Elisha Mbogo Nthiga v United Nations Sacco Society Limited [2021] KECPT 592 (KLR) | Temporary Injunctions | Esheria

Elisha Mbogo Nthiga v United Nations Sacco Society Limited [2021] KECPT 592 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE CO-OPERATIVE TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI

TRIBUNAL CASE NO.748 OF 2019

ELISHA  MBOGO  NTHIGA.............................................................CLAIMANT

VERSUS

UNITED  NATIONS  SACCO SOCIETY  LIMITED................ RESPONDENT

RULING

Vide the Application  dated 11. 12. 2019, the Claimant has moved  this Tribunal  seeking  for Orders inter alia:

1. That  this Honourable  court be pleased  to certify  this application  as urgent  and service  thereof be dispensed  within  the 1st instance;

2. That  this  Honorable  Tribunal  be pleased  to issue  a temporary  order restraining  the Respondents,  agents, servants and/or any  other person claiming  through  it  from attaching  shares,  attaching  salaries, harassing, and/or  in interfering  with Claimant’s  guarantors pending  hearing and  determination  of this  Application ;

3. That  this  Honorable  Tribunal  be pleased  to issue  a permanent injunction order restraining  the Respondents,  agents, servants and/or any  other person claiming  through  it  from attaching  shares,  attaching  salaries, harassing, and/or  in interfering  with Claimant’s  guarantors pending  hearing and  determination  of this  suit ;

4. That cost of this Application be provided for.

The Application is supported by the grounds on its face and the  Affidavit sworn by the Claimant on 11. 12. 2019.

The Respondent  has  opposed  the Application vide  the  Replying  Affidavit  sworn by Moses  Amolo on 20. 2.2020.

Vide  the  directions  given  on  14. 10. 2020,  the Application  was canvassed  by way of  written submissions.  The Claimant filed his  written submissions  on  12. 11. 2020 while  the Respondent did so  on 9. 12. 2020.

Claimant’s  Contention

Vide the instant  Application, the  Claimant  contend that  the Respondent  has  issued  a Notice  to attach  the deposits  of his guarantors  yet  he is still servicing  his loan.  That the Respondent’s  actions  are uncalled for,  unconstitutional and malicious. That  he has not  defaulted  in repaying  his loan.

Respondent’s case

The Respondent  has opposed  the Application  on grounds  that the  Claimant  has defaulted  in repayment of a loan  of Kshs.4,950,000/= advanced  to  him. That  he defaulted  in repaying  the said  loan  in May, 2014. That  he was required  to pay a  monthly  installment of Kshs.95,518. 95. That however,  he alleged to pay  what suited him.  That  several notices  were issued  to  him  to regularize his account  to no avail.  That  the instant  application  has been overtaken  by  events  since,  the Respondent on  20. 12. 2019 recovered  the balance  of  his loan  (Kshs.1,830,215. 77/-  from  his guarantors.)

Issues  for determination

We have  framed  the following  issues  for determination:

a. Whether  the Claimant  has established  a proper basis  to warrant  the grant  of an order  of temporary  injunction;

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 Facie  case  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......”

From the holding  of the court  in the Mraos case above,  it is trite  that for a  party  to  establish existence  of a prima facie  case he/she  should  establish  existence  of a right which  has been  infringed  by the other side so  as  to call  for  a rebuttal. With  this in mind, we ask  whether  the Claimant has satisfied  this condition. It is  his  case that the  Respondent  has  threatened  to recover his outstanding  loan from his guarantors yet  his  loan is performing. On the  other hand,  the Respondent  contend  that the  Claimant  defaulted in repayment  of his loan thus prompting  it  to recover  the same from  his guarantors. That  by the time  the instant  claim  was filed,  it had already  recovered  the outstanding loan  from  the guarantors.

We have perused  the Claimant’s  loan statement  annexed  to  the  Replying  Affidavit  of  Moses  Amolo and marked  a MA3. We note  that a sum of  Kshs.4,950,000/= was  credited  to the Claimant’s  account  on  18. 4.2013. That the monthly repayment  was Kshs.95,518. 95. That  the Claimant  repaid  the said  monthly  installment  until  18. 10. 19 when the same  reduced  to Kshs.85,000/=. That  this figure  progressly  came  down  and  at  one point, that is,  30. 11. 2018, the repayment  was Kshs.30,000/=. What  this  mean is that  the Claimant  was not repaying  the loan  as per the terms  of the contract.

We have  also perused  annexture MA6. They are  correspondences from the Respondent  informing  the public that  the Claimant’s guarantors had been  pursued  to recover  the loan.  The letters are  dated 24. 12. 19.

We have  also  perused  the pertinent  part of  the  Claimant’s  loan statement  and note that  the said  loan was  recovered  from the guarantors on 20. 12. 2019.  The  instant claim was filed  on  11. 12. 2019 and  no stay orders  were granted.  We thus agree  with the Respondent that the same has  been overtaken  by events  since the said  funds  had already  been recovered  from the guarantors.

Needless  to say  that even  if the said  sum  had not  been recovered, we find  that the  Claimant has  not  established  a proper  basis  to warrant  the grant of  the orders  sought. The  material  placed  before  us show  that  he  defaulted  in repayment  of the loan.

Conclusion

The upshot  of the foregoing  is that we do not  find merit  in  the Claimant’s  Application  dated  11. 12. 2019 and hereby  dismiss  it with costs.

RULING SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY THIS 25TH   DAY OF  MARCH,  2021.

HON. B. KIMEMIA   CHAIRPERSON   SIGNED  25. 3.2021

HON. JANE MWATSAMA DEPUTY CHAIRPERSON SIGNED  25. 3.2021

MR. P. GICHUKI    MEMBER   SIGNED  25. 3.2021

Wachira Advocate  for Respondent  present

HON. B. KIMEMIA   CHAIRPERSON   SIGNED  25. 3.2021