The on-going case against Senate President- By Tope Ajayi.
Bukola Saraki, at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), has, at every
point, continued to reveal surprises. The latest one was Thursday’s admission
by the Chairman, Mr. Danladi Yakubu Umar, that the tribunal, under his
leadership, erroneously delivered its 2011 verdict that discharged former Lagos
State governor, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
Umar made the revelation while
giving a ruling in a motion filed by Saraki’s lead counsel, Mr. Kanu Agabi,
SAN, challenging the jurisdiction of the tribunal on the grounds that the
condition for filing the case was not fulfilled. Agabi had contended that, on
the basis that Saraki was not given the opportunity to either admit in writing
or deny the alleged inconsistencies in the asset declaration form he filled in
2003 when he was Governor of Kwara State, the charges should be quashed as it
was done in the Tinubu case.
The CCT Chairman, however, refused Agabi’s prayer,
saying the proviso in Section 3 (d) of the CCB and Tribunal Act has been
negated by Paragraph 3 (e) of the Third Schedule of the 1999 Constitution.
While noting that Tinubu was tried under the same Constitution and law, which
are still in operation till date, Umar admitted that the tribunal took an
erroneous decision in the earlier case.
He said: “The judgment in the Tinubu
case was delivered par in curiam. The tribunal has since realized that the
decision it made in the case between FRN vs Tinubu was in error and has clearly
departed from it”.
Umar’s reversal of himself in the CCT’s verdict in the
Tinubu case throws up a series of concerns with strong implications for the
reputation of the CCT as a judicial institution of government and, by
extension, the integrity and credibility of the Nigerian judicial system in its
entirety.
First, what kind of judge admits to giving a judgment in error?
Was he influenced at the time he delivered this judgment?
Was he under duress?
What has changed in our laws?
Was it not the same 1999 Constitution and the
Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act that were used in the trial of Tinubu?
What should even be more worrying is the casual manner with which Umar declared
that his ruling five years ago was a mistake.
Why, one would ask, did it take
Umar five years, and another case to realize that he made a mistake?
Let
us assume, for the purpose of argument, that Umar’s ruling in the Tinubu case
was truly a mistake as he claimed. Let us also assume that the ruling he gave
then was a capital punishment that had been executed. Is this the way he would
so cynically dismiss it as an error just to fulfill a current political
expediency?
Since the ruling, last Thursday, several lawyers, who were outraged
by the ruling, have roundly condemned it. One legal opinion is that the CCT is
not competent to reverse itself on its earlier judgment as only a court of
higher jurisdiction can reverse a ruling by the CCT. In this case, only the
Appeal Court, in the first instance, can reverse or nullify a flawed judgment
by the CCT not the CCT itself. It is only the Supreme Court, being an apex
court of the land, that has the power to reverse itself.
Legal interpretation
Umar held that the failure of the Code of Conduct Bureau to meet certain
conditions precedent before putting Saraki on trial was not weighty enough to
discharge him and strike out the trial. He said Section 3(d) of the Code of
Conduct Tribunal Act, which made it a requirement for any defendant to be
invited for confirmation or denial of discrepancies in the assets form, had
been overtaken by the provision of Section 3 (e) of the 1999 Constitution.
According to the CCT Chair, Section 3 (e) of the 1999 Constitution had rendered
the condition precedent contained in the CCB Act unconstitutional, null and
void because the provisions of the CCB Act were inconsistent with the
Constitution.
Umar further said that the failure of the CCB to invite the
defendant in the instant case had not ousted the jurisdiction of the tribunal.
Certainly, these are very contentious claims at best. Subjecting Umar’s ruling
on the Saraki trial to rigorous legal interpretation reveals that once again,
the CCT Chair is treading a new path of error just as he did in the Tinubu
trial.
It has been pointed out that his recourse to Paragraph 3 (e), of the
Third Paragraph of the 1999 Constitution, as the tribunal’s basis for not
adhering to Section 3 (D) of the CCT Act, smacks of ignorance or mischief. It
is argued that if the judge had gone further down to Section 3 (g), he would
have found that there is nothing in the part of the Constitution that he was
citing that contradicts Section 3(d) of the CCBT Act. Paragraph 3 (e) of the
Constitution’s Third Schedule states that the Bureau shall have power to
“receive complaints about non-compliance with or breach of the provisions of
the Code of Conduct or any law in relation thereto, investigate the complaint
and, where appropriate, refer such matters to the Code of Conduct Tribunal.”
Paragraph 3 (g) however states that the Bureau shall “carry out such other
functions as may be conferred upon it by the National Assembly.”
With an Act
being a piece of legislation enacted by the National Assembly, the Code of
Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act, in Section 3, clearly spells out in detail the
functions of the CCB/CCT to receive assets declarations by public officers;
examine such assets and ensure that they comply with the law; retain custody of
such assets declarations; and most importantly: “receive complaints about
non-compliance with or breach of this Act and where the Bureau considers it
necessary to do so, refer such complaints to the Code of Conduct Tribunal
established by section 20 of this Act in accordance with the provisions of
sections 20 to 25 of this Act.”
The last clause is also premised on the fact
that “provided that if the person concerned makes a written admission of such
breach or non compliance, no reference to the Tribunal shall be necessary.”
What this means is that the Act resulted from the powers granted the National Assembly
by the same constitution and therefore both are not contradictory but
complementary.
Regardless of the legal arguments, which would continue to rage
in the days ahead, what was crystal clear from the ruling on Thursday was that
Umar stumbled, stuttered and fumbled through the judgment as if he was seeing
it for the first time. The way he stuttered through the ruling could only
evoke another sad occasion during the last general elections when the returning
officer for the elections in Rivers State, a vice chancellor, could not read
the results even though he claimed to have written it himself.
No surprise that
the election was eventually cancelled. Grave concerns Again, if indeed the
issues highlighted here are to be given serious considerations, they pose grave
concerns on the credibility of the CCT and why such an institution vested with
far-reaching powers should not be subjected to the whims and caprices of just
anybody.
You certainly cannot speak clearly if you have food in your mouth, or
a sword dangling on your neck. It should be noted that the powers of the
tribunal are so enormous that they hardly give room for errors, deliberate,
contrived or otherwise. For example, once a person is successfully convicted by
the CCT, that person has to fully serve his punishment as the prerogative of
mercy or any power of pardon does not apply to convictions by the tribunal.
Moreover, the powers of the Attorney General to enter a plea of nolle prosequi
to discontinue any criminal case at any stage does not operate in cases before
the CCT.
All these powers make the need to preserve and protect the integrity,
character and credibility of the CCT even more imperative. That the CCT
Chairman admitted error, especially the manner he did, leaves much to be
desired.
*Ajayi is a public affairs analyst
vanguard newspapers
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