IN THE
NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL COURT OF NIGERIA
IN THE IBADAN JUDICIAL DIVISION
HOLDEN AT IBADAN
DATE: 2/ND DECEMBER 2025 SUIT NO: NICN/IB/07/2023
BETWEEN:
Mr. Adeniyi Oluwaseun Adefisan - - Claimant
AND
1. Sparkwest
Steel Industries Limited
2. Mr.
Niyi Oyedele - - - Defendants
(Managing
Director, C.E.O., Sparkwest Ind. Ltd).
REPRESENTATION
Rasheedat Akinrinde with R. Jigan & Moyosore Adedokun
for the Claimant
Chief C. N. Nwuke for the
Defendants
JUDGMENT
1. Introduction
& Claims
1. The Claimant commenced this Suit by
Complaint dated 22/12/2022 and filed on 17/1/2023 along with the other required
frontloading processes. Pursuant to the Order of this Honourable Court made on
17/1/2024, the Claimant filed his Amended Statement of Facts dated 26/2/2024
along with the other required frontloading processes on 29/2/2024, same was
regularized on 15/4/24 and he sought the following reliefs -
1. A Declaration that discriminatory labour
practice is an unfair labour practice, which is contrary to Section 254C (1)
(f) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as
amended.
2. A Declaration that the calculated 13th
month’s salary at maximum rate provided in the Staff Handbook (the Conditions
of Service) for some former members of staff of the 1st Defendant
for the years 2016 - 2019 & 2021 - 2022 and the denial of same to the
Claimant is discriminatory and an unfair labour practice.
3. An Order of this Honourable Court directing the Defendants to pay the Claimant the sum of ?145,557.7(One
Hundred and Forty-Five Thousand, Five Hundred and Fifty-Seven Naira, Seven
Kobo) being Claimant’s earned but unpaid 13th month’s salary for the
years 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021, for which the Claimant completed full years in
service, pursuant to Section 3.6 of the Staff Handbook.
4. Any other order(s)
which the Honourable Court may deem right to make in
the circumstances of this case.
2. On
8/4/2024, the Defendants filed their Statement of Defence dated 5/4/2024, along
with all other required processes, in response to the Claimant’s Amended
Statement of Facts. In response to the Defendants’ Statement of Defence, the
Claimant filed Claimant’s Reply to the Statement of Defence dated 14/5/2024,
along with the Claimant’s Further Written Statement on Oath on the same date,
same was regularized on 21/5/24.
2. Case of
the Claimant
3. Claimant opened his case on 5/2/2025 when
he testified in chief as CW1. He adopted his witness depositions of
29/2/2024 & 14/6/2024 as his evidence in chief and tendered 15
documents which were admitted in evidence and marked as Exh. OA1 – Exh.
OA15. While being cross examined, CW1 testified that 13th
month salary is not in his letter of employment but that it is contained in the
Handbook and the 1st Defendant has been paying him since he
joined it; that Human Resources Manager of the Defendants does not reside in
the factory of the Defendants; that that is the reason he did not request the
interpretation of the Handbook; that the 1st Defendant continues to
pay him 13th month salary there was no need for him to seek any
interpretation regarding it again.
3. Case of
the Defendants
4. When the Claimant closed his case on
5/2/2025, learned Counsel to the Defendants informed the Court that the
Defendants would not call evidence but would rather rest on the case of the
Claimant as presented.
4. Final Written Addresses
5. The
final written address of the Claimant of 16 pages was dated 3/3/2025 and filed
on 5/3/2025. In it learned Counsel set down a lone issue for determination thus
-
Whether
having regard to the totality of the evidence on record before this Honourable
Court, the Claimant has proved his case against the Defendants to be entitled
to the reliefs sought.
6. Arguing
this lone issue, learned Counsel submitted that the Claimant carries the burden
of proving his case by placing before the Court his terms and conditions of
work and showing what the Defendants have done wrong citing Oloruntoba-Oju
& Ors v. Abdul Raheem & Ors (2008) LPELR-2596(SC) & Sections 131
& 132, Evidence Act, 2011; that the reliefs sought by the Claimant are
akin to claims in special damages which must be strictly proved citing Evang
v. First Bank (2019) LPELR-49055(CA) & Obasuyi & Anor v. Business
Ventures Ltd (200) LPELR-2155(SC). Counsel referred to section 3.6 of Exh.
OA3 which provides for a 13th month salary up to a maximum of
one-month basic gross salary to the employee to be paid in December of each
year and which is tied to performance. Learned Counsel submitted that the
Claimant pleaded the facts relating to the fact that Claimant was not as
expected; that Claimant’s entitlement for the years 2017 to 2019 and 2021 is
the sum of =N=145,557.7 using Claimant’s monthly basic salary as calculated
from Claimant’s annual basic salary as stated in Exh. OA1 & Exh. OA4 and
that the Defendants did not deny their non-payment of the 13th month
salary to the Claimant but claimed that unproven bad financial performance of
the 1st Defendant was responsible for the non-payment of the 13th
month salary. Learned Counsel further submitted that the 13th month
salary is different from performance bonus which is covered by section 2.13 of Exh.
OA3 and that there is evidence that the 1st Defendant paid same
13th month salary to some other employees citing Exh. OA6-Exh. OA13.
Counsel urged the Court to hold that refusal of the Defendants to him his
13th month salary is unjustifiable discriminatory and unfair labor
practice and order the payment of same to the Claimant.
7. On
effect of failure of the Defendants to call evidence in support of their
pleadings, learned Counsel submitted that the pleadings filed by the Defendants
must be deemed abandoned and hence moribund and the Defendants must be deemed
to have accepted all the pleadings and evidence led by the Claimant in proof of
his case citing Fairline Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd & Anor. v. Trust
Adjusters Nigeria Ltd (2012) LPELR- 20860(CA). Learned Counsel prayed the
Court to so hold and grant all the reliefs sought by the Claimant.
8. The final written address of the
Defendant was dated 28/5/2025 and filed on 29/5/2025. In it learned Counsel set
down 2 issues for determination thus –
1.
Whether the 2nd Defendant is a proper
party to the action of the Claimant as presently constituted.
2.
Whether by the terms of Claimant’s
employment with the 1st Defendant he is entitled to the 13th Moth Salary every
year of his service with the 1st Defendant.
9. On the first issue, learned Counsel
submitted that the only person who is to be directly or indirectly determined
and affected by any decision in an action before any Court, needs to be made a
party citing Lamido & Ors. v. PDP & Ors (2020) LPELR-55828(CA); that
the guiding principles in the determination of who is a necessary party in a
suit are laid down by the Supreme Court in Adeniran v. Olusokan (2019)8 NWLR
(Pt. 1873) 98; that throughout the entire amended statement of facts as
well as evidence led by the Claimant no iota of allegation is made against the
2nd Defendant beyond being the Managing Director of the 1st
Defendant; that the 1st Defendant is an independent personality
citing Salomon v. Salomon (1897)AC 22; that the 2nd Defendant
as Managing Director is merely an agent of the 1st Defendant and
that except where there is a personal claim against him he cannot be made an
action against the 1st Defendant because a Director I never
personally liable for the acts of the Company unless personal wrongdoing is
established against him citing NDIC v. Oken Enterprises Ltd (2004)10 NWLR
(Pt. 880) 107 & Onyekweli v. INEC (2009)6 NWLR (Pt. 1136) 13. Learned
Counsel in as much the 2nd Defendant is an agent of a disclosed
principal and there being no allegation and proof of any personal wrongdoing
against him in this action, the 2nd Defendant is not a proper party
to this action and that this Court lacks jurisdiction to make any findings
against him. Counsel urged the Court to hold as such.
10. With
respect to the second issue, learned Counsel submitted that a contract of
employment is a specie of contract to which the parties once they had entered
are bound by its terms citing FBN v. Emenike & Ors (2022)
LPELR-58536(CA) & NUHPSW v. Outsourcing Services Ltd (2023) LPELR-60683; that
the terms and conditions, especially the emoluments of the Claimant were all
set out in his letter of appointment – Exh. OA1; that nowhere in the
exhibit is it stated that the Claimant shall be entitled to a 13th
month salary every year of his service with the 1st Defendant and
that the law is trite that parties cannot read into the agreement what is not
therein contained.
11. Learned
Counsel submitted that he conceded that Claimant was given Exh. OA3 –
Employee’s Handbook; that Claimant relied on Clause 3.6 of Exh. AK3 which
refers to a 13th month salary to found his relief but that a
community reading of clause 12 of Exh. OA1 and clause 3.6 of Exh. OA3
will show that the parties never agreed that the payment of the 13th
month salary will be automatic or compulsory every year; that such payment as
expressly stated in Exh. OA3 is tied to performance; that the
performance is related to the performance of the 1st Defendant rather than that
of the Claimant; that if the parties intended to make the payment dependent on
the performance of the employee, the Staff Handbook would have stated as
such expressly; that any attempt to interpret performance as synonymous
to employee’s performance will be tantamount to reading into the document what
is not therein contained or provided citing Intercontinental Bank v.
Testwide (Nig.) Ltd & Anor (2020) LPELR-52493(CA); that the Claimant
ought to have requested and obtained policy interpretation from the Human
Resources Department of the 1st Defendant as he is entitled to do as
per his contractual terms; that having failed to do so there is no basis to
find in favor of the Claimant that he is entitled to the 13th month
salary. Learned Counsel submitted further that Claimant failed to provide any
evidence to substantiate his allegation of discriminatory practices against him
by the 1st Defendant; that Claimant was paid all that were contained
in his contract with the 1st Defendant; that Exh. AK6 – Exh. OA11
to prove that the 1st Defendant paid some other persons the 13th
month salary have no evidential value citing Section 83(1)(a & b),
Evidence Act, 2011 as amended; that Claimant was neither the maker of the
exhibits nor have personal knowledge of the statement contained in the exhibits
and that the exhibits have no probative value citing Dunny v. A.G, Taraba
State (2012)LPELR-15532(CA) and that the condition precedent to the payment
of the 13th month salary to the Claimant does not exist.
12. Learned
Counsel prayed the Court to dismiss the case of the Claimant in its entirety.
5. Decision
13. The case of the Claimant is that he was
employed on the 17/8/2016 as a Quality Control Officer and later promoted to
Executive Assistant 1 (EA 1) in the 1st Defendant. Sometime in
October 2022, he was disengaged by the Defendants and his entitlements, save
for the 13th month’s salary, were paid as settled in the Terms of
Settlement dated and filed 21/6/2023 which the Honourable Court entered as the
Judgment of the Court the same day, in Suit No. NICN/IB/47/2022. By
Clause 11 of the said Terms of Settlement dated and filed 21/6/2023, the
Claimant reserves the right to pursue non-payment of his 13th month
salary. The Claimant is claiming entitlements to his 13th month
salary for the four (4) years of 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021 which amounts to ?145,557.7(One Hundred and Forty-Five
Thousand, Five Hundred and Fifty-Seven Naira, Seven Kobo) with the exclusion of
pro rata calculated 13th month salary for 2022 when the
Claimant did not complete one full year. It is the case of the Claimant that
the decision of the Defendants not to pay him 13th month’s salary
for the years 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021 on the ground of “non-performance” of
the 1st Defendant is merely negative discrimination and punitive as
the 1st Defendant paid the 13th month’s salary of its
other employees as exemplified and represented by Exh. OA7 – Exh. OA13,
an indication of good performance of the 1st
Defendant in those years. Although the Defendants filed their defence along
with requisite frontloaded processes, learned Counsel to the Defendants however
elected to not call evidence at trial. Thus, for all intents and purposes, all
the defence processes filed are deemed abandoned the Defendants having chosen
to rely on the case of the Claimant as filed and argued. I have carefully read
and understood all the processes filed by the parties on either side. I
listened attentively to the testimony of the sole witness of the Claimant and
watched his demeanor. I patiently reviewed and evaluated all the exhibits
tendered by the Claimant. I, in addition, heard the oral submissions of the
learned Counsel for the parties at the stage of adopting their final written
addresses. Having done all this, I set down these issues for the just
determination of this suit as put forward by the Defendants as follows –
1. Whether
the 2nd Defendant is a proper party to this suit as constituted.
2. Whether
by the terms of the Claimant’s employment he is entitled to the 13th Month
Salary every year of his service with the 1st Defendant
14. Let me indicate from the outset of this
Judgment that the Defendants in this case even though filed pleadings, they did
not lead any evidence at trial. It is on record that the learned Counsel to the
Defendants elected to and rested his case on the case of the Claimant.
Implications of this step taken by the learned Counsel are far reaching. First
it portends that the only evidence available to the Court is the case as
presented by the Claimant. Secondly it shows that the Defendants are not
disputing the case as put forward. The third implication and perhaps more far
reaching is that the Defendants abandoned their pleadings and there is nothing
from their side to controvert all the averments and evidence led by the
Claimant. Again, as the Tsaminami JCA pointed out in Fairline Pharmaceutical
Industries Ltd & Anor v. Trist Adjusters Nigeria Limited (2012), pleadings
without more are akin to a mere skeletal framework of a case. When evidence is
led, it adds flesh and gives life to the skeletal case. As the Court of Appeal
noted in Balaje v. Yaya & Ors (2015) LPELR-25630(CA) both are
essential and one cannot exist with any meaningful result or benefit to a party
without the other just as the flesh without the skeletal framework is of no use
to the human body.
15. The
first issue for determination is whether the 2nd Defendant is a
proper party to this suit as constituted. This issue was vigorously canvassed
by the learned Counsel to the Defendants and Counsel had submitted that the 2nd
Defendant is not a proper party to be in this action. It is on record and not
controverted by either side that the 2nd Defendant is the Managing
Director and Chief Executive Officer of the 1st Defendant. Now who
is a proper party to a suit? A party is said to be a proper party to a suit, as
the Supreme Court laid down in Adeniran v. Olusokan II (2019)8 NWLR (Pt.
1673) 98 when the presence of such a party is necessary for the effectual
adjudication of the matter in dispute; the claim against the existing
Defendants also affects the party sought to be joined and his interest is the
same as or identical with that of the existing Defendants.
16. Can
it be said that the presence of the 2nd Defendant in this suit is
imperative for the effectual and final determination of this case? I answer in
the affirmative. 2nd Defendant is not just an ordinary person or
staff or employee or agent of the 1st Defendant. 2nd
Defendant is the Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer of the
1st Defendant. Of a truth 1st Defendant has a legal
personality of its own as the old English case of Salomon v. Salomon (1897)
AC 22 decided. The fact however remains that an artificial person as the 1st
Defendant can only act via the instrumentality of humans who direct its
affairs. In any event, an employee can only proceed against his employer in a
situation such as this, where part of the allegation amounts to a breach of the
terms and conditions of engagement. Within the context of labour jurisprudence
in this country, the meaning of who is an employer is given an expansive
and robust interpretation to include not just an agent, but also manager. In Mr.
Omene Andy Robinson v. Mr. Nasarvali Dudekeh & Anor unreported Suit No.
NICN/AB/03/2020 which Judgment was delivered on 9/4/2025, this Court was
confronted with a similar situation as the instant case. The 1st
Defendant in that case was both the Managing Director/Operations Manager.
Efforts of Counsel to remove him from the suit were rebuffed by the Court. This
is what the Court said in paragraphs 48 & 49 of the Judgment -
48. ….. The determination as to who is an
employer of labour has been statutorily settled by Labour Act, Cap. L1 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004. The
Act in Section 91(1) states that -
"employer"
means any person who has entered into a contract of employment to employ any
other person as a worker either for himself or for the service of any other
person, and includes the agent, manager or factor of that
first-mentioned person and the personal representative of a deceased employer.
“49. Without necessarily defining an employee the section simply defines - "worker" to mean any person who has
entered into or works under a contract with an employer, whether the contract
is for manual labour or clerical work or is expressed or implied or oral or
written, and whether it is a contract of service or a contract personally to
execute any work or labour, but does not include - (a) any person employed
otherwise than for the purposes of the employer's business; or (b) persons
exercising administrative, executive, technical or professional functions as
public officers or otherwise; or (c) members of the employer's family; or (d)
representatives, agents and commercial travellers in so far as their work is
carried out outside the permanent workplace of the employer's establishment; or
(e) any person to whom articles or materials are given out to be made up,
cleaned, washed, altered, ornamented, finished, repaired or adopted for sale in
his own home or on other premises not under the control or management of the
person who gave out the article or the material”.
17. The
position of the 2nd Defendant as the Managing Director of the 1st
Defendant makes his presence in this suit imperative. 2nd Defendant
is the mind, the heart and the entire instrumentality by which the 1st
Defendant breathes and operates. He is not just an agent of the 1st
Defendant but indeed the employer of the Claimant. He is a proper party
in this suit. His presence will enhance effectual determination in this case.
Without much ado therefore, it suffices for this Court to hold that the first
issue must and is here answered in the affirmative and is resolved in favor of
the Claimant.
18. The
second issue for determination is whether by the terms of the Claimant’s
employment he is entitled to the 13th Month Salary every year of his
service with the 1st Defendant. The Claimant made a claim of entitlement to be
paid 13th month salary for the years 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021 which
he alleged formed part of his terms and conditions of engagement. The relief
sought by the Claimant amounts to an allegation of breach of contract by the
Defendants. In an employment litigation of this nature where an employee
alleges a breach of contract of employment, it is incumbent on him to exhibit
his contract of employment and show to the Court which of the terms and
conditions agreed on was breached by the Defendant. In proof of his claim, the
Claimant tendered Exh. OA1 being his Offer of Employment, Exh. OA2
-Confirmation of Appointment & Exh. OA3 – Defendant’s Employee Handbook. Clause
12 of Exh. OA1 indicated that on assumption of duty a copy of Exh. OA3
would be given to the Claimant. In Clause 3.6 with the heading 13th
Month’s Salary, Exh. OA3 states –
“A 13th
month’s salary up to a maximum of one-month basic gross salary of the employee
will be paid in December of each year and it will be tied to performance. This
will be pro-rated for any Employee who has not completed a full year in the
service of the company”.
19. Both
sides agreed that they are bound by Exh. OA3. None of the parties also
objected to the provision of Clause 3.6 of the said exhibit. The area of
controversy and contention is as regards the interpretation to be accorded to
the word performance in the first portion of the provision. While the
Claimant argued that the performance in the provisions relates to the
performance of the employee, the learned Counsel to the Defendant submitted
that it is indeed the performance of the 1st Defendant that
was contemplated by the Drafter of Exh. OA3 and that the 1st
Defendant performed poorly during the years under consideration by the Claimant
and hence the said 13th month salary could not be paid. It is
apparent from the argument from both sides that Clause 3.6 of Exh. OA3 is
capable of different interpretations.
19. Exh.
OA3 was drafted by the Defendants. That exhibit was already in existence
ever before the Claimant was employed by Exh. OA1. I have no evidence
before me to support any inclination that the Claimant had any input into the
making or the contents of the said exhibit. Could it be said that the
Defendants deliberately left the actual meaning attached to clause 3.6 of the
exhibit hanging for a time when issue of this nature would arise? Why did the
Defendants not make it clear as to whose performance whether the employee
or the 1st Defendant’s is anticipated by the provision of clause 3.6
of Exh. OA3? The ambiguity in the construction of Clause 3.6 of Exh. OA3
was caused by the Defendants. I am reluctant to assume that it was indeed a
deliberate act by the Defendants for a day and scenario as this. That is my
finding. It is a trite law that the Court would not permit a party to profit or
benefit from his own error or self-created confusion. It is also a trite
position of the law that in interpreting contracts of employment, ambiguity
must be resolved in favour of that which gives the employee an advantage. That
was the crux of the decisions of the Hon the President of this Court in Adekunle
Owulade v Nigerian Agip Oil Co Ltd Unreported Suit No: NICN/LA/41/2012
judgment delivered on 12/7/16 and Chiroma v. Forte Oil Plc Suit No:
NICN/ABJ/165/2018 judgment delivered on 2/5/19. Faced with a similar
situation Ogunwumiju, JSC cited both decisions with approval in New Nigeria
Development Company Limited v. Daniel Igbagbe (2021) LPELR-56666(SC). I
accordingly resolve the second issue in favor of the Claimant and hold that by
the terms of the Claimant’s employment he is entitled to the 13th
Month Salary every year of his service with the 1st Defendant.
20. I
should point out that the Claimant in seeking to prove his case had tendered Exh.
OA6-Exh. OA12. These exhibits showed the payment of 13th month
salary by the 1st Defendant to some of its employees. I note that
these payments were made for the years for which the Claimant is also seeking
payment of same to him. The Defendants did not offer any valid reason for this
act which I find to be discriminatory. I find this practice by the Defendants
to be discriminatory against the Claimant and a constitutional breach. Section
254C (1)(g), Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as
amended frowns at every form of discrimination at workplace.
21. Any form of discrimination is frowned at by
the global labour community. In this respect, the ILO Convention No. 111 on
Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention, 1958 is the primary
international instrument dedicated to eliminating discrimination in the world
of work. It fundamentally aimed at eliminating discrimination in employment and
occupation. The Convention defines discrimination as any distinction,
exclusion, or preference based on race, colour, sex, religion, political
opinion, national extraction, or social origin that results in the impairment
of equality of opportunity or treatment in employment or occupation. It
obligates member states to formulate and implement a national policy that
actively promotes equality in access to employment, vocational training, and
working conditions. Convention 111 requires states to review existing
laws, abolish discriminatory practices, and ensure effective remedies for
victims of discrimination in both the public and private sectors. This
Convention together with related ILO standards—such as Convention 100 on
Equal Remuneration and Convention 156 on Workers with Family Responsibilities—forms
a foundational framework for promoting fairness, inclusivity, and dignity in
the workplace at the global level. Nigeria ratified this Convention as far back
as 2002 and is thus obliged to ensure compliance with same by all stakeholders
in labour and employment matters including the Defendants. Any form of
discrimination at workplace is therefore a form of unfair labour practice which
this Court is obliged to pronounce on by the Third Alteration Act, 2010.
Accordingly, l declare the conduct of the Defendants toward the Claimant in
this case as discriminatory and amounts to an unfair labour practice.
22. Considering the outcome of this case along
with the facts and evidence led by the Claimant, it is one case that ought not
have gotten to this level. The Defendants had settled some of the major claims
of the Claimant. Yet for the sum of =N=145,557.7 the parties went through the
whole length of adjudication. Yet again the Defendants elected to not call any
evidence. The monetary claim of the Claimant is for a sum certain. It amounts
to a claim in special damages. The law requires that it be pleaded and strictly
proved. I find sufficient averments in the pleadings filed by the Claimant to
support a grant of the relief. Aside that, i also find that the Claimant
strictly proved his entitlement to this relief. I find evidence of his salary;
evidence of the fact that he was entitled to be paid 13th month salary;
evidence of the fact that he was not paid even though some of his colleagues at
work were paid during the years under consideration as well as evidence of the
fact that the 1st Defendant had good performance in the years concerned to be
able to afford payment of the sum to the Claimant.
23. Accordingly, l resolve the two issues set
for determination in favour of the Claimant. I hold that the Claimant is
entitled to all the reliefs sought. I declare that the Defendants discriminated
against the Claimant in the non-payment of 13th month salary to the Claimant. I
also declare that discriminatory labour practice is an unfair labour
practice, which is contrary to section 254C(1)(g) of the Constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended. I declare that the
calculated 13th month’s salary at the maximum rate provided in the Staff
Handbook (the Conditions of Service) for some members of staff of the 1st
Defendant for the years 2014-2019 & 2021 and the denial of same to the
Claimant is discriminatory and an unfair labour practice. The Defendants are
here ordered and directed to pay the Claimant the sum of =N=145,557.7 (One
Hundred ad Forty Five Thousand, Five Hundred and Fifty Seven Naira and Seven
Kobo Kobo) being Claimant’s earned but unpaid 13th month’s salary for the years
2017 – 2019 & 2021 for which the Claimant completed full years in service
pursuant to Section 3.6 of the Staff Handbook.
24. Cost
is said to follow event. This case was filed on 17/1/2023. Both time and
resources have been expended in the prosecution of this case. Accordingly, the
Defendants are ordered and directed to pay to the Claimant the cost of this
action assessed at =N=200,000.00 only.
6. Conclusion
25. Finally, for the avoidance of doubt and for
all the reasons as contained in this Judgment, the case of the Claimant wholly
succeeds as follows -
1.
I declare that discriminatory labour
practice is an unfair labour practice, which is contrary to section
254C(1)(g) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as
amended.
2.
I declare that the calculated 13th
month’s salary at the maximum rate provided in the Staff Handbook (the
Conditions of Service) for some members of staff of the 1st Defendant for the
years 2016-2019 & 2021 - 2022 and the denial of same to the Claimant is
discriminatory and an unfair labour practice.
3.
The Defendants are here ordered and
directed to pay the Claimant the sum of =N=145,557.7 (One Hundred and Forty
Five Thousand, Five Hundred and Fifty Seven Naira and Seven Kobo) being
Claimant’s earned but unpaid 13th month’s salary for the years 2017 – 2019 and 2021, for which the Claimant completed
full years in service pursuant to Section 3.6 of the Staff Handbook.
4.
The Defendants ae ordered and directed to
pay to the Claimant the cost of this action assessed at =N=200,000.00 only.
26. All the terms of this Judgment except cost
shall be complied with within 30 days from today and shall thereafter attract
interest at the rate of 20% per annum until final liquidation.
27. Judgment
is entered accordingly.
____________________
Hon. Justice J. D. Peters
Presiding Judge