B.A. Morohunfola v Kwara State College of Technology (SC 170/1987) [1990] NGSC 16 (5 July 1990)

B.A. Morohunfola v Kwara State College of Technology (SC 170/1987) [1990] NGSC 16 (5 July 1990)

In The Supreme Court of Nigeria

On Friday, the 6th day of July 1990

SC 170/1987

Between

B.A. Morohunfola                           .......            Applicant

And

Kwara  State College of Technology                  .......            Respondent

 

Judgment of the Court

Delivered by

Belgore, J.S.C. 

I dismissed this appeal on the 9th day of April, 1990 and reserved the reasons for so doing to today. I now give my reasons.

The appellant was the plaintiff at the trial High Court in Ilorin and after he was non-suited there, he appealed to the Court of Appeal, the respon­dent who was the defendant also cross-appealed asking that the correct ver­dict of the trial Court ought to be that of dismissal and not non-suit. The appellant’s appeal was dismissed and the cross-appeal was allowed. The plead­ings that one would say joined the issues between the parties are very short. The statement of claim reads as follows:

 

STATEMENT OF CLAIM

 

1.    By a letter from the Principal of the College acting for and on behalf of the defendant a letter dated the 17th April, 1980 was issued to the plaintiff purportedly terminating the plaintiffs service with the defendant, which said letter the plaintiff hereby pleads:

                               

2.    The plaintiff was the defendant's Deputy Registrar on GL 14.

 

3.    The defendant's Sole Administrator's appointment had terminated on or before 15/4/80 and His Excellency, Alhaji Adamu Atta, the Governor of Kwara State had not appointment a new Governing Council or another Sole Ad­ministrator.

 

Wherefore the plaintiff claims as per his writ of summons, viz :

 

The plaintiffs claim is for

 

(i)    a  DECLARATION

 

(a)    that the purported termination of the plaintiff's ap­pointment by a letter from an agent of the defendant dated the 17th April, 1980 to the plaintiff is null and void as the Sole Administrator's Office had terminated on or before (15/4/80) and a Governing Council had not been set up by His Excellency the Governor of Kwara State, Alhaji Adamu Atta and

 

(b)    that the plaintiff is entitled to his emolument until the determination of this suit and thereafter until the plaintiff is legitimately relieved of his post and

 

(ii)     a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant and/or its agents and/or servants from filling the post, which the plaintiff contends is not vacant.

 

Dated this 10th day of June, 1982.

(Sgd.)

J.O.Ijaodola

Plaintiff's Solicitor.

 

And against this unusually short statement of claim is a safely short statement of defence reading as follows:

 

STATEMENT OF DEFENCE

 

SAVE AND EXCEPT as may hereinafter expressly admit­ted the defendant denies each and every allegation of fact con­tained in the statement of claim as if such allegations were set out seriatim and specifically traversed.

 

1.    The defendant denies paragraphs I 2 and 3 of the statement of claim and puts the plaintiff to the strictest proof thereof

 

2.    In further answer to paragraphs I and 3 of the statement of claim, the defendant avers that the plaintiff's appointment was terminated in accordance with the Regulations Governing Conditions of Service for its senior staff and that the plaintiff was paid 3 months salaries in lieu of notice in accor­dance with the said regulations. The defendant shall rely on the said regulation at the trial of this case.

               

3.    The defendant further avers that the consent of either the Governing Council or the Sole Administrator was not needed in paying the plaintiff the said three months salaries or in terminating him since the plaintiff was not terminated for misconduct.

 

4.    The defendant further states that the plaintiff has since been in gainful employment and that as at now, he is the principal and/or proprietor of a post primary school in Offa, Kwara State, hence, he is not entitled to any emolument from it.

 

5.    WHEREOF the defendant prays the court to dismiss the plaintiff's case as it is frivolous. vexatious and discloses no cause of action.

 

Dated this 29th of April, 1983.

(Sgd.)

Wole Olanipekun

Defendant's Solicitor

 

It is upon the meagre statement of claim traversed by statement of defence that the appellant wanted to have his declaration that Exhibit I was null and void and the purported termination of his appointment as Registrar of Kwara College of Technology was of no effect. Learned trial Judge observed inter alia as follows:

 

I have scrutinised all the pipers filed in this case; and upon due reflection it seems to me that the statement of claim is so grossly inadequate that it falls far short of the minimum practically required under Order It of the High Court (Civil Proce­dure) Rules 1975. It is just too brief to be regarded as pleadings and too deficient to he relied upon for any purpose in this suit. It cannot be over-emphasised that evidence must be based on the pleadings and no testimony should lie in vacuum. The plaintiff ought only to be permitted to establish his claim against the defendant on the facts as pleaded or borne out by the Writ of Summon and the statement of claim. I dare say that much of the facts received in evidence in this case has no bearing or relevance to the plaintiff's pleading. They are completely outside it as will be pointed out presently. The  Writ of Summons and the statement of claim together fail to comply with the elementary principle of briefly describing each of the parties, neither are there any averments relating to the appointment of the plaintiff as such.

 

It is indeed necessary to allege the fact of the plaintiffs appointment by the defendant, its date, duration and conditions as well as the plaintiffs office, status or position at the time of his appointment. None of these was pleaded or testified to by the plaintiff'

               

The trial court found no merit in the appellant's case and non-suited him. The appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal. and the respondent also cross-appealed asking for the case to be dismissed rather than be non-suited. The appellant's appeal was dismissed and the cross-appeal was allowed. Against this judgment the appellant has appealed to this court.

 

There were three grounds of appeal which can be summarised as follows:

 

(i)    that the court of Appeal was in error in holding that because of non-pleading and tendering of the original letter of appointment, the appellant could not give evidence of such appointment and this main plank of his case failed.

 

(ii)    that there was no legitimate authority of the respondent compe­tent to terminate the appointment ~'f the appellant.

 

(iii)    that by receiving three months salary in lieu of notice, the appointment.

 

This is an unusual case. In our High courts the best method of explaining issues between the parties before hearing is by way of pleadings. Pleadings must contain facts, facts only, on which a party relies for his case; the facts must be material. In the matter of pleading it is for the  plaintiff to plead sufficient material facts so that the defendant will know the case he is to face; the it is then up to  defendant to admit or traverse those  facts. If a right is pleaded, e.g. those rights under Chapter IV of the constitution, sufficient material facts must be pleaded to point unequivocally that those rights have been infringed. See Ransome-Kuti v. Attorney-General of the Federation (1985) 2N.W.L.R.(P.6) 211. Thus, facts not pleaded go to no issue; and because parties are bound by their pleadings, evidence received on unpleaded facts must he expunged from the record. Ajide v. Kelani (1985) 3 N.W.L.R. (Pt.12) 248;  A-G., Anambra State v. Onuselogu (1987)4 N.W.L.R. (Pt.66) 547,548 55].

 

In the trial Court all the appellant did amounted to mere general pleading with material facts left scanty. The result is that the respondent as defendant answered only to what was pleaded and nothing more. I do not believe heavier burden is placed by law on the respondent as defendant in this case. For, in all matters it is incumbent on the person who asserts to prove and if in the pleading the plaintiff has not made clear assertion, it does not behove the defendant to clarify more than what he has been confronted A with. Thus even though a party is to plead facts only and not the evidence by which those facts are to be proved, matters such as fraud, statutory exception, defence of laches, res ipsa loquitur, are special matters which must be specifically pleaded because they are material facts. Odumosu V. African Continental Bank Ltd. (1976) 11 S.C. 261 at 269; Attorney General (Anambra) v. Onuselogu Ltd. (1987) 4 N.W.L.R (Pt.66) 547.          

 

There was no evidence before the trial court that the appellant was employed by the respondent because there is nothing in the pleading of the appellant to indicate when he was employed, what are the terms and condi­tions of his employment, what are his rights and obligations. The court of trial was just confronted with a letter of termination without more; the plain­tiff's statement of claim is too vague and lacking in particulars not only by its brevity but also by lack of material particulars that most of the evidence led during trial actually went to no issue.

 

The appellant's case had vitually collapsed at the court of first instance and the very able judgment of the Adeniyi J., was concluded with a generous verdict of non suit. The court of Appeal rightly set aside the non-suit by en­tering a verdict of dismissal. What happened in that court is that the appellant by the inadequate pleading and offering of inadmissible evidence woe­fully failed to prove his case. It was not a matter of mere technical defect in the case; it was the failure to prove his case. The verdict in such a case is not to non-suit, it should have been dismissed outright.

 

It was for the foregoing reasons that I dismissed this appeal on 9th day of April, 1990 and awarded N500.00 costs against the appellant.

 

 

Judgment delivered by

Obaseki, J.S.C.

 

On the 9th day of April 1990, this appeal came up for hearing before this court. After reading the briefs of argument filed by the parties and hearing counsel at the oral hearing, I dismissed the appeal for lack of substance and reserved my reasons for the judgment till today.

 

However, before now, I had the advantage of reading in advance the draft of the reasons for judgment just delivered by my learned brother, Belgore, J.S.C.

 

The claim before the High Court of Kwara State filed by the plaintiff/appellant against the defendant/respondent was for

 

(i)    Declaration

 

(a)    that the purported termination of plaintiff's appointment 6 by a letter from an agent of the defendant is null and void;

 

(b)    that the plaintiff is entitled to his emolument until the de­termination of this suit and thereafter until the plaintiff is legitimately relieved of his post; and

 

(ii)    a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant and/or its agents and/or servants from filling the post which the plaintiff contends is not vacant.

 

The statement of claim contains 5 paragraphs and the facts pleaded are deficient in that the letter of appointment was not pleaded. Furthermore, the letter of appointment was not referred to or given in evidence by any of plaintiff's witnesses.

 

Where a plaintiff in a matter such as this fails to plead and prove the fact of his appointment, he is not entitled to the declaration that his appointment subsists, neither is he entitled to his emoluments until the determination of this suit and thereafter till he is legitimately relieved of his appointment as claimed.

 

It was for the above reasons and those set out in the Reasons for Judg­ment just delivered by my learned brother, Belgore, J.S.C., that I dismissed the appeal.

 

Judgment delivered by

Uwais, J.S.C.

 

This appeal was dismissed on the 9th day of April 1990 with N500.00 costs awarded in favour of the respondent and we reserved our reasons for the dismissal. I now give mine.

 

I have had the advantage of reading in advance the reasons for judg­ment read by my learned brother Belgore, J.S.C. I entirely agree with the reasons.

 

By Order 10 rule 5 of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 1975 of  Kwara State applicable to this case –

 

5.    Every pleading shall contain a statement of all the material facts on which the party pleading relies…

 

The appellant's cause of action was based on contract of employment. It was absolutely essential therefore for the appellant, as plaintiff, to plead in his statement of claim the fact that there was a contract of employment between him and the respondent, as defendant. And furthermore, to spell out in the statement of claim what the terms of the contract were. If this was not done then the material facts necessary to formulate a complete cause of action had not been averred and the statement of claim was bad - see Bruce v. Odhams Press Ltd. (1936)1 All E.R. 287 at p.294 and Shell-BP Petroleum Development Co. of Nigeria Ltd. & S Ors. v. M.S. Onasanya, (1976)1 All N.L.R. (Pt.1) 425 at p.429 where this court held that where an action is founded on contract, as the present case, the plaintiff must give sufficient particulars, in his pleading to enable the contract to be identified. If this is not done, then the statement of claim has not disclosed a cause of action.

 

This is why no averment which is essential to success must be omitted. In an action for wrongful dismissal it is necessary, therefore, to plead the contract of employment, which is the foundation of the action, and not to leave the fact of the existence of the contract and its terms to speculation by the defendant and the trial Judge. Without the contract and its particulars being pleaded by the plaintiff no evidence of the terms of the contract which has been breached would be admissible at the trial; and this will be fatal to the action since it will lack foundation. Shell-B P's case (supra).

 

It was for these and the fuller reasons contained in the reasons for judg­ment read by my learned brother Belgore, J.S.C.; which I hereby adopt as mine, that I agree on the 9th day of April, 1990 that this appeal had no merit and that it should be dismissed.

 

 

Judgment delivered by

Karibi-Whyte, J.S.C.

 

On the 9'h April, 19901 dismissed the appeal of the appellant. I awarded costs assessed at N500.00 to the respondents and indicated that I will give my reasons for doing so today. This I now proceed to do.

 

I have read the judgment of my brother Belgore, J.S.C., in this appeal. I agree with it.

 

The main questions of law involved in the determination of this appeal B have been well settled in many earlier decisions in our courts. They are

 

1.    What are the essential facts necessary in a pleading in a claim for declaration that plaintiffs appointment has not been validly terminated?

 

2.    Whether plaintiff having failed to prove his claim, defendant is entitled to judgment?

 

The action was fought by the defendant entirely and properly on the basis of a defective pleading and the judgments of the courts below were based on these grounds. The facts of the case are very short, simple and uncontroverted. Appellant who claimed to be the Deputy Registrar of the defendant on salary GL. 14 at the Kwara State College of Technology, to have received a letter dated 17th April, 1980 purportedly terminating his service with the defendant. He stated in his statement of claim that on this date, the appointment of the Sole Administrator of the defendant had been terminated two days previously and that no new Governing Council had been appointed. He therefore brought this action on 4th May, 1982 claiming

 

(i)    A Declaration:

               

(a)    that the purported termination of his appointment by an agent of the defendant in a letter dated 17/4/80, is null and void.

               

(b)    that he is entitled to his emolument until the determination of the suit and thereafter until the legitimate termination of his appointment.

               

(c)    perpetual injunction restraining the defendant from filling his post, whilst he remained in the defendant's employ­ment.

 

The defendant filed and served a statement of defence in which all the aver­ments in the three-paragraph statement of claim were denied. But in addition, the defendant pleaded the Regulations Governing the Conditions of Service of its senior staff which are applicable to the plaintiff. It was all pleaded that defendant terminated the appointment of plaintiff in accordance with these Regulations. It was averred in the statement of defence that the consent of neither the sole Administrator nor the Governing Council was necessary in paying the said three months salary, plaintiff having been terminated for misconduct. Finally it was pleaded that plaintiff since been gainfully employed.

 

In his evidence in chief at the hearing of the case appellant tendered letter dated 17/4/80 purporting to have terminated his appointment stated and that the letter was written by a Dr. Amode, the Principal of the defendant College. It was admitted in evidence and marked "Exh.1". Although the ­Regulation governing conditions of service was not pleaded by the plaintiff he gave evidence of it and tendered it and it was admitted in evidence and marked Exh.2. Page 8 of "Exh.2". which relates to Resignation and Termi­nation of Appointment, was tendered, admitted in evidence and marked ':Exh.2A." In line with his pleading, plaintiff stated that at the tune of the termination of his appointment there was neither a Governing Council, nor a Sole Administrator, the appointment of the Sole Administrator having been terminated on 15/4/80. Under cross-examination by learned counsel to the defendant, plaintiff admitted he could on resignation pay the defendant sal­ary for three months referred to in "Exh. 1, "and that defendant paid into his Bank Acounts his salary for three months. He admitted that his salary was always paid into his Bank Account. Plaintiff admitted that he was the Rector of a new school he named "Pegning Centre of Continuing Education" founded by him. He admitted he could not have established the school if his appointment with the defendant had not been terminated. This was all the evidence in the case.

 

Learned counsel to the defendants rested his defence on the case of the plaintiffs, closed his case and opted to address the court. Before the address of counsel the trial Judge exercising powers under section 222 of the Evidence Law recalled the Plaintiff suo motuto explain the meaning of Grade Level 14 in his statement of claim. Plaintiff then having been reminded that he was still on oath gave the evidence.

 

After the address, and before judgment the trial Judge exercising powers invited counsel for the parties to address him on whether or not this was a proper case for a non-suit. Counsel addressed the court at length, neither accepting that this was a proper case for a non-suit.

 

In his judgment wherein the learned trial Judge non-suited the parties, he found that "the statement of claim is so grossly inadequate that it falls far short of the minimum practically required under Order 10 of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 1975. It is just too brief to be regarded as pleading and too deficient to be relied upon for any purpose in this suit. (Italics is mine for emphasis).

 

The learned trial Judge observed that much of the evidence in the case was not covered by the pleadings and were completely outside it. He then went on to point out that although it was necessary in the pleading to allege the fact of plaintiff's appointment by the defendant, its date, duration and conditions, as well as the plaintiff's office status or position, at the time of his appointment. He observed that there were no such averments in the state­ment of claim. The plaintiff in his oral testimony did not refer to them. He also observed that there was no averment in the statement of claim that the plaintiff could only be appointed or dismissed by the defendant, the Council or the Sole Administrator. The learned trial Judge however expunged from the records "Exhibits 2 and 2A" dealing with the regulations governing Senior Staff and particularly appointments and termination thereof, on the grounds that they are inadmissible having not been pleaded by the plaintiff. He then came to the following conclusion:

 

With the above two exhibits discountenanced, the substratum of the plaintiff's case is shaken; and it ought to collapse since there are no more facts on which his case can be grounded in the absence of these exhibits before the legal authorities relied upon,  particularly the case of Skenconsult Nigeria Ltd. & Anor. v. D. S. Ukey (1981)1 S.C.6 at p.9.

 

Learned trial Judge recognised the failure of the plaintiff to allege and prove any contract of service or agreement between him and the defendant or any letter of appointment, which should constitute the-foundation of his case without proof of which he must fail. He observed that even if Exhibits 2 B and 2A were to be admitted, plaintiff would still have failed in his claim because of his failure to establish any contract of service which would enable him to challenge the validity of Exh.1, i.e. the letter of termination of his ap­pointment.

 

After finding as above stated, the learned trial Judge held that "the in­terest of justice is better served by non-suiting the plaintiff in the peculiar circumstances of the case." In his view…..considering the case as a whole, that the plaintiff has not failed intoto in the proof of his case. At the same time, it appears unconscionable to allow the defendant to take advantage of the technicalities and obtain judgment. (italics mine).

 

Both parties appealed against the judgment of the learned trial Judge. The court of Appeal dismissed the appeal of the plaintiff/appellant and allowed the appeal of the defendant.

 

On appeal, plaintiff/appellant in ground 2 challenged the criticisms of the trial Judge of his pleadings and evidence at the trial, and in ground 3 the expunging of the Exhibits 2 and 2A from the records. Ground 1 is the gen­eral ground.

 

On his part the defendant/appellant, filed four grounds of appeal. E Ground 1 challenged the non-suit on the ground that the action ought to have been dismissed intoto. Ground 2 which is identical with plaintiff's ground 3 was an appeal against the expunging of Exhibits 2 and 2A. Ground 3 challenged the finding of the trial Judge that the payment of three month's salary into plaintiff's account was not proper. Ground 4 challenged the trial judge's expunging of the evidence that plaintiff was the Rector of Regnem Centre of Continuing Education as wrong in law.

 

Considering together the plaintiffs ground 3 and the defendant's ground 2, the Court of Appeal agreed that the learned trial Judge was wrong to have expunged "Exhibits 2 and 2A." It was held that the exhibits were ad­missible although tendered by the plaintiff who did not plead them. The court declared,

 

In effect when a matter is made an issue by either party the opponent is entitled to lead evidence on the point. Indeed the defendant rested its case on that of the plaintiff because the plaintiff had tendered Exhibits 2 and 2A and admitted under cross-exami­nation facts canvassed in the statement of defence. The learned trial Judge was therefore palpably wrong to have expunged Exhibits 2 and 2A from the records.

 

I entirely endorse this dictum as a correct statement of the law.

 

With respect to defendant's ground 4, the court of Appeal, held that although plaintiff did not plead that he was Rector of Regnem Centre for Con­tinuing Education, the trial Judge was wrong to have expunged that evidence led at the trial because the defendant pleaded it in paragraph 4 of the statement of defence and plaintiff admitted the fact under cross-examination. Accordingly ground 4 of the defendant ground of appeal succeeds, plaintiffs ground 2 raised the question of the sufficiency of his pleading in re­lation to his claim. In determining this ground the Court of Appeal observed that the substantive law relating to the plaintiff's case is that of contract of service and that when a party complains of a wrongful dismissal or that the termination of his appointment is null and void, he is saying in effect that there is a breach of contract of service.

 

The Court of Appeal observed that the statement of claim is devoid of necessary material facts, and that there is nothing to guide the court as to whether the contract would have lawfully terminated before judgment to warrant the court ordering a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant from filling the vacant post. Accordingly, the contract of service or letter of appointment ought to have been pleaded and evidence led in support. The argument of Mr. Ijaodola for the plaintiff/appellant that it was not necessary to plead the letter of appointment on the ground that it was not material to the claim, was rejected. The court considered the contract of service as material, and accepted the submission of Mr. Olanipekun for the defendant that the failure of the plaintiff to plead and tender his contract of service amounts to an admission, going by section 148(d) of the Evidence Act, that the issuance of Exhibit 1 was proper.

 

On this, the Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal of the plaintiff.

 

Now turning to the question of non-suit which was ground 1 of the grounds of appeal of the defendant, the court referred to the error of the trial Judge in expunging Exhibits 2 and 2A and rejecting the evidence of the plaintiff that he is the Rector of an Educational Institution. The Court of Appeal also considered and rejected the finding that the payment of three months salary into plaintiff's account was improper. The court of Appeal held that by implication the acceptance of the three month's salary without objection was an acceptance of the termination of his appointment. The court of Appeal then came to the conclusion

 

There is no doubt that if the learned trial Judge had not wrongly expunged Exhibits 2 and 2A and rejected the evidence that the plaintiff had established a college and had not erroneously held that the three months salary in lieu of notice was not paid in the proper way, he would have come to the irresistible conclusion that the plaintiff had accepted the termination of his appoint­ment and would have dismissed the suit. This settles this appeal.

 

I entirely agree. Thus the Appeal of the defendant against the non-suit by the trial Judge was allowed. The judgment of the trial Judge was set aside.

 

An order of dismissal of the suit of the plaintiff was entered.

 

Plaintiff has further appealed to this court. He relied on three grounds of appeal. The grounds excluding particulars are as follows –

 

1.    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred and mis­directed themselves in law in holding that the non-pleading and non-tendering of the letter of appointment of the plaintiff/appellant was fatal to the plaintiff/appellant case.

 

2.    The learned Justices of the Court of Appeal erred and misdir

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