Lilian Wayua Mbevi v FEP Sacco Society Limited & Purple Royal Auctioneers [2021] KECPT 589 (KLR) | Temporary Injunctions | Esheria

Lilian Wayua Mbevi v FEP Sacco Society Limited & Purple Royal Auctioneers [2021] KECPT 589 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE CO-OPERATIVE TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI

TRIBUNAL CASE NO.83 OF 2020

LILIAN  WAYUA  MBEVI....................................................................CLAIMANT

VERSUS

FEP SACCO SOCIETY LIMITED.........................................1ST  RESPONDENT

PURPLE  ROYAL AUCTIONEERS.......................................2ND RESPONDENT

RULING

Vide the Application  dated 21. 2.2020,  the Claimant has moved  this Tribunal  seeking  for the following Orders:

1. Spent;

2. That  this Honourable  Tribunal  be pleased to grant  a temporary  injunction  restraining  the Respondents whether  by acting  by themselves, servants or agents from attaching, advertising  for sale by  way of auction or  otherwise the Claimant’s  properties  Title  No. Ndumberi/Riabai/5613, Kihingo Area and Title NO. Ndumberi/Riabai/3796, near Kiambu High School, Kiambu County on  27. 2.2020 or thereabout be stayed  pending  the hearing  and determination  of this Application;

3. That the intended  auction  of the properties  title  No. Ndumberi/Riabai/5613, Kihingo Area &  title  No. Ndumberi/Riabai/3796,  Near  Kiambu High School, Kiambu County  scheduled  for  27. 2.2020 or thereabout  be stayed  pending  the hearing  and  determination  of this Application;

4. That  this Honourable  Tribunal  be pleased to grant  a temporary  injunction  restraining  the Respondents whether  by acting  by themselves, servants or agents from attaching, advertising  for sale by  way of auction or  otherwise the Claimant’s  properties  Title  No. Ndumberi/Riabai/5613, Kihingo Area and Title NO. Ndumberi/Riabai/3796, near Kiambu High School, Kiambu County  pending  the hearing  and determination  of this claim;

5.  That  this Honourable  Tribunal  be pleased to grant  an interlocutory order  barring  the Respondent from  taking possession of the Claimant’s   properties  Title  No. Ndumberi/Riabai/5613, Kihingo Area and Title NO. Ndumberi/Riabai/3796, near Kiambu High School, Kiambu County ending  the  hearing  and determination  of this suit;

6. Any other  or further  or better relief  that this Honourable  Tribunal  may deem  fit and just  and convenient  to grant  in the circumstance; and

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

The Application is supported by the grounds on its face and the  Affidavit  sworn by  Claimant on  21. 2.2020. The Respondent  has  opposed  the Application vide  the  Replying  Affidavit  sworn by the  1st  Respondent’s Chief Executive  Officer ( Dr.Jackson Wanjau) on 13. 3.2020.

Vide  the  directions  given  on  23. 7.2020,  the Application  was canvassed  by way of  written submissions.  The Claimant filed  her written submissions  on  26. 10. 2020 while  the Respondent filed  its initial  set of  submissions  on 26. 10. 2020 and  Supplementary  ones  on  2. 11. 2020.

Claimant’s  Contention

Vide  the instant  Application,  the Claimant  contend  that the Respondents  have  put her charged  properties  on sale yet  her loan  with the 1st Respondent  is performing. That she took  the said loan  way back in  2016 whilst  she worked  with the  1st Respondent  on the security  of the following  properties:

a. L.R. NO. Ndumberi/Riabai/5613; and

b. L R.NO.Ndumberi/Riabai/3796

That  she  has been faithfully repaying  her loan  until  a point when she lost her job with  the 1st Respondent. That  she has been making efforts to  repay  and on diverse dates  between  20. 11. 2019 and 21. 2.2020,  she has paid  a total  of Kshs.130,000/=.

That  she has  since proposed  to the 1st Respondent  to review  her  repayment  terms.  That she  is willing  to make  a monthly repayment  of Kshs.40,000/=.

That  upon making  and/or  presenting  the said proposal to the Respondents,  the Respondents  have not responded  to  her but  resorted  to  dubious advertisements for sale of  the charged  properties. That  they have affixed  the said Notices  on electricity poles  all  over  Kiambu Town without issuing  formal Notice  to her.

That she finds it unfair  for the Respondents  to advertise  the properties  for sale  while  the loan is  performing  to the  best of  her ability.

Respondent’s  Case

Vide the Replying  Affidavit of the 1st  Respondent’s CEO sworn  on  13. 3.2020,  the Respondent has opposed  the Application  based  on the following  grounds:

That  the Claimant  applied  for two loans  from the 1st Respondent  namely; Kshs.7,500,000/= and Kshs.1,000,000/= respectively.

That  upon receipt  of the said loans, the Claimant  did not make any payments  until she received  a demand letter from  the  1st Respondent’s Advocate on record  dated  16. 9.2019.

That  when repayment  was not forthcoming,  it instructed  the 2nd Respondent  vide a letter  of instruction dated 11. 11. 2019.

That upon  receipt  of instructions  the  2nd  Respondent  began  recovery  process  by issuance  of a 45 days redemption  Notice.

That upon  issuance  of appropriate  Notices,  the properties  were  then advertised  for sale on  10. 2.2020.

That contrary  to the assertion  that the loan  is performing,  the converse  is true.  That the  Claimant  is supposed  to repay  the loan  by  monthly installments  of Kshs.194,167/= which  she never  did until  she received  a demand  letter  in September 2019.

Issues  for determination

The Claimant’s  Application  dated  21. 2.2020 has presented  the  following  issues  for determination

a. Whether  the Claimant  has established  a proper basis  to warrant  the grant  of an Order  of a temporary  injunction;

b. Who should  meet  the  costs  of the Application?

Temporary injunction

We have  jurisdiction  to make  an order  regarding  temporary  injunctions  by dint  of Order 40  of the Civil  Procedure  Rules. Order  40  Rule 1  (a) provides  thus:

“ Where  in any suit  it is proved  by Affidavit or otherwise –

(a) That  any property  in dispute  in a suit is  in  danger  of being  wasted,  damaged, or alienated  by any party to  the  suit, or wrongly sold in execution of a decree,  the court may  by order  grant  a temporary  injunction to  restrain  such  act, or  make such  other  order  for the purpose  of staying  and preventing  the wasting, damaging, alienation, sale,  removal, or disposition of the property  as the court thinks fit, until  the disposal  of the  suit  or until further  orders.

Before  exercising  the above  jurisdiction,  we are  guided  by  the Principles  enunciated  by the court in  the case of  Giella – versus-  Cassman  Brown [1973] EA. They  include:

(a)  A prima facie case  with a probability  of success;

(b) Irreparable  damage; and

(c) Balance  of Convenience.

The court   in the  case of Mrao  Limited  versus  first  American Bank  of Kenya  Limited (2003) eKLR explained what  Constitute  a Prima Faciecase  in the following terms:

“.......A Prima Facie  case is  more than  an arguable  case. It is  not sufficient  to  raise  issues.  The evidence  must show  an infringement  of a right  and the probability  of  the Applicant’s case  upon trial.  It is a case which  on the material  presented,  to the  court,  a Tribunal  properly  directing  itself  will conclude  that there  exists  a right  which  has apparently been infringed  by the  opposite  party as to call  for an explanation from  the latter......”

Prima FacieCase

From the holding  of the court in the Mrao case above, for a party  to establish  existence  of  a Prima facie  case,  he/she must  demonstrate  existence  of a right  which has been  violated  such  to call for a rebuttal  from  the opposing  party.  The question  then abound  as to whether the Claimant  has  demonstrated  existence  of a right which  has been violated  by  the Respondents  so as to  call for protection.

The Claimant’s borne of  contention  is that the Respondent  has proceeded  to  advertise  her  properties  for sale  while her  loan is performing. That between the  period  20. 11. 19 and 21. 2.2020 she has  paid a cumulative  sum  of Kshs.130,000/=.

That due  to harsh  economic  times,  she wants  to be allowed  to  repay  the loan by way of monthly  installments of Kshs.40,000/=.

That  the Respondents have  not issued  her with the proper  Notices  before advertising  her properties  for sale.

On its  part,  the 1st  Respondent  contends  that the Claimant  took two  types of loans for Kshs.7,500,000/= and Kshs.1,000,000/= which attracts  monthly  repayments  of Kshs.194,167/= but  did not  repay  the same  until  the point  she received  a demand  letter  from its advocates  on record. That due  process  has  been adhered  to in the process of  realizing  the securities offered.

That the monies  the Claimant  is holding  belongs  to members and that  any delay  in repayment  will seriously hamper  its operations.

We  categorize  the  facts surrounding  this Application  into  three namely; whether  the Claimant  defaulted in repayment  and  if so whether  the Respondents is  estopped  from  recovering the same. Secondly,  whether  the Respondents  have followed  due process  in its recovery.

Default

From the  material  placed  in support  and opposition  of the Application,  it is not in dispute  that the Claimant has defaulted in  repayment of the loan.  Whilst  the Claimant  has  expressly  avoided  to  confirm  this fact,  the same is  discernible when she prays for variation of repayment  terms  to Kshs.40,000/=.

Whether 1st Respondent is prohibited from recovering the defaulted loan

From  the Claimant’s own  argument,  the 1st Respondent  should  be prohibited  from recovering  the entire  loan  merely because  the said  loan  is  performing. We respectively  disagree  with her and  find  that once the loan  is in default  the  1st Respondent  is entitled  to recover  the full amount.

Process  of recovery

It is not in dispute  that the Claimant  provided two  of her  properties  as security for the loan. These are  LR.NO.Ndumberi/Riabai/5613and 3796.

It is  the Claimant’s Contention  that the Respondents advertised  the said properties  for sale without  issuance  of proper Notices. That she  only saw posters  placed on electricity  poles all  over Kiambu advertising  the said properties for sale.

We have  perused the documents  field by the  1st  Respondent, this include:

a. A letter  of instruction  to the 2nd  Respondent dated  11. 11. 19;

b. Notification  of sale dated  2. 12. 2019;

c. 45 days  redemption  Notice  dated 2. 12. 2019; and

d. Affidavit  of service sworn  by Maina  Mwangi  on 16. 12. 2019.

Upon  perusal  of the Affidavit  of service  referred  to  above,  it is apparent  that the Claimant was served  with  Notification of sale of her properties on  16. 12. 2019. She personally acknowledge  receipt of  the said  Notice.  How then  can she allege  that she was not  aware  about  the execution  process?.

From the foregoing, we  are satisfied  that the Claimant  was issued  with the requisite  Notices before the  charged properties  were advertised for sale.

Conclusion

The upshot  of the foregoing  is that we do not find merit  in the Claimant’s  Application  dated 21. 2.2020 and hereby  dismiss  it with costs  to the 1st Respondent.

RULING SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY THIS 7TH   DAY OF  JANUARY,  2021.

HON. F. TERER    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN                     ................................

MR. P. GICHUKI   MEMBER                                         .................................

MR. B. AKUSALA    MEMBER                                     ..................................

In the presence  of

Claimant absent

Court assistant    Maina

HON. F. TERER    DEPUTY CHAIRMAN SIGNED  7. 1.2021.