Atake was appointed a judge of the High Court of the Midwestern Nigeria in 1967 along with three other judges. They are the Hon. Justice
Victor Ovie Whisky, Hon. Justice S O Ighodaro and the Hon. Justice M A Aghoghovbia. He was 41 years old. He was assigned to the
Sapele Division to join the Hon. Justice E A Ekeruche and the Hon. Justice
Akinwunmi Rhodes-Vivour. Other brother Judges at the time of his appointment included: Hon. Justices Mason Begho (Chief Justice, Mid-West), J O Izuora,
Andrews Otutu Obaseki,
Ayo Gabriel Irikefe,
Arthur Edward Prest, J. Omo-Eboh and Uche Omo. Atake served in various judicial divisions of the High Court in the Mid-West that included the Benin, Warri and
Agbor divisions. He handled a wide range of cases. It is on record that he was quick in the uptake. In his court, the dispensation of justice was fast and quick. He was highly principled, strong-willed. That reputation still precedes him in all the divisions he served either as a Magistrate or as a Judge of the High Court. Said
Ephraim Akpata, a retired Justice of the
Supreme Court of Nigeria, in his autobiography Justice For All And By All (1994) at 148: "Justice F O M Atake was one of the most efficient Chief Magistrates before whom I practised. He was......very quick in the uptake. His Judgements were well researched, well written and of high intellectual standard. Proceedings in his court were fast. To the best of my knowledge, he harassed no counsel or litigant....... Justice Atake was strong-willed and highly principled and held fast to what he believed in. He was blunt, not deceptive..."However, when it came to the law of contempt of court, Franklin Atake found himself, somewhat to his surprise, at the centre of controversy. Some of his decisions in contempt of court cases brought him in full collision with the press and brought a renewed bout of national publicity. He sent the President of the
Nigerian Bar Association, his cousin, Mr. Godwin Mogbeyi Boyo to prison for contempt of court when he thought he crossed the line. In 1969, he handed down what proved to be a controversial decision in the case reported as Boyo v The Attorney-General, Mid-West [1971] 1 All NLR, 342; [1971] NSCC, 333; See also, Re: GM Boyo v The State [1970] 1 All NLR, 111, [1970] NSCC, 87. Mr. Godwin Mogbeyi Boyo was arrested on a warrant issued by Franklin Atake. On an objection by Boyo's counsel that the court had no jurisdiction to hear the contempt proceedings, Atake ruled that he was indeed competent to try Boyo for contempt of court. Naturally, as Godwin Boyo was the President of the Nigerian Bar Association, the decision received a great deal of publicity. The press generally supported Boyo – there were persistent calls in nearly all the Nigerian newspapers for Franklin Atake to resign from the Bench. This went on for a considerable period. Years. The Governor of Mid-Western Nigeria, Brigadier
Samuel Ogbemudia, also involved himself in the matter. Having failed to convince the then Chief Justice of the Mid-Western Nigeria, The Honourable Mr. Justice Mason Begho, to refer the matter to the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee (a body responsible, inter alia, for taking disciplinary action against judges), the Governor wrote to the Head of State and Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, General
Yakubu Gowon, asking that some way be found to refer the matter to the committee. The Governor recommended that Franklin Atake be invited to resign or be removed from the Bench. General Gowon accordingly referred the matter to the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee. The chairman of the committee, the
Chief Justice of Nigeria, Dr.
Taslim Olawale Elias, called on Franklin Atake for his comments. After a very detailed consideration of the matter, the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee decided (in a decision endorsed by the Head of State) that: "Although Mr. Justice Atake may have acted indiscreetly, it did not see that a case had been made out for his removal from the Bench or for any disciplinary action to be taken against him. If the then Chief Justice Sir
Adetokunbo Ademola felt that disciplinary action was necessary, he would have so directed and raised the matter before the Committee at one of its subsequent meetings. The Committee deprecates the attitude of the press and Military Governors interfering in matters that are essentially judicial, and in calling for the removal of judges. It would be preferable to let the Chief Justice of a State ask that something be done if a judge of his court behaves in an unbecoming manner." (Excerpts from the minutes of the Advisory Judicial Committee meeting held in Lagos on 28 July 1972).Franklin Atake was thus absolved and continued his judicial career in the Mid-Western Nigeria Judiciary. ==A Senator of The Federal Republic of Nigeria==