The Kaduna division of the Court of Appeal has ruled
that the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has no constitutional right to
confiscate imported rice in open markets.
The court gave the order while delivering judgement in
an appeal filed by the Customs Service against the judgement of the Federal
High Court, Kaduna, which discharged and acquitted one Suleiman Mohammed of a
two-count charge on the importation of foreign goods.
In the judgement delivered by the three-member panel
led by Justice Ntong Ntong, the court also ordered the Nigeria Customs to
release 613 bags of foreign rice, alongside 80 bags of millet worth about N200
million and a truck impounded from the respondent in the appeal, Suleiman
Mohammed, a 37-year-old businessman, on the Kaduna-Zaria Expressway.
In the judgment, the court held that “Kaduna-Zaria
Expressway is not a land border and that the Nigeria Customs Service has no
right to arrest Suleiman Mohammed on June 14, 2019, and confiscate his goods on
the Kaduna-Zaria Expressway, which is outside the contemplation or application
of the ban on the importation of foreign rice.”
The court also held that the Nigeria Customs Service
“has no right to patrol the Kaduna-Zaria Expressway or any highway for the sole
purpose of arresting and confiscating any foreign rice on those highways or
expressways because they are not land borders.”
Justice Ntong said he had “taken time to read the
record of appeal, especially the judgment of the trial court, briefs of
parties, statutes, and exhibits, and agreed with the trial court that the
Kaduna-Zaria Expressway is not a ‘land border’ as stipulated by the law.
“The defendant was merely a purchaser of rice and
millet at the Central Market, Gusau, in Zamfara State, with a receipt of
purchase and not an importer, and the Nigeria Customs Service ought to have
arrested the importer and not a mere purchaser from the open market.”
The judge wondered how a fowl, instead of attacking
the person who killed it, pursues the person who is de-feathering it, an Annang
idiom which suggests that the appellant ought not to shut its eyes against
importers and instead chase petty traders and consumers who buy in the open
market.
The three man-panel further held that, after all,
contraband goods pass through the borders, the main beats of customs.
The Court of Appeal also chided officials of the
Nigeria Customs Service for carrying out “a shoddy investigation in the comfort
of their office,” holding that “where it has become difficult or impossible for
them to return the confiscated rice, millet, and truck, the Nigeria Customs
Service Board shall pay to the respondent a sum of money equivalent to the
current price or cost of the confiscated items.”
In dismissing the appeal, Justice Ntong Ntong ordered
the Nigeria Customs Service to obey and comply with the orders of the Court
forthwith.
Comments:
Leave a Reply