LEGISLATIVE HOUSES (POWERS AND PRIVILEGES) ACT

CENTER FOR LAWS OF NIGERIA: FEDERAL LAWS

Constitution Federal Laws Treaties
State Laws Court Judgments Court Rules
DOWNLOAD OF A COPY OF THIS LAW IS AVAILABLE [N1,500 (PDF)] CLICK HERE FOR ONLINE PAYMENT. PDF COMPENDIUMS OF ALL THE LAWS OF NIGERIA, LAGOS AND OTHER STATES ARE ALSO AVAILABLE. EMAIL: lawnigeria@gmail.com or info@lawnigeria or Text/WhatsApp +23407067102097

DOWNLOAD (PDF-N1500)

LAWS OF THE FEDERATION OF NIGERIA 

 

LEGISLATIVE HOUSES (POWERS AND PRIVILEGES) ACT

CAP L12, 2014

[EDITOR’S NOTE: This Act has been repealed by the LEGISLATIVE HOUSES (POWERS AND PRIVILEGES) ACT, 2017]

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

  1.   Short title.
  2.   Interpretation.

Freedom of speech

  1.   Immunity from proceedings.

Evidence before committees

  1.   Power of committee to order attendance of witnesses.
  2. Issue and service of summons to attend.
  3. Power to issue warrant to compel attendance.
  4. Witness may be examined on oath.
  5. Privileges of witnesses.
  6. Answers in committee not to be admissible in proceedings.
  7. False evidence.
  8. Refusal to answer or failure to attend.
  9. Fabricating evidence.
  10.   Proceedings to be deemed judicial proceedings for certain purposes.

Conduct of strangers

  1. Entry to Chamber or precincts of Legislative Houses.
  2. Offences relating to admittance to the Chamber or precincts.
  3. Obstructing members or officers, and creating disturbances, etc.
  4. Power of arrest.
  5. Strangers may be removed on orders of President or Speaker.
  6. Influencing members.

Conduct of members

  1.   Acceptance of bribes by members.
  2.   Contempt of a Legislative House by members.
  3.   Suspended member excluded from Chamber and precincts.

Evidence of proceedings

  1.   Restriction on evidence as to certain matters.

Publication and reports

  1.   Publication of certain statements and writings an offence.
  2.   Printing false copies of laws or proceedings.
  3.   Protection of persons responsible for publications authorised by a Legislative House.
  4.   Publication of extracts of proceedings without malice

Miscellaneous

SECTION

  1. Powers of President or Speaker to be supplementary to powers otherwise conferred.
  2. Notification of arrest of member of House of Representatives.
  3. Courts not to exercise jurisdiction over acts of President, Speaker or officer.
  4. Civil process not to be served in Chamber or precincts.
  5. Restriction on prosecutions.
  6. Seditious meetings, etc.

 

 

LEGISLATIVE HOUSES (POWERS AND PRIVILEGES) ACT

An Act to declare and define certain powers, privileges and immunities of the Legislative Houses established under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and of the members of such Legislative Houses; to regulate the conduct of members and other persons connected with the proceedings thereof and for matters concerned therewith.

[16 of 1953. 30 of 1957.)

 

[30th April, 1953]                                                                                  [Commencement.)

  1. Short title

This Act may be cited as the Legislative Houses (Powers and Privileges) Act.

  1. Interpretation

In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires-

“Chamber” in relation to a Legislative House, means the place in which the Legislative House sits in session for the transaction of business;

“Committee” means a standing, select or special committee and includes any such committee of a Legislative House which joins with a committee of any other Legislative House;

“Constitution” means the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999;

[Cap. C23.)

“Legislative House” means the Senate, the House of Representatives, or a House of Assembly of a State, constituted under the constitution;

“Officer” in relation to a Legislative House, means the clerk or any other officer or person acting within the Chamber of the Legislative House or the precincts thereof under the orders of the President or Vice-President of the Senate, Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives or of the House of Assembly of a State, as the case may be, and includes any police officer on duty within the precincts of the House;

“Precincts” means the offices of a Legislative House and the galleries and places provided for the use or accommodation of strangers, members of the public and representatives of the press and includes, while a Legislative House is sitting and subject to any exceptions made by direction of the President or Vice-President of the Senate, Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives or of the House of Assembly of a State, the entire building in which the Chamber of the House is situated and any forecourt, yard, garden, enclosure or open space adjoining or appertaining to such building and used or provided for the purposes of the House;

“President” means the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria;

“Standing orders” means standing orders made by the Legislative House and for the time being in force;

“Stranger” in relation to a Legislative House, means any person who is not a member or officer of that House.

Freedom of speech

  1. Immunity from proceedings

No civil or criminal proceedings may be instituted against any member of a Legislative House-

(a)      in respect of words spoken before that House or a committee thereof; or

(b)      in respect of words written in a report to that House or to any committee thereof or in any petition, bill, resolution, motion or question brought or introduced by him therein.

Evidence before committees

  1. Power of committee to order attendance of witnesses

A committee of a Legislative House authorised by the standing orders thereof or by a resolution of the House to send for persons, papers and records may order any person-

(a)      to attend before it and to give evidence; or

(b)      to attend before it and to produce any paper, book, record or other document in the possession or control of such person.

  1. Issue and service of summons to attend

(1)      Any order to attend, to give evidence or to produce documents before a committee of a Legislative House in accordance with section 4 of this Act shall be notified to the person required to attend or to produce documents, by a summons under the hand of the Clerk of the House issued by the direction of the President or Speaker thereof.

(2)     In every summons issued in accordance with subsection (1) of this section, there shall be stated the time when and the place where the person summoned is required to attend and, in the case of an order made in accordance with paragraph (b) of section 4 of this Act, the documents he is required to produce.

(3)      Subject to the provisions of subsection (4) of this section, every such summons shall be served on the person mentioned therein by delivering to him a copy thereof and there shall be paid or tendered to the person so summoned such sum for expenses as may be authorised by standing order of the House.

(4)      A summons issued in accordance with this section may be served by an officer of a Legislative House or by a police officer:

Provided that the President or Speaker may, if he is satisfied that for any reason personal service of a summons cannot be effected, order that service be effected by forwarding the same by registered post addressed to the person to whom it is directed at his last known place of abode or business.

  1. Power to issue warrant to compel attendance

(1)      If a person to whom a summons under section 5 of this Act is directed does not attend before the committee at the time and place mentioned therein, the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the Legislative House may, upon being satisfied that the summons was duly served or that the person to whom the summons is directed wilfully avoids service, issue a warrant to apprehend him and bring him, at a time and place to be stated in the warrant, before the committee.

(2)      A warrant issued under this section shall be executed by a police officer.

(3)      The President or Speaker, as the case may be, on issuing a warrant for the arrest of any person under this section, may if he thinks fit, by endorsement on the warrant, direct that the person named in the warrant be released after arrest on his entering into such a recognisance before a magistrate for his appearance before the committee of the Legislative House as may be required in the endorsement.

  1. Witness may be examined on oath

A committee of a Legislative House, if authorised by standing orders or resolution of that House to send for persons, papers and records, may require that any facts, matters and things relating to the subject of inquiry before such committee be verified or ascertained by the oral examination of witnesses, and may cause any such witnesses to be examined on oath, which the chairman of the committee or the Clerk thereof is hereby authorised to administer.

  1. Privilege of witnesses

(1)      Every person summoned to attend, to give evidence or to produce any paper, book, record or other document before a committee of a Legislative House shall be entitled in respect of such evidence or the disclosure of any communication or the production of any such paper, book, record or other document to the same privilege as before a court of law.

(2)     Except with the consent of the President (or in the case of the records or affairs of State of a department of the Government of a State, the Governor of such State) no public officer shall be required-

(a)      to produce before any committee of a Legislative House any paper, book, record or other document; or

(b)      to give before any committee of a Legislative House evidence on any matter, if such paper, book, record or other document or such evidence is stated by the public officer to form part of or to relate to the unpublished official records of any naval, military, air force or civil department, or to relate to any affairs of State.

  1. Answers in committee not to be admissible in proceedings

An answer by a person to a question put by a committee of a Legislative House shall not, except in the case of criminal proceedings for an offence against section 117 of the Criminal Code or an offence against this Act, be in any proceedings, civil or criminal, admissible in evidence against him.

[Cap. C38.]

  1. False evidence

Any person who before a committee of a Legislative House knowingly gives a false            answer to any question material to the subject of the inquiry of the committee which may be put to him during the course of his examination shall-

(a)      if the answer was given on oath, be deemed to be guilty of an offence against section 117 of the Criminal Code and shall be liable on conviction to the punishment therefore prescribed by that Code;

[Cap. C38.]

(b)      if the answer was given otherwise than on oath, be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment for twelve months.

  1. Refusal to answer or failure to attend

Any person who –

(a)      fails without reasonable excuse, the proof whereof shall be upon him, to attend before a committee when so required by an order made under the provisions of section 4 of this Act; or

(b)      refuses to be examined before, or to answer any question put by, a committee, or to produce any paper, book, record or other document which he has been required to produce by an order made under the provisions of section 4 of this Act, unless such question or paper, book, record or other document is not, in the opinion of the chairman, material to the subject of the inquiry of the committee or such refusal is allowed under the provisions of section 8 of this Act,

shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of fifty naira or to imprisonment for three months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Fabricating evidence

Any person who presents to a committee of a Legislative House any false, untrue, fabricated or falsified document with intent to deceive the committee shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of two hundred naira or imprisonment for twelve months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Proceedings to be deemed judicial proceedings for certain purposes

The proceedings before a committee of a Legislative House authorised by standing orders or resolution of the House to send for persons, papers and records shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding for the purposes of sections 121, 122 and 123 of the Criminal Code.

[Cap. C38.)

Conduct of strangers

  1. Entry to Chamber or precincts of Legislative Houses

(1)      No stranger in respect of a Legislative House shall be entitled to enter or remain within the Chamber or precincts of the Legislative House without the authority of the            President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the House.

(2)      Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1) of this section, where two or
more Legislative Houses sit in session for the transaction of business in the same place, then while anyone of those Legislative Houses is sitting, no person who is not a member or officer of that House shall be entitled to enter or remain within the Chamber or precincts of the House without the authority of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the House.

  1. Offences relating to admittance to the Chamber or precincts

Any person who-

(a)      being a stranger enters the Chamber or precincts of a Legislative House without permission duly granted under the authority of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, thereof contrary to the provisions of section 14 of this Act, or being therein with such permission refuses to leave at the order of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the Legislative House; or

(b)      being admitted to the Chamber or precincts of a Legislative House as a stranger contravenes any rule made by the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the Legislative House under the standing orders of that House relating to the admission of strangers; or

(c)       attends any silting of a Legislative House as representative of any newspaper or journal after a general permission granted under the standing orders of the House to the representative or representatives of that newspaper or journal has been revoked, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a tine of fifty naira or to imprisonment for three months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Obstructing members or officers, and creating disturbances, etc.

Any stranger in respect of a Legislative House who-

(a)      hinders or obstructs any member of that Legislative House coming to, going from or being within the Chamber or the precincts thereof; or

(b)      interferes with, resists or obstructs any officer of a Legislative House while in the execution of his duty; or

(c)       creates or joins in any disturbance which interrupts or is likely to interrupt the proceedings of that Legislative House while it is sitting; or

(d)      sits or votes in that Legislative House, shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine of one hundred naira or to imprisonment for six months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Power of arrest

An officer of a Legislative House may, without an order from a magistrate and without a warrant, arrest-

(a)      any person who commits any offence contrary to section 15 or 16 of this Act in his presence;

(b)      any person within the Chamber or precincts of the Legislative House whom he reasonably suspects of having committed an offence contrary to either of the said sections.

  1. Strangers may be removed on orders of President or Speaker

The President or Speaker, as the case may be, of a Legislative House may at any time, order any stranger in respect of that House to withdraw from the Chamber and precincts of the House, and if any such person shall fail to obey such order he may be forcibly re- moved from the Chamber and precincts of the House by any officer of the House and no proceedings shall lie in any court against the President or Speaker, as the case may be, or such officer in respect of such removal.

  1. Influencing members

Any person who-

(a)      offers to any member or officer of a Legislative House any bribe, fee, compensation, reward or benefit of any kind in order to influence him in his conduct as such member or officer, or for or in respect of the promotion of or opposition to any bill, resolution, matter or thing submitted or intended to be submitted to a Legislative House; or

(b)      makes use of or threatens to make use of any force, violence or restraint or inflicts or threatens to inflict any temporal or spiritual injury, damage, harm or loss upon or against a member of a Legislative House in order to compel such member to declare himself in favour of or against any proposition or matter pending or expected to be brought before that Legislative House, or on account
of such member having declared himself in favour of or against any proposition or matter brought before that Legislative House, shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine of four hundred naira or to imprisonment for two years or to both such line and imprisonment.

Conduct of members

  1. Acceptance of bribes by members

Any member of a Legislative House who accepts or agrees to accept or obtains or attempts to obtain for himself or for any other person any bribe, fee, compensation, reward or benefit of any kind for speaking, voting or acting as such member or for refraining from so spoken, voted or acted or having so refrained shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine of four hundred naira or to imprisonment for two years or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Contempt of a Legislative House by members

(1)      Any member of a Legislative House who-

(a)      being a member of a committee of the House, publishes to any person not being a member of such committee any evidence taken by the committee before it has been reported to the House; or

(b)      assaults or obstructs a member of the Legislative House within the Chamber or precincts of the House; or

(c)       assaults or obstructs any officer of the Legislative House while in the execution of his duty; or

(d)      is convicted of any offence under this Act, shall be guilty of contempt of the Legislative House.

(2)      Where any member is guilty of contempt of a Legislative House, the House, may by resolution, reprimand such member or suspend him from the service of the House for such period as it may determine:

Provided that such period shall not extend beyond the last day of the meeting next following that in which the resolution is passed, or of the session in which the resolution is passed, whichever shall first occur.

(3)      No salary or allowance payable to a member of a Legislative House for his service as such shall be paid in respect of any period during which he is suspended from the service of the House under the provisions of this section.

(4)      Nothing in this section contained shall be construed to preclude the bringing of proceedings, civil or criminal, against any member in respect of any act or thing done contrary to paragraph (b) or (c) of subsection (1) of this section.

  1. Suspended member excluded from Chamber and precincts

A member of a Legislative House who has been suspended from the service of that House shall not enter or remain within the Chamber or precincts of the House while such suspension remains in force, and, if any such member is found within the Chamber or precincts of the House in contravention of this section, he may be forcibly removed therefrom by any officer of the House and no proceedings shall lie in any court against such officer in respect of such removal.

Evidence of proceedings

  1. Restriction on evidence as to certain matters

No evidence relating to any of the following matters, that is to say-

(a)      debates or other proceedings in a Legislative House;

(b)      the contents of the minutes of evidence taken or any documents laid before a committee of a Legislative House or any proceedings or examinations held before any such committee, by any member or officer of the House or any shorthand-writer employed to take minutes of any such evidence or proceedings or, in respect of any of the matters specified in paragraph (b) of this section, by any person who was a witness before the committee shall be admissible in any proceedings before a court or person authorised by law to take evidence unless the court or such last-mentioned person is satisfied that permission has been given by the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the House or the chairman of the committee (as the case may require) for such evidence to be given.

Publications and reports

  1. Publication of certain statements and writings an offence

(1)      Any person who-

(a)      publishes any statement, whether in writing or otherwise, which falsely or scandalously defames a Legislative House or any committee thereof; or

(b)      publishes any writing reflecting on the character of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of a Legislative House or the chairman of a Committee of a Legislative House in the conduct of his duty as such President, Speaker or chairman; or

(c)       publishes any writing containing a gross, wilful or scandalous misrepresentation of the proceedings of a Legislative House or of the speech of any member in the proceedings of a Legislative House, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of two hundred naira or to imprisonment for twelve months, or to both such fine and imprisonment.

(2)      In this section “publish”, in relation to any writing, means exhibiting in public, or causing to be read or seen, or showing or delivering, or causing to be shown or delivered, with the intent that the writing may be read or seen by any person.

  1. Printing false copies of laws or proceedings

Any person who prints or causes to be printed a copy of any Act or law now or hereafter in force, or a copy of any report, paper, minutes or votes or proceedings of a Legislative House as purporting to have been printed by the Government Printer or by or under the authority of a Legislative House or by the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of a Legislative House, and the same is not so printed, or tenders in evidence any such copy as purporting to be so printed having reasonable cause to know that it is not so printed, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of two hundred naira or imprisonment for twelve months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

  1. Protection of persons responsible for publications authorised by a Legislative House

(1)      Any person, being a defendant in any civil or criminal proceedings instituted for or on account of or in respect of the publication by such person or by his servant, by order or under the authority of a Legislative House, of any reports, papers, minutes, votes or proceedings, may, on giving to the plaintiff or prosecutor, as the case may be, twenty-four hours’ written notice of his intention, bring-

(a)      before the court in which such civil or criminal proceedings are being held a certificate under the hand of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of the Legislative House stating that the reports, papers, minutes, votes or proceedings in respect of which such civil or criminal proceedings have been instituted were published by such person or his servant by order or under the
authority of a Legislative House;

(b)      an affidavit verifying such certificate.

(2)      The court shall thereupon immediately stay such civil or criminal proceedings and the same and every process issued therein shall be deemed to be finally determined.

  1. Publication of extracts of proceedings without malice

In any civil or criminal proceedings for printing any extract from or an abstract of any report, paper, votes or proceedings published by or under the authority of a Legislative House, if the court or jury, as the case may be, be satisfied that such extract or abstract was published bona fide and without malice, judgment or verdict, as the case maybe, shall be entered for the defendant or accused.

Miscellaneous

  1. Powers of President or Speaker to be supplementary to powers otherwise conferred

The powers of the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of a Legislative House conferred by this Act shall be supplementary to any powers conferred on him by the Constitution, or by standing orders.

  1. Notification of arrest of member of House of Representatives

Where a member of the National Assembly is-

(a)      arrested or detained in custody upon the warrant or order of a court; or

(b)      sentenced by a court to a term of imprisonment, the court shall, as soon as practicable, inform the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the House of Representatives, as the case may be, accordingly.

(i)       for the transaction of the business of a Legislative House; or
for any religious, charitable or scientific purpose; or

(ii)      for any other purpose with the consent of the President or Governor given on such terms as he may think fit.

  1. Courts not to exercise jurisdiction over acts of President, Speaker or officer

Neither the President or Speaker, as the case may be, of a Legislative House nor any officer of a Legislative House shall be subject to the jurisdiction of any court in respect of the exercise of any power conferred on or vested in him by or under this Act or the standing orders of the Legislative House, or by the Constitution.

  1. Civil process not to be served in Chamber or precincts

Notwithstanding anything in any written law, no process issued by any court in Nigeria in the exercise of its civil jurisdiction shall be served or executed within the Chamber or precincts of a Legislative House while that House is sitting or through the President, Speaker or any officer of a Legislative House.

  1. Restriction on prosecutions

No prosecution shall be instituted for an offence under this Act except by the Attorney-General of the Federation upon information given to him in writing by the President of the Senate or Speaker of the House of Representatives, or by the Attorney-General of a State upon information given to such officer by the Speaker of the Legislative House of a State.

  1. Seditious meetings, etc.

(1)      Subject to the provisions of this section, no meeting of more than fifty persons
shall be convened or held within a radius of one mile of a Legislative House during any sitting day; and any meeting convened or held contrary to the provisions of this subsection, shall be deemed to be a seditious meeting.

(2)      Nothing in this section shall be construed to apply to any meeting convened or held-

(3)      Every person who convenes, gives notice of or attends any meeting prohibited by this section, or as owner or occupier of any premises consents by any means to the use of the premises for the purposes of such a meeting, shall be guilty of an offence and be liable on summary conviction to a fine of not less than one hundred naira or to imprisonment for a term of not less than six months or to both.

LEGISLATIVE HOUSES (POWERS AND PRIVILEGES) ACT

SUBSIDIARY LEGISLATION

No Subsidiary Legislation

 

error: Our Content is protected!! Contact us to get the resources...

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Subscribe!