The National Industrial Court, Abuja, on Monday ordered four banks
to within 14 days disclose the balance standing of all accounts operated by the
Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria.
The listed banks are: Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), First Bank
Nigeria Plc, Fidelity Bank Plc, and ABU Microfinance Bank (Main and Kongo
Campuses).
The judge, Justice Rakiya Haastrup, made the order while ruling on
a motion ex-parte, filed by 110 staff of the university, wrongly sacked by the
authority of the institution.
The motion was brought pursuant to Order 51 of the Rules of the
Court and Section 83 of the Sheriffs and Civil Process Act, CAP.407, Laws of
the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.
“The court has scrutinised this application and therefore holds
that the prayers of the applicant/judgment creditors remain valid. The three
prayers are hereby granted.
“All the named garnishee banks are ordered to file and serve on
the applicant/judgment creditor, sworn affidavit disclosing the balance
standing to the respondent/judgment debtors’ account maintained with the
garnishees.
“They should show cause why the amounts standing to the credit of
the debtors should not be used to satisfy the judgment debt within 14 days from
the date of receipt of the order’’, she said.
The judge also made an order mandating the attachment of the
amount standing to the credit of the respondents/judgment debtors with the
garnishees in favour of the judgment creditor.
According to her, the exhibition of the outstanding amount is
necessary in order to satisfy the judgment debt owed by virtue of Justice P.O.
Lifu’s judgment delivered on Nov.30, 2015.
Haastrup also made an order, directing the banks to show cause why
they should not pay the N2.5 billion plus Claimant/Judgment Creditors Salaries
from July 2016 to date.
She held that the amount to be paid included 10 per cent interest awarded the
applicant/judgment creditors in the judgment as outstanding salaries and other
emoluments.
The court also granted leave to the applicant/judgment creditors
to serve the court order and other processes in the case on the garnishee banks
by service at their Regional Headquarters in Abuja.
The court, had in November 2017 struck out a motion of stay of
execution, filed by the university to stall the payment of the amount.
Haastrup, in her ruling, maintained that the motion was “not
competent, lacking in merit and therefore refused to grant it.
Haastrup said the application had not shown any exceptional
circumstances to justify that the institution had no resources to pay the
amount ordered by the court on Nov. 30, 2015.
The application had indicated that the defendants lacked the
resources to settle the workers and would be financially crippled if allowed to
pay the estranged workers the said sum.
The 110 workers, whose appointments were terminated in 1996, had
dragged the university to court, claiming they were wrongly terminated.
They joined the Minister of Education, the Attorney-General of the
Federation, and the Minister of Justice, as co-defendants in the suit.
The court, on Nov. 30, 2015, ruled in favour of the workers,
ordering the university to reinstate them and pay their entitlements.
The university is yet to comply with the orders, which has
necessitated this latest applicant seeking the garnishing of the institution’s
bank accounts with the above four banks.The judge has fixed Feb.22, for the
hearing of the substantive application.
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