×
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by whitelisting our website.

Court orders seizure of Emirates’ aircraft over debt

starconnect
Emirates Airline to lose aircraft
An aircraft in the fleet of Emirates Airline

Admin l Monday, December 02, 2019

IKOYI, Lagos, Nigeria – A Federal High Court sitting in Lagos has ordered the siezure of an aircraft belonging to Emirates Airline over an N8.1 million  judgment debt. The order was sequel to a motion filed by Dr Charles Mekwunye seeking for the enforcement of a Supreme Court judgment in a suit between Promise Mekwunye and the airline.

Emirates Headquarters in the UAE

Granting the reliefs sought by Mekwunye, Justice Mohammed Liman, held, “It is accordingly ordered that an attachment is hereby issued on the judgment debtor’s aircraft registered as ‘A6 Aircraft Type 77W EK: 783/784’, or any other aircraft belonging to the judgment debtor(Emirates) which flies into Nigeria Territory, to be arrested and detained until the judgment debt is fully paid: in default after 30 days, the aircraft shall be auctioned to satisfy the judgment debt.”

The judge also ordered that Emirates Airline shall bear the cost of  maintainance and custody of the detained aircraft.

Miss Mekwunye who was then a student of North Texas University, Denton, Texas USA had in 2008 dragged Emirates Airline to court for refusal of boarding of her two-way flight ticket from Dallas to Nigeria and back for no reason and for further refusing to fully refund the cost of the  ticket of American Airline she bought to come back to Nigeria. 

She claimed that the Emirate Airline offered no reason for its action leaving her stranded for days at the airport until she was able to secure a more expensive flight ticket on a longer route to Lagos. 

In a judgment delivered on November 15, 2010, the Federal High Court held that the refusal of Emirates Airline to carry Mekwunye amounted to a breach of contract of carriage.  Consequently, the court ordered full refund of ticket without any deduction or charge, and further granted N2.5 million in general damages and N250,000 in legal costs against the airline.

Emirates Airline appealed the judgment and contended that the trial Judge erred in law when he awarded N250,000.00 in legal fees when the plaintiff claimed 1,000,000.00 but led no evidence.

Advertisement

The airline contended that the award of general damages was contrary to the Montreal Convention which not only limits the damages recoverable but placed obligation to prove wilful misconduct /gross negligence against the airline before the airline can be liable for damages.  

On April 11, 2014, the Court of Appeal upheld the Emirate Airline’s appeal and upturned the award of N250,000 and N2.5million earlier awarded to Miss Mekwunye. The matter later moved to the Supreme Court and in a lead judgement delivered on February 1, 2019, by Justice Ejembi Eko, the apex court overruled the decision of the Court of Appeal and upheld the earlier judgment of Federal High Court.

The apex court held that the trial court was right in ordering Emirates Airline to pay in the circumstances N2.5m as general damages in addition to ticket refund as the airline cannot rely on the Montreal Convention for limitation of liability when it was guilty of fundamental breach of the contract as argued by the appellant’s lawyer Dr. Mekwunye.

The Supreme Court further held amongst other things that the Court of Appeal was wrong to have heard and upturned the decision of the lower court when Emirate Airline never obtain leave of court to file the appeal as to costs.

The apex court also held that Emirate Airline’s denial of boarding was a repudiation of its contract with Mekwunye and a breach of the fundamental term of the contract which does not entitle it to rely on the Montreal Convention which sets limit  of claims in an action between an airline and it passenger. 

The judgment debt plus interest has since accumulated to about N8.1 million as Emirates Airlines refuses to comply with the judgment. 

TAGGED: ,
Share this Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version
Be the first to get the news as soon as it breaks Yes!! I'm in Not Yet