The supreme court will, October 7, resume hearing in a suit involving the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Union Bank of Nigeria (UBN) and Petro Union Oil & Gas Company Limited over £2.556 billion debt judgment.
The case was a lower court judgment establishing that £2.556 billion was lodged in the coffers of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and Union Bank by Petro Union as far back as 1994.
Ahead of the apex court decision, some stakeholders had said the case is similar to the recent $10 billion Process & Industrial Development Limited (P&ID) legal tussle.
Apart from the supreme court hearing, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had also instituted criminal charges against officials of the Petro Union at the federal high court.
Advertisement
According to the EFCC, the case is an attempt to defraud Nigeria and the Union Bank of Nigeria (UBN).
The Petro Union saga started in 1994 when its directors, including Prince Isaac Okpala (now dead) and his wife, issued a cheque dated December 29, 1994, for £2,556,000,000 to establish three refineries in Nigeria.
The cheque, issued in favour of their consultants, Gladstone Kukoyi and Associates, was drawn on the Barclays Bank account of Gazeaft Ltd.
Advertisement
The Okpalas were also directors of the UK-registered Gazeaft.
According to the court papers, Gladstone Kukoyi and Associates lodged the cheque with Union Bank. The bank then asked its London branch to confirm it, as was the formality, only to be told that Gazeaft Ltd had closed that account since 1989 — five years before the cheque was issued. Union Bank said it notified the CBN about the suspicious cheque and that the central bank did its own checks and confirmed that Gazeaft’s UK account had indeed been closed since 1989.
By 2012, the company filed a suit at the federal high court, Abuja, asking to be paid £2.556 billion by the CBN, Union Bank, the minister of finance and the attorney-general of the federation.
The company premised its arguments on an allegation that CBN received the sum of £2,159,221,318.54 while Union bank retained £396,778,681.46 as commission.
Advertisement
Allegations that both parties have countered.
Petro Union won the case at the lower court, and the appeal court also reaffirmed the high court’s decision.
But CBN and Union bank had since filed an appeal before the apex court.
They are accusing Petro Union of obtaining the two judgments based on facts that were not only predicated on falsehood but have criminal implications.
Advertisement
The hearing of the appeal at the apex court was later stalled on June 27, 2021, owing to a dispute over legal representation for Petro Union and another objection filed by Petro Union in the matter.
Two lawyers, Joe Kyari Gadzama (SAN) and Onyechi Egwuonwu had confronted each other over who should represent Petro Union in court.
Advertisement
The representatives of Petro Union had later confirmed in open court that their lead lawyer is now Gadzama and that they had asked Egwuonwu to work together with him to no avail.
Following this confirmation, Gadzama, Petro Union’s lawyer, told the court that he had filed a preliminary objection to the application on the ground that the same application for leave to appeal against the same court of appeal decision was earlier heard on the merits and dismissed by the supreme court on December 16, 2019.
Advertisement
Add a comment