Audio By Carbonatix
A Cape Coast High Court hearing the dual citizenship case of the Assin North MP has deferred judgment of the matter to the 28th of July.
Judgment was supposed to have been delivered on Wednesday, July 14, but the court presided over by Justice Kwasi Boakye, after listening to the legal arguments from the counsels of the petitioner and the second respondent, decided to adjourn the reading of his judgment to the 28th of July.
The Presiding Judge indicated that he had taken the decision not to deliver his judgment on the 14th of July in deference to the Supreme Court.
The Assin North MP, Joe Gyaakye Quayson, has petitioned the apex court to arrest the judgment of the court because the presiding judge did not allow the parties an oral submission in court.
He also has invoked the supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court for the court to interpret certain constitutional provisions that they believe the High Court was not competent in interpreting.
The Assin North MP, Joe Gyaakye Quayson, who has now secured the services of a new lawyer after the exit of Abraham Amaliba, has not been in court ever since the trial began.
In Court on Tuesday, the MP’s lawyer, Justin Pwavra Teriwajah, indicated he had applied for Stay of Execution at the Appeals Court and a motion to arrest the judgement of the Cape Coast High Court at the Supreme Court.
He prayed the court to grant the motion as they await the decision of the Apex court.
His prayer was answered as the judge, out of respect for the apex court decided to choose an adjournment over the delivery of his judgment.
There were earlier legal tussles where Mr. Teriwajah served the petitioner when he filed the motion but did not copy the lawyer for the petitioner, Frank Davies. He explained, he only recognized the petitioner and not Frank Davies because the lawyer for the petitioner should have filed a separate process indicating he was the lawyer representing the petitioner.
Frank Davies, stated he was shocked that such an argument could be spewed by the new lawyer for the MP after he’s been handling the case of the petitioner right from the beginning of the trial and conducted businesses relative to the case for and on behalf of the petitioner.
The judge, eventually, ruled and stated that Mr Davies, by the records in court, is the lawyer for the petitioner and remains the lawyer for the petitioner should have been accorded due recognition.
Justice Kwasi Boakye adjourned the delivery of his judgment to the 28th of July, a day after the Supreme court would give its decision in the application filed before it by the Assin North MP.
Latest Stories
-
Today’s Front pages: Tuesday, January 13, 2026
20 minutes -
Galamsey fight: Western Regional Minister calls for real-time monitoring of water bodies
23 minutes -
NPP has lost its identity, the current party is “fake” – Prof Frimpong-Boateng
33 minutes -
GRA targets GH¢225bn revenue in 2026 as VAT reforms take effect
41 minutes -
Heath Goldfields promises community-centered revival of Bogoso-Prestea Mine
43 minutes -
Ghana’s development visions lack scientific foundation – Frimpong-Boateng
46 minutes -
Interior Minister confirms arrest over fake security service recruitment scheme
48 minutes -
Ghanaians would’ve laughed at us if you were appointed Finance Minister – Richard Nyama to Stephen Amoah
51 minutes -
Police nab suspect who beat landlady to death at Agona Nyakrom
55 minutes -
Re-electing old flagbearer will be a “trainwreck” for NPP – Prof Frimpong-Boateng
56 minutes -
Police arrest seven alleged human traffickers, rescue 48 victims in Ho
1 hour -
One dead, three injured in ghastly crash on Kibi–Suhum Road
1 hour -
Bawumia is a nice person but can’t lead Nkrumah’s Ghana – Frimpong-Boateng
1 hour -
Amin Adam took over a rotten economy and fixed it; he isn’t your mate – Richard Nyama to Stephen Amoah
2 hours -
BoG sets strict Ghana Card rule for financial transactions
2 hours
