Supreme Court sets new
rules for SAN applicants
The Legal Practitioners
Privileges Committee (LPPC) has released new guidelines for the conferment of
the rank of Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN).
A copy of
the new guidelines obtained by our reporter shows that applicants for the
highest rank in the legal profession will now cough out a whopping N300,000 as
application fee as against N250,000 paid last year.
A
committee, which was set up to review the guidelines had recommended N500,000
application fee and justified the recommendation on the high cost of conducting
chambers inspection across the country.
But the
Chairman of the LPPC and Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloma Mukhtar
rejected the recommendation arguing that it was too high.
The
documents have also empowered the committee to suspend a legal practitioner
from the use of the rank of SAN pending the determination of any disciplinary
action, complaint or prosecution against such a legal practitioner.
This new
guidlines also empower the committee to punish an alleged erring legal
practitioner even when his guilt has yet to be established.
Other
changes in the new guidelines include earlier opening of the application
process. Call for applications will now be made not later than January 7, each
year as against not later than January 31 under the former arrangement.
Applicants
are also now required to provide certified true copies of complete record of
trial proceedings in at least five cases he or she handled at the high court
from filing stage to judgment to show that he or she conducted the trial
throughout.
For those
applying as academics, the new guidelines introduce fresh hurdles. They must
now show that their works are published by reputable publishers ‘whose
reputation shall be assessed and determined by the Academic sub-committee.’
The
guidelines retain the criteria for evaluating candidates’ competence, which
are: integrity 25 per cent, judges’ opinion 15 per cent, knowledge of law 15
per cent, contribution to the development of the law 10 per cent, leadership
qualities 10 per cent, strength and quality of reference 15 per cent and quality
of law office 10 per cent.TheSun
Short URL: http://www.osundefender.org/?p=141561
The Legal Practitioners
Privileges Committee (LPPC) has released new guidelines for the conferment of
the rank of Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN).
A copy of
the new guidelines obtained by our reporter shows that applicants for the
highest rank in the legal profession will now cough out a whopping N300,000 as
application fee as against N250,000 paid last year.
A
committee, which was set up to review the guidelines had recommended N500,000
application fee and justified the recommendation on the high cost of conducting
chambers inspection across the country.
But the
Chairman of the LPPC and Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloma Mukhtar
rejected the recommendation arguing that it was too high.
The
documents have also empowered the committee to suspend a legal practitioner
from the use of the rank of SAN pending the determination of any disciplinary
action, complaint or prosecution against such a legal practitioner.
This new
guidlines also empower the committee to punish an alleged erring legal
practitioner even when his guilt has yet to be established.
Other
changes in the new guidelines include earlier opening of the application
process. Call for applications will now be made not later than January 7, each
year as against not later than January 31 under the former arrangement.
Applicants
are also now required to provide certified true copies of complete record of
trial proceedings in at least five cases he or she handled at the high court
from filing stage to judgment to show that he or she conducted the trial
throughout.
For those
applying as academics, the new guidelines introduce fresh hurdles. They must
now show that their works are published by reputable publishers ‘whose
reputation shall be assessed and determined by the Academic sub-committee.’
The
guidelines retain the criteria for evaluating candidates’ competence, which
are: integrity 25 per cent, judges’ opinion 15 per cent, knowledge of law 15
per cent, contribution to the development of the law 10 per cent, leadership
qualities 10 per cent, strength and quality of reference 15 per cent and quality
of law office 10 per cent.
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