The  Supreme Court on Friday nullified the election of Kebbi state Governor  Usman Saidu Dakingari of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and ordered  the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, to conduct a fresh  governorship election in the state within 90 days.
The  decision of the court was premised on the failure of the Sokoto  Division of the Court of Appeal which had earlier upturned the decision  of the Kebbi state Election Petition Tribunal which also nullified the  governor’s election.
The Court of Appeal while affirming the  governor’s election delivered its judgment on 29 December 2011 but  deferred the reason for its decision to 23 January, 2012, a day clearly  out of the 60 days prescribed by section 285 (7) and (8) of the nation’s  constitution as amended.
The court held that the Court of Appeal  not being the final court in the determination of appeals arising from  the conduct of governorship elections, lacked the power to deliver  judgment and defer the reasons for its decision, more so, to a date  which is outside the mandatory 60 days prescribed by Section 285 (7) of  the Constitution.
According to Justice Walter Onnonghen who  delivered the decision of the court, “it is obligatory for the Court of  Appeal and the Supreme Court to dispose an appeal within 60 days from  the date of the decision being appealed. Section 285 (7) implies that  both the decision and the reasons for that decisions must be completed  within the stipulated time. Any decision without a reason is no decision  at all. The judiciary has no option than to work within the time frame  provided by the law.”
The court subsequently upheld the appeal of  the candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, Abubakar  Malam Abubakar which challenged the validity of the decision of the  Court of Appeal and declared the Court of Appeal’s decision invalid and a  nullity.
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