Lawyers in Nigeria: Nigeria Lawyers and the Nigerian Legal Practitioners Act
List of Names and Categories of Lawyers in Nigeria
The Nigerian Lawyers Directory is a specialised professional legal directory of Lawyers in Nigeria who are lawyers or legal practitioners that are licensed to practise law in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, having been duly called to the Nigerian Bar as Barristers and Solicitors of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, whereupon they automatically became members of the Nigerian Bar Association from the date of call.
Nigerian lawyers are associated with different names or appellations and they practise their legal profession in different categories and institutions, which include the following:
- Barristers
- Solicitors
- Attorneys
- Advocates
- Legal Practitioners
- Law Academics (Academia)
- Notaries Public
- Arbitrators
- Legal Advisers
- Legal Secretaries
- Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN)
- Attorneys-General (Federal Attorneys-General and Attorneys-General of States)
- Justices
- Judges
- Magistrates
- Corporate Practice Lawyers
- Law Officers (Federal Ministry of Justice and State Ministries of Justice
- In-House Lawyers (Companies and all types of organisations)
- Litigation Practice Lawyers
- Property (Real Estate) Lawyers
- Probate Lawyers
- Company Lawyers
- Business Lawyers
- Taxation Lawyers
- Information Technology Lawyers
- Internet Security Lawyers
- Maritime and Shipping Lawyers
Click here to list yourself and your law firm in the free premium professional Nigerian Lawyers Directory.
Practice as a Legal Practitioner in Nigeria
Section 2 of the Nigerian Legal Practitioners Act provides as follows:
2. Entitlement to Practise
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, a person shall be entitled to practise as a barrister and solicitor if, and only if, his name is on the roll.
(2) If —
(a) an application under this subsection is made to the Chief Justice by or on behalf of any person appearing to him to be entitled to practise as an advocate in any country where the legal system is similar to that of Nigeria; and
(b) the Chief Justice is of the opinion that it is expedient to permit that person to practise as a barrister for the purposes of proceedings described in the application,
the Chief Justice may by warrant under his hand authorise that person, on payment to the Registrar of such fee not exceeding fifty naira as may be specified in the warrant, to practise as a barrister for the purposes of those proceedings and of any appeal brought in connection with those proceedings.
(3) A person for the time being exercising the functions of any of the following offices, that is to say —
(a) the office of the Attorney‐General, Solicitor‐General or Director of Public Prosecutions of the Federation or of a State;
(b) such offices in the civil service of the Federation or of a State as the Attorney‐General of the Federation or of the State, as the case may be, may by order specify,
shall be entitled to practise as a barrister and solicitor for the purposes of that office.
(4) A certificate signed by, or by a person authorised either generally or specially in that behalf, any of the persons mentioned in paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of this section stating that a particular individual is exercising the functions of a particular office shall, without prejudice to any other means of proof, be conclusive proof for the purposes of that subsection that the individual is exercising the functions of that office; and any document purporting to be a certificate under this subsection shall be admitted in evidence and, until the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a certificate.
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