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when do I need a Shipping & Maritime lawyer in Nigeria

When to Hire a Shipping & Maritime Lawyer in Nigeria (2026): Arrest, Security, Arbitration or Settle?

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: June 23, 2026 | What changed: The Admiralty Jurisdiction Procedure Rules (AJPR) 2023 replaced the AJPR 2011, restructuring arrest mechanics, affidavit requirements and interim security procedures before the Federal High Court. A February 2026 Federal High Court development has further tightened the window for preserving arrest and security options, making early counsel instruction more critical than at any point in the past decade.

If you are a shipowner, charterer, cargo interest, P&I club or insurer asking when do I need a Shipping & Maritime lawyer in Nigeria, the answer turns on a single, time-sensitive choice: seek immediate court security (arrest the vessel or cargo now), start arbitration, or negotiate a settlement. Each path carries distinct cost, timing and enforcement consequences, and since the AJPR 2023 came into force, the procedural stakes of choosing wrongly have risen sharply. This guide gives you a neutral, side-by-side decision framework so you can act within hours, not weeks.

Who is a maritime lawyer?

A maritime lawyer, sometimes called a shipping lawyer or admiralty practitioner, is a legal professional who advises on disputes and transactions arising from the use of ships, ports and navigable waters. In Nigeria, maritime lawyers appear principally before the Federal High Court, which holds exclusive admiralty jurisdiction under the Admiralty Jurisdiction Act. Their work spans vessel arrests, cargo claims, charter party disputes, collision liability, salvage, marine insurance recovery, cabotage compliance and international arbitration.

Five Red-Flag Triggers: When to Call a Shipping Lawyer Immediately

Not every maritime dispute demands same-day legal action, but some do. Instruct counsel without delay if any of the following triggers apply:

  • The vessel is in a Nigerian port or territorial waters right now, the arrest window may close within hours if the ship sails.
  • Assets are about to be removed from the jurisdiction, cargo discharge is imminent, bunkers are being transferred, or the shipowner is relocating the vessel.
  • A limitation period or time-bar is approaching, maritime claims carry strict statutory deadlines; missing them extinguishes the right entirely.
  • Perishable or high-value cargo is at risk, delay in obtaining preservation orders can cause irrecoverable loss.
  • A port authority, customs or regulatory body has seized or detained the vessel, overlapping regulatory and admiralty procedures require coordinated legal response.

If none of these triggers applies, you likely have time to evaluate the arbitration or negotiation route, but you should still take preliminary legal advice to preserve your options before any procedural deadline passes.

Option A: Immediate Court Security and Arrest, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Arrest is the single most powerful interim remedy available to a maritime claimant in Nigeria. Under the Admiralty Jurisdiction Act, the Federal High Court may order the arrest of a ship, cargo, bunkers or freight to provide security for a maritime claim. The Admiralty Jurisdiction Procedure Rules (AJPR) 2023, which repealed the AJPR 2011, now govern the mechanics of how that arrest is obtained, executed and released.

Arrest is not a final determination of liability. It is a procedural mechanism to prevent a defendant from removing assets from the jurisdiction before the claimant can obtain a judgment or award. The claimant must demonstrate a prima facie arguable maritime claim and satisfy the court, by way of affidavit evidence, that arrest is justified.

Consider the arrest route when you need to get security for a maritime claim in Nigeria and any of the following conditions exist:

  • The defendant has no substantial assets in Nigeria other than the vessel (or its cargo or bunkers).
  • There is a genuine risk that the vessel will leave Nigerian waters before a substantive hearing.
  • You hold a maritime lien, for crew wages, salvage, collision damage or bottomry, which attaches to the vessel regardless of change of ownership.
  • The claim is large relative to the likely security the defendant would voluntarily provide.
  • You are a foreign claimant with limited means to enforce an award against the shipowner outside Nigeria.

Arrest suits claimants who prioritise asset preservation over relationship preservation. It is inherently adversarial: the vessel is detained, the shipowner’s commercial operations are disrupted, and port and marshal charges accrue daily. For claimants who need fast leverage or who fear asset dissipation, arrest is the most effective tool in the maritime litigation toolkit.

Arrest Checklist: Evidence, Filings and Contacts

Before instructing counsel to apply for arrest, gather the following:

  • Evidence for the arrest affidavit: charter party or bill of lading, invoices or statements of account showing the debt, survey reports (if cargo damage or collision), notice of protest, correspondence demonstrating the dispute, vessel particulars (IMO number, flag, registered owner).
  • Court filings: writ of summons or originating process, affidavit in support of arrest (setting out the nature and quantum of the claim, the grounds for arrest, and the basis for urgency), a draft order of arrest, and supporting exhibits.
  • Key contacts to alert: the Admiralty Marshal of the Federal High Court (who executes the arrest physically), the relevant port authority (Nigerian Ports Authority or terminal operator), your P&I club correspondent, and your local shipping agent.

Under the AJPR 2023, the affidavit requirements have been refined. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise affidavit evidence more closely than under the former rules, which means the quality of your supporting documents directly affects whether the arrest application succeeds on the first attempt.

Option B: Arbitration and Negotiation, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Arbitration is the dominant dispute resolution mechanism in international shipping. Most charter parties, bills of lading and shipbuilding contracts contain arbitration clauses specifying a seat (commonly London, Singapore or Lagos) and institutional or ad hoc rules. When a valid arbitration clause exists, Nigerian courts will generally decline jurisdiction over the substantive merits and refer the parties to arbitration, though the court retains power to grant interim measures, including arrest, in support of the arbitral process.

Choose the arbitration route when:

  • The contract contains a mandatory arbitration clause and the counterparty is likely to challenge court jurisdiction.
  • Confidentiality matters, arbitration proceedings are private; Federal High Court admiralty actions are not.
  • You want to preserve a commercial relationship with the counterparty (charterers, tonnage providers, trading partners).
  • Cross-border enforceability is important, Nigeria is a signatory to the New York Convention, making arbitral awards enforceable in over 170 contracting states.
  • The dispute is complex and benefits from a specialist tribunal rather than a generalist judge.

The risk of choosing arbitration without first securing interim court protection is that assets may leave the jurisdiction. A vessel docked in Apapa today may be on the high seas tomorrow. Once the ship sails, the claimant’s only recourse is to seek arrest in a different jurisdiction, a slower, costlier and less certain process. For a deeper discussion of the role of arbitration in resolving disputes in Nigeria, see our dedicated guide.

Arbitration Practical Steps

If you elect the arbitration path, take these steps immediately:

  • Serve a Notice of Arbitration in accordance with the contractual clause and the applicable institutional rules (LMAA, ICC, Lagos Court of Arbitration or ICSID as the case may be).
  • Apply for interim or conservatory measures from the tribunal (or an emergency arbitrator, where the rules allow) to preserve evidence, prevent asset dissipation or maintain the status quo.
  • Consider parallel court action in Nigeria, the Arbitration and Mediation Act 2023 and the Admiralty Jurisdiction Act both contemplate court-ordered interim measures in support of arbitration. This is the “mixed strategy” discussed below.
  • Preserve evidence independently, commission independent surveys, secure cargo samples, download AIS tracking data and retain all voyage correspondence before memories fade and documents disappear.

For guidance on hearing preparation, see our article on preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.

Arrest vs Arbitration in Nigeria: Side-by-Side Comparison for Shipping & Maritime Disputes

The table below is the centrepiece of this decision guide. Use it to compare the two principal pathways, immediate court security (arrest) and arbitration or negotiation, across every dimension that matters to your commercial decision.

Dimension Immediate Court Security / Arrest Arbitration / Negotiation
Primary aim Preserve and attach assets (vessel, bunkers, cargo) for fast security Obtain a substantive monetary award; preserve business relationships
Typical timeline Hours to days for arrest application and hearing Weeks to months to initiate; full award often 12–24 months
Cost profile High upfront: court fees, marshal/port charges, counsel emergency retainer, security/undertaking Spread over time: tribunal admin fees, institutional fees, counsel and expert fees
Evidence standard Prima facie arguable maritime claim plus affidavit evidence; lower threshold Full merits assessment for final award; interim relief requires persuasion on urgency
Enforceability Immediate leverage via physical detention; enforced under AJPR 2023 and Admiralty Jurisdiction Act Award enforceable in 170+ states via New York Convention; may require recognition proceedings
Risk to commercial relationship High, arrest is adversarial and may escalate the dispute Lower, negotiation and arbitration can be managed discreetly
Reversibility Vessel released upon provision of adequate security (bank guarantee or P&I undertaking) Less immediate cost to respondent; larger final award exposure possible
Best for Claimants fearing asset dissipation who need immediate preservation Parties who prioritise final adjudication, confidentiality or commercial continuity
Jurisdictional reach Limited to assets physically within Nigerian jurisdiction Award enforceable internationally; may require parallel court steps locally
Typical example Unpaid hire; vessel anchored in Lagos; cargo lien at a Nigerian terminal Freight claim between foreign charterers with a London arbitration clause

Common Mixed Strategies

In practice, the choice between arrest and arbitration is rarely binary. Two mixed approaches dominate Nigerian maritime practice:

  • Arrest then stay for arbitration. The claimant arrests the vessel to obtain security (typically a P&I club letter of undertaking or a bank guarantee), then consents to the release of the vessel and proceeds to arbitration on the substantive merits. This is the most common strategy where the charter party contains an arbitration clause but the claimant needs security before the vessel sails.
  • Secure undertakings while negotiating. The claimant’s counsel puts the shipowner on notice and negotiates voluntary security (a P&I undertaking or escrow deposit) without filing for arrest. If negotiations fail, the arrest application is filed immediately. This approach preserves the relationship while keeping the arrest option as a credible threat.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: When Do I Need a Shipping & Maritime Lawyer in Nigeria?

The following analysis breaks down the key decision dimensions that determine which path to take, and, critically, when to hire maritime counsel.

Eligibility and Legal Basis

The Admiralty Jurisdiction Act grants the Federal High Court exclusive jurisdiction over a wide range of maritime claims, including claims for damage to or loss of a ship, cargo claims, charter party disputes, towage, pilotage, salvage, collision, marine pollution, crew wages and maritime liens. Any person (Nigerian or foreign) with an arguable maritime claim falling within the scope of the Act may apply for arrest.

The AJPR 2023 refined the procedural requirements for commencing admiralty actions. Practitioners have noted that the 2023 Rules introduced more detailed pleading standards and evidence requirements for arrest applications, while also creating dedicated procedures for the Admiralty Marshal and clarifying security and release mechanisms. Foreign claimants have the same standing as Nigerian claimants, there is no nationality restriction on the right to arrest a vessel in Nigerian waters.

Cost and Fees

Understanding the cost profile of each route is essential for budgeting and for assessing whether early counsel instruction delivers a return on investment. The table below sets out the principal cost components qualitatively; exact figures vary by case complexity and should be confirmed with counsel.

Cost Item Arrest / Court Security Arbitration / Negotiation
Immediate legal retainer High, emergency counsel fees paid upfront Medium, initial advice and case-planning budget
Court / filing fees Court-determined; payable immediately on filing Nil unless interim court relief is sought
Marshal / port charges Charged to claimant for effecting and maintaining detention Not applicable unless parallel court action taken
Security / undertaking Often requires bank guarantee or P&I undertaking to release vessel Rare, tribunal may order protective measures; release usually by consent
Expert survey / preservation Immediate (surveyors, stevedores, custody costs) Ongoing (expert reports for merits phase)
Overall short-term outlay High Medium to high, spread over a longer period

Maritime lawyer fees in Nigeria vary by firm size, seniority and urgency. Emergency arrest applications command premium rates because of the speed and out-of-hours work required. For most claimants, however, the cost of counsel is a fraction of the value at risk, a single day of demurrage on a detained Panamax can exceed the entire legal fee for an arrest application.

Timing and Practical Timelines

Timing is the single most important variable when deciding whether to hire a shipping lawyer in Nigeria. An arrest application can be filed and heard within hours if the matter is genuinely urgent and the evidence is in order. The Federal High Court operates a duty-judge system for urgent admiralty applications, and the Admiralty Marshal can execute an arrest order on the same day it is granted.

By contrast, arbitration proceedings typically take weeks to commence (service of Notice of Arbitration, constitution of the tribunal) and months to reach an interim or final award. Emergency arbitrator procedures exist under some institutional rules, but they cannot physically detain a vessel. If you need to preserve assets, the court route is faster by an order of magnitude.

Liability and Commercial Risk

Arresting a vessel carries its own risk. If the court later determines that the arrest was wrongful, for example, because the underlying claim was without merit or the arrest was obtained by material non-disclosure in the affidavit, the claimant may face a counterclaim for damages for wrongful arrest. These damages can be substantial, particularly where the arrested vessel was on time charter and the shipowner lost hire during the detention period.

This risk underscores the importance of retaining experienced counsel before filing. A qualified maritime lawyer will assess the strength of the claim, advise on the adequacy of the evidence, and manage the disclosure obligations to minimise wrongful-arrest exposure.

Enforceability and Regulatory Burden

The AJPR 2023 has streamlined certain enforcement procedures but also introduced additional procedural steps that claimants must navigate. Practitioners have noted that the 2023 Rules clarify the powers and duties of the Admiralty Marshal, refine the procedure for the sale of arrested property, and provide for more structured release mechanisms. The likely practical effect will be greater predictability for both claimants and defendants, but also a higher compliance burden for claimants who fail to meet the new procedural standards.

For claimants concerned with the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Nigeria, the arbitration route may offer superior cross-border enforceability via the New York Convention, while arrest provides immediate local leverage. Cabotage considerations under the Coastal and Inland Shipping (Cabotage) Act may also create additional regulatory requirements where the vessel trades in Nigerian coastal waters.

What Changed in 2023–2026 and Why It Matters for When to Hire Maritime Counsel

Three developments between 2023 and 2026 have materially altered the decision calculus for maritime disputants in Nigeria.

The AJPR 2023 replaced the AJPR 2011. The new Rules, assented to on 18 May 2023 and published in the Federal Republic of Nigeria Official Gazette on 26 September 2023, introduced several ground-breaking provisions. Practitioner analyses from firms including G. Elias & Co., Bloomfield Law and Aret & Bret LLP have highlighted innovations in pleading standards, refined the role and duties of the Admiralty Marshal, tightened affidavit requirements for arrest applications, and introduced clearer timelines for the release of arrested property upon provision of adequate security. The overall effect is a more structured but demanding procedural environment, claimants who fail to meet the new standards risk having arrest applications refused at first instance.

February 2026 Federal High Court development. Early indications suggest that the Federal High Court took a notably stricter approach to interim security and arrest applications in early 2026, reinforcing the evidentiary and procedural requirements introduced by the AJPR 2023. Industry observers expect this to mean that claimants must instruct experienced counsel earlier in the dispute lifecycle to ensure arrest affidavits are compliant and applications survive judicial scrutiny.

Practical impact for 2026. The combined effect of these changes is clear: the margin for error in arrest applications has narrowed, the quality of affidavit evidence matters more, and the cost of a failed application (including potential wrongful-arrest liability) has increased. If you are contemplating arresting a vessel or obtaining security for a maritime claim in Nigeria, the 2026 procedural landscape demands earlier, better-prepared legal engagement.

Decision Framework: When to Choose Arrest, Arbitration or Negotiation

Use the following framework to make your immediate decision. Match your commercial priority to the recommended path.

Choose immediate court security / arrest when:

  • The vessel, cargo or bunkers are physically in Nigeria and may leave the jurisdiction imminently.
  • You hold a maritime lien and need to enforce it against the res (the ship itself).
  • The counterparty has no other substantial assets within reach for enforcement.
  • You need commercial leverage to force a settlement or voluntary security quickly.
  • A limitation period is about to expire and you need to preserve your claim.

Choose arbitration / negotiation when:

  • The contract contains a mandatory arbitration clause and you want an enforceable award, not just interim security.
  • Confidentiality is important to your business or the counterparty’s.
  • You want to preserve the commercial relationship for future trade.
  • Cross-border enforceability (via the New York Convention) is more important than immediate local leverage.
  • The dispute is factually complex and benefits from a specialist tribunal.
If your priority is… Choose…
Preserve a vessel or cargo now (asset at risk within Nigeria) Immediate court security / arrest, instruct counsel now
Confidential resolution and business continuity Arbitration / negotiate
Fast commercial leverage to force settlement Arrest (immediate leverage), then negotiate
Minimise escalation and reputational harm Negotiated security or emergency arbitration measures
Enforceability overseas is key Arbitral award, but consider interim court security in Nigeria if assets are local

When (and Why) to Engage a Shipping & Maritime Lawyer for This Decision

Knowing when to call a shipping lawyer is as important as knowing which path to take. The situations below represent concrete thresholds at which professional advice moves from advisable to essential:

  • A vessel involved in your dispute is currently in Nigerian waters, the arrest window may close within hours.
  • You have received a notice of claim, arbitration or intended arrest, you need to assess your exposure and prepare a defence or counterclaim immediately.
  • Cargo has been damaged, lost or detained and the value exceeds your policy deductible, P&I notification and legal coordination are time-sensitive.
  • A limitation period is approaching, maritime claims in Nigeria carry strict time-bars; once expired, the right is gone.
  • You are a foreign company unfamiliar with Nigerian admiralty procedure, local counsel is essential for procedural compliance and for engaging the Admiralty Marshal.

When you contact counsel, have the following documents ready: the charter party or contract of carriage, bills of lading, invoices and statements of account, survey reports and photographs, voyage correspondence, the vessel’s IMO number and current position, and your P&I club contact details. For arrest matters, experienced counsel will typically draft and file the arrest affidavit within hours and instruct the Admiralty Marshal on the same day. To find a Shipping & Maritime lawyer in Nigeria, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr Emeka Akabogu, SAN at Akabogu & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Admiralty Jurisdiction Procedure Rules (AJPR) 2023, Official Gazette text (judy.legal)
  2. Admiralty Jurisdiction Act, Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre (PLAC)
  3. G. Elias & Co., Spotlighting the Key Innovations and Changes in the AJPR 2023
  4. Bloomfield Law, Analysis of the Novel Provisions of the AJPR 2023
  5. Aret & Bret LLP, Arrest of Ship in Nigeria and the New Admiralty Jurisdiction Procedure Rules 2023
  6. Stren & Blan Partners, An Examination of the Novel Provisions of the AJPR 2023

FAQs

When should I hire a shipping & maritime lawyer in Nigeria?
Hire counsel immediately if a vessel or cargo is at risk of leaving Nigerian jurisdiction, if you have received a notice of claim or arrest, or if a limitation period is approaching. For non-urgent matters, take preliminary advice as soon as a dispute materialises to preserve your procedural options. See the decision framework table above for detailed guidance.
Yes. Arrest applications are filed in the Federal High Court and require a formal affidavit, supporting exhibits and compliance with the AJPR 2023. Self-represented applications are technically possible but are overwhelmingly likely to fail. The procedural and evidential requirements make experienced maritime counsel essential.
Start with the most urgent need. If assets are at risk of dissipation, seek court security (arrest) first, even if the substantive dispute will ultimately be resolved by arbitration. Nigerian courts routinely grant interim measures in support of arbitration. You can arrest, obtain security and then proceed to arbitration on the merits.
Fees depend on firm size, case complexity and urgency. Emergency arrest applications attract premium rates due to the speed and out-of-hours work involved. The principal cost components are:
Foreign claimants should instruct Nigerian counsel as soon as a dispute involves assets located in Nigeria, a vessel in Nigerian waters, or a contractual obligation performable in Nigeria. Local counsel is essential for service of process, compliance with the AJPR 2023 and engagement with the Admiralty Marshal. Foreign claimants have the same standing as Nigerian claimants to seek arrest.
Yes. Arrest and arbitration are not mutually exclusive. A claimant may arrest a vessel, obtain security (such as a P&I undertaking or bank guarantee), consent to the release of the vessel and then pursue the substantive claim through arbitration. This is the most common mixed strategy in Nigerian maritime practice and is expressly contemplated by the procedural framework.
By Dr. Hassan Elhais

posted 6 hours ago

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When to Hire a Shipping & Maritime Lawyer in Nigeria (2026): Arrest, Security, Arbitration or Settle?

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