WHETHER LOGIC, MATHEMATICS OR THE LAW; IMO SUPREME COURT REVIEW HAS MERIT AND THE SCALE IS HERE PONTIFICATED. By KEMKA S. IBEJI
KEMKA S. IBEJI |
Rt. Hon. Emeka Ihedioha has a good case, very valid and sound argument and so the judgment will tilt to his side on Monday 2nd March, 2020.
Two (2) factors grant Emeka Ihedioha's case the desired and requires merits;
A. The issue of spread was overlooked and omitted in the judgment. When the Supreme Court in her judgment asserted that Sen. Hope Uzodinma having polled the highest number of votes cast and having met the statutory requirement of spread is therefore returned as the winner, it failed to consider the veracity of her premises granting the conclusion. In logic however, only true premises can give true conclusions. For every valid statement therefore, the premises and conclusion must be either true (through and through) or false all through. No valid argument has false premises and true conclusion or true premises and false conclusion. This is the law of logic and it is an internationally known and indisputable truism. And if therefore it is true that Sen. Hope Uzodinma didn't meet the condition of spread, it simply faults the judgment and renders it null. The judgment was acquired fraudulently and the Supreme Court cannot order an illegality.
B. The issue of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court was divested of jurisdiction as it failed to dispense the Cross Appeal judgment of the Appeal Court which would have given her the jurisdiction. In the case, Sen. Hope Uzodinma was not already part of the matter in the eyes of the law. Giving a declaration of your judgment and thereafter refer to the subsisting judgement that wasn't trashed as spent is putting the cart before the horse. You don't jump the fence to open the gate!
With all knowledge of logic, the validity of arguments, the precedence of cases, a little understanding of the law and the sensitivity of justice, I bet you that one of these will be the outcome on Monday;
1. Setting aside of the judgement
Or
2. Reviewing of the Consequential Order
I will keep my eyes on these as the scales of justice. Take me up on this as I vow unshaken on this. I bet the world...
I am,
KEMKA S. IBEJI
A Philosopher King
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