Daniel Kamau Mbogo v Samuel Muigai Kamau [2021] KEELC 3819 (KLR) | Boundary Disputes | Esheria

Daniel Kamau Mbogo v Samuel Muigai Kamau [2021] KEELC 3819 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE ENVIRONMENT  AND LAND COURT AT THIKA

ELC APPEAL  NO. 44 OF 2019

DANIEL  KAMAU MBOGO...........................................................APPELLANT

VERSUS

SAMUEL MUIGAI KAMAU........................................................RESPONDENT

(Being An appeal from the Judgment  and Decree of the Chief Magistrates Court  at Thika  Hon. M. W. Wanjala, Senior Resident Magistrate issued on  8th February 2019, in Thika CMCC No. 746 of 2006)

BETWEEN

SAMUEL MUIGAI KAMAU..............................................................PLAINTIFF

VERSUS

DANIEL KAMAU MBOGO...........................................................DEFENDANT

JUDGMENT

The Appellant  Daniel  Kamau Mbogo, was  the  Defendant  in Thika CMCC 746 of 2006. The  Respondent  Samuel Muigai Kamau  was the Plaintiff. By a Re Amended Plaint, the Plaintiff (Respondent)  brought the suit against the Defendant and sought  for orders that;-

a)  That the  Thika District Land  Registrar  and the Thika District Land   Surveyor do visit  the original land  parcel Loc 16/ Kimandi/ Wanyaga /832(now parcels  number 9222, 923, 924 and 925 ) and  excise 0. 03 hectares  therefrom and put the same back  to the original land parcel  Loc 16/Kimandi-Wanyaga/833 (now parcels  number as 843, 844, 845, 846 and 847) the current  parcels of land should be adjusted as follows;

FROM TO

Loc 16/Kimandi 843 0. 05 ha 0. 56ha

Loc 16/Kimandi 847 0. 201ha 0. 221ha

Loc 16/Kimandi 922 0. 49 ha 0. 43ha

Loc 16/Kimandi 924 0. 23 ha 0. 21ha

b)  General Damages  for trespass and fraud  and mesne profits  for the Defendants encroachment  on the Plaintiff’s land parcel Loc 16/Kimandi/Wanyaga 843 and 847.

c)  Costs of the suit and interest  on a and b above at Court rate.

In his statement of Claim, the Plaintiff (Respondent) averred that Defendant and himself bought  L.R No.Loc 16/Kimandi-Wanyaga 286,  measuring 2 acres  and they agreed to share it out equally  amongst themselves and each was to get 1 acre. That they purchased the land at Kshs. 12,500/= and each one of them  contributed Kshs.6,250. That the Land Control Board Consent for the subdivision was acquired and the said land parcel was subdivided into two parcels being  L.R 833 and 832, owned by the Plaintiff (Respondent)and the Defendant(Appellant) respectively. That at the time of the subdivision, the Plaintiff (Respondent) was not present  and he trusted that the Defendant(Appellant) shall apportion  the said land equally  but the Defendant fraudulently made  his land parcel physically bigger  on the ground at the Plaintiff’s expense.

He particularized fraud  as;  acquiring a larger  portion of the land  than the one he was  entitled knowing very well that  this was at the expense  of the Plaintiff’s rights as a proprietor  of the other acre; having a title deed  showing that he owns  one acre of land  knowing very well that it was bigger by 0. 03 acres  or 0. 074acres  and at the expense of  the Plaintiff’s (Respondent’s) portion of land.  That the Defendant(Appellant)  has since subdivided  his portion  into various portions   namely  Kimandi-Wanyaga  922, 923, 924, 925  and the Plaintiff’s(Respondent) portion is now  Kimandi - Wanyaga 843, 844, 845, 846 and 847. That  the Defendant has since the initial subdivision  between the parties  been using the 0. 03 hahived off  from the Plaintiff’s(Respondent’s)  land  and the Plaintiff’s(Respondent’s) claim General damages and mesne profits.

The Suit was contested and the Defendant(Appellant) filed an Amended Defence and Counter Claim   dated 5th June 2015 and denied all the allegations made in the Plaint. He also averred that the Plaintiff and Defendant bought L.R 286 together  in 1976, and  the same was subdivided on  21st August 1979, in the Plaintiff’s(Respondent’s) presence and he signed the mutation forms  as correct. Further that  the subdivision  was done by the District Surveyor, Murang’a District . He denied that the Plaintiff was absent during the subdivision. That the District Surveyor Murang’a surveyed the subdivided land  L.R 286  into L.R 832 and 833 professionally and made  approximate boundaries exactly  as required by section 21(1)  of the Registered Land Act  and the Plaintiff was satisfied with the subdivision. That if there was  any discrepancies in acreage, between the Plaintiff’s (Respondent’s) portion  of former L.R 833  and the Defendant’s(Appellant’s)  L.R 832,then it is minute and excusable.

That they agreed in writing  on5th February  1979,that on the junction of Kimandi Garage  Road  and Ndakaini  Road  where the Plaintiff (Respondent)  already had a house,  the Plaintiff (Respondent) would keep  a plot of 50 ft  and 90 ft  along the  Kimandi  garage road  and the  Defendant would have the rest  of the frontage. That the width of the Plaintiff’s plot was to measure  15m wide  along Kimandi  to garage road by 30 m long. That contrary to the agreement, the Plaintiff (Respondent) extended a width of 60 ft  to garage road and  98 ft   long and extended  his plot to area of 10ft wide. That the Defendant (Appellant)sold  L.R 615 to Johnson Mbugua Muchoki in 1992, but the Land Registrar has refused to give him an official search and he has not been made a party.

That the subdivision of the Plaintiff’s  L.R 833  into L,R 843 0. 050 HA, L.R 844 0. 033HA, L.R 845 O.O33HA, L.R 846 0. 033HA and L.R 847 0. 50HA  total O.400HA.  Further that the Plaintiff’s (Respondent’s)  totals acreage isone acre and he has not lost anything . That the Plaintiff (Respondent) had 6 months from the date of subdivision to claim compensation and his claim is therefore time barred. That the Plaintiff(Respondent) should have lodged a claim under section 31 of the Survey Act  within 12 months after the survey  dated 21st  August 1979, to the Director of Survey,  if he was aggrieved and he did not do so  and is therefore time barred.

Further that the Plaintiff’s cause of action is Statute barred under Section 7 of the Limitation of Actions Act. That the Court did not have jurisdiction to hear the matter under  Section 31  of the Land Disputes  Tribunal Act. Further that the Defendant(Appellant) has not interfered with the original boundary and  the Plaint does not  comply with the Civil Procedure Rules.

In his Counter Claim, the Defendant (Appellant)   reiterated the contents of the Defence and sought for orders that;

a)  That  the Defendant to the Counter Claim  Mr. Samuel Muigai  Kamau do surrender to the Plaintiff  to the Counter Claim and be evicted from  155 square  meter on the road frontage  of L.R Loc 16/Kimandi/286 forthwith  and any building  the Defendant  to the Counter Claim may have built in that portion of 155 square  metres be demolished at the Defendant to the Counter Claims expense.

The matter proceeded by way of viva voce evidence wherein the plaintiff (Respondent) gave evidence for himself and called one more witness.  The Defendant (Appellant) also gave evidence for himself and called three more witnesses.

PLAINTIFF’S (RESPONDENT’S) CASE

PW1 Samuel Muigai  Kamau  adopted his witness statement dated  14th March 2016,  as his evidence in chief . He further produced his list of documents   dated 23rd  October 2014  as Exhibits 1 to 6.  He prayed that the 2 acres of land be divided into an acre each and that L.R 286 is less than one acre. He denied that his part of the land occupies the frontal part.  That they never agreed that the person who gets the frontal part get less. Further, that he was not present when the survey was done, but the Defendant was present. That he noticed that his parcel was less when he set to subdivide it into plots. That a road project was coming up and a Surveyor and the Land Registrar went to the land  and established that it was less and a report was prepared.

That the Defendant  is married to his sister, and he settled on the land and invited the Defendant. He denied that there was a sale Agreement. He denied any knowledge of the sale agreement dated 5th February 1979,  and that the signature was his. He also denied visiting Maina Muiruri Advocate. That the land was 2 acres and they both contributed equally. That each of them was to get an acre and he had constructed a house  on the parcel prior to the purchase. That he was present when the surveyor from Murang’a  surveyed the parcel on 21st August 1979,and several other people were also present. That he filed Misc  28 of 2006, which was dismissed. That he had titles to  parcel Numbers 843, 844, 845,846 and 847, but did not know if the Defendant had titles to his parcels Nos. 922,923,924 and 925. That he did not know the actual size of his land.

It was his  further testimony that when the survey was done, he had not arrived as he was on the night shift and travelled that morning  only to arrive when the survey was already done. That he did not know the nature of the documents that he signed. That there is a big difference in the size of the parcels of the land on the ground as the Defendant has more land.

PW 2 Jeremiah Kihonge Kiama adopted his witness statement dated  9th February 2016, and  testified that the Plaintiff is his  elder brother  and  the Defendant is  the brother to his brother’s wife. That the two parties bought the land which was two acres and agreed that each would get an acre  after partition. That he was not present when the survey was done on  21st August 1979, and did not represent the Plaintiff during the survey. Further that  he was present when the survey was done on 17th August 2006, as the survey had come to align the boundaries. That he found that the Defendant had encroached   on the Plaintiff’s land  by 2 to 3 meters from the road to the river.

He further testified that he was not aware if Mr.Kihiu was the Surveyor or the Land Registrar. That the Plaintiff and Defendant were present during the survey of 2006.  That Kamiti Joel Mbogo and Kamau Marenye were not present on that day. That he did not see the Plaintiff sign any papers after the survey. That according to the report, Mr. Kihiu  was the Land Registrar  and it was signed  by a Mr. Stephen Gatheru for  the District Surveyor, Thika. That he could recognize  his brother signature. He confirmed that it was his in the mutation form.

DEFENCE CASE (APPELLANT’S)

DW1 Daniel Kamau  Mbogo   adopted his witness  statement dated 13th August 2018,  as his testimony. That the Plaintiff is his brother In law. He produced his list of documents as Exhibits 2 to 11. He marked Document 1 DMF1. That they made the agreement with the Plaintiff and they both signed . That the Plaintiff was present during the survey on 21st August 1979. That the Plaintiff’s brother Joel Mbogo and Solomon Kamaiti were also present. That the Surveyor aligned the boundary and asked them whether they were both satisfied and they agreed.  Further, that they signed the mutation forms and the Plaintiff later refused to sign the partition forms. That he filed case No. 52  of 1980.   They had both collected their titles and they were living peacefully until the Plaintiff filed a suit and was given an exparte order to partition the parcel again, but the same was set aside. That the Plaintiff then filed the instant suit seeking orders to resurvey.

That they went to an Advocate to do an agreement  where each one of them would get  a plot at the corner  that measured 50  ft by  98 ft  and for the rest of the land to be shared equally, and they gave  the agreement to the  Surveyor. That the Plaintiff was present when the survey was done pursuant to the Court orders and he was not present as he had not participated in the proceedings.  Further that the Plaintiff later moved to the LDT which gave  ruling on  17th February 2009,  and he appealed against the same.

That contrary to their agreement, the Plaintiff got  60 fton the frontage  facing the road  side instead of  50 ft. That the Plaintiff has constructed on the plot.  That the Gatanga Land Disputes Tribunal  made  a decision  in favour of the Plaintiff and ordered that  the land be re aligned. That the Appeals Committee confirmed  the  Gatanga LDT  decision and on appeal, the Nyeri High Court did not overturn the decision. That the decision that was made in  Misc  28 of 2006,  was set aside  upon his Application . That the Plaintiff understood what the survey was and did not complain. That one can bring another surveyor if in doubt.  That a surveyor came up pursuant to the Court order in Misc 28 of 2006and the Land Registrar was not present, but  several people were present. That he did not participate in the 2nd survey done pursuant to the Court order.

That the report in Court is  joint report by the District Land Surveyor  and Land Registrar. That he signed the mutation forms and he did not have a problem with it. That he has one acre of land and they both paid Kshs. 100/=  to the lawyer for the agreement. That the agreement was prepared by Mr. Pujas clerk  and they paid Kshs. 200 to Maina Muiruri who signed it.  That the agreement does not indicate who prepared it. That each of them was supposed to have50 ft frontage to the road  and he got 60ft facing the road. That he was against the land being surveyed afresh as  they have sold part of the land.

DW2  Kamiti Magana Solomon adopted his witness statement dated 4th September 2014, and filed on   3rd December  2014. That on 21st August 1979, the Defendant told him to accompany him  and witness how their parcel of land was to be subdivided. That the Plaintiff and his brother  Jeremiah Kihonge Kamauwere present  and the survey was conducted and trees planted as they had  been told by the surveyor. That he was witnessing for the Defendant together with  Joel Mbogo Kibe. That the plot is in a trading  center  and there  were other onlookers. That they were called by the Surveyor to sign that they were satisfied with the process and they appended their signatures.

That he witnessed the Surveyor subdividing the land, but he did not know how to undertake survey.  That the signing meant that they were agreeable  to how the survey  had been done  and for a problem to arise,  it depended  on how the survey  was done.

DW3 Joel Kibe  Mbogo  adopted his witness statement dated 4th September 2014. That the parcel of Land is 286. That on 21st  August 1979,as he was headed to the shop  and he  met the Defendant who told him  that they were in the process of subdividing  their land with the Plaintiff and were awaiting the Surveyor to divide the land into  two portions and requested him to witness. That Daniel Kamau Mbogo, Samuel Muigai  Kamau and his brother Jeremiah Kihonge  were present.   That subdivision was done  and at the boundary,  some rafters were planted by the parties  as well as Jeremiah Kihonge. That they later signed to confirm that the survey had been done and none complained and did not appear to have any  problem. That they were following what the surveyor was telling them . That he saw the sign but he was not near and he  did not know what they were signing.

DW4 Benson Kamau  Marenye  adopted his witness statement on  30th April 2015. That on 11th April 2015, Daniel Kamau asked him to assist him in measuring  their land with the Plaintiff and told him that the Plaintiff had taken  more land than he was supposed to.  That they measured together using a tape measure  and he  found that the place that Samuel had constructed was  60 ft and they did the same at night and they were alone. That their dispute was that one  person got a bigger portion  of the parcel of land  than what they had agreed.

That they measured the parcel at night and they used a torch and they each confirmed that it was 60 ft.  That Samuel was not called during the exercise. The beacons were the houses they had constructed and they did not have a map. That Daniel told him where to start the measurements and where to end.

After the viva voce evidence, the parties  filed their written submissions and on 8th February 2019,the trial Court entered Judgment in favour of the Plaintiff(Respondent) and stated as follows;

“The said report  buttresses the Plaintiffs claim  that his portion of land (parcel number 833)  is smaller than what  it was stated to be. Relying on that report  by the surveyor dated  the 12th October 2006 and without any  other report to the contrary, the Court  has no option  but to believe  what the Plaintiff asserted in his Plaint. I consequently enter  Judgment for the Plaintiff in terms of prayer (a)(i) of the re amended plaint  filed in Court  on the 7th July 2015.

The Counter Claim by the Defendant  was similarly not proved  to the required standards  and is hereby  disallowed  with no orders as to costs. The defendant did not produce  the agreement that was marked  as DMFI  or any other evidence  to prove that the parties herein  had agreed to share out the parcel  otherwise than in equal  measure. He has  all along been silent  and contended with  how  the parcels were partitioned  and his Counter Claim appears to be an afterthought  meant to Counter the Plaintiff’s claim. I do not also think that the Plaintiffs  claim was barred  by the provisions of Section  148(2) of the Registered Lands Act (repealed)  or Section 31 of the Survey Act  as stated by the Defendant.

The Appellant was aggrieved by the above determination of the trial Court and Decree thereon and he has sought to challenge the said Judgment through the Memorandum of Appeal filed on 3rd July 2019  . The Appellant sought for orders that;

1.  That this appeal be allowed.

2.  That the Judgment  delivered by Hon. M.W Wanjala Senior  Resident Magistrate on 8th February 2019, be set aside  and be substituted therewith with an order dismissing  the suit and allowing  the Appellant’s Counterclaim  dated 10th June 2015.

3.  That the costs  of this Appeal  and the lower Court suit  be borne by the Respondent .

4.  That any  other or further relief  as the Honourable  Court may deem fit and just to grant in the circumstances of this Appeal

The grounds in support of the Appeal are:-

1.  The Learned Magistrate  erred in  allowing the Plaintiffs suit  in failing to appreciate  and to hold  that the suit in so far  as the Plaintiff sought to recover land , allegedly owned  by the Defendant  is barred by Limitation  by dint of Section 7  of the Limitation of Actions Act  Cap 22 Laws of Kenya.

2.  The Learned Magistrate  erred  in allowing the Plaintiff suit in failing to appreciate  and hold that  in so far  as the Plaintiff’s claim is based on an alleged  trespass over his land  by the  Defendant   this Court lacked Jurisdiction  to entertain it by dint  of Section 3 of the Lands Disputes Tribunal  Act a position  that the same Court  had held  in its ruling  delivered on 15th April  2008 holding  the Preliminary Objection  on the very same grounds.

3.  That the Learned Magistrate  erred in allowing the Plaintiff suit in failing to appreciate  and hold  that the suit  in so far as the  Plaintiffs sought correction of errors on the survey carried out  in 1979 between his land parcel Kimandi /Wanyaga /833 and the Defendants parcel  No. Kimandi /Wanyaga/832 then  the same is barred by Limitation by dint of Section 31 Survey  Act, Capo 2999 Las of Kenya  and Section 148 of  the Registered Lands  Act , Cap 300 Laws of Kenya.

4.  The Learned Magistrate  erred in allowing  the Plaintiffs suit in failing to appreciate  and hold that in so far as the Plaintiff  sought to challenge  or appeal  the decision of the registrar  to accept  and act on mutations and survey  works carried out in 1979  between his parcel  and that of the Defendant  then the Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain  it by dint of Section 150 of the Registered Land Act Cap 300 Laws of Kenya.

5.  The Learned  Magistrate erred in allowing  the Plaintiff’s suit when she had correctly  found and appreciated the fact that the Plaintiff was aware of and satisfied with the  survey carried out  in 1979  between  his parcel   of land and  that  of the Defendant   yet she proceeded to use the survey  of 1979  without any proper and legal basis.

6.  The Learned Magistrate  erred in allowing  the  Plaintiff  suit  in considering and  relying on the surveyors  report of 12th September 2006 carried out pursuant  to orders made in Thika  Chief Magistrates  Court Misc  Appl 28 of 2006  when the orders had been set aside  and the cause withdrawn  on 12th September 2006 and hence the report had been rendered null and void and of no effect.

7.  The Learned Magistrate erred in   allowing  the Plaintiff’s suit  in considering and relying on the surveyors  report of 12th September  2006 carried out pursuant to the orders made  in Thika Chief Magistrates Court Misc Appl 28 of 2006 even after observing  that the said  surveyor  had not been called  as a witness and hence his evidence had nit ben tested.

8.  The Learned  Magistrate erred in allowing  the Plaintiff’s suit thus leading to absurd result where the Plaintiff ended having a larger parcel of land  at the expense of the Defendant when the two portions ought to be of equal size.

9.  The Learned Magistrate erred  in dismissing the Defendant’s counter claim  by holding and finding  that there was no sufficient  evidence to prove  it when there was ample evidence  on record.

The Appeal was canvassed by way of written submissions.   The Appellant through the Law Firm  of  Gacheru Ngángá  & Company Advocates  filed his written submissions dated 21st September 2020,  and submitted that the suit was barred by the Limitations of time  and the  Court lacks jurisdiction. It was further submitted that  the law provided  timelines on how Appeals were to be lodged, heard and determined and the Respondent ignored the process. That the Respondent was provided with many remedies and he did not explore them.  That the lower Court dismissed the issue of jurisdiction without giving reasons.

It was further submitted that the implications of the proceedings and  orders made in Misc Appl. No. 28  of 2008, is that there was stay of these orders   until when the Application was withdrawn. That the effect of the withdrawal of the Application was an admission  that the Application was wrongly filed  and  was to render any orders made in favour  of the Applicant null and void. That having been withdrawn on the Respondent’s own admission, the Court did not have powers to entertain the Application.   That the purported resurvey was done  without involvement of the Appellant. It was therefore submitted that the Applicant has made a case that  the Appeal is merited.

The Respondent through the Law Firm of  Wachira Ndungu & Company Advocates  filed  his written submissions on 23rd October 2020,  and submitted  that the Plaintiff discovered the fraud  on 1st August 2001and filed the suit  on 14th September  2006, and the suit is not time barred. That the Appellant confirmed that the  Thika Land Disputes Tribunal ruled in favour of the Appellant  and ordered the boundaries to be realigned  and the Appeals tribunal confirmed the same.

Further that Section 31 of the  Surveys Act  bars the Director of Survey  or a Government Surveyor  from sending a Notice  to the licensed Surveyor  after expiry of 12 months.It was further submitted that  Section 148 of the Registered Land Act refers to a claim  by a proprietor  against the government  for indemnity  and thus it is not relevant to this matter. That the case   does not fall within  the provisions of Section 150  of the Registered Land Act (repealed) as the same deals with  decisions of Registrar and Appeals.

It was further submitted that the proceedings of the  Misc 28 of 2006 were produced without contest  and the trial Court was  in order to rely on the report dated 12th September 2006 . The Court was urged to dismiss the instant Appeal.

Having carefully considered the Memorandum of Appeal, the evidence adduced in the subordinate Court   and the written submissions, the Court finds that the  issues for determination are ;

1.  Whether the  Subordinate Court had Jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter.

2.  Whether the Appeal is merited.

1. Whether the  Subordinate Court had Jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter

The Appeal is based on  various grounds amongst them the issues that the  trial Court did not have jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter  as the matter was time barred.

The issue of limitation goes to the jurisdiction of the court to entertain claims and therefore if a matter is statute barred, the court has no jurisdiction to entertain the same. Jurisdiction is everything and without it a Court  has no option but to down its tools.

The  Court will first determine whether the suit  is time barred and or the  trial  Court had jurisdiction to determine the matter.

It is the Appellant’s contention that the  trial  Court had no jurisdiction to determine  the matter as the  suit was time barred by dint of the provisions of Section 7 of the Limitations of Actions Act as the suit  sought to recover land. That since the cause of action arose on 21st  August  1999, then  12 years have since lapsed.

Section 7 of the Limitation of Actions Act provides:

“An action may not be brought by any person to recover land after the end of twelve years from the date on which the right of action accrued to him or, if it first accrued to some person through whom he claims, to that person.

Further Section 26 of the Limitation of Actions Act provides as follows;

Where, in the case of an action for which a period of limitation is prescribed, either—

(a)  the action is based upon the fraud of the defendant or his agent, or of any person through whom he claims or his agent; or

(b) the right of action is concealed by the fraud of any such person as aforesaid; or

(c) the action is for relief from the consequences of a mistake, the period of limitation does not begin to run until the plaintiff has discovered the fraud or the mistake or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it:

And in the case ofJustus Tureti Obara …Vs…Peter Koipeitai [2014] eKLRthe Court  held that;

“I am in agreement with the Plaintiff’s submission that the Plaintiff’s claim is for the recovery of the suit property from the Defendant and as such the limitation period for such a claim is 12 years as provided for in section 7 of the Limitation of Actions Act, Cap. 22, Laws of Kenya. I would wish to point out further that the Plaintiff’s case although for recovery of land is based on fraud. The proviso to section 26 (a) of the Limitation of Actions Act, Cap. 22, Laws of Kenya provides that where an action is based on the fraud of the Defendant or his agent, the period of limitation does not begin to run until the Plaintiff has discovered the fraud or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it. As to when the Plaintiff herein discovered the fraud alleged against the Defendant is a matter to be ascertained at the trial.”

From the above provisions of law and the decided cases, it is not in doubt that for purposes of Limitation, when an action is based on fraud or, mistake, time does not begin to run  until the fraud is discovered. The Respondent’s suit was based on fraud.   Further the Respondent averred that he did not discover that the survey was wrong until  9th August 2001, when he sought to subdivide the land. It therefore follows   that time began to run in the year 2001. The Court therefore finds and holds that  from2001 to 2006, when the suit was filed, 12 years had not lapsed and therefore the suit was not time barred as per the  Section 7 of the Limitations of Actions Act.

Further that the suit was time barred as per Section 31 of the Survey Act. The said provision of Law provides;

31. Correction of errors (1) The Director, or a Government surveyor authorized in writing by the Director in that behalf, may at any time undertake such field and office checks on the survey work of a licensed surveyor as he thinks fit.

(2) The Director, or a Government surveyor duly authorized to authenticate a plan under section 32 of this Act may, by notice in writing, instruct any licensed surveyor to correct at his own expense within a time specified in such notice any error made by him in the survey represented by the plan submitted for authentication: Provided that such notice shall not be sent more than twelve months after the date on which the plan was sent to the Director under section 30.

From the reading of the  said provision of law, the Court finds that the

same relates to the  Director  or a Government Surveyor  authenticating a plan and or correcting of errors committed by a surveyor and does not in any way  limit the time within which  party can claim an error occurred.

The Appellant has also contended that the Court did not have jurisdiction by dint of Section 3 of the Land  Disputes Tribunal Act. The said section provides:-

(1)   Subject to this Act all cases of a civil nature involving a dispute as to;

(a) the division of or the determination of boundaries to land including land hold in common:

(b) a claim to occupy or work land; or

(c) trespass to land. shall be heard and determined  by a Tribunal established under section 4.

Does the instant suit therefore falls within the said boundaries?

From the Re Amended Plaint, the Court notes that the Respondent was seeking orders from Court  to have the Land Registrar  and District Land Surveyor  visit the  land and  put it back. The Court further notes that  it is acknowledged that  Gatanga Land Disputes Tribunal had already determined the matter and  held that the same should be aligned and therefore what the Respondent was seeking was  for the  Land Registrar and District Surveyor to come in and align the same.

The Appellant had also contended that  the  suit is  barred by the provisions of  Section 148 of the Registered Land Act(Repealed). The Court concurs with the submissions by the Respondent that the  provisions of Section 148 of the  said Act  deals with indemnity by a proprietor as against the  government which is not the cause of action in the instant suit nor is the suit  about decisions of the  Land Registrar  as provided by Section 150 of the repealed Act.

From the foregoing, the Court finds and holds that the trial Court did  have jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter .

2. Whether the Appeal is merited

Having held that the trial Court had jurisdiction, the Court must then determine whether the  trial Court came to correct or wrong conclusion. It is the Appellant’s contention that  the trial  Court erred in  relying on  the report  dated 12th September 2006. The dispute as to whether or not the boundaries were to be adjusted  had been litigated upon and the same determined by the Land Disputes  Tribunalwhich on  17th February 2009 made a decision and stated as follows;

“Deputy Land Registrar  and the District Surveyor  visited the stated land  and parcel originally  parcel Loc.16  Kimandi Wanyanga  832 and 833 which were supposed to be equal  do a survey  to adjust  the boundaries  for equal sharing (original  1 acre each).”

From the said decision, it is not in doubt that the issue as to whether or not there was a discrepancy had been settled. In the Court’s considered view, in his Re-amended Plaint, what the Respondent was seeking therefore was how to align the said measurements.

The next question then would have been how would the Court then make a finding of how the measurements would be adjusted. The court concurs with the Appellant that the survey presented by the Plaintiff   had been impugned by the Court when the said proceedings were set aside. However the trial Court was faced with a situation where it had to make a decision. The Respondent had presented a proposal on how the said adjustment could have been done. Was the said report binding to the Court? I certainly do not think so and that is why the Court stated that having been faced with no option but only the report that has been produced in evidence by the Respondent

The Appellant did not present an alternative  form in which the  adjustment of the boundaries could be done and the Court finds that it  was  not wrong of the trial Court to seek to rely on the said  report which in the Court’s considered view was but a mere proposal that only guided the Court.

Consequently the Court finds that the trial Court did not err and therefore, this Appeal is not merited as the Court used its discretion to come to a determination which had to be made  and since the  evidence was  not contested, it was the best way.

Having now carefully re-evaluated and re-assessed the available evidence, before the trial court, the Memorandum of Appeal together with the written submissions, the Court finds that the trial Magistrate arrived at a proper determination and this Court finds no reason to upset the said determination.

The upshot of the foregoing is that the Appellant’s Appeal is found not merited and consequently the said Appeal is disallowed entirely and the Judgment and Decree of the trial court is upheld with costs to the Respondent.

It is so ordered.

Dated, signed andDelivered atThikathis25thday ofMarch 2021

L. GACHERU

JUDGE

25/3/2021

Court Assistant -  Dominic

ORDER

In view of the declaration of measures restricting court operations due to theCOVID-19 Pandemic, and in light of the directions issued by His Lordship, the Chief Justice on 15th March 2020, this Judgement has been delivered to the parties online with their consents. They have waived compliance with Order 21 rule 1 of theCivil Procedure Rules which requires that all judgments and rulings be pronounced in open Court.

With Consent of and virtual appearance via video conference – Microsoft Teams Platform

Mr. Gacheru for the Appellant

Mr. S. N. Nganga for the Respondent

L. GACHERU

JUDGE

25/3/2021