James Gitau Singh v Headlink Publishers Limited, Paul Kimani T/A Print Maxim, Tom Alwaka & Bryan Yongo [2015] KEHC 216 (KLR) | Defamation | Esheria

James Gitau Singh v Headlink Publishers Limited, Paul Kimani T/A Print Maxim, Tom Alwaka & Bryan Yongo [2015] KEHC 216 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

CIVIL CASE NO.290 OF 2008

JAMES GITAU SINGH.....................................................................PLAINTIFF

VERSUS

HEADLINK PUBLISHERS LIMITED.…...................................1ST DEFENDANT

PAUL KIMANI T/A PRINT MAXIM.......................................2ND DEFENDANT

TOM ALWAKA.....................................................................3RD DEFENDANT

BRYAN YONGO.....................................................................4TH DEFENDANT

JUDGMENT

Subject: Defamation

1. The plaintiff James Gitau Singh sued the defendants herein Headlink Publishers; Paul Kimani T/A Print Maxim; Tom Alwaka; and Bryan Yongo vide a plaint dated 3rd July 2008.  The plaintiff’s claim against the defendants jointly and severally is for:

Compensatory damages.

Aggravated damages and or exemplary damages.

An injunction to restrain  the defendants  whether by themselves, their servants and or agents  or otherwise from further  publishing  the said or similar  libel upon the plaintiff;

A withdrawal by way of publication in the 1st defendant’s weekly citizen front cover in both Daily Nation and Standard Newspapers a complete apology to the publication complained of.

A permanent injunction restraining the 1st defendant and 3rd defendant from publishing the Weekly Citizen or any other publication.

Costs and interest.

Such other relief as this court may deem fit.

2. The 1st defendant did not enter appearance hence interlocutory judgment was entered against it in default.  The claim against the 2nd defendant was withdrawn.  The 3rd and 4th defendants entered appearance and filed  defenses  but did  not appear  in court during  the hearing  despite  notice of  hearing  date being  served  upon them.  The plaintiff was therefore allowed to proceed with the hearing, the defendants’ absence notwithstanding, in accordance with the provisions of Order 12 rule 2(a) of the Civil; Procedure Rules.

3. The  plaintiff  alleged  in his plaint that  on 16th June  2008, the 1st defendant  Headlink Publishers  Ltd published  and printed  the following  defamatory  words of the  plaintiff in the Weekly Citizen “Kibaki  family lawyer caught  in sex Act.”  The article which was reproduced in the plaint at paragraph 8 stated:

“Now Kibaki lawyer unmasked

“James Singh Gitau- a top lawyer based at Unity House, Koinange Street Nairobi whose clients include members of President Mwai Kibaki family is causing havoc in the country’s houses of vice.

The lawyer  of mixed  origin  in his mid 40’s has impregnated  a record  18 women and  abandoned  the children  amid threats  that he  would use  his connections and influence  to  neutralize them should  they attempt  to file any claims  against him.

Gitau who  is also a lawyer  to Finance Minister Amos Kimunya  a key member  of Kibaki kitchen cabinet is further reported  to prefer  the so-called  group sex or groupies  to the  initiated  and does not  bother to take  any protective  measures.

One  of the  victims, according  to our investigation, is a sacked  Kenya Airways  hostess by  the name  Cynthia, now a pale shadow  of her former  dazzling  self and who rues  the  day her path crossed with  Gitau’. after Cynthia’s sacking  from the  national carrier  that passes  itself  as the pride of Africa, Singh, commonly known as Mhindi Mwafrika  in the high circles threatened  her with dire  consequences  if she ever as little  as entertained  the thoughts of  the two being intimate  again.

In private, Gitau, who was  fostered  by the late powerful permanent secretary Hezekiah Nelson Oyugi lionizes  himself as the most  successful young lawyer  in the country with  who is who clients  and can buy anybody.  Among his clients is Asian tycoon Manish Shah, the brains behind collapsed Trust Bank and Citi Finance.

Singh  despite  having  been raised by late Oyugi, has engaged  in auctioning  property  owned  by the same  family  that raised him up and occasionally disclosed in social places  how the  widows of the late PS  queue  in his office  awaiting  for hand-outs  which he  refuses  to give.

Our investigation reveals as a result of being heartless, his wife, banker working at Citi Bank head office Upper Hill Nairobi is in deep shock.

And to make matters  worse, Singh who frequently  drinks with the Finance Minister  at “Soho’s” Karen Blixen, Dusty Nails and Macushla  is embroiled in a tug-of –war  with a lady of mixed  origin called  Julie   with whom he  had a three year  old baby.  Although he has flatly rejected her, the lady has sworn to go down fighting, saying that it is time someone belled the cat.

Nene Kalinga is the saddest case.  She befriended the lawyer, had a kid   with him and died mysteriously in a tragic road accident, but the flamboyant lawyer still refused to take responsibility of his child.

Known to acquire  top of the range automobiles  from unsuspecting Asian clients   whom he  charges  exorbitantly, the lawyer preys  especially on those  who are incapable  of paying  whose  vehicles  he confiscates before  using  them to entice  his victims.

Our two- month  investigations  which involved  a 24 hour chase  with the latest  undercover  technology equipment  unearthed  his secrets  happenings  in various  bedrooms  and social joints.

Singh who has a tattoo on his upper arm is a man of means in the real estate world.  He has acquired various homes through his proxy auctioneering firm and has eight houses in the high-end Runda Estate Nairobi.  Controversy surrounds a house in a Riverside Drive which he claims to own yet the real owner still claims he acquired it fraudulently.

We have established  that former  Limuru MP George Nyanja, who designed Nyayo Stadium, Nairobi West  is cursing  the day he met  the shrewd, outwardly  polite lawyer  who  likes donning  designer –made  suits  and shoes  resembling  those  of Minister Kimunya.

Whenever  out of the country running errands  for the minister , which involves  millions of shillings, Singh spends a good part  of his time and money  shopping  around  for classy suits  from the capital fashions  of the world.

Back to Nyanja saga, it is said sometimes back, the lawyer bought the ex-MP’s home through a proxy company for a paltry sh 60 million.  The property in question is located in the much –coveted Karen and is said to be valued at over sh 350 million.

Using his political  connections, he is  said to hold  offshore  bank accounts  and secrets  of the First  Family’s business  investments  both locally  and internationally.  It is suspected, Singh was instrumental in helping the First Family acquire substantial shares in tycoon Nausha Merali’s Equatorial Bank which has a branch at Bruce House Nairobi, a building owned by the president.

A source  who has been close to Singh for years  claims  he has gone crazy  and is overheard  saying that he defrauded  the First Family in the controversial land tussle  pitting a Citi lawyer  and Belgo Holdings  relating  to prime property in Kitusuru .

He also attempted to defraud an MP from Western province sh 50 million and demanded an inducement from him to enable   him compromise his case   with an Asian-owned bank.

Our sleuths have established  that  Singh leaves his house  at 7am on some occasions, moves  like he  is going to his  office then  goes  to visit his  girlfriends  with whom he spends  a good  part of  the day.

His victims include green university students and span across young corporate executives, high –class flesh peddlers to prominent models in the country.

The latest victim  mostly found in his company  is a banker aged 23 years whom he  took to  the Rhino Charge  in Nanyuki  where they spent  four nights  while his wife  remained  at home  lonely nursing  his two sons.  The wife  is said to have  given up on him  saying  that  she is hanging  around  the lawyer for money yet  she is a  well paid banker and can be  independent.

During   parties  at the Runda house  he acquired  through public auctions, he invites  his girlfriends  who openly ridicule  his wife  for apparently  having  failed  to tame her  cassanova  of a husband.

A number of lawyers have now been engaged to file maintenance cases against him in a battle that has now spilled to the press.

The army of victims, we have information, are  at an advanced  stage  of planning  to storm his office with  wailing  babies  of all looks  and colours  and challenge  the lawyer  with DNA tests.

The move is likely to impact on his corporate clients.  The list of his clients includes commercial banks and leading Asian tycoons.  He boasts to be close to judges who rule in his favour.

Singh Gitau, who  also owns large tracts  of coffee frames  in Kiambu, is  also at loggerheads  with lawyer  Mungai Muriu  as to who is in  control  of Minister  Kimunya’s legal matters.

Confidants  of the two lawyers  say the  bad blood  between the two learned  friends  has to  do with damning  reports  on unscrupulous  deals in the offing which according  to  documents in our  possession run into millions  of shillings.

But for now, a source  at James Singh Unity House  office revealed, he holds  sh 2. 5 billion in  secrecy  on behalf  of the  minister  on account  of various deals.  However, the evidence  we have  is that, the fee charged  on the said amount  is exaggerated  with the lawyer  boasting  that Kimunya   was at one time an  accounts clerk  with Securicor (K) ltd  living in Buruburu and that  the minister  who has  no children is at his beck and call.

The flamboyant lawyer’s wife is Phoebe Gitau with sons Kimani and Kinyanjui.

Singh is among lawyers who have used State House links to mint money.  Lawyer Fred Ngatia, John Khaminwa, Gibson Kuria Kamau are a smiling lot too.

During the Moi era, lawyer Donald Kipkorir could  not allow any skirt  to pass before  him  and now  is struggling  to survive  after committing  himself to refund  millions of shillings  he owes  state corporations.  He acted as a lawyer to strategic parastatals and even Moi’s son Gideon and was associated with a number of dubious deals.

With his offices at Posta Sacco, Kipkorir’s clients included Moi’s friends but now his survival depends on God’s mercy as women laugh at him and fellow learned friends discuss his fall from grace to grass in the open.

Whether James Singh Gitau will be another Donald Kipkorir, only time will tell.”

4. The plaintiff alleged that the above words in their natural and ordinary meaning meant and were intended to mean:

That the plaintiff  who acts  for President Mwai Kibaki  family visits  houses of vice

That the plaintiff had impregnated 18 women and abandoned the children.

That the plaintiff would use his connections to neutralize the women he had impregnated should they file suit against him.

That the plaintiff is involved in act of group sex.

That the plaintiff had fathered d a child with Kenya Airways hostess, Cynthia and abandoned her.

That the plaintiff having been fostered by the late Hezekiah Oyugi has wrongfully sold the late Hezekiah Oyugi’s family assets and boasts that his widows queue for handouts at his offices.

The plaintiff has fathered and abandoned a 3 year old child with a woman called Julie.

That the plaintiff has fathered a child with Nene Kalinga and abandoned the child despite Nene dying   in a mysterious road accident.

That the plaintiff  charges exorbitant  legal fees  from his  clients  and confiscates  motor  vehicles  from them  when they  are unable  to pay.

The plaintiff despite practicing as an advocate has an auctioneering firm which he used to purchase houses in auctions.

That the plaintiff has eight (8) houses in Runda including one on Riverside Drive which he acquired fraudulently.

That the plaintiff, whilst acting for George Nyanja has purchased Mr Nyanja’s house for kshs.  60 million when it was valued at over kshs.  350 million.

That the plaintiff is Honourable Kimunya’s lawyer and runs illegal errands for the minister.

That the plaintiff maintains illegal accounts on behalf of the First Family and is privy to the First Family’s investments both locally and internationally.

That the plaintiff helped the First Family acquire shares in Equitorial bank.

That plaintiff has defrauded the First Family of a property in Kitusuru pitting a Citi lawyer and Belgo Holdings.

That the plaintiff attempted to defraud an MP from Western province of kshs.  50 million and demanded a bribe to enable him compromise a case.

That rather than go to his office, to work in the morning, the plaintiff visits university students, models and high class flesh peddlers.

That the plaintiff took a young banker of 23 years to the Rhino Charge where they spent four nights whilst his wife remained at home.

That he invites girlfriends for parties at his home in Runda, who openly ridicule his wife.

That the plaintiff has several maintenance suits against him.

That the plaintiffs uses his close connections with judges so that the latter can rule in his favour.

That the plaintiff is involved in unscrupulous deals which have led to fall out between him another lawyer, Mungai Muriu Advocates.

That the plaintiff is holding kshs 2. 5 billion in a secret account on behalf of Honourable Kimunya.

That the plaintiff is charging Honourable Kimunya exaggerated fees.

That the plaintiff boasts that Honourable Kimunya, who is a minister, is at his beck and call.

That the plaintiff has used his State House connections to mint money.

That the plaintiff’s conduct is similar  to that of Mr Donald  Kipkorir, a lawyer  allegedly involved  in dubious  deals  during  the Moi era  and who was a  rampant  woman chaser.

5. The plaintiff also alleged that the said published words were intended to mean:

That the plaintiff is a womanizer.

That the plaintiff has no regard towards his marital obligations.

That the plaintiff visits prostitutes.

That the plaintiff is dishonest and cheats his clients.

That the plaintiff is a dishounorable person.

That the plaintiff is unpatriotic and a thief who hides money abroad.

That the plaintiff bribes Judges.

That the plaintiff is dishonourable and unfit to be an advocate.

That the plaintiff has acquired immense property through fraudulent means.

That the plaintiff has defrauded the First Family of property in Kitusuru.

That the plaintiff uses illegal means including state house connections to block people of their legal rights and expectation.

That the plaintiff has conspired and connived with the First Family and minister for finance in defrauding and looting of the country resources.

The plaintiff is a hypocrite and without any sense of objection, propriety or morality.

6. It  was further averred by the plaintiff  that the  defendants  caused  photographs  of the plaintiff to be published  and arranged in such a manner  as to suggest  that the plaintiff  had been involved in sexual conduct  with the person in the photographs.

7. The plaintiff testified on oath as PW1.  He stated that he was an advocate of the High court of Kenya and a businessman engaged in real property management.  He adopted his witness statement recorded on 30th September 2014 and filed in court on 7th October 2014’ as his evidence in chief.

8. In the said statement, with amendments  allowed by the court, the plaintiff  testified  that he had previously worked  with Hamilton Harrison  and Mathews Law Firm until January 2001 when  he established  his own law firm of Singh Gitau Advocates and in 2011, he founded LJA Associates  together   with Linda Watiri Muriuki and Andrew Mukite  Musangi.  The plaintiff  also stated  that he was  a dedicated  family man, drops his children  (sons)  to school  at 7. 30 am  and by 8. 00am he is in office  preparing  to attend to court by 9. 00a.m.  That on Monday the16th June 2008 when dropping his to son to school he was surprised to see a weekly citizen publication bearing the headline: “Kibaki family lawyer caught in sect Act”with page two running a further “Now Kibaki lawyer unmasked”.  He averred that the whole story was a malicious fabrication intended to defame him and embarrass him in the eyes of his family, friends, colleagues and clients.  Further, that the publication was written in a sensational manner so as to attract as much attention as possible.  The  plaintiff further testified  that no comment  was sought  from him despite  being  mentioned  in an extremely unfavourable  context and only found out about  the article  accidentally  on his way  taking his son to school.

9. The plaintiff further testified that the three  photographs  used were his true image, though the images were more  than eight  years old  as at the time of  publication and were  taken  at a friend’s  house and not a brothel as alleged.  In addition, that  the  two ladies who featured  were  his  friends  Ms Wangechi  Gitau  advocate and  Ms Stacy  Muthoni a niece  to Mr Njee  Muturi who was the  best man at the plaintiff’s wedding hence they  were not prostitutes  as alleged in the article.  He further  stated that the only property  he owned  was his Runda house  wherein  he resided and that he  did not own any property on Riverside  Drive  and neither   did he acquire  any property  fraudulently contrary to the  allegations in the article.

10. The plaintiff  stated that at the material  time, he represented  Citi Finance  Bank and not Honourable George Nyanja  as alleged  in the article  and that  neither  did he  buy a house belonging  to George Nyanja, which  property was  sold by his client  the Bank – Citi  Finance Bank under  its statutory power of sale  to Red Mars  Holding Limited.  The plaintiff denied that  he ever  acted for  the first family and  or that he maintained  accounts  on their behalf  and neither  was he instrumental  nor involved  in the alleged  purchase of  Equatorial  Bank on their behalf.  He also denied allegations that he ever  defrauded  the  first family  or that he was connected to State  House to make money  or seal deals  or that he defrauded  a Western MP kshs  50,000,000 as alleged in the impugned publication.  The plaintiff admitted knowing Mr Amos Kimunya but denied acting for him, drinking or socializing with him or holding kshs 2. 5 million for him.  He also denied allegations that he knew Manish Shah, the Asian tycoon behind Trust Bank and Citi Finance Bank.  He denied engaging in any form of professional misconduct while billing his clients and or that he relied on favours from Judges to win a case.  The plaintiff denied ever impregnating 18 women nor abandoned their babies.  He also  denied having   intimacy relations with the  ladies named  in the article, impregnating  them and  or having  a tug of war  or maintenance  suits  filed against  him.  The plaintiff testified that  the 4th defendant  Bryan  Yongo had requested  to meet  the plaintiff and the two met  at the ABC Centre  and the  4th defendant asked the plaintiff  whether the latter could help in a case in which the plaintiff  was acting as advocate  for Citi Finance  Bank in HCC 1965/91 and HCC 251/2008 in which the plaintiff was George  Nyanja  and Citi Finance  Bank was  the defendant, to ensure  that the plaintiff  in the case George Nyanja  got his property back from the Bank and the 4th defendant  would  ensure the plaintiff was well  compensated  if he agreed  to help.  According to the plaintiff, he declined the request and compensation offer and that is when the 4th defendant told him he would teach the plaintiff a lesson by publishing information he had concerning the plaintiff.  Further  that after the impugned  publication he met the  3rd defendant  who demanded  kshs 200,000 for him to issue  a retraction and apology in a subsequent article  and it was  upon the plaintiff’s failure  to pay the said money that  another  article  in the  weekly citizen  30th June 2008 headlined “ Revolt Brews in Cabinet” with a sub heading “ As  Libya buys  Kimunya Crude  Oil Shop buys Golden Beach  Hotel Mombasa  through lawyer James Singh.”

11. The plaintiff stated that  he had acted  for the claimant  in HCC 99/2005  Mary Muthoni Murithi, William  Gachengo Nduhiu, Dunkan Nderitu  Ndegwa, Edwin Alfred Bristow  as  administrators of the estate of Samson  Muriithi Nduhiu V KCB and Mutuality Investment Trust Ltd  but denied  being  involved in the sale of Golden Beach  Hotel.

12. The plaintiff further stated that  he complained  in writing  to the Media Council  of Kenya who  in turn wrote to the 1st defendant  to respond by 9th July 2008 but  it had no powers to restrain  defendants  from further  defaming  him.

13. According to the plaintiff, the articles were merely intrusive in his private life and were not news worthy neither were they of public interest to necessitate a headline coverage.  The said articles are said to have caused him great anguish and distress and affected his life and two sons who are mentioned.  He also lost many friends who read the article because of allegations of corruption and infidelity.  The plaintiff singled out Mr Rajan Shah a neighbor and close friend and after him reading those articles him and his family became uncomfortable with him in their house during their events.  Further, that the articles causes members of the Asian community who were his clients to shun him.  He further stated that  the articles affected his profession and  branded   him as a corrupt, overcharged clients, acted against  clients interests  and therefore clients  and prospective  clients  were  hesitant  to be associated with  him due to the taint of  immorality and corruption.  Even his professional colleagues shunned him.  He produced all the documents referred to him in his testimony as filed in court as exhibits.

14. The plaintiff also called PW2 Mr Rajan Shah who testified on oath, adopting his statement written on 30th September 2014.  He stated that he was a friend and close associate of the plaintiff before the impugned publication. That the plaintiff was also his lawyer and they visited each other as family friends since the plaintiff even shared a birthday with PW2’s eldest daughter Jiya. That after the impugned publication, people started calling PW2 asking him whether he had read the sensational story about his friend in the Weekly Citizen and when he told them that he had not read, they told him that his lawyer the plaintiff was a conman, womanizer hence he should be careful on his dealings with the plaintiff.  That he read the publications  after which he was shocked since he knew the plaintiff to be an honest ad upright person. That after the said publication, he avoided the company of the plaintiff  and did not give him any more legal work as before and neither could he refer any of his friends as earlier done to the plaintiff because he dreaded being seen with a person who had been painted in bad light as an immoral, corrupt person. That he later met the plaintiff and even after the plaintiff explaining himself out, it took the witness along time to believe him, which was after the court injuncted the newspaper. That the story is also found in the internet and every time he googles out the plaintiff’s name, the story pos up. Further, that some of his friends always bring up the story of the plaintiff stating “your friend lawyer who had a story in the Citizen.”  He also testified that some Asian business persons took away work from the plaintiff who as a result suffered financial loss and had to borrow some money from the witness.

15. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendants never offered any evidence.  Despite being served with a hearing notice, they or their advocates on record did not attend court. The plaintiff’s evidence therefore remained uncontroverted.  The plaintiff filed  written submissions  on 17th June 2015, urging the  court to  find that he had  proved his case  against the  defendants  more specifically that  he had  proved all the ingredients of defamation and prayed for  judgment  against  the defendants as prayed.

16. According to the plaintiff, the published words were defamatory of him in that in their natural and ordinary meaning they meant that

He visited  houses of  vice

He had impregnated 18 women and abandoned d their children.

He would use his connections to neutralize the women he had impregnated should they file suits against him.

He was involved in acts of group sex.

He had fathered a child with a Kenyan Airways Hostess, Cynthia and abandoned her.

Having been fostered by the late Hezekiah Oyugi had wrongly sold his family’s assets and boasted of his windows queuing for hand outs in his offices.

He had fathered and abandoned 3 year old child with a woman called Julie.

The plaintiff also contended that the said words as published were understood printed in such a manner as to suggest that the plaintiff had been involved in sexual conduct with the persons in the photographs.

On quantum, the plaintiff submitted that  as the publication had  injured his reputation and hurt  his feelings, he was entitled  to compensatory damages  as  defined  in  Biwott V Clays Ltd [2000] 2 334 and John  v M.G Ltd [1996] 1 ALL ER 35.  He submitted those who read the publication and were his friends and professional colleagues shunned him and treated him with contempt.  He lost clients like PW2 and others whom the witness used to refer to him, who never wanted to be seen with the plaintiff in public.  He had to borrow money as clients shunned him.  The plaintiff relied on Johnson Evan Gicheru V Andrew Moron& Another [2005] e KLR. in urging the court to consider the factors for compensatory damages on libel actions which were :-

The objective features of the libel itself, such as gravity, its province, the circulation of the medium in which it is published, and any repetition.

The subject effects on the plaintiff’s feelings not only from the prominence itself but from the defendant’s conduct thereafter both up to and including the trial itself.

Matters tending to mitigate damages such as the publication of an apology.

Matters tending to reduce damages.

Vindication of the plaintiff’s reputation past and future.

17. He submitted  that no clarification  was sought  before publication  and republication thereof which  had the  intention of destroying  his otherwise unblemished  professional  and personal reputation  hence, calculated  to inflict  maximum damage  to him.  He prayed for kshs  15,000,000 compensatory  damages based on the case of  Nation Media Group Ltd & 2 Others  V John Joseph Kamotho  & 3 Others , Biwott V Mbuguss & Another  [2002] KLR  1 321.  Daniel Musinga V Nation Newspapers [2005] e KLR, Benson Ondimu Mesese v KTDA [2005] e KLR.

18. The plaintiff  also prayed for  aggravated damages of 5,000,000 on the ground  that the defendants  having demanded  for  kshs 200,000/-  to recant the stories,  and  upon the plaintiff failing to pay the same, they republished the article thereby acting with improper  motive.  He relied on John V MGN (Supra) and Biwott V Clays (supra).  He also  prayed for an injunction restraining the defendants  from publishing  the same libel article, a withdrawal of the said  publication; a complete  apology and a permanent injunction restraining  the 1st defendant and 3rd defendant from publishing  the “weekly citizen” or any other publication. The plaintiff also prayed for costs and interest.

Determination

19. The plaintiff filed statement of agreed issues together with the             2nd defendant against whom the suit was withdrawn.  The said issues are filed on 23rd July 2010.  The 4th defendant filed his own statement of issues on 13th July 2010.  The plaintiff’s statement of agreed issues is

Whether  the 1st and  2nd defendants  published  and caused  to be printed  a libelous publication in the weekly citizen on 16th June  2008 at the instigation of the  4th defendant.

Whether  the plaintiff was wrongly  and maliciously defamed  by the defendants  in a subsequent  publication in the weekly citizen  on  30th June 2008.

Whether   malicious conspiracy to publish constitutes  a cause of action  (4th defendant’s defence)

Whether the 2nd defendant printed the weekly citizen on 16th and          30th June 2008 or was it Mo Printers.

Whether  the 3rd and 4th defendants maliciously and with  intent to  injure the plaintiff conspired   and caused  to be published  in the weekly citizen false and  defamatory photographs  purchased from the  4th defendant.

Whether   the 2nd defendant published the photographs.

Whether the plaintiff had reasonable cause to allege that the                2nd defendant   printed   the publication.

Whether the photographs published by the 1st and 2nd defendants were fabricated and old and published in a manner suggesting the plaintiff had been involved in sexual conduct with the person in the photographs.

Whether the 4th defendant bears any responsibility for the matters averred in paragraph 13 of the plaint (4th defendant’s defence).

Whether the plaintiff’s suit discloses a cause of action against the 2nd and 4th defendant’s.

Whether the publication in the weekly citizen have seriously injured and his character and reputation as an advocate, citizen, and father been brought to disrepute.

Whether the plaintiff is entitled to the relief sought.

Who is to bear the cost of this suit?

The 4th defendant filed 8 issues for determination but never participated in the proceedings.

20. Having considered   the pleadings  by the parties  to this suit, the evidence both oral and documentary  as adduced  by the plaintiff and his witnesses   and the submissions  filed supported by case law, and noting  that the defendants  never tendered  any evidence  in  support of their defenses to controvert or rebut the plaintiff’s allegations  and testimony, this court finds the following issues as appropriate for determination in the circumstances of this case, as most of the issues framed by the parties can be conveniently considered together:-

Whether the publication of 16th June 2008 complained of was and concerning the plaintiff is capable of being construed as being defamatory.

Whether the said publication was made maliciously.

Whether there was a conspiracy between the 1st, 3rd and 4th defendants and each of them to publish or cause the publication in question of and concerning the plaintiff.

Whether the plaintiff’s reputation was injured as a result of the impugned publication and if so, what damages is the plaintiff entitled to.

What orders should this court make?

Who should bear the costs of this suit?

21. The court  in determining defamation cases  must at all times balance  the provisions  of Articles  33, 34 and 35 of the Constitution, dealing  with freedoms of expression and  freedom of the print  and electronic  media  and  the individual’s right  to access information  on the one hand and the command under Article 28 of the Constitution on the right to respect and uphold the inherent dignity of every person.  On the right to access information and the freedom of expression, Lord Denning MR had this to say in Fraser V Evans & Others [1969] ALL ER:

“There are some things which are of such public concern that newspapers, the press and indeed everyone are entitled to make known the truth and to make their comment in it.  This is an integral part of the right of speech and expression.  It must not be whistled away.”

22. Lord Coleridge, CJ in the case of Bernard & another V Periman [1891-4] ALL E R 965 had stated in an earlier case:-

“ The right  of speech is one  which it is for the public  interest  that individuals  should  posses, and indeed, that they  should exercise without  impediment  so long as  no wrongful act is done, and unless an alleged libel is  untrue there is no wrong committed.”

23. Speaking about a person’s right to protection of reputation and character, William Shakespeare stated:

“Lago Good name in a man or woman, dear my Lord, is the immediate jewel of their souls.  Who steals  my purse  steals trash; his and  has been  slave  to thousands; but  he that  filches  from me my good name Robs me of  that which not  enriches  him; and makes  me poor indeed.” (Othello Act 3 Scene 3,155-161).

24. In Kenya, the freedom of expression is guaranteed under Article 33 of the Constitution.  That freedom includes:

(a) Freedom to seek, receive or impart information or ideas.”

25. The freedom of the media is also guaranteed under Article 34 of the Constitution.  That Article enacts:

“ Freedom and Independence  of Electronic, print and all other types  of media is guaranteed, but does not  extend to any expression specified  in Article 33(2)”.

26. In other words that freedom does not extend to or licence to among others; Propaganda for war, incitement  to violence, hate speech or advocacy of hatred that constitutes  ethnic incitement, vilification of others  or incitement to cause  harm or is based  on any ground  of discrimination specified or contemplated  in Article  27(4) and that in the exercise  of the right  to freedom of  expression, every person shall  respect  the rights and reputation  of others.

27. From  the  above  exposition, it is  crystal clear that  freedom  of  expression and of the media  is guaranteed  under the Constitution.  Nonetheless that freedom is not absolute.  The limitation thereto is spelt out in black and white.

28. On whether the impugned publication concerned the plaintiff and can be construed as being defamatory of the plaintiff, it is important to highlight that the burden of proof always lies on the person who alleges the existence of certain facts.  The standard of proof in civil cases is that of on a balance of probabilities.  In answering that first  issue, we  must appreciate  that in defamation  cases, the claimant, in order  to prove that  the words complained of are defamatory, he must  prove  that the said words  were published, they concerned  the  plaintiff, they were published  by the defendant(s), that  they were  false and that they  were defamatory  in character  of the  plaintiff  and finally, that  the publication  was done  with  malice.  The locus classicus case on defamation of character is J Kudwoli vs Eureka Educational and Training Consultant & 2 Others HCC 126 and 135 of 1990 [Kuloba J as he then was].  See also WycliffeA. Swanya V Toyota East Africa Ltd & Another [2009] e KLR.

29. In the instant case, it is not a disputed fact that by a June 16-22, 2008 publication of the Weekly Citizen bracing itself as Kenya’s Most Authoritative Political Newspaper, Volume II issue No.23 costing a paltry shs 30/- equivalent to what Judas betrayed Jesus for (save that in the case of Jesus’ betrayal it was in Shekels), there is a splashing front headline in bold titled “Kibaki Family Lawyer caught in Sex Act.”“Beneath those words are 5 photos of what the newspaper called “James Singh Gitau, top Nairobi lawyer whose clients include first family, Finance Minister Amos Kimunya among others in love exploits as shown in the pictures.  His offices are suitably in Unity House along the famous Koinange Street Red Right district.”

30. Those pictures as produced by the plaintiff tell a story.  They are res ipsa loquitur.  Two of them show the plaintiff half dressed only waist down and in the company of a female.  In one of the pictures –the first one in the background is a lady still lying in between the sheets.  Below those photos is another photograph showing the plaintiff smooching a lady.  The third photograph shows the plaintiff with a lady head down while he drank some liquid.

31. The real story is published on page 2 thereof with a 3/5 page top to bottom headed.  “Now Kibaki family lawyer unmasked.”The publication was done by the 1st defendant’s “Citizen Team.” The photographs were in full colour.  The publication also referred to the plaintiff by name.  This court had the opportunity to see the plaintiff in court and confirms that indeed by his physical (facial) appearance he is that person whose photographs were conspicuously/overtly and sensationally published by the 1st defendant.

32. But publication is not enough, even if it was admitted by the defendants.  There must be proof that a third party did read the publication, other than the printer or publisher.  The paper must be exhibited in court and a person who read it called to testify to that fact. In this case, the plaintiff testified, produced the impugned publication and called one witnesses PW2 Mr Rajan Shah, a businessman in real estate and bakery.  He was also a friend and client to the plaintiff.  The witness testified that he read the paper and was shocked to the extent of shunning the plaintiff for the embarrassing publication. It therefore follows that there was publication of the alleged defamatory words and images of and concerning the plaintiff.

33. The next question is whether the publication was false.  The plaintiff admitted that the pictures were true images   of him taken more than 8 years prior to their publication and were taken at a friends’ house and not at a brothel as the publication alleged.  Further, that the two ladies in the picture were his friends, Ms Wangechi Gitau an advocate while Ms Stacy Muthoni who was a niece to his best man at his wedding, and not prostitutes.

34. The plaintiff denied owning the properties at Riverside Drive. He also denied that he acquired property fraudulently.  He also denied defrauding the first family and or that he acted for them in any matter as alleged by the first defendant.  He denied using his alleged State House connections to cut deals. He also denied the allegation that he defrauded a Western Parliamentarian of shs 50 million.  He denied ever acting for Mr Kimunya and or raising inflated fee notes.

35. The plaintiff denied confiscating a motor vehicle from any of his clients.  He also denied relying on favours from any Judge to win cases.  He further denied ever impregnating a record 18 women or abandoning their babies.  He also denied visiting young University students or high class flesh peddlers.  The plaintiff did complain to the Media Council who nonetheless lacked the muscle to restrain the 1st defendant.

36. Albeit  the plaintiff admitted  the  pictures  to be  his true images, he denied the description  given  by the 1st  defendant  depicting him as being engaged in love  exploits, that he was amorous, and or that he  was  involved in sex orgies. The plaintiff  explained  out the occasion of which those photos were taken and therefore  it was expected that  the publisher thereof would  controvert  the plaintiff’s  averments and testimony by giving evidence to justify the publication of the photos  and the entire  story which alluded not only  to the alleged amorous sex acts and escapades by the plaintiff but also his alleged involvement in illegal, immoral  and fraudulent  activities  not befitting of the plaintiff  who is an advocate  of the High Court of Kenya.  None of the defendants filed any defence of truth of justification or fair comment or publication in the public interest.

37. As earlier stated, the suit against the 2nd defendant was withdrawn and only the 4th defendant filed a defence denying all the allegations leveled against him by the plaintiff. He denied that he ever conspired to publish the impugned article.  Interlocutory judgment was entered against the      1st and 3rd defendants in default of defence on 30th March 2009.  This case therefore proceeded on formal proof basis against the said 1st and 3rd defendants.  The 4th defendant  entered  appearance  and filed defence  but despite  being served  with a hearing  notice he never  attended court for the hearing to tender  his defence.  On the basis that the evidence tendered by the plaintiff concerning the publication was not controverted in any way, I find that the allegations in the publication, that he was immoral, dishonest and corrupt, other than the true images of the plaintiff, were false and lacking in substance.

38. The next question is whether the publication was defamatory of the plaintiff.As stated earlier, every person is entitled to the protection and respect of their inherent dignity. The ancillary question, on viewing those pictures and reading the sensational story which was also read by the plaintiff’s witness, PW2 is what was the motivation on the part of the 1st defendant?  What did the 1st defendant purpose to achieve by publishing such half nude photographs of the plaintiff and the story that followed?  The plaintiff has explained the circumstances under which those photographs were published.  But it is not just about the photographs of the plaintiff.  It is about what they depict that he was engaged in love exploits with flesh peddlers and much more, the clear statements by the 1st defendant that the plaintiff was involved in fraudulent, near criminal activities including professional impropriety of influencing   judges to win cases in court.  It is worth noting that the nature of the defamation grievance is so personal.  An intangible but priceless asset of any human being is the respect, reputation and esteem he has from others.  In the sociological set up of any society, any human being is entitled to respect of his person and is reciprocal. He is entitled to protect himself from being abused, insulted and disparaged with a view to lowering his reputation in the eyes of right thinking members of the society generally. A person is entitled to his good name. Therefore, if any person  makes  a publication which is  injurious  or calculated to injure that  good name, the victim of the  publication is entitled  to seek a  redress  on defamation in a court  of law.

39. In my view, the publication was defamatory of the plaintiff.  It demeaned and disparaged him and stripped him naked   in public.  It even named his wife and two minor children.  The plaintiff’s witness who was his friend and client and who had previously referred clients to the plaintiff shunned him.  His friends also shunned not only the plaintiff but PW2 because of the latter’s association with the plaintiff. That evidence was not rebutted or at all. I am persuaded that the publication complained of fits the definition of a defamatory statement as defined in Winfield in J.A. Jolowicz and T.  Ellis Lewis- Winfield on tort 8th Edition Page 254 that:

“Defamation is the publication of a statement which tends to lower a person in the estimation of right thinking members of the society generally, or which tends to make them shun or avoid that person.”

A defamatory statement, according  to Gatley and  Libel and Slander  8th Edition  by Phillips Lewis  paragraph 4 page 5 discredits a man or tends to lower him  on the estimation of others  or to expose  him to hatred, contempt  or ridicule  or  to injure   his  reputation in his  office trade or  profession or to  injure  his financial credit.”

40. In this case, the article  made very serious  allegations of fraudulent acquisition of property, defrauding  of the first  family, using State  House  connections to cut deals, defrauding some politician from Western Kenya, raising inflated fee notes to Kimunya, confiscating a motor vehicle from a client, relying  on favours  from  judges to  win cases, abandoning  children etcetera  etcetera.

41. In the absence of any truth in those allegations, and in view of the evidence tendered by PW2, this court finds that the publication was not only defamatory of the plaintiff but highly inflammatory.  The publication was deleterious and purely intended to tarnish and destroy the plaintiff’s reputation as a successful lawyer. In Honourable Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta v Barasa Limited (2011) e KLR Rawal J. observed that the information will be assumed to be untrue until the defendant proves otherwise.

42. The plaintiff sought a withdrawal of the said publication by the 1st defendant and even complained to the Media Council who was unable to discipline the 1st defendant.  He had to contend with the publication and in this digital world; the publication is still alive on any search engine, as testified by PW2 that whenever he googles, the plaintiff’s name appears and that his friends refer to him by the plaintiff saying “your lawyer friend whose story appeared in the Citizen paper.”

43. The next issue  is whether  there was a conspiracy between  the 1st, 3rd and 4th defendants  to defame  the  plaintiff and  hence the  impugned  publication.  From the impugned publication, the author is named as Citizen Team.  However the plaintiff testified  on oath, which evidence is uncontroverted, that before  the impugned publication, the  4th  defendant  requested to meet  the plaintiff and they met at  the ABC Centre and the  4th defendant asked  him whether  the plaintiff could help in a case  in  which the  plaintiff  was  acting  as an advocate for Citi Finance  Bank  in HCC 1965 of 1991 and HCC  251/2008 in which the plaintiff  was  George Nyanja and the plaintiff’s  client  was Citi Finance  Bank,  to ensure  that Mr Nyanja got  his property back from the bank, as per  Plaintiff’s  exhibit  7 and 13 showing plaint and defence in the said cases.  That  the 4th defendant  told the  plaintiff that  he was prepared  to ensure that the plaintiff  was well compensated  if the  plaintiff   agreed  to do so; and that  when the plaintiff declined,  the 4th  defendant  promised  to teach the  plaintiff a lesson by publishing  information he had concerning  the plaintiff.

44. The  plaintiff testified  that after  the impugned  publication, he met the  3rd defendant Tom Alwaka  at Fair View Hotel where he  inquired  about the  source of the information and he informed  the plaintiff that he had been paid sh 500,000 by the 4th defendant Brian  Yongo to publish  the article  and that he  had purchased the photographs from Brian Yongo.  Further, that  Mr Yongo wanted  to tarnish  the plaintiff’s  name because of  the plaintiff’s involvement  as counsel in  two High Court cases  involving  George  Nyanja  and Citi Finance over the  former’s properties.  That the 3rd  defendant asked for shs 200,000/- for  a retraction to be published  and in the subsequent  weekly citizen  Edition of 30th June  2008, there  was another  headline “ Revolt brews in  Cabinet” with a sub heading “ As Libya  buys Kimunya  Crude Oil Shop Buys Golden  Beach Hotel Mombasa through lawyer  James Singh”.  The plaintiff admitted acting for Mary Muthoni in HCC 99/2005 but denied being involved in the sale of the Golden Beach Hotel.

45. As earlier stated, the publication of 16th - 22nd June 2008 was by the 1st defendant “Citizen Team” No name of author thereof or source was given.  In the subsequent publication of 30th June, 2008, there is also no name of the author save “Citizen Team.” The 3rd defendant’s defence  denied any  wrong doing,  authoring the publication, meeting  the plaintiff  and or purchasing  the impugned  photos from the 4th  defendant who also  denied  each and every allegation by the plaintiff.

46. The 3rd  defendant in his  replying affidavit  sworn on 14th  July 2008 in opposing  an injunction  application by the plaintiff had annexed copy  of his resignation letter from Headlink Publishers Limited (1st defendant) as Senior Editor,  to vie for  a Parliamentary  nomination in Emuhaya. Albeit  there was no rebuttal of the  plaintiff’s evidence,  I find it  difficult  to believe  that there  was any  conspiracy between the 1st, 3rd  and 4th defendants  to publish the impugned article.  There is no evidence to show the source of the publications.  In addition  the plaintiff impresses this court as an intelligent lawyer  of good  repute and if the 4th defendant was demanding that the plaintiff compromises  his client’s case for  a handsome compensation with  threats  that  such  publications would be  made concerning the plaintiff if  he refused  to co-operate, it was only  prudent  that the plaintiff reports  the 4th defendant to the  police, expresses  his concerns to  the presiding  judge in the matters affecting his client or  writes a protest note to the advocate for  the adverse  party in the material case involving  George Nyanja and  Citi Finance  Bank.

47. In addition, if it appeared to the plaintiff that the 3rd defendant was trying to extort some money from him, nothing prevented the plaintiff from reporting the matter to the police to investigate.  Even if there would be no charges pressed against any of the defendants, the plaintiff would have gathered evidence that would lend credence and assist him in a civil claim.

48. I am on the evidence adduced by the plaintiff unable to find any evidence of conspiracy between the 1st, 3rd and 4th defendants to publish the offending article.  Since  the two defendants  denied  in their defences although they  did not testify, the burden of proof  still lay on the plaintiff  to prove, on a balance  of probabilities  that the two defendants  conspired,  authored  and caused  the 1st  defendant  to publish the  offensive  article  and  photographs.

49. On the question of whether the offensive publication was made maliciously, in Libel, pleading malice is not mandatory.  However, malice can be inferred or established from the publications themselves.  From the  publication  a clear message  is send to  the reader that  the plaintiff is  an immoral person, he is  a criminal, untrustworthy, fraudster and  is doomed  to fail like  Donald  Kipkorir. This court was not shown how fraudulent or immoral the plaintiff was. Neither was it shown how Donald Kipkorir whose name was dragged in the offending article was a failure such that the plaintiff was headed in the same direction. The bold  headline and coloured  pictures  including some showing  the plaintiff half nude, and the  failure  by the  1st defendant to testify as to the plaintiff’s immorality and or dishonesty and or publish any apology  or even  file a  defence  in this case to controvert  the allegations  against it denotes  impunity and malice.  Those publications are not protected by Section 7 of the Defamation Act and the schedule thereto.

50. On whether the plaintiff’s credibility, character and reputation was injured and therefore whether he is entitled to damages, the plaintiff testified that he is a family man.  His wife and children were named personally in the article.  He called PW2 who testified as to how he started evading the company of the plaintiff with whom they had freely associated as client /advocate and among the Asian Community. Following the publication which his friends called him after reading it and asking him to read, his friends and colleagues always referred to him as “your lawyer friend.”  That the plaintiff lost clients and was forced to borrow money to fend for him is not in dispute and this court believes that evidence; for the greatest asset that an advocate in private practice has is his reputation. Once he loses it, he also looses clients and therefore a livelihood. According to the plaintiff and PW2, the plaintiff’s friends and professional colleagues and acquaintances shunned him.  Taking into consideration the plaintiff’s profession and career, and his deportment in court, I have no doubt  that he  is a person of  reasonable  fortitude  and therefore  his  reputation and standing  in  society was greatly lowered by the impugned defamatory publication.  That being the case, I find that he is entitled to damages for being libeled unjustifiably.

51. In Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Edition VOL 28 paragraph it is stated:-

“If a person has been libeled without any justification or excuse, the law presumes that some damage will flow in the ordinary course of events from the mere invasion of his right to his reputation and such damage is known as general damages.  Thus, a plaintiff  in  a libel action is not  required  to  prove  his reputation, nor to  prove that he has suffered  any  actual loss or damage.  The plaintiff  is not obliged to testify, although  it is  customary for him to do so, but having proved a  statement  is defamatory of him  and not  excused by any  available  defence, he is  always entitled  at least to nominal damages .  However, it is open to a plaintiff in a libel action to plead and prove special damage which he is entitled to recover in addition to general damage.  In appropriate circumstances, he may also seek aggravated or exemplary damages.”

52. In Gicheru V Morton and Another   (2005) 2 KLR 332, the Court of Appeal was clear that:

“………….A man defamed does not get compensation for his damaged reputation.  He gets damages because he was injured in his reputation, that is, simply because he was publicly defamed.  For this reason, compensation by damages operates in two ways….as a vindication of the plaintiff to the public and as a consolation to him for a wrong done.  Compensation is here a solatium rather than a monetary recompense for harm measurable in money.”

53. In awarding /assessing the compensation to be awarded to the defamed plaintiff, the case of Jones vs Pollard [1997] EMLR 233 page 243 is useful. It sets out principles to be taken into account in such assessment thus-.

The objective features of the libel itself such as its gravity, its province, the circulation of the medium in which it is published and any reputation.

The subjective effects on the plaintiff’s feelings not only from the prominence itself but from the defendant’s conduct thereafter both up to and including the trial itself.

Matters tending to mitigate damages, such as the publication of an apology.

Matters tending to reduce damages.

Vindication of the plaintiff’s reputation, past and future.

Other factors as set out in Standard Ltd V C.N. Kagia t/a Kagia & Co- Advocates CA 115/2003 are that:

In situations where the  author  or publishers  of a libel could have  with due  diligence verified the libelous  story or in other  words, where  the author  or  publisher was reckless or negligence, these  factors  should be  taken  into account  in assessing  the level of damages.

The level of damages awarded should be such as to act as deterrence and to instill a sense of responsibility on the part if the authors and publishers.

54. Applying  the above principles  to this case, it is  clear from the evidence adduced that the 1st defendant acted recklessly  and sensationally  in publishing  the plaintiff’s photos  and alleging, besides  the so called  sexual exploits, other  ills of a criminal nature  of and  concerning the plaintiff.  There was no evidence that they even contacted the plaintiff to verify those wild allegations against the plaintiff.  They never responded to the demand with any apology.  They never interviewed the plaintiff to give his side of the story before publishing, and they have remained non-responsive to this suit.

55. It is common knowledge that the 1st defendant’s paper wherein the offensive publication featured is widely read as a gutter press in the name of “Kenya’s Most Authoritative Political Newspaper.”  If that  is anything to go by, what is  political  about the  plaintiff being naked with prostitutes  defrauding  people of their property and having his office  next to  the red lights of Koinange street, strategic  enough  to nab the  call guls?”There was nothing in the publication to show that the plaintiff had political interests other than his alleged defrauding of the 1st family and Mr Kimunya.

56. Those  allegations as published  against the  plaintiff are  very weighty  going to the  core of  moral turpitude  and deprivation of  any decency  or shame on the part of the plaintiff.  From PW2’s evidence the plaintiff is no doubt without the respect he commanded from his friends, associates, and clients.  Any right thinking person would depict the plaintiff as a despicable vile, evil and decadent person of the lowest level.

57. Moreover, the size and influence of the publication is obvious especially in Nairobi.  The paper is also cheap enough.  It is affordable among many citizens.  This court takes judicial notice that people are always attracted to negative stories concerning others.  Is that person depicted in the publication the one who is before this court seeking to be vindicated, yes I say and add that indeed Mr Gitau demonstrated before this court to be of repute in the society. He has appeared before the court on other occasions representing his clients. He has showed honour and respect to the court.  The 1st defendant never controverted that fact.

58. The subsequent publication of 30th June, 2008 by the 1st defendant only added insult to injury.  It was malicious.  The 1st defendant did not check the veracity of any of the publications/allegations against the plaintiff. It also refused to publish any retraction.

59. The plaintiff sought compensatory damages and proposed a sum of shs 15,000,000.  Compensatory  damages  were defined  by Visram J.( (as he then was)  in Biwott vs Clays Ltd[2000] 2 KLR 334  as “damages  awarded to the plaintiff for  injury of his reputation and the hurt of his feelings.”  A successful claimant in defamation is entitled to general compensatory damages [see John V MG Ltd [1996] 1 ALL ER 35. Section 16A of the Defamation Act Cap 36 Laws of Kenya stipulates that:

“In any action for libel, the court shall assess the amount of damages payable in such amount as it may deem just.

Provided that  where a libel is in respect of  an offence  punishable  by death  the amount assessed  shall not be  less than  one million shillings, and where the libel is in respect of an offense punishable  by imprisonment  for a term not less than three years  the amount assessed  shall not be less than four hundred thousand shillings”.

60. The plaintiff expressed how his feelings were hurt by the impugned publication occasioning him great anguish and distress.  He lost friends and clients.  Being a family man with children, it cannot be gainsaid that the publication  subjected him and  his  family to  ridicule  and contempt  as per the testimony of  Mr Rajan Shah who stopped  associating with and or retaining the  plaintiff  as his advocate and could not  recommend  any of his friends  to  the plaintiff for  legal advice  because of the  allegations linking the plaintiff with defrauding the Kibaki family, Mr Kimunya and some western Kenya politician among other clients.  The witness avoided being seen with the plaintiff in public albeit the two had been close friends prior to the offensive publication.

61. I am satisfied on the evidence on record  that the offensive publication  brought  the plaintiff into disrepute  among his peers, family, friends, clients and professional colleagues, taking  into account  the prominence  with  which  it  was splashed.

62. In awarding the quantum of damages under the head of compensatory damages, I shall borrow guidance from the past decisions.  In Joshua  Kulei  V Kalamka Ltd HCC 375/97, Nicholas  Biwott V Clays  (supra) where the  court made  higher awards for  compensatory general damages, on appeal, those decisions were reduced Tunoi JA who stated that :

“high awards lacked judicial bases and they may be found  to be manifestly excessive and should  not be used as persuasive  guidelines  of the awards  to be followed by the trial court, since the trial judges concerned appeared  to have  ignored the basis fundamental principles  of awarding damages in libel cases.”

63. The award of compensation or damages is in the discretion of the court, which in a right case, should frown upon the publication which is grave, without justification and persistent and when asked by a demand letter, not retracted.  Thus, each defamation case has to be carefully considered in the light of its own circumstances surrounding the publication, its nature, extent of circulation, behavior of the defendant before and after the publication and during the trial.

64. The Constitution of Kenya guarantees every person the right to inherent dignity and reputation which must be respected and protected and any person unless done lawfully cannot violate that right.  In the instant case, I find that the plaintiff’s right to his inherent dignity was gravely violated by the impugned publication.  Hs privacy was invaded without justification. There was no evidence that the photos were taken in a brothel or that they were current. The publication could be seen and viewed and read by anyone owing to its prominence in the paper.  The 1st defendant has not given any explanation why it wrote or published the news item concerning the plaintiff and the insinuations therein which have been denied by the plaintiff to the satisfaction of this court.  As was  held in Nation Media Group Ltd & 2 Others  V Joseph  Kamotho & 3 Others [2010] eKLR,:

“ reputation is an  integral and  important  part of the dignity  of the  individual and once besmirched  by an unfounded allegation one’s reputation  can be damaged forever, especially if there is no opportunity to vindicate  one’s reputation.”

65. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to damages.  Taking into account all the aforestated circumstances and the plaintiff’s standing in society as a prominent lawyer, family person and businessman, and on the authorities cited, I  award the plaintiff  Five Million Kenya Shillings- shs 5,000,000 general compensatory damages for loss of reputation guided by the decision in Ken Odondi & 2 Others  v James Okoth  Omburah T/A Okoth Ombura  & Company  Advocates [2013]e KLR  where the  Court of Appeal awarded the  respondent who is an advocate of the High Court of Kenya shs  4,000,000 general compensatory damages.

66. The plaintiff also prayed for aggravated damages and proposed shs 5,000,000.  In Ken Odondi & 2 Others V James Okoth Omburah (advocates) (supra) the Court of Appeal held that:

“ In any event the respondent  established  through evidence  that not  only had he lost  …………….but  a prospective partnership with another  lawyer  did not  materialize  as a direct  result of the defamatory article.  So the respondent was  not only entitled  to general damages  for defamation  but  was also  entitled  to exemplary  damages for  defamation  to punish  the appellants  who had  defamed  him and  refused to retract  the offending  article or apologize.”

67. In John V MG Ltd (supra) the English court held that:

“Exemplary damages on the other hand had gone beyond compensation and are meant to ‘punish’ the defendant.  Aggravated damages will be ordered against a defendant who acts out of improper motive i.e.  Where it is attracted by malice; insistence on a fluny defence of justification or failure to apologize.”

68. In this case, I find that the 1st defendant acted out of an improper motive and maliciously.  They refused to apologize or retract the offensive publication and neither did they attend court to mitigate their position.They acted with impunity. They republished the article though not with the same prominence. I find and hold that the plaintiff is entitled to exemplary damages.  I award the plaintiff Two million shs 2,000,000 aggravated damages.

69. The  plaintiff also sought  for an injunction to restrain the defendants  from further  publishing  the said or  similar  libel upon the  plaintiff and a withdrawal of the said  publication   together  with an apology. In my view, an injunction is merited.  An interim one was granted pending hearing and determination of this suit.  I  accordingly  confirm  the interim injunction and order that the 1st defendant  is hereby permanently restrained  by themselves , their agents, servants and or  otherwise  from further  publishing  the said  or similar  libel upon or concerning the plaintiff.

70. On the  prayer  for withdrawal of the publication  and apology, I  find that  the same were overtaken  by events  and as  there is  no other  alternative  relief sought, I decline to grant those prayers.

71. The prayer for a permanent injunction restraining the 1st defendant from publishing the “Weekly Citizen” or any other publication would drive the 1st defendant completely out of business forever and perpetually.  I decline to grant that prayer, having  granted  an order restraining  them from  publishing  any libelous  material  of and concerning  the plaintiff .

72. In the end, I enter judgment for the plaintiff against the 1st defendant only.  I find the 1st defendant liable for maliciously publishing libelous material of and concerning the plaintiff.  I award the plaintiff a sum of Kshs Seven Million Kenya Shillings shs 7,000,000 damages for defamation of character.  I grant  an injunction  restraining  the  1st defendant, Headlink Publishers, its agents, servants, or any  other person acting through them or on their  behalf  from further  publishing  the said or similar  libel upon or concerning the plaintiff. I award the plaintiff costs of this suit and interest on damages from date of this judgment until payment in full.

73. As the claim  against the  3rd and  4th defendants  were not  proved  to the standard  required  on a balance  of probabilities, I dismiss  the suit by the plaintiff  against them.  I make no orders as to costs since the 3rd and 4th defendants did not fully participate in these proceedings.

Dated, signed and delivered at Nairobi this 30th day of October, 2015.

R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE