The Lawmakers suspended the
probe after Ambode secured a court order which directed parties to the suit to
maintain status quo.
Former Governor of Lagos
State, Akinwunmi Ambode, has appealed the ruling of a Lagos High Court which
struck out a suit seeking to stop the State House of Assembly from
probing him
over the procurement of 820 buses meant to revolutionize public transportation
in the State.
However, in a ruling to the
interlocutory action filed by the governor on Thursday, Justice Yetunde
Adesanya who presided over the matter struck out the suit by the former
Governor on the ground that it was premature and not justiceable.
The Judge said the Ad-hoc
Committee set up to investigate Ambode was a fact finding committee, noting
that an investigation was not an indictment.
But in the notice of appeal
filed by his counsel, Tayo Oyetibo, SAN, before the Lagos division of the
Appeal Court, Ambode prayed the court to set aside the decision of the trial
court and allow the appeal.
Besides, the former
governor prayed the appellate court to remit the matter back to the High Court
to allow the Chief Judge to re-assign it to another judge of the High Court for
trial.
Respondents in the appeal
are the State House of Assembly, its Speaker, Mudashiru Obasa and the House
Clerk, A.A Sanni. Others are Mr. Fatai Mojeed, the Chairman of the Ad-hoc
Committee set up by the House to probe the procurement of the buses and eight members
of the Committee.
On the four grounds of
appeal, Ambode argued that the trial court erred in law when it held that the
suit he filed was not mature.
According to him, any
person who assumed that his right was being infringed upon or likely to be infringed
had the right to invoke the jurisdiction of the court to seek legal protection,
which the court had a duty to entertain.
He argued further that the
court below erred in law when it held that Section 36 (1) of the 1999
constitution did not apply to the exercise of the powers of the defendants
under Section 128 of the constitution.
Ambode argued that Section
128 (1) of the constitution provides that the exercise of the powers of the
House of Assembly is subject to the provisions of the 1999 constitution.
He submitted that the trial
court erred in law when it held that the Claimant’s action did not disclose a
reasonable cause of action.
According to him, his
action was a declarative action, which pleaded the facts of the allegations
against him, which were not denied by the defendants.
He also submitted that the
trial judge erred in law when it held that the defendant’s objection was
properly taken without the defendants filing a statement of defence.
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