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Court of Appeal Act Chapter 75 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 1990
This Act has been amended by Court of Appeal (Amendment) Decree No 65 of 1993
Arrangement of Sections
General
Part II Appeals in Civil cases
Part III Appeals in Criminal Cases from a Court sitting as a Court of first instance
Part IV Appeals in Criminal cases from a Court sitting in its appellate jurisdiction
Part V Procedure
Part VI Supplemental
Court of Appeal Act Chapter 75 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 1990
1st day of October 1976
Part I General
1.
The number of the Justices of the Court of Appeal, including the President of
that Court, shall be forty-one.
2.
(1)
There shall be paid to the President of the Court of Appeal the same salary as
is payable to a Justice
of the Supreme Court. (2)
There shall be paid to each Justice of the Court of Appeal the same salary as is
payable to the Chief Judge
of a State.
(3) There shall also be paid to each Justice on
account of expenses incurred in connection with his office or
otherwise, such
allowances as are considered reasonable by the Federal Government and comparable
with similar appointments.
(4)
The amounts payable under this section shall be charged on and paid out of the
Consolidated Revenue Fund. 3.
(1)
The President shall take precedence of all other Justices of the Court of
Appeal, and the other Justices
shall take precedence after the President in
accordance with such directions as may be given by the President of the Federal
Republic
of Nigeria. (2)
The President shall rank equal to a Justice of the Supreme Court and the other
Justices of the Court of Appeal shall rank next to the Justices of the Supreme
Court and equal to the Chief Judge
of the Federal High Court. 4.
Subject to section 255 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria, a
person holding the office of President or Justice of the Court of Appeal shall
vacate his office when he attains the age of
sixty-five years. 5.
(1)
There shall be appointed for the Court of Appeal, a Chief Registrar and such
number of Registrars and other
officers in the Registrar grades as may be deemed
necessary. (2)
The Chief Registrar and other officers appointed under this section shall
exercise such powers and perform
such duties as may be conferred or imposed upon
them by this Act or rules of court, and subject thereto, by any direction of the
President. 6. (1) The Court of Appeal shall have and use, as occasion may require, a seal having a device or impression approved by the President and bearing the inscription "The Court of Appeal".
(2) The seal of the Court of Appeal shall be kept by
the President who may entrust it or a duplicate thereof
to such officers of the
Court of Appeal as he may think fit. 7.
(1)
The process of the Court of Appeal shall run throughout the Federation. (2)
Any judgment of the Court of Appeal shall have full force and effect throughout
the Federation and shall
be enforceable by all courts and authorities in any
part of the Federation in like manner as if it were a judgment of the High Court
of that part of Nigeria. 8.
(1) The practice and
procedure of the Court of Appeal shall be in accordance with this Act and,
subject to
this Act, in accordance with rules of court. (2)
The President may make rules regulating the practice and procedure of the Court
of Appeal. 9.
The Court of Appeal shall be duly constituted for the purpose of hearing and
determining any appeal if
it consists of at least three Justices:
10.
A single Justice of the Court of Appeal may exercise any power vested in the
Court of Appeal other than
the power of final determination of any cause or
matter:
(a) in appeals in criminal causes or matters, if any
Justice refuses an application for the exercise of any
such power, the person
making the application shall be entitled to have his application determined by
the Court of Appeal; and (b)
in appeals in civil causes or matters, any order, direction or decision made or
given in pursuance of the
power conferred on a single Justice by this section
may be varied, discharged or reversed by the Court of Appeal. 11.
When, after an appeal in any cause or matter has been
fully heard before
the Court of Appeal, judgment is reserved for delivery on
another day, then, on the day appointed for delivery of the judgment,
it shall
not be necessary for all those Justices before whom the appeal in the cause or
matter was heard to be present together
in court, and it shall be lawful for the
opinion of any of them to be reduced into writing and to be read by any other
Justice;
and in any such case the judgment of the Court of Appeal shall have the
same force and effect as if the Justice whose opinion is
so read had been
present in Court of Appeal and had declared his opinion in person. 12.
The Court of Appeal shall have power
to award costs in all civil proceedings
in the Court of Appeal and subject to
the provisions of any other law and to rules of court, it shall be in the
discretion of the
Court of Appeal to determine by whom and to what extent the
costs shall be paid. 13.
Subject to the provisions of any other enactment, in
all proceedings before
the Court of Appeal, the parties may appear in person or
be represented by legal practitioners.
Part
II Appeals
in Civil Cases
14.
This Part of this Act shall apply to
the exercise of the jurisdiction
of the Court of Appeal to hear appeals in civil
causes or matters. 15. (1) Where in the exercise by the High Court of a State or, as the case may be, by the Federal High Court of its original jurisdiction an interlocutory order or decision is made in the course of any suit or matter, an appeal shall, by leave of that court or of the Court of Appeal, lie to the Court of Appeal; but no appeal shall lie from any order made ex parte, or by consent of the parties, or relating only to costs.
(2)
Nothing in subsection (1) of this section, shall be construed
so as to authorise
an application to the Court of Appeal in the first instance for leave to appeal
from an interlocutory order
or decision made in the course of any suit or matter
brought in the High Court of a State or the Federal High Court. 16.
The Court of Appeal may, from time to
time, make any order necessary for
determining the real question in controversy
in the appeal, and may amend any defect or error in the record of appeal, and
may
direct the court below to inquire into and certify its findings on any
question which the Court of Appeal thinks fit to determine
before final judgment
in the appeal and may make an interim order or grant any injunction which the
court below is authorised to
make or grant and may direct any necessary
inquiries or accounts to be made or taken and generally shall have full
jurisdiction
over the whole proceedings as if the proceedings had been
instituted in the Court of Appeal as court of first instance and may re-hear
the
case in whole or in part or may remit it to the court below for the purpose of
such re-hearing or may give such other directions
as to the manner in which the
court below shall deal with the case in accordance with the powers of that
court, or, in the case
of an appeal from the court below in that court's
appellate jurisdiction, order the case to be re-heard by a court of competent
jurisdiction. 17.
The Court of Appeal shall not grant a new
trial or reverse any judgment
by reason of the ruling of any court that the
stamp upon any document is sufficient or that the document does not require a
stamp. 18.
An appeal under this Part of this Act
shall not operate as a stay of execution,
but the Court of Appeal may order a
stay of execution either unconditionally or upon the performance of such
conditions as may
be imposed in accordance with rules of court.
Part
III Appeals
in Criminal cases from a Court sitting as a Court of First instance
19.
This Part of this Act shall apply to the
exercise of the jurisdiction of the
Court of Appeal to hear appeals in criminal
causes or matters from decisions of the court below sitting at first instance. 20.
(1)
The Court of Appeal on any appeal under this Part
of this Act against conviction
or against an order of acquittal, discharge or
dismissal, shall allow the appeal if it thinks that the verdict should be set
aside
on the ground that it is unreasonable or cannot be supported having regard
to the evidence, or that the judgment of the court below
should be set aside on
the ground of a wrong decision on any question of law or that on any ground
there was a miscarriage of justice
and in any other case, the Court of Appeal
shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (3) of this section and section
21 of
this Act, dismiss the appeal:
Provided
that the Court of Appeal may, notwithstanding that it is of opinion that the
point raised in the appeal might be decided
in favour of the appellant, dismiss
the appeal if it considers that no substantial miscarriage of justice has
actually occurred.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court
of Appeal shall, if it allows
an appeal against conviction, quash the conviction
and direct a judgment and verdict of acquittal to be entered or order the
appellant
to be re-tried by a court of competent jurisdiction.
(3)
On an appeal against
sentence or, subject to the provisions of this Act,
on an appeal against
conviction, the Court of Appeal shall, if it thinks that a different sentence
should have been passed, quash
the sentence passed at the trial and pass such
other sentence warranted in law (whether more or less severe) in substitution
therefor
as it thinks ought to have been passed, and if not of that opinion
shall, in the appeal against sentence, dismiss the appeal.
(4) Subject to
the provisions of this Act, the Appeal shall, if it allows
an appeal against
acquittal or dismissal, direct a judgment and verdict of conviction entered and
pass such sentence as the court
below passed, or order the appellant to be
re-tried by competent jurisdiction. 21.
(1)
If it appears to the Court of Appeal that an
appellant, though not properly convicted
on some count or part of the
information or charge, has been properly convicted on some other count or part
of the information
or charge, the Court of Appeal may either affirm the sentence
passed appellant at the trial, or pass such sentence in substitution
therefor as
it thinks proper, and as may be warranted in law by the verdict on the count or
part of the information or charge on
which the Court of Appeal considers that
the appellant has been properly convicted.
(2) Where an appellant
has been convicted of and the court which tried him could
on the information or
charge have found him guilty of some other offence, and on the finding of the
trial court, it appears to
the Court of Appeal that that court must have been
satisfied of facts which proved him guilty of that other offence, the Court of
A
instead of allowing or dismissing the appeal, substitute for the verdict found
by such court, a verdict of guilty of that offence
and pass such sentence in
substitution for the sentence passed at the trial as may be warranted in law for
that other offence,
not being a sentence of greater severity.
(3)
If on any appeal it appears to
the Court of Appeal that, although the appellant
was guilty of the act or
omission charged against him, he was insane at the time the act was done or
omission made so as not to
be responsible according to law for his action, the
Court of Appeal may quash the sentence passed at the trial and order the
appellant
to be kept in custody as a person of unsound mind in such place and in
such manner as the Court of Appeal may direct pleasure of
the President of the
Federal Republic, be known, and the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
may thereupon and from time
to time, give such order for the safe custody of the
appellant during pleasure in such place and in such manner as the President
of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria may see fit. 22.
(1)
Where any law in force in the State from which an appeal is
brought has suspended the
operation of any order made on conviction by the court
before which the appellant was convicted, for the payment of compensation
or of
any of the expenses of the prosecution, or for the imprisonment or other
punishment imposed on the person convicted or for
the restoration of any
property to any person, and the re-vesting in case of any such conviction in the
original owner or his personal
representative of the property in stolen goods,
such order shall continue to be suspended until the determination of the appeal
if notice of appeal, or notice of application for leave to appeal is given
within thirty days of the date of the conviction.
(2)
In cases where the operation of an order is
suspended until the determination
of the appeal, the order shall not take effect
if the conviction is quashed on appeal.
(3) The Court of
Appeal may by order annul or vary any order made by the court
before which the
appellant was convicted for the payment of compensation or of any other expenses
of the prosecution or for the
imprisonment or other punishment imposed on the
person convicted or for the restoration of any property to any person although
the conviction is not quashed, and the order, if annulled, shall not take
effect, and, if varied, shall take effect as so varied.
Part
IV Appeals
in Criminal cases from a Court sitting in its appellate jurisdiction
23.
This Part of this Act shall apply to the
exercise of the jurisdiction of
the Court of Appeal to hear appeals from
decisions of the court below in criminal causes or matters in which an appeal
has been
brought to the court below from some other court. 24.
On the hearing of an appeal under this Part of
this Act, the Court of Appeal
may exercise any power that could have been
exercised by the court below or may order the case to be re-tried by a court of
competent
jurisdiction.
Part
V Procedure
25. (1) Where a person desires to appeal to the Court of Appeal, he shall give notice of appeal or notice of his application for leave to appeal in such manner as may be directed by rules of court within the period prescribed by the provision of subsection (2) of this section that is applicable to the case.
(2) The periods for the
giving of notice of appeal or notice of application for leave
to appeal are- (a)
in an appeal in a civil cause or matter, fourteen days where
the appeal is
against an interlocutory decision and three months where the appeal is against a
final decision; (b)
in an appeal in a criminal
cause or matter, ninety days from
the date of the decision appealed against.
(3)
Where an application for leave to appeal is made
in the first instance to the
court below, a person making such application
shall, in addition to the period prescribed by subsection (2) of this section,
be
allowed a further period of fifteen days, from the date of the determination
of the application by the court below, to make another
application to the Court
of Appeal.
(4)
The Court of Appeal may extend the periods prescribed in subsections (2) and
(3)
of this section. 26.
The Court of Appeal may, at any time assign
counsel to an appellant in any
appeal or proceedings preliminary or incidental
to an appeal in which, in the opinion of the Court of Appeal, it appears
desirable
in the interest of justice that the appellant should have legal
assistance, and that he has not sufficient means to enable him to
obtain that
assistance.
27.
In
the exercise of its jurisdiction, the Court of Appeal may, if it thinks it
necessary or expedient in the interest of Justice-
(a)
order the production of any
document, exhibit, or other thing
connected with the proceedings, the production
of which appears to it necessary for the determination of the case; (b)
order any witnesses who would
have been compellable witnesses
at the trial to attend and be examined before
the Court of Appeal, whether they were or were not called at the trial, or order
the examination of any such witnesses to be conducted in manner provided by
rules of court, or, in the absence of rules of court
making provision in that
behalf, as it may direct, before any Justice of the Court of Appeal or before
any officer of the Court
of Appeal or other person appointed by the Court of
Appeal for the purpose, and allow the admission of any depositions so taken
as
evidence before the Court of Appeal; (c)
receive the evidence, if tendered,
of any witness (including the
appellant) who is competent but not compellable
witness, and, if the appellant makes an application for the purpose, of the
husband
or wife of the appellant, in cases where the evidence of the husband or
wife could not have been given at the trial except on such
an application; and (d)
where any question arising on
the appeal involves prolonged
examination of documents or accounts, or any
scientific or local investigation, which cannot in the opinion of the Court of
Appeal
conveniently be conducted before the Court of Appeal, order the reference
of the question in matter provided by rules of court,
or in the absence of rules
of court making provision in that behalf, as it may direct, for enquiry and
report, to a special commissioner
appointed by the Court of Appeal, and act upon
the report of any such commissioner so far as it thinks fit to adopt it; and
exercise
in relation to the proceedings of the Court of Appeal, any other powers
which may for the time being be prescribed by rules of court,
and issue any
warrants necessary for enforcing the orders or sentences of the Court of Appeal:
Provided
that in no case shall a sentence be increased by reason of or in consideration
of any evidence that was not given at the
trial. 28.
(1)
On
the hearing of an appeal in a criminal cause or matter, an appellant,
notwithstanding that he is in custody, shall be entitled
to be present, if he so
desires, except where the appeal is on some ground involving a question of law
alone, but in that ease,
and on an application for leave to appeal and on any
proceedings preliminary or incidental to an appeal, he shall not be entitled
to
be present, unless where rules of court provide that he shall have the right to
be present or where the Court of Appeal gives
him leave to be present.
(2) The power of the
Court of Appeal to pass any sentence under this Act may be
exercised
notwithstanding that the appellant is for any reason not present.
(3)
The right of an appellant who is in custody to be present
at the hearing of his
appeal shall be subject to his paying all expenses of and incidental to his
transfer to and from the place
where the Court of Appeal sits for the
determination of his appeal:
(4)
An appellant who does not appear at the hearing of his appeal
or application for
leave to appeal by counsel, may present his appeal or argument in writing and
any appeal or argument so presented
shall be considered by the Court of Appeal. 29.
(1)
The Court of Appeal may, if it thinks fit, on the
application of an appellant, admit
the appellant to bail pending the
determination of his appeal.
(2) The time during which
an appellant, pending the determination of his appeal, is
admitted to bail shall
not count as part of any term of imprisonment under his sentence and, any
imprisonment under the sentence
of an appellant, whether it is the sentence
passed by the trial court or the sentence passed by the court below on appeal or
the
sentence of the Court of Appeal, shall, subject to any direction which may
be given by the Court of Appeal, be deemed to be resumed
or to begin to run, as
the case requires, from the day on which he is received into prison under the
sentence. (3)
In any case in which the appellant has
received special treatment pending
the hearing of his appeal in accordance with
the provisions of any law relating to prisons, the Court of Appeal shall fix the
day
from which the sentence shall be deemed to begin to run. 30.
If it appears to the Registrar that any
notice of appeal against a conviction
purporting to be on a ground of appeal
which involves a question of law alone does not show any substantial ground of
appeal, the
Registrar may refer the appeal to any Justice of the Court of Appeal
and such Justice may, if he is of the same opinion, direct
the Registrar to
refer the appeal to the Court of Appeal for summary determination, and, when the
case is so referred, the Court
of Appeal may if it considers that the appeal is
frivolous or vexatious, and can be determined without adjourning the same for a
full hearing, dismiss the appeal summarily without calling on any persons to
attend the hearing or to appear for the State thereon.
Part
VI Supplemental
31.
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires- "appeal"
includes an application for leave to appeal; "appellant"
means any person who desires to appeal or appeals from a decision of the court
below or who applies for leave
to so appeal, and includes a legal practitioner
representing such a person in that behalf; "cause"
includes any action, suit or other original proceeding between a plaintiff and a
defendant or an applicant and
a respondent, and any criminal proceeding; "Court
of Appeal" means the Court of Appeal established by section 217 of the
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; "court
below" means the court from which an appeal is brought; "Justice"
means a Justice of the Court of Appeal and includes the President of that Court; "judgment"
includes decision or order; "matter"
includes any proceeding in a court not in a cause; "the
President" means the President of the Court of Appeal; "Registrar"
means the Chief Registrar of the Court of Appeal, any Senior Registrar or
Registrar of the Court of Appeal
or any other officer of the Court of Appeal by
whatever title called exercising functions analogous to those of a Registrar of
the Court of Appeal; "rules
of court" means rules of court made or deemed to have been made under this
Act; "sentence"
includes a recommendation; "suit"
includes action; "verdict"
includes the decision of a judge or court as to whether or not the accused
person is guilty in cases where such
decision rests with the judge or court. 32.
This Act may be cited as the Court of Appeal Act.
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