Legal Nigeria

Appeal court declines to bar FIRS from VAT collection

By Ameh ochojila,

FIRS

Reserves ruling on Lagos joinder bid.

The Court of Appeal on Thursday declined to accede to the request of Rivers and Lagos States for the appointment of Receiver or Manager for the purpose of collecting and keeping Value Added Taxes (VAT) in place of the Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS) pending the resolution of all legal disputes in the matter.

The two states separately canvassed that the order of status quo ante belum granted on September 10 in favour of FIRS to continue the collection be put on hold in view of the appeal already logged at the Supreme Court against the order.

Counsel to Rivers State Chief Ifedayo Adedipe SAN, in his oral application, pleaded with the appellate to exercise its power under Order 4 Rule 6 of the Court of Appeal to appoint a Receiver or Manager to take custody of the VAT in the interest of justice to parties in the matter.

Attorney General of Lagos, Mr Moyosore Onigbanjo SAN, who stood for his state toed the path of Rivers in canvassing that the court be fair and just in pending appeal.

Onigbanjo specifically asked the Appeal Court to restrain FIRS from further collectting the tax and replace it with a Receiver or Manager that will act for patties that are locked in the legal battle.

The Lagos Attorney General predicated his expressed fear of unjust treatment on the fact that FIRS apart from collectting the tax has been sharing it among the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory FCT despite the pendency of the legal tussle.

However, the presiding justice, Hamma Simon Tsanami asked the two states to make their request formal by making it in writing.

Meanwhile, the court reserved ruling in an application by Lagos to make it a respondent in the appeal filed by FIRS against a judgement granted in favour of Rivers State by a federal high court in Port Harcourt.

Onigbanjo, who moved the application, argued that Lagos has vested interest in the Value Added Taxes collection and that the decision of the court would affect it.

The Attorney General informed the 3-man panel of Justices that FIRS in its appeal against the federal high judgment made some allegations against It and that it would be in the interest of justice for it to be allowed to join in the appeal to ventilate its defense.

FIRS as the appellant through its counsel, Mahmoud Magaji, SAN, opposed the Lagos request to join adding that that the state has not shown how its interest would be jeopardizsd if not allowed in the matter.

Processes filed by the Attorney General of the Federation AGF Abubakar Malami SAN through his counsel, Tijani Gazali SAN were struck out on the ground of being incompetent having been filed out of time.

After talking arguments from parties, Justice Tsanami reserved ruling adding that parties would be communicated when the ruling is ready.