circumstances, be described as credible and that the respondent, had not proved his case so as to warrant the burden being shifted to the appellant. The submission in the respondent’s brief was that the respondent having given evidence to the effect that the rate of interest was 11% per annum which was settled between him and the said Assistant General Manager, the respondent had discharged the onus on him by section 135(1) of the Evidence Act and so the burden was shifted to the appellant to prove or establish the contrary.

It is necessary to clarify one aspect of this case. It is that it was the respondent that was claiming all the reliefs set out above. The appellant did not counter-claim though it led evidence on the rates of interest and on the amount outstanding. It was, therefore, open to the appellant, in defending this case, to establish what it averred to be the rates of interest stipulated under clause 3 of the mortgage agreements or alternatively, not to establish the averments but to destroy the respondent’s case by making it impossible, by lawful means, for the respondent to prove his case, for example, by valid objections on points of law. The burden of proving a particular fact is on the party who asserts it. See Okubule v. Oyagbola, (1990) 4 N.W.L.R. (Pt.147) 723; and Ike v. Ugboaja (1993) 6 N.W.L.R. (Pt.301) 539. That is the position in civil cases but the onus does not remain static. It shifts from side to side, where necessary, and the onus of adducing further evidence is on the person who will fail if such evidence was not adduced. See Nigerian Maritime Services Ltd., v. Afolabi (1978) 2 S.C. 79 at p. 84; and Highgrade Maritime Services Ltd. v. First Bank of Nigeria Ltd. (1991) 1 NWLR (Pt.167) 290. As the respondent was the party who asserted, in his pleading, that the rate of interest applicable to the loan granted to him by the appellant was 11% per annum, the onus was on him, on the principles stated above, to prove his assertion. If he failed to prove the assertion the proper order which the learned trial Judge should make was one dismissing the respondent’s claim and it would not matter whether the appellant was unable to prove the averments in its own Statement of Defence, since the appellant had claimed nothing.

What then was the evidence before the learned trial Judge, warranting the granting of the reliefs in items (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) of the respondent’s claim and which evidence the Court of Appeal described as credible and on the basis of which the Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment of the learned trial judge The crucial and the most important aspect of the evidence led by the respondent and upon which the whole of his case depended, was his evidence that 11% per annum was the rate of interest, on the loan. That, according to him, was what was discussed and agreed between him (respondent) and the Assistant General Manager, Operations, Lagos, during the negotiation between them. The evidence had been completely discredited and rendered of no probative value by the appellant that successfully showed or demonstrated that the agreements relating to the loan in question were the mortgage deeds (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) and not the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) containing the particulars or details of the alleged negotiation; that the aforesaid memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) or oral evidence of the respondent concerning the aforesaid negotiation could not be used to vary, alter or contradict the provision of clause 3 of the mortgage deeds; and that a provision could not be imported into the said agreements requiring the appellant to obtain the respondent’s prior consent or to give prior notice of an increase in the rate on interest to the respondent. In short, the memorandum (Exhibit ‘1’) or the evidence of the respondent of the rate of interest of 11% per annum allegedly agreed upon during negotiation, was not admissible. If that was so, the amount determined by the respondent as his total indebtedness and the amount stated by him to be the balance could not be correct. In the circumstance, the respondent’s case was in disarray and could not be said to have any legal or factual basis. It also could not be rightly said (as the learned trial Judge and the Court of Appeal had said) that the respondent had discharged the burden on him to prove his case or that (as the Court of Appeal had said) the respondent had set up a credible case. Further, one really could not see what was unsatisfactory, in the evidence led by the appellant, that pursuant to the power conferred upon the appellant by clause 3 of the mortgage agreements (Exhibits ‘5’ and ‘6’) to stipulate the rate of interest from time to time, the appellant stipulated interest rates from time to time bearing in mind the relevant central Bank guidelines to commercial banks in respect of which it had no alternative but to comply.

The answer to the question raised under the second issue has been stated in this judgment. The provision of clause 3 of the mortgage deeds could not reasonably or properly be construed to require the appellant to obtain the prior consent of the respondent or to give prior notice to the respondent in connection with increase or increases in rates of interest and failure, if any, to obtain respondent’s consent or to give prior notice of increase to the respondent could not nullify the rates of interest stipulated by the appellant under clause 3 of the mortgage agreements. The answer to the question raised under the first issue is in the negative. The respondent did not discharge the burden of proving his case by credible evidence, the question of the burden of proof being shifted to the appellant did not arise, and the affirmation by the Court of Appeal of the judgment of the learned trial Judge granting the first four reliefs was not justified.

The appeal succeeds and it is hereby allowed. The judgment of the Court of Appeal, in so far as it related to items (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) of the respondent’s claim and the order awarding costs to the respondent are hereby set aside. In their place is substituted an order dismissing the respondent’s claim in items (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) of the respondent’s claim. The sum of N500.00 is awarded to the appellant as costs in the court below and the sum of N1.000.00 is awarded to it as costs in this court.

UWAIS, .J.S.C.: I have had the opportunity of reading in draft the judgment of my learned brother Adio, J.S.C. I agree with it, and for the reasons he gives I too would allow the appeal. However, I would desire to add the following for emphasis only.

There is no doubt from the facts of this case that at the time the respondent negotiated the loan in question with the Assistant General Manager of the appellant, it was represented to the respondent that the loan would attract interest at the rate of 11%. The loan was subsequently secured by two deeds of mortgage (Exhibits 5 and 6). The fact that the parties executed the deeds of mortgage after the negotiation establishes that the negotiation by itself was too general to establish a binding contract between the parties. It hence became necessary for the parties to execute formal documents in the form of the deeds of mortgage (Exhibits 5 and 6.)

By clause 3 of Exhibit 5 which is identical with clause 3 of Exhibit 6, the interest payable on the money secured by the deeds of mortgage is as follows:-

”All interest payable on the moneys hereby secured shall accrue due from day to day at the rate from time to time stipulated by the hank and may be capitalized at such intervals as the bank may from time to time prescribed but not more often than monthly and added to the moneys hereby secured and shall thereupon bear interest accordingly at the rate aforesaid.”

The words ”at the rate from time to time stipulated by the bank” clearly show that the appellant is at liberty to fix the interest rate as it would deem fit. In other words, the appellant is not bound to adhere to the rate of 11% per annum negotiated between the respondent and the Assisrant General Manager of the appellant. However, the learned trial Judge (Olagunju, J.) was of contrary view for he held as follows:-

”I find as a fact that the rate of interest on the loan agreement between the parties was settled at 11% per annum and I imply that rate into the two Mortgage Deeds, Exhibits 5 and 6 to interprete clause 3 of each Deed.”

With respect, by so holding the learned trial Judge was in fact saying that the words in italics in clause 3 above mean that the rate of interest is fixed at 11% per annum. But surely that makes nonsense of the expression. Admittedly, that result could be attained by the appellant fixing the same rate all the time; but the evidence adduced by the appellant, whose prerogative it is under the deeds of mortgage to fix the interest rate, was that the rates varied from year to year in accordance with the credit guidelines issued by the Central Bank of Nigeria. Indeed the power to fix the minimum interest payable on a loan is vested by law in the Central Bank of Nigeria. Section 14 of the Banking Act, 1969, (now Section 15 of Gap. 28 of the Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 1990) provides:-

”(1) The rate of interest charged on advances, loans or credit facilities or paid on deposits by any licensed bank shall be linked to the minimum rediscount rate at the Central Bank subject to stated minimum and maximum rates of interest, and the minimum and maximum rates of interest when so approved shall be the same for all licensed banks: provided that differential rates may be approved for the various categories of banks to which this Act applies.

(2) The interest structure of each licensed bank shall be subject to the approval of the Central Bank.”

The Court of Appeal (Mohammed, J.C.A. as he then was, Aikawa and Ogundere, JJ.C.A.) in interpreting the same words held as follows (per Ogundere, J.C.A.):-

”The word stipulated according to the Concise Oxford Dictionary means; mention or insist upon as essential part of agreement; demand as part of a bargain or agreement. The appellant therefore had an obligation under clause 3 to notify the mortgagor or plaintiff/respondent of the change in and demand interest rates from time to time starting with the offer of 11% in Exhibit 1. Failure to do this nullifies the variation of interest rate clause and fixed the rate at 11% per annum.”

In paragraph 7 of the Statement of Defence, the appellant averred that it always communicated to the respondent his periodic statements of account (which show the charges made on the account) as well as the prevailing interest rate chargeable on the loan granted to him. The appellant called evidence in proof and the periodic statements of account were admitted as exhibits 4 to 4S inclusive. These exhibits show credit and debit columns and symbols which are explained at the bottom of each page. The symbols indicated and explained as well include ”interests”. The interests deducted from the account are shown under the debit column of the exhibits. It is therefore evident from the exhibits that the interests charged are clearly stated. I am unable to understand the finding by the Court of Appeal that the appellant was not notified of the change in interest rate nor was demand made of the new interest rates. The position taken by the Court of Appeal is clearer when it states (per Ogundere, J.C.A.):-

”Thus Exhibit 4, the statement of account of the respondent which is based on various interest rates is bad in law as it does not comply with proper banking usage, nor was the testimony of D.W.1 on the unstipulated various interest rates in compliance with clause 3. No loan account of the respondent rendering periodically to him was tendered, nor the letters of notification of changes of interest rates. What was a loan agreement was treated like an overdraft with a fixed rate of interest at least as can be inferred from Exhibit 4. It does not appear as if the Union Bank officials understand or appreciated the full purport of clause. 3”

The foregoing is a critique of how the appellant administers the provisions in clause 3 of Exhibits 5 and 6. The manner in which the appellant exercises its prerogative under clause 3 may not be satisfactory but that does not derogate from the fact that it has the right under the deeds of mortgage to charge respondent interest from time to time at rates different from 11 % per annum. The respondent claims that the interest chargeable on the loan agreed is static at 11% per annum, but Exhibits 5 and 6 prove the contrary. It is for the respondent, as plaintiff, to prove that the interest rate of 11% per annum is not changeable, but clause 3 in exhibits 5 and 6 and section 15 of Cap. 28 have conclusively disproved that fact. The burden on the appellant, as defendant, is not to prove beyond the balance of probabilities that the interest rates are variable. In my opinion, the burden had been discharged by the appellant putting exhibits 5 and 6 in evidence and relying on clause 3 therein.

It is for these and the fuller reasons contained in the judgment of my learned brother Adiom J.S.C. that I too allow the appeal. The decision of the Court of Appeal as well as that of the High Court are hereby set aside. I adopt the order as to costs.


SC.159/1991