AKISATAN (APENA OF IPORO) & OTHERS
V.
AKINWANDE THOMAS & OTHERS
JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
28TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1950
2PLR/1950/6 (P.C.)
OTHER CITATION(S)
2PLR/1950/6 (P. C.)
(1950) XII WACA PP. 90 – 92
LEX (1950) – XII WACA 90 – 92
BEFORE THEIR LORDSHIPS:
LORD GREENE,
LORD SIMONDS,
LORD MORTON OF HENRYTON
BETWEEN:
AKISATAN (APENA OF IPORO) & OTHERS — Appellants
AND
AKINWANDE THOMAS & OTHERS — Respondents
ORIGINATING COURT(S)
Appeal from the West African Court of Appeal.
ISSUE(S) FROM THE CAUSE(S) OF ACTION
COURT:- Nigeria — Supreme Court — Native Courts — Jurisdiction — Supreme Court Ordinance, section 12.
CASE SUMMARY
The Supreme Court Ordinance, by which the present Supreme Court of Nigeria was established, contemplates that there may be concurrent jurisdiction in the Supreme Court and a Native Court-which is inconsistent with the vesting of exclusive jurisdiction in the Native Courts where, ex facie, the Supreme Court would have jurisdiction. The opening words of section 12 of the Supreme Court Ordinance, which enact that, “subject to” such jurisdiction as may for the time being be vested by Ordinance in Native Courts, the Supreme Court shall have the thereinafter defined jurisdiction, are equivalent to without prejudice to”, and are not to be construed as ousting the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and vesting exclusive jurisdiction in a Native Court in any matter in respect of which jurisdiction had been vested by Ordinance in that Native Court. The proviso to section 12 is conclusive on the question, for if it were the correct view of the substantive part of the section that it enacted that in all cases in which a Native Court has jurisdiction that of the Supreme Court is ousted, there would be no sense in providing by a proviso that in certain of such cases the Supreme Court should not exercise jurisdiction. Further, there is nothing in the previous history of the legislation by which courts were established in the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria, or in the context of the Ordinance of 1943, which would suggest that in 1943 so drastic a measure would be taken as substantially to limit the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in favour of the Native Court.
Accordingly, in a suit which did not raise any issue in respect of which it was specifically enacted by the proviso to section 12 that the Supreme Court should not exercise original jurisdiction, and there was a Native Court— a Grade A Court of competent jurisdiction, the Supreme Court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit
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