The Federal High Court in Abuja has reserved judgment in the ongoing legal battle between Sterling Bank Plc and Miden Systems Limited, a dispute that has drawn attention across Nigeria’s banking and oil-and-gas sectors. Justice James Omotosho announced that the court will deliver its ruling on December 12, 2025, after hearing final arguments from both sides.
Miden Systems, a Lagos-based engineering and marine services company, has accused Sterling Bank of making unauthorised debits from its domiciliary account and violating the terms of their loan agreement. The firm alleges that the bank transferred funds amounting to US $41.56 million, alongside additional sums of US $4.87 million and ₦12 million, to parties identified as AA and Chasewood with the note “AA Loan Repayment”, transactions Miden claims it never approved.
Sterling Bank, however, insists the transfers were legitimate. The lender maintains that Miden obtained a US $30 million credit facility for a marine vessel financing project and later defaulted on repayment obligations. According to the bank, Miden’s total indebtedness stood at US $30.8 million as of March 19, 2021. Sterling also argues that a consent judgment previously entered by a Lagos court under Suit No. FHC/CS/946/2021 settled the matter, making the new case an “abuse of court process.”
During the recent hearing, Sterling Bank’s counsel contended that the Abuja suit was substantially identical to the earlier Lagos case, urging the court to dismiss it. They argued the matter was “incompetent in law, an abuse of court process, and lacking jurisdiction.” Miden’s legal representatives countered that the current case arose from new evidence uncovered by a police investigation, which allegedly exposed forged signatures and unauthorised fund transfers, claims they say warrant fresh judicial scrutiny.
At the heart of the dispute lies a 2010 vessel financing contract Miden secured from Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), valued at around US $24 million. Miden claims the disputed loan from Sterling Bank was intended to fund that project, and that the bank’s actions crippled its business operations.
The outcome of this case is expected to set a precedent for how Nigerian banks handle large corporate loan recoveries and client fund management. Analysts say it could clarify the extent of a bank’s authority over domiciliary accounts and reshape corporate lending practices, particularly in the oil-and-gas and maritime sectors where multi-currency financing is common.
The Sterling Bank–Miden case highlights systemic issues in Nigeria’s banking sector, where weak loan-recovery mechanisms and rising non-performing loans continue to strain liquidity. Such disputes can undermine investor confidence and restrict access to credit, slowing economic growth in a country already grappling with high borrowing costs and forex instability.




