A Federal High Court in Lagos, on Thursday, dismissed an application seeking to unfreeze a Unity Bank account with a balance of N1.9 billion belonging to Hajiya Bola Shagaya.
Justice Oluremi Oguntoyinbo, in a judgment on Thursday, threw out Shagaya’s application, declaring that it lacked merit and that the said account was validly secured by the EFCC.
Justice Oguntoyinbo faulted Shagaya’s claims that she was not availed the opportunity to defend herself before the order was secured.
According to the judge, the order was made through an ex-parte motion (without notice to other parties) and as such, there was no way the court would have listened to her own side of the story.
“The interim order was made based on an ex-parte application filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission; an ex-parte application has no respondent and the court is not expected to hear from the other party.
“Even when the other party is around, it can only be seen and not heard; therefore, the failure of Justice Hassan to hear the applicant cannot invalidate the order.
“The granting of the interim order of attachment is not unconstitutional and does not constitute an infringement on the applicant’s rights to own property,” the court held.
The court further noted that the failure of the applicant to controvert an averment contained in the counter-affidavit of the EFCC regarding her refusal to honour its invitation was fatal to her case.
The judge said that the claim by the applicant that the order was made in perpetuity had no bearing as there was no evidence that the EFCC has either concluded its investigation of the matter or filed any charge against the applicant.
The court, therefore, held that it was erroneous to claim that the interim order had become permanent or in perpetuity, since the said order is meant to last until the conclusion of investigations by the EFCC.
She held that there was no evidence to show that the respondent had concluded its investigations, and accordingly dismissed the applicant’s suit.
Justice Muslim Hassan of the same court, had on Dec. 29, 2016, issued an interim order, attaching the account, following an ex-parte application by the EFCC.
Hassan had held that the order would subsist, pending conclusion of investigations by the commission.
Dissatisfied, Shagaya, through her lawyer, filed a motion before another judge, Justice Oguntoyinbo, seeking to unfreeze the account.
She claimed that the EFCC’s action violates her rights to own property, adding that she was never afforded an opportunity before the order was made.
In its counter affidavit, the anti-graft agency claimed that the N1.9 billion represents the balance of a total of N3.3 billion, which Shagaya received as “founder fees” on behalf of an organisation named “Women for Change”.
According to the commission, the organisation is spearheaded by a former First Lady, Mrs. Patience Jonathan.
The EFCC claimed that the N3.3billion was realised from Shagaya’s “alleged fraudulent activities in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, (NNPC), where she allegedly influenced an allocation of Dual Purpose kerosene to a company, Index Petrolube Africa Ltd., with the aid of the former First Lady,
EFCC claimed that out of the N3.3 billion, Shagaya had “paid a cumulative sum of N1.2 billion to the former First Lady, through her account, ‘Women for Change Initiative’, to which She (Patience) is sole signatory.
The commission averred that after paying N1.2 billion to Patience, Shagaya warehoused the balance of N1.9 billion in her account.
The EFCC said it was on this basis that it secured an interim order to attach the said account. (NAN)