A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory in
Apo, Abuja, on Monday ordered Guaranty Trust Bank Plc to refund N5.3bn
illegally withdrawn from the account of one its customers, Dr. Ted Edwards.
Justice Valentine Ashi, in his judgment, ordered
that the N5.3bn should attract 10 per cent interest from Monday, when judgment
was delivered, till the time the money was paid back to the owner.
The court also ordered that the money should
attract another 21 per cent interest from December 12, 2014 when GTB allowed
the illegal withdrawal, until the fund was eventually paid back to Edwards.
The judge, while reviewing the case in his
judgment, held that the bank did not have any defence to its action of the
withdrawal of the total sum of N5,240,516,186.21 from the customer’s account
and thereby ordered the bank to pay the money to the owner through his Zenith
Bank Plc account.
Edward, a lawyer of Edwards and Partners Law
Firm, had initiated the suit, FCT/HC/CV/939/2015, in January 2015 following the
alleged illegal withdrawal of the money on December 12, 2014.
The money was paid into the plaintiff’s law
firm’s account with the GTB on January 2, 2014 by the Accountant-General of the
Federation, Jonah Otunla.
The money was said to be for the settlement of a
judgment got by his clients, Impecca Services Limited and His Royal Highness,
Eze Ezekwo, against the Association of Local Government of Nigeria, as cost of
consultancy services they rendered to the 774 local governments.
But in his judgment on Monday, Justice Ashi
struck out the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Accountant General of the
Federation, Minister of State for Finance, Anaocha Local Government Area, and
the Incorporated Trustees of ALGON from the suit as defendants on the grounds
that they were not necessary parties.
The plaintiff stated, in the suit’s originating
processes, that shortly after the money was paid into his account on behalf of
his clients, GTB made some disbursements from the account as directed, but that
he was only informed on December 12 by an official of the bank that the Central
Bank of Nigeria had withdrawn the N5.3bn.
He said that when he enquired from the bank why
it made deduction from his account without his consent, he said GTB only
insisted that the withdrawal was made in obedience to CBN directive, which it
could not disobey.
Justice Ashi held in his judgment that GTB
betrayed the banker-customer relationship between it and the plaintiff.
The judge held that it was wrong for
GTB to have made withdrawal from the customer’s account without the customer’s
knowledge and consent.
The judge held that GTB’s claim that it was
helpless and that the withdrawal was at the instance of CBN was not tenable.
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