COURT ORDERS GBENGA DANIELTO PAY EX-WORKERS WITHIN 30 DAY
The National
Industrial Court (NICN) sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos on Friday, October 6,
2017ordered Western Publishing Company Limited, publishers of Compass
Newspapers, owned by former governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel to pay
former employees all their entitlements, including pension, running into
several million in the next 30 days.
Her lordship, Justice
Ayodele Obaseki Osaghai delivered the judgement in suit NICN/LA/143/2014
brought before it by Messrs Victor Asowata, Azuka Christopher Nwokocha, Usoro
Ndianobong, Moses Abel Hope, Ayodele Kolawole, Emmanuel Ukudolo and Sebastine
Enyinna against Gbenga Daniel and Western Publishing Company Limited.
The complainants had
through their lawyer, Nkem Eke, sued the newspaper, seeking several reliefs,
including an order compelling the newspaper owned by the former governor to pay
all their salary arrears, pension deducted but not remitted to the various
pension administrators, cooperative contributions deducted at source from
salaries but not remitted to the cooperative society and unpaid accumulated
Leave Allowance.
He argued that the
development amounted to breach of their rights to decent living and to take
care of their families having laboured even in terrible weather in the morning
and nights for months, stressing that a worker deserve his wages.
Lawyer to Compass
Newspapers, F. Ogundowo had argued during hearing that the plaintiffs were not
entitled to the reliefs sought on the ground that management issued a general
memo dated 19/4/2012 after a general meeting stating that with effect from that
day, editorial staff including cartoonists would only be paid upon procurement
of advert for the company.
He told the court that
the memo superseeded letters of appointment and that the complainants are not
entitled to the reliefs since they failed to procure adverts for the newspapers
as stipulated in the memo.
Ogundowo argued
further that some of the plaintiffs went away with laptops, cameras and
motorcycles which are company properties, that the plaintiffs were joined and
that the court lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter. He therefor urged the
court to dismiss the suit.
Ruling on the matter,
Justice Ayodele Obaseki Osaghai noted that the fact the plaintiffs were joined
does not invalidate the suit and citing relevant sections of the constitution,
she said that the matter falls within the jurisdiction of the NICN.
On allegation that
some of the plaintiffs bolted away with company properties, her lordship ruled
that the defendant failed to prove that the properties obtained through
higher purchase were not paid for.
She ruled that the
letters of appointments supersedes ordinary memo, stressing that the
complainants proved their cases beyound reasonable doubts by tendering relevant
documents like letters of appointments, letters of resignation, and statement
of accounts from the various pension administrators.
She them ordered
owners of the newspapers to pay all entitlements within 30 days, failure
which 21 percent interest will accrue to the total judgement sum until it is
liquidated.
She also awarded cost
of N150, 000 against the defendant. She also struck out the 5th
complainant (Ayodele Kolawole) for failing to appear to prove his case
during the trial.
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