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By SCM Staff Writer I Monday, October 13, 2025

 

IKOYI, Lagos – Melrose Books & Publishing, ​a major publishing house has been ordered to pay a suspended worker more than six years’ worth of backdated salary and allowances after a judge ruled his “indefinite suspension” was a shocking employment law blunder.

The ​Lagos-based Melrose Books & Publishing must now cough up an enormous sum to their former employee, named only as Ade, within the next 30 days.

​The massive payout covers 68 months of salary—from October 2015 to June 2021—plus a string of annual leave and medical allowances for the entire seven-year period!

​Company’s N12m Claim Sunk

​The shock ruling by Hon. Justice (Prof) Elizabeth Oji of the National Industrial Court also threw out the publisher’s counter-claim that Ade owed them a whopping N12.2 million (a claimed shortfall in company funds).

​Melrose Books & Publishing had tried to argue that Ade was responsible for a missing N18m, claiming he even admitted to a N12.2m “variance” in a handwritten note.

​However, the Judge said the company’s allegations were not backed up by any proper internal investigation.

Crucially, the court found there was no proof the company ever co-operated with Ade to reconcile the accounts before they brutally suspended him without pay.

​Ade had fiercely denied owing a penny, stating that a previous external audit found no debt. He told the court he only signed an “interim report” because he thought it was routine procedure—not an admission he was a thief.

​He was suspended without pay just two days after being given a seven-day ultimatum to reconcile the books.

​In her stinging judgment, Justice Oji slammed the company for leaving Ade’s employment status “in limbo,” stating that modern labour law “frowns at prolonged suspensions, indefinite suspension without pay.”

​She ruled that because the publisher never formally sacked Ade and failed to prove any wrongdoing, he was legally still an employee for the entire period.

​”The Claimant’s evidence has not established entitlement to this relief,” she declared, rejecting the publisher’s multi-million-pound debt claim.

​It’s a massive win for Ade, who successfully counter-claimed that his indefinite, unpaid suspension was “harsh and unlawful.”

​Melrose Books & Publishing now has to pay up all back salary, annual leave, and medical allowances in full before the month is out.

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