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Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu has signed into law the State Value Added Tax (VAT) Bill as passed by the State House of Assembly.
TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Governor Sanwo-Olu signed the bill into law on Friday, following passage by the House.
The bill is for a law to impose and charge VAT on certain goods and services.
Sanwo-Olu signed the bill into law at about 11:45 am on Friday after returning from an official trip to Abuja .
By this act, the Bill has now become a Law.
Meanwhile, the Lagos State Government on Friday has applied to be joined as a co-respondent in the appeal filed by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) against the judgement of the Rivers State High Court, which declared that the Rivers State Government had the right to collect Value-Added Tax (VAT) and Personal Income Tax in the state, and not the FIRS.
Attorney-General of the state, Moyesore Onigbanjo, made the request at the Court of Appeal in Abuja on behalf of the state government.
Onigbanjo told the court that the state’s interest was at stake, stressing that if they aren’t joined in the matter, it would amount to a breach of fair hearing.
He urged the court to take the application for the joinder first before the FIRS’ application for a Stay of Execution of the judgement of the Rivers State High Court.
The Counsel to the FIRS, Mahmud Magaji SAN, however, urged the court to hear the main application (stay of execution request) first, as that was of utmost priority.
Subsequently, the head of the three-man panel, Justice Haruna Tsammani, stepped down the matter for ruling.
A Federal High Court in Port Harcourt had on September 6 dismissed an application by the FIRS, seeking to stop the Rivers State government from enforcing the Rivers State High Court judgement vesting the power to collect VAT within Rivers State on the state government and not FIRS.
The FIRS had, through a motion on notice, applied for a stay of execution on the earlier judgement delivered by Justice Stephen Pam, affirming the constitutional role of the state governments to collect VAT and not FIRS.
However, the Appeal Court sitting in Abuja had earlier ordered all parties to maintain status quo and refrain from taking action that would give effect to the judgement of the Federal High Court in Port Harcourt that allowed the Rivers State government to collect VAT.
A three-man panel of the appellate court led by Justice Haruna Tsammani gave the order on Friday while ruling on an appeal filed by the Federal Internal Revenue Service (FIRS).
The court also ruled that the motion of joinder by the Lagos State government be heard and gave the applicants two days to file their written addresses.
Similarly, the respondents have been given two days to file their response, while the applicants were given a day to reply on the point of law.