Original Research

Lawyers’ antics and nonverbal impoliteness in Nigerian court documents: An example of Mosojo versus Oyetayo

Abayomi O. Ayansola, Bibian Ugoala
Inkanyiso | Vol 12, No 2 | a44 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ink.v12i2.44 | © 2023 Abayomi O. Ayansola, Bibian Ugoala | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 24 January 2023 | Published: 30 November 2020

About the author(s)

Abayomi O. Ayansola, College of Humanities, Department of English and Literary Studies, Veritas University, Abuja, Nigeria
Bibian Ugoala, Department of Languages, Faculty of Arts, National Open University of Nigeria, Nigeria

Full Text:

PDF (221KB)

Abstract

Unlike the inquisitorial court system, the adversarial court requires that counsels willfully resort to face-aggravating impolite non/verbal acts through the instrumentation of relevant court papers as well as the use of professional privileges at the cross-examination phase to the detriment of the opposition, thereby elevating the quest for victory above fact-finding and the dispensation of justice. The study evaluates counsels’ impolite nonverbal communicative behaviour and professional antics which are complementary to verbal impoliteness. Anchored on Watts’ (2003) theory of relational works and Culpeper’s (1996) impoliteness super-strategies, the study drew fifteen (15) purposively selected examples, with preponderance of underlying nonverbal face-aggravating behaviour by professional courtroom participants, from archived pretrial documents and transcripts of proceedings in Mosojo versus Oyetayo (2012). Against the existence of inquisitorial and fact-finding alternative dispute resolution (ADR) mechanisms, the disputants chose the adversarial Western-like court system, with a penchant for impolite non/verbal behaviour, for the resolution of the Obasinkin chieftaincy dispute in a Nigerian community. Findings revealed that counsels’ antics and nonverbal impolite behaviour are not only embedded in some legal documents, but also manifested in the form of time-wasting, willful absence from court and embedded presupposing boobytrap arguments that were meant to frustrate the opposition and influence the course of justice. Litigants are advised to explore the ADR alternative while judges should regulate the courtroom use of language to prevent the miscarriage of justice.

Keywords

Lawyers antics; court documents; Nigeria; Mosojo vs Oyetayo; face-aggravation; impoliteness; nonverbal acts

Metrics

Total abstract views: 664
Total article views: 228


Crossref Citations

No related citations found.