Thursday 22 June 2017

UPDATE ON FAILED ATM TRANSACTION CASE

The very important test case of KUME BRIDGET ASHIEMAR v. GT BANK PLC. and UBA PLC. (SUIT No. MHC/198/14) is steadily making progress at the High Court of Justice of Benue State of Nigeria specifically High Court No. 7, sitting in Makurdi. The case seeks to address a trend which has bothered many bank customers in Nigeria. The case involves a failed ATM transaction or ATM non-dispense error as alleged by the plaintiff  and it is probably the first Nigerian case to seek to address failure of ATM to dispense cash as other ATM cases had dealt with unauthorized ATM withdrawals.

The plaintiff sometimes in October, 2013 attempted severally to withdraw money from the ATM of 2nd defendant but according to the plaintiff the ATM failed to dispense cash nevertheless her account was debited. According to the defendants the withdrawal transaction was successful. Plaintiff disagreed and sued the defendants.


The plaintiff opened her case and testified while the 1st defendant opened their case on Thursday, 22nd June, 2017 calling their sole witness who testified and was cross-examined. The case has been adjourned to 20th July, 2017 for 2nd defendant to call their own witness to testify.

ANOTHER METHOD OF STEALING CASH FROM ATMs

My article: ANOTHER METHOD OF STEALING CASH FROM ATMs has been published in the Digital Evidence and Electronic Signature Law Review. The article as the title suggests, deals with a method of stealing cash from ATMs, which is not widely known. I implore you to read it and get informed. 

Tuesday 13 June 2017

EPHRAIM v. FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA (2012) LPELR-22363(CA): A CASE OF POOR INVESTIGATION

FACTS
By a criminal charge dated the 25th June 2008, the Appellant was arraigned before the Federal High Court sitting at Kaduna in the following terms:
"That you Nnachi Ephraim on or about the 4th day of April, 2008 at Prime Gate Cybercafe, 1 Okpara Street, Abakaliki, Ebonyi State within the jurisdiction of the Federal High Court, being the Manager of Prime Gate Cybercafe failed to register the Cybercafe with the Economic Financial Crimes Commission and thereby committed an office contrary to Section 13(1)(a) and punishable under Section 13(5) (c) of the Advance Fee Fraud And other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006."
A trial was conducted as a result and, one witness each, testified on behalf of the Appellant and Respondent respectively. At the conclusion of the trial, the trial Court found the Appellant guilty.

DECISION
Upon appeal, the Court of Appeal Per ORJI-ABADUA, J.C.A. on Pp. 44-46, paras. G-F of the judgement held that:
 "For a person to be guilty under Section 13(1)(a), the person must in the normal course of business, provide telecommunications or internet services, or must be the owner or the person in the management of any premises being used as a telephone or internet cafe or by whatever name called. I must observe that the fact that the signboard of primegate cyber cafe is posted at No. 1 Okpara Street, Abakaliki notwithstanding, there must be some overt act on the part of the owner of the cybercafe to prove that he actually provides telecommunications or internet services to the public. There was no shred of evidence adduced by the prosecution establishing that Primegate Cybercafe was indeed providing telecommunications and internet services at No. 1 Okpara Street Abakaliki. The fact that the signboard of Primegate is hanging thereat does not constitute any proof that the said cybercafe was providing any internet services at the said address. I think, the saying; 'the hood does not make the monk' suits appropriately here. All the documents tendered before the lower Court profoundly showed that it was Artifice Colony cybercafe that was indeed providing both the telecommunication and internet services at No. 1 Okpara Street, Abakaliki and not Primegate. P.W.1 admitted that no investigation was carried out by the EFCC to decipher whether Primegate Cybercafe was indeed taken over by Artifice Colony Cybercafe or not. They did not obtain the tickets and receipts normally issued to customers to strongly establish that it was Prime gate Cybercafe that was running the said business. The question is; 'if there was no proof that Prime gate was indeed offering any internet or telecommunication services, where then lies the offence?' It is only when the cyber cafe or a person is offering the services enumerated in Section 13(1)(a) of the Advance Fee Fraud And Other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 that the person or the entity is required in law to register the same. A moribund or defunct company, whose signboard is still hanging out on its former business address without any iota of proof of it running any business thereat, cannot be said to be carrying out the same services it had wound up, merely because of the continued display or affixation of its signboard at its former business address. It is not an offence to display a signboard, but, it is an offence to carry out such internet or telecommunication services or being the owner or person in the management of any premises being used as a telephone or internet cafe without registration of the cyber cafe. There must be proof of usage of the place as a telephone or internet cafe. This was lacking in the evidence proffered by the prosecution in the instant case. It is glaring that the judgment of the lower Court was not properly guided in line with principles of law. The Court terribly erred. Accordingly, I find the decision of the lower Court as being perverse."

COMMENTS
This case is from a period when majority of Nigerians could only have cheap access to the Internet via cybercafes. During that period some cybercriminals also used the cybercafes to perpetrate cybercrimes and it was perhaps thought that requiring cybercafe owners or operators to register their cybercafes with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), would help in fighting or curbing the menace of cybercrime particularly "4I9" or "Yahoo Yahoo" boys.

However, with the crash in the cost of obtaining access to the Internet via subscription to any of the popular telecom provider's data plan, cybercafes have slowly gone out of business. Only a handful remain in business as many Nigerians now have smartphones and tablets and access the Internet on such devices.

The case, however, illustrates the effect of poor or shoddy investigation in a criminal case. The EFCC did not carry out thorough and proper investigations in the case and then charged the accused to court. According to the Court of Appeal:
"P.W.1 (prosecution i.e. EFCC witness) admitted that no investigation was carried out by the EFCC to decipher whether Primegate Cybercafe was indeed taken over by Artifice Colony Cybercafe or not. They did not obtain the tickets and receipts normally issued to customers to strongly establish that it was Prime gate Cybercafe that was running the said business."
This instance of poor performance by the prosecution is not limited to the EFCC only but also crops up sometimes in cases where very poor or little investigation is conducted by the Police thereby putting the prosecution lawyer in a fix when he is preparing charges or conducting trials.


It is hereby suggested that law enforcement agencies should sit up and do proper and thorough investigations before filing charges as without cogent evidence the court cannot manufacture evidence upon which to find an accused person guilty of the offence for which he has been charged with.

It must be noted that the performance of the EFCC demonstrated in this case is a one off as the EFCC has secured many convictions which are too numerous to mention here.