It is therefore apparent that the detention of the Respondent and the seizure of the vehicle by the police were illegal acts. Now the question that calls for determination is: Can the Appellant be held responsible for these acts? Every private individual has the right to report a crime or a suspected crime to the police. This on its own cannot ground an action for false imprisonment against the private individual. The Supreme Court in Isheno v. Julius Berger (Nig.) Plc. (2008) 6 NWLR (Pt. 1084) 582 at 597 held that: “The position of the law is that an action for false imprisonment will not lie against a private individual who merely gave information which led the police on their initiative to arrest a suspect.” In Okonkwo v. Ogbogu (1996) 5 NWLR (Pt. 449) 420 at 433, the Supreme Court per Ogwuegbu JSC held as follows: “To succeed in an action for false imprisonment, the plaintiff must show that it was the defendant who was actively instrumental in setting the law in motion against him.” Thus, for a party to succeed in an action for false imprisonment, the party must prove that it was the other party that was actively responsible in setting the law in motion against him.
— M. Ogunwumiju JCA. Arab Contractors (O.A.O.) Nigeria Ltd. V. Gillian Umanah (CA/L/445M/09, 26 April 2012)