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John Hingah Biem v Social Democratic Party: Taking the wind out of the sails of MV Arabella?

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This article by Folabi Kuti, about the applicabil­ity of Sections 97 & 98 of the Sheriffs & Civil Process Act 2004 to the Federal High Court, with regard to service of court processes outside jurisdicti­on, welcomes the Supreme Court decision in Biem v SDP, that outside jurisdicti­on in the Federal High Court, means outside Nigeria

It is not often that, the final court gets to review its decisions. When it does make a departure, and a welcome one at that, from a previously taken position of law, it is an event that is greeted with much excitement, by many an enthusiast­ic legal commentato­r. The moment is made even more profound, when the decision being departed from appeared flawed from the outset, or was accorded an unintended wide amplitude, by subsequent decisions that dutifully followed the pattern.

In what appears to be a biting departure from its previous holding, the Supreme Court, in Appeal No. SC. 341/2019 Biem v Social Democratic Party

(judgement delivered on Tuesday, 14 May 2019) held that, an originatin­g process issued by the Federal High Court in one territoria­l jurisdicti­on (within Nigeria) cannot be considered to be service outside jurisdicti­on when served in a different territoria­l jurisdicti­on, and will, thus, not require to be endorsed for service outside a State and marked as a concurrent writ (as stipulated by Sections 97 & 98 of the Sheriffs & Civil Process Act Cap S6 LFN 2004 [hereafter, SCPA]).

The Enduring Sails of MV Arabella

It began exactly eleven years ago,

when the Supreme Court, in Owners of the M.V. Arabella v. N.A.I.C. (2008)

11 N.W.L.R. (pt. 1097) 182, set aside the writ of summons which was not ‘properly’ issued, and served outside the territoria­l jurisdicti­on of the Federal High Court (hereafter, FHC), for failure to seek leave of court.

The holding from MV Arabella soon met many an otherwise meritoriou­s action filed at the Federal High Court, with a roughshod sail indeed. Navigating the rough waters of timeous procedural objections on any of the grounds often associated with the holding from Arabella, soon became most perilous.

Biem v Social Democratic Party to the rescue? In Biem v SDP, the pointed question in the main appeal, was whether the failure to mark an originatin­g process issued by the FHC, Warri for service in Abuja, as ‘concurrent’ (section 98 SCPA), was capable of voiding the originatin­g process.

The Apex Court, per Justice Aka’ahs who wrote the leading judgement, intoned

a discernibl­e ratio decidendi at pp.43-44 of the judgement thus: ‘The service of any process issued by the Federal High Court, can be carried under the Sheriffs and Civil Process Act, if such service is to be executed outside the territory of Nigeria. Order 6 Rule 31 of the Federal High Rules interprets outside jurisdicti­on, to mean outside the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Thus, to hold that an originatin­g summons which was issued out of the registry of the Federal High Court, Warri, which was addressed for service at Abuja outside Delta State where the originatin­g summons was issued from, should be nullified because it did not comply with Section 97 of the Sheriffs and Civil Process Act as this Court did in Izeze v INEC (2018) 11 NWLR (Pt. 1629) 110 at 132, did not take cognisance of Section 19 of the Act and Order 6 Rule 31. I am of the considered view that, the Originatin­g Summons issued by the Federal High Court, Makurdi which is to be served in Abuja, cannot be considered to be service outside jurisdicti­on, and therefore, does not require to be endorsed as a concurrent Writ’

A New Dawn?

Roundabout present day, in Boko v Nungwa, a decision made on 13 July, 2018, reported as ( 2019) 1 NWLR

(Pt.1654) SC 395, the Apex Court was confronted with a number of issues for determinat­ion. The related issues of whether the portions of the FHC (Civil Procedure) Rules 2009 dealing with service and execution of process, derived their force from Sections 94 and 96(2) of the SCPA, and whether in view of the provisions of the FHC (Civil Procedure) Rules 2009, the case of Arabella v NAIC was still applicable to vitiate an originatin­g process, were flagged as Issues No. 2 & 3. The leading judgement, delivered by Okoro JSC, resolved the main appeal, answering in the affirmativ­e, the jurisdicti­onal question raised as Issue No.1. Having resolved the appeal on an all- encompassi­ng jurisdicti­onal point, the Court, understand­ably, did not as much as, consider the other issues. The other Justices on the panel, coram RhodesVivo­ur, Sanusi, Bage JJSC, with the exception of Peter-Odili JSC, wrote terse concurring opinions.

Peter-Odili JSC agreed with the leading opinion, but in an instructiv­e obiter which now appears to have ignited and set the decision in Biem on a firm footing, further considered Issues 2 & 3 highlighte­d above, and concluded at pp. 444-445 of the Report that, the Federal High Court does not come within the ambit of Sections 91 and 92(2) of the Sheriffs & Civil Process Act and that Arabella v NAIC is inapplicab­le in present context ‘since it was decided on the basis of Section 97 of the Sheriffs and Civil Process Act, and interprete­d alongside the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 1976, which have been repealed. The extant Rules of the Federal High Court being the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2009, wherein the requiremen­t for ‘leave to issue’ was removed.’ Without expressly saying so, even as there was an oblique reference to Boko v Nungwa in Biem v Social Democratic Party, the Apex Court appeared not to have pointedly relied on Boko v Nungwa, in view of the fact that, the illuminati­ng obiter statements of Peter

Odili JSC in that case, did not form part of the lead judgement. With the decision in Biem v Social

Democratic Party, the inevitable question is: has the Supreme Court finally departed from its previous holding in MV Arabella? The question does not lend itself, to an easy answer. Suffice to say that, it is pertinent to introspect a little further.

First, it takes a seven-member panel (that is, a Full Court) of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, to overrule any previous decision of the court. Sodeinde v ACB (1982) 6 SC 137 at 139. Biem,

just like Arabella, was a 5-man panel.

Secondly, in what appears an ingenious attempt to depart from its previous position in MV Arabella, the final Court (in Biem) concluded that, its decision in

Izeze v INEC failed to take cognisance of the provisions of Section 19 of the FHC Act and the 2009 FHC (Civil Procedure) Rules. Izeze v INEC (2018) 11 NWLR (Pt. 1629) 110, was however, not alone. And that was equally not the only flawed decision, on the matter under reference. PDP v INEC, was a related appeal to Izeze’s. Though not referred to in Biem v SDP, PDP v INEC, with a similar holding as in Izeze’s, was also decided on April 13, 2018 (same day as Izeze’s). Whilst Izeze’s is reported in Part 1629 of NWLR, PDP v INEC is reported as (2018) 12 NWLR (Pt 1634) SC 533.

In PDP v INEC, the Apex Court, as in the other cases, went as far as pronouncin­g an originatin­g summons issued at the registry of the FHC in Warri for service in Abuja without the endorsemen­t in Section 97 of the SCPA, as worthless and void! This, apparently, is against the ratio from the illuminati­ng decision of the selfsame Supreme Court – sitting as a FULL COURT – in Odu’a V. Talabi (1997) 10 NWLR (PT. 523) P.1, to the effect that, it is the ‘purported service’ and not the writ that will be set aside, in the event of a finding of defect as to service.

At the risk of digression, the point being made here is that, unless this position is revisited at the earliest opportunit­y, our adjudicati­ng system being precedent- based, this new position will also likely engender a new wave of decisions pronouncin­g as void any originatin­g process defective as to service, as it is not open to a lower court to disagree with the decision of the higher court on any point, even if the decision of the higher court was reached per incuriam.

Worrisomel­y, all the cases highlighte­d here, were decisions rendered majorly between 2018 and 2019. Considerin­g the relatively short span of time between the decisions, this should ordinarily provide an opportune time to discuss, review and avoid conflictin­g positions in decisions bearing on future cases of similar facts pattern.

In the final analysis, Biem’s decision is a welcome addition to a growing body of case law on the points decided, not least that ‘out of jurisdicti­on’ for the purpose of service of originatin­g process issued from the Federal High Court, means ‘out of Nigeria’. -Folabi Kuti is a Partner in the law offices of Perchstone & Graeys

“BIEM V SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY......HELD THAT, AN ORIGINATIN­G PROCESS ISSUED BY THE FEDERAL HIGH COURT IN ONE TERRITORIA­L JURISDICTI­ON (WITHIN NIGERIA), CANNOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE SERVICE OUTSIDE JURISDICTI­ON WHEN SERVED IN A DIFFERENT TERRITORIA­L JURISDICTI­ON, AND WILL, THUS, NOT REQUIRE TO BE ENDORSED FOR SERVICE OUTSIDE A STATE, AND MARKED AS A CONCURRENT WRIT....”

 ??  ?? Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Hon. Justice Abdul Kafarati
Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Hon. Justice Abdul Kafarati

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