Mehmord Suleman Mohamed and Anor v Midlands Breweries (PVT) Limited (APPEAL No 231/2020) [2022] ZMCA 125 (4 November 2022) | Land allocation | Esheria

Mehmord Suleman Mohamed and Anor v Midlands Breweries (PVT) Limited (APPEAL No 231/2020) [2022] ZMCA 125 (4 November 2022)

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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF ZAMBIA HOLDEN AT NDOLA (Civil Jurisdiction) APPEAL No 231/2020 BETWEEN: MEHMORD SULEMAN MOHAMED SADIK PATEL MOHAMED SAKIL 1 ST APPELLANT 2ND APPELLANT AND MIDLANDS BREWERIES (PVT) LIMITED COMMISSIONER OF LANDS LUSAKA CITY COUNCIL 1 ST RESPONDENT 2ND RESPONDENT 3RD RESPONDENT CORAM: CHASHI, CHISHIMBA AND SIAVWAPA JJA On 23rd August and 4 th November 2022 For the Appellants: Mr. P. Songolo of Philsong and Partners For the 1 s t Respondent: Mr. Besa of Besa and Co with Mr. G. Lungu of Muleza Mwiimbu and Co For the 2 nd Respondent: Mr. N. Mwiya, Senior State Advocates (f For the 3 rd Respondent: Not in Attendance JUDGMENT SIAVWAPA JA delivered the Judgment of the Court. Cases referred to: Sailas Nzowami and Others v Flamingo Farm Limited Selected Judgment No. 5 of2019 3. 4. Anti-Corruption Commission v Barnett Development Corporation Limited (2008) 1 ZR 69 Savenda Management Services v Stanbic Bank Zambia Limited Selected Judgment No. 10 of 2018 Anderson Kambela Mazoka and Others v Levy Patrick Mwanawasa and Others (2005) ZR 138 Legislation referred to: The Lands and Deeds Registry Act, Chapter 285 1.0 INTRODUCTION 1.1 This appeal is against the Judgment of the High Court dated 17th April, 2020 delivered by the Honourable Mrs. Justice M. Mapani-Kawimbe. 1.2 By the said Judgment, the learned Judge ordered the cancellation of the Certificates of Title issued to the 1 st and 2nd Appellants in respect of Plot Numbers LUSAK/LN-2804 / 1 and LU SAK/ LN-2804 / 2 respectively. 1.3 The cancellation order was made upon the learned Judge's finding that there was impropriety in the manner the two plots were allocated to the Appellants. 2.0 BACKGROUND 2.1 Sometime in 2014, the Chief Executive Officer for the 1st Respondent identified a piece of land in the Chinika Light J2 Industrial Area and informed the 3 rd Respondent about it and expressed interest in acquiring the piece of land. 2.2 Officers from the 3rct Respondent were tasked to go and ascertain the availability of the said piece of land in the company of the 1 st Respondent's Chief Executive Officer. 2.3 Later, the 1 st Respondent's Chief Executive Officer was advised to submit a formal application which he did by letter dated 15th f March, 2014. 2.4 The 3 rd Respondent then created two plots from the said piece of land and subsequently made a recommendation to the Commissioner of Lands, the 2 nd Respondent herein, that the two newly created plots be allocated to the 1 st Respondent. 2 .5 Not having received any response to his application, the 1 st Respondent's Chief Executive Officer was surprised to discover ( that someone was erecting a perimeter wall around the two plots. 2.6 This prompted the 1 st Respondent's Chief Executive Officer to conduct a search on the Lands Register which revealed that the two plots had been allocated to the two Appellants. J3 2. 7 Further investigations revealed that the Appellants were allocated the plots without submitting applications and that the files for the two plots had gone missing. 3.0 IN THE HIGH COURT 3. 1 The above discoveries unsettled the 1 st Respondent's Chief Executive Officer causing the 1 st Respondent to commence an action in the High Court against the 2 nd and 3 rd Respondents and the Appellants. 3 .2 In the amended statement of claim, the 1 st Respondent claimed for the fallowing: 1. An order to compel the 1 s t Respondent to allocate the two commercial plots numbers LUSAK/ LN-2804/ 1 and LUSAK/ LN-2804/2, Lusaka to the Plaintiff as the initiator of the creation and the only applicant. 2. An order f or cancellation of any Certificates of Ti.tle illegally obtained by reason of fraud in favour of the 2nd and 3rd Def endants for plots LUSAK/ LN-2804/ 1 and LUSAK/ LN- 2804/ 2 resp ectively. 3 . An order of interim injunction restraining the 2nd and 3rd Def endants either by themselves, agents, s ervants or employees from continuing with construction of their boundary wall f e nces or to have any d ealing with the said land until determination of the matter. J4 4. An order to compel the 4th Defendant to demolish all illegal structures constructed by the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendants on the two (2) plots in dispute. 5. An order for vacant possession. 6. Damages for inconvenience and loss of use of the land 7. 8. Any other relief the Court may deem fit Interest Costs 4.0 DECISION OF THE HIGH COURT 4 . 1 In her Judgment, the learned Judge found that the recommendation by the Council to the Commissioner of Lands is not binding, that fraud was not proved but that procedural impropriety h a d b een proved. 4.2 On the b a sis of the above findings of fact, the learned Judge dismissed the clajms and ordered the cancellation of the Certificate s of Title . 5. 0 THE APPEAL 5.1 The Appellants expressed their displeasure with the Judgment of the Court below by filing a Notice and Memorandum of Appeal on 23rct September, 2020. 5.2 The Memorandum of Appeal contains the following grounds of Appeal; JS 4. An order to compel the 4th Defendant to demolish all illegal structures constructed by the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendants on the two (2) plots in dispute. 5. An order for vacant possession. 6. Damages for inconvenience and loss of use of the land 7. Any other relief the Court may deem fit 8. Interest Costs 4.0 DECISION OF THE HIGH COURT 4.1 In her Judgment, the learned Judge found that the recommendation by the Council to the Commissioner of Lands is not binding, that fraud was not proved but that procedural impropriety h a d been proved. 4.2 On the basis of the above findings of fact, the learned Judge dismissed the claims and ordered the cancellation of the Certificates of Title. 5. 0 THE APPEAL 5.1 The Appellants expressed their displeasure with the Judgment of the Court below by filing a Notice and Memorandum of Appeal on 23rd September, 2020. 5.2 The Memorandum of Appeal contains the following grounds of Appeal; JS earlier lost on account of the Commissioner of Lands' failure to follow the laid down procedure in effecting repossessions and confirming availability of land to the .1 st Appellant and giv~n that the Appellants had already developed the properties, by the time this action was being commenced and the Court below refused to halt the Appellant's construction activities. 4. The learned trial Judge erred in both law and fact when she cancelled the Certificates of Title for the Appellants after dismissing the Plaintiffs case in its entirety that sought cancellation of the Certificate of Title on account of fraud. 5 . The learned trial Judge in the Court below misdirected herself in law and fact in that the finding of fact that there was procedural impropriety despite overwhelming evidence that proved that the Commissioner of Lands moved himself to compensate the Appellants and begged them not to sue his office and further that the Commissioner of Lands clearly played a key role in the failed land transaction for the 1 st Appellant that led to the loss of the 1 st Appellant's land and that the Commissioner of Lands also failed to follow procedure in repossessing the 2 nd Appellant's property that led to loss of the 2nct Appellant's land is p erverse as it was m a de in the absence of any r elevant evidence properly before the Court to tha t J7 effect and was clearly made upon a misapprehension of the facts and it is a finding which, on a proper view of the evidence, no trial court acting correctly, can reasonably make. 6.0 ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT 6.1 In their Heads of Argument filed into Court on 20th November, 2020, the Appellants argued grounds one and three together and the other grounds separately. 6.2 The gist of the arguments in grounds one and three is that the learned Judge in the Court below ought not to have ordered the cancellation of the Certificates of Title after dismissing all the claims by the 1 st Respondent based on alleged fraud which the learned Judge found not to have been proved. 6 .3 The Appellants also criticise the learned Judge for not declaring the lawful owners of the Plots in dispute when the evidence before the Judge clearly pointed to the Appellants as the owners. 6.4 The Appellants further argue that having dismissed the fraud allegation, the learned Judge was wrong to order the cancellation of the Certificates of Title on procedural impropriety which was not pleaded thereby depriving the Appellants of an opportunity to defend themselves. J8 6.5 In ground two the arguments are largely a repetition of the arguments 1n grounds one and three to the effect that procedural impropriety was not pleaded and neither was it argued by the 1 st Respondent. They also argue that they were both offered the two pieces of land at the Commissioner of Lands' volition after he misled them as to the availability of the properties they had bought from private citizens and for breach of the re-entry procedure. ~ ( 6.6 They further argue that given the wide discretionary powers enjoyed by the Commissioner of Lands in land alienation, he could not be faulted for offering them the plots in dispute. 6. 7 The arguments in ground four are another attack on the learned Judge for ordering the cancellation of the Certificates of Title despite dismissing the 1 st Respondent's claims and finding that fraud was not proved. ( 6 .8 In ground five , the arguments on procedural impropriety are repeated as well as those expressing the Commissioner of Land's discretionary power to offer land. 7.0 ARGUMENTS IN OPPOSITION 7 .1 The 1 st and the 2 nd Respondents filed their Heads of Argument on 22nd and 24th December 2020 respectively while the 3rct Respondent did not file Heads of Argument. J9 • 7 .2 The 1 st Respondent's arguments in grounds one and three can be summed up as firstly that the claims in the Court below did not include declaring the owner of the Plots but included an order for cancellation of the Certificates of Title. 7.3 Secondly that having found that the Commissioner of Lands offered the plots to the Appellants without them applying, the learned Judge was right to find procedural impropriety in the allocation and ordering cancellation on that basis. 7 .4 In ground two the 1s t Respondent argued that the Commissioner of Lands allocated the plots to the Appellants in breach of Circular No. 1 of 1985 without citing the law under which h e made the allocations. 7.5 In ground four, the 1s t Respondent has argued that procedural impropriety was part of the evidence in the Court below and that cancellation on account of procedural impropriety is supported by the Supreme Court Judgments in Sailas Nzowami and Others v Flamingo Farm Limited 1, on the basis of section 34 of the Lands and Deeds Registry Act. 7 .6 With regard to ground five, the 1s t Respondent was of the view that the same was a repetition of the arguments in other grounds. JlO • C 7. 7 The 2°d Respondent argued with reference to grounds one and three that the learned Judge did not need to declare ownership of the properties because section 34 of the Lands and Deeds Registry Act provides for cancellation of a Certificate of Title upon proof of impropriety in the allocation process. 7.8 The 2 nd Respondent further argued that the learned Judge did not just pluck procedural impropriety from the air but that she picked it from the overwhelming evidence before her. 7.9 The 2°d Respondent argued grounds two, four and five together disputing the Appellants' argument that the 1 st Respondent's claim was dismissed in its entirety because the claim for cancellation of the Certificates of Title was granted. 7.10 The further argument is that even if the argument for fraud was dismissed, the learned Judge ordered the cancellation on the basis of procedural impropriety based on the Supreme Court decision in Anti-Corruption Commission v Barnett Development Corporation Limited2 • 7.11 The 2 nd Respondent also refuted the suggestion by the Appellants that the learned Judge granted a remedy outside the pleadings and evidence which would be contrary to the guidance by the Supreme Court in the case of Savenda Jll C Management Services v Stanbic Bank Zambia Limited3couched as follows; "The power which section 13 of the High Court Act creates is limited to that of the court investigating if alternative remedies and reliefs are available from the pleadings and evidence deployed before it as opposed to suggesting, from a vacuum, fresh remedies or reliefs. The actions by the learned High Court Judge effectively amounted to his stepping into the arena of the dispute, which we find to be a misdirection on his part deserving of intervention by the Court of Appeal. Ours is adversarial court system which shackles the Judge to the pleadings and evidence presented before him. He is at large and by virtue of section 13 to grant any re lief and remedies coming out of such pleadings and evidence, whether they are specifically asked for or not, but he is not permitted to introduce a remedy or relief from facts and circumstances of his own creation and outside the pleadings and evidence." 7.12 It is the 2 nd Respondent's view that the learned Judge below did investigate alternative remedies based on the pleadings and evidence and settled for the procedural impropriety based cancellation of the Certificates of Title. J12 .. 7.13 The 2nd Respondent argued that on the basis of DW3's testimony to the effect that an application to the Commissioner of Lands was required even in case of replacement of Land, and whereas the Appellants did not apply, the Appellants had the opportunity to defend themselves by rebutting that evidence which they did not. 8.0 OUR ANALYSIS AND DECISION 8.1 We have applied our minds to the dispute as presented and ( argued in the Court below, the decision of the Court below and the appeal before us. Five grounds of appeal have been fronted and argued by the parties. 8 .2 In our view, there are only two issues that we need to deal with based on the five grounds of appeal namely; whether there was evidence upon which the learned Judge established procedural impropriety and whether, having ordered the cancellation of the Certificates of Title, the learned Judge ought to have declared C who the owner of the plots was. 8.3 Based on our identification of the two issues in 8.2 above we ' have divided the five grounds of appeal into two groups namely one comprising grounds two, four and five all of which speak to procedural impropriety and two comprising grounds one and three both of which speak to the issue of ownership of the plots. J13 • " C 8.4 We will begin by considering the arguments around procedural impropriety on which the Appellants have decried the decision or finding by the learned Judge that the offer of the two plots to the Appellants by the Commissioner of Lands was marred by the failure to follow procedure. 8.5 The Appellants also strongly argued that a finding of procedural impropriety was untenable because it was not pleaded thereby deprivin:g them of the opportunity to defend themselves against the allegation. 8.6 It is not in dispute that the amended statement of claim appearing at page 61 of the Record of Appeal does not include a claim based on procedural impropriety. 8.7 Paragraph 14(2) of the Statement · of Claim calls for the cancellation of the Certificates of Title relies on the ground of illegality by reason of fraud in the manner the Appellants ( obtained the plots. This is in addition to paragraph 13 which details particulars of fraud . 8.8 In view of the celebrated cases of Anderson Kambela Mazoka and Others v Levy Patrick Mwanawasa and Others4 and • Savenda Management Services v Stanbic Bank Zambia Limited in which the Supreme Court guided on the importance of pleadings and how the trial Courts are shackled by pleadings J14 .. and evidence, we need to determine whether there was evidence deployed at· the hearing upon which the learned Judge made the finding of procedural impropriety. 8 .9 In his testimony running from page 718 to 724 in volume 2 of the Record of Appeal, Mr. Bates Namuyamba, who was the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the 1 st Respondent, specifically at page 721, lines 11 to 19, stated as follows; C "I went to see the Commissioner of Lands to ask how the Plots were given to the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendants. The Commissioner of Lands asked for the files of the suit properties to verify what happened in the physical files. The Commissioner of Lands was Mr. Muma and when he perused the files they were empty shells and had no application letters from the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendants." (underlining ours for emphasis). ( 8.10 The witness then continued from line 23 as follows; "When I went back the two files that were in the Commissioner of Land's office had also been missing and I decided to sue the Defendants. I suspect that there was fraud because the Commissioner of Lands could not have given people land who did not apply for it. JlS 8.11 From the above portions of the 1 st Respondent's testimony, it is clear that the 1 st Respondent's suspicion of fraud in the · allocation of the same plots to the Appellants was based on the absence of application letters by the Appellants to the Commissioner of Lands. ( ( 8.12 In response to the suspicion of fraud for alleged failure to apply for the plots, the 1 st Appellant stated as follows in cross examination at page 728 lines 20 to 24; "I never applied for the replacement of the land. The . Lusaka City Council did not recommend me for the piece of land that I own ..... " 8.13 As for the 2 nd Appellant, he said nothing about applying for the land in dis pute which was allocated to him as a replacement of th e re-possessed piece of land. 8.14 Most important is the fact that even though the 1 st Respondent . ( led viva voce eviden ce of non-compliance with the procedure in the acquisition of the disputed pieces of land, the Appellants did not object to that evidence on account that procedural impropriety, to which the evidence spoke, was not pleaded. 8 . 15 The Appellants were however, accorded the opportunity to rebut the evidence of fa ilure to follow procedure in the acquisition of the plots. Their mainstay argument is that the Commissioner J16 l ( ( of Lands, of his own volition, decided to offer them the pieces of land to replace the ones they had lost by way of repossession and re-entry respectively. 8.16 In light of what we have said above, the argument that the learned Judge plucked the allegation of procedural impropriety from the air fails as it was informed by the evidence adduced by the 1 st Respondent. 8. 1 7 According to the evidence of DW3, who testified as Senior Lands Officer, at page 738 lines 12 to 16 volume 2 of the Record of Appeal, a person seeking replacement of land should apply but that there were no applications from the Appellants. 8.18 He further said that the Commissioner of Lands had no business in private land transactions as was the case with the Appellants and as such, the Commissioner of Lands should not have replaced la nd in a private transaction. 8 .19 In her Judgment at page 50 paragraph 5 .29 of the Record of Appeal, the learned Judge stated as follows; ."The question that follows is whether the Plaintiffs claim of fraud has been founded. From the evidence adduced, it is crystal clear that the allegation of fraud has not been proved. My finding is fortified by the fact that the test set out above on fraud has not J17 been met. However, the issue of procedural impropriety in the manner that the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendant acquired the land has been established by the following omissions; (i) There is no record of their a.pp lications on the Ministry of Lands files as required by the Lands Circular of 1985. (ii) The 2 nd Defendant's purported replacement arose from failed land sale transaction with Mr. Silom.bwana and the Commissioner of Lands had no role to intervene in his matter. (iii) The Commissioner of Lands validly re-entered the property of the 3 rd defendant and there is no evidence of challenge of the re-entry. (iv) The evidence of DW3 revealed that the purported replacements were not supported by Commissioner of Lands." the 8.20 The learned Judge then relied on Section 34 of the Lands and Deeds Registry Act to order the cancellation of the Certificates of Title for procedural impropriety in their acquisition as interpreted by the Supreme Court in the case of Anti-Corruption Commission v Barnett (Supra}. J18 ) been met. However, the issue of procedural impropriety in the manner that the 2 nd and 3 rd Defendant acquired the land has been established by the following omissions; (i) There is no record of their applications on the Ministry of Lands files as required by the Lands Circular of 1985. (ii) The 2 nd Defendant's purported replacement arose from failed land sale transaction with Mr. Silom.bwana and the Commissioner of Lands had no role to intervene in his matter. (iii) The Commissioner of Lands validly re-entered the property of the 3 rd defendant and there is no evidence of challenge of the re-entry. (iv) The evidence of DW3 revealed that the purported replacements were not supported by the Commissioner of Lands." 8.20 The learned Judge then relied on Section 34 of the Lands and Deeds Registry Act to order the cancellation of the Certificates of Title for procedural impropriety in their acquisition as interpreted by the Supreme Court in the case of Anti-Corruption Commission v Barnett (Supra). J18 8.26 The other issue is the contention by the Appellants that the learned Judge failed to deal with the real issue before her by not determining the owner of the two plots. 8.27 We start by stating that the amended statement of claim at pages 61 to 63 of the Record of Appeal does not contain a claim for the declaration of the owner of the plots. The closest is claim 1 which sought an order compelling the 2 nd Respondent to allocate the two plots to the 1 st Respondent. 8.28 It is a well established position of the law that a Court shall not give a remedy not asked for and as such the Court below had no obligation to declare anyone as the owner. 8.29 We are however, quick to state that an order for the cancellation of the Certificate of Title automatically reverts ownership of the land in dispute to the title holder immediately before the issuance of the cancelled Certificate of Title. 8.30 In this case, the pieces of land in issue belonged to the state and the order of cancellation reverted the two plots to the state under the custody and control of the Commissioner of Lands. 8.31 The other argument touted by the Appellants is that it was improper for the learned Judge to make an order for the cancellation of the Certificates of Title after dismissing the 1 st J20 Respondent's claims entirely. This is clearly not the correct position as argued by the 1 st and 2 nd Respondents. The correct position is that the claim of the cancellation of the Certificates of Title succeeded as its success was not dependent on the I i I, Ii 'I i success of the other claims. 8.32 Granted that the claim to order the cancellation of the Certificates of Title based on illegality and fraud failed, it succeeded on account of procedural impropriety in the ~ acquisition of the plots. 8.33 We therefore find the first and the third grounds equally without merit and dismiss them accordingly. 9 .0 9.1 CONCLUSION The end result is that the appeal fails on all the grounds and we dismiss it in its entirety for lack of merit with costs to the Respondent to be taxed in default of agreement. J. CHASHI COURT OF APPEAL JUDGE F . M. CHISHIMBA COURT OF APPEAL JUDGE M. J. SIAVWAPA COURT OF APPEAL JUDGE J21