COURT SET TO DELIVER JUDGEMENT IN RHODES-VIVOUR, JANDOR’S APPEAL
The Labour Party’s Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour and the People’s Democratic Party’s (PDP) Abdulazeez Olajide Adediran have filed appeals against Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s reelection. The Court of Appeal in Lagos has scheduled its decision for tomorrow, Wednesday, Nov. 15.
The judgement is scheduled to be given tomorrow at 3 p.m., according to a letter the court gave to the parties involved in the appeal.
After hearing the arguments from the parties, the Court of Appeal bench headed by Justice Yargata Nimpar reserved judgement on the two appeals exactly one week before, on November 7.
Paul Bassi and Samuel Bola are the other justices on the panel.
The parties will be informed of the date of judgement, the court declared.
The re-election of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and his deputy, Obafemi Hamzat, was affirmed by the unanimous ruling of the Election Petitions Tribunal on September 25.
Following the parties’ arguments, the three-member panel chaired by Justice Yargata Nimpar reserved the judgement during the hearing of the two appeals on November 7.
Olagbade Benson, the lead attorney for Rhodes-Vivour, urged the court to allow the appeal, provide the requested remedy, and overturn the Tribunal’s ruling that was given on September 25th in his submission to the justices.
Additionally, he asked the court to analyse the meaning of the Constitution’s Section 182(1)(a) and how it relates to the qualifications of the second and third respondents.
Gbadebo-Rhodes Vivour filed his notice of appeal on October 7th, citing 21 grounds for appeal against the State Governorship Tribunal’s ruling that confirmed Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s return.
The appeal claimed, among other things, that the tribunal had committed a legal error when it depended on the Court of Appeal’s ruling to exclude all of Mr. Peter Gregory Obi & Anor. vs. INEC & Ors.’s subpoenaed witness testimony.
Sticking to the subject of their subpoenaed witnesses, the appellants in Grounds 2 and 3 further argued that the Tribunal had erred in law when it dismissed the oral testimony and supporting documentation of the three witnesses, PW7, PW8, and PW9, citing their non-listing as witnesses and the fact that their sworn statements were not frontloaded with the petition and supporting documentation in accordance with the Electoral Act 2022.
In Grounds 4 & 5, Rhodes-Vivour contended that the Tribunal erred in law when it held that the burden of proof of the specific Oath of Allegiance subscribed to by the Deputy Governor as well as the evidence of his renounced citizenship rests on the Appellant and that exhibits placed before the tribunal on this issue were deemed abandoned.
It also stated that the tribunal failed to disqualify Sanwo-Olu and his deputy having found that Hamzat is a naturalized United States of America citizen who made a declaration of allegiance to that country.
Other grounds of the petition touched on the failure of the tribunal to disqualify Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu and his deputy having found that Dr. Obafemi Hamzat is a naturalized United States of America citizen who made a declaration of allegiance to that country.
Rhodes-Vivour argued that Section 177 of the 1999 Constitution states that only a Nigerian citizen by birth is qualified to contest for the office of Governor and Deputy Governor of a State.
In its response to the appeal, counsel to Gov. Sanwo-Olu and Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Wole Olanipekun urged the court to dismiss the appeal.
He contended that the dual citizenship argued by the appellant was never presented before the tribunal.
“They are now presenting a case of dual citizenship, they believe that this is a trial court. The tribunal found out that the purported oath of allegiance to a foreign country was not before it so it ruled it out. We urge your Lordship to dismiss this appeal,” he said.
In the appeal of the PDP & its governorship candidate, Azeez Olajide Adediran popularly known as Jandor, he filed 34 grounds of appeal against the judgment of the Tribunal which declared Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu as the winner of the election.
In the grounds of appeal, Jandor says “Contrary to the misleading conclusion of the Tribunal, the issue of disqualification of the winner of an election, is both a pre and post-election dispute, and it was highly erroneous of the Tribunal to treat it as merely a pre-election issue”.
The candidate and his party, also reiterated the reliefs in their petitions, asking for the disqualification of the candidates of both the APC and Labour Party.
Jandor also faulted the tribunal for striking out the Labour Party and its candidate from his petition especially as he had made several allegations of infractions against Rhodes-Vivour. He noted that the law acknowledges that everyone against whom an allegation is made, must be made a party in such an action.
The PDP candidate in his appeal also said that he deserved to raise issues in the tertiary qualifications of Gov Sanwo-Olu which were built on false A Level WAEC Certificates as demonstrated in some of the exhibits he placed before the court.
Among other reliefs, he wants the Court of Appeal to hold that the tribunal had no jurisdiction to hold that the different names in the different certificates presented by the Sanwo-Olu belong to the same person.
At the time of the Governorship Election of Sat. March 18, 2023, Sanwo-Olu and Hamzat were not qualified to have contested the elections.
All the votes recorded for both candidates and the APC in the said election were wasted votes owing to the non-qualification of the 2nd and 3rd to have participated in the election.
That Jandor having scored the third highest number of votes in the Election and having satisfied the provisions of the Electoral Ac,t 2022, is the validly qualified candidate to be returned as the winner of the said election.
In its response, counsel to Sanwo-Olu and Hamzat, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Bode Olanipekun, submitted that the reliefs sought by the appellants are such that they must succeed on the strength of their petition and not on the weakness of the respondent’s defence.
He argued that the appellants did not prove anything before the lower tribunal and no burden shifted to the respondents to disprove any fact.
“In the instant case, the petitioner tendered the alleged false A Level WAEC Certificates from the bar, and could not produce before the Court the Original document from which the exhibit was counterfeit.
“It is trite law that where oral evidence and documentary evidence tendered by a party in proof of a fact says different, that party cannot be said to have led credible and cogent evidence in proof of that fact,” Olanipekun said.
He subsequently urged the court to dismiss the appeal.