• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Elendu Reports Online
Fidelity Bank NG
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Governance
  • Education
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Funke Akindele, Husband Set To Part Ways

    Funke Akindele, Husband Set To Part Ways

    The Oratory, Street And Homeless Children Movie Premieres In Abuja

    The Oratory, Street And Homeless Children Movie Premieres In Abuja

    MURIC wants Buhari to ban Big Brother Naija show

    Breaking: BBNaija Whitemoney Takes Home The Money

    Rachael Oniga’s Death Not COVID-19 Related – Son

    Rachael Oniga’s Death Not COVID-19 Related – Son

    Tunde Kelani’s Ayinla Takes Ibadan On A Cultural Extravaganza

    Tunde Kelani’s Ayinla Takes Ibadan On A Cultural Extravaganza

    Glitz, Glamour As Celebrities, Dignitaries Storm Film House Cinema Ibadan For  ‘Okoto’ (The Series) Premiere

    Glitz, Glamour As Celebrities, Dignitaries Storm Film House Cinema Ibadan For  ‘Okoto’ (The Series) Premiere

  • Photo News
  • World News
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Governance
  • Education
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Funke Akindele, Husband Set To Part Ways

    Funke Akindele, Husband Set To Part Ways

    The Oratory, Street And Homeless Children Movie Premieres In Abuja

    The Oratory, Street And Homeless Children Movie Premieres In Abuja

    MURIC wants Buhari to ban Big Brother Naija show

    Breaking: BBNaija Whitemoney Takes Home The Money

    Rachael Oniga’s Death Not COVID-19 Related – Son

    Rachael Oniga’s Death Not COVID-19 Related – Son

    Tunde Kelani’s Ayinla Takes Ibadan On A Cultural Extravaganza

    Tunde Kelani’s Ayinla Takes Ibadan On A Cultural Extravaganza

    Glitz, Glamour As Celebrities, Dignitaries Storm Film House Cinema Ibadan For  ‘Okoto’ (The Series) Premiere

    Glitz, Glamour As Celebrities, Dignitaries Storm Film House Cinema Ibadan For  ‘Okoto’ (The Series) Premiere

  • Photo News
  • World News
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Elendu Reports Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

James Omotosho: A Judge and His À La Carte Law

Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

by Elendu Reports
November 9, 2025
in Featured
0
James Omotosho: A Judge and His À La Carte Law
0
SHARES
FacebookTwitterWhatsappEmail
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

​One month after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu proclaimeda state of emergency over Rivers State last March, on 18 April 2025, former Rivers State Governor, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, and Life Member of the Body of Benchers, Nyesom Wike, held one of his beverage-powered media encounters in Abuja, during which he proclaimed with characteristic exuberance that his successor as Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, “should thank Mr. President” for the emergency proclamation.

On 22 October, 2025, this line officially made it into Nigerian jurisprudence when James Omotosho, a judge of the Federal High Court of Nigeria, decided in Suit No. FHC/PH/CS/53/2025 that the plaintiff “should be grateful” that the president proclaimed the emergency over Rivers State. The messenger through whom these words have now officially become law in Nigeria offers important insights into what has become the fate of judicial office in the country.

When he terminated the emergency rule in Rivers State in September 2025, President Tinubu took time to acknowledge“over 40 cases in the courts in Abuja, Port Harcourt, and Yenagoa” filed to challenge the declaration, noting with a touch of presidential menace that “some cases are still pending in the courts as of today.” On 22 April, James Omotosho decided one of those pending cases.

The plaintiff in the case was Samuel Amatonjie, who describes himself as a resident and registered voter in Rivers State, as well as a member of the Nigerian Bar Association, (NBA). That means he is also a lawyer. The six defendants in the case included the President of Nigeria, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Attorney-General of the Federation, the National Assembly, and the Military Administrator of the Emergency.

Although he filed the case at the Port Harcourt Division of the Federal High Court, Mr. Amatonjie’s case traveled inexplicably to Abuja where it inexorably ended up in the court of James Omotosho, a judge whose fixation with all matters in which Nyesom Wike has even the most tangential of interestshas become plainly pathological. Some context is essential here.

In October 2023, a mere five months after the end of Mr. Wike’s tenure as governor of Rivers State, the State House of Assembly, the site of an early attempt to remove the governor, suffered a conveniently–timed fire incident. It became evident that the relationship between Mr. Wike and Siminalayi Fubara, his hand-picked successor, was hopelessly fractured. In the wake of that, the state legislature splintered into two factions, respectively loyal to the incumbent governor and to his predecessor.

On 6 November 2023, the faction loyal to the governor headed to the Federal High Court in Port Harcourt, the State capital, seeking judicial legitimation of its claims to being in lawful control of the parliamentary gavel. They applied in proceedings intended to be heard without the other parties present (ex-parte) for an order to restrain the other faction from interfering with their conduct of legislative duties. Delivering her ruling the following day in Suit No. FHC/PH/CS/240/2023, Phoebe Ayua, the presiding judge, declined this application; required that all sides be put on notice for a full hearing; and ordered that the parties “should not take any step concerning the subject matter, since the matter is already before this court.”

Three weeks later, on 29 November 2023, while this order remained undischarged, Martin Amaewhule, the Speaker of the faction in the State House of Assembly loyal to Mr. Wike and, himself a named defendant in the proceedings before Justice Phoebe Ayua, filed Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/1613/2023 before the same Federal High Court in Abuja on the same subject matter. Like the previous suit, Amaewhule sought judicial legitimation of a factional claim to control of the Rivers State legislature,asking the court to restrain federal authorities and institutions as well as the Governor of Rivers State from exerting financial or other pressures on them and ensuring release to them of all federal allocations standing to the credit of the Rivers State House of Assembly.

As with the previous suit in Port Harcourt, the plaintiffs in the case before the Federal High Court invited the judge in Abuja to grant them these reliefs without hearing the named defendants. The following day, on 30 November, James Omotosho, the judge who presided over the proceedings in Abuja, ruled swiftly and, unlike his colleague in the Port Harcourt case, promptly granted all the reliefs sought without hearing any other person.

This was not the first time that James Omotosho would portray himself as a fully subscribed, judicial Man Friday, granting curious orders deeply solicitous of the political interests of Mr. Wike. In the month originally preceding the governorship election in 2019, he issued an order restraining the All Progressives Congress (APC), the main opposition party in Rivers State, from presenting any candidate in the governorship election, all but ensuring that the governorship election in the State was Mr. Wike’s electoral non-event.

In February 2023, James Omotosho again issued another order restraining the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) – who were not afforded a hearing –  from taking disciplinary measures against Mr. Wike on allegations of anti-party activities.

In January 2024, James Omotosho voided the Appropriations of Rivers State and issued a most remarkable of à la carte judicial orders restraining the State Governor from “frustrating” the Amaewhule faction of the House of Assembly loyal to Mr. Wike.

On the last day of October 2025, the same judge struck again in proceedings filed by Mr. Wike’s loyalists, granting them an à la carte order to invalidate the proposed national convention of the PDP by restraining the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from attending or recognizing it.

The sheer range of the magnetic forces that bind this judge with Mr. Wike’s interests is well beyond the ordinary laws of both physics and of judicial administration. Those forces were on full advertisement in this judgment on Samuel Amatonjie case. First, the judge held that he did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter. Next, he held that Mr. Amatonjie lacked the standing to bring the case anyway. Indeed, the judge held that the case was so void that “the originating process ought not to have been accepted for filing, let alone wasting the precious time of the court.”

The case ought to have ended there. But the judge would not be assuaged and his judgment, enthusiastically supported with the authority of Wikipedia, swiftly descended into farce.

Turning to the requirement for the National Assembly to approve emergency rule by a joint resolution of two-thirds majority, the James Omotosho ruled that “nowhere in section 305 of the Constitution is there any specific method” for reaching this resolution and, therefore, that “if the National Assembly in their discretion decide to use voice votes in approving the proclamation, they are within their constitutional powers to do the same.” The man has his unique Omotosho version of the Constitution.

Having held that he lacked jurisdiction and the claimant lacked standing to bring the case, James Omotosho, however,“dismissed” the case. But he reserved his best for last, roundingoff with an audacious act of judicial malpractice by imposing costs of Nine Million Naira on the Plaintiff in favour of Respondents, each of whom was sued in institutional capacity.

The only thing more bizarre than the jurisprudence or the orders that emanate from the court of James Omotosho is the predictability with which all cases affecting the political interests of Mr. Wike at the Federal High Court improbably end up on his docket. That is a matter of à la carte law which can only be explained by the troika of Mr. Wike, his favorite judge,and the current Chief Judge of the Federal High Court.

190 years ago, when he wrote the classic, Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville decided to devote a chapter to “judicial power”, which he described as “a political power of the first order.” In the Court of James Omotosho, de Tocqueville finds his proof as well as the falsification of his thesis. The ends may be political but can that also be said of the means by which they are procured?

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at [email protected]

​

2

Tags: African lawyersJusticelawyersNigerian lawNigerian lawyers
ShareTweetSendSend
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Words of wisdom with Pastor Dickson Meso Ibekwe

Elendu Reports

Elendu Reports

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.


ADVERTISEMENT

News

James Omotosho: A Judge and His À La Carte Law

James Omotosho: A Judge and His À La Carte Law

by Elendu Reports
November 9, 2025
0

...

Words of wisdom with Pastor Dickson Meso Ibekwe

Words of wisdom with Pastor Dickson Meso Ibekwe

by Elendu Reports
November 8, 2025
0

...

FG targets Guinness record with longest dining table In Abuja

FG targets Guinness record with longest dining table In Abuja

by Elendu Reports
November 6, 2025
0

...

Dangote Assures Nigerians of Steady Petrol, Diesel Supply

Dangote Assures Nigerians of Steady Petrol, Diesel Supply

by Elendu Reports
November 2, 2025
0

...

Load More
ADVERTISEMENT
Elendu Reports Online

  • Business
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Faith
  • Featured
  • Governance
  • ICT
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Photo News
  • Politics
  • Promoted
  • Sports
  • Top News
  • World News

James Omotosho: A Judge and His À La Carte Law

Words of wisdom with Pastor Dickson Meso Ibekwe

FG targets Guinness record with longest dining table In Abuja

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© Elendu Reports Online | Designed by TeamInnovate

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Governance
  • Education
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Photo News
  • World News
  • Opinion

© Elendu Reports Online | Designed by TeamInnovate

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.