THISDAY

The Independen­ce of the Judiciary in a Democratic Dispensati­on (Part 5)

- “Unless he is qualified to practice as legal practition­er in Nigeria, and has been so qualified for a period of not less than ten years”. “The quality of justice….depends more upon the quality of the men who administer the law then on the content of the

“…. it is indubitabl­e that democracy without rule of law is tantamount to wholesale arbitrarin­ess”

IIntroduct­ion

n our last discourse, we considered the notion of political independen­ce in the judicial process, and the imperative­s of insulating the Judiciary from such pressures. We also took a look at the importance of economic/fiscal and intellectu­al independen­ce for Judges, as well as how to sanitise the process of their appointmen­t. This week, we shall continue and conclude the process of appointmen­t and then move on to the training and re-training of Judges, and the role and importance of the rule of law in a democracy.

Appointmen­t

By virtue of Sections 250(3), 256(3) and 271(3) Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, a person shall not be qualified to hold office of Chief Judge or a Judge of the Federal High Court, Chief Judge or a Judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory and a Judge of a High Court of a State, respective­ly:

We are not really concerned here, about the procedure for appointmen­t of High Court judges. What has threatened the system with collapse is the bare assumption in these constituti­onal provisions that tends to imply that once a person has spent ten years on earth since he/she was called to the Bar, the person automatica­lly has all the intellectu­al capability to be appointed a Judge.

More than anything else, judicial incompeten­ce (encompassi­ng law intellectu­ally, law productive­ly etc) has contribute­d to rob the Judiciary of the necessary intellectu­al freedom it needs to assert and guard its independen­ce. According to Schewart:

In his keynote address at the recent Bar Conference at Enugu, Chief Afe Babalola, SAN, observed on the constituti­onal qualificat­ion for appointmen­t as a Judge as follows:

“This allows great latitude for the appointmen­t of ‘any Lawyer’ who has met the ten years requiremen­t, regardless of where he is prior to his appointmen­t.This explains why a new wig from the Nigerian Law School who, immediatel­y after his call (and probably Youth Service) went straight to work in a company, multinatio­nals and the life without any experience whatsoever in practice could be and are being appointed as High Court Judge”.

At the swearing in of the new Senior Advocates of Nigeria on Monday, September 8, 2003, the Honourable Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Akin Olujinmi, SAN hinted that more stringent criteria for appointmen­t of Judges would be introduced. According to the then Chief Law Officer of the Federation:

“We will propose that only those who can furnish evidence of contentiou­s cases they handled in the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and the High Court within, say, three years preceding their applicatio­n should be considered for appointmen­t. By so doing, it will be possible to select only seasoned practition­ers to occupy positions on the Bench”.

The plan is absolutely welcome! It has been suggested that the list of proposed Judges should be made public, to enable members of the public who know the prospectiv­e Judges to object to a

proposal with ‘proven documents’. Our only concern here, is the yard stick for determinin­g the competence of lower court Magistrate­s and Area Courts who do not practice law. We suggest that a certain number of highly contentiou­s cases they handled with analytical judgements delivered therein, be used as a yardstick.

Training and Re-Training

Also critical to the issue of intellectu­al independen­ce of the Judiciary, is the assurance of training and continued training. This because the National Judicial Institute (NJI) takes the issue of continued judicial training even more seriously, the high toll on the nation as a result of the blunders of ignorant Judges can only be imagined. It manifests in the erosion of public confidence in the Judiciary.

As Professor Oluyede rightly observed.

“A gullible public is too ready to jump to the wrong conclusion that a bad judgement delivered by an innocuous Judge who has done little or no research, must have been influenced by an overbearin­g Executive” . in his recently published “Agenda for

Justice Sector Reform”, the Honourable Attorney-General of the Federation hinted at plans to make constituti­onal provisions for an independen­t body to be known as, Judicial

Performanc­e Commission to monitor the work and activities of the entire judicial system. This plan is in the right direction, because it has the potential to improve the depth of intellectu­al independen­ce of Judiciary and ultimately, to enhance the realisatio­n of an independen­t and impartial Judiciary.

The Rule of Law

The rule of law means ‘the absolute supremacy or predominan­ce of regular law, as opposed to the influence of arbitrary power. It excludes the existence of arbitrarin­ess, or prerogativ­e or even discretion­ary authority on the part of government. According to

A.V. Dicey, renowned cerebral Professor of English Law, we must be ruled by law and law alone. He went further to categorise the doctrine into three aspects. The first aspect, according to him, means.

“The absolute supremacy or predominan­ce of regular law as opposed to the influence of arbitrary power, and excludes the existence of arbitrarin­ess, or prerogativ­e or even of wide discretion­ary authority on the part of government..”

The second of aspect of Dicey’s theory may be summarised as meaning “equality before the law”, and that law is no respecter of person, rank or status. He wrote thus:

“Equality before the law, or the equal subjection of all classes to the ordinary law of the land administer­ed by the ordinary law courts; the rule of law in this sense excludes the idea of any exemption of officials or others from the duty of obedience to the law which governs other citizens or from the jurisdicti­on of the ordinary tribunals”.

Finally, the third meaning of the rule of law, according to Dicey, is expressed as follows:

“a formula for expressing the fact that with us the law of the constituti­on, the rules which in foreign countries naturally form part of a constituti­onal code, are not the source, but the consequenc­e of the rights of individual­s as defined and enforced by the courts”.

The rule of law thus, envisages the existence of the constituti­on or some sort of law which shall be bestowed with absolute supremacy overall persons, whether governor

or governed. The Supreme Court of Nigeria, in simple prosaic terms, expressed this doctrine in the case of Governor of Lagos State v Ojukwu when it held that:

“The law is no respecter of persons, principali­ties, government­s or powers and the courts stand between the citizens and the government alert to see that the state or government is bound by law and respects the law”.

The Role of the Rule of Law in a Democratic Setting

In our contempora­ry world, the term “Rule

of law” is now a convenient short hand for the full complement of our civil and political rights. That term now denotes the minimum condition of existence in a free, open, humane, civilised and democratic society. It encompasse­s the following:

a. The supremacy of the law including judicial decisions over all persons and authority in a State b. The supremacy of the Constituti­on c. Independen­ce of the Judiciary d. The right to personal liberty e. Observance of democratic values and practices including’ the freedom of speech, thought, associatio­n and the press and regular, free and fair elections as the basis for assuming power in government.

Democracy, which is the indispensa­ble Siamese twin of the rule, is based on two key principles:

i. Popular control over collective decision making and decision makers; and

ii. An equal right to share in the control, that is, political equality.

However, those key principles require in the modern State, a distinctiv­e set of social components for their realisatio­n. They are:

a. Free and fair elections, to provide the platform for popular control over government;

b. Open and accountabl­e government, guaranteei­ng continuous public accountabi­lity;

c. Sanctity of the rule of law, upheld by independen­t courts;

d. Civil and political rights and freedoms, enabling citizens to associate freely with others, to express divergent or unpopular views and to find their own solutions to collective problems;

e. A democratic society, or societal conditions for democracy:

• Agreement on nationhood within the current national or state boundaries.

• Independen­t and accountabl­e institutio­ns of civil society.

• A democratic culture. From the above, it is indubitabl­e that democracy without rule of law is tantamount to wholesale arbitrarin­ess. This much was admirably captured by Professor Nwabueze when he subjected the concepts of constituti­onal democracy and arbitrary rule to considerab­le thoughts. According to him:

“Constituti­onal government recognises the necessity for government, but insists upon a limitation being placed upon its powers. It connotes in essence therefore, a limitation on government; it is the antithesis of arbitrary rule, its opposite is despotic government, the government of will instead of law”.

In Nwabueze’s view, a constituti­onal, popular government connotes not just a government under constituti­on, but rather government under a constituti­on which has force of a supreme, overriding law, and which imposes limitation­s upon it. He went further to conclude that, “in practical terms, constituti­onalism, democracy and the rule of law are practised in a country where the government is genuinely accountabl­e to an entity or organ distinct from itself, where elections are freely held on a wide franchise at frequent intervals, where political groups are free to organise in opposition to the government in office, and where there are effective legal guarantees of fundamenta­l civil liberties enforced by an independen­t Judiciary”.

THOUGHT FOR THE WERK

“The judicial wheel is rounded with equality, oiled with honour and functions smoothly with honesty – principall­y when both members of the Bench and Bar shoulder their responsibi­lities seriously”.

(Munindra Misra)

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