Union Bank Plc has won a decisive legal victory as a Lagos Federal High Court awarded a judgement of N20,732,299,999.21 in its favour against Danium Energy Services Limited and its CEO, Kehinde Elliot Ogbor, in suit number FHC/L/CS/1905/2023.
The bank brought the claim on the basis of a “Memorandum of Settlement dated 6th March 2018” and a “Consent Judgment of 25th April 2018,” which it contended had been breached by the defendants. The court found that the settlement agreement and personal guarantees executed by the defendants created enforceable contractual obligations, which were not honoured.
As part of the judgement, the bank was also authorised to take exclusive possession of all properties pledged by Danium Energy and Ogbor as collateral. Those properties include highly‐valued real estate located in Ikoyi, Banana Island, and Victoria Island, all in Lagos State, as well as the company’s head‐office building on Anifowoshe Street, Victoria Island.
In the defendants’ defence, Ogbor and Danium Energy challenged the claim, asserting that the settlement and consent judgment were vitiated by fraud, misrepresentation, undue influence and economic duress, thus arguing that the agreements were voidable. They additionally argued that obligations were fulfilled through other arrangements. For example, the crystallisation of a Keystone Bank guarantee and delivery of petroleum cargo to an off‐taker–and sought refunds for monies they claimed were wrongly demanded. However, the court dismissed their counterclaim in its entirety and ruled in favour of the bank, granting all the reliefs sought by Union Bank.
From an economic lens, this ruling has multiple implications: recovering such a large debt strengthens Union Bank’s balance sheet and signals enforceability of collateral in Nigeria’s banking sector; for oil‐marketing companies, it underscores the risks of non‐performance and the importance of maintaining regulatory and contractual compliance; and more broadly, enforcing large claims may improve investor confidence in Nigeria’s legal and financial systems. The infusion or avoidance of N20.7 billion in non‐performing assets has ripple effects for credit availability, lending rates, and the cost of doing business in the petroleum downstream sector.
In summary, a landmark legal decision has given Union Bank the upper hand, converting a long‐standing debt claim into a legally binding judgment with the backing of real property collateral seized for enforcement. The ripple effects are likely to be felt not just by the parties involved but across Nigeria’s financial and downstream oil marketing sectors.




