The Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal sitting has dismissed an appeal filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to challenge the order directing the commission to unfreeze the accounts of a legal practitioner, Mike Ozhekome (SAN).
The appellate
court in unanimous judgement delivered by Justice Chidi Nwaoma Uwa held that
the appeal lacks merit.
The two other
members of the panel who concurred with the judgement are Justice Tunde Awotoye
and James Abundaga.
At the
instance of the EFCC on April 3rd 2017, Justice Abdulaziz Anka of the Federal
High Court, Lagos had lifted a restraining order he earlier placed on the
Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB) account of Ozekhome.
The EFCC had
obtained the interim ex parte order of forfeiture to freeze the money for 120
days, arguing that the sum of N75million transferred to the account was proceed
of unlawful activity, because it was paid to Ozekhome by the then sitting
Governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, whom it said it was investigating.
Ozekhome on
his part had argued that the action of the EFCC was unconstitutional, had no
legal justification and was a gross violation of sections 36, 37 and 41 of the
1999 Constitution.
He filed a
motion before the Federal High Court, Lagos, urging it to set aside its earlier
order freezing his chambers’ account. He alleged misrepresentation,
non-disclosure, suppression of material facts and non-compliance with the rules
of the lower court and Judicial authorities regulating the grant of ex parte
applications by the Appellant.
Justice Anka
after hearing arguments from Ozekhome and Mr Rotimi Oyedepo for the EFCC
vacated the ex parte order and unfreeze his account with Guaranty Trust Bank
(GTB).
Apparently
dissatisfied with the ruling, the EFCC filed an appeal before the Court of
Appeal alleging miscarriage of justice by the lower court.
The
anti-graft agency had argued that whilst the silk is entitled to his
professional fees, he is not entitled to receive such from funds suspected to
be proceeds of crime.
In dismissing
the appeal, the appellate court held that the EFCC had wrongfully obtained the
ex parte order to freeze the account as the lower court lacked the jurisdiction
to grant same and as the defendant could not have committed any infraction to
warrant his account being blocked and frozen.
The upper
court further held that there was contradictory evidence shown in invoices and
receipts issued by Ozekhome to Fayose and the said sum represented part payment
of his professional fees in the handling of various cases for Fayose across the
country.
On whether a
legal practitioner is legally obliged to begin to ask a client for the very
source of his money from which the client desired to pay a lawyer, the court
said there was no such requirement known to law.
“A Legal
Practitioner is entitled to his fees for professional services and such fees
cannot be rightly labelled as proceeds of crime.
“It is not a
requirement of the law that a legal Practitioner would go into inquiry before
receiving his fees from his client, to find out the source of the fund from
which he would be paid.”
N75m Professional Fees
It would be
recalled that sometime in 2016, the EFCC had, through Justice Ibrahim Idris,
then of the Federal High Court, Lagos, frozen Governor Fayose’s accounts,
accusing him of allegedly keeping proceeds of unlawful activity.
Fayose
immediately engaged Ozekhome’s legal services and he approached the Federal
High Court, Ado Ekiti, presided over by Justice Taiwo Taiwo, and challenged the
ex parte freezing order granted by Justice Idris.
In his
judgement, Justice Taiwo found that the freezing order had been improperly
granted without jurisdiction in the first place, and upon suppression of
material facts.
After this
judgement, Fayose went to his bank and withdrew the sum of N5million from his
account for himself, while transferring N75 million to Ozekhome, as part
payment of his professional fees.
The EFCC
immediately appealed this judgement, and then went ahead to freeze Ozekhome’s
account, contending that the N75 million paid to his chambers by Fayose as
professional fees for legal services rendered as a proceed of unlawful
activity.
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