Crime Watch

Court: LASTMA Has No Right To Tow Vehicles, Impose Fines Over Traffic Offence

Justice Olalekan Oresanya gave the ruling while delivering judgment in a suit filed by a legal practitioner, Lawal Aliyu against LASTMA, the Lagos State Government, and the state’s Attorney General.

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A Lagos State High Court in Ikeja has ruled that the imposition of fines and forceful towing of vehicles belonging to alleged traffic offenders, by officials of Lagos State Traffic Management Authority, LASTMA without court order is illegal.

 

Newsonline reports that the judgment of the Lagos State High Court is coming after protests by commuters and vehicle owners whose cars and buses were impounded by LASTMA and auctioned amid pleas and cries of the owners.

 

Justice Olalekan Oresanya gave the ruling while delivering judgment in a suit filed by a legal practitioner, Lawal Aliyu against LASTMA, the Lagos State Government, and the state’s Attorney General.

 

Aliyu had filed the suit to challenge the N20,000 fine imposed on him by LASTMA for an alleged traffic offence, and another N10,000 towage fine which he was forced to pay by the traffic enforcement agency.

 

READ ALSO: Nigerians Slam Lagos Police PRO Over Comment On Extortion, Brutality Of Officers

 

Justice Oresanya held that “Public authorities and bodies cannot act in a manner that is inconsistent and incompatible with the fundamental rights of citizens as guaranteed by the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

 

“Even in the jurisdiction, where parliamentary laws/statutes are supreme, such as the United Kingdom, public bodies must not act in a manner that is incompatible with the convention and rights of citizens as embodied in the European Convention on Human Rights which has now incorporated into the Human Rights Act 1998, the African Charter on Human and Peoples Right, being an equivalent of the ECHR, and which has now being codified into the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Right (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, 2004 being the equivalence law.”

 

Justice Oresanya narrowed down the issues in the matter to three and resolved all in favour of the applicant (Aliyu), relying on Sections 34, 36, and 41 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), among others.

 

On the second issue regarding the fine and towing fee imposed on the applicant, the court said a careful perusal of Section 27 (1) b, c, d and e of Traffic Management Law relied upon by the respondents revealed that LASTMA could not impose fine without arraigning an alleged.

 

Credit: Oseni Rufai

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