Abuja court says police and FRSC cannot fine motorists over third-party insurance without court order
The Facts
- The Federal High Court in Abuja restrained the Nigeria Police Force and the Federal Road Safety Corps from imposing fines or penalties on motorists over third-party motor vehicle insurance without a court order.
- Justice Hauwa Yilwa delivered the ruling.
- The court held that the police and FRSC still have statutory authority to enforce compliance with third-party motor insurance requirements.
- The judgment said the agencies do not have legal authority to sanction motorists by imposing fines directly; only a court of competent jurisdiction can do that.
- The suit was filed by Deji Adeyanju against the Inspector-General of Police, the Attorney-General of the Federation and the FRSC.
- The ruling matters for motorists because it allows police and FRSC officers to continue checking insurance compliance, but bars them from issuing on-the-spot financial penalties without judicial process.
- One issue the court did not grant was a declaration that the police and FRSC lack power to enforce third-party motor vehicle insurance nationwide.
Context
What did the court actually stop the police and FRSC from doing?
The court stopped the two agencies from imposing or demanding fines from motorists over third-party motor insurance violations without a valid court order. It said sanctioning offenders is for a court of competent jurisdiction, not roadside enforcement officers Channels Television,Vanguard,thewillnews.com.
Can the police and FRSC still check whether drivers have third-party insurance?
Yes. Multiple reports say the judgment did not remove their enforcement role: the agencies can still stop vehicles, demand documents and verify compliance with third-party insurance laws, but they cannot unilaterally fine motorists Guardian,Premium Times Niger…,P.M. News.
How did this case reach the court?
The ruling followed a suit filed by lawyer and activist Deji Adeyanju, identified in reports as case FHC/ABJ/CS/291/2025, against the Inspector-General of Police, the Attorney-General of the Federation and the FRSC Punch Newspapers,Vanguard,thewillnews.com.
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