Monicah Nyawira Wahome v Veronica Wambui [2016] KEELC 508 (KLR) | Review Of Judgment | Esheria

Monicah Nyawira Wahome v Veronica Wambui [2016] KEELC 508 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE ENVIRONMENT AND LAND COURT OF KENYA

AT NYERI

ELC CASE  NO. 257 OF 2014

(FormerlyNYERI HCCC NO. 202 OF 2000)

MONICAH NYAWIRA WAHOME..............PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT

-VERSUS-

VERONICA WAMBUI .............................. DEFENDANT/APPLICANT

RULING

1. Veronica Wambui (hereinafter) referred to as the applicant, brought the notice of motion dated 21st July,  2014 seeking  to review and/or set aside the judgment  delivered on 4th July, 2014 and all consequential orders issued in that judgment.

2. The application, which is brought under Section 80 and   Order 45 Rules 1 and 2of the Civil Procedure Act and         Rules respectively,  is premised on the grounds that her   family members and herself are in occupation of the parcel of land known as Nyandarua/Kianjogu/Block1   (Muririchua)/133, (hereinafter referred to as the suit      property) and that there is a mistake in the court’s  proceedings because land parcels Nos. 116, 168 and 186    are occupied by the family of Shelmith Wahome   (deceased). The applicant who states  that she has just    become aware of the judgment, explains that she did not    attend the court when the matter came up for hearing     because she thought the court was hearing a different   matter (Nyeri High Court Succession cause No.658 of   2013), in which she is not a party and that  she thought the matter had been amicably settled.

3. In reply and opposition to the application, Ibrahim    Wahome Wambugu, who has described himself as the  legal representative of the estate of Monica Nyawira   Wambui Wahome has deposed that the  applicant was never a wife of David Wahome Ndabi (the previous  owner of the suit property, now deceased); that the property was legally transferred to the plaintiff/respondent  (Monica Nyawira Wahome vide letters of grant of     representation issued in Nyeri PMCCC No.60 of    1992)       and that the letters of administration issued to the   plaintiff/respondent were confirmed on 23rd June, 2010.

4. Terming the applicant a trespasser to the suit property, the   deponent of the replying affidavit faults the applicant for    having failed, refused or neglected to ventilate the issues raised in the application during hearing of the suit.

5. With regard to the explanation offered by the applicant concerning her failure to attend court and defend the case,   the deponent argues that there is no way the applicant    could have mistaken the succession cause with the   current case because she is  not a party to the succession   cause (Nyeri Succession Cause No. 658 of 2013).

6. The deponent admits that the parties to this dispute tried    out of court negotiations but contends that there being no    consent recorded in court concerning the said  negotiations, the applicant cannot be heard to say that she   was under the impression that the matter was amicably   settled out of court.

7. Arguing that there appears to have been no   communication between the applicant and his advocate,      the deponent contends that the apparent lack of   communication between the applicant and her advocate is   an indication that the applicant had abandoned the suit on   realising that she did not have a case against the   respondent.

8. The deponent further contends that review does not lie  against a judgement.

9. In reply to the issues raised in the respondent’s affidavit,the applicant filed the further affidavits he swore on 13th    October, 2014 in which she reiterates her contention that she is a wife of Daniel Wahome Ndabi and that the suit    had been amicably settled at the time the judgment was   entered. In that affidavit, the applicant accuses the   respondent of having concealed material facts to the court and urges the court not to punish her on account of    mistakes of  her advocates.

Submissions on behalf of the applicant

10. On behalf of the applicant, reference is made to Section  80of the Civil Procedure Act; Order 45 Rule 1; Order 12  Rule 7 of the Civil Procedure Rules and several decided  cases and submitted that inclusion of properties belonging     to Shelmith Wahome in the judgmet is an error apparent on the face of the record. It is clarified that the applicant    only occupies the suit property. The trial judge is said to       have appreciated that under Section 28 of the Land   Registration Act, 2012 spousal interest is an overriding   interest to registered land.

11. It is explained that owing to none attendance of the   applicant to court when the matter came up for hearing,    the court failed to make a finding in the applicant’s favour.

12. Pointing out that reasons for none attendance have been provided and that the court was not informed of the alleged   out of court settlement of the dispute, it is submitted that   owing to the history of the suit property and the nature of  the applicant’s claim to the suit property, it is only fair and    just that the judgment be set aside.

Submissions on behalf of the respondent

13. On behalf of the respondent, it is submitted that the  applicant failed, refused and/or neglected to attend court   despite having been notified about the hearing. No attempt    was made to move the court before judgment was delivered. The applicant has been indolent, for instance   she failed to comply with Order 11, for that reason, it is   submitted that from the conduct of the applicant, the only  reasonable conclusion that can be made from the     applicant’s conduct is that she had lost interest. Further     that, most of the issues and grounds raised in the   application were settled by the court vide the judgement sought to be set aside. It is reiterated that the reasons  given by applicant for none attendance of court for hearing    are not convincing.

14. With regard to the alleged none disclosure of material   facts, it is submitted that there is no evidence of none   disclosure of material facts tendered.

15. On propriety of the application, it is pointed out that the   applicant has not extracted and annexed the decree   sought to be reviewed and based on the authority of YusufKifuma v. Equity Bank of Kenya Limited & Another(2015) e KLR submitted that failure to extract and annex  the decree to be reviewed rendered the application fatally  defective. In Yusuf Kifuma v. Equity Bank of KenyaLimited & Another (2015) e KLR  it was held:-

“...Order or ruling being reviewed must be attached...failure to do so is fatal as was decided in      Orchid Pharmacy Limited v. Southern Credit   Corporation Limited & 2 others (2015)e KLR.”

It is further submitted that the applicant has not satisfied  the requirements for review.

Analysis and determination

16. Whereas the applicant seeks to review and/or set aside   the judgment delivered on 4th July, 2014 and all consequential orders issued against her and her family    concerning the suit property, it is not in dispute that she did  not extract and annex a copy of the decree sought to be   reviewed as by law required. The question to answer   concerning the applicant’s failure to extract and annex the    decree sought to be reviewed to the application is whether  it rendered the application fatally defective as contended  by the respondent.

17. There is divided opinion on the effect of failure by an  applicant to extract and annex the decree sought to be   reviewed to the application for review. In a majority of the   cases, the opinion is that failure to extract and annex the decree sought to be reviewed to the application, renders  the application fatally defective. In this regard see the   following cases:-

a).  Yusuf Kifuma v. Equity Bank of Kenya Limited & Another (2015) eKLR;

b). Titus Mulandi Gitonga v. B.O (a minor suing through his mother & next

friend SNO (2016) e KLR;

c).Suleiman Murunga v.Nilestar Holdings Limited and   another (2015) eKLR

d).Emkus Company Ltd v. Charles Asikowa Okolo    (2014) eKLR

18. In the above cited cases, the courts were categorial that  failure to extract and annex the decree sought to be reviewed to an application for review renders the   application for review fatally defective. There is, however,    an emerging jurisprudence, based on the overriding  objective of the court, under Article 159 of the Constitution    and Sections 1A and 3A of the Civil Procedure Act, to the  effect that failure to extract and annex the decree sought to be reviewed, in as far as the court is able to discern what   is sought to be reviewed and that no prejudice is   occasioned on the respondent, is not fatal to an application    for review. In this regard see the cased of Eustace Mutegi    Murungi & another v. Agrivine Kaburi Njoka (2016) e   KLR and  Abdullahi Mohamud v. Mohammud Kahiye (2015) e KLR.

19. In the case of  Abdullahi Mohamud v. Mohammud   Kahiye(supra)Aburili J., observed:-

“The case law relating to review of judgments is abun    dant. In Nuh Nassir Abdi Vs Ali Wario & 2 Others(2013) eKLR, the Court held that a decision whether or   not to vary, set aside or review earlier orders is an ex ercise of judicial discretion and the Court ought only  to exercise such discretions if to do so would serve a useful purpose.

Therefore, on the first issue of whether the application  as presented without an extract order or decree is fa     tally defective, the case of Stephen Boro Gitiha Vs  Family Finance Building Society & 3 Others Civil AppealNairobi 263/2009 is relevant. In that case, the  Court held that:-

“The overriding objective overshadows all technicali ties, precedents, rules and actions which are in con flict with and whatever is in conflicts with it must give   way. A new dawn has broken forth and we are chal     lenged to reshape the legal landscape to satisfy the   needs of our time. The Court must warn the litigants   and counsel that the Courts are now on the driving seat of justice and the Courts have a new call to use    the overriding objective to remove all the cobwebs   hitherto experimented in the civil process and to weed    out as far as is practicable the scourge of the civil   process starting with unacceptable levels of delay and    cost in order to achieve resolution of disputes in a   just, fair and expeditious manner. If the often talked of backlog of cases is littered with similar matters, the  challenge to the Courts is to use the new broom” of  overriding objective to bring cases to finality, by de   clining to hear unnecessary interlocutory application and instead to adjudicate on the principle issues in a      full hearing if possible.

In this case, the plaintiff’s counsel did annex copy of  the judgment which is sought to be reviewed. The ex     traction of a decree or order sought to be reviewed no   doubt stems from the judgment and is a purely  procedural omission which should not be used to   impede access to justice. Furthermore, Section 99 of   the Civil Procedure Act gives latitude to this Court to amend judgments, decree or orders. It states

Clerical or arithmetical mistakes in judgments, decree    or orders or errors arising therein from any accidental slip or omission, may at any time be corrected by the   Court either of its own motion or on the application of    any of the parties.”

Therefore, failure to extract decree in this case is notfatal to an application for review. I am not persuaded by the cases cited by the Defendant, which cases were decided before the enactment of Sections 1A and 1Bof the Civil Procedure Act and Article 159 (2) (d) of the  Constitution of Kenya, 2010, which enactments requirethe Courts to administer justice “without undue regardto procedural technicalities,”and especially, where inthe omission like the one in the instant case is notdemonstrated to occasion any prejudice or injustice to the defendant,  and which prejudice cannot beade  quatelycompensated by an award of costs. This is not to say that Article 159, (2) (d) of the Constitution was meant to aid in the overthrow or destruction of rules ofprocedure and or to create an anarchical free-for all in the administration of justice.As was held in the case of Nicholas Kiptoo Arap Korir Salat Vs IEBC & 6 Others[2013] eKLR by Kiage JA,that Courts must neverpro  videsuccor and cover to parties who exhibit scantre  spectfor rules and timelines which make the processof judicial adjudication and determination fair, just,certain and even handed….”(Emphasis supplied)

However, the Supreme Court in the case of RailaOdinga & 5 Others Vs IEBC  & 3 Others Petition 5/2013SC [2013] eKLR, held that Article 159 (2) (d) of the Con stitution is not a panacea for all  procedural shortfalls, …it is plain to us that Article 159(2) (d) is applicable on    a case to case basis.”

Having examined and considered the matter herein anxiously, I am of the view that this is a proper case   where omission to extract and annex a decree to an   application for review will not occasion any injustice to the defendant, without overthrowing the rules and            procedures since they guide the Court and parties in    obtaining justice.

This Court as an agency of the legal processes of  justice is called upon and appreciates all the relevant   circumstances and the requirements of a particular case, and to conscientiously determine the best cause.     I am convinced that this is one of the cases where a Court can disregard procedural technicalities in favour  of substantive justice, having regard to all relevant cir  cumstances obtaining in this case. For the above  reasons, I dismiss the defendant’s objection that  failure to annex copy of decree sought to be reviewed   renders this application fatally defective.

I therefore proceed to determine the merits of the   prayer for review of judgment of the Hon. Waweru Judge delivered on 24th October, 2014, on special  damages having already laid down the applicable law.”

20. Having read and considered the above cited decisions, I  am persuaded by the emerging jurisprudence to the effect that failure to extract the decree sought to be reviewed   merely renders an application for review defective. Whether the defect renders the application fatally defective, in my view, depends on the effect of the defect on the court’s ability to fairly and effectually determine the questions in issue. If despite the failure by the applicant to  extract the decree and annex it to the application the court   is able to fairly and justly determine the issues raised, then   the failure to extract and annex the decree should be  treated as a mere procedural technicality which should, by dint of the provisions of Article 159 of the Constitution and  Sections 1A and 3Aof the Civil Procedure Act, not be used to deny litigants access to substantive justice.

21. In applying the foregoing principles to this case, I am of the view that the issues raised by the applicant are discernable from the pleadings. The respondent has not demonstrated that failure to extract and annex the order sought to be   reviewed has occasioned on him any prejudice. In view of  the foregoing, I find and hold that failure to extract and annex the order sought to be reviewed did not, in the circumstances of this case, render the application fatally  defective.

22. Turning to the merits of the application, in order to justify the Court in granting an application for review sought by   the applicant under the provisions of Order 45 Rule 1(b) of the Civil Procedure Rules, certain requirements must be    met. These are:-

(1) The applicant must not have appealed from the  decision sought to be reviewed. In this regard, see     Order 45 Rule 1(a) which provides as follows:

“45(1) Any person considering himself aggrieved      —

by a decree or order from which an appeal is al  lowed, but from which no appeal has been    preferred.

(2)  The application must be based on

(a)    discovery of new and important matter  or evidence which, after the exercise of       due diligence, was not within the applicant’s knowledge or could not be    produced by the applicant at the time when the decree was passed or the    order made, or

(b)some mistake or error apparent on the   face of the record,

(c)    or any other sufficient reason,

(3)the application must be made to the court  which passed the decree or made the order without unreasonable delay.

23. The foregoing provisions are based on Section 80 of the Civil Procedure Act, Cap 21 Laws of Kenya, which    provides as follows:

“Any person who considers himself aggrieved—

(a)  by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed by this Act, but from which no appeal   has been preferred; or

(b)  by a decree or order from which no appeal is allowed by this Act, may apply for a review of   judgment to the court which passed the decree  or made the order, and the court may make such      order thereon as it thinks fit.”

24. Unlike Order 45 of the Civil Procedure Rules which prescribe the conditions upon which an application for  review may be granted, Section 80 of the Civil Procedure Act, gives the Court wide and unfettered jurisdiction in the  exercise of its powers of review and does not prescribe the   conditions upon which the power may be exercised.

25. In the case of Official Receiver and ProvisionalLiquidator Nyayo Bus Service Corporation vs.       Firestone EA (1969) Limited Civil Appeal No. 172 of1998the Court of Appeal held that Section 80 of the Civil  Procedure Act enables a court to make such orders on   review application which it thinks just so that the words “or any sufficient reason” as used in Order 44 [now Order 45]   Rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Rules are not ejusdem  generis with the words “discovery of new and important matter” etc. and “some mistake or error apparent on the  face of the record” and that those words extend the scope   of the review. Accordingly, the said court held that there is no reason why any other sufficient reason need be   analogous with the other grounds in the Order because   clearly Section 80 of the Civil Procedure Act confers an   unfettered right to apply for review and so the words “for   any sufficient reason” need not be analogous with the    other grounds specified in the Order. See

26. In Republic v Anti-Counterfeit Agency & 2 others Ex-   Parte Surgipharm Limited [2014] eKLR,it was ob served:-

“In dealing with the delegated legislation made under the   Act Farrell, J in Sardar Mohamed vs. Charan SinghNand Singh & Another HCCA No. 51 of 1959 [1959] EA  793 was of the following view, with which view, I respect    fully associate myself:-

“In terms section 80 of the Civil Procedure Ordinance confers an unfettered right to apply for review in the circumstances specified and an unfettered discretion in the court to make such order as it thinks fit. The omission of any qualifying words at the beginning of the section appears to have been deliberate, since the section is obviously based on section 114 of the Indian Code, which is qualified, and similar qualifying words appear in a number of the other sections. Under section 81(1) of the Ordinance the Rules Committee has power to make rules “not inconsistent with the provisions of this Ordinance”. If a rule is inconsistent it is to that extentultra vires;and if the Ordinance confers unfettered power, a rule which limits the exercise of the power isprima facieinconsistent with the Ordinance andultra vires.If, however, a rule is capable of two constructions, one consistent with the provisions of the Ordinance, and one inconsistent, the court should lean to the construction which is consistent on the principle"út res magis valeat quam pereat”.If the words “or for any other sufficient reason” can be given a liberal construction, there is nothing in Order 44, rule 1(1) in any way inconsistent with section 80 of the Ordinance. The paragraph is perhaps unnecessary, but serves to make it clear that at least the two grounds specified are such as would entitle an aggrieved party to apply for review”.

27. In applying the foregoing legal principles to the   circumstances of this case, it is clear from the pleadings and the submissions filed in this case that the applicant did  not appeal against the decision sought to be reviewed. There was no in ordinate delay in making the application   for review, as the application  was made barely three (3) weeks after the decision sought to be reviewed was made.

28. On whether the applicant has satisfied the conditions setunderOrder 45 Rule 1for being granted the orders    sought, whereas the applicant contends that there is    an    error apparent on the face of the court’s record; having    considered the reasons given for that contention to wit that     the court should not have dealt with some of the properties  because the applicant was in occupation, I find the alleged   mistake    to be incapable of amounting to the error  contemplated  underOrder 45of the Civil Procedure Rules. I say this because the error contemplated in that  section of the law does not require evidence to prove. In  that regard see the case ofAnthony Gachara Ayub v.    Francis Mahinda Thinwa(2014) eKLR where the Court of    Appeal stated:-

“In the case of Draft and Develop Engineers Limited – v- National Water Conservation and Pipeline Corporation, Civil Case No. 11 of 2011, the High Court correctly stated that:

“An error apparent on the face of the record cannot be defined precisely or exhaustively, there being an element of indefiniteness inherent in its very nature, and it must be left to be determined judicially on the facts of each case.  There is a real distinction between a mere erroneous decision and an error apparent on the face of the record.  Where an error on a substantial point of law stares one in the face, and there could reasonably be no two opinions, a clear case of error apparent on the face of the record would be made out.  An error which has to be established by a long drawn process of reasoning or on points where there may conceivably be two opinions can hardly be said to be an error apparent on the face of the record.  Again, if a view adopted by the court in the original record is a possible one, it cannot be an error apparent on the face of the record even though another view was also possible.  Mere error or wrong view is certainly no ground for a review although it may be for an appeal”. (Emphasis supplied).

29. In the instant case, I am of the view that it cannot be   reasonably said that there is an error apparent on the face of the court’s record because the issues that touch on the   alleged error are questions of fact that ought to have been  brought to the attention of the court for the court to con  sider and make a determination thereon.

30. Besides the contention that there is an error apparent on the face of the court’s record, the applicant contends that  she is entitled to the orders sought, on account of what Order 45 categorises as any other sufficient reason.

31. Under this ground, the applicant has flanked the following   issues in support of her claim:-

1. that she is in occupation of the suit property;

2. that she has legally recognised interest in the suit property (is a spouse of Shelmith Wagaki (deceased), the previous owner of the suit property;

3. that failure to attend court and defend the case was caused by a mistake on the part of her advocate; and

4. that the failure to attend court and defend the case has been properly explained.

32. From the respondent’s response to the above contention, it is not in dispute that the applicant is in occupation of the   suit property and that there were negotiations to amicably   settle the dispute out of court. Whereas there is no   evidence that the dispute had been amicably settled; I am  persuaded that the applicant’s failure to attend court and  defend the suit was caused by her advocates.

33. From the conduct of the parties prior to the entry of the judgment sought to be reviewed or set aside, to wit the   parties were negotiating the dispute with the view of   settling it out of court, I hold the view that in the absence of  any evidence to the effect that the negotiations had hit a   snag, and given the fact that the court was not informed   that the negotiations had flopped, allowing the judgment to  stand on account of the mistake by the applicant’s advocate may occasion unnecessary hardship on the   applicant.

34. In view of the foregoing and cognisant of the principles that guide the court in reviewing or setting aside it’s orders enunciated in the case of Patel Vs East Africa Cargo  Handling Services Limited (1974) EA 75 at page 76  cited in Lochab Bros. Limited V Peter Kaluma T/A Lu mumba Mumma & Kaluma Advocates & 2 others (2013)  eKLR at page 4 thus:-

“There are no limits or restrictions on the judge’s discretion except that if he does vary the judgment he does so on such terms as may be just… The main concern of the court is to do justice to the parties and the court will not impose conditions on itself to fetter the wide discretion given to it by rules;”,I am inclined to allow the application herein.

35. As the applicant, through her advocate, was responsible   for the circumstances that led to filing of this application I   condemn her to pay the costs of the application.

Orders accordingly.

Dated, signed and delivered at Nyeri this 10th day of August,  2016.

L N WAITHAKA

JUDGE

In the presence of:

N/A for the defendant/applicant

N/A for the plaintiff/respondent

Court assistant - Rahab