Gedion Angachi Anyinya, John Muleshe Were, Christopher Odhiambo Ochola, Joshua Anyanga Omukami, Eglay Amakobe Makokha, Moses Wamboye Lisunu, Aggrey Mukolwe Omusumari, Peter Malika Atsimire, Gilbert Milton Okaye, Omumia Kusimba Weringa & Mumias Sugar Company Limited v West Kenya Sugar Company Ltd [2016] KECA 502 (KLR) | Jurisdiction Of High Court | Esheria

Gedion Angachi Anyinya, John Muleshe Were, Christopher Odhiambo Ochola, Joshua Anyanga Omukami, Eglay Amakobe Makokha, Moses Wamboye Lisunu, Aggrey Mukolwe Omusumari, Peter Malika Atsimire, Gilbert Milton Okaye, Omumia Kusimba Weringa & Mumias Sugar Company Limited v West Kenya Sugar Company Ltd [2016] KECA 502 (KLR)

Full Case Text

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL

AT ELDORET

(CORAM:  MARAGA, MUSINGA & GATEMBU, JJ.A.)

CIVIL APPEAL NO. 117 OF 2012

BETWEEN

GEDION ANGACHI ANYINYA ……………....…………... 1ST APPELLANT

JOHN MULESHE WERE ……………………..……….... 2ND APPELLANT

CHRISTOPHER ODHIAMBO OCHOLA …....…………. 3RD APPELLANT

JOSHUA ANYANGA OMUKAMI  …………...………..….4TH APPELLANT

EGLAY AMAKOBE MAKOKHA …………..……….…… 5TH APPELLANT

MOSES WAMBOYE LISUNU  ………………………….6TH APPELLANT

AGGREY MUKOLWE OMUSUMARI ……..……….….. 7TH APPELLANT

PETER MALIKA ATSIMIRE  …………...……………...  8TH APPELLANT

GILBERT MILTON OKAYE  …………….…..………….. 9TH APPELLANT

OMUMIA KUSIMBA WERINGA  ………………….… 10TH APPELLANT

MUMIAS SUGAR COMPANY LIMITED ....………….. 11TH APPELLANT

AND

WEST KENYA SUGAR COMPANY LTD ……………… RESPONDENT

(An appeal from the Ruling of the High Court of Kenya at Bungoma, (Muchelule, J.) dated and delivered on the 30th April, 2012

in

HCCC NO. 23 OF 2012)

*********************

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

The appellants were the plaintiffs in H.C.C.C. No.   23of2013at Bungoma, which suit was    instituted  against the respondent. In that suit, the    appellants  sought a permanent   injunction to restrain the respondent, its servants, employees, agents and   officers from soliciting for sugar cane,  constructing a weighbridge, interfering with the  development of sugarcane, or causing breach of contracts by 20,000 farmers who had been contracted to grow sugarcane by Mumias Sugar  Company Limited, the 11th appellant.

Along with the plaint, the appellants presented  an  application seeking interlocutory injunction in  terms of the substantive orders sought, pending hearing and determination of the suit.

Following a full hearing of the application, the   High court found the application lacking in merit and  dismissed it with costs.   Further, the court held    that the dispute ought to have been  filed before the   Sugar Arbitration Tribunal and proceeded to strike out the entire suit for want of jurisdiction.

The appellants were aggrieved by that decision and preferred an appeal to this Court.

The memorandum of appeal raises 21 grounds of   appeal. However, in their written submissions,    the   appellants’ advocates collapsed them into three  broad grounds as follows:

“(a)  That the learned judge erred   in law and fact by declining to exercise jurisdiction in this  matter and making a blanket  finding that all disputes  between the parties under the   sugar industry are not within    the competence of the High    Court.

(b)  The learned judge erred in law   and fact in his interpretation  of Article 7 of the 6th schedule   of the transitional clauses of the Constitution as any  conflict between a statute and    any substantive provision of  the Constitution must be read  together with Article 2 (4) [which] establishes the    supremacy of the Constitution;   and

(c)   The learned judge erred in law   and fact in arriving at an   erroneous decision that the suit before it was res judicata by dint of Busia Chief Magistrate’s Court Civil Suit  number 9 of 2012, Venswa  Okwara Mutoka & 2 others V.    West Kenya Sugar Company                          Limited.”

What was the basis of the appellants’ suit and  application?  Mumias Sugar Company Ltd, (herein   after referred to as “MSC”) is a sugarcane miller in  Kakamega County.   Sometimes in 2006 Busia   Sugar Company Ltd allowed MSC to deal directly    with         sugarcane farmers in Busia.  Consequently,    MSC recruited farmers in Busia sugar zone and   entered into contracts with 20,000 of them.  The   farmers were to grow sugarcane and sell it to   MSC. The 1st to 10th appellants are some of the    farmers so contracted.

The respondent is also a sugarcane miller in   Kakamega. Sometimes in December, 2011 the respondent, with permission of the County  Council of Busia, began constructing a   weighbridge at Olepito area along the Busia – Mumias Road, with intention of buying     sugarcane    in Busia   sugar zone. The respondent also started   contracting farmers in the area to grow and sell to it sugarcane, which was to be weighed at the   weighbridge in issue.

MSC complained that the respondent’s intention in constructing the weighbridge was to lure the   20,000 farmers it had contracted, including the 1st to 10th appellants, into violating the   agreements MSC had entered into with the  farmers.

The respondent opposed the appellants’ application.  It stated that the construction of   the  weighbridge on its parcel of land had been  completed and it had started contracting new  farmers to grow and supply it with sugarcane.  It denied that it had approached any farmer    contracted by   MSC or induced any such farmer to breach any existing contract with MSC.

Together with the replying affidavit, the   respondent also filed a notice of preliminary        objection to the appellants’ suit and  application.   One of the grounds of the preliminary objection   was that the High Court had no jurisdiction to hear  and determine the suit in view of the provisions of  section 31 of the Sugar Act, 2001 (now repealed). The respondent further contended that since its impugned acts and operations are in Busia County,    the suit ought to have been filed in the High   Court at Busia.

The issues raised in the preliminary objection   were argued within the application for interlocutory   injunction.

Rejecting the application, the trial court held that there was no evidence that the respondent was    inducing any of the 20,000 farmers contracted by  MSC to breach their respective contracts with MSC.  Consequently, the court held that the appellants had not established a prima facie case with a  likelihood of success.

The court faulted the appellants for failing to disclose that three farmers contracted by     MSC had filed a suit at Busia Chief  Magistrate’s Court, to wit, CMCC No. 9 of 2012, seeking a permanent injunction to restrain the respondent from  constructing, operating and/or commissioning the  same weighbridge. Though MSC was not a party to that suit, it was obvious that the suit was to its   benefit, the trial judge concluded.

As to whether the appellants’ suit ought to have   been filed in the High Court at     Busia or Bungoma, the learned judge stated:

“The pleadings are clear that the weighbridge subject of this case has been constructed on the defendant’s parcels of land in Busia County.  The 1st to 10th plaintiffs are farmers in Busia County.  The cause of action arose in that County. Under Section 12 (d) of the Civil Procedure Act, the suit ought to have been filed at the High Court at Busia and not in Bungoma.”

Regarding jurisdiction of the High Court to hear and determine the suit, the Court observed that    under section 31 of the repealed Sugar Act, 2001,the Sugar Arbitration Tribunal was established “for the purpose of arbitrating disputes arising  between  parties under this Act,” and since the appellants and the respondent are all parties under the Act, the dispute ought to have been referred to the   said tribunal.

The court rejected the argument advanced by the appellants’ advocate that since the Sugar Act, 2001, preceded the ConstitutionofKenya, 2010  its provisions are inferior and have been overtaken  by the Constitution.  The court went on to state that the Sugar Act, 2001, and the Regulations made   thereunder were saved under  Article 7ofPart 2   of the sixth schedule of the Transitional and Consequential Provisions of the Constitution.

In his brief highlight of the appellants’ written  submissions, Mr. Makokha, holding brief for Prof.   Ojienda, learned counsel for the appellants,   submitted that in holding that the High Court had no original jurisdiction to hear the dispute, the  court failed to appreciate that what was before it    was a commercial dispute between two millers.

In the written submissions, the appellants  contended that the jurisdiction of the tribunal was dependent on existence of sugar industry   agreements that are provided for under section   29of theSugar Act, 2001, that are negotiated  between growers and millers, growers and out- grower institutions, and millers and out-grower institutions.

Mr. Kibe Mungai, learned counsel for the respondent, countered the appellants’        submission regarding the court’s jurisdiction, citing   section 31 (1) of the Sugar Act, 2001. He  reiterated that the appellants and the    respondent are “parties” under the Act.  He   added that section 29 is not jurisdictional and    there is nothing in the Act to suggest that in the   absence of sugar industry agreements the tribunal  would be divested of   jurisdiction to adjudicate a  dispute between parties under the Act.

Our view regarding the issue of jurisdiction is  that section 31 (1)of theSugar Act, 2001, established  the Sugar Arbitration Tribunal for the purpose of arbitrating disputes arising between any parties    under the Act.  Who are “parties”referred to in the aforesaid section?  In our view, they include growers  of sugarcane, millers and outgrowers.  The 1st to  10th appellants were growers while the 11th appellant and the respondent are millers.  All the  players in  the dispute were “parties” and the bone of  contention related to issues related to the sugar         industry.

The appellants’ counsel’s submission was that the jurisdiction of the Sugar Arbitration Tribunal was   dependent upon existence of agreements between  the contending parties envisaged by section 29of   theAct.Since there were no such agreements   presented before the trial court, the court was not  able to arrive at a jurisdictional finding, counsel     added.

Section 29 provided for sugar industry agreements between growers and millers, growers and    outgrower institutions and millers and grower  institutions.  We do not agree that the jurisdiction  of the tribunal was dependent upon existence of  agreements between the contending parties.  If a  relevant dispute involving “parties” under the Act   were to arise, even in the absence of an agreement  between them, the tribunal would have had  jurisdiction to arbitrate it.  Section 29of theActwas not jurisdictional.  There was obviously no   agreement between the appellants and the  respondent but the dispute between the two  millers related to supply of sugarcane to them by  growers, a vital and key role in the sugar industry as defined under the Act.  The dispute, in our view,   ought to have been  referred to the tribunal, as rightly held by the High Court.  The preliminary  objection raised by the respondent regarding the  court’s jurisdiction urged   that the suit be struck     out.  We find that the trial court, having upheld theobjection,  it was right in proceeding to strike out        the suit.[GK1]   We agree that it    was justified in so doing.

The next ground of appeal relates to the learned     judge’s interpretation of section 7 of the sixth   schedule to the ConstitutionofKenya, 2010.  Section 7 (1) thereof states as follows:

“All law in force immediately before the effective date continues in force and shall be construed with the alterations, adaptations, qualifications and exceptions necessary to bring it into conformity with this Constitution.”

The appellants’ advocate submitted that the Sugar  Act, 2001, had been repealed by the Crops Act,    No.   16of2013 and therefore the Sugar Arbitration Tribunal created under the repealed Act had been     abolished.

In his submissions before this Court, the appellants’      counsel stated that if we were to agree with the High   Court that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the  suit, the appellants shall be without remedy or  forum to adjudicate the dispute.  However, the appellants’ submission before the trial court was    quite different.  The appellants’ counsel urged the Court to consider that the Sugar Act, 2001,  preceded the Constitution of Kenya, 2010, and therefore its provisions were inferior and had been   overtaken by the Constitution.  He cited, inter alia,  Article 159 (2) (d) of the Constitution which  requires courts to administer justice without undue    regard to procedural technicalities.

In his considered ruling, the learned judge held that      there was nothing in the Sugar Act or Regulations   that offends either the letter or spirit of the   Constitution.  We agree with the judge’s holding.  The Crops Act, No. 16of2013 was not in force at  the time the matter went before the trial court.  The learned judge rightly interpreted the provisions of  the Sugar Act as it existed then.

The last issue for this Court’s determination is  whether the suit before the High Court was res judicata by dint of Busia Chief Magistrate’s Court  Civil Suit No. 9of2012, VENSWA OKWARA  MUTOKA & 2 OTHERS V WEST KENYA SUGAR  COMPANY LIMITED.  In that suit, three farmers,   who are not among the appellants herein, sought a    permanent injunction to restrain the respondentfrom constructing,operatingand/orcommissioning a weighbridge.  The suit was struck out for the   reason that the court did not have jurisdiction to    hear and determine it, given the express provisions       of section 31of theSugar Act, 2001.

Section 7of theCivil Procedure Act states as    follows:

“no court shall try any suit or issue in which the matter directly and substantially in issue has been directly and substantially in a former suit between the same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim, litigation under the same title, in a court competent to try such subsequent suit or the suit in which such issue has been subsequently raised, and has been heard and finally decided by such court.”

We do not think that the objection relating to the   doctrine of res judicata was well founded.  The two    matters were neither directly and substantially in    issue in the two suits, nor were the parties the   same.  More importantly, the earlier suit had not been finally decided, it had been struck out for want  of jurisdiction and therefore the subsequent suit    was not res judicata.  See CANELAND LIMITED &   OTHERS V DELPHIS BANK LIMITED [2000] LLR. MULLA ON THE CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE   Volume 1 16th edition at Page 284 states that a  matter cannot be said to have been heard and   finally decided if the former suit was dismissed for    want of jurisdiction.  We must therefore uphold    the last ground of appeal.

But having upheld the trial judge’s finding that the     High Court had no jurisdiction to hear and   determine the dispute before it, this appeal must    fail, we so find.

Consequently, the appeal is dismissed with costs to   the respondent.

Orders accordingly.

DATED and Delivered at Eldoret this 14th day of June, 2016.

D. K. MARAGA

…………..…….…………

JUDGE OF APPEAL

D. K. MUSINGA

…………..…………..……

JUDGE OF APPEAL

S. GATEMBU KAIRU, FCIArb

…………..………………..

JUDGE OF APPEAL

I certify that this is

a true copy of the original.

DEPUTY REGISTRAR

[GK1]Is there something missing here?