Breaking: Court Dismisses $19.6 Million Against NNPCL — Rules Contract Scope Cannot Be Changed Orally

By Nathaniel Ike ||
May 25, 2026

Imagine spending what could be months, possibly years, building a legal case around a conversation. No paper trail, no signed addendum, no written memo confirming the new terms. Just your word against a national oil giant. That is exactly the situation Alternate Dimensions Ventures Ltd found itself in on Friday, May 22, 2026, when an Abuja court promptly closed the door on its $19.6 million professional fees claim against the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, in what legal observers are already describing as one of the most instructive commercial law rulings in recent Nigerian jurisprudence.

In a landmark ruling today, May 22, 2026, the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Abuja threw out a $19.6 million lawsuit filed by Alternate Dimensions Ventures Ltd against the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), affirming a key legal principle: a written contract cannot be expanded through oral agreements or conduct.

Alternate Dimensions had sought $19,600,000 in professional fees, claiming the scope of its Direct Sale, Direct Purchase (DSDP e-pro) contract with NNPCL was orally expanded. Represented by counsel Patrick Peter, the firm argued it was entitled to the revised sum for services rendered under the alleged new terms.

But NNPCL, through its lawyer Ituah Imhanze of KENNA LP, pushed back sharply, arguing that parties are bound exclusively by the clear terms of their written agreement. Imhanze contended that without any written amendment, the claim was legally unsound, and the court agreed.

Delivering judgment, Justice Hamza Mu’azu upheld NNPCL’s defense, stating that the contract was unambiguous and that no evidence was adduced during the trial, which supported the alleged scope expansion. The court further found that NNPCL fully complied with all contractual terms and committed no breach.

Dismissing the suit as meritless, Justice Mu’azu reinforced the doctrine of sanctity of contract: any amendment to a written agreement must be express, unequivocal, and documented, not implied or verbal.

The ruling spares NNPCL from the S19.6 million claim and also a floodgate of similar potential liabilities.

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