Chief
Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Mohammed
|
When all the days they go
on holiday and vacation are computed, judges in Nigerian courts work just about
104 days in a year.
The
Guardian report continues:
Out
of 365 days in a year, judges do not sit during weekends -104 days; public
holidays -10 days; annual court vacation- 60 days; Christmas vacation-14 days;
Easter vacation -14 days; conference week- seven days as well as Fridays, which
are usually reserved for judgments, amounting to 52 days.
When
the figures are summed up, they add up to 261 days, implying therefore that
judges sit only for 104 days, when 261 days are deducted from the 365 days in a
year.
Besides,
in an election year and during staggered elections, high court judges who are
members of election petition tribunals, are away for 180 days, amounting to six
months.
Cases
in the courts manned by such judges are adjourned sine die as judges are said
to be away on national assignments.
Similarly,
appellate courts concentrate attention on appeals arising from election
petitions.
Former
president of the West African Bar Association, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN) said the
yearly vacation by courts was designed by the British colonial regime to allow
judges travel to the UK for summer holidays.
“But
at that time, judges were working on Saturdays and the country did not observe
many holidays. The judiciary ought to indigenize the administration of justice
in the country by jettisoning the colonial legacy. Judges should go on leave
for a month in a year which should be structured in a way that our courts do
not collapse during their vacation he stated” Falana said.
According
to him, facilities for effective performance by judges are not available. His
words: “Judges still write longhand while court rooms are not adequate or
conducive to work. Some lack ventilation and others are so dark that judges
cannot sit if there is no light.
In
many states, the courts have no funds to buy generators and diesel. When there
is no light the courts are so hot that the judges and lawyers are allowed to
remove their wigs and gowns.
“As
there are no libraries, judges have to take photocopies of reported cases from
lawyers. The Executive arm of government has refused to comply with the
provisions of the Constitution which has guaranteed financial autonomy for the
judiciary.
Since
the Nigerian Bar Association has failed woefully to ensure that the two
judgments of court on financial autonomy for the judiciary are complied with by
the executive, the judiciary staff union has been left to fight for autonomy
for Nigerian judges.
“The
judiciary should take advantage of the ongoing Constitution review to ensure
that all judges retire at 70 years, while interlocutory appeals are abolished.
Election petition tribunals should be constituted by retired judges so that the
proceedings of courts are not disrupted by the avalanche of election petitions.
After all, most arbitral tribunals are constituted by retired judges,” he
advised.
For
the director, Access to Justice (A2J),Mr. Joseph Otteh, the length of judges’
vacation raises concern.
“We
can acknowledge at the outset, that the line between official working hours and
personal rest time among judges is a blurred one, and this is so even during
yearly vacations. We also concede that the conditions under which some judges
function, at work or home are daunting and can be quite stressful.
“However,
in the face of widespread delays in the delivery of justice, and the
frustrations caused to court users, as well as the negative case clearance
rates found in the courts, the length of vacation time is unsustainable and can
be a significant contributory factor in the congestion we see in court
dockets,” he said, adding that there is a legitimate and reasonable public
interest claim for judges to stay longer on their beats and do more to reduce
case delays.
He
said: “One way to look at this is to ask: If a patient with long term medical
care needs is told that his treatment will have to be suspended for about three
or four months in a year, because his physician is on vacation, will that make
sense to the patient? I believe it will not.
“Cumulatively,
the duration of judges vacation in Nigeria is among the lengthiest in the
world. Just recently for example, the Indian High Court of Gujarat announced
judicial vacations in 2016 for a period of less than one month, from Monday,
the 9th of May, to Sunday, the 5th of June 2016, and Indian High Courts enjoy a
cumulative vacation period of between one and half months and two and a half
months. In Israel, district court judges enjoy a six week vacation while in
Netherlands, it is four weeks.
“With
the caseload in our courts, it is hard to justify the amount of time judges
spend on vacation in Nigeria, even if we admit the difficult conditions under
which they do their important work,” Otteh declared.
In
his own view, Lagos lawyer, Mr. Tony Odiadi said the cost of judges going on
vacation does not outweigh the benefits. He said: “When a system is not in
operation, there is usually a cost, but when matched against the tradition and
values of the system, the said cost is dispensed with. There is also a
Parliamentary tradition of vacation as well as the Executive/ President
vacation periods. With that in mind, the whole exercise amounts to an essential
practice within the various arms of government.”
Odiadi
pointed out that urgent matters affecting rights, responsibilities, freedom and
violations are usually attended to by a vacation judge who sits to treat all
such urgencies.
“Anti-corruption
war of the current administration cannot be compromised or lost because the
court is keeping to its age old tradition of vacation,” he stated.
Similarly,
former chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Lagos branch, Mr. Alex
Mouka believes that the long vacation is justifiable when the pressure under
which judges and lawyers (especially litigation lawyers) work are considered.
He
said: “Busy practitioners work under intense pressure nine months of the year –
arguing cases back to back and travelling to courts in different cities. The
long vacation is the only time such practitioners and judges can rest and
recharge.”
Mouka said cases do not really suffer during the vacation.
Mouka said cases do not really suffer during the vacation.
His
words: “First of all, probably as a result of universal awareness of the
vacation or because it is summer holidays and most litigants are also on
holiday, there is a reduction in the number of matters that come to court
around this period.
“In
any event, while the courts are on vacation, there is always provision for
vacation judges, who will sit in rotation and handle urgent matters and cases
coming up during the vacation. Thus, cases do not suffer.
“Finally,
it must be pointed out that the Magistrate Court, where a lot of matters (both
Civil and Criminal) are disposed off does not go on vacation (although some
Magistrates would arrange to take their annual leave about this time) and is in
fact open throughout the year dispensing justice.”
On
his part, Dr. Kayode Ajulo believes that court’s long vacation is part and
parcel of the legal year, in our jurisdiction as well as in other common law
jurisdictions. He said that it is codified in the legal calendar during which
period, most of judges are on vacation and do not regularly sit to take up
cases.
He
noted that the vacation helps judges rejuvenate themselves. “It very well give
their sagging spirits a boost. It is also to some, a time to thoroughly embark
on legal research of the cases before them, holding conferences, etc. It is a
tradition of the bench that has come to stay,” he stated, adding that it is
technically incorrect to posit that the cost implication of court’s long
vacation amounts to 261 days in a year.
“The
vacation is justiciable, considering the number of criminal cases and
commercial disputes.
What should be reviewed and increased is the number of the judges in Nigeria,” he suggested.
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