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THE STATE v. ANDREW YANGA

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THE STATE v. ANDREW YANGA

THE STATE v. ANDREW YANGA

(2021) Legalpedia (SC) 98158

In the Supreme Court of Nigeria

HOLDEN AT ABUJA

Thursday, January 14, 2021

Suite Number: SC.712/2018

CORAM

OLABODE RHODES-VIVOUR

KUDIRAT MOTONMORI KEKERE-EKUN

CHIMA CENTUS NWEZE

AMINA ADAMU AUGIE

UWANI MUSA ABBA AJI

THE STATE  ||  ANDREW YANGA

AREA(S) OF LAW

APPEAL

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

FAIR HEARING

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

SUMMARY OF FACTS

The Respondent was charged on 14 count charges for obtaining by false pretence contrary to Section 419 and stealing contrary to Section 390(9) of the Criminal Code Law of Ogun State, when he obtained and stole varying sums of money ranging from N6, 489,000.00 (Six Million, Four Hundred and Eighty-Nine Thousand Naira), to N121,000.00 (One Hundred and Twenty One Thousand Naira) from persons within the jurisdiction of the trial Court. At the trial, out of the 8 witnesses listed, 5 testified while the Respondent gave his lone evidence. On the date slated for final oral address, Counsel reported to the Court that the Respondent was sick. However, despite the information, the trial Court directed that final oral address be taken in the absence of the Respondent against the provision of Section 210 of the Ogun State Criminal Procedure Law, 2006. Judgment was delivered and the Respondent was convicted and sentenced to 7 years imprisonment. Dissatisfied with the judgment, the Respondent appealed to the Court of Appeal, Ibadan Division, which set aside the trial court’s judgment, quashed the conviction and sentence of the Respondent. Peeved by judgment of the lower court, the Appellant has appealed against same contending that although the Respondent was not in Court, his Counsel addressed the Court on his behalf, hence the whole proceedings of the trial Court cannot be vitiated.

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HELD

Appeal Dismissed

ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION

Taking into consideration the settled fact that the Respondent herein was not in Court on 20th November, 2015 when counsel’s address was conducted by the trial Court, can it be legally contended that the Honourable Court below is not bound by the pronouncement of this Honourable Court in STATE V. LAWAL (2013) 7 NWLR (PT.1354) AT 568 such that the Honourable Court below ought to have acted otherwise.

RATIONES

CRIMINAL TRIAL – DEFINITION OF CRIMINAL TRIAL

“I make haste to state here that the criminal trial of every accused person begins with arraignment and culminates with conviction and sentence in judgment. In the precedent relied upon by the Respondent’s learned Counsel, State V. Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (FT. 1354) at PP.586, Mohammad, JSC, defined criminal trial to mean “the whole of the proceedings including the judgment and sentence” This therefore has been the constitutionally inalienable right enjoyed by every accused person.

Per U. M.A. AJI, J.S.C.

ADDRESSES OF COUNSEL – WHETHER ADDRESSES OF COUNSEL ARE AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THE TRIAL

“Section 294(1) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) contemplated written address or Counsel’s address to be part of the criminal trial or proceedings, when it provides that: Section 294 (1) Every Court established under this Constitution shall deliver its decision in writing not later than ninety days after the conclusion of evidence and final addresses and furnish all parties to the cause or matter determined with duly authenticated copies of the decision within seven days of the delivery thereof. Per Nnaemeka-Agu, JSC in Ndu V. State (1990) LPELR-1975(SC) (P. 45, Paras. A-C) relying on Obodo v. Olomu & Anor (1987) 3 N.W.L.R. (Pt.59) 111, at p. 123-124, re-iterated this point thus: …this Court has stated before, the addresses of Counsel are an essential part of the trial. That can be the only possible inference from the fact that the constitution itself used the conclusion of addresses as a very important determinant of the time limit for delivery of judgments under Section 258 of the Constitution of 1979. See also State V. Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (PT. 1354) at PP.585, wherein this Honourable Court held that “addresses by parties or their Counsel are an integral part of the hearing or trial of an accused person.”

Per U. M. A. AJI, J.S.C.

CRIMINAL TRIAL – ESSENCE OF THE PRESENCE OF AN ACCUSED PERSON THROUGHOUT HIS TRIAL

“The essence of the presence of an accused throughout his trial is to afford him an adequate opportunity to play his statutory role and liberty to respond at every stage of the proceedings personally or through a legal practitioner of his own choice for the purpose of ensuring fair hearing. The above has been reinforced and backed by the provision of the law that tried the Respondent. Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Law, Ogun State, (pari materia with Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Act) provides that: Every accused person shall subject to the provisions of Section 100 and of Subsection (2) of Section 223, be present in Court during the whole of his trial unless he misconducts himself by so interrupting the proceedings or otherwise as to render their continuance in his presence impracticable.

Per U. M.A. AJI, J.S.C.

FAIR HEARING – MEANING OF FAIR HEARING UNDER SECTION 36(1) OF THE CONSTITUTION OF FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, 1999 (AS AMENDED)

“The law is indeed well settled that fair hearing within the meaning of Section 36(1) of the Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), means a trial or hearing conducted according to all legal rules formulated to ensure that justice is done to the parties. It requires the observation or observance of the twin pillars of the rules of natural justice, namely audi alterem partem and nemo judex in causa sua. These rules, the obligation to hear the other side of a dispute or the right of a party in dispute to be heard, is so basic and fundamental a principle of our adjudicatory system in the determination of disputes that it cannot be compromised on any ground. See Per Peter-Odili, JSC in Eye V. FRN (2018) LPELR-43599(SC) (P. 28-30, Para. A).

Per U. M.A. AJI, J.S.C.

RIGHT TO FAIR HEARING – WHETHER THE ABSENCE OF AN ACCUSED PERSON THROUGHOUT HIS TRIAL AMOUNTS TO A BREACH OF HIS RIGHT TO FAIR HEARING

The proceedings of 20/11/2015 having been fundamentally flawed on account of the trial Court’s failure to adhere to this law and the rule of natural justice of the Respondent’s right to fair hearing jeopardized and marred the proceedings since written/oral address or Counsel’s address is part and parcel of the trial of the Respondent, whose presence is required throughout until judgment. “It is an essential principle of criminal law and practice in Nigeria that the trial of an accused person for an offence has to be conducted in the presence of the accused…” See State V. Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (PT.1354) at PP.586 For the trial Court to lighten the importance of the presence of the accused person (the Respondent) throughout his trial including address stage is lamentable and must be discouraged. “The addresses, I hold, are not directed at the Court alone. The purport of the address by a party is to let the Court and his adversary know what his summing up is on the facts and the law as revealed by the evidence before the Court. Therefore it is a wrong supposition for a trial Court to believe that an address at the close of a party’s case is meant for it alone; the other side, throughout the trial of a case must not be blinded from what his adversary relies upon”. See Per Salihu Modibbo Alfa Belgore, JSC in Forcabos Ovo Obodo V. Stafford Olomu & Anor (1987) LPELR-2189 (SC) (P.12, PARAS. B-D).

Per U. M.A. AJI, J.S.C.

CRIMINAL TRIAL – CONSEQUENCES OF PROCEEDING WITH ADDRESS OF COUNSEL IN THE ABSENCE OF AN ACCUSED PERSON

“Having emphasized that address of Counsel or written/oral address is part of the trial of the Respondent, which was done in his absence; the proceeding is bound to suffer a major setback. A similar scenario played out on the effect of conducting a trial in the absence of an accused person and came up before this Court in Hassan V. State (2016) LPELR-42554(SC) (PP. 7-8, PARAS. F-D), wherein Per RHODES-VIVOUR, JSC, held: Once an accused person shows that there is an infringement of the principle of natural justice against him, if that proceedings in Court continued in his absence, it is my view that there has been an infringement of the principle and the trial should be declared a nullity. In the same vein, it was held in State V. Lawal (supra) at 586, that the exercise of allowing the trial to proceed in the absence of some of the accused persons rendered the entire proceedings of that Court including the judgment a complete nullity for not only denial of fair hearing but also for failure of that Court to give the affected Appellants even a fair hearing that may not be called a fair hearing. For the trial Court to have continued with the proceedings of 20/11/2015 in the absence of the Respondent was to invoke upon itself a grave blunder. In State V. Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (PT.1354) at PP.585, this Honourable Court in considering Section 210 of the Oyo State Criminal Procedure Law, similar with Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Act held strongly that “proceeding with the trial of the appellants in the absence of one of them constituted a serious breach of the law.” Thus, a judgment which is given without compliance with rules of Court and which non-compliance has breached a fundamental human right such as the right to fair hearing, is a nullity and is capable of being set aside either by the Court that gave it or by an appellate Court. See the dissenting view of Per Niki Tobi, JSC in Barr. (Mrs.) Amanda Peters Pam & Anor V. Nasiru Mohammed & Anor (2008) LPELR-2895(SC) (P. 71, PARAS. E-A). Furthermore, Per Tobi, JSC in Ejeka V. State (2003) LPELR-1061(SC) (P. 18, PARAS. A-C), on the effect of mistake of Judges in a criminal trial and its consequences, held that a mistake made by a Judge in a criminal trial can vitiate the proceedings and result in acquittal of the accused if the mistake is so fundamental to the trial to the extent that it has caused injustice to the accused person. The case of State V. Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (PT.1354) @ PP.565, being a decision of this Apex Court must be followed since the principle of criminal trial in the absence of the accused person was the stare decisis or precedent laid down by this Court, ought to have been followed by the trial Court. To attempt any distinction when the principle is clear is an invitation of wrath. Therefore, stare decisis presupposes that the law has been solemnly declared and determined in the former case. It thus precludes the Judge of the subordinate Court from changing what has been determined. In other words, they should keep the scale of justice even and steady not liable to waiver with every Judge’s opinion. See Per Onu, JSC in Adesokan & Ors V. Adetunji & Ors (1994) LPELR- 152 (SC) (P. 56, PARAS. A-F).

Per U. M. A. AJI, J.S.C.

“STARE DECISIS” – DEFINITION OF “STARE DECISIS”

“Stare decisis” is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary, 8th Edition, at Page 1443 thus: “to stand by things decided. The doctrine of precedent under which it is necessary for a Court to follow earlier judicial decisions when the same points arise again in litigation. ….. “The rule of adherence to judicial precedent finds its expression in the doctrine of stare decisis. The doctrine is simply that, when a point or principle of law has been once officially decided or settled by the ruling of a competent Court in a case in which it is directly and necessarily involved, it will no longer be considered as open to examination or to a new ruling by the same tribunal, or by those which are bound to follow its adjudication, unless it be for urgent reasons and in exceptional cases. ….”

Per K. M. O. KEKERE-EKUN, J.S.C

DOCTRINE OF STARE DECISIS – CONDITION FOR THE APPLICABILITY OF THE DOCTRINE OF STARE DECISIS

“It is settled law that for the doctrine to apply, the facts of the two cases must be the same or similar. The adherence to precedent provides for certainty of the law. See: Adegoke Motors Ltd. Vs Adesanya (1989) 3 NWLR (Pt. 109) 250; Mailantarki Vs Tongo (2017) 5 – 6 SC (Pt. II) 132; University of Lagos Vs Olaniyan (1985) LPELR – 3419 (SC) @ 26 C – F.

Per K. M. O. KEKERE-EKUN, J.S.C

CRIMINAL TRIAL – IMPORTANCE OF THE REQUIREMENT OF THE PRESENCE OF AN ACCUSED PERSON THROUGHOUT HIS TRIAL

“Section 210 of the Criminal Procedure Law of Oyo State provides: “210. Every accused person shall, subject to the provisions of Section 100 and Subsection (2) of Section 223, be present in Court during the whole of his trial unless he misconducts himself by so interrupting the proceedings or otherwise as to render their continuance in his presence impracticable.” ?Section 100 applies to proceedings before a Magistrate while Section 223 is in relation to persons of unsound mind. The requirement of the presence of an accused person throughout his trial is in consonance with his fundamental right to fair hearing guaranteed by Section 36(1) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended. It has been held by this Court that the addresses of counsel are an essential part of the trial. The Court is fortified in this view by the provision of Section 258 of the 1979 Constitution (Now Section 294 (1) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended), which utilised the conclusion of addresses as an important determinant of the time limit for delivery of judgment. See: Ndu Vs The State (1990) LPELR – 1975 (SC) @ 45 A – C: Obodo Vs Olomu & Anor (1987) 3 NWLR (Pt. 59) 111 @ 123 0 124.

Per K. M. O. KEKERE-EKUN, J.S.C

CRIMINAL TRIAL – CONSEQUENCES OF TAKING FINAL ADDRESS IN THE ABSENCE OF AN ACCUSED PERSON

“In State Vs Lawal (2013) 7 NWLR (Pt 1354) 568, this Court held that the conduct of proceedings, in that case, the taking of final addresses in the absence of two of the accused in a joint trial, constituted a breach of their fundamental right to fair hearing and rendered the trial a nullity. To press the point home, His Lordship, Alagoa, JSC, in his contribution, stated thus (at page 595 – 596 supra): “It is a fundamental principle of fair hearing that accused persons standing trial for a criminal offence have to be present in Court throughout the period of their trial, a violation of which renders the trial a nullity. See Daniel Adeoye Vs The State (1999) 6 NWLR (Pt. 605) 74, where this Court held that a trial, whether objected to or not, in the absence of an accused person is a sham and renders the purported trial a nullity, the only known exceptions being where the accused misconducts himself at the trial or is of unsound mind and so incapable of making his defence…”

Per K. M. O. KEKERE-EKUN, J.S.C

‘FINAL ADDRESSES’ – MEANING AND IMPORTANCE OF ‘FINAL ADDRESSES’

“The said expression ‘final addresses’ means the last or ultimate speech or submission made to the Court in respect of the matter before it, before the delivery of the judgment. Put simply, it is the last address before the delivery of the judgment, Sodipo v Lemminkainen Oy (supra); Mustapha v Governor of Lagos State (supra); Ijebu Ode v Balogun and Company Ltd (supra); Okeke v State (supra). It [final address] is the penultimate part of the three most important portions of the trial period; the first, being the hearing of the evidence; while the last is the judgement, Okeke v State (2003) LPELR -2436 (SC) 19 -20; F-A. Such is its pedestal in the administration of justice that when counsel or a party is denied this right [that is, of address], the trial Court is, equally, deprived of its enormous benefits. Its inevitable consequence is that a miscarriage of justice has been occasioned, Okafor and Ors v A.G., Anambra and Ors (1991) LPELR -2414 (SC) 28; A-C; Obodo v. Olomu [1987] 3 NWLR (pt.59) 111; Adigun v. A-G of Oyo State (supra). This explains why a party must have the same right as given to his adversary to offer, by his counsel, the final address on the law in support of his case, Ndukauba v Kolomo and Anor (2005) LPELR -1976 (SC) 12; A-D.

Per C. C. NWEZE, J.S.C.

BRIEF WRITING – ESSENCE OF BRIEF WRITING

“Now, prior to the evolution of brief writing in various Rules of our Courts, counsel, actually, ‘pounded and hammered [their arguments] at the Bar.’ In place of that practice which has now fallen into desuetude, one of the new features introduced by these rules is the concept of advocacy in writing, that is, brief writing, whose main purpose is to curtail the time that should have been wasted in lengthy oral arguments, Onifade v Olayiwola and Ors (1990) 7 NWLR (pt 161) 130, 160: oral arguments in which verbose counsel beat out the bush, Omojasola v Plison Fisko Nig.Ltd and Ors ? (1990) 5 NWLR (Pt 151) 434, 441. Thus, although oratorical prowess was previously a great asset in advocacy, due to the great changes which have been wrought in the Court rules, proficiency in the presentation of briefs has taken the place of brilliancy in oral advocacy, Gaamstac Eng. Ltd and Anor v FCDA (1988) 4 NWLR (pt 88) 296, 305-306. [per Nweze, JSC in Kalu v State (supra) 9 et seq]

Per C. C. NWEZE, J.S.C.

STATUTES REFERRED TO

Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended)|Criminal Procedure Law of Oyo State|

COUNSEL

EKO EJEMBI EKO, ESQ.For Appellant(s)|MUSIBAU ADETUNBI, ESQ.For Respondent(s)|

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