‘WHY I WANT NBA ABA ELECTORAL C’TE DISBANDED,’ BY APPELLANT

OPINION

APPEAL TO THE NIGERIAN BAR ASSOCIATION ABA BRANCH APPEAL COMMITTEE AGAINST THE DECISION OF THE ELECTORAL COMMITTEE OF THE NIGERIAN BAR ASSOCIATION ABA BRANCH.

BRIEF SUMMATION OF THE GROUSE OF THE APPELLANT

2.1 INTRODUCTION:
2.2 This Appeal is against the decision of the Electoral Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch published on the 16th day May 2022 upon the grounds ex facie the Notice of Appeal.

2.0 BRIEF SUMMARY OF FACT

2.1 I am a member of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch.

2.2 Respectfully, upon the commencement of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch 2022 Electoral process, I had course to carefully study the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches in order to ascertain the validity and or competence of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch Electoral Committee which the branch set up to conduct the election and the validity of the Notice of Election given by the said committee.

2.3 After a deep study of the Constitution of Nigerian Bar Association 2015 as amended in 2021 and the Third Schedule, Part 1 of the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches as it relates to the constitution of Electoral Committee and the validity of the Notice of Election issued by them, it became obvious that the exercise of their constitution as an “Electoral Committee” and the election they purport to carry out is illegal.

2.4 Consequent upon that, I wrote a petition to the Electoral Committee to that effect. Same was considered by them and they ruled against me which led to my appeal to this Committee.

3.0 ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION

3.1 I hereby nominate three (3) issues for determination, which are:
a. Whether the Electoral Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch is duly constituted in accordance with the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches. (Grounds One and Two).

b. Whether the Notice of Election date issued by the Electoral Committee is valid taking into consideration the provisions of the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches. (Ground Three).

c. Whether the Electoral Committee is competent to fix the date of an election for a branch taking into consideration article 9(2)b of the uniform bye law for branches. (Ground Four)

d. Whether the Electoral Committee after holding that they will comply strictly with the provisions of the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches can turn around to strictly apply some provisions of the Bye law and jettisoning some of the provisions. (Ground Five).

4.0 ARGUMENT OF ISSUES.
4.1 I shall respectfully argue the issues raised in this appeal seriatim.

ISSUE ONE

4.2 The committee tagged the “Electoral Committee” was constituted with the following members:

1. Chief Theo Nkire
2. Prof. Ernest Ojukwu (SAN)
3. Ichie Goddy Akonani Esq
4. A.G.E. Nwachukwu Esq
5. N.D. Ojeh Esq Esq
6. Chief C.U.C. Eduzor
7. Victor Nwaugo Esq
8. Sir. E.E. J. Agwulonu
9. Chidozie Ogunji Esq
10. Ken Nwakanma Esq
11. Barth Okoye-Aniche Esq
12. C.C Elele Esq

4.3 Furthermore on or about February 2022, other persons were equally added to the already illegal body as members of the committee. These are;

1. Bob Chukwueke Esq
2. Godson Ihenko Esq
3. Linda Ejims Esq
4. Chinyere Ojukwu Esq.

4.4 I submit that the Committee in the first instance was illegal and the lumping of the other members compounded the illegality and therefore they cannot engage in the conduct of a valid election. After all, as we say, “you cannot put something on nothing and expect it to stand”.

4.5 First and foremost is the sacred provisions of ARTICLE 9(2)(A) OF THE THIRD SCHEDULE PART 1 OF THE NIGERIAN BAR ASSOCIATION UNIFORM BYE-LAWS FOR BRANCHES which provides as follows;

“2 The Electoral Committee:
(a) shall consist of five members;”

4.6 Respectfully, the above number is the valid committee to be established and not otherwise. The key words in Article 9(2)(a) referred to above are the word “Shall” and “Consist”. The word shall by all authorities and definitions is mandatory. Further, by the BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY SIXTH EDITION AT PAGE 308 the word “consist” is defined as follows;

“To stand together, to be composed of or made up of”. (emphasis mine)

4.7 In effect for there to be a valid Electoral Committee, it must be one composed of or made up of five members as that is what will create a valid and legal entity. Any other thing is illegal and unconstitutional.

4.8 This word consist has equally been given judicial interpretation in DR OLUBUKOLA ABUBAKAR SARAKI VS. F.R.N (2016) 3 NWLR PT 1500 PG 531 where a full panel of the Supreme Court made up of seven Justices per Kekere Ekun (JSC) stated thus;

“The phrase “consist of” is defined in the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English, 8th Edition (International Student’s Edition) page 310 as follows:
“Consist of make up something; constitute; be comprised of;
These words all mean to be formed from the things or people mentioned, or to be the parts that form something.”

4.9 Sirs, flowing from this, it is obvious that the creation of 12 man committee as an Electoral Committee is illegal and the attempt rather unfortunately raising it to Sixteen (16) is equally a void act by virtue of the Constitution of Nigeria Bar Association.

4.10 The effect therefore is that for there to be a valid Electoral Committee, it must consist of five members.

4.11 Furthermore, I am not unmindful of the provisions of Article 9(d) of the Third Schedule, Part 1 of Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches which provides as follows:

“Each Committee shall have a minimum of 5 members each of whom must be a financial member of the Branch”.

4.12 Sirs, reliance on the above provision is simplistic as the said provision does not brook the increase and or forming of a committee outside the provisions of The Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye Law for Branches. With respect holding on same to validate an otherwise illegal body is clutching on straws.

4.13 More so, the above do not excuse the committee as while the provision dictates the minimum, the specific provision on the constitution of the committee insists that it must “Consist” only of five members.

4.14 A further look at the said provision of Article 9(d) of the Third Schedule, Part 1 of the Bye Law will show that it is intended for other Committees in the bye law that have no number of persons to constitute same but was left open for the appointing authority or body to fix as they deem fit. These committees include: the Continuing Legal Education Committee, The Welfare Committee, Human Rights Committee, Ethics and Disciplinary Committee, Law Reform Committee, Bar and Bench Relations Committee and the Election Appeal Committee. The provisions of Article 9(d) do not concern the Electoral Committee whose membership were clearly spelt out by the Constitution. It is trite that the express mention of a thing means the exclusion of others. It is instructive to note that the operative word in that article is “shall” which connotes mandatory compliance. If the draftsmen of the Uniform Bye Law intended the said provision to be permissive, they would have used the word “may” instead of “shall”.

4.15 My Lord ONNOGHEN (JSC) (as he then was) put a note of finality on the issue in DR OLUBUKOLA ABUBAKAR SARAKI VS F.R.N (SUPRA) when he held thus:

“By submitting that the above relevant provisions of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) and sections of the Acts constitute both the composition and quorum of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, learned senior counsel for appellant admits that there is a difference between composition and quorum but that in the case of the tribunal in question, the terms/words mean the same thing.
To resolve the issue, we shall have to start by understanding some relevant words used in drafting the provisions; these are “consist of”.
At page 208 of New Webster’s dictionary of English Language, International Edition, the word “consist” is defined inter alia, thus:-
“To be made up or composed… to reside or lie essentially”.
On the other hand, the word is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary, 6th Edition at page 308 as follows:-
“To stand together, to be composed of or made up of”.
From the above definitions, it is very clear, and I hold the view that paragraph 15(1) of the 5th Schedule to the 1999 Constitution (as amended) and section 20(1) and (2) of Cap. C15, LFN, 2004 provide for the establishment and composition of the Code of conduct Tribunal as consisting of a Chairman and two other members. This construction is clearly the literal meaning of the words used by the draftsman in the relevant sections concerned”.

4.16 In the circumstances, the committee is therefore illegal and such an illegal body cannot midwife a valid election.

ISSUE TWO:

4.17 The Electoral Committee on the 14th day of April 2022 issued a Notice which was pasted at the Notice Board of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch wherein it was published that the election of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch by the Committee is fixed for the 17th day of June 2022. This publication with the greatest respect is void as same is made contrary to the provisions of THIRD SCHEDULE PART 1 OF THE NIGERIAN BAR ASSOCIATION UNIFORM BYE LAWS FOR BRANCHES AT ARTICLE 16(1) which states thus:

“Not later than Ninety (90) days to the election, the Electoral Committee shall announce the date of the election as fixed by the Electoral committee shall announce the date of the election as fixed by the Electoral Committee and invite nominations of candidates for the various offices and shall publicize the provisions of the Bye-Law relating to eligibility to contest and eligibility to vote and also issue election and campaign guideline. Provided that no candidate shall commence any form of public campaign until the campaign guideline are issued or released. (Emphasis mine)

4.18 Respectfully, the words of the said Article 16 are very plain and brooks of no side stepping. By the provisions of the above Article, the least time for publication of election date is a day that is not less than Ninety (90) days. A simple calculation of not later than the Ninety (90) days window by the publication is the 14th day of July 2021. It’s therefore a shock that contrary to the above provision, instead of the said 14th day of July 2022 or thereabout for the holding of the election the Committee stated that the Election has been fixed for the 17th June 2022 contrary to the basic law for the holding of the election. Despite my petition, the Electoral Committee glossed over this.

4.19 Incidentally, and most fundamentally is that the said Article 16(1) is the first under the duties of the Electoral Committee. Clearly any election fixed for the 17th day of June 2022 as the Electoral Committee sought to do is an illegal venture which no legal practitioner should be part of.

4.20 Sirs, unless it is shown that election is not being conducted under the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Laws for Branches as if it is to be held under the said enabling law, the purported election allegedly fixed for the 17th day of June 2022 is an illegal act. As a body of lawyers, it will be most wrong not to follow our own laws which we gave to ourselves.

ISSUE THREE:
4.21 We submit that the electoral committee cannot by any stretch of imagination be competent to fix the date for the election because it is contrary to the provision of the Uniform Bye-law for branches. Article 9(2)(b) provides thus:

“Article 9 (2) Electoral Committee:

(a) ………….

(b) Shall conduct the election of officers of the branch on a date in the month of June of an election year as the branch Executive Committee may determine and shall inter alia undertake due publicity for the elections and nominations thereto, the printing of ballot papers and compilation of the list of eligible candidates and voters”

4.22 From the wordings of the above article, it is clear that the Electoral Committee usurped the powers of the Executive Committee of the branch as can be gleaned from the minutes of the meeting of the Electoral Committee particularly paragraph 4.3 of the minutes of 4th April, 2022. This usurpation of the powers of the Executive Committee by the Electoral Committee has further compounded the infirmity bedeviling this Electoral Committee and its unlawful activities.

4.23 Furthermore, this usurpation of powers by the Electoral Committee has rendered the acts of the electoral committee unlawful and the Electoral Committee cannot be allowed to continue in its illegality.

ISSUE FOUR:

4.24 Respectfully Sirs, the Electoral Committee after holding that they will strictly apply the provisions of the Bye Law in the conduct of the branch election turned round to pick the provisions they desired to apply and jettison the other provisions which they don’t like.

4.25 Where the affairs of an organization are regulated by a given set of rules or constitution, that constitution must be followed and applied to the latter. The committee cannot decide to apply one provision and leave the other the inherent power which is imbibed in a constitution lies in its strict applicability.

4.26 Furthermore, this act of the Electoral Committee if not stopped will create disunity, malice and or crisis among the members of the Aba Branch as the persons who are affected by the strict interpretation of the Bye Law against them will feel bad, cheated and or scammed knowing that a provision of the same Bye Law was jettisoned in favour of another person.

4.27 I therefore urge you to resolve the issues in my favour and make the following directive:

1. A holding that the body called the Electoral Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch is incompetent by virtue of Article 9 (2) of the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye-Law for Branches.

2. A directive to the Chairman and the Executive Committee of Nigerian Bar Association Aba Branch to constitute a new Electoral Committee consisting of only five (5) members as provided for in the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye Law for Branches.

3. A decision that the document dated 14th day of April 2022 calling for election on the 17th day of June 2022 is in violation of Article 16 (1) Of the Nigerian Bar Association Uniform Bye Law for Branches and therefore invalid.

DATED THIS 18TH DAY OF MAY, 2022.

…………………………………………….
B.C. NWAOKORO ESQ.

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OKUTEPA QUERIES PAYMENT OF PRACTISING FEE VIA NBA PORTAL

Former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Lead Prosecutor at the Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Committee (LPDC), Mr. Jibrin Okutepa (SAN) has challenged the legality of lawyers paying the annual Bar Practice Fee (BPF) through an NBA portal.

In a post he made today on a CITY LAWYER WhatsAPP platform while tagging an NBA Notice on payment of BPF, the fiery senior lawyer argued that there is no legal basis for NBA to receive the fee from lawyers, saying: “where does NBA derive its powers to collect practising from lawyers and direct that payment shall be online through portal created by NBA.”

He stated that the Legal Practitioners Act mandates only the “Registrar” to collect BPF, saying: “How did we come to the practice of paying our bar practising fees through the portal of NBA? Can somebody guide me? As lawyers, we must not follow the rules without the backing of the law.”

It is recalled that NBA had issued a notice to members thus: “As you may already be aware, the National Executive Council (“NEC”) of the Nigerian Bar Association (“NBA”), at its last NEC meeting held in Abeokuta, Ogun State, on the 16th day of December 2021, resolved that manual Bar Practicing Fee (“BPF”) payments be jettisoned. Consequently, BPF payments can only be made through the NBA Online Payment Portal, with effect from the 1st day of January 2022. Members can now make individual or group payments through the Portal.”

The full text of Okutepa’s post made on his verified handle is below:

In the light of the provisions of the legal practitioner Act, particularly section 7 thereof which is yet to be amended,where does NBA derive its powers to collect practising from lawyers and direct that payment shall be online through portal created by NBA. For added measures, this is what LPA says in section 7 thereof: No legal practitioner (other than such a person as is mentioned in subsection (3) of section 2 of this Act) shall be accorded the right of audience in any court in Nigeria in any year, unless he has paid to the Registrar in respect of that year, a practising fee as is from time to time prescribed by the Attorney‐General of the Federation after consultation with the association.

[1999 No. 31.]

(3) The Registrar shall‐

(a) issue to every person by whom a practising fee is paid in respect of any year a receipt for the fee in the prescribed form; and

(b) as soon as reasonably practicable after the end of January in each year and thereafter from time to time during the year as he considers appropriate cause to be printed in the prescribed form and put on sale a list or supplementary list of the legal practitioners by whom practising fees have been paid in respect of that year; and

(c) pay over to the Association as soon as may be after the end of each year a sum equal to nine tenths of the aggregate amount of the practising fees received by him in pursuance of this section during the year,

and a receipt purporting to be issued and list purporting to be printed in pursuance of this subsection in respect of any year shall be evidence that the person named in the receipt or, as the case may be, that any person named in the list has paid to the Registrar the practising fee in respect of that year.

As lawyers, we must do things according to law. The payment of practising fees is a statutory duty and a creation of law. The law sets/ directs how the payments are to be made by lawyers and who is to issue receipts. It also sets out how NBA should benefit from the payments made by lawyers. How did we come to the practice of paying our bar practising fees through the portal of NBA? Can somebody guide me? As lawyers, we must not follow the rules without the backing of the law.

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