Bramwel Musamia v Board of Directors, Nacico Sacco [2021] KECPT 591 (KLR) | Interlocutory Injunctions | Esheria

Bramwel Musamia v Board of Directors, Nacico Sacco [2021] KECPT 591 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE CO-OPERATIVE TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI

TRIBUNAL CASE NO.204 OF 2020

BRAMWEL MUSAMIA.........................................................................CLAIMANT

VERSUS

THE BOARD  OF DIRECTORS, NACICO SACCO.................... RESPONDENT

RULING

Vide the Application  dated 24. 7.2020,  the Claimant has moved  this Tribunal  seeking  for the following Orders:

1. That  this Application  be certified  as urgent;

2. That pending  the hearing  and final  determination  of this Application  and this case,  the Respondent  be restrained from replacing  the Claimant  as the  Chairman of NACICO INVESTMENT  CO-OPERATIVE  SOCIETY  LIMITED; and

3. That the costs of this Application  be  provided for.

The Application is supported by the grounds on its face and the  Affidavit  sworn by  himself  on even date. The Respondent  has  opposed  the Application by filing a  Replying  Affidavit  sworn by Tom  Seme, on 12. 8.2020.

Vide  the  directions  given  on  30. 7.2020,  the Application  was canvassed  by way of  written submissions.  The Claimant filed  his written submissions  on  27. 10. 2020 while  the Respondent did so  earlier  on  25. 9.2020.

Claimant’s  Case

It is the Claimant’s  case that  the Respondent  has threatened  to replace  him as the Chairman  of Nacico Investment Co-Operative  Society Limited. That  the Respondent  and Nacico Investment  Co-operative  Society  Limited  is yet to hold  its  Annual  General  Meeting (Annual General Meeting) for purposes  of electing  its office  bearers.  That further,  the Commissioner  for Co-operatives has  placed  a moratorium on  the replacement  of officer bearers whose  term of office  expires  before  the Annual General Meeting  are  held.  That he will suffer  great  injustice  in the hands  of the Respondent  if the Orders  sought are not granted.

Respondent’s  Case

Vide  the Replying  Affidavit sworn  by Tom  Seme (who  has described  himself as  the Chairman of the Respondent  and Nacico Investment  Co-operative  Society  Limited)  on  12. 8.2020,  the Respondent  has opposed the  Application  on grounds  that the Claimant  is no longer  the Chairman  of Nacico Investment Co-operative  Society  Limited. That  the Respondent  is the parent  Co-operative  of Nacico Investment.

That once  the Investment  Sacco was  incorporated, the  Management  Committee of the  Respondent  became  its interim Management  Committee. That as  such,  the Chairman of the Respondent  became  the Chairman  of the  investment Society.

That  when he (Tom Seme) lost  the  Chairmanship of the Respondent  to the Claimant in the elections of 2017,  he automatically ceded  his position  of Chairmanship of the investment society to him  as well.

That once  he was  re-elected  as Chairman of the Respondent,  he automatically  became  the  Chairman  of the investment  society. That this is  as per the by-laws of the investment  society. That this position  was confirmed by the sub- county  Co-operative  Officer  vide a letter dated  15. 6.2020. That  the Claimant  has not demonstrated  how he became  the Chairman  of the investment society   so us to  entitle  him to the reliefs sought. That the investment  society  is  yet to hold  its Annual General  Meeting. That  at the  moment, the Management  of the Respondent  cannot be  detached  from that  of the investment  society.

Issues  for determination

The Claimant’s  Application  has presented  the following  issues for determination:-

a.Whether  the Claimant  has established  a prima facie  case to warrant  the  Respondent  to be restrained  from replacing  him from being  the Chairman of Nacico Investment  Co-operative  Society Limited; and

b.Who should  meet the  costs  of the Application?

Temporary injunction

We have  jurisdiction  to make  an order  regarding  temporary  injunctions  by dint  of Order 40  of the Civil  Procedure  Rules. Order  40  Rule 1  (a) provides  thus:

“ Where  in any suit  it is proved  by Affidavit or otherwise –

(a) That  any property  in dispute  in a suit is  in  danger  of being  wasted,  damaged, or alienated  by any party to  the  suit, or wrongly sold in execution of a decree,  the court may  by order  grant  a temporary  injunction to  restrain  such  act, or  make such  other  order  for the purpose  of staying  and preventing  the wasting, damaging, alienation, sale,  removal, or disposition of the property  as the court thinks fit, until  the disposal  of the  suit  or until further  orders.

Before  exercising  the above  jurisdiction,  we are  guided  by  the Principles  enunciated  by the court in  the case of  Giella – versus-  Cassman  Brown [1973] EA. They  include:

(a)  A prima facie case  with a probability  of success;

(b) Irreparable  damage; and

(c) Balance  of Convenience.

The court   in the  case of Mrao  Limited  versus  first  American Bank  of Kenya  Limited (2003) eKLR explained what  Constitute  a Prima Faciecase  in the following terms:

“.......A Prima Facie  case is  more than  an arguable  case. It is  not sufficient  to  raise  issues.  The evidence  must show  an infringement  of a right  and the probability  of  the Applicant’s case  upon trial.  It is a case which  on the material  presented,  to the  court,  a Tribunal  properly  directing  itself  will conclude  that there  exists  a right  which  has apparently been infringed  by the  opposite  party as to call  for an explanation from  the latter......”

Prima facie  Case

As was held  by the court in  the Mrao Case above,  a Prima facie is more than  an arguable  case.  It is  not sufficient  to raise  issues. The evidence  must show  an infringement of a right. It is a case which  on the material  presented  to the court,  a Tribunal  properly directing  itself will conclude  that  there  exists a right which  has  apparently been  infringed to call  for an explanation  from the other.

The question begs as to whether  the Claimant in the present  Application has demonstrated  existence  of right that has been infringed  by  the Respondent  so as to  warrant  an explanation. It is the Claimant’s case that he is  the current Chairman  of Nacico Investment  Co-operative  Society Limited  and  that the  Respondents have  threatened  to remove  him without  any colour or  right. That  the members  of Nacico Investment Co-operative  Society  Limitedhas not held  its Annual General Meeting to elect  its officials. That  the Respondent  and Nacico Investment Co-operative  Society Limitedare  two  distinct  and separate  legal  entities.

On its part  the 1st Respondent  contend that  whilst  the two entities  are separate  in their legal  personalities,  they are intertwined  in that the  Management  Committee  of the Respondent  has always  automatically  become  the Management  Committee  of the Investment Society. That this  has been the norm  and the Claimant  has benefited from it in the past.  That  when the current Chairman of the Respondent, Tom Seme lost elections to the Claimant in the year  2017,  he ceded  his Chairmanship  of the Investment  Society to the Claimant. That now  that the Claimant  has lost  Chairmanship of the Respondent,  he cannot  be heard  to decline to relinquish  his chairmanship in the investment  society as well.

The remedy  sought  by the Claimant  is an equitable  one and  the maxim  goes; he who comes  to equity  must come  with  clear hands.While  the Claimant  contends  that he is  the current Chairman of the Investment  Society, he  has not explained  the circumstances  under which  he became  so. He  has not also explained  circumstances under which  one loses a seat  as an official  of the said society. He has also not disclosed  to us  that  when  he was the Chairman of the Respondent,  he was also  the automatic chairman  of the Claimant.  By concealing  this crucial  and material  facts,  the Claimant  has come to the court of equity  with ‘dirty hands’.

What  we discern  from the  material  placed before  us is that  the current  procedure  becoming  an official  of Nacico Investment  Society Limited is through  election  to be an official  of the Respondent. The Claimant  has not refuted  this fact. This  being the case and looking  at the contention  of the Claimant, it is  apparent  that he  has no right which  has been  violated  by the Respondent  so as to call for explanation.  Put  it the other way  round,  the Claimant  has not established  a prima  facie case  with a probability  of success.

With the foregoing  in mind,  we find  that the balance  of  convenience  militates  against  the grant  of the Orders  sought  by the Claimant.

Conclusion

The upshot  of the foregoing  is that  we dismiss  the Claimant’s  Application  dated 24. 7.2020 with costs  to the  1st Respondent.

RULING SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY THIS 7TH   DAY OF  JANUARY,  2021.

HON. F. TERER    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN SIGNED  7. 1.2021

MR. P. GICHUKI   MEMBER    SIGNED  7. 1.2021

MR. B. AKUSALA    MEMBER   SIGNED  7. 1.2021

In the absence  of both  parties

Court clerk  Maina

HON. F. TERER    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN SIGNED  7. 1.2021

12. 00

Chege for Claimant

HON. F. TERER    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN SIGNED  7. 1.2021