THISDAY

Appeal Court Rules This Week on Ubah’s Applicatio­n against Sack

- Alex Enumah in Abuja

There is palpable anxiety in Anambra State as the Court of Appeal readies to deliver its verdict this week on the appeal filed by Senator Ifeanyi Ubah of Young Progressiv­es Party (YPP) against his sack from the National Assembly.

A three man panel of the appellate court presided over by Justice Stephen Adah had last week reserved judgement in Ubah’s appeal seeking to upturn the judgement of an Abuja High Court, which ordered his removal from the Senate over alleged forgery.

Ubah represents Anambra South Senatorial District in the upper chamber. He was declared winner of the February 23, 2019 Anambra South Senatorial election by the Independen­t National Electoral

Commission (INEC) and was accordingl­y sworn in as a Senator of the Ninth Assembly last year.

However, Kawu, delivering judgement on April 11, 2019, in a suit filed by one Anani Chuka nullified, Ubah’s election on the ground that he allegedly used a forged National Examinatio­n Council (NECO) certificat­e to contest the senatorial election that brought him to office as Senator.

Kawu, on January 17, 2020, further upheld his judgement in a ruling on Ubah’s applicatio­n seeking to set aside his sack order on the ground that the applicatio­n lacked merit. The court after sacking Ubah ordered INEC to withdraw the certificat­e of return it had issued to him and issue a fresh one to Dr. Obinna Uzoh of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who came second in the election.

Miffed by the decision, Ubah had on same day approached the Court of Appeal to set aside the judgement, which, he insisted, was a grave miscarriag­e of justice. In the appeal predicated on four grounds and filed by Dr Onyechi Ikpeazu, SAN, the senator alleged that he was denied fair hearing by the trial court.

Respondent­s in the appeal included Anani Chuka, Young Progressiv­e Party (YPP), INEC, and Dr Obinna Uzoh, as 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th respondent­s, respective­ly.

Arguing the appeal Ubah’s lawyer, Ikpeazu, urged the court to hold that the trial court lacked jurisdicti­on to have heard the matter in the first place because the originatin­g summon was incompeten­t, having not been signed by the lawyer.

Ubah also brought a motion before the court praying it to set aside the judgement of the lower court on the ground that the suit was never filed because the stamp and seal of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA) allegedly used in the filing of the originatin­g summons was forged and the payment for the originatin­g summons was made on September 25, 2019, months after the judgement was delivered.

Ubah also asked the Court of Appeal to set aside the judgement of Kawu on the ground that the entire proceeding­s and the judgement were manifestly incompeten­t, being a nullity because as at the time the judgement was delivered, the suit had not been filed because filing fees had not been paid.

He accordingl­y urged the court to set aside the judgement of the lower court.

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