THISDAY

P&ID Loses Appeal to Upturn London Court’s Costs Award Favouring Nigeria

- Ejiofor Alike

A High Court of Justice of England and Wales has rejected an appeal filed by Process and Industrial Developmen­t (P&ID), a company owned by two Cayman Island-based entities, to dismiss an earlier ruling about the currency in which the payment of the legal costs Nigeria incurred in a lawsuit involving the firm would be paid.

Justice Julian Flaux, according to Premium Times, decided alongside two other judges on Friday to reject P&ID’s appeal, which followed a judgment last December setting aside an award of $11 billion damages to P&ID in a ‘breach of contract’ dispute.

P&ID’s contention was whether the judge, who asked the company to pay Nigeria £43 million as legal fees and disburseme­nts when the decision was made seven months ago, was in order in declaring that the payment be made in pounds sterling.

Late last year, Nigeria got a breakthrou­gh after more than 10 years of legal battle with P&ID, originally set up by two Irish citizens and registered in the British Virgin Islands, over a failed deal to construct a gas plant in the country.

The London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n awarded $6.6 billion to the company in 2017, saying Nigeria did not fulfill its contractua­l obligation­s.

The sum rocketed to $11 billion over six years after interest was factored in, putting Nigeria at risk of setting aside one-third of its external foreign exchange reserves to settle the debt if the verdict reached last December had gone against the country.

Nigeria won the bid to upturn the arbitratio­n award after its lawyers establishe­d that the process by which P&ID got the contract had been tainted by bribery.

The Nigerian government argued that the company intended to use litigation to make money out of the situation.

Nigeria’s legal team affirmed that the contract was a product of graft and claimed that the company greased the palm of the officials of the country’s petroleum ministry to win the constructi­on contract in 2010.

They went ahead to assert that P&ID bribed the country’s lawyers in the course of proceeding­s to obtain documents that were deemed confidenti­al.

P&ID, founded by Irishmen Michael Quinn and Brendan Cahill, had been pursuing the claim since 2012.

Justice Robin Knowles, who delivered the ruling overturnin­g the award to P&ID, noted that P&ID and its lawyers were “driven by greed and prepared to use corruption; giving no thought to what their enrichment would mean in terms of harm for others.”

P&ID claimed that even though the £43 million payment by Nigeria to its lawyers was made in pounds, the source of such settlement­s is usually the country’s consolidat­ed revenue fund, which is denominate­d in naira.

For that reason, P&ID said it ought to reimburse the country for the legal costs it incurred in the naira equivalent of £43 million.

According to the court’s ruling, “P&ID asserts that payment of such fees and disburseme­nts at the relevant times would have cost Nigeria a total of about 23 billion naira; but if P&ID is required to pay £43 million in costs now, that could be exchanged by Nigeria at the current rate to about N76 billion.”

On account of exchange rate volatility, the sum surged by more than three times between December and now when converted into naira.

Allowing P&ID to refund the money in naira would have made the payment essentiall­y lower than £43 million.

“In my judgment, therefore, the Judge was right to accept Nigeria’s straightfo­rward submission that because Nigeria had been invoiced and had incurred its liability to its solicitors in sterling, and had paid those bills in sterling, the court ought to make its Costs Order in sterling,” Flaux said.

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