Court Vacates Order Freezing Capital Oil Accounts
Court Vacates Order Freezing Capital Oil Accounts
Nnamdi Felix / Abuja
Nearly a month after a Federal High Court made an order
freezing his accounts and granting control of his company's assets and
facilities to Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria, Amcon, reprieve came to
embattled Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah, owner of Capital Oil and Gas Industries Limited, as
the court on Wednesday discharged the order it granted freezing the properties
of the company.
The court had last month granted the Asset Management
Corporation of Nigeria, Amcon, immediate possession of properties belonging to
the company and its owner, Ifeanyi Ubah.
The order freezing the company's properties was made under Sections 49 and 50 of Amcon's Act.
While discharging the order, Justice Abdul Kafarati held
that Amcon did not have to destroy or
kill a going concern just because it is owing it some debt.
He upheld the argument of Mr. Ifeanyi Uba's lawyer, Chief
Wole Olanipekun, a senior advocate of Nigeria, to the effect that the duty of
Amcon was to make sure that debtors pay their debt and not to push them
out of business.
The judge also faulted the method adopted by Amcon in
securing the exparte order freezing the company's accounts. Although the judge
could not find any section of the Amcon Act he could rely on to vacate the
order, he chose to rely on the inherent jurisdiction of the court and Section 6 (6) of the Constitution.
Justice Kafarati also stated that it was not in doubt that
the company's business was a going concern when the order was made. He also
said that Amcon did not gain anything from the order he granted them since
about a month ago.
He noted that since Amcon could not dispose the properties while the case was
in court, that it is prudent to allow the Mr. Ubah to continue to operate his
business and organise how to repay the debt. He therefore directed Amcon to
allow Capital Oil continue with its business while the company negotiates how
to pay the debt.
"To stop the company from operating might have adverse
effect on the economy of the country, parties should sit down and agree on how the
debt would be repaid instead of shutting down the business"
The court had earlier varied the order following an
application by the company for an order to allow it pay its workers' salaries.
Ubah and Capital Oil are allegedly indebted to Amcon to the
tune of N48.014 billion and were among the 113 companies and 419
directors/shareholders that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, listed as Amcon's
debtors.
The banks have since been barred from extending further
credit to the debtor companies and their directors until they repay their
loans.
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