Ecobank
Nigeria Limited has urged the Supreme Court to set aside a Court of
Appeal verdict on its winding-up petition against Honeywell Flour Mills
Plc over an alleged 3.5billion debt.

Justice
Mohammed Yunusa of the Federal High Court in Lagos last December 4 froze
Honeywell’s accounts following an application by Ecobank’s lawyer Mr.
Kunle Ogunba (SAN) of the Insolvency Forte.
The judge
later
varied the order by allowing Honeywell to withdraw N15million per
week pending hearing of the suit, which Honeywell appealed against.
The Court of Appeal ruled in Honeywell’s favour and discharged the restraining order.
But Ecobank
has urged the Court of Appeal to grant an order of injunction retraining
Honeywell from taking advantage of the order discharging the
interim/varied order pending the determination of the case by the
Supreme Court.
The bank
said the interim order was made to preserve Honeywell’s funds in some
banks, namely Zenith, Access, Citibank, Stand Chartered, Wema, Guarantee
Trust, Fidelity and Ecobank until the case is determined.
“There is an
urgent need to preserve the res (subject-matter) of the appeal to avoid
foisting a situation of helplessness on the Supreme Court, a superior
court of record,” Ecobank said.
The bank is
urging the Supreme Court to set aside the entire judgment/decision of
the Court of Appeal on the ground that the appellate court erred in law
in setting aside the ex-parte orders made by Justice Yunusa.
The Court of
Appeal, in the judgment delivered by Justice Abimbola Obaseki, set
aside Justice Yunusa’s order on the ground of abuse of Order 4 of
winding up rules.
But the bank
is urging the Supreme Court to hold that the Winding-up Rules did not
outlaw the issuance of ex-parte orders, among other ground.
Besides, it
said the Winding-up Rules did not provide for ex-parte orders, adding
that it was provided for in the court’s Civil Procedure Rules.
“The
Winding-Up Rules is a subsidiary legislation and not elevated to the
rank of a statute. Rule 4 of the Winding Up Rules only provided for
applications inter-parties and thus created a lacuna as it relates to
ex-parte applications which can only be filled by the Civil Procedure
Rules of the court,” the bank said.
Ecobank also
appealed against the dismissal of its appeal challenging the
jurisdiction of Justice Mohammed Idris of the Federal High Court in
establishing a customer banker’s relationship in a related case.
The Court of Appeal had held that there was a banker-customer relationship between the parties.
Bur the bank
is praying the Supreme Court to hold that the Court of Appeal
occasioned a gross miscarriage of justice by allowing the respondents
the benefits of an “in-principle” agreement they were never party to.
Ecobank is
also praying the Supreme Court to decide whether it was wrong to seek
redress before other courts and whether it amounted to contempt of
court.
“The learned
justices of the Court of Appeal erred in law and occasioned a gross
miscarriage of justice by failing to determine whether the learned trial
judge, Justice Mohammed Idris, had power to even hear or consider the
committal proceedings,” the bank said.
Ruling in
favour of Honeywell, Justice Obaseki-Adejumo of the Court of Appeal had
held that Justice Yunusa made the ex-parte order without notice to
Honeywell. She said it violated the rules guiding winding-up petitions.
According to
her, the rules state that every application in such a petition shall be
by motion on notice to the person against whom the order was to be
made.
“Justice of
the case demands that both side be heard. The ruling of the Federal High
Court is hereby set aside. The petition shall be assigned to another
judge for necessary action. Parties shall bear their costs,” she held.
Justice
Idris had last August 10 made an order of interim injunction restraining
the bank from publishing the plaintiffs’ name as debtors and ordered
parties to maintain status quo pending hearing of the plaintiffs’ suit.
But
Honeywell said while the suit was pending, Ecobank filed other suits
before other judges in a bid to recover its debt from Honeywell Group
and its chairman Oba Otudeko.
Honeywell’s lawyers, therefore, filed Form 48 and Form 49, urging the court to hold the bank in contempt.
But Justice
Idris struck out the contempt proceedings on the basis that no proper
service was effected on the alleged contemnors.
Ecobank is
praying the Supreme Court to hold that the Court of Appeal was wrong to
have failed to consider whether Justice Idris had the vires to sit as
judge in his own case.
“The Court
of Appeal occasioned a gross miscarriage of justice by failing to decide
whether the learned trial judge ought to be allowed to hear and/or
determine the committal proceedings even before the issue of improper
service,” Ecobank said.
Source: Thisday....
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