Justices of the Supreme Court |
The acting Chief Justice
of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen, has said appointing more judges or
increasing the number of courtrooms are not the solutions to the problem of
delayed justice dispensation in the country.
The
Punch report continues:
The
acting CJN said the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court would remain
congested so long as the number of appeals proceeding from the high courts was
not regulated.
Justice
Onnoghen said this on Monday in Lagos while inaugurating the newly refurbished
building of the Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal on Lagos Island.
He
argued that it was erroneous to believe that delay at the Supreme Court was as
a result of not having up to 21 justices prescribed by the constitution.
He
noted that even the United States of America, with a higher population, had
only nine Supreme Court Justices.
He
argued that the current 17 justices on the Supreme Court bench were just enough
for the country if the number of appeals proceeding to the appellate and apex
courts was regulated.
Justice
Onnoghen stated, “We always think that we can solve the problem of congestion
in our courts by appointing more judges or justices, creating more divisions of
the court; because the idea is that the more you have, the lesser the workload
in court, but it has not been so; but it has not been proved right. It has
rather been proved wrong, because the more divisions you create, the more cases
get filed. The more judges and justices you appoint, the more cases that get
filed; which points to the fact that we have really not hit the nail on the
head.
“The
solution lies in making every appeal to the Court of Appeal and the Supreme
Court by leave; that is where the solution lies, it doesn’t lie in multiplying
the number of divisions and the judges. No. It lies in controlling the jurisdiction
of the court, the quantity, the number of cases that get to the Court of Appeal
and the Supreme Court.”
“If
we have 21 vacancies for the Supreme Court, believing that will be the
solution; no, it isn’t. Apart from the physical constraint that the Supreme
Court has in terms of space, there is equally the other idea that we should
look at. Which of the countries in the whole world can you point to that has
that kind of number of Justices on the Supreme Court bench? There is none. Even
in America, as large as it is, there are nine. Go to India, none.
“The
number 17 is adequate for our size if we can only solve the problem by
controlling the volume of traffic that gets to the Supreme Court.”
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