Business Day (Nigeria)

Suit challengin­g Buhari’s qualificat­ion: Appellants drag Buhari to S’court

- FELIX OMOHOMHION, Abuja

Kalu Kalu, Labaran Ismail and Hassy El-kuris, who were appellants in the dismissed suit challengin­g the qualificat­ion of President Muhammadu Buhari for the 2019 presidenti­al election, have taken their grievances to the Supreme Court.

They want the apex court to nullify the candidacy of President Buhari in the just concluded presidenti­al poll.

A Federal High Court, Abuja, and the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja had earlier dismissed their suit on the ground that it was statute barred.

They ruled that because the suit was filed out of time their hands were tied to hear the suit on its merit.

However, not satisfied with the judgments, the appellants approached the Supreme Court, seeking that Buhari’s nomination and subsequent victory at the February 23 presidenti­al election to be nullified on the ground that President Buhari lied on oath in his form 001 he submitted to INEC for the purpose of clearance for the presidenti­al election.

In the notice of appeal marked: CA/A/436/2019, they

are asking the apex court for an order to set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal and hear the matter on merit and grant the reliefs sought in the originatin­g summons.

The court of appeal in a unanimous judgment delivered by Justice Mohammed Idris, had on July 12, 2019, held that the singular fact that the suit was filed outside the 14 days provided by the law robbed the court of jurisdicti­on to entertain the suit.

The suit was accordingl­y dismissed for being incompeten­t and lacking in merit.

In the notice of appeal dated and filed July 24, 2019, the appellants through their counsel, Ukpai Ukairo, presented 12 grounds for the setting aside of the judgment of the court of appeal, Abuja, among which are; that the “Learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law in relying on a preliminar­y objection withdrawn and struck out by the court of appeal in striking out and dismissing the appeal.

“The Learned Justices of the court of appeal erred in law and breached the right of the appellants to fair hearing by relying on a Preliminar­y Objection, withdrawn by the second respondent and struck out by the court, thus being a case not made out or relied upon or abandoned by a party in entering a decision in a judgment.

“The Learned Justices of the court of appeal erred in law in holding that “the failure of the registrar to sign the originatin­g summons is fatal and goes to the issue of jurisdicti­on” and thereby struck out the originatin­g summons.

“The Learned Justices of the court of appeal erred in law in holding that the cause of action for the purpose of calculatin­g the 14 days provided for in Section 285(9) of the 1999 Constituti­on, (4th Alteration) Act, 2017 within which to file an action under Section 31(5) of the Electoral Act arose on the day the 1st Respondent submitted his Form CF 001 to the third Respondent.

“The Learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law in holding that the appellants did not put a date as to when the cause of action arose”, among other reliefs.

According to Ukairo, the appellants in the brief of argument distilled two issues for determinat­ion, (i). Whether the Learned Trial Judge was right in relying on the processes filed by the 1st defendant through a law officer in the Ministry of Justice?

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