Madjah Construction v Fredrick Akimaya Mukanji [2019] KEHC 2041 (KLR) | Personal Injury | Esheria

Madjah Construction v Fredrick Akimaya Mukanji [2019] KEHC 2041 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA AT MOMBASA

CIVIL APPEAL NO. 163 OF 2016

MADJAH CONSTRUCTION....................................APPELLANT

VERSUS

FREDRICK AKIMAYA MUKANJI........................RESPONDENT

JUDGMENT

1. The appellant, MADJAH CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD, was the original   Defendant in Civil Case No 1201 of 2012 at MOMBASA CHIEF  MAGISTRATE’S COURT, where the Respondent, FREDICK  MUKANJI  has instituted a suit in the lower court by filing a plaint  dated 14th June, 2012 seeking to be paid damages on account of injuries he  alleged to have sustained in the course of duty with the  Defendant asa plumber fixing water pipes into the wash basin at   Greef company at  Shimazi – Mombasa.

2. The Respondent averred that the accidentoccurred by the negligence of the appellant and breach of statutory duty of care owed to him. The   Respondent particularized the  particulars of breach of statutory duty  being building a stone wall that wasstructurally  defective,  failing to  take any or any adequate  precautions for his safety   while he was engaged upon his  said  work, and  exposing him to the risk of damages  or injury of which they knew  or  ought to have known.

3. The appellant filed a defence in which he denies thatthe respondent  was employed by it as a casual but admitted that he was involved in an  accident on or about the date mentioned therein.  It admitted that  while   it has a duty to take all reasonable precautions on the safety of  the Respondent, the respondentalso had the duty to take all reasonable  precaution for his  on safety while at work. It further denied  that the accident was caused any negligence and or breachof  duty on  it part. It averred that if the Respondent suffered any injuries, loss and  damages, thenit was due tohis ownnegligence. It denied every  particulars of negligence attributed to it and particularized the  particulars of negligence on the part of the Respondents. He urged that  the court dismisses the Respondent’s suit with costs.

4. The parties entered into a consent on liability at the ratioof 75%  against theAppellant and 25% against theRespondent on 2. 3.2015.  They were to negotiate with regard to quantum but the matter  proceeded to trial  to determine  the same.

5. After hearing the case, the trial magistrate awarded  the Respondent  Kshs 800,00/= as  general damages, Kshs2000 and Kshs 49,413/- as  special damages, bringing  the total sum of damages  to kshs 851,413/=  less  the Appellant’s  25% contribution , hence the Respondent  was  therefore awarded  Kshs 638,559. 75 plus  costs and interest.

6. The Appellant was aggrieved by the said decision of the trial magistrate  and vide a memorandum of appeal  dated 21st November, 2016,  filed  an appeal on 23rd November, 2016 wherein he has raised the  following grounds of appeal;

(1)That the learned resident magistrate erred in law in  awarding  to the plaintiff Kshs 800,000/= for general  damages in that the said sum is so excessive as to amount to and erroneous estimate of the damages payable to  the plaintiff.

(2)That  the learned  resident magistrate  erred in failing  to  consider or adequately consider the medical reports of Dr Ronald F Kaale dated 24th  April, 2015 on the injuries sustained by the  plaintiff which was tendered in evidence and marked DEx1 and  that  of  Dr. Maurice Peter Siminyu dated  14thApril 2012 which wastendered inevidence and marked PEX4.

(3)That the learned resident magistrate erred  in law in   holding that  the plaintiff in  Mombasa HCC NO. 319 RD   of 2001 Ahmed Mohamed vrsAbdulhafidh Mohamed    Banragah( hereinafter called the  Ahmed case) suffered  comparable injuries to the plaintiff  in this case when it  is clear upon reading the authority that the injuries  sustained  by Mr Ahmed Mohamed  and  its after effects   were far more severe that the injuries sustained bythe    plaintiff inthis case in the case below.

(4) That the learned resident magistrate erred in law in being guided by Ahmed case whilst awarding general    damages of the 800,000/= to the plaintiff.

(5) That the learned resident magistrate erred in fact    and in law in not holding that the injuries sustained in  Ahmed case weresosevere that it could not be used as a comparable in this case indetermining the general damages payable to the plaintiff in the  case below.

(6)The learned resident magistrate failed to give any or any adequate reason or reasons of how he arrived at the   figure of Sh 800,000/= general damages which he awarded to the plaintiff

(7)That  the learned  resident magistrate erred in failing;

(a) To appreciate the significance of the various facts that  emerged from the evidenceof the      plaintiff’switnesses.

(b) To consider or properly consider all the evidence before himand/or

(c) To make any or nay proper findings on the aspect of quantum of damages on the evidence before him.

(8) That the learned resident magistrate erred in failing to consider or adequately considerall the evidence before him and the written submissions  filed by counsel for the Appellant.

DETERMINATION

7. It is now settled law that the dutyof the first appellant court is to re- evaluate theevidence in the subordinate court both on points of law  and facts and come up with its own findings and conclusions.( See the  case of SELLE VRS ASSOCIATED MOTOR BOAT COMPANY  LIMITED ( 1968) E A 123; PETERS VRS SUNDAY POST ( 958) E A  424 and JABANE VRS OLENJA ( 1986) KLR 661)

8. This Honourable court has not been called upon to determine the  issue of liability as this was agreed upon by consent of the parties,  which was  accordingly recorded in court on 2nd March, 2015. The  appellants, it was agreed that they shoulder 75% while the Respondent  was apportioned 25% liability.

9. As the first appellate court in this case, its duty istherefore  to examine and re-evaluate the evidence and findings of the trial court, and  reach itsown independent  conclusion as to whether or not the findings  of  the  court with regard to quantum of damages should stand.

10. The test as to whether an appellate court may interfere with an  awardof damages was stated by the court of appeal in the case of  MBOGO AND ANOTHER VRS SHAH, (1968) E A 93 in the following  words.

“ I think it is well settled that this court will not interfere with the exercise of discretion by the inferior court unless it is satisfied that the  decision is clearly wrong because it has  misdirected itself or because it has acted   on matters on which it should not have acted or because it has failed to take into consideration  matter which it should have taken intoaccount and consideration and doing so arrived at a wrong conclusion”

11. And in the case of H. WEST & SON LTD VRS  SHEPHARD (1964) A C  326, Lord  Morris stated at page 353 that;

“ Thedifficulttask of awarding  money compensation in a case of this kind  is  essentially a matter of opinion of judgment and of experience.In asphere in which   none can predicate with  complete assurance that the award made by another is wrong the best that can be done is to pay regard to the  range of limits of current thought . In a case such as the  present, it  is natural  and reasonable  for any member of an appellate tribunal to pose for himself the question  as to what award he himself would have made.Having done  so and remembering that inthis sphere there are  inevitable differences of view and of opinion, he does  not  however proceed to dismiss as wrong a  figure of    an award merely because it does not correspond with  the figure of his ownassessment”

12. Counsel for both parties filed their written submissions with regard to  assessment of damages based on the injuries the plaintiff pleaded.

According to the Respondent’s counsel, theRespondent pleaded that  he suffered compound fracture of the left tibia /fibula, soft tissue  injuriesto the  right knee, degloringinjury  of the  left leg, and chest  injuries. The Respondent underwent surgery to fix the metal plates  and screws and another to remove the implants after he developed a  bone infection and discharging wound. The doctor noted that the  Respondent had developed arthritis and restricted movement of the  left ankle.

13. The Respondentfiled written submission in which he proposed an  award of Kshs 1,000,000/= for general damages and cited the case of  AHMED MOHAMED VERSUS ABDULHAFIDH BANGRAGAH HCC  NO. 319 RD OF 2001 and MWAURA MUIRURI VRS SUERA  FLOWERS LTD & ANOTHER (2014) in support of  the said proposal.

14. To distinguish authorities that the Respondent cited, theAppellant   proposed an award of between Kshs 300,000/= and Kshs 325,  000/-and cited the case of PETER MWINZI MBOO VRS ISAAC MWANGI  KARUIKI HCC NO 267 OF 1995 insupport of this.

15. I have considered the Appellants’and the Respondents’ submissions and  cited authorities by each one of them in light of  the injuries the  Respondentsuffered. According to themedicalreports submitted by  Dr KAALE and Dr. SIMINYU, the Respondent  was not fully  recovered and needed to under go a prolonged antibiotic therapyand  surgical  debridement of  dead bone and removalof the metal implants that  were  stillin  situ.

16. I also find the following casebear close resemblancein terms of the injuries sustained as well as the awards made.

(a) Inthe case of FLORENCE NJOKIMWANGI VRS CHEGE  MBITIRU ( 2014) e KLR , JusticeWakiaga on appeal allowed  a sumof Kshs 700,000/ as general damages  where a plaintiff had sustainedfractures of femurs bilaterally, two degloring injuries of theright knee and the right ankle and concluded that she will need money to remove k-nails and  screwsor”

(b) DICKSONKARUIKI NYAGA & ANOTHER VRS EMMA MBANDI NYAGA, 2015) e KLR, wherein  on   appeal an award of  Kshs 400,000/= for general damages was made where the plaintiff suffered a fracture of the right fibula and  multiple soft  tissue injuries with the likelihood of developing osteoarthritis and ostomyhetils in future . In that case it was opined that the fracture and soft tissue injuries had  healed   without  any complications”.

17. In this case, the injuries sustained bytherespondent wereless severe that the ones in the instant appeal. From the foregoing, similarinjuries have attracted an award of between Kshs 100,000/= and Kshs 406,000/=. In considering the  gravityof the injuries  the respondent  in this case  suffered and  the  rate of inflation, an  award on the upper  limit  would be justified . And although no injuries are exactly the same,  as in the other cases, courts should tryand keep damages within the  limits which  has found expression and favour in decided cases.

18. I am also persuaded by the case of ALPHONCE MULINZUKIVRS  BRIAN CHARLES OCHUODHO ( 2014) e KLR, where  the High court upheld the sum of Khs 800,00/= as the   general damages. In the case  of  KIGARAGARI VRS AYA ( 1982-88) IKAR 768,where  it was stated  as follows;

“ Damages  must be within the limits set out bydecided cases and also within the limits the Kenyan economy can afford. Large awards are inevitably passed on to members of the public, the  vast majority of whom cannot afford the burden in the form of increasedin- serviceand increased fees.”

19. The court, in the case of DANIEL KOSGEI NGELECHI VRS  CATHOLIC TRUSTEE REGISTERED DIOCESE OF ELDORET& ANOTHER (2013)eKLR, cited with approval the case of  KIGARAGARI VRS AYA (1982-88) IKAR 768:

“I state this soas to remove the misapprehension so often repeated that the plaintiff is entitledto be fully compensated for allthe loss and detriment she had suffered. That is not the law. She is only entitled to what is in the circumstances a fair compensation, fair both to   her and to the Defendants. The Defendants are not wrong doers. They are simply the people who foot the bill.”

20. It is therefore my finding that the trial court was right and it cannot be  faulted for having made the award it made because the authorities of  the Respondent bore some injuries which respondentsuffered. To say  that a court cannot rely on an authority because the injuries in that  authority donot exactly compare to the case before the court would  be in error.

21. There cannot always be a case that matches another exactly in terms  of injuriessuffered. Authorities are used by court as a guide in the  awards to make. The trial court rightly usedthe above–cited authorities as a guide.There is therefore, no basis for this court to  interfere with the lower court’s award.

22. Accordingly, I uphold the award by the trial court on quantum and  dismissthe appeal with costs.

Judgment delivered, dated and signed this 14th day of February, 2019 at Mombasa.

LADY JUSTICE D. O. CHEPKWONY