Geoffrey Wambanda Wandambusi) & Margaret Naliaka Wambanda V Attorney General for and on Behalf of The Commissioner of Lands, The Clerk, Bungoma County Council , Mohammed Noor Ahmed & Bungoma Municipal Council [2015] KECA 289 (KLR) | First Registration Indefeasibility | Esheria

Geoffrey Wambanda Wandambusi) & Margaret Naliaka Wambanda V Attorney General for and on Behalf of The Commissioner of Lands, The Clerk, Bungoma County Council , Mohammed Noor Ahmed & Bungoma Municipal Council [2015] KECA 289 (KLR)

Full Case Text

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL

AT ELDORET

CIVIL APPEAL NO. 118 OF 2007

(CORAM:  MUSINGA, GATEMBU & MURGOR, JJA.)

BETWEEN

GEOFFREY WAMBANDA WANDAMBUSI) …................. 1ST APPELLANT

MARGARET NALIAKA WAMBANDA …......................… 2ND APPELLANT

(Personal representatives of the estate of,

WAMBANDA KHWATENGE WANDAMBUSI

AND

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR AND ON

BEHALF OF THE COMMISSIONER OF LANDS ….... 1ST RESPONDENT

THE CLERK, BUNGOMA COUNTY COUNCIL …...    2ND RESPONDENT

MOHAMMED NOOR AHMED ….............................. 3RD RESPONDENT

BUNGOMA MUNICIPAL COUNCIL …....................... 4TH RESPONDENT

(An appeal from the Judgment and Decree of the High Court of Kenya at Bungoma by (Karanja, J.) dated 14/3/2007

in

CIVIL CASE NO. 24 OF 2003)

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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

A).     INTRODUCTION

1. The central issue for determination in this appeal is whether under the Registered Land Act (now repealed),  proprietary rights over land that were not recognised during   land   adjudication process can be asserted, nearly 34 years   after registration of land and subsequent issue of title    documents.

2. The trial court determined that issue in the negative and thus  gave rise to this appeal.

B).     THE APPELLANT'S PLEADINGS

3. In his amended plaint filed on 17th May, 2014, Wambanda Khwatenge Wandambusi,the original appellant,  (hereinafter referred  to as “the deceased”) stated that he was   the beneficial legal owner of land parcel No. East Bukusu/1062 (the suit property) but the 2nd respondent  was unjustifiably and illegally registered as the owner   thereof in 1969 or thereabout.  He added that the 1st    respondent, in its capacity as the trustee for the   Government of Kenya, compulsorily acquired the suit property    without paying him full compensation for the same but  instead paid compensation to the 2nd respondent. The land  was   thereafter sub-divided into two portions namely, East Bukusu/south Kanduyi/6666andEast Bukusu/South Kanduyi/6668.

4. Parcel No. 6666 was registered in the name of the 3rd respondent while parcel No. 6668 was registered in the name   of the 4th respondent.

5. The appellant sought a declaration that the sub-division and  transfer of the suit property was null and void and for an   order that the original parcel number be reinstated and the  land be registered in his name.  In the alternative, he sought compensation by the Government.

6.  The Attorney General entered appearance for the 1st   respondent on 10th February, 2005 but did not file any statement of defence until sometimes in May, 2005.  On 18th November, 2004 the appellant sought and obtained leave for  judgment to be entered against the 1st respondent. The 3rd respondent filed neither a memorandum of appearance nor a statement of defence.  The 2nd and 4th respondents failed to   file their statements of defence in time, such that the   matter was set down for formal proof.

C.      THE APPELLANT'S EVIDENCE

7. During the formal proof, the appellant testfied and produced  several documents relating to the suit property.  Although the appellant was born on the suit property, he migrated to  Uganda in 1953 and lived there until 1996.  When he   returned to Kenya he realised that the suit property had been registered in the name of Bungoma County Council in 1969. Subsequently the suit land had been sub-divided and the two sub-divisions transferred to the 3rd and 4th respondents as   earlier stated.

8. The appellant then engaged the Government and Bungoma   County Council in some correspondence, with a view to  getting the suit land back.  A Task force was set up by the  Bungoma    County Council to look into the appellant's claim   and in February, 2002 the task force made the following  recommendations:

“1. That the lease hold title issued to Mohammed Noor for Land Parcel No. E. Bukusu/S. Kanduyi/6666 measuring 0. 7883 Ha. issued on 19th January,1996 be nullified and therefore revoked   by the Commissioner of Lands;

2.   That since the County Council of  Bungoma was not consulted the sub-      division of land parcel No. E. Bukusu/S. Kanduyi Nos. 6666 and 6668 be      nullified.

3.   That arrangements be now made for the   council to have the matter rectified.

4.   That the Council lawyer be involved in  this matter where his expertisim (sic) is   needed in resolving the matter/issue.

5.   That Mr. Wambandas request be therefore looked into with a view to resolving the  issue by the Council.”

9.  The above recommendations were not acted upon and as a    result the appellant filed the suit that gave rise to this appeal.

D.      THE TRIAL COURT'S FINDINGS

10. In her considered judgment, Karanja, J. (as she then was)having set out and analysed the evidence of the deceased,   who did not call any witness, held as follows:

“My finding is that he did not even remotely   establish any rights recognized in law over     the said portion.  He admitted himself that   he left the place even before the adjudication process took place.  Prior to the adjudication process, land was held in common and nobody had any proprietary   right over any plots.  After the adjudication process, some people were moved and    allocated land on parcels other than those     they occupied.  Rights to land were   conferred than to the people on the ground    who were identified to represent their   family interests or as individuals if there    were such.  Whoever was not there could not    be given the land in absentia.  If indeed the  plaintiff's family were entitled to that land,  why wasn't the same allocated to them   during the adjudication process?.  My    considered finding therefore is that the  plaintiff has failed to lay any basis for his  claim over the plot in question.  For the sake of argument, even assuming that the plaintiff had any rights over the plot in   question, he left the land for 43 years. Bungoma County Council was registered as  owner in 1962 (sic).  There was no claim made against their title and so even again   assuming that they had no good claim to  the  land, they acquired rights over the    same on expiry of 12 years i.e. by 1981.  The   plaintiff herein would not therefore have   any good claim against them.  From    whichever angle I look at this matter,   clearly, the law is not on the plaintiff's side  and he cannot get the orders he is seeking   from the court.”

11. Being dissatisfied with the High Court's findings, the   appellant preferred an appeal to this Court and raised the   following grounds of appeal:

“1. The learned trial judge erred in law and misdirected herself when she  failed to realize that inter-locutory    judgment had been entered against all  Defendants who although served with  summons to enter appearance had all failed to file any defence to the   Plaintiff's claim and who deliberately chose not to defend the claims.

2.   The learned trial judge failed to give   any or any proper attention to the oral   and documentary evidence produced by the appellant in support of his case.

3.   The learned trial judge erred in law when she failed to realize and hold   that the appellant had proved his case against all defendants jointly and  severally on the balance of probability.

4.   The learned trial judge erred in law when she reversed a proper judgment        entered ex-parte against all the defendants and in case of respondent  No. 1 with leave of the Superior court.

5.   The learned trial judge erred in law when she took into account matters  which she ought not to have taken into  account in her judgment as none of the defendants had raised them.

6.   The learned trial judge decided the   case on extra-eneous and irrelevant  matters that were no-issues in the case  before the court.

7.   The decision of the trial court was arrived at against the weight of the     evidence adduced in court and on    extraneous matters that were not encompassed in court.

8.   The trial court placed undue emphasis   on matters which the defence would      have raised had they wanted to do so  and the trial court mounted an unwarranted prosecution of a case for   the defendants who had themselves never wanted to raise such defences although they had ample opportunity       to do so.

9.   The learned trial judge erred in law when she reversed the interlocutory     judgment entered against the defendants by another judge of equal        jurisdiction.

10. The learned trial judge exhibited open  bias in her judgment against the appellant's case.”

12. When the appeal came up for hearing, Mr. Onyinkwa,  learned counsel for the appellants, withdrew the appeal against the 4th respondent.  He then proceeded to make brief submissions in respect of some of the aforesaid grounds of    appeal.  He faulted    the learned trial judge for setting aside the interlocutory judgment that had been entered in favour of  the appellant.  In his view, the appellant had proved his case   on a balance of probabilities.

13. He further submitted that under section 115 of the repealed   Constitution, the 4th respondent was holding the land as a  trustee for the benefit of the local community.  He lamented     that the recommendations made by the task force were not    acted upon.

14. Both Mr. OnyisoandMr. Murunga,learned counsel for the  1st and 2nd respondents respectively,  opposed the appeal.   They fully supported the findings made by the trial       court.

The 3rd respondent passed away long before the appeal was   heard and since he was not substituted, the appeal against      him abated.

F).     DETERMINATION

15. We have considered the grounds of appeal against the evidence on record, the submissions by counsel and the  findings made by the trial court.  Our findings are as follows:

16. The appellant prayed for interlocutory judgment to be entered against the 2nd and 4th respondents for their     failure to file  their statements of defence within the   requisite time or within 7 days as had been agreed by   consent on 21st February, 2005.  The amended plaint did    not contain any claim for   pecuniary damages and neither    was it for detention of goods and so no interlocutory   judgment could be applied for.  The appellant   could only   seek to have the suit set down for hearing as stipulated under Order 1 X A rule 8 of the repealed   Civil Procedure Rules.The same can also be said of the interlocutory judgment   that   was sought as against the 3rd respondent for its failure  to  enter appearance and file defence. The interlocutory   judgments were therefore wrongly sought and entered.

17. As regards the ex parte judgment that was sought and entered against the Government, there was due compliance with the provisions of Order 1 X A rules 7and11of the  repealedCivil Procedure Rules.  The court directed that the suit be set down for hearing as a formal proof.  But even in a  formal proof, the appellant still has to adduce sufficient    evidence to sustain his claim.  The learned judge was  therefore right in holding that, “the court would not enter  judgment in favour of a plaintiff as a matter of course just because no defence had been filed or because there is interlocutory judgment on record.”

This finding is sufficient to dispose of grounds 1, 4 and 9.

18.  Regarding grounds 2, 3, 5, 5, 6, 7 & 9 did the learned judge   decide the case against the weight of evidence and by taking  into account matters which she should not have   considered ?

Having carefully perused the impugned judgment, we find nothing to indicate that the trial judge took into account    any material or matters that were outside the oral and documentary evidence that was adduced by the appellant.The appellant's oral evidence as recorded by the learned judge was no more than one and a half pages long but he produced    a total of 16 documents which contained considerable information and which was also relied upon in arriving at the  decision.

19.     The appellant's Exhibit No. 12 revealed that he moved out of the family land in 1953 when he went to Uganda in search of   employment and he returned in 1996.  Bungoma County Council was the first registered proprietor of the suit property in 1969.  The appellant did not prove that the said registration was illegal.  In any event, under section 143 (1)of  theRegistered Land Act, (now repealed), a first registration cannot be impeached even if it was procured   through fraud.The section provides:

“Subject to sub-section (2), the court may order rectification of the register by  directing that any registration be cancelled or amended where it is  satisfied that any registration (other than a first registration) has been  obtained, made or omitted by fraud or  mistake.”

20.  That legal position has been explained and affirmed in many decisions of this Court.  In JOSEPH MARISIN V JOSEPH   KIBILAT S. BARGALLIET, Civil Appeal No. 306 of 1997,this Court had the  following to say regarding section 143 (1) of  the said Act:

“Quite clearly this section envisages that    the title by way of a first registration is  indefeasible even if obtained by fraud.  This must of necessity be so because the Land Adjudication Committee goes into all claims of ownership of the   particular land prior to issuance of the   first registration title.  That is the law   and a court of law cannot interpret the   law otherwise than what it clearly lays down.”

In our view therefore, the learned trial judge was right in  holding that the appellant had failed to lay any basis for his claim over the suit property.

21.     The recommendations that were made by the task force that was appointed by the Bungoma County Council did not have any force of law and were not binding upon the respondents.   They could not therefore sway the trial court into making a   decision in favour of the appellant.

22.     Regarding the last ground of appeal, that the learned trial  judge exhibited open bias against the appellants, the appellants' learned counsel did not make any effort to  substantiate such a serious allegation.  Indeed that ground   was not argued at all.  Our perusal of the entire judgment  does not show any element of bias on the part of the learned  judge against the appellants.  We reject that ground of appeal.

23.  All in all, we find this appeal lacking in merit and   consequently dismiss it in its entirety.  The appellants shall bear the costs of the appeal.

DATED and delivered at Eldoretthis 29th day of October, 2015

D. K. MUSINGA

…...........................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

S. GATEMBU KAIRU, FCIArb

…...........................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

A. K. MURGOR

…..........................

JUDGE OF APPEAL

I certify that this is

a true copy of the original.

DEPUTY REGISTRAR