The Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal has upheld the judgment of a
Lagos State High Court sentencing an ex-beauty queen, Ibinabo
Fiberesima, to five years imprisonment for manslaughter.
The lower court presided over by Justice Deborah Oluwayemi had
convicted Fiberesima of manslaughter, ruling that the actress’ reckless
driving was responsible for the death of one Dr. Giwa Suraj on the
Lekki-Epe Expressway.
Justice Oluwayemi had set aside the verdict of a Lagos State
Magistrates’ Court in Igbosere which earlier ordered Fiberesima to pay a
fine of N100,000 for the offence. The high court judge ordered that the N100,000 should be refunded to her while she should proceed on five years imprisonment.
However, Fiberesima, not pleased, headed for the Court of Appeal seeking to upturn the Justice Oluwayemi’s verdict. But in a unanimous decision on Friday, a three-man appellate court
panel, in a lead judgment by Justice Jamilu Tukur, dismissed Fibersima’s
notice of appeal adjudging it as lacking in merit.
The panel, comprising Justices U.I. Ndukwe-Anyanwu and Justice
Tijani Abubakar, said the magistrate court, which ordered Fiberesima to
pay a N100,000 fine after conviction, misused its discretion. The appellate court aligned with the reasoning of Justice Oluwayemi,
who described the magistrate’s verdict as judicial recklessness. It rejected argument by Fiberesima, through her lawyer, Nnaemeka
Amaechina, that the magistrate’s verdict was in line and that the high
court had no grounds to review it. The appellate court agreed with Justice Oluwayemi that the N100,000 imposed on Fiberesima did not serve the purpose of justice. The court added that Section 28 of the Road Traffic Law clearly
provides that where a reckless and dangerous driving has caused the
death of a person, the accused person shall be guilty of an offence and
is liable on conviction to imprisonment of seven years.
Upon being handed the Appeal Court verdict on Friday, Fiberesima, who
was present in court on the order of the panel, burst into tears. Her lawyer, Amaechina, however, indicated that the appellate court
verdict will be challenged at the Supreme Court, adding that he had
already filed a notice to that effect.
In his argument before the appellate court, Amaechina had urged the
court to uphold the magistrate’s court’s decision in his client’s case,
contending that by virtue of the Notice of Increased in Jurisdiction of
Magistrates, No. 7 of 2006, the trial Magistrate could only have imposed
a maximum of seven years imprisonment or N100, 000.00 fine.
He stressed that N100, 000 fine is the maximum limit the trial
Magistrate can impose as fine and that was what it imposed on the
appellant.
But counsel for the state, Mrs. Rotimi Odutola, argued that the law
creating the offence of dangerous driving causing death had provided for
a term of imprisonment as punishment for anyone convicted under section
28, hence the magistrate ought not to exercise such arbitrary
discretion to impose N100.000.00 as fine.
Odutola further submitted that the children of the deceased had been
permanently deprived of the “measureless contributions” of their father
to their lives as a result of his death caused by the appellant.She urged the court to uphold the judgement of the Lagos High Court and dismiss the appeal
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