Kudoyi v Newton Premium Autos Ltd & 2 others [2025] KEHC 3970 (KLR)
Full Case Text
Kudoyi v Newton Premium Autos Ltd & 2 others (Commercial Appeal 042 of 2024) [2025] KEHC 3970 (KLR) (Commercial and Tax) (28 March 2025) (Judgment)
Neutral citation: [2025] KEHC 3970 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
In the High Court at Nairobi (Milimani Commercial Courts)
Commercial and Tax
Commercial Appeal 042 of 2024
H Namisi, J
March 28, 2025
Between
Ronald Kudoyi
Appellant
and
Newton Premium Autos Ltd
1st Respondent
Jamrock Wheel Ltd
2nd Respondent
National Transport & Safety Authority
3rd Respondent
(Being an Appeal from the Judgement of Hon. B. M. Cheloti, Principle Magistrate delivered on 9 February 2024 in Milimani COMMSU E385 of 2022)
Judgment
1. By Plaint dated 10 May 2022, the Appellant herein instituted proceedings in the lower court against the Respondents seeking:i.An order compelling the 3rd Defendant to register motor vehicle registration number KDC 848B in favour of the Plaintiff;ii.Costs of the suit
2. The Appellant’s claim was that at all material times, he was the registered owner of motor vehicle registration KDC 848B, having purchased the same from the 1st and 2nd Respondents. The Plaintiff pleaded that he was in actual and uninterrupted possession of the motor vehicle since purchasing the same on 8 November 2022 at the price of Kshs 2,700,000/=. The 1st and 2nd Respondents had refused and/or ignored to transfer ownership and remained in possession of the log book.
3. The 2nd Respondent entered appearance and filed a Statement of Defence and Counterclaim. In its Defence, the 2nd Respondent pleaded that it was a stranger to the claim. The motor vehicle had not been sold to anyone at any point in time. Instead, the 2nd Respondent claimed that the motor vehicle had been stolen from it before it was subsequently recovered and was being held as an exhibit at the Embakasi Police Station. It was the subject of Criminal Case No. E3260 of 2022 at Makadara Law Courts, with charges preferred against Newton Kimathi Karimi for stealing a motor vehicle contrary to section 278A of the Penal Code.
4. In the Counterclaim, the 2nd Respondent claimed the sum of Kshs 3,000/= per day, for loss of user, together with interest thereon at the prevailing commercial rates of interest from 1 November 2021.
5. The Appellant filed a Response to the Defence and Defence to Counterclaim.
6. The 1st and 3rd Respondents did not enter appearance.
7. The matter was heard and submissions filed.
8. In its judgement, the Court identified the issues for determination as whether the 1st Defendant (Respondent herein) was acting as an agent of the 2nd Defendant and whether the Plaintiff was entitled to the remedies sought. The Court noted that while the Plaintiff submitted that the 1st Defendant was acting as an agent of the 2nd Defendant, the 2nd Defendant submitted that the motor vehicle had been stolen and therefore, the 1st Defendant did not have the possession to pass to the Plaintiff. The Court held that the 1st Defendant was acting as an agent of the 2nd Defendant, which was compounded by the fact that the 1st Defendant has been allowed to drive away with the vehicle from the 2nd Defendant’s premises. The theft of the vehicle would have been reported immediately, but in this instance, the report was made months after the vehicle had left the 2nd Defendant’s premises.
9. The agency notwithstanding, the Court found that the Sale Agreement between the Plaintiff and the 1st Defendant precluded the 2nd Defendant owing to privity of contract. Consequently, the Court dismissed the suit as well as the counterclaim.
10. Aggrieved by the judgement, the Appellant lodged this appeal on the following grounds:i.That the learned trial magistrate erred in law and in fact and misdirected herself in failing to acknowledge the fact that agency whether express or implied is an exception to the privity of contract;ii.That the learned trial magistrate erred in law and fact in application of the law on what would constitute exception to privity of contract;iii.That the learned Magistrate erred in law and in fact by failing to apply the law on principal-agent relationship;iv.That the learned Magistrate erred in law and fact by failing to take into account the 3rd Respondent is a body corporate capable of being sued under law;v.That the learned trial Magistrate erred in law by misapplying the exception to the general rule of privity of contract.
11. Parties canvassed the Appeal by way of written submissions.
Analysis and Determination 12. I have read the Record of Appeal, Memorandum of Appeal and respective submissions. It is the duty of a first appellate court to re- appraise and re-analyse the evidence on record and arrive at its own conclusion and give reasons either way – see Sumaria & Another vs Allied Industries Limited [2007] 2 KLR. The Court has also to appreciate that in the discharge of its aforesaid mandate the Court should be slow in moving to interfere with a finding of fact by a trial court unless it was based on no evidence, it was based on a misapprehension of the evidence or the Magistrate had been shown demonstrably to have acted on wrong principle in reaching the finding he did –see Musera vs Mwechelesi & another [2007] 2 KLR 159.
13. The Appellant’s case was that on 8 November 2021, he purchased the motor vehicle KDC 848B for the price of Kshs 2,100,000/=. He executed a Sale Agreement between himself and the 1st Respondent. In the Recitals of the Agreement, the 1st Respondent indicated that he had authority to sell the motor vehicle. Newton Kimathi signed the Agreement on behalf of the 1st Respondent. The Agreement did not state who the registered owner of the vehicle was. On cross examination, however, the Appellant confirmed that he conducted a search of the motor vehicle records, but did not contact the registered owner.
14. It was a term of the Agreement that upon payment of the full purchase price, the 1st Respondent would initiate the process of transferring ownership to the Appellant as well as releasing the log book to the Appellant. According to the Appellant, the transfer was never done, neither did he receive the logbook. It was his testimony that after payment of Kshs 2. 1 million, the Appellant took possession of the vehicle. However, the 1st and 2nd Respondents stopped picking his calls and avoided him completely. The log book was never released, neither was the transfer effected.
15. On the other hand, the 2nd Respondent’s case was it was the registered owner of the motor vehicle at all times and that the vehicle was never sold to anyone. It was the private property of the 2nd Respondent. On 8 November 2021, the vehicle was stolen from the 2nd Respondent’s premises along Mombasa Road. Charges were preferred against Newton Kimathi Kirimi.
16. From the Record of Appeal, it is clear that there was a principal-agent relationship between the 1st Respondent and the 2nd Respondent, even though the 2nd Respondent denied the same. The 2nd Respondent submitted that in the entire proceedings in the trial court, no document to establish a nexus or agency between the 1st and 2nd Respondents was produced and no claim was made against Newton Kimathi.
17. In the Reply to Defence, the Appellant averred that the 2nd Respondent sued its agent, the 1st Defendant. The charges preferred against the agent were stealing by agent contrary to section 283(a) of the Penal Code, which were later amended to stealing of motor vehicle contrary to section 278A. In deed, the two Charge Sheets are contained in the Record of Appeal. The former was approved by the Office of Director of Public Prosecutions on 24 June 2022, while the latter was approved on 5 July 2022. Further, the extract from the Occurrence Book indicates that the report made on 7 June 2022 was that the individual, Newton Kimathi, who was well known to the 2nd Respondent, came to the yard and took the vehicle to go and show a buyer in Kilimani.
18. According to Halsbury’s Law of England 4th Edition Volume 1(2) para 19 and 20, a principal agency relationship is created by the express or implied agreement of principal and agent or by ratification by the principal of the agent’s acts done on his behalf. Express agency is created where the principal or some person authorized by him, expressly appoints the agent whether by deed, by writing under hand or orally. Implied agency arises from the conduct or situation of parties.
19. According to Cheshire and Fifoot, the Law of Contract, 5th Edition page 386-394, agency can be created in various ways. These include agency by Estoppel. The quote therein by Lord Cransworth is important in demonstrating how this form of agency is created:“No one can become an agent of another person except by will of that person. His will may be manifested in writing of orally or simply by placing another in a situation in which according to the ordinary rules of law, or perhaps it would be more correct to say, according to the ordinary usages of mankind, that other is understood to represent and act for the person who has so placed him... this proposition, however, is not at variance with the doctrine that where one has acted as from his conduct to lead another to believe that he has appointed someone to act as his agent, and knows that the other person is about to act on that behalf, then unless he interposes, he will in general be stopped from disputing the agency, though in fact no agency really existed...”
20. In this instance, the 2nd Respondent knowingly and voluntarily released the motor vehicle to Newton Kimathi, to show the same to a potential buyer. The Appellant viewed the vehicle that was presented by the 1st Respondent. Upon meeting of minds, the 1st Respondent caused an agreement to be drafted. The Agreement clearly indicated that the 1st Respondent had the authority to sell the motor vehicle. It did not indicate that the 1st Respondent was the registered and/or beneficial owner of the vehicle. The Agreement was subsequently executed, the 1st Respondent was represented by Newton Kimathi. I concur with the trial court’s finding that for all intents and purposes, the 1st Respondent acted as the agent of the 2nd Respondent.
21. That notwithstanding, I will not address the issue of privity of contract. This is in view of the relief sought by the Appellant in its Plaint dated 10 May 2022. The Appellant sought one relief only; an order compelling the 3rd Respondent to register motor vehicle registration number KDC 848B in favor of the Appellant. In my considered view, in light of the relief sought, addressing the issue of privity of contract would be merely an academic exercise as it would have no bearing whatsoever on the final outcome herein below.
22. The trial court held that it could not compel the 3rd Respondent, a state corporation, to perform a task which it is mandated to as that would amount to usurping judicial power.
23. It is trite law, and worth remembering, that a party is bound by its pleadings. It is a cardinal principle of law that a court will only grant reliefs sought by a party. In the instant case, much as I may not concur with the reasoning of the trial court in not granting the relief sought, I concur fully that the order could not be granted under the circumstances. This is because the Appellant sought to compel the 3rd Respondent to register the vehicle in his favor yet he had not moved the court to determine the issue of ownership of the vehicle. By so doing, the Appellant was putting the cart before the horse. The Appellant should have first sought a declaration that the vehicle was his, then the order to compel would come subsequently.
24. Further, based on the evidence before it, the trial court was correct in dismissing the suit since, considering the single prayer the Appellant sought, the Appellant had not proved its case against the 3rd Respondent on a balance of probabilities. There was no evidence to demonstrate that the 3rd Respondent had refused, failed and/or neglected to perform its duty to register the motor vehicle in favour of the Appellant.
25. In view of the foregoing, I find no reason to interfere with the decision of the trial court. The appeal is unsuccessful and the same is dismissed. In view of the outcome, each party shall bear its own costs.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 28 DAY OF MARCH 2025. HELENE R. NAMISIJUDGE OF THE HIGH COURTDelivered on virtual platform in the presence of:Shililu.................. for the AppellantN/A................................ for the 1st RespondentMisati....................................for the 2nd RespondentN/A...........................for the 3rd RespondentMs. Libertine Achieng................ Court Assistant