Osun State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola has taken his case to the Court of Appeal in Abuja, asking for reversal of the March 22 judgment of Osun Election Tribunal which declared Sen. Ademola Adeleke winner of September 2018 election.
The tribunal had, by a majority judgment given by
two of its three members, voided the election of Oyetola, pronounced the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate winner and asked the Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue him a certificate of return.
In a notice appeal filed on March 26, by his team of lawyers led by Wole Olanipekun (SAN), Oyetola urged the appellate court to nullify the tribunal judgment given by Justices Peter Obiora and Anyinla Gbolagunte.
Oyetola faulted the majority judgment on the grounds
that it was perverse, replete with contradictions and not supported by evidence
led by the petitioners.
The Osun governor, therefore, prayed the Court of
Appeal to uphold his appeal, set aside the majority judgment and dismiss
Adeleke’s petition at the tribunal.
The governor said his complaint in the appeal was
against the entire majority judgment, except where the tribunal held that it
lacked jurisdiction to set aside INEC Guidelines.
Oyetola contended that the majority judgment was a
nullity because it was written and delivered by Justice Obiora, who did not
participate in all the proceedings of the tribunal and who was not present when
all the witnesses gave evidence.
He noted that Justice Obiora was absent on
Feb. 6 this year when the respondents witnesses (RWs) 12 and 13 – Ayoola Soji
and Oladejo Kazeem – testified and tendered exhibits, which the tribunal
admitted in evidence.
The appellant argued that, Justice Obiora
could not have seen the two witnesses and was unable to examine their
demeanour, as required, and therefore, unlawful for the judge to have authored
a judgment to review the evidence given by the witnesses.
Oyetola also argued that the tribunal, in its
majority judgment, erred in law and acted without jurisdiction when it accepted
the petitioners’ complaint of non compliance with the provisions of Electoral
Act in relation to the September 22, 2018 governorship election and on that
basis proceeded to nullify the victory of Oyetola and APC.
The appellant noted that, no where in the entire
petition, did Adeleke and the PDP complain about non-compliance with the
provisions of the Electoral Act in relation to the September 22, 2018 election.
He added that the only ground, in the petition,
alleging non-compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act was in
relation to the re-run election held on September 27, 2018.
Oyetola noted that the tribunal contradicted itself in its conclusion, in page 191 of the majority judgment, to the effect that the information omitted by the election officers in the Forms EC8A in the 17 polling units, where the tribunal voided results, were essential to proving over-voting.
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Oyetola said: “All petitioners’ witnesses testified and admitted that petitioners were not short-changed regarding the scores recorded for them in each Form EC8A tendered, and that no addition of votes was reflected in favour of the appellants.
“By cancelling of elections in 17 poling units, the
lower tribunal acted without jurisdiction. By deciding as aforesaid, the lower
tribunal discountenanced Section 139(1) of the Electoral Act.”
Oyetola also faulted the tribunal’s decision to void
the re-run election when the petitioners did prove that there were elections in
the seven polling units where the re-run election took place and that the
results were wrongly cancelled.
He noted that the petitioners did not plead nor
adduce evidence that the presiding officers of the affected seven polling units
had ab initio (on his own/without any prompting) approved of the elections at
the polling units.
He added that the petitioners did not tender the
results from the seven polling units.
The appellant also noted that the petitioners did
not call in their agents from the affected polling units as witnesses; did not
tender documentary evidence to show that it was the returning officer that
unilaterally cancelled the elections.
Oyetola also argued that the tribunal acted outside
its jurisdiction, erred in law and arrived at a perverse decision when it
engaged in calculating and subtracting from election results to arrive at
proclaiming Adeleke and PDP as being victorious.
The appellant noted that, while the petitioners, in
their relief, put the total votes of parties, after the deduction of the
cancelled votes, at : APC 241,335 and PDP:246,634, the tribunal, in its
judgment, after making its computation and deduction, allocated the parties:
APC 253,452 and PDP 253, 777.
Oyetola argued that, where the petitioners failed to
tender the press release they claimed INEC issued in respect of the cancelled
elections, and also failed to tender results from the seven polling units, the
tribunal was in error to have acceded to the petitioners’ prayer to void the
said press release.
The appellant also argued that the tribunal
contradicted itself when, on the one hand, it nullified the re-run election of
September 27, 2018, but on the other hand, went ahead to void the election of the
appellant on the same election.
He further argued: “Having rightly held that
it lacks the jurisdiction to strike down and nullify the approved guidelines
and regulations for the conduct of the Osun governorship election 2018, made by
INEC, the tribunal mis-directed itself in law and came to a perverse decision
by going ahead to nullify the re-run election.”
Oyetola also argued that the tribunal was wrong to
have declared Adeleke winner of the election, held on September 22 and 27, 2018
on grounds of non-compliance rather than ordering a re-run election.
He noted that, not only did the decision
disenfranchise the electorate in the affected polling units, it violated the
provisions of Section 140(2) of the Electoral Act.
Oyetola argued that, since elections were concluded
in the polling units; results counted and recorded in the appropriate forms,
and no one contested the quantum of votes scored by the parties, the reasons
given by the tribunal to void the votes did not affect the result of the
election.
He added: “The lower tribunal wrongly
disenfranchised the electorate in the said polling units after casting their
votes and without any challenge to the scores generated from the voting
exercise.”
The appellant prayed the court of to dismiss the
petition by Adeleke and PDP, for being unmeritorious and set aside the majority
decision of the tribunal, which he argued, “is against the weight of evidence.”
(NAN)