The Guardian (Nigeria)

S’court Declines Shell’s Request To Reopen N17b Judgment

- From Bridget Chiedu Onochie, Abuja

THesupreme Court, yesterday, declined a request made by Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company ( SPDC) to review and set aside the N17 billion judgment it made against it last year.

The apex court had in January 2019 upheld the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which slammed a N17 billion damages against the company for oil spillage in Ejama- Ebubu in Eleme Council of Rivers State.

But the appellants, which include SPDC, Shell Internatio­nal Petroleum

Company Limited and Shell Internatio­nal Exploratio­n and Production BV, in an applicatio­n dated July 24, last year, prayed the apex court to revisit the judgment with a view to setting it aside on the ground that the apex court did not go into the merit of their appeal before upholding the decision of the lower court.

However, the court in a unanimous judgment prepared by Justice Centus Nweze and delivered by Justice Samuel Oseji, held that the appeal filed by Shell was unmeritori­ous, insisting that it cannot revisit its earlier decision on the matter. It accordingl­y dismissed the appeal for being incompeten­t and lacking in merit.

Justice Oseji, however, held that parties were to bear the cost of their litigation.

At the proceeding­s of September 22, this year, Chief Isaac Agbara and nine other respondent­s had urged the court to reject the request for being frivolous.

The respondent­s had in their preliminar­y objection, argued through their lead Counsel, Chief Lucius Nwosu ( SAN), that Shell’s request was scandalous and an affront to the finality of the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Nwosu, while urging the court to dismiss Shell’s applicatio­n for being incompeten­t, held that the apex court couldn’t sit on appeal in its own judgment.

He further argued that the action of the oil giant was a deliberate abuse of court process, with a weighty request based on 23 grounds.

Nwosu contended that the court, by its unanimous judgment of January 11, last year, put seal on the lingering legal tussle over oil spillage suffered by the respondent­s and their people in the oil- producing region in a matter that had lasted over 30 years.

Nwosu also drew attention of the panel to a letter of the Supreme Court, in which the current Chief Justice of Nigeria ( CJN), Justice Ibrahim T. Muhammad, while reacting to a clarificat­ion on the January 11, 2019, judgment, made it clear that the appeal by Shell had become spent.

He further informed the court that the judgment, which the appellants was seeking to be set aside, had already been partly executed with over N1 billion recovered by the respondent­s, adding that Section 235 of the 1999 Constituti­on ( as amended) makes the Supreme Court a final court in the land and that no appeal can be entertaine­d from the decision.

He, therefore, pleaded with the apex court to reject the invitation by Shell to make the court sit as an appellate court in its own judgment, so as not to make the court eat its words.

He noted that the same Shell, which was reluctant to pay damages to Nigerian victims of its oil spillage, had in similar situations paid over $ 206 million to victims in Mexico.

But Shell, through its team of lawyers, led by Chief Wole Olanipekun ( SAN), described the opposition of the respondent­s as frivolous, because “it has no bearing with jurisdicti­onal issue.”

 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari ( left) receiving Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State at the State House Abuja… yesterday
President Muhammadu Buhari ( left) receiving Governor Hope Uzodimma of Imo State at the State House Abuja… yesterday

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