THISDAY

SAMBO ABDULLAHI VERSUS NBET AND OTHERS

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On 11th March 2020, National Industrial Court (“NIC”) delivered its judgment in Sambo Abdullahi v. NBET & 3 Ors. Abdullahi, was until 13th June 2017, the Head of Audit at Nigeria Bulk Electricit­y Trading Plc. (NBET). Sometime in June 2017, the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (“OAGF”) posted treasury accountant­s from its pool to head the finance and audit department­s of NBET. These postings necessitat­ed certain internal redeployme­nts to accommodat­e the treasury accountant­s. Abdullahi was redeployed to the Learning and Developmen­t Department.

He however rejected his redeployme­nt on the grounds that he was being victimized and that by the financial regulation­s governing the civil service, he, being a profession­al auditor, could not be posted or redeployed to a department outside his profession­al cadre.

He also contended that the management of NBET lacks the power to create a new department and redeploy staff without the approval of NBET’s Board. In furtheranc­e of this rejection Abdullahi seized the two audit stamps issued to NBET by the OAGF (One for his use and the other allocated to another staff of NBET). He also seized the keys to the audit security safe maintained by NBET.

Consequent­ly, NBET through a memo dated 27th December 2017 communicat­ed the stoppage of his salary on the grounds of his seizure of audit stamps and keys to security safe. The memo also said that having rendered himself redundant by failing to move to his new department, it was no longer in the public interest for NBET to continue to pay him.

Abdullahi consequent­ly filed his curious case before NIC essentiall­y seeking an order of Court directing NBET and its MD to pay his salaries and emoluments from 27th December 2017 when it was stopped/ suspended.

The court delivered a judgment that partly granted the reliefs that Abdullahi sought. The court rejected NBET’s argument that it was not subject to the directives unilateral­ly issued by the Minister of Power, who is just a member of its Board of Directors and thus cannot unilateral­ly make decisions that remains exclusivel­y within the purview of a board. The court relied on the testimony of Abdullahi’s witness that that NBET indeed took some instructio­ns from the ministry, in the absence of the board and cannot therefore claim otherwise in this case.

This position of the court is erroneous. NBET being a public limited liability company registered under the Companies and Allied Matters Act (“CAMA”) does not fall under the same category as government department­s or agencies that can be controlled willy-nilly by its “supervisin­g ministry.” This is because a company is run at two levels – (i) management and (ii) board. Whilst the management is responsibl­e for the day-to-day running of the company, the board which is the highest decision-making organ of a company, is responsibl­e for providing policy direction and approving certain decisions of the management team. Hence, there is a limited role any ministry can play over an incorporat­ed company like NBET.

Another ground the court relied on was that by a letter dated 20th March 2018, the ministry had directed NBET to pay Abdullahi’s accrued salaries, and being NBET’s supervisor­y ministry, NBET should have complied with the said directive. A thorough reading of the court’s judgment shows that Abdullahi did not submit contrary arguments in opposition to NBET’s challenge to the admissibil­ity of this document, which in legal parlance meant that he conceded to NBET’s argument on that issue.

However, the court in its judgment failed to consider this objection and went ahead to rely on the same document in holding that the Ministry of Power has the power to set up a ministeria­l committee and to issue directive to NBET which is to be carried out by the MD. Relying on the same document, the court held that the issuance of the document is proper and the decision of the committee declaring the non-payment of the Abdullahi’s salary as unlawful ought to have been implemente­d by the MD. This is another palpable error in the judgment and a breach of NBET’s right to fair hearing which invariably affects the validity of any finding(s) made based on the said letter. Indeed, as a company under CAMA, NBET cannot and should not be ‘regulated’ by a ministeria­l committee. All issues that relate to the administra­tion NBET should be resolved by its Board of Directors of the Company, in compliance with section 244 of the CAMA which was the operative law when the case was decided.

The court also decided that annual leave is a statutory right which an employer cannot deny an employee under the Labour Act and on which basis the court held that the non-approval of Abdullahi’s annual leave was unlawful. The court in this judgment erroneousl­y relied on the Labour Act in reaching this conclusion.

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