People's Voice

Premium News

Politics

PDP LEADERSHIP: APPEAL COURT FAULTS RECOGNITION OF ABDURAHMAN FACTION

June 6, 2026 • Dons Eze • 3 min read

PDP LEADERSHIP: APPEAL COURT FAULTS RECOGNITION OF ABDURAHMAN FACTION

1001313796

The Court of Appeal in Abuja has faulted Justice Uche Agomoh of the Federal High Court in Ibadan, for granting reliefs that were not sought by any of the parties in a dispute involving the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

In a judgment delivered by Justice Uchechukwu Onyemenam of the Court of Appeal, the appellate court held that the trial judge went beyond the reliefs before her when she recognised a factional caretaker committee in the PDP leadership crisis.

The dispute stems from a judgment delivered by Agomoh on January 30, in which she held that the PDP caretaker committee led by Abdurahman Mohammed and Samuel Anyanwu was the legitimate faction of the party.

The Court of Appeal said none of the parties had sought such a declaration.

“In the instant case, there is clearly a live issue where the trial court went outside the reliefs sought to recognize and uphold a factional caretaker committee,” Onyemenam said.

The appellate court added that if the declaratory and injunctive reliefs sought on appeal had not been tied to the legitimacy of the Ibadan convention already nullified by the Supreme Court, it would have ordered a retrial on the leadership organs purportedly created or validated by the convention.

“Once the Convention itself has been pronounced null, void and of no effect by the Supreme Court, any superstructure erected upon it is necessarily without legal foundation,” the court held.

The court said the legal foundation of the Anyanwu-led caretaker committee recognised by the trial court had been extinguished by the Supreme Court’s judgment. It added that revisiting the issue would serve no practical legal purpose.

The Court of Appeal stopped short of expressly describing the trial court’s action as ultra petita, a legal doctrine referring to situations where a court grants relief beyond that sought by the parties.

Part of the judgment reads: “This Court would be driven to the conclusion that the offending portions of the judgment, and indeed the judgment as a whole insofar as the excess permeates the decision, are a nullity and liable to be set aside ex debito justitiae.

“A direction to the trial court to retry an issue that has been settled at the apex level would, in effect, invite it either to repeat what has already been decided or to purport to sit in judgment over the Supreme Court, both of which the law forbids.

“On the merits, I hold that, by reason of the binding decisions of this Court in Appeal No. CA/ABJ/1695/2025 and of the Supreme Court in Appeal No. SC/CV/164/2026, which nullified the Ibadan Convention of 15th–16th November 2025 and settled the core issues underlying this appeal, there is no longer any live controversy between the parties.”

The judgment was supported by Justices Mohammed Mustapha and Okon Abang, the other members of the three-member panel.

The decision effectively nullifies the basis upon which the Federal High Court recognised the caretaker committee linked to the Abdurahman Mohammed faction of the PDP.

Share this story
Dons Eze

DONS EZE, PhD, Political Philosopher and Journalist of over four decades standing, worked in several newspaper houses across the country, and rose to the positions of Editor and General Manager. A UNESCO Fellow in Journalism, Dr. Dons Eze, a prolific writer and author of many books, attended several courses on Journalism and Communication in both Nigeria and overseas, including a Postgraduate Course on Journalism at Warsaw, Poland; Strategic Communication and Practical Communication Approach at RIPA International, London, the United Kingdom, among others.

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *