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The Federal High Court, Abuja Division on Wednesday voided the letter of invitation sent by the House of Representatives to the Petroleum Minister, Dieziani Alison-Madueke and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to appear before its investigative panel over allegations that they spent N10 billion hiring a private jet.
The court based its position on the ground that the House failed to comply with constitutionally defined procedure for issuing summons or invitation.
Determined not to honour several invitations extended to them by the House, the minister and NNPC had besieged the court, praying it to restrain the legislature from probing allegations that they spent over N10bn on a chartered aircraft.
The court presided over by Justice Ahmed Ramat Mohammed posited that the House of Representatives has the constitutional and statutory power to summon any public officer irrespective of his or her position to appear before it to render an account of how he or she has managed public property in his or her care.
According to the court, it is wrong to argue that the House could not summon the minister without the consent of the President on matter relating to a private jet.
In the view of the court, the issue of private jet is not of such confidentiality and therefore not among issues that she needed to obtain permission from the President before responding to.
The judge, however, held that the legislature, in exercise of its power to summon, must comply with its own rules, else its summons becomes invalid and nugatory.
The judge held that the House did not follow due process in inviting the plaintiffs in this instant case
The court also held that the House of Representatives ought to have presented before the court the resolution of the meeting published in a gazette or a journal where it agreed to invite the minister and NNPC.
It added that the National Assembly is given power to direct investigation but the burden of proof is on the House of Representatives to show that there is a resolution that directed such invitation.
“None of the defendants has produced the published resolution where it was said that the plaintiffs should be invited.
“The defendants ought to have brought before the court, resolution of its meeting wherein the plaintiffs are invited to appear before it, published in a gazette or house journal.
“There is no evidence before the court that there was a resolution to invite the plaintiffs. By this act, it renders the summons invalid. Therefore, the letter of invitation served on the plaintiffs is hereby set aside because of the failure of the House of Representatives to produce the resolution as duly published in the gazette or its house journal.
“Had the House of Representatives published the resolution in a gazette or a house journal and presented it before this court, the plaintiffs would not have any business coming to this court. This decision does not imply that the House of Representatives does not have the power to summon anybody no matter how highly placed to investigate him.
“However in this instant case, the House of Representatives has not followed the due process of inviting the plaintiffs. It is on that note that I advise the plaintiffs to submit themselves to any invitation to show their respect to constituted authorities,” the judge held.
At the argument stage, the plaintiffs, through their counsel, Etigwe Uwa (SAN) submitted that the National Assembly had no constitutional power to carry out an oversight function on Ministries, Departments and Agencies of Government and can not hold hearing to adjudicate on petitions against them.
Uwa contended that before any summons could be issued out by the House or request for any documents or papers made, the consent of the President must be first sought, adding that the defendants never followed such process.
He also submitted that before the summons could be issued on his client, such summons must first be published in the gazette of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and must also be first published in the journal of the National Assembly in line with sections 88 and 89 of 1999 Constitution.
The plaintiffs added that the defendants, without complying with Sections 88 and 89 of the 1999 Constitution, could not summon them. The plaintiffs therefore prayed the court to set aside the invitation.
But the defendants, through their counsel, Yakubu Maikyau (SAN) and Abubakar Mahmud (SAN) for the Senate and the House of Reps respectively prayed the court to dismiss the argument of the plaintiffs.
They submitted that the National Assembly had not issued any summon on the minister but rather an invitation. They further submitted that the plaintiff has approached the court because she was panicky over what the outcome of the probe would be.