A Jos High Court on Tuesday found Etisalat Nigeria (9 Mobile)
guilty of trespassing into a personal property and ordered it to pay N15
million damages.The judge, R.K. Sha, ordered that the plaintiff be given the property.
The judgment was based on a suit filed by Christ Best West Africa
Ltd, the plaintiff, against Emerging Markets Telecommunication Services
Limited (Etisalat Nigeria now 9Mobile).
Sha said that the act of running and maintaining the mast on the
property amounted to trespass and constituted a nuisance to the rights
of the plaintiff to exclusively use and enjoy the property.
The judge ordered that the mast be dismantled and removed and
awarded N15 million damages to the plaintiff considering the amount of
discomfort and annoyance that must have resulted from the defendant’s
act of trespass.
In the suit filed on October 14, 2013, the plaintiff said that the
defendant trespassed into his property on 15 Hausa Road at Ku Mark West
of Mines in Jos Local Government Area.
It urged the court to declare 9Mobile mounting its
telecommunication mast, electricity generating sets and the steel
perimeter fence on the property illegal.
The plaintiff also urged the court to declare the entire
development of the property a nuisance and order a restoration of the
property to him.
It prayed the court for a mandatory order of injunction directing
and compelling Etisalat to dismantle and remove the mast and other
installations on the property.
The plaintiff also prayed the court to award it N50 million as
special damages against the defendant. The plaintiff’s counsel, A. I.
Okafor, told the court that his client acquired the land in 2010, from
the Olagbemiro’s family and processed the Right of Occupancy in 2011.
Mr. Okafor said that the defendant entered the land and erected a
mast illegally and thereby obstructed movement on the premises.
“Many tenants refused to pay their rents as a result of the
disturbances from the mast and prospective tenants were deprived thereby
causing loss of enormous amounts of revenue from the property,” he said.
Mr. Okafor said Nigeria Communications Commission inspected the
site and confirmed that the mast was wrongly erected and a nuisance to
the people.
The defendant’s counsel, Great Nnamani, however, said that his
client had a lease agreement on the piece of land for the purpose of
erecting its telecommunication mast, base station and equipment.
Mr. Nnamani said a search was conducted and it was found that one
Mai Iliya, the District Head of Jenta Adamu Village in Jos North Local
Government Area, issued a letter confirming ownership of the land.
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