THE COURT OF APPEAL’S PRONOUNCEMENT IN CNOOC & ANOR V NNPC & ANOR: A JURISDICTIONAL LANDMINE?
Abstract
The present article examinedthe various contradictory decisionswhich have been delivered by two separate trial courts in the Lagos division of the Federal High Court (FHC),on the constitutionality or otherwise of the jurisdiction of the Tax Appeal Tribunal (TAT) in Nigeria. Thus,whereas one court of the Lagosdivision of the FHChadheld in NNPC vTAT & 3 Ors, validating the jurisdiction of the TAT,that TAT was not a court, but an administrative tribunal established by statute to resolve taxation disputesbetween taxpayers and the FederalInland Revenue Service (FIRS), surprisingly, another court of the same Lagos division of the FHC, on the other hand, held otherwise, in the case of CNOOC & AnorvNNPC & Anor. Hence, since both Courts are of co-ordinate Jurisdiction, thusthe two contradictory pronouncements created some doubts, uncertainty and confusion in the minds of stakeholders. Accordingly, it becameimperative for the Court of Appeal, which is next in the hierarchy of courts in Nigeria, to make a pronouncement on the way forward, on the subject. The present article therefore x-rays arguments, laced with authorities, in support of the creation of the TAT as a necessaryfacilitator for resolution of tax disputes and conflicts, with the decision of the Court of Appeal Lagos Division, in CNOOC & Anor vNNPC & Anor, in perspective.However, the article concludedwith a call that, evenwith the pronouncement of the Appellate Court, that it is not yet uhuru, for there is still need, and an urgent one, too, for legislative interventions, to review the extant statute creating the TAT, to embrace current agitations, demands and realities.
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