Agreement, which transferred ownership of Newswatch Communications Ltd to
a businessman, Mr Jimoh Ibrahim.
Two minority shareholders – Mr Nuhu Aruwa and Prof. Jubril Aminu – had
filed a petition, urging the court to nullify the agreement which
transferred ownership of the company to Ibrahim.
The applicants also sought an order restraining the respondents from
publishing and selling to the public, Newswatch daily and weekend
magazines.
Respondents in the suit are Newswatch Communications Ltd, Global Media
Mirror Ltd, Mr Jimoh Ibrahim, Newswatch Newspapers and the Corporate
Affairs Commission.
Delivering judgment in the suit on Monday, Justice Ibrahim Buba upheld all
the prayers of the minority shareholders.
The judge also awarded the sum of N15.7m as damages against Ibrahim and
also gave an order stopping further publications of Newswatch Daily.
Buba held that the respondents could not prove that they paid up for the
shares as the petitioners gave evidence to show that the second to the
third respondents totally failed to pay for the shares of the company.
Buba said, “They have not showed how and when they paid for the said
shares, and nothing in paragraphs11 and 18a of the respondents’ statement
of defence shows how they paid for the shares.
“There is no evidence in paragraph 3 that the respondents paid on or
before May 5, 2011 as stated, as they have only given their interpretation
to that paragraph.
“Whatever monies they spent was spent on Daily Mirror and this was
confirmed by DW2 during cross-examination.
“The N510m was supposed to be paid for shares and not for any other
purpose; there is no evidence to show that the shares have been paid for.
“Besides, it was a company called Global Fleet that paid the N14 million,
not any of the respondents who contracted with the first respondent.”
The judge, therefore, held that the case of the petitioners had merits and
so granted all the reliefs sought.
He said, “The court grants all the reliefs as set out on the petition at
the inception of this case.
“An order setting aside the contract entered into between the first and
second respondents’ companies by virtue of document titled ‘Share Purchase
Agreement’, between the first and second respondents executed in May 2011.
“A consequential order setting aside the Form CAC2 ( Statement of Share
Capital and Return of Allotment of Shares) of the 1st respondent company
dated Aug. 27, 2012, and presented for filing by one Gloria A. Ukeje.
“An order directing the 2nd and 3rd respondents jointly and severally to
pay special damages in the sum of N15.7m to the first respondent company
being loss of business profits since August 2012 till October 2012 when
its operations were unilaterally shut down.”
The court also held that the petitioners had discharged the burden placed
on them by proving their case, while the first to fourth respondents
failed woefully to discharge the burden placed on them.
The petitioners had averred that the 2nd and 3rd respondents purportedly
came into majority ownership of the Newswatch Communications by virtue of
a Share Purchase Agreement entered into in May 2011.
They averred that by virtue of clause 3 of the said agreement, the 2nd
respondents purportedly acquired 51 per cent of the company on the
condition that they paid the sum of N510m as price of its shares.
They added that by clause 4 of the agreement, the money was to be paid on
or before May 5, 2011, and that the 2nd respondent was obligated to pay
additional N500m within 90 days after takeover.
The amount was supposed to serve as working capital for the company.
The petitioners averred that without complying fully with the
aforementioned conditions of agreement, the 2nd respondent through the
instrumentality of the 3rd respondent, went ahead and took over full
control and management of the first respondent’s company.
Consequently, they filed the action, seeking to quash the takeover.