Odusoga v. Ricketts (1997) 7 NWLR (pt.511) 1 at 21 where Wali, J.S.C said:- “The fact that the Respondent made part-payment to the vendor, for which he obtained a receipt Exhibit ‘A’ did not pass the legal estate of the land in dispute to him. Where a purchaser, as in this case, paid only part of the purchase price of a parcel of land which was demarcated into plots before the sale, went into possession, developed substantial part of the land while leaving the rest bushy and undeveloped, the legal estate of the undeveloped part still remained with the vendor, particularly when the purchaser had failed to pay the balance of the purchase price after several repeated demands”.
Onu, J.S.C at page 25 of the same report observed thus: “In the instant case, no such customary sale did indeed take place, and the trial Court rightly so found. This is because, the Respondent did not pay the full price for the 4 plots of land he purported to purchase from the Appellants for 950 pounds with a balance of 250 pounds left unpaid. The attributes of a valid sale being therefore absent from the purported sale to the Respondent, title thereto not having passed, the Court below seriously erred, when it held that under customary law the legal representatives of Jemi-Alade, transferred the ownership of the land in dispute on the part payment of the purchase price thereof. A fortiori the court below also was in error when, it held that the execution in 1976 of Exhibit ‘B’ was a confirmation of the purported customary sale which took place in 1965…”