Supreme court reserves judgment in David Mark’s appeal on ADC leadership dispute
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Supreme court reserves judgment in David Mark’s appeal on ADC leadership dispute

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Supreme court reserves judgment in David Mark’s appeal on ADC leadership dispute

Admin By Adewale Adewale
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The supreme court of Nigeria has reserved judgment in an appeal filed by David Mark over the leadership tussle in the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

A five-member panel of the apex court, led by Mohammed Garba, fixed a date for judgment after hearing arguments from parties in the case.
 
Mark, who is leading a faction within the party, is challenging the March 12 judgment of the court of appeal, which ordered parties to maintain the status quo ante bellum in a suit instituted by aggrieved members of the party.
 
In the appeal marked SC/CV/180/2026, the former senate president argued that the appellate court exceeded its jurisdiction by intervening in what he described as the internal affairs of a political party.
 
Through his counsel, Jubril Okutepa, a senior advocate of Nigeria, Mark maintained that disputes relating to party leadership are non-justiciable, urging the court to set aside the judgment.
 
The respondents in the suit include Nafiu Bala, the ADC, Rauf Aregbesola, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), and Ralph Nwosu.
 
Among the reliefs sought, Mark asked the court to restrain INEC from recognising any leadership outside his faction pending the determination of the appeal.
 
He also prayed the court to stop the electoral body from making changes to the party’s leadership structure and to stay proceedings in a related suit pending before the federal high court in Abuja.
 
While INEC did not file any process in support of or against the appeal, other respondents urged the apex court to dismiss the case.
 
The appeal stems from a ruling delivered by the court of appeal delivered on March 12, which dismissed Mark’s appeal against a September 4 ruling of the federal high court.
 
At the federal high court, Bala, a former deputy national chairman of the ADC, had filed a suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/1819/2025, seeking to stop the Mark-led leadership from parading themselves as national officers of the ADC.
 
Bala listed the ADC, Mark, Aregbesola (national secretary), INEC, and Ralph Nwosu, the party’s founder and former national chairman, as defendants.
 
Bala maintained that he never resigned his position as national vice-chairman and argued that he ought to have assumed leadership in line with the party’s constitution following Nwosu’s exit as national chairman.
 
He later declared himself national chairman, vowing to challenge the Mark leadership in court.
 
In the suit filed on September 2, 2025, Bala is seeking an order restraining INEC from recognising Mark-led executives and compelling recognition of himself as acting national chairman.
 
He also filed motions seeking to stop the party from holding meetings, congresses, or conventions pending the determination of the suit.
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