Home » Nigerian Cases » Supreme Court » Bilante International Ltd. V. Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (2011) LLJR-SC

Bilante International Ltd. V. Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (2011) LLJR-SC

Bilante International Ltd. V. Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (2011)

LAWGLOBAL HUB Lead Judgment Report

JOHN AFOLABI FABIYI, J.S.C.

The appellant/cross-respondent herein was the plaintiff in the High Court of Enugu State. It claimed the sum of N95,684,741.57 as special and general damages for breach of contract to lend money for its road construction project. The respondent/cross-appellant filed a counter-claim thereat for outstanding and unpaid overdrafts made to the appellant amounting to N13,050,002.79 as at 29th February, 1992. The trial court awarded the sum of N75,684,741.57 damages against the defendant. It also dismissed the defendant’s counter-claim.

The defendant appealed to the court of Appeal, Enugu Division (“the court below” for short) against the whole judgment. The court below set aside the judgment of the trial court on 13th January, 1997 in respect of the stated damages awarded. However, it upheld the dismissal of the counter-claim by the trial court.

Both sides have appealed to this court. The plaintiff filed the main appeal while the defendant cross- appealed.

On 21st March, 2011 when the appeal was heard, learned counsel for the appellant moved an application filed on 2nd June, 2010 to substitute Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation for the respondent on record. There was no objection raised and same was granted. Thereafter, learned counsel on both sides adopted briefs of argument as exchanged and filed on behalf of the parties.

On page 4 of the appellants’ brief four (4) issues were couched for determination of the appeal. They read as follows:-

“(1) Whether the Court of Appeal was competent to exercise jurisdiction in respect of the respondent’s appeal.

(2) Whether, having regard to all the documentary evidence, the Court of Appeal was right in holding that there is no contract between the parties by which the respondent was to advance overdraft facilities to the appellant for the execution of the road contracts during the twelve months duration of those contracts.

(3) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in setting aside the judgment given in favour of the appellant in respect of the ‘de-fixing’ of its fixed deposit accounts.

(4) Whether the Court of Appeal was right in dismissing the entirety of the appellant’s claim and setting aside the sum of N75,684,741.57 awarded in the appellant’s favour by the High Court of Enugu State.”

On behalf of the respondent/cross-appellant, four (4) issues were decoded in respect of the main appeal and two (2) issues in respect of the cross appeal at pages 2-3 of the brief argument. They read as follows:-

“(1) Was the defendant’s appeal to the court below competent

(2) Was the court below right in holding that the plaintiff did not prove any enforceable contract with the defendant as alleged in the statement of claim

(3) What was the nature of the claim made in respect of the de-fixture of the plaintiff’s fixed deposit

(4) Did the damages claimed by the plaintiff flow naturally from any breach of contract

(5) Did the plaintiff in its defence to the counter-claim specifically deny the fact of obtaining loans from the defendant

(7) (Sic; in reality (6)) Did the production by the plaintiff of the statement of account supplied to it by the defendant which it did not dispute and which showed an indebtedness not prove the debt owed”

MAIN APPEAL

Issue 1, put succinctly, is whether or not the defendant’s appeal to the court below was competent. The appellant herein as respondent at the court below canvassed this point relating to the competence of the appeal with fervour. Much fuss was generated on same and there is a carry over to this court.

The contention of the appellant is that there was no proper notice of appeal before the court below to activate the hearing of the appeal thereat. Notice of appeal dated 10th October, 1995 was filed to activate the appeal at the court below by the respondent which compiled the Records of Appeal. Leave of the court was sought for departure from the Rules to use same for hearing the appeal. The application was granted on 22nd November, 1995.

On 8th January, 1996 the respondent herein as appellant at the court below, filed another Notice of Appeal dated 5th January, 1996 at the Registry of the High Court; albeit, within the time permitted by the Rules of court. The respondent, withdrew the earlier Notice of appeal filed by it and relied on the later notice of appeal. The appellant is still contending, as it did at the court below, that the later notice of appeal is incompetent as the appeal had already been entered at the court below. It was submitted that the case of Tukur v. Government of Gongola (1988) 1 NWLR (Pt. 68) 63 is distinguishable from the facts in this matter as the two notices of appeal filed therein were filed before the appeal was entered. Learned counsel urged that the appeal should be struck out for want of competence.

See also  Nigeria Water Resources Development Limited V A.k Jaiyesimi (1963) LLJR-SC

Learned counsel for the respondent in this appeal contended that the appeal at the court below was competent. It was observed that the contention of the plaintiff in the court below was that the notice of appeal dated 5th January, 1996 did not form part of the record of appeal as it came into existence after the appeal was entered in the court below on 22nd November, 1995. It was further stressed that the plaintiff did not raise any issue of notice of appeal having been filed out of time when it filed its amended brief on 30th May, 1996.

There is no dispute on the point that the appeal at the court below was heard upon the bundle of documents filed by the respondent sequel to the leave granted by the court below on 22nd November, 1995. The 2nd notice of appeal filed within time on 8th January, 1996 at the Registry of the High Court was relied upon. The first notice of appeal was withdrawn in consonance with the course approved by this court in Tukur v. Government of Gongola State (supra). Therein, the issue that fell for determination was whether an appellant can file two Notices of Appeal. The answer is in the affirmative. But the appellant must choose which of them he intends to rely upon. See: Iteshi Onwe v. The State (1975) 9 – 11 SC. 41.

It must be pointed out here that the appeal at the court below proceeded upon the leave granted to depart from the Rules in the preparation of the bundle of documents for the appeal. I am of the view that an entry of the appeal was not, stricto sensu, made as envisaged by the provisions of Order 9 Rule 13(1) of the Court of Appeal Rules 1981. The defendant as appellant at the court below was at liberty to file all relevant documents and have same duly brought to the attention of the court with the opposing party duly served. The plaintiff as respondent at the court below was duly served with the 2nd Notice of Appeal and its brief was filed with reliance placed on it.

The stand point of the appellant on this issue borders on technicality. The appeal before the court below was competent. The issue is resolved against the appellant.

Issue 2 has to do with whether or not there was any enforceable contract between the parties. In its real essence, the law of contract at this point requires elucidation. Contract is defined as an agreement between two or more persons which creates an obligation to do or not to do a particular thing. Its essentials are competent parties, subject matter, a legal consideration, mutuality of agreement and mutuality of obligation. Lamoureu v. Burrillville Racing Ass’n 91 R.I 94, 161A. 2d 213, 215.

To constitute a binding contract between parties, there must be a meeting of the mind often referred to as consensus ad idem. The mutual consent relates to offer and acceptance. An offer is the expression by a party of readiness to contract on the terms specified by him which if accepted by the offeree gives rise to a binding contract. The offer matures to a contract where the offeree signifies a clear and unequivocal intention to accept the offer. See: Okugbule & Anor. v. Oyagbola & Ors (1990) 4 NWLR (Pt. 147) 723. It should be reiterated that in order to establish that parties have formed a contract, there must be evidence of consensus ad idem between them. Then if there is a stipulated mode for acceptance of the offer, the offeree has a duty to comply with same. See: Afolabi v. Polymera Industries (1967) 1 All NLR 144.

The acceptance must correspond with the term of the offer. If it purports to qualify the offer, it may amount to a counter-offer and not an acceptance. It may amount to rejection of the offer. It also destroys that offer so that cannot subsequently be accepted. Both parties and the two courts below appear to be at one that Exhibit 4 seems to convey an offer by the respondent to the appellant herein. It reads as follows:-

“3rd December, 1990

Chief A. O. Okoli

Chairman,

Bilante International Ltd.

86, Awolowo Road,

Ikoyi.

Lagos.

Dear Sir,

APPLICATION FOR A FACILITY OF N18.000.000:00

We refer to your letter No. B1/EN/OBN/2/Vol. 2/34 dated 30th November, 1990 in connection with your application for a facility of N18,000,000:00 and the contract which you are handling for Anambra State Government.

Management has considered the good relationship which you enjoy with the Bank over the years, and as we consider you a very valuable customer of the bank, we have agreed:

See also  Chief John Oyegun Vs Chief Francis Nzeribe (2010) LLJR-SC

(1) To pay you 24% (twenty-four percent) for the Fixed Deposit which will be used as a collateral for the facility you are asking for;

(2) Management has noted that a total of N13m will be available for the security to cover our exposure which we understand will fluctuate only up to N10m by the end of January, 1991. We have also noted that your request could be reviewed as the need arises, and that an additional N2.9m will be paid before the end of January to reinforce whatever facility would be granted;

(3) As we consider your contract with Anambra State Government a priority commitment, Management has agreed to provide $300,000:00 (Three Hundred Thousand US Dollars) by middle of January, 1991 to meet your immediate requirement and to enable your contract agreement take off smoothly. It is also our view that after this allocation in January a breathing space will be allowed to enable us handle subsequent foreign exchange need of your Company.

It is our hope that with these concessions the Management magnanimity and understanding would have been recognized. Kindly confirm the above agreement reached at today’s meeting by signing and returning the duplicate copy of this letter.

Yours faithfully

ORIENT BANK OF NIGERIA LTD

SGD

E. C. IKE

MD/CHIEF EXECUTIVE

SGD

I. C. IGBOAMALU

A.G.M BANKING OPERATIONS.”

From the above, it is glaring that the respondent herein set out the terms upon which it would grant the loan to the appellant. The respondent also stipulated how it wants the appellant to indicate its acceptance of the offer. The appellant chose to write Exhibit 5 to the respondent. It reads as follow:-

“The Managing Director,

Orient Bank of Nigeria Limited,

20 Garden Avenue,

GRA,

Enugu.

Sir,

RE: APPLICATION FOR A FACILITY OF N18,000,000.00

We refer to your letter OBN/AD.1/27 dated 3rd December, 1990 in respect of our application for a facility of N18,000,000:00 and wish to thank you for your approval for the facility at interest rate of 271/2% (TWENTY-SEVEN AND HALF PERCENT).

We further wish to direct that our total security cover of N13m with your bank comprising –

(a)Cash on Fixed Deposit – N11,000,000:00

(b) Bank Guarantee – N 2,000,000:00

N13,000,000:00

be utilized as follows-

(1) That the cash on Fixed Deposit N11m which is a merger of the existing Fixed Deposit Account of N1m acting previously as a collateral to Account 2 Account No. (010200374) plus N10m from call Deposit be fixed for one year with effect from today – (4/12/90) at the agreed interest rate of 24% (TWENTY-FOUR PER CENT).

(2) That the Bank Guarantee of N2m now serve as a direct collateral cover on our Account 4 (Account No. 010200593) where the hitherto existing overdraft facility of N1m on Account 2 (Account No. 010200374) should now be transferred.

We have already written the Commissioner of Finance, Anambra State Government, requesting him to execute in favour of your bank, the relevant forms for domiciliation of the contract payments.

We thank you again for your cooperation.

Yours faithfully,

Bilante International Limited.

SGD

Chief A. O. Okoli

(Chairman).”

It goes without any modicum of reservation that by its letter in Exhibit 5 above, the appellant set out other terms for the loan which it sought from the respondent. Such a ploy equates with a counter-offer and not an acceptance. It amounts to a rejection of the offer in Exhibit 4. To put it bluntly, it destroys the offer and cannot subsequently be accepted or reactivated.The above apart, the stipulated mode of acceptance requested by the respondent in Exhibit 4 to sign a duplicate of same and return it was not complied with by the appellant to its detriment. See: Afolabi v. Polymera Industries (Nig) Ltd. (supra) which is apt on this point. The required mode of acceptance as requested by the offeror must be complied with by the offeree. See Halsbury’s Law of England 3rd Edition Volume 8 at page 74. This common Law stance has been codified by the Contract Law, Cap. 30 Laws of Anambra State 1986. Section 109(1) provides as follows:-“Where an offer prescribes a method by which acceptance of his offer is to be communicated to him, that method shall be adopted by the offeree, and acceptance which fails to comply with such requirement shall be ineffective.”

The above discussion clinches the arguments of the appellant to the contrary on this issue. This is enough to resolve this issue against the appellant. It failed to establish a binding contract between it and the respondent. The court below was right. I resolve the issue against the appellant and in favour of the respondent.

Issue (3) deals with ‘whether the Court of Appeal was right in setting aside the judgment given in favour of the appellant in respect of the de-fixing of its fixed deposit account’.

The trial court held ‘that the de-fixture of the plaintiff’s fixed deposit was a breach of contract by the defendant to de-fix without the agreement or concurrence of the plaintiff’. But the contrary is extant in Exhibit 22A written by the plaintiff to the defendant which gave it a ‘temporary instruction to de-fix our fixed deposit account to the tune of N28m’ and same stated to be ‘in accordance with the agreed de-fixing arrangement’ as pleaded in paragraph 21 of reply to statement of defence. Senior counsel for the respondent submitted that no arrangement was pleaded or given in evidence to show how the defendant acted contrary to the arrangement. He felt that it was wrong for the trial Judge to hold in effect that the de-fixture was the unilateral act of the defendant. The appellant had no answer to same in its reply brief. The submission of the senior counsel in respondent’s brief can well be put on its mettle. The plaintiff did not prove that de-fixture was a unilateral act of the defendant. The plaintiff had no cause of action for damages or loss of interest from the fixed deposit account.

See also  Chief Kehinde Onadehin & Ors v. J. S. Sonuga & Anor (1974) LLJR-SC

The plaintiff which is the appellant herein did not prove any enforceable contract which is binding on the defendant respondent. There can be no breach of a non-existent contract. See: Best (Nig.) Ltd. Blackwood Hodge (Nig.) Ltd. & Ors. (2011) 1 SCNJ 282 at 299 – 300. I cannot surmise any plausible reason for an award of general damages in the circumstance of this matter.

I resolve the two issues against the appellant and in favour of the respondent.

I short, come to the conclusion that the main appeal is devoid of merit. It must be, and is hereby dismissed.

CROSS APPEAL

The defendant counter-claimed for a sum of N13,050,002.79 being debt outstanding in the plaintiff’s accounts with the Bank. The contention of the defendant is that there was no sufficient denial of the defendant’s claim to put the debt in issue requiring proof by viva voce evidence. The defendant placed reliance on Order 9 Rules 9 and 10 of the High Court Rules for the contention.

It was further contended that the Statement of Account – Exhibit 12 series were sufficient to prove the appellant’s alleged indebtedness. Learned counsel for the cross-respondent felt that the appellant sufficiently traversed the respondent’s counter-claim in paragraphs 13 and 15 of the Reply to the Defence.

Learned counsel felt that the burden was clearly placed on the respondent to establish the alleged indebtedness that formed the basis of the counter-claim. Learned counsel for the respondent/cross-appellant felt that the mere tendering of Exhibit 12 series without any viva voce evidence by the appellant was not enough. Learned counsel cited the case of John Orekie Anyakwo v. African Continental Bank Limited (1976) 2 SC 41 at page 46.

A counter-claim is said to be a separate and independent action in its own right. See: Oyegbola v. Esso W.A. (1966) 1 All NLR 170; Ogbonna v. Attorney-General Imo State (1992) 1 NWLR (Pt 220) 647. In this matter, the plaintiff filed a Reply to the counter-claim and joined issues with the defendant. The defendant merely tendered Exhibit 12 series- the statement of Account but did not adduce oral evidence to put same in proper perspective so as to establish the claim. The case of John Orekie Anyakwo v. African Continental Bank Ltd cited by the learned counsel for the cross-respondent is on all fours with the instant appeal. Therein, the plaintiffs tendered Exhibit C Statement of Account therein and called a witness who did not know anything about the transaction. Fatayi-Williams, JSC (as he then was) pronounced that they know or ought to have known right from the beginning that in order to succeed, they had to prove how the debit balance claimed from the defendant was arrived at.

The appellant disputed the alleged indebtedness and maintained that on the contrary, there should be a credit balance of N800,000:00 in its accounts. The respondent Bank ought to know that in order to succeed, they had to demonstrate through oral evidence by an official who is familiar with the accounts how the debit balance claimed was arrived at. The court below was correct in the stance taken by it. I do not see any merit in the cross-appeal. I affirm the judgment of the court below in respect of the cross-appeal.

In conclusion, I see no merit in any of the two appeals. Both the main appeal as well as the cross-appeal is hereby dismissed. I make no order on costs in the prevailing circumstance.


SC.177/1996

More Posts

Section 47 EFCC Act 2004: Short Title

Section 47 EFCC Act 2004 Section 47 of the EFCC Act 2004 is about Short Title. This Act may be cited as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment,

Section 46 EFCC Act 2004: Interpretation

Section 46 EFCC Act 2004 Section 46 of the EFCC Act 2004 is about Interpretation. In this Act – Interpretation “Commission” means the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission established

Section 45 EFCC Act 2004: Savings

Section 45 EFCC Act 2004 Section 45 of the EFCC Act 2004 is about Savings. The repeal of the Act specified in section 43 of this Act shall not

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

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

LawGlobal Hub is your innovative global resource of law and more. We ensure easy accessibility to the laws of countries around the world, among others