Francis Githinji Ngatia v National Land Commission, Chief Land Registrar, Land Registrar Kiambu, County Government, Kiambu & Director of Surveys [2020] KEELC 595 (KLR) | Title Revocation | Esheria

Francis Githinji Ngatia v National Land Commission, Chief Land Registrar, Land Registrar Kiambu, County Government, Kiambu & Director of Surveys [2020] KEELC 595 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE ENVIRONMENT AND LAND COURT

AT THIKA

CONSTITUTIONAL PETITION NO. 12 OF 2019

FRANCIS GITHINJI NGATIA................................................PETITIONER/APPLICANT

VERSUS

NATIONAL LAND COMMISSION......................................................1ST RESPONDENT

CHIEF LAND REGISTRAR.................................................................2ND RESPONDENT

LAND REGISTRAR KIAMBU............................................................3RD RESPONDENT

COUNTY GOVERNMENT, KIAMBU................................................4TH RESPONDENT

DIRECTOR OF SURVEYS..................................................................5TH RESPONDENT

RULING

The matter  for determination is the Notice of Motion Application  dated  24th September 2019,  by the Petitioner/ Applicant seeking for orders that;

1. That pending the hearing and determination of  the Application herein a conservatory  order of injunction  restraining and staying an action  by the Respondents  of the  determination  of the 1st Respondent  contained in Kenya Gazette  ( Special Issue) Vol. CXX-No 138  of 9th November 2018 touching on the Petitioner’s land  parcel Ndumberi/ Riabai/ 2673 and also restraining  and barring the 2nd to 5th Respondents  from cancelling the Petitioner’s  title for land parcel  Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673 or re planning  of the said land  Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673or in  any manner  whatsoever  acting on the said  determination  by the 1st respondent  touching on land  parcel No. Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673.

2. That pending  the hearing  of the Petition , the Respondents be directed to furnish  the Petitioner with:-

a) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the written complaint for review of grant lodged with the 1st Respondent.

b) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the proceedings  and hearings  conducted for the review  of the grant  of land parcel  Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673  by the 1st Respondent

c) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the full written determination by the 1st Respondent.

d) The 3rd Respondent to avail copies of the land records/ green card for land parcel Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673.

e) The 4th Respondent to avail copies of the survey records for land parcel Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673.

3. That  this Honourable Court  do give directions  on the hearing  of the substantive Petition.

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

The Application is premised on the grounds that the Petitioner/ Applicant is the registered owner of the suit property. That at the time of the purchase, the Petitioner conducted the requisite due diligence before purchasing the said property and was satisfied  that the vendor had a good title to pass. That in Kenya Gazette ( Special Issue) Vol.CXX-No 138  of 9th November 2018,the 1st Respondent made a determination / recommendation to the 2nd  Respondent  to cancel the title  for the suit property.

That the 1st Respondent’s decision was arbitrary and unreasonable as it cancelled the title to the suit property without conducting a hearing despite the Applicant having entered his response as highlighted under Section 14(3)  of the National Land Commission Act. It was contended that the 1st Respondent did not provide the Petitioner/ Applicant with a written complaint, did not conduct an inquiry, did not even follow the format of the complaint contained in their proposed rules for the hearing of review of grants. Further that the 1st Respondent entertained a matter that had been before Courts relating to the suit property and a consent entered to remove the restriction on the suit property by the Kiambu Municipal Council.

Further that  the 1st Respondent  published the aforesaid  Kenya Gazette  purporting it to be signed  by the Chairman  of theNational Land Commission.   That it was well known that  the Chairman of the NLC  was under disability  of criminal proceedings and was  the substantive chair  of the National Land Commission  at the time. That the 1st Respondent’s decision is made in bad faith  and in breach of the law as the 1st Respondent proceeded  without proper rules and in contempt  of a Court order  directing the making of the rules. It was further contended that the 1st Respondent’s statutory mandate to review grants of public land had also expired when the 1st Respondent purported to make the determination relating to the suit property. That the 3rdand 5th Respondents are in violation of the Petitioner’s /Applicant’s rights interfering with the land survey records of the suit property.

That the Applicant has over the years been in possession/ occupation and has dealt with the suit property in the normal and ordinary manner and has undertaken a business in the property. That the Petitioner is the bonafide purchaser for value without notice of any defect  of the title  and it is therefore unconstitutional  for the 1st Respondent  to revoke the title and thus the Petitioner’s rights have been violated.

In his supporting Affidavit, Francis Githinji Ngatia, the Petitioner/ Applicant herein  averred that  on 7th December 2007, he  purchased the suit property from  Lucy Njoki Kimani  for Kshs.1,400,000/=  and on  17th December 2007, he was registered as  the owner of the suit property  and was lawfully issued with a title deed in his name.  That he has been in possession of the suit property to date. It was his contention that at the time of sale, he conducted his due diligence and the search showed no encumbrance.

He further averred that on 3rd March 2017, the 1st Respondent made an advertisement in the Daily Nation for the review of the grants   which included the suit property registered in his name. That through his Advocates, he wrote to the 1st Respondent requesting to be availed with the written complaint filed against his suit property, the details of the complaint and the complaint together with the supporting documents, but the 1st Respondent did not avail the said documents. That he filed a Memorandum of response dated 23rd March 2017, but by a Notice, the 1st Respondent postponed the hearings  from 24th, 25th and 26th April 2017  to 24th, 25th and 26th  May 2017,  and that on aNotice dated 24th April 2017, further postponed the hearings  until further notice .

It was his contention that the statutory period for review of grants  under Section 14(1) of the National Land Commission Act  of 2015  was for 5 years and had expired on  2nd May 2017, and no extension was granted by Parliament.  That the legal period expired before any hearings of the complaint of the suit property.  Further that the 1st Respondent made a determination to the effect that the 2nd Respondent do revoke the title  of the the suit property and re plan the area as market. That the said determination was dated 28th April 2017, and was published 18 months later on 9th November 2018 . Further that the 1st Respondent in Kenya Gazette  ( Special issue)  Vol . CXXX-No138 of 9th  November 2018  though dated28th April 2017  amends a gazette Notice for July 2017. He contended that the 1st Respondent failed to make rules and regulations for the review exercise and gazette them as it had been ordered by Court in Sceneries Limited…Vs…  National Land Commission (2017) eKLR.  That the 1st Respondent did not even comply with its draft rules published on its website.

He further contended that no hearing was conducted before a determination, and the suit  had earlier been  the subject of legal proceedings  in Chief Magistrate’s  CourtatKiambu  whereby the Municipal Council of Kiambu  by consent removed the restrictions on the suit property.    That the Municipal Council had confirmed that the suit land was lawfully acquired.  He averred that the 3rd Respondent has denied him access to his land records and that the 5th Respondent has on unknown dates deleted and or erased the Survey Map for  the suit property. He contended that the recommendation for re planning is to be undertaken in violation of his constitutional rights.  That he is a bonafide purchaser for value and is protected by law as he  also made inquiries at the  1st Respondent’s office  in Kiambu and he was given a letter  that stated that his ownership  of the suit property had been upheld.  He averred that the violation of his constitutional rights has caused him  losses as he cannot develop the land or use it as security . He urge the Court to grant the orders sought.

The Application is opposed and the  4th Respondent filed grounds of opposition  dated 25th October 2019,  and averred that the  1st Respondent in line  with Sections 6 and 14  of the National Land Commission  Act, 2012  held public hearings  to review grants and disposition of public land  including the suit property  from 30th January 2017  to 3rd February 2017,  at Thika Town Hall. . That  on 3rd March 2017, the 1st Respondent issued a Notice  to that effect in the Daily Nation Newspaper  and upon issuance of the Notice and hearings of the parties  made a determination in the official  Kenya Gazette Special Issue  Vol. CXX No. 138  dated 9th  November 2018,  to the Chief Land Registrar to revoke  the title of the suit property.

It was contended that the Petitioner/ Applicant has yet to demonstrate that the official Kenya Gazette is tainted with illegality and procedural Impropriety . That the 1st Respondent cannot be said to be in contempt  of   court order  by dint of the fact that  the National Land Commission (Review of grants  and Dispositions of Pubic land) Regulations 2017  through which the 1st Respondent  undertook the review of the grants  were made operational vide Kenya Gazette  Supplement  No. 64  dated 21st April 2017. Further that the Petitioner has failed to establish how his constitutional rights  have been violated  and has thus failed to establish  the threshold required  for grant of conservatory orders.

The 2nd, 3rd and 5th Respondents also filed grounds of opposition dated 21st January 2020,and averred that the Petition will not be rendered nugatory if the orders sought are not granted. Further that there is no evidence tabled by the Petitioner/ Applicant to show that the survey records for the suit property are non-existent having been deleted/ erased. That the Petitioner/ Applicant has not demonstrated that the Respondents have failed to discharge their constitutional mandate to require the intervention sought from the Court. It was contended that the Application is misconceived, frivolous and vexatious and that the Applicant ought to have carried out due diligence to ensure that the land was surveyed.

The Application was canvassed by way of written submissions which the Court has carefully read and considered. Having gone through the submissions by the parties, the Court notes that the parties have submitted that the issues for determination are whether:- the Petitioner is a bonafide purchaser for value, whether due process was followed. whether the 1st respondent had mandate to review the Petitioner’s / Applicant’s grant. Whether the Applicant’s rights were violated. However, all these issues go to the merit of the case and if the Court was to make a determination on the said issues at this stage, will in effect be be determining the Petition which is not the duty of the Court to do so at this interlocutory stage.

It is the Court’s considered view that as the Petitioner/ Applicant is seeking for conservatory orders, and the same being at interlocutory stage, the main issue for determination at this stage is whether the Applicant is deserving of the said orders. Further since the Applicant has also sought for various documentations, the Court finds the issue for determination is whether the Petitioner/Applicant is entitled to the orders sought.

The Petitioner/ Applicant has sought for conservatory orders.  In the case of Kenya Electricity Transmission Company Limited …Vs… Kibotu Limited [2019] eKLRthe Court held that;

“The principles to be satisfied in granting of a conservatory order was expressed by Justice Onguto J. (as he then was) in the case ofBoard of Management of Uhuru Secondary School v City County Director of Education & 2 Others [2015] eKLR  are   as follows

“In summary, the principles are that the Applicant ought to demonstrate an arguable prima facie case with a likelihood of success and that in the absence of the conservatory orders he is likely to suffer prejudice. Further, the Court should decide whether a grant or a denial of the conservatory relief will enhance the Constitutional values and objects of a specific right or freedom in the Bill of Rights, and whether if an interim Conservatory order is not granted, the petition or its substratum will be rendered nugatory. Lastly, that the Court should consider the public interest and relevant material facts in exercising its discretion whether to grant or deny a conservatory order.”

Further the  Supreme Court of Kenya also rendered itself  on conservatory orders in   the Case ofGatirau Peter Munya v Dickson Mwenda Kithinji & 2 others eKLRas follows:

“Conservatory orders bear a more decided public law connotation: for these are orders to facilitate ordered functioning within public agencies, as well as to uphold the adjudicatory authority of the court, in the public interest. Conservatory orders, therefore, are not, unlike interlocutory injunctions, linked to such private-party issues as ‘the prospects of irreparable harm’ occurring during the pendency of a case; or ‘high probability of success’ in the applicants case for orders of stay. Conservatory orders, consequently, should be granted on the inherent merit of a case, bearing in mind the public interest, the constitutional values, and the proportionate magnitudes and priority levels attributable to the relevant causes”

Therefore, guided by the above case law, the Court has to be satisfied that the Applicant has demonstrated a prima facie case, with a likelihood of success and that unless the court grants the conservatory order, there is real danger and he will suffer prejudice.

A prima facie casewas defined in the case ofMrao Ltd…Vs…First American Bank of Kenya Ltd & Others (2003)KLR, to mean:-

“A case in 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 or rebuttal from the latter.”

It is not in doubt that the Applicant herein is the registered owner of the suit property Ndumberi/Riabai/2673, having produced a title deed issued to him on 17th December 2007, which made him the prima facie absolute and indefeasible owner of the suit property. Further it is also not in doubt that by the Special issue of Gazette Notice, the   1st Respondent recommended the revocation of his title to the suit property and that the 4th Respondent should re-plan the said property as a market.

It is alleged by the Petitioner/ Applicant that the same was done without following the due process and in excess of its jurisdiction.  If indeed that is the case, then the Applicant’s rights over the suit property have allegedly been infringed which then calls for a rebuttal from the  Respondents. Given that the Petitioner/Applicants has a title to the suit property and there is a recommendation for revocation of the same, the Court finds that the Applicant has established a prima facie case.

On whether the Applicant will suffer prejudice, it is not in doubt that in its recommendation, the 1st Respondent recommended that the suit property be re-planned as a market.   If the 2nd Respondent is to replan the suit property into a  market area and the title is revoked, there is no doubt that the Petitioner/ Applicant will suffer prejudice as his efforts to recover the suit property, if indeed the Court is to find that his rights were violated will   be next to impossible.  Therefore, the Court is satisfied that if conservatory orders are not issued, then the Applicant will, suffer irreparable harm more so because land is unique in nature and it cannot be substituted. See the case of Muslims for Human Rights (MUHURI) & 2 Others…Vs…Attorney General & 2 Others, HC Petition No.7 of 2011, where the Court held that:-

“A Conservatory Order would enable the court to maintain the status quo or existing situation or set of facts and circumstances so that it would still be possible that the right and freedoms of the claimant would be capable of protection and enforcement upon determination of the Petition and the trial was not a futile academic discourse of exercise”.

Therefore, this Court finds and holds that the Petitioner/ Applicant is deserving of the conservatory order sought.

Further the Applicant had sought for copies of various documents. The Court has seen various correspondences by the Applicant to the Respondent seeking for written complaints and the proceedings. It is not in doubt that the said documents are necessary for the effective adjudication of the matter.  For these reasons, the Court finds and holds that the Applicant is entitled to the orders sought, that he should be availed the said documents. However, the Court notes that   the Survey Records can only be provided by the 5th Respondent.

For the above reasons, the Court directs that the said Survey Records be provided by the 5th Respondent herein.

Having carefully considered the available evidence, the Court finds the Application dated 24th September 2019,is merited and the same is allowed in terms of prayers no. 3 and 4.

Further the Court directs the 5th Respondent, to avail the copies of the survey records of the suit property to the Applicant, instead of the 4th Respondent.  The Applicant is also entitled to costs of the Application.

The Court notes that in Order No. 3 of the application, the Applicant had sought for conservatory orders pending  the  hearing and determination of the Application which was a repetition of order No. 2. In exercise of its inherent powers and in the interest of justice, the Court orders that the conservatory orders are issued pending the hearing and determination of the Petition.

For avoidance of doubt the Court makes the following orders;

1. That pending the hearing and determination of  the Petition  herein a conservatory  order of injunction  be and is hereby made  restraining and staying an action  by the Respondents  of the determination  of the 1st Respondent  contained in Kenya Gazette  ( Special Issue) Vol. CXX-No 138  of 9th November 2018 touching on the Petitioner’s land  parcel Ndumberi/Riabai/2673 and also retraining  and barring the 2nd to 5th Respondents  from cancelling the Petitioner’s  title for land parcel  Ndumberi/  Riabai/2673 or re planning  of the said land  Ndumberi/Riabai/2673 or in  any manner  whatsoever  acting on the said  determination  by the 1st respondent  touching on land  parcel No. Ndumberi/Riabai/2673.

2. That pending  the hearing  of the Petition , the Respondents be and are hereby directed to furnish  the Petitioner with:-

a) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the written complaint for review of grant lodged with the 1st Respondent.

b) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the proceedings and hearings  conducted for the review  of the grant  of land parcel  Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673  by the 1st Respondent.

c) The 1st Respondent to avail copies of the full written determination by the 1st Respondent.

d) The 3rd Respondent to avail copies of the land records/ green card for land parcel Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673.

e) The 5th Respondent to avail copies  of the survey records  for land parcel Ndumberi/ Riabai/2673.

f) The Applicant is entitled to the costs of the Application.

It is so ordered.

Dated, signed and Delivered at Thika this 19th  day of November 2020

L. GACHERU

JUDGE

19/11/2020

Court Assistant - Lucy

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 Ruling 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. Gatitu Wang’oo for the Petitioner/Applicant

No appearance for the 1st Respondent

M/s Ndundu  for the 2nd, 3rd, 5th Respondents

M/s Ndundu holding brief for Mr. Marim for the 4th Respondent

L. GACHERU

JUDGE

19/11/2020