Abimbola Akinlua retweeté

Sued His University to the Supreme Court and Won ₦20,000,000!
Case: Victor v. F.U.T.A. (2026) 8 NWLR (Pt. 2044) 33
Imagine graduating, knowing your grades were wrongly calculated, but being handed a lower class of degree than you earned. Most students would accept "fate" and move on.
Mr. Adebayo A. Victor refused to back down.
What makes this story incredible? Victor was a layman (not a lawyer), yet he personally prosecuted this case through the entire hierarchy of courts for nearly two decades.
The 19-Year Battle for a 2:1
In 2007, Victor graduated in Mechanical Engineering from FUTA, receiving a Second Class Lower.
Convinced his scores were wrongly recorded, he spent four years begging the university to re-mark 10 specific courses. The university ignored him.
In 2011, he sued. The journey was brutal:
2013: The trial court dismissed his case on a technicality. Victor appealed and won a retrial.
2017: The High Court finally ordered FUTA to re-mark his scripts. FUTA refused and appealed.
2022: Under Supreme Court pressure, FUTA finally complied and re-marked the scripts.
The Plot Twist: Victor was right all along. The independent re-marking officially upgraded his degree to a Second Class Upper. His correct certificate was physically handed to him in open court at the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court Defends Student Rights
With the degree secured, the Supreme Court turned its attention to the university’s conduct.
Led by Justice Helen Moronkeji Ogunwumiju, JSC, the apex court established a massive precedent:
The Duty of Care: While universities have academic autonomy, they owe a "Duty of Care" to their students. They must provide fair assessments and transparent complaint procedures.
The Penalty: By ignoring Victor for years and causing him to lose international scholarship opportunities, FUTA breached that duty.
The lower court had awarded Victor a mere ₦500,000. The Supreme Court threw that out as too small and reviewed the awards upward:
₦18,000,000 in General Damages for emotional distress.
₦2,000,000 in Litigation Costs.
Total Takeaway: Victor walked away with his rightful Second Class Upper degree and ₦20,000,000 in compensation.
The Big Insight
"Justice is not a fencing game where one party seeks to outsmart the other." Whether you run a university or a business, you cannot hide behind institutional bureaucracy to ignore legitimate complaints.
Huge respect to Mr. Adebayo Victor for his unmatched resilience!
Could you have held on for 15+ years to defend your academic rights? Let’s map it out in the comments!
© Law Parlor

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