Senior Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan, Dr. Doyin Okupe
The Nigerian Deposit Insurance
Corporation has asked a Federal High Court in Lagos to place on the
“undefended list” a suit it filed to recover an alleged debt of N34m
from the Senior Special Adviser to
President Goodluck Jonathan, Dr.
Doyin Okupe, and two others.
A plaintiff usually applies to put a matter on undefended list when he believes the respondents have no valid defence.
Okupe’s co-respondents in the suit filed
by the NDIC before Justice Saliu Saidu are Value Trust Investment
Limited and its Director, Mr. Ray Ahazie.
The corporation had instituted the
action in 2007 to recover the alleged debt being the outstanding of a
loan facility obtained by the respondents from Gulf Bank Plc in October
2000.
The corporation, in a statement of claims by its lawyer, Dr. Abiodun Layonu (SAN), said the respondents obtained the loan from the bank to facilitate a contract to supply the Bayelsa State Government with 10,000 metric tons of imported rice.
It, however, stated that though the said
rice was successfully imported on December 28, 2000, the ship was
unable to berth at the Apapa Port in Lagos until January 3, 2001 because
the port was then congested.
The corporation stated further that when
the ship arrived at Port Harcourt on July 26, 2001, an unpaid agency
fee in the sum of $155,000 prevented it from berthing.
According to the NDIC, the said delay in the delivery of the bags of rice led to some becoming caked and some becoming stained.
Bayelsa State Government was said to
have refused to take delivery of the rice, following which Gulf Bank was
forced to commence an open market sale of the goods and in the process
discovering that a good number of the bags of rice were spoilt.
The bank said that at the end of the
sale it was able to recoup only N454, 574,150 of the loan advanced to
the defendants leaving an outstanding sum of N70,425,850.
The outstanding sum was said to have been attracting interest since 2001.
The matter was said to have been
referred to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in September
2005 where the sum of N196,642, 996 of the debt with interest was
waived, leaving only an outstanding of N44m.
The NDIC however claimed that following
the waiver, the defendants were able to pay only N10m out of the N44m
bringing the debt down to N34m.
But since then the defendants were said to have allegedly abandoned the debt or refused to liquidate it.
NDIC in its suit before the Federal High
Court is seeking to reclaim the indebted sum with 21 per cent interest
per annum till it would be finally liquidated.
The corporation also wants the court to put the cost of instituting the legal action on the defendants.
At the resumed hearing of the case
before Justice Saidu, counsel for the NDIC, Mr. Oburume Ayeteno,
informed the court that the corporation had filed an application to
place the suit on the undefended list, adding that he was ready to argue
same.
In response, however, Okupe’s lawyer, Mr. Yemi Gbonegun, said he had already filed a statement of defence to the claims.
The document was however not found in
the court’s records following which Gbonegun sought for an adjournment
to be able to re-file it.
The court adjourned further proceedings till July 8.
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