Supreme Court Voids Appeal Ruling, Resets ADC Leadership Case to Trial Court

“The appellate court exceeded its jurisdiction… the matter remains within the competence of the trial court,” the Supreme Court held.

🟥 Supreme Court Voids Appeal Ruling in ADC Leadership Dispute

The Supreme Court of Nigeria has voided a Court of Appeal ruling in the leadership dispute involving the African Democratic Congress, holding that the appellate court exceeded its jurisdiction and ordering the case back to the Federal High Court.

“The appellate court exceeded its jurisdiction… the matter remains within the competence of the trial court,” the Supreme Court held.

The ruling nullifies the appellate directive that parties should maintain the status quo, effectively reopening the legal process without determining the substantive leadership claims.

🟨 Case Reset as Supreme Court Reasserts Judicial Process

The apex court directed all parties to return to the Federal High Court where the original suit was filed, reaffirming that the trial court remains the proper forum for resolving the dispute.

This is not a resolution of the dispute, but a reset of how it must be resolved.

“This court will not assume the role of the trial court,” the judgment stated, underscoring the limits of appellate intervention.

The court was explicit: the appellate intervention could not stand where the trial process remained active.

🟥 How the Dispute Reached the Supreme Court

The dispute began at the Federal High Court, where a leadership challenge filed by party chieftain Nafiu Bala Gombe questioned the legitimacy of a leadership structure linked to a faction within the party.

While that case was pending, the Court of Appeal intervened, issuing an order directing parties to maintain the status quo — a directive that became central to the dispute over its interpretation and scope.

That intervention is what the Supreme Court has now overturned.

Supreme Court voids Appeal Court ruling in ADC dispute, resets case to trial court and reinforces judicial control over party processes

🟨 Appeal Court Intervention Ruled Premature

In reviewing the lower court’s actions, the Supreme Court concluded that the Court of Appeal intervened prematurely in a matter that had not been fully determined at the trial level.

The ruling reinforces a clear boundary: political disputes must follow judicial process, not bypass it.

The apex court anchored its decision on procedural correctness, emphasising that jurisdictional limits must be respected within the judicial hierarchy.

The ADC vs INEC crisis has escalated into a decisive legal confrontation as David Mark’s faction challenges its derecognition in court.

🟥Judicial Process Now Central to Political Control

The ADC leadership case Supreme Court ruling reinforces a critical institutional reality — control of process is now central to control of outcome.

This is not merely a party dispute; it is a judicial clarification of how political conflicts must be resolved.

By resetting the case and insisting on procedural order, the judiciary is asserting authority over:

  • internal party disputes
  • interpretation of legal orders
  • limits of appellate intervention
  • legitimacy of leadership claims

⚠️Courtrooms Become Decisive Political Arena

The implications extend beyond the ADC.

  • leadership contests within parties are likely to remain court-driven
  • internal party processes face increased judicial scrutiny
  • political outcomes may depend on legal timelines
  • uncertainty within party structures is prolonged

For political parties, the implication is immediate: leadership battles will not be settled in party rooms alone, but in courtrooms where process determines power.


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