Ikpeazu asks Appeal Court to quash sack order
Abia State Governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu, has filed an appeal against
Monday’s judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja, which removed him
from office on charges of tax evasion.
In the notice of appeal filed by Chief Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN) at the
Appeal Court, Abuja Division, the Ikpeazu raised five grounds upon
which he asked the appellate court to set aside the judgment and order
of the lower court.
Ikpeazu said that the Federal High Court lacked the power to order him to vacate the seat of Abia State governor.
According to Ikpeazu, “The trial judge erred in law when he ordered as a
consequential order that the appellant vacates his office as the
governor of Abia state immediately when there was no jurisdiction in the
Federal High Court to remove, vacate the occupier of the office of the
governor of a state or order the removal of such officer after the
unsuccessful challenge of the result of the election at the tribunal
and swearing in of the appellant as the governor.”
The governor said that the only power, authority and order exercisable
by the Federal High Court was to disqualify the candidate from
contesting the election based on Section 31(6) of the Electoral Act
2010.
He also faulted the judge when he held that he did not pay his tax for
2011, 2012 and 2013, as at when due, when he was a public officer whose
tax deduction was under Pay As You Earn (PAYE) scheme where tax
deductions were from the source of his monthly salary by the tax
authorities who issued all the tax receipts and certificates.
He also said that the Abia State Board of Internal Revenue Services
that issued him the tax certificates had not declared the certificates
forged and that the trial court did not invite the issuing authorities
to give evidence in the course of the trial.
The governor said that the plaintiff, Dr. Samson Udechukwu Ogah, was
not a member of staff of the Abia Board of Internal Revenue and did not
call any official of the board to testify that the tax certificates were
forged.
Ikpeazu therefore accused the trial judge, Justice Okon Abang, of
violating his right to fair hearing by embarking on judicial
investigation without giving him (the governor) the opportunity to
address the court on the issue.
The governor further argued that “the learned trial judge erred in law
when he held that the appellant presented false information to the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) by his meticulous
study and investigation of documents filed in courts in the recess of
his chambers and thereby violated the right of the appellant to fair
hearing.”
The governor said that the judge had no duty to investigate the
contents of documents dumped on the court in the recess of his chambers
with a view to finding for the plaintiff.
“The decision of the judge which arose from the judicial investigation
without opportunity to the appellant violated the appellant’s right to
fair hearing,” the governor said.
Ikepazu also rejected the decision of the high court declaring him
unqualified to be nominated as the primary election conducted by his
party because false information was supplied to INEC.
According to him, INEC Form CF001 which the judge relied on was not one
of the grounds of qualification to contest the primary election of the
PDP.
He said that the judge misconceived the presentation by the parties
and thereby arrived at a wrong conclusion which occasioned a grave
miscarriage of justice.
Meanwhile, the governor’s party, the PDP, has rejected the judgment
and filed a separate appeal. The PDP said that the trial court erred in
law when it held that it had jurisdiction to hear the suit which was on
whether section 24 (f) of the 1999 Constitution was complied with.
It said: “The honourable trial court misdirected itself when it
construed the provisions of the PDP constitution to the detriment of
the appellant without giving the appellant a chance to be heard and
thereby occasioned a miscarriage of justice.”
In the particulars of the error, the appellant said Ukeagbara and Mba
being “the 1st and 2nd respondents in the appeal did not pray the trial
court to construe the provisions of the PDP constitution.
“No evidence was led that the said Uche Sampson Ogah participated in
the 2015 Abia State gubernatorial elections, yet the trial court
declared him as winner of the said elections contrary to the express
provisions of section 141 of the Electoral Act.”
The PDP urged the Court of Appeal for “an order setting aside the
judgment of the Federal High Court of Nigeria in suit No.
FHC/ABJ/CS/10862014 delivered on the 27th day of June, 2016.”
Justice Okon Abang had on Monday ordered Ikpeazu’s removal from office
for giving false information in the form submitted to the Independent
National Electoral Commission by the PDP, nominating him as its
candidate for the April 11, 2015 governorship election.
In two separate judgments, Justice Abang ordered Ikpeazu to vacate the office of the governor of Abia State.
The judge also directed INEC to issue a fresh Certificate of Return to
the plaintiff in one of the two suits, Ogah, who was the first
runner-up in the governorship primary conducted by the PDP on December
8, 2014.
He had ordered that Ogah’s full entitlements be restored to him as governor of Abia State.
The judge made the orders after disqualifying Ikpeazu as the
candidate of the PDP in the April 11, 2015, governorship election on the
basis that he committed perjury by giving false information in the
Form 8C001 and documents accompanying it, which he and the PDP
submitted, nominating him to INEC as the party’s governorship
candidate.





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