Equity Bank Limited & Lucy Ndururi v Robert Chesang [2016] KEHC 2558 (KLR) | Bank Customer Relationship | Esheria

Equity Bank Limited & Lucy Ndururi v Robert Chesang [2016] KEHC 2558 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

CIVIL APPEAL NO.  571 OF 2012

EQUITY BANK LIMITED……………….…......…….1ST APPELLANT

LUCY NDURURI…………………………….……..2ND APPELLANT

VERSUS

ROBERT CHESANG ………………………….……..RESPONDENT

JUDGMENT

1. This appeal arises from the judgment and decree of Honourable C.Obulutsa Senior Principal Magistrate delivered on 25th October, 2012 in Milimani CM CC No. 1930 of 2010.  In the said suit, the respondent herein was the plaintiff.  He sued  the appellants  Equity Bank Limited and Lucy Ndururi  claiming for   special damages, general  damages, damages  for the tort  of  libel, damages for  breach of contract  aggravated,  punitive  and exemplary  damages  costs and interest  at commercial rates  from 22nd February  2010  on specials  and general damages  and from  date of judgment  on costs.

2. The defendants were served with summons to enter appearance but they never entered any appearance   and interlocutory   judgment in default    was entered against them.  They later applied to set aside the interlocutory judgment but   the trial court dismissed the application for setting aside of interlocutory judgment.  An appeal  was lodged  vide HCCA  149/2011 and in a decision rendered  on  17th July 2013    the High Court dismissed the appeal hence the matter had  to proceed in the lower court for assessment  of damages.

3. Being dissatisfied  with the said  judgment  and decree wherein the plaintiff/ respondent  was awarded  a sum of  shs  11,450 special damages, shs  1 million general damages   for libel and breach of contract; and  shs  1. 5 million  aggravated  punitive  and exemplary  damages  all totaling  shs  2,511,450 plus costs of  the  suit   and interest, the appellant filed  this appeal on 31st October  2012  setting out  the following  11 grounds of  appeal contending that:

1. The learned magistrate erred in law in  awarding the respondent general damages  for breach of contract;

2. The learned magistrate erred in law in law and fact in awarding the respondent general damages for libel yet there was infact no proof of libel, no publication by the appellants.

3. The learned magistrate erred in law and  fact  in awarding  the respondent  general damages for libel yet the respondent confirmed that  the print out  at the Nakumatt Supermarket  was made by  the supermarket not the appellants.

4. The learned magistrate erred in law and  fact  in assessing  damages on the  reliance  of previous authorities  of the  High Court  of Appeal in  which damages   were awarded  to practicing  advocates  of many years  standing who had thriving law practices yet the respondent confirmed that he has never taken out a practicing certificate.

5. The learned magistrate erred in law and  fact  in assessing  damages on the  reliance  of previous authorities  of the  High Court  of Appeal that  involved   publication  in nationwide daily news  papers  whose  impact, incidence, frequency if the publication cannot be  compared  with that of a publication  in a supermarket  till print out.igh

6. The learned magistrate erred in law and  fact  in failing  to appreciate  that the  respondent confirmed  that  once 22nd February 2010  while at  the Bank, the  words allegedly  uttered  the Branch  Manager   were said to him while   inside the Branch Manager’s  office and that  there  was no other  person in that room at the moment .  Further that the respondent confirmed that other words   were uttered either by the Branch Manager or the Bank’s employees uttered any words in relation to the account within the banking hall (sic.)

7. The learned magistrate erred in law when awarding  and assessing  damages he relied on the High Court authority of  Nicholas  R.O. Ombija  V KCB  which  was  delivered on  27th July 2009 in Milimani  CC No. 547/2008 after the Court  of  Appeal  In CA  153/2009 had on   24th  July  2009  3 years  prior to  the delivery  of the High Court   authority stayed all  proceedings  including  the delivery of  the judgment the respondent  was relying  on.

8. The learned magistrate erred in law and  fact  when in awarding  and assessing damages  he  relied  on the High Court  authority of Nicholas  R.O. Ombija  V KCB Bank yet the same  involved a  judge of the High Court  as opposed to a  person like the respondent who  is not   a judge  of the High Court  and has never taken out a practicing certificate  in his life.

9. The learned magistrate erred in law and fact when he failed to hold and appreciate that there   was no evidence at all and proof that the alleged libel had directly resulted in diminishing and or injuring the status of the responded in any manner.

10. The learned magistrate erred in law and fact in awarding punitive and exemplary damages   given the peculiar circumstances on the case.

11. The learned magistrate erred in law and fact in completely disregarding the appellant’s written submissions.

4. The appellant   prayed that this appeal be allowed with costs, setting aside the judgment and resultant decree in the lower court and dismissing the suit in the lower court.

5. Parties filed written submissions which they highlighted disposing of this appeal.  They also relied on several decided cases.

6. In the appellant’s  submissions filed on  9th June  2015, it  was submitted that the  amount of damages  awarded  by the trial court   was  inordinately  high.  Reliance    was placed on Butt Vs  Khan  [1981] 1 KLR approved by the Court of Appeal  in Stephen Obure Onkanga  V Njugu  consolidated  Limited [2013]  e KLR  which set out  the principles  upon  which  an appellate  court  will  disturb damages  awarded  by the  trial court.  According to the appellants, the authorities relied on by the  trial court in assessing  damages  concerned nationwide  publication in newspapers whose  scope cannot be compared to  the present   case where the alleged  publication  was in a supermarket  till print out.  The appellants also challenged  the award  of damages  in defamation, relying  on Jones  V Polland [1997] EMLR  233. 243  as cited  with approval in  Johnson Evan Gicheru V Andrew  Morton  & Another  [2005] e KLR .

7. It  was  further  submitted that reliance  on Nicholas  R.O. Ombija  Vs KCB  case   by the trial magistrate was erroneous   as the reach  of the said  defamatory statements  was  markedly different.  Further, that  the respondents   standing   was not  similar  to that of  Nicholas Ombija  hence damages  should be reduced and that  in any case, the Nicholas Ombija  case  was overturned  by the Court of Appeal in October 2015.  Reliance    was also placed on KTDA Vs Benson Ondimu Masese [2008] e KLR where the Court Appeal considered the social and professional standing of the respondent and reduced damages.

8. The appellants  maintained that the  respondent, though an advocate, had  not taken  out a practicing  certificate  and so the alleged  damages  on  his reputation cannot  be compared  to that of Ombija J.

9. It was further submitted that general damages for breach of  contract  should not have  been  awarded, reliance  being  placed on Provincial Insurance Company EA Ltd  Vs Mordekai  Mwanga  Nandwa citing  Dharamshi V Karsam[1974] EA 41.

10. In the submissions filed on  15th July 2015  combined with   the oral highlights, the appellant’s counsel  submitted that  the court’s  jurisdiction had been  properly  invoked as opposed to the  contention  by the respondent.

11. Further, that the issue of  filing  a notice of appointment of advocates  instead of a Memorandum of Appearance  was not fatal  and that the  same  was   curable Under  Article  159 of the Constitution, since the purpose of Memorandum of Appearance  was  the same  as that  of notice of appointment  of advocates   namely, to inform  the other party  and the court  of  the particulars  of the defendant  or his advocate and the addresses  of service.  The appellants also relied  on the overriding   objectives  of the Civil Procedure  Act which they urged, should  not be defeated, as applied  the decision  in Patrick  Thoithi  Kanyuira  V Kenya  Airports  Authority  [2011] e KLR.  Further that the submissions on that issue by the respondent is coming too late in the day an appeal.

12. On liability  and formal proof, the appellants  relied on the Court of Appeal decision in CA 115/2016  Douglas  Odhiambo V Telcom(K) Ltd where the  court held  that even  if the suit proceeded  by  way of formal proof, the plaintiff must proof liability  by evidence and not  submissions  and  pleadings.  In this case, it   was submitted that there was no evidence to prove liability hence the respondent should not have been awarded any damages.  It  was contended  that the publication of the offending  print out  was done by the  supermarket and not by the  appellants and that even if  this court  was to uphold the   finding  on liability, the damages awarded   were inordinately  high.

13. The respondent Mr  Robert Chesang   who was acting pro se opposed the appeal and  submitted   relying  on his  sets of  written  submissions filed on  16th June  2015  and  29th July 2015.

14.  On whether  the appeal herein  is competent, Mr Chesang  submitted that first, the records  of appeal  as filed are  incomplete   in that  some exhibits  produced in the lower court are  missing whereas  in some  records of appeal, a  purported defence   was sneaked  in  yet there   was no defence   and or appearance  filed.  According to Mr Chesang, the 1st record of appeal should be disregarded.

15.  Further, that under  Order  6  of the Civil procedure  Rules,  if one  does not  file a defence  then they must  seek leave   to appeal.

16. Mr Chesang submitted that the trial magistrate applied all relevant principles and made no error.  Further, that the trial court took into account the established principles for awarding damages.  He stated that he had taken out all practicing certificates from 1997-2015 and paid the Law Society of Kenya and Advocates Benevolent Association fees as required.

17. Further, that he had  given uncontroverted evidence as to the  liability of the appellants  hence  the  submissions by the  appellants  challenging  the evidence  is an attempt  to file  a defence   on appeal.  It was also submitted that the grounds of appeal are vague and that they do not disclose how the trial court failed to act.  Mr Chesang contended that it would appear that the appellants never read the proceedings and judgment of the lower court.  He also  submitted that there  was   no award  of general damages for breach of contract, but for  libel and breach of contract as   was espoused  by the Court of Appeal  decision in Nyamogo & Nyamogo Vs Barclays Bank of Kenya  where  the Court of Appeal  explained  the meaning of  an award of  damages  for breach of contract on the basis  of libel.

18. Mr Chesang submitted that the case of Douglas  Odhiambo V Telkom Ltd  is  distinguishable  in that  the advocate  in that  case only produced  documents without  a hearing  unlike in this case  where he testified, called  one  witness  and produced   19 exhibits  which are  missing   in the trial  record of appeal herein filed.  He urged the court to analyze and evaluate the trial court evidence and arrive at its own conclusions.  He also urged this court not to interfere with the findings by the trial court as was held in Nderitu & another (no citation given).

19. Further, that aggravated/exemplary damages   were deserved in view of the malicious conduct of the appellants, adding that the court records have been tampered with hence the appeal should be dismissed with costs.

20. In a brief   rejoinder, Ms Areri  submitted that the appeal  was competent  and conceded  that there   was no defence  filed by her  clients  but that  their  challenge of the trial court’s judgment  is regarding quantum regarding the standing of the respondent in society.

21. On the Nyamogo & Nyamogo case, it was submitted that it related to Bills of Exchange Act Section 27.

Determination

22. This being the first appeal, this  court is  obliged  to abide by the  provisions of Section 78 of the Civil  Procedure Act to reevaluate  and reexamine  the lower court record  and the  evidence   before it  and arrive at  its  own independent   conclusion , having  regard to the fact that it neither  saw nor heard  the witnesses as they testified, as  was stated  in the Sielle Vs Associated Motor Boat  Company Ltd [1968] EA  123  by Sir  Clement De Lestang that:

“ This court must  consider the  evidence, evaluate  itself  and draw  its own  conclusion   though  in doing so it  should always  bear in mind  that it neither  heard  witnesses  and should  make due allowance  in this respect.  However, this  court is not bound  necessarily to follow  the trial  judge’s  findings  of  fact if it   appears  either that he had clearly  failed on some  point to take  account of  particular  circumstances or probabilities  materially  to estimate  the evidence or of the  impression  based on the demeanor  of a witness is  inconsistent  with the evidence   in the case generally.  (Abdu Hammed Sarif V Ali Mohammed Solan [1995] 22 EACA 270. ”

23. And in the case of Mbogo Vs Shah & Another [1968] EA 93, the court set out circumstances under which an appellate court may interfere with a decision of the trial court as follows:

“  I think it is well settled that this  court  will not interfere  with the exercise  of discretion  by the  inferior  court unless  it is satisfied  that the  decision is clearly wrong   because it  has misdirected  itself  or because it has  acted  on  matters  on which it  should not have acted  or because  or because it   was failed  to take into consideration matters  which it   should  have taken  into account  and consideration  and in doing so arrived at  a wrong conclusion.”

24. Applying   the above  principles to this appeal,  what is  an undisputed fact is that the defendants  neither  entered  an appearance  nor filed  defence in the lower  court as a result  of which interlocutory  exparte  judgment   was entered against  them  and  the plaintiff proceeded  to formally  prove his case.  The first   trial before Mr Okato was quashed by the High Court Honourable Korir J vide JR 149/2011 vide a judgment delivered on 17the July 2012.

25. The appellants /defendants herein also tried to challenge the exparte judgment on appeal but were unsuccessful.  The plaintiff was heard by Honourable Obulutsa, SPM on 17th August 2012 as PW1.  He testified, adopting his testimony  on oath  presented  before Mr Okato  on 10th March  2011 that he is an advocate  of the High Court   of Kenya from  1997 and  produced all his exhibits  listed P EX1-18.

26. According to the plaintiff, on 22nd February 2010 he went to Nakumatt Supermarket to shop.  He used his ATM card with Equity Bank to pay for the goods.  Regrettably, the transaction failed with results “transaction declined account nonexistent.”The Supermarket thought that the plaintiff/respondent was trying to defraud the supermarket   using an ATM card and they caused him to be arrested and temporarily detained by anti-fraud banking unit which incident caused a commotion because the supermarket was full of shoppers.  He was  detained for  30 minutes  and  was  only released  after the  shop’s manager  intervened  and scrutinized  the ATM card  and  other documents  belonging  to the plaintiff upon which they confirmed that the documents   were genuine.  The plaintiff   was very embarrassed by the incident.  He had met Clement   Karuma one of the shoppers on the queue for payment for the goods with whom they exchanged their contacts before the incident.

27. Soon thereafter the plaintiff went  to the  nearest  Equity Bank Branch at Four ways Towers A/C 0120100307921 and  on filling in a form to inquire  in his account, he  was told that he had  no account  with the bank as shown by ( Pex8).  He also proceeded to  his Tom Mboya  Branch and  met the Branch Manager, the  2nd  defendant herein who became  very rude  to the plaintiff, refusing to hear anything  and told him in his face that he  was not clever to defraud  the bank and she threatened  to  call the police to arrest him.

28. That despite all the embarrassment he was going through, he had 8 accounts with the 1st defendant bank and all of them had funds totaling to shs 800,000.  That he tried  to find out  what  was happening  but  was unsuccessful so he  issued a demand  notice for the opening  of his accounts and release  of all his   money, which  was  only released after contempt  proceedings were commenced  against the  Managing Director  of the Bank.  He produced deposit slips and Bank statements.  He therefore prayed for damages, costs, interest and an apology.

29. In cross examination the plaintiff/respondent stated that he was an administrator with Lifemart Limited, Lifehouse Foundation and Lifehouse Services dealing in leasing rights in Kenya and other countries.  Further, that he had registered the firm of Chesang and Chesang Advocates to offer legal services.  He  reiterated having  8  accounts  with the  1st defendant and  that  4 of those accounts were connected  to the ATM card issued  to do shopping.  He stated that it  was   at 1. 00pm when he shopped  goods worth  15,000 and presented  the ATM card which he had  always  used  for payment  but after swiping  it is when  he cashier/teller gave him a print out  to the effect that the  accounts   were  nonexistent.  He  was arrested and  detained at the manager’s office  until  the manager, after examining  his documentation  believed  him and  said the  problem must have been  with the bank.  He confirmed  going to the defendant’s  Fourways Towers and  to the Tom Mboya  Branches  but got  hostile reception in the latter  branch  where the second defendant  manager told him that he  was not clever to defraud  a bank and she threatened  to call the  police.  He produced  Bank  deposit  and evidence of the accounts  opened  with the  1st defendant  as listed  in  his plaint.

30. The plaintiff did not call his witness the second time when his case was reheard.  The defendants had no evidence to offer following entry of exparte judgment which they had unsuccessfully tried to set aside so both parties filed written submissions for consideration by the court.

31. The plaintiff /respondent filed submissions seeking  for judgment  in his  favour  relying  on the Standard  Ltd  Vs G. Kagia[2010] e KLR on damages  and the  cases of Julius  Orenge  t/a RAO Otieno & Company V The Standard  and Nicholas Ombija Vs KCB Ltd  [2009] e KLR.

32. The defendants submitted that  they were not liable  because the words “ transaction declined” were uttered  by the supermarket  and not the bank  and that the  words  allegedly  uttered   by the   2nd defendant   were not  uttered  in the  presence of any third  party and therefore did not  amount to  defamation.  Reliance    was placed on the case of Munyi Vs Lewa Wildlife Conservancy.  The defendants  also relied on Securicor   Vs Benson  Onyango and submitted that  no  damages could be  awarded for  breach of contract  and further, that as the plaintiff had not  practiced or set  up a law  firm, he had no reputation that could have been destroyed.  Reliance was placed on the Standard d Vs G.N. Kagiacase.

33. The trial magistrate found that the plaintiff had not engaged in active legal practice.  However, that on  the evidence adduced, he  was   satisfied  that the plaintiff  had  proved  his case  and on the  basis  of Ombija  Vs KCB, he  found that  breach of  contract  and libel  formed  one transaction  and that as there  was evidence  that A/C 0120100307921  which  was linked to the ATM card  had shs  258,167/90 as at 7th May  2014  there  was no explanation  why the ATM Card  would be  rejected  as account  being nonexistent.  The trial magistrate considered submissions by the defendants who had contended that the Ombija case was inapplicable   as there    was an appeal pending.  The trial magistrate found  that the  case  was  applicable  and that   as that judgment  had not been set  aside, the decision in Ombija  case  was binding  on the lower court.  He also  found that the defamatory  statement   was communicated  to  third  parties and hence the  plaintiff’s  reputation  was  injured  and that the defendant  breached  the contract  it had with the  plaintiff by failing to enable him use his  card in circumstances that caused the  supermarket to  treat  him as  a fraudster.

34. From the above evidence in the lower court, pleadings, grounds of appeal, submissions both in the lower court and in this appeal and the authorities   relied on, the issues for   determination are:

1. Whether the  appellants  required  leave of court to appeal;

2. Whether the appellants  are  liable for breach of contract and libel

3. Whether the respondent is entitled to any damages  and if so how  much

4. What  order should this court make and

5. Who should bear costs of this appeal?

35. On whether the appellants  required  leave of court to appeal, Section 65  of the Civil Procedure  Act is  clear that an appeal shall  lie to the High Court  from any original decree or part of a decree  of a subordinate  court,  other than  a magistrate’s court of  a third class, on  a question of law or fact.

36. Furthermore, Section 67 of the Civil Procedure Act enacts that an appeal may lie from   an original decree passed exparte.

37. In this case, the respondent obtained interlocutory judgment against the appellants and their efforts to set aside   that judgment in order to defend   the suit   were unsuccessful.  They were nonetheless allowed to cross examine witnesses and to file submissions.

38. In my view the decree in the lower court    was therefore passed exparte as there was no defence on record.  That decree   was appealable as of right.  No leave was required to file an appeal.  Accordingly the objection by the respondent fails.

39. On the issue of whether  the appellants  were liable   for breach of  contract and  libel, the appellant submitted that  the trial magistrate   was in error  in that there   was no evidence  of defamation since the  printout  slip  was produced  by the supermarket  and secondly, that  the  2nd defendant  did not  defame  him in the  presence  of third  parties.  They also contended that the Nicholas  Ombija  case should not have been relied  on by the trial court  although  its circumstances  were similar  because there  was an  appeal  pending determination  and that  now the  said decision  has been  overturned  by the  Court of Appeal in 2015.

40. I will first  deal  with the decision in KCB Ltd V Honourable Nicholas  Ombijah CA  231/2009 which  was an  appeal from the  judgment and  Decree of Khaminwa J  dated  27th July 2009.  This court notes that  in the said  case, the High Court (Khaminwa J)  had on  5th March  2009 struck out the defendant’s  defence  and entered  judgment  on liability for the plaintiff against the defendant  and ordered  the suit to proceed  for formal proof.  Being  dissatisfied  with that decision of the High Court, the defendant  appealed  vide CA  231 of 2009 and in the judgment   delivered  on  23rd October 2015, the Court of Appeal, in allowing  that appeal found that  as a matter of  fact, there   was no denial   by Honourable  Ombija  J that he had  a debit  balance  in the card account   hence he had  an overdrawn account .  Further, the Court of Appeal found that there  was no  unequivocal  admission of the plaintiff’s  claim by the defendant through the letter  dated  14th May 2008 which profusely apologized for the delay in uplifting the temporary  suspension of the plaintiff’s account  after the cheque deposited on  15th April 2008  was cleared  on the evening  of  19th April  2008, until 6th May  2008.

41. It has not been  shown in this  case that the circumstances  under which  the appeal in CA 231/2009   was allowed  are the  same  prevailing  circumstances  in this case,  noting that  the said  appeal   was against a ruling   on  an application  which  sought to have the defence struck out    and judgment  entered  in favour  of the plaintiff/respondent.  Furthermore, the Court of Appeal did order for restoration of the defence on the record with the result that that suit is not yet determined and therefore it will have to be heard on the merits.

42. In this case, it has not been shown that the respondent had overdrawn his accounts whose existence with the 1st appellant   is undisputed by the evidence adduced in   the lower court.  There is also no evidence that the respondent herein was relying on an alleged admission of his claim by the appellant/defendant.

43. Therefore, the concern of this court is whether on the evidence adduced by the respondent in the lower court, there is   ample evidence to support the respondent’s claim as allowed by the trial court.  This court reiterates that the Court of Appeal in the Ombija case(supra) did not overturn   the finding  that in claims  of this  nature, contract  and libel form one  transaction, which is a relevant  factor in determining  liability and  damages for injury to one’s  credit  where there is  evidence of bank/customer  contractual relationship.

44. Therefore, on whether  the appellant herein  was  liable for breach of contract  and libel, there  was uncontroverted  evidence  adduced  by the plaintiff that he  held  8 accounts  with the 1st appellant   which accounts had sufficient  funds  to pay for the items  at the supermarket  which did not  cost more than 15,000.

45. Further, there   was uncontroverted evidence  that 4 of those  accounts  were co-joined and linked to the  ATM card which  the respondent  was using  as a debit  card.  Therefore, would the 1st appellant  have been justified  in refusing to  honour the ATM debit  card  and in remarking  that the account  was nonexistent when the respondent  used or presented  the ATM card to  the supermarket teller?  And in addition, did that dishonor amount to breach of customer/bank relationship?  And if so, was the respondent’s credit injured and therefore would he is entitled to damages for breach of contract and libel?

46. It is trite law that the relationship between a bank and its customer is that of principal and agent.  Consequently, the bank being  the holder  of customer’s  money is under a  duty to pay  a customer’s order where  there are sufficient  funds to his credit  and where there is such failure, a  cause of action  will accrue.

47. Where the banks decline to honour a customer’s order for the money held in account, without any sufficient explanation, that refusal or failure constitutes a breach of contract for which the banker is liable in damages.

48. In addition, the principles applicable to dishonor of cheques presented for payment are the same   as those applicable for the dishonor of the order for payment using a credit   card   as well as a debit card.

49. In this case, I find that the print out by the supermarket teller was information which the bank configured in its system and therefore the fact of rejection of the transaction for nonexistent account was uttered by the bank to the supermarket teller who is a third party for purposes of publication of defamatory matter. Iam also satisfied on the evidence adduced in the lower court that that allegation that the plaintiff had no account was false, derogatory and unjustified and in breach of bank/ customer contractual relationship.

50. In Halsbury’s  Laws of England, 4th  Edition, Volume 3  at paragraph 125  on  banker- customer  relationship and  obligations thereto, it is stated that:

“The characteristic usually found in bankers are:

1. That they accept  money from and collect cheques   for their customers  and place them to their  credit;

2. That they honour  cheques  or orders drawn on them by their customers when presented  for  payment  and debit  their customers  accordingly; and

3. That they keep current accounts in their books in which the credits and debits are entered.”

51. In Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Edition VOL 3 paragraphs 155 on wrongful dishonor of a cheque.  It is  stated;

“ If  without justification , a banker  dishonors  his customer’s  cheque, he  is liable to the customer  in damages  for injury  of credit.  Proof of actual injury to credit is not necessary to secure substantial damages, either for a business customer or for personal customers.  The answer on a cheque dishonored on presentation by a third person may constitute libel, but such cases are rare; in such cases general damages may be awarded.”(Emphasis added).

52. Therefore  there being   evidence that  the plaintiff had 4 accounts all connected to the ATM card that was used for the failed transaction on account of nonexistent account, and which had sufficient funds  for purposes of the transactions which the plaintiff was transacting, in  my humble view, the receipt   printed showing  nonexistent  account  was  uttered  by the bank’s system  to a third party  supermarket’s teller  thus dishonoring  the plaintiff’s  credit, which was  in breach  of the bank customer relationship.

53. InPaget’s Law of Banking, 13th Edition the learned author states: -

“The Credit of a customer may be seriously injured by the wrongful dishonor of a cheque. Yet it is rare that a customer will be able to prove special damage. His claim is for general damages in respect of injury to his reputation.

As regards trading customers, the law presumes injury without proof of actual damage. The special position of traders was recognized by the House of Lords in Wilson Vs United Counties Bank Ltd (1920) AC 102, where, after reviewing the authorities, Lord Birkenhead said:

‘The Ratio decidendi in such cases is that the refusal to meet the cheque, under such circumstances, is so obviously injurious to the credit of a trader that the latter can recover, without allegation of special damage, reasonable compensation for the injury done to his credit’’.

54. In T. G Reeday,Law Relating to Banking, 2nd Edition on the Obligations of the Bank in honouring cheques. The author writes thus: -

“The opening of a current account implies a contract that the bank will pay at the branch concerned cheques drawn by the customer in correct form and with funds available, whether consisting of a credit balance or an authorized overdraft limit. If a bank dishonours a cheque wrongfully i.e. where funds are available and no legal impediment to payment exists, then this is a breach of contract for which the customer can sue for damages and the measure of the damages is not the amount of the cheque but such sum as is reasonable compensation for the injury to his credit….. However, in the case of a tradesman, and by analogy is that of a professional man or a commercial agent, reasonable compensation can be recovered without proof of special damages.”

And Patel v National and Grindlays Bank Ltd (1959) E.A. 76 the Court held: -

“Where a banker dishonours a cheque when the customer’s account is in funds, it is the commercial credit of the customer that is injured and the inference arises that pecuniary loss will necessarily ensue. In Vanbergen Vs St. Edmonds Properties Ltd., 1933 I K.B. 345, where a bankruptcy notice was wrongly served on a trader, Macnaughteen J. , said at page 348;

“With regard to damages, I do not think that the cases with regard to contracts for sale of goods have any bearing on a case such as this. The Plaintiff is a trader, and the service of a bankruptcy as the jury have found in this case, is an act which would very likely affect the direct of a trader. In my view, those cases are opposite in which it has been held that if a banker, with funds in his hands belonging to a customer, dishonors a cheque drawn by the customer, he is liable to substantial damages to the customer for breach of contract.”’

56. In the instant case, I find no merit in the appellant’s complaint that the trial court did not consider their written submissions as the trial court did consider those sub missions before arriving at the decision that he did and the record bears this out. Furthermore, it is clear to my mind that the accounts in issue existed, from which the ATM card was connected; that the funds were sufficiently available in those accounts in excess of sh 200,000; that the ATM card was current and not expired; that accounts were active or expected to be active as there was no reason why a bank would issue an ATM card on dormant accounts and not recall it; there was no evidence of default by the respondent; there was no evidence of fraud or suspected fraud for the accounts in issue to be frozen; there was no evidence of any unusual activity or heavy withdrawal from the accounts raising suspicion or red flag of fraud; there was no evidence that the ATM card was blocked; and neither was there evidence that the ATM card was being used at an unusual location to indicate some fraud in which case the issuer of the card would be made aware.

57. PEX5 which is the appellant’s own brochure on cash back encouraging account customers to shop, pay and withdraw cash conveniently is clear that the customer with the ATM as that held by the plaintiff respondent could shop for goods and services at their preferred outlet, pay using any of their equity cards and withdraw cash at their preferred outlets. This was never to be as the respondent could not access his money which was in his accounts connected to the ATM. Furthermore, when the respondent went to make inquiries from his bank, the bank claimed that his accounts 012010030791 at Fourways Towers, 0120290783826 0120291026554 at Haille Sellasie Avenue were nonexistent.

58. The claim by the appellant  that the account  was incomplete   was in my view, insincere since the  appellant   did not provide any  details  of what  details  were lacking  when  the account   was opened  and whether  the appellant   was asked  to furnish  some further  particulars  before his account  as opened   could be  activated.  And  even assuming that particular  account’s  opening  process  was incomplete, there   was in my view, no justification  for the appellant’s  system refusing to  allow  the respondent  to transact  on his co-joined  accounts  which  were active  and which had  sufficient  funds.

59. Accordingly, I find that the trial magistrate was not in error when he found and held that the appellants were liable for breach of contract and libel. I uphold the decision of the lower court and dismiss that ground of appeal on liability.

60. On damages, although the appellants submitted that no damages are awardable for breach of contract, in law, damages are available  for breach  contract  as stated  in the literary works of  Anson’s  Law of Contract  28th Edition  which  states at page 589 that:

(1)  Every breach of contract entitles the injured party to damages for the loss he or she has suffered.”  Page 590.  “Damages for breach of contract are designed to compensate for the damage, loss or injury the claimant has suffered through that breach.  A claimant  who  has not, in  fact, suffered any loss by reason  of the breach, is nevertheless entitled  to a verdict  but the damages  recoverable will be  purely  nominal..”

61. In Bank of Baroda  (K) Ltd  V Timrod Product CA 132/2001 the Court of Appeal upheld  an award of shs  3 million awarded  to the respondent  by the  High Court for  loss of  business  credit, reputation and loss of profit  following  a claim by  the respondent for  a dishonored  cheque.  A similar principle was earlier on applied in Gibson Ombonya Shiraku Vs Commercial Bank of Africa CA 16/85(unreported).

62. In this  case the reason given for  dishonor  of the ATM debit  card was wholly  untrue  and unnecessarily  strong-  “ transaction declined account nonexistent.”These words are the same that the appellant’s managers at ways Towers Branch indicated on the respondent’s inquiry slip and two deposit slips at the Haille Sellasie Avenue branch produced in evidence.

63. That reason as given by the bank for the failed transaction in the supermarket depicted the plaintiff in bad light   as was seen by the teller who called in security to detain the plaintiff for interrogation by the manager, that he must have been a fraudster.  This evidence by the respondent was never rebutted.  In addition, the arrogance of the defendant’s  manager  who is the second appellant herein  Lucy Ndururi when confronted  with the complaint by the plaintiff to explain the problem though not proven to be  defamatory is a demonstration of spite  and malice  against  the plaintiff.  The defendant never   showed any remorse   for the humiliation   shown to the plaintiff when the ATM card would not be used to pay for goods worth in the supermarket.  The dishonor compelled the plaintiff/respondent  to close all his 8 accounts with the appellants  and the defendants even refused  to release  the monies  available in those accounts to the respondent until he had  to obtain a mandatory compelling injunction including commencement  of contempt  of court proceedings  before his  money  was released  to him while  this case   was  pending.

64. If indeed the respondent/plaintiff had no accounts with the 1st appellant bank or there no money in those accounts, where did the bank get the sh 876,821. 20 to refund to the respondent following the commencement of contempt proceedings?  Such  conduct on the part of the 1st appellant bank must be checked with sanctions of an award of   aggravated damages  as set out in Obongo & Another V Municipal  Council of Kisumu [1971] EA 91  where the Court of Appeal stated that…

“……….the power to award  exemplary  damages does not   affect  the power of the court when  making an award  of  general damages   to take into   account the  conduct of the defendant  as an aggravating  factor………

It might also be argued that aggravated damages would have been more appropriate than exemplary.  The distinction is not always easy to see and it is to some extent an unreal one.  It is well  established that when damages  are at large  and the court is making  general  award, it may take into account  factors  such as  malice  or arrogance  on the part  the defendant  and this is regarded   as increasing  the injury  suffered  by the plaintiff, as  for example, by causing  him  humiliation or distress.  Damages enhanced on account of such aggravation are regarded as still being essentially compensatory in nature.”

65. In this appeal, I reiterate that on the evidence adduced in the lower court, the 1st appellant/ defendant received  the plaintiff’s money  and opened  accounts wherein the  said monies   were held  yet when  the respondent needed  the money for  his necessities  at a supermarket, the  appellants  kept it  away from him and claimed that he had  no account  with them.  If that   was the case, then where did they get the money which they refunded him after closure of his bank accounts and on compulsion by the court through contempt proceedings?

66. No apology   was tendered to the plaintiff for the unfortunate action of the bank which I find was not well intentioned.   That   in my view   was highly spiteful of the plaintiff /respondent who need not proof that he was an advocate   at the time for him to deserve damages since the accounts   were not in the names of his law firm.  He was nonetheless the bank’s customer. Whether or not he was an advocate with a practicing certificate in my view is not relevant since it is persons who practice law and not all legal practitioners, depending on their area of practice require a practicing certificate.  The respondent herein was and is an advocate and he admitted that he was at the material time working for private companies.

67. The appellant cannot hide under the respondent’s failure to hold a practicing certificate to escape damages for breach of contract or for libeling its customer. As regards trading customers, the law presumes injury without proof of actual damage.  The special position  of traders   was recognized  by the House of Lords in Wilson  V United  Counties  Bank Ltd [1920] AC 102  where, after  reviewing the  authorities, Lord  Biksenhead said:

“ The  ration decidendi in such cases is that the refusal  to meet the cheque, under  such  circumstances  is no obviously injurious  to the   credit  of a trader  that the latter  can recover  without allegation of special damages, reasonable compensation from the injury done  to his  credit.”

68. The  appellant’s  conduct  aggravated  the plaintiff’s  misery  and distress in the eyes of the supermarket  teller who   had to call  in security to arrest, detain  and interrogate  the respondent.  In my view, an apology would have mitigated the respondent’s loss. I have rejected the evidence of the customer as he did not testify in the fresh proceedings after the first proceedings where he had testified were quashed by the High Court.

69. According to Paget’s Laws of Banking, a customer is/must be taken to know the state of each of his accounts.  If   the balance on the whole is against him, he has no right to expect   cheques   he draws   will be cashed.  Further, money  is not  available  immediately  it is paid  into an account even if  payment is  by cash as the bank  must be  allowed sufficient  time to  carry out  book keeping  operations  before  crediting  the account.

70. In the instant  case, there  was  evidence  that the respondent had  active accounts with the appellant, three of which   were linked to the ATM  card  which  he presented for swiping at  the  supermarket.  There   was  no evidence that he  had just  credited the said accounts   with  money and  was seeking  to access  the same without  according the  appellants  sufficient  time to carry  out book keeping  operations  before  making  the said monies  available  to the respondent.

71. In Patel Vs National Grindlays Bank Ltd [1959] EA 76, the court held  that:

“ where  a banker dishonors  a cheque  when the  customer’s account  is in funds, it is  the commercial credit  of the customer  that  is injured  and the  inference  arises  that pecuniary loss will necessarily  ensue.  In Van Bergen V St  Edmonds  Properties  Ltd,(1933) 1KB 345  where  a bankruptcy notice  was wrongly  served on a trader, Macnaughteen J, said at page  348:-

“Withregard to damages, I do not think that the cases with regard to contracts for sale of goods have any bearing on a case such as this.  The plaintiff is a trader, and the service of bankruptcy as the jury have found in this case, is an act which would very likely affect the direct of a trader.  In my view, those   cases  are opposite  in which  it has  been  held that  if a banker, with  funds in his hands  belonging to  a customer, dishonors a cheque  drawn by the customer, he is  liable to substantial damages  to the customer  for breach of  contract.”

72. On quantum interference of damages, the principle  it that  an appellate  court will not  ordinarily interfere with the  findings  of a trial court on an award of damages  merely  because  the appellate  court  may take the view that had  tried  the case it would have awarded  a higher  award or lower  damages  different  from the award  of the trial court. To so  interfere this court  must be  persuaded  that the trial court acted  on wrong  principles  of law  or that the  award   was so high or  so low  as to  make it   an entirely  erroneous  estimate  of the damage to which the plaintiff  is entitled.  This is the general principle  to be  found in Rook V Raiunie[1941] ALL ER 297 and adopted  with approval  by the Court of Appeal  in Butt  V Khan  [1981] KLR 349 that (per Law JA:

“……an appellate court will not disturb an award of damages unless it is as inordinately high or low as to represent an entirely erroneous   estimate.  It must  be shown  that the judge  proceeded on  wrong  principle, or that  he misapprehended  the evidence  in some  material  respect  and so  arrived   at a figure  which was  either  inordinately high or low….”

73. The appellants  submitted on the  ground challenging   the award of shs  2,511,450 as being  inordinately high  with regard  to general damages, aggravated, punitive  exemplary  damages, although it acknowledged that the award  of damages  is at the  discretion of the court   and that  discretion  should not be exercised  to discourage litigants  to seek justice, counsel for  the appellant also  out  principles  that guide  the award of  damages   such as they are meant to compensate a party for the loss   suffered  but no to enrich  a party, and as such, they should be  commensurate  to the  injuries   suffered; the punitive damages  may be  awarded  if it   was found that  the appellants actions or conduct in the lower court suit were willful, wanton or malicious; punitive  damages  should  only be  awarded in those circumstances where the combined award of general an aggravated damages  would be insufficient to achieve  the goal of  punishment  and  deterrence; that the award of  punitive damages  bears no relation to what  the  plaintiff should  receive  by way of compensation  and may be  awarded in situations  where the  defendants  misconduct  is so malicious, oppressive  and high  handed that it offends   the court’s  sense of decency.

74. The trial magistrate  in awarding  the damages  to the respondent considered  submissions by both parties’  advocates and the  case law    relied   upon, taking into account  the circumstances  of the case, the conduct  of the appellant , noting that account No. 0120100307921  which  was  linked to  the ATM card had  as at 7th May  2014   account  balance of  shs  258,168/90 and that  there was no explanation given why the account  would be  rejected  as being  nonexistent.  The trial magistrate also took into account the manner in which the respondent’s   inquiries with his bankers were received with hostility and contempt exhibited by the 2nd appellant.  The trial magistrate considered  that the communication  was made to third parties and one such  third party  was the  supermarket  teller  who swiped  the card and  produced  a receipt showing  that no accounts  existed. In my view, that  was  sufficient  publication which led to the respondent  being arrested, detained and questioned by the supermarket  security  and  manager.

75. The case of  Honourable  Nicholas Ombija  on the issue  of breach of contract  and libel  in banker/customer  relationship forming being  one transaction still holds  true in  principle as stated in Paget’s Law of Banking  13th Edition at paragraph 18. 19 (supra) that:

“ The  credit of a customer may be seriously  injured by the wrongful dishonor  of a cheque  and in so  far as that  may be a breach of  contract, the  customer’s  claim is for general damages  in respect of injury  to his reputation.”

76. In this case, I find that the appellant failure to activate  the respondent’s   accounts to enable him access money  through the use of ATM card   was  gross  recklessness which constitutes  willful blindness  which amounts to  knowledge  and which  justify this court to fund  malice, in view  of the subsequent  conduct of the  1st appellant’s  managers  who attended  to the respondents inquiries. Iam fortified by the Encyclopedia  of Banking Law  C.21 Selangor  United  Rubber  Estate Ltd V Cradock ( No.3) [1968] 2  ALL ER  1073)  It  was held  that:

“ A bank  has a duty  under its  contract  with its  customer  to exercise  reasonable care and skill in carrying out its part  with  regard  to operations  within its  contracts  with its customers.  The duty to exercise reasonable care and skill extends over the whole range of banking business within the contract with the customer.  Thus the duty applies to interpreting, ascertaining and acting in accordance with the instructions of the customer.”

77. In my humble, view; the appellant had no justification or excusable reasons for dishonoring the credit of its customer, the respondent herein.  I find that  act of  declining  to allow the  respondent to transact  his business  with ease   using the   ATM card an  act of carelessness which  was not going  to the benefit of  any party of the  law except  injuring  the customer’s  credit  and for which liability  must attach  and damages  awarded  not only for  breach of contract  but also for  libeling the customer’s credit.

78. I also find that the appellant bank’s action of not activating the respondent’s accounts was not in accordance with the accepted standards in customer/bank relationship and in the ordinary course of business.  The respondent, in my  view, did not  act in the  best  interest of its customer  in the manner  in which it  handled the  respondent’s  accounts and  therefore the computer  generated  print out of  there being   no account  was wrongful and humiliating  hence the bank  was  in breach of the customer/relationship and contract.

79. Furthermore, this court finds  that indeed, the appellants have, in this appeal  by way of submissions, tended to challenge the factual evidence which  was  adduced  in the lower court yet  they never had  any defence  to any of those factual  matters.  Submissions are not evidence and have never been substitute to evidence.  The suit  in the trial  court proceeded  as  a formal proof and on the evidence  adduced, I am  satisfied  that the respondent  proved his  claim against  the appellant   on a balance of probabilities  to warrant  a judgment   both on liability  and an award of damages.

80. I also find that the appellant  was  in breach of f the contract  it had  with its  customer, the respondent, to honour the use of ATM card which  was a contractual relationship  informed by a fiduciary nature of  customer/bank relationship  where the bank should  not expose  the customer to injury that is  foreseeable.  The bank/customer relationship is based on the utmost good faith.  The bank is also under  a contractual  duty to diligently  handle  accounts  of a customer, to ensure that  funds-deposited on account  are available  when required  by the customer.  Any deviation from that understanding  without  justifiable  reasons  which should  be communicated  to the customer  well in advance  or immediately, the  bank is in breach of a contract  with  the customer  and is liable  in damages.

81. In the end, I find that the  trial  magistrate correctly exercised  his discretion in awarding to the  respondent  kshs  1 million general  damages  for libel  and breach of  contract  and shs  1. 5 aggravated damages in view of the humiliating, embarrassing and contemptuous manner in which the appellants  treated the  respondent  and made no apologies  about it. I see no reason advanced to persuade me to interfere with the exercise of the trial magistrate’s discretion.  I uphold the awards both on special damages general damages and aggravated damages as awarded as being reasonable in the circumstances of this case.  There   was no challenge to special damages of shs 11,450 which were awarded at the interlocutory stage I uphold the same.

82. +In the end, I uphold the decision of the trial court and find that this appeal lacks merit and the same is hereby dismissed with costs to the respondent.

Dated, signed and delivered at Nairobi this 21st day of September 2016.

R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE