OBA OLUFON & CO.

Home/Insights/Property recovery

Property recovery

Warrant of possession: turning judgment into vacant property.

A possession judgment is not the end of a recovery case — it is the start of the enforcement phase, which has its own procedural traps.

OBA OLUFON & CO. · Property recovery benchJune 20266 min read
A Nigerian court bailiff holding a warrant of possession while a locksmith changes the gate lock.

Landlords who treat a possession judgment as the conclusion of the case are frequently surprised to find the tenant remains in occupation weeks or months later. A judgment for possession still requires a warrant of possession to be applied for, issued and executed by the appropriate court bailiffs — a distinct procedural phase with its own delays and pitfalls.

Applying for the warrant promptly

A delay in applying for the warrant after judgment gives a resisting tenant time to file an appeal or a stay application, potentially reopening the enforcement question the landlord assumed was settled. Moving immediately to secure the warrant preserves the momentum the judgment created.

A judgment for possession is a legal entitlement. A warrant, properly executed, is what actually gets the keys back.

Execution logistics matter

Bailiff execution requires coordination — scheduling, ensuring adequate security presence where resistance is anticipated, and documenting the state of the premises at handover to forestall a later dispute about damage or missing fixtures.

Anticipating resistance

Where a tenant is likely to resist physical execution, coordinating with the police in advance, and ensuring the warrant and underlying judgment are readily available on-site, avoids the execution stalling on a technicality raised in the moment.

This note is general commentary on Nigerian legal practice and does not constitute legal advice or create a lawyer–client relationship. Outcomes depend on the specific facts and the applicable law at the time. For advice on a particular matter, speak with the firm.

Keep reading

Related insights.

All publications
Property

Recovery of premises in Abuja: the steps landlords get wrong.

Read
Property recovery

The statutory notice: still the most expensive thing landlords get wrong.

Read

Engage the firm

Have a matter like this?

Initial consultations are confidential. Tell the firm what you\’re facing — you\’ll leave with a clear view of the options, the cost and the time to a result.

Scroll to Top