THISDAY

Court Dismisses Lawyers’ Suit against IGP, Lagos CP

- Wale Igbintade

Justice Daniel Osiagor of the Lagos Division of the Federal High Court has dismissed a fundamenta­l human rights suit filed by two lawyers, Jama Onwubuarir­i and Joseph Iwunze, alongside their company, Truck Tech Platforms Limited, against the inspector general of police, Lagos police commission­er and a shareholde­r in the company Temidayo Adeboye.

Osiagor dismissed the suit, holding that the applicants could not stop the police from performing their statutory duty.

The applicants (Onwubuarir­i, Iwunze, and Truck Tech Platforms limited) in their Originatin­g Summons in suit No, FHC/ L/ CS/ 1423/ 2022, had dragged the IGP, the police commission­er, officer in charge monitoring unit, the police command in Lagos and Temidayo Adeboye before the court.

They asked the court to declare that the first and second respondent­s and other officers under their control have no statutory or constituti­onal power to interfere in a dispute amongst shareholde­rs arising from or relating to shareholdi­ng ownership, management and control of the 3rd applicant, a private company.

They also prayed for a declaratio­n that the harassment, invitation and arrest of the first and second applicants by the police commission­er’s monitoring team, Lagos command (Ikeja), over a civil dispute arising from control and management of the third applicant, is illegal, unconstitu­tional, and a breach of the applicant’s fundamenta­l rights under sections 3, 35 and 41 of the Constituti­on.

Besides, the applicants prayed for a declaratio­n that the fourth respondent’s (Adeboye) petition against the applicants, to the first respondent, when the same Adeboye had instituted several civil suits marked FHC/L/ CS/414/2022, NICN/LA/113/2022, and FHC/L/CP/1158/2022, was a gross abuse of court processes, forum shopping, and a breach of their fundamenta­l rights to carry on business and therefore constitute­s a violation of the applicant’s fundamenta­l right guaranteed under sections 34, 35 and 41, of the constituti­on.

The fourth respondent, Temidayo Adeboye, had petitioned the police over alleged stealing of shares, forgery of the company register, and falsificat­ion of entries in the company’s register.

Osiagor, in his judgment, held that in a comprehens­ive police investigat­ion that culminated in the O/C/legal conclusion, stated, “It is our legal opinion that while parties may adopt a civil approach at the Federal High Court to dissipate with their civil proceeding­s, Jama Onwubuarir­i and joseph Iwunze are culpable for criminal act for falsificat­ion, obtaining credit by false pretence or other fraud.

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