Benjamin Nwakuba Iroagbara V. David Ufomadu (2009)
LAWGLOBAL HUB Lead Judgment Report
P.O. ADEREMI, J.S.C.
This is an appeal against the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division delivered on the 17th of January 2001 in Appeal No. CA/PH/202/96: Mark A. Iroagbara (for himself and on behalf of Iroagbara Family) and David Ufomadu. The Court of Appeal Port Harcourt (hereinafter referred to as the court below) had dismissed the appeal brought by the appellant against the judgment of the High Court of Justice, Umuahia Judicial Division of the then Imo State where he (the appellant) was the plaintiff in Suit No. HU/14/77: Mark A. Iroagbara and David Ufomadu (the defendant). The plaintiff/appellant had claimed against the defendant/respondent in the trial court the following reliefs: –
“(a) Declaration of title to all that piece or parcel of land situate at Amamba, Umuobasi, Ugba-Ibeku, Umuahia within the jurisdiction of this court and whose annual value is N10.00 and which is clearly shown on the plaintiffs plan aforesaid,
(a) N500.00 general damages for the trespass committed by the defendant in 1966 when he made the said purported grant to Benjamin Nwoko, without the consent of the plaintiff’s family.
(b) N500.00 general damages for the trespass by the defendant as to the portion he purported to grant to the said Madam Bessy about 1970.
(c) Order for forfeiture of the portion granted to the defendant’s said late half brother now in the possession of the defendant.
(d) Perpetual Injunction restraining the defendant, his servants, agents and/or workmen from further entry or interference in any manner whatsoever upon the land in dispute.”
Pleadings were filed and exchanged between the parties. Evidence was called at the trial court by the parties to prove the averments in their respective pleadings. After taking the final addresses of counsel to the parties, and in a reserved judgment delivered on the 16th of March 1990, the learned trial judge dismissed the suit, in toto. Being dissatisfied with the said judgment, the plaintiff appealed to the court below which, after taking the oral submissions of their respective counsel and upon reading the respective briefs of the parties filed in the Registry of the court below, in a reserved judgment delivered, as I have said, on the 17th of January 2001, dismissed the appeal with cost. Again, being dissatisfied with the judgment of the court below, the appellant has appealed to this court by a Notice of Appeal filed on the 10th of April 2001 which contains five grounds of appeal. Distilled from the said grounds of appeal for determination by this court are five issues, which, as set out in the brief of the appellant are as follows: –
“(1) Whether or not there were 2 (two) grounds of appeal filed by the appellant against the judgment of D.E. NJIRIBEAKO J. of the Umuahia High Court and whether this factual error (if any) has not occasioned a miscarriage of justice in this case
(2) Whether the failure of the Justices of the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division to consider the issues for determination in the appeal agreed upon by the parties to the appeal did not vitiate their judgment
(3) Whether payment of tribute is a condition precedent under Customary Land Law for the existence of a pledge
(4) Whether the Court of Appeal sufficiently gave thought to the complaint of the appellant in issue one (1) of his issues for determination of the appellant (sic) and whether the combined effect of the procedures adopted by the trial court and the court below does not occasioned (sic) a miscarriage of justice
(5) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in not considering issue (sic) 2 (two) and 4 (four) agreed upon by the parties in the court below and whether these did not occasioned (sic) a miscarriage of justice”
However, the respondent raised three Issues for determination by this court; and as set out in the brief of argument of the respondent, they are in the following terms: –
“(1). Was there really any ground of appeal not considered by the court below in view of the four issues distilled from the four grounds of appeal by the appellant which the court below duly considered
(2) As the court below duly considered the four issues distilled from the four grounds of appeal, would it be correct to contend that the court below did not consider any of the grounds of appeal already distilled into the issues merely because the court below incorrectly stated the number of the grounds of appeal which it had intact considered
(3) Was there any miscarriage of justice by the court below or did the proceedings on appeal became vitiated as imputed in the 1st and 2nd issues of the appellant in this appeal”
When this appeal came before us on the 2nd of March 2009 for argument, Mr. Njoku, learned counsel for the appellant referred to, adopted and relied on his client’s brief filed on 29th April 2002 and the reply brief filed on 30th August 2002 and urged us to allow the appeal. Mr. Obonna, learned counsel for the respondent, for his part referred to, adopted and relied on his client’s brief filed on the 15th of August 2002 and urged that the appeal be dismissed.
Before I proceed with this appeal, I wish to state here what the case of each party is as evinced from their respective pleadings. In his statement of claim, the plaintiff/appellant’s case is that the land in, dispute situate at Amamba, Umuobasi, Ugba-Ibeku was originally owned by Mba Okereke, his ancestor who had two children namely: Anyaogu and Ogube; Anyaogu begat Ibeso and Ekwuruke; Ibeso begat Iroagbara, Aguwa and Ezeocha; while Ekwuruke begat Nwoko and Uluocha. The land now in dispute devolved to the children of Anyaogu. On the death of Ezeocha who had no male issue, his (Ezeocha) property was inherited by Iroagbara, the plaintiffs father, under the native law and custom of Ugba people which is part of the land in dispute. On the death of Iroagbara, his children including the plaintiff inherited his (Iroagbara) land and that of Ezeocha earlier inherited by Iroagbara. He claimed that they exercised acts of ownership and possession thereon. The defendant according to him is a native of Umundugbe and not a native of Amamba; that no person from Umundugbe owns land within the land in dispute or even at Amamba. One Ogumka, the half brother of the defendant was granted permission to farm on a portion of the land in dispute. On the death of Ogumka, the defendant’s mother took him to live in Ogumka’s house on the land. On the death of his mother, the defendant built his own house thereon. When asked to perform customary token of farming for the plaintiff’s family, he (defendant) refused and even asserted his ownership of the land in dispute, hence this suit.
The defendant, on the other hand challenged the right of the plaintiff to bring the suit as according to him one branch of Iroagbara family (there are two branches) did not authorise this action. He also averred that the land at Ibeso was never partitioned. The defendant avers that he is from Umundugbe Amamba Umuobasi Ugba Ibeku. Amamba, according to him is made up of two sections namely Umundugbe and Umu-Ituru. Plaintiff is from Umu-Ituru’s section while the defendant is from Umundugbe’s section. He went further to aver that both sections own the land in dispute which now belongs to him by way of inheritance from his ancestors. He denied being a tenant to the plaintiff and that indeed the defendant’s section deforested the land in dispute before it devolved on him.
I have read the two sets of issues identified by the parties for determination by this court. It is my humble view that Issues Nos. 1, 2 and 5 raised in the appellant’s brief can jointly be taken together with Issues Nos. 1 and 2 in the respondent’s brief of argument. While Issues Nos. 3 and 4 in the appellant’s brief shall both be taken together with Issue No.3 in the respondent’s brief. Arguing Issues Nos. 1, 2 and 5 in his brief, the appellant referred to the quotation from the judgment of the court below where it was said that he filed only two grounds of appeal but that he went to distill four issues for determination by the court below and argued that from the record of proceedings, it was clear that he filed four grounds of appeal. Consequently, two issues were not considered having wrongly held that only two grounds of appeal were filed and only two issues must be distilled therefrom. This negates the principle of FAIR HEARING, he argued while urging that the appeal be allowed on Issues Nos. 1 and 2. The arguments in Issues Nos. 1 and 2 dovetail into Issue No.5 where it was submitted that having so held that only two grounds of appeal were filed and only two issues should have been distilled therefrom and having consequently failed to consider Issues Nos. 2 and 4 as a result of its holding that only two grounds were filed, this occasioned a miscarriage of justice, he finally urged that the appeal be allowed.
The respondent on Issues Nos. 1 and 2 which are in pari materia with Issues Nos. 1, 2 and 5 in the appellant’s brief, made copious references to the records and submitted that although the court below erroneously held that only two grounds were filed, it infact and in truth considered all the issues predicated on those four grounds which the appellant filed and it was therefore urged that their Issues Nos. 1 and 2 be resolved in their favour.
At page 148 of the records of proceedings, the court below held inter alia: –
“The plaintiff then appealed and filed two grounds of appeal from which the learned counsel for the appellant distilled four issues for determination while the respondent relied and adopted the issue formulated by the appellant. It cannot be over-emphasised that there should never be more issues than the grounds of appeal.”
The above quotation is erroneous having regard to what is contained in the Notice of Appeal filed. But a careful reading of the whole proceedings leaves one in no doubt that all the issues raised by the appellant were duly considered in the judgment. Indeed, Issues Nos. 1 and 4 which were alleged as having not been considered were copiously considered in the judgment. If I may point out, in the said judgment, it was again said inter alia: –
“I believe the issue in this case revolves around the question as to who the land in dispute belongs.”
The above is the all-embracing question which ought to be answered in seeing to it that justice was done in this case and as I have said, a careful reading of the whole judgment leaves me in no doubt that it was painstakingly considered. Issues Nos. 1, 2 and 5 on the appellant’s brief are hereby resolved against the appellant while I resolve Issues Nos. 1 and 2 in favour of the respondent. Issues Nos. 3 and 4 raised by the appellant and Issue No. 3 identified by the respondent are all subsumed in that poser by the court below, which again, for purposes of emphasis reads: –
“I believe the issue in this case revolves around the question as to who the land in dispute belongs.”
As I have pointed out above, the plaintiff/appellant’s claims against the defendant/respondent are for (a) declaration of title, (b) damages for trespass committed by grants made to some people, (c) forfeiture of the portion of land granted to the defendant’s half brother now in possession of the defendant and (d) an order of perpetual injunction. I hasten to say that the defendant/respondent did not counter-claim. In civil cases, the like of the one under consideration, on the burden of proof on the pleadings, the rule is that the burden of proof rests on the party (whether plaintiff or defendant), who substantially asserts the affirmative of the issue.
When it is said that onus of proof shifts from plaintiff to defendant and vice versa from time to time as the case progresses, it means no more than the burden of proof may shift depending on how the scale of evidence preponderates. However, subject to the scale of evidence preponderating, the burden of proof rests squarely on the party who would fail if no evidence at all, or no more evidence as the case may be, were given on either side. However, let me quickly say that if a plaintiff on whom always rests the onus of proving that affirmative of what he asserts, no burden shifts to the defendant unless he has counter-claimed. For the umpteenth time, I wish to say that the plaintiffs case was that the land in dispute originally belonged to his ancestor one Mba Okereke through whom it devolved on him that the father of the plaintiff settled one Ogubunka Ufomadu, a member of the defendant’s family on the land as a customary tenant.
PW1 -: who incidentally was the original plaintiff in this case – Mark Amakwe Iroagbara – while testifying in proof of his case said inter alia: –
“I know the land in dispute. It lies at Amamba Umuobasi Ibeku Umuahia. I am from Amamba Village in Umuobasi. The defendant is from Umundugbe Village Umuobasi. The land in dispute lies in the lands of Amamba people. No member of Umundugbe Village has any land there as of right …………………………………
The land in dispute belonged to Mbah Okeleke. He was my great grand-father. He had two sons – Anyaogu and Oguibe. Anyaogu also had two sons-Ibeso and Ekwuruke. Ibesi was my grand-father. He had three sons viz: lroagbara my father, Aguwa and Ezeocha. When Mbah Okeleke died, his two sons inherited all his land and partitioned same. The land in dispute was the share of Anyaogu. When Anyaogu died Iroagbara and Ekwuruke shared Anyaogu’s land. 1roagbara got this portion now in dispute. Iroagbara was my father. When he died I and my two brothers – Benson and Stephen inherited the land.”
The above is the terse evidence given by the plaintiff/appellant himself in support of his claim to the ownership of the land in dispute. The law is sacrosanct that where title to land is said to have been derived by grant or inheritance, the pleadings must aver facts relating to the founding of the land in dispute, the persons who founded the land and exercised original acts of possession and persons on whom title in respect of the land has devolved since the first founding. See PIARO V. TENALO & ORS (1976) 12 S.C. 31. I have looked at the pleadings of plaintiffs, it is bereft of these essential averments. Again, the plaintiff/appellant had averred that his father once employed Ogumka Ufomadu a relation of the defendant to cut palm fruits for him, later Ogumka Ufomadu was allowed by his said late father to remain on a portion of the land as a tenant paying tributes for the use of the land and that it was when the defendant/respondent refused to continue to pay the tributes that he took this action claiming the afore-mentioned reliefs. But his own witness PW2 – one Nwakeoma Akingbu, when giving evidence in chief said inter alia: –
“I know the land in dispute………….The land was owned by one Iroagbara now late. Late Ndumele Ufomadu lived in the land. The land was granted to Ogubunka by Iroagbara.”
When cross-examined, the witness said inter alia: –
“Ogubumka begged lroagbara for land and he granted this land to him. He did not pay any money for it. It was an outright gift.”
The trial judge, while evaluating the evidence of PW2 said: –
“After summarizing the evidence of PW2, I asked myself why there was so much demand for land inspection in this case. Plaintiffs witness said that the grant of the land in dispute was outright. This evidence knocked off the bottom from the plaintiff’s case and destroyed it completely. So the question of any form of tribute did not at all arise.”
The court below, in reacting to the evidence adduced by PW1 and PW2 said inter alia” –
“The plaintiff and his witness testified divergently on the issue of tributes and the nature of the grant. If the grant was outright, there cannot be a tribute. Moreover, it is important to state that the only witness for the appellant did not even make any mention of a payment of tribute………………..The court below premised his judgment on the strength of the appellant’s case and came to the conclusion that the case of the appellant in the court below is frauth (sic) with inconsistencies and improbabilities.
It is difficult to rationalise the basis for the averment and testimony that the respondent is a tenant whose father paid a tribute when there is contradictory evidence to that. It is on this basis that the court below dismissed the case as it amounted to a waste of time”
These are concurrent findings of facts. They are not perverse. I cannot agree more with the two concurrent findings. The appellant has woefully failed to establish his ownership of the land in dispute. There is no evidence of customary tenancy between the appellant and the respondent; therefore the question for forfeiture does not arise. Again, from all I have said above, it is my view that the court below painstakingly examined the case of the appellant in all its ramifications and rightly came to the conclusion that the appeal before it had no merit. Issues Nos. 3 and 4 in the appellant’s brief of argument are therefore resolved against him.
In conclusion, having regard to all I have said above, it is my judgment that this appeal is unmeritorious. It must be dismissed and it is hereby dismissed. Judgment of the court below and that of the trial court are consequently upheld. The respondent is entitled to the costs of this appeal which I assess in his favour at N50, 000.00 against the appellant.
SC.128/2002