The number of justices of the Supreme
Court will further drop from its current 16 to 15 as one of them,
Justice Muhammad Muntaka-Coomasie, will retire on February 13, 2016.
The constitution provides for 21 as the maximum number of justices that can be appointed to the Supreme Court.
With the retirement of Justice John
Fabiyi on November 25, 2015, the number of the apex court justices had
dropped to 16 from 17.
Barely one year before Justice Fabiyi’s
retirement, the number of apex court justices had fallen to 16 with the
retirement of the immediate past Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloma
Mukhtar (retd.), on November 20, 2014.
Muntaka-Coomasie, who is number four on
the order of seniority of the Supreme Court justices, will retire from
the bench on February 13, his 70th birthday.
His birthday is not stated in his bio on
the apex court’s website, but our correspondent learnt that he was born
on February 13, 1946.
Prior to joining the Supreme Court of
Nigeria in 2008, Muntaka-Commasie was a justice of the Court of Appeal,
and served in the Port Harcourt, Jos, Abuja, Ilorin, and Benin
divisions.
The last appointment to the apex court
bench was made in May 2015, when Justice Amiru Sanusi was appointed
following the retirement of the immediate past CJN.
At the valedictory court session which
held in honour of Justice Fabiyi on the day of his retirement at the
Supreme Court complex, the President of the Nigerian Bar Association,
Mr. Augustine Alegeh (SAN), called for full compliance with the
constitutional provision which prescribes the maximum number of 21
justices of the Supreme Court in order to reduce the workload for the
justices of the apex court.
On September 13, 2015 at this year’s
triennial conference of Commonwealth Magistrates’ and Judges’
Association in New Zealand, the CJN, Justice Mahmud Mohammed, said
qualification to be appointed to the Supreme Court bench would no longer
be limited to justices of the Court of Appeal.
He said, “My lords, the need for a
change in the criteria for the appointment of judicial officers in
Nigeria prompted me to direct the National Judicial Council to implement
the new Revised NJC Guidelines and Procedural Rules for the Appointment
of Judicial Officers of all Superior Courts of Record in Nigeria 2014.
“It was clear that the old guidelines
and rules had become unworkable as it saw anachronisms such as the
limitation that saw only justices of the Court of Appeal, as of right,
making it to the Supreme Court of Nigeria.
“Under the new, more rigorous and
transparent rules, any qualified legal practitioner with the requisite
intellect has the opportunity of making it to any court in the land and
even to the posts of heads of federal and state superior courts,
including the Chief Justice of Nigeria.
“As Chairman of the National
Judicial Council, I have had to take up the responsibility of ensuring
that the overall appointments procedure maintains the institutional
integrity of the judicial appointment process while ensuring that only
the most competent persons are elevated.”
Punch
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