A dispute over who is authorised to represent General Hydrocarbons Limited has stalled proceedings in the suit filed by the company against the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) and others before Justice Ambrose Lewis-Allagoa of the Federal High Court, Lagos.
The issue arose when two senior lawyers — Dr. Abiodun Layonu (SAN) and Mr. Oluseye Opasanya (SAN) — respectively announced appearance for the claimant.
While Layonu informed the court that he was representing General Hydrocarbons Limited, Opasanya, who was reportedly appointed Receiver/Manager over the company by AMCON, told the court that he is the lawful legal representative of the claimant, given the company’s status in receivership prior to the commencement of the action – a position that was allegedly not disclosed to the court.
The dual appearances triggered a prolonged legal argument over who is the proper counsel authorised to speak for the company. This prompted Justice Lewis-Allagoa to repeatedly seek clarification. The trial judge asked both senior lawyers to identify the authentic representative of the claimant in view of the pending receivership.
With no resolution in sight, the court directed both counsel to file formal written addresses on the issue of representation. The matter was then adjourned to December 3, 2025.
The disagreement over legal representation also frustrated the contempt proceedings initiated by General Hydrocarbons Limited against AMCON.
The contempt application was predicated on earlier interim orders in which Justice Allagoa had restrained AMCON and its agents from taking any recovery steps against the company, interfering with its assets, or appointing a receiver pending the hearing of any motion.
The underlying suit concerns Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 120 and 121 which were granted within a structured commercial and regulatory framework aimed at assisting First Bank of Nigeria to recover a substantial non-performing loan issued to Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept Limited.
To safeguard the repayment of the loan or “Outstanding Exposure,” the Department of Petroleum Resources (now NUPRC) considered permitting a qualified operator to run the assets and apply production revenues toward the debt. It was in this context that General Hydrocarbons Limited (GHL) proposed to operate the two assets.
The Tripartite Agreement signed by GHL, First Bank and AMCON stated that one of GHL’s key considerations was resolving the Outstanding Exposure, while advancing Nigeria’s economic interests. GHL undertook financial commitments and received support from First Bank and later AMCON.
Under this framework, GHL became responsible for operating OMLs 120 and 121 and for applying production proceeds toward repayment of the exposure.
However, AMCON and First Bank later alleged serious operational and financial misconduct by GHL’s former management, including alleged revenue diversion, chronic non-payment of contractors, operational breakdowns, and the imminent risk of demobilisation of the FPSO operator —conditions that threatened the assets with shutdown and possible licence revocation.
Acting under sections 34 and 48 of the AMCON Act, AMCON appointed a Receiver over GHL on September 18, 2025. It has been contended that the appointment, by law, suspended the powers of GHL’s former directors from that date. This notwithstanding, the former directors allegedly initiated the present suit in the name of the company without lawful authority, and in what AMCON describes as an attempt to obstruct the receivership.
It has been contended that the Receiver had taken steps to stabilise operations and safeguard the company’s assets, even as the former directors have been accused of allegedly attempting to weaponise interim court orders obtained after the Receiver’s appointment.
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