An Edo High Court sitting in Benin City has stopped Governor Godwin Obaseki and its agent, the Edo State Geographic Information Service (GIS), from the collection of land use charges in the state, describing it as unconstitutional, null and void.
In a judgement delivered by Justice Peter Akhihiero on Monday, April 25, 2022, in a case brought before him by the claimant, Chief Ferdinand Orbih, SAN, Justice Akhihiero held that issues of land use charges are exclusive duties of the 18 local government areas in the state.
In the Judgement with a suit No B/99D/202, the counsel to the claimant, Kinsley Obamogie, had argued that by Section 7 (1) (5) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (As Amended), the collection of what the Edo State Government through a law, called the Land Use Charge is the exclusive duties of the 18 Local Governments of Edo State specifically donated by the constitution, which does not allow any delegation whatsoever.
Obamogie specifically made reference to Paragraph 1(j) of the Fourth Schedule of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,1999 (As Amended) that the Land Use Charge Law, 2012 was enacted by the Edo State House of Assembly in flagrant breach of Section 7 Subsection 1 and 5 and paragraph 1(j) of the Fourth Schedule to the Constitution.
He submitted that the local governments cannot give up powers given to them by the constitution to collect tenement rates through an Agreement between the 18 Local Governments and Edo State Government, being an obligatory duty imposed by the constitution and he asked the court to grant the reliefs sought by the claimant.
Delivering the judgement, Akinhiero, held among others, that there was no written agreement presented to the court between the 18 Local Governments and the Edo State Government delegating the powers to collect tenement rates to the State government.
The court then held that it is the ouster of express powers provided by the constitution, for the Land Use Change Law to give powers to the Edo State Government using the Edo GIS to collect tenement rates expressly donated by the constitution.
The court subsequently declared the Edo State Land Use Charge, Law, 2012, which purports to take the powers from the Local Governments in Edo State to collect Tenement Rates as null and void.
“Sequel to the foregoing, I hold that in the light of the provision of section 7, subsection 1and 5 of the
constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended ) and paragraph 1(j) of the fourth schedule to the aforesaid 1999 constitution the provision of section 3 (2), 5, 18, 24 and the identified parts of section 27, the land use charge law, 2012 of Edo state are unconstitutional, invalid, null and void and of no effect whatsoever. I, therefore, resolved issue 1 in favour of the claimant,” the judge said.