The Lagos Division of the Court of
Appeal has upheld the dismissal of a N1.5bn libel suit instituted by a former Governor of
Enugu State, Mr. Sullivan Chime, against The Guardian Newspaper and Chief
Okechukwu Ezea, his opponent in the 2007 gubernatorial election.
The appellate court, in a lead
judgement delivered by Justice Rita Pemu on Friday, said Justice Kazeem
Alogba of the Lagos State High Court, was right in dismissing Chime’s
libel suit for lack of merit.
The former governor had instituted
the suit claiming damages in the sum of N1.5bn from Ezea and The Guardian
Newspapers Ltd.
Chime had alleged that Ezea
defamed him through a publication on page seven of The Guardian
Newspaper of August 14, 2007.
According to Chime, Ezea had defamed
him by publishing in the newspaper that he had plotted to kill him.
Ruling on the suit, Justice Alogba
of the lower court, had however, dismissed the suit for lack of merit and
awarded a cost of N100, 000 against Chime.
Dissatisfied with the judgment, the
ex-governor, through his counsel, Dr. Gbolahan Elias (SAN), had approached the
appellate court seeking to upturn the judgement.
On Friday however, the appellate
court, while upholding Justice Alogba’s decision, held that Chime’s suit could
not be sustained.
Justice Pemu said Chime ought to
have called the witnesses that attended the press conference where the
defamatory statements were allegedly uttered.
The judge aligned with the
argument of first respondent’s counsel, Dr. Joseph Nwobike (SAN), that the
appellant failed to prove that the first respondent even uttered the defamatory
statements.
Justice pemu further noted
that the appellant had not attached any weight to a similar publication
in the Vanguard Newspaper, whereas he had sued The Guardian.
Consequently, the court awarded a
cost of N30, 000 against the appellant.
The governor had in his appeal,
submitted that the lower court erred in law when it held that the appellant
failed to prove that Ezea uttered the defamatory statements complained of.
He further submitted that the lower
court erred when it held that the words published in The Guardian newspaper
were incapable of defaming him.
Chime had in his statement of claim,
accused Ezea of addressing a press conference in August 2007, attended by
numerous representatives of the press in Abuja, where he allegedly accused him
of plots to kill him.
The governor averred that his
personal reputation had been seriously tarnished, adding that he had suffered
considerable distress and embarrassment from such libelous assertion.
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