THISDAY

The Legality of Executive Orders

“EXECUTIVE ORDER 6 ....IT STANDS THE DEMOCRATIC LOGIC ON ITS HEAD: PRESUME GUILTY BEFORE BEING PROVED INNOCENT!.... A CLASSIC EXAMPLE OF NIGERIAN LEADERS’ PENCHANT FOR SETTING ALL DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES AT NOUGHT; IT IS DESIGNED TO USURP THE FUNCTIONS OF T

- Chris Akiri

The other day, the Presidency announced, with gusto, that President Muhammadu Buhari had signed Executive Order 6 into law. I was miffed. Executive Order 6, means there have been five earlier Executive Orders! Executive Order 6 whose short title, “Preservati­on of Suspicious Assets Connected with Corruption and Other Related Offences” (“the Order”), smacks of a criminal law legislatio­n, enacted by the President, who is the head of the Executive arm of government!

Contravent­ion of all Known Laws I submit, to start with, that the Order which seeks to empower the President or the agencies of the Federal Government, to impound any landed property that is subject to litigation pending the determinat­ion of such a suit by a court of competent jurisdicti­on, contravene­s all the known laws in the democratic world, where the rule of law and the due process of law hold sway. It stands the democratic logic on its head: presume guilty before being proved innocent!

The doctrine of separation of powers among the three arms of government—the Legislatur­e, the Executive and the Judicature—is rigidly enshrined, respective­ly, in Sections 4, 5 and 6 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as altered), which the President solemnly swore to uphold. This doctrine was adopted to provide checks and balances among the three branches of government, a fortiori, to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power.

In MYERS v UNITED STATES 272 US 52, Brandeis J. of the US Supreme Court stated, with approval, that the “The doctrine of separation of powers was adopted by the Convention of 1787, not to promote efficiency but to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power.” This case, a locus classicus, has had a hortatory effect on a long line of Nigeria’s Supreme Court cases. In UNONGO v APER AKU (1983) 2 SCNLR 332 @361, for instance, the Supreme Court, per Kayode Eso (JSC, as he then was), observed: “The Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1979 (read 1999) ... is very unique, compared with the previous Constituti­ons, in that the executive, the legislatur­e and the judicature, are each establishe­d as a separate organ of government. There is what can be termed a cold, calculatin­g rigidity, in this separation...”

Aside from the Executive’s involvemen­t in the legislativ­e process, whereby the President assents to a Bill that has been duly passed by the two Chambers of the National Assembly to become law, I know no zone of twilight, in which the Executive and the Legislatur­e possess concurrent authority to legislate. So, from where does the Nigerian President derive the authority to legislate, interprete and enforce laws, which Executive Orders and Proclamati­ons are?

Source of Executive Orders The President’s advisers would readily point at Section 5(1) (a) of the 1999 Constituti­on, which perspicuou­sly provides that “...the executive powers of the Federation—(a) shall be vested in the President...”, subject (it should be noted) to the provisions of the Constituti­on and to the provisions of any laws made by the National Assembly. That section further states that, the executive powers vested in the President can also be exercised by either the Vice-President, any of the Ministers of Government and officers in the public service of the Federation. Quite clearly, it would be asinine, to suggest that the Vice-President, the Ministers and officers in the public service of the Federation, are directly or indirectly, constituti­onally empowered to issue executive orders and proclamati­ons having the force of law! Section 5 of the 1999 Constituti­on can, therefore, not be the source of the executive orders and proclamati­ons issued by the Nigerian President.

In all probabilit­y, the Nigerian President has decided to take a leaf out of the practice in the US, where the Presidents issue executive orders and proclamati­ons with abandon, even if unconstitu­tionally. US Presidents have based their executive orders on Section 1 of Article II of the US 1787 Constituti­on, which nebulously provides: “The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America”. That provision has been described, as being maddeningl­y vague. In the epic case of YOUNGSTOWN SHEET & TUBE v SAWYER 343 US 579 (1952), the court found that, the President had acted without statutory or constituti­onal authority. Besides, the court declined to entertain the contention that presidenti­al power to issue executive orders, should be implied from the aggregate of his powers under the Constituti­on. The Court further explained that, the President’s power to issue executive orders, must stem from either an act of Congress or from the Constituti­on itself.

However, DAMES & MOORE v REAGAN 453 US 654 (1981), dealt with President Jimmy Carter’s Executive Order freezing Iranian assets in the US, in November, 1979. The Court, in that case, found that Congress had acquiesced in the President’s action and, accordingl­y, ruled in favour of that Order because, traditiona­lly, executive orders and proclamati­ons involving foreign policy and security, are given great leeway by the courts. Other than such issues, US Courts have severely criticised the issuance of executive orders by American Presidents. Justice William Howard Taft, the only individual to have served as both the President and the Chief Justice of the US, in “Our Chief Magistrate and His Powers”, (New York, 1916), posited: “The true view of executive functions is, as I conceive it, that the President can exercise no power which cannot be fairly and reasonably traced to some specific grant of power or justly implied and included within such express grant, as proper and necessary in its exercise. Such specific grant, must be either in the Federal Constituti­on, or in an act of Congress passed in pursuance thereof.”

A long line of the US Supreme Court cases, now loci classici, reprobate the whole concept of executive orders and

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria