Republic v Director of Survey, Chief Registrar of Titles & National Land Commission Ex-Parte Sayani Investments Limited [2016] KEHC 1374 (KLR) | Renewal Of Leases | Esheria

Republic v Director of Survey, Chief Registrar of Titles & National Land Commission Ex-Parte Sayani Investments Limited [2016] KEHC 1374 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

JUDICIAL REVIEW DIVISION

MISCELLANEOUS CIVIL APPLICATION NO.  313 OF 2014

REPUBLIC.................................................................APPLICANT

VERSUS

DIRECTOR OF SURVEY.................................1ST RESPONDENT

CHIEF REGISTRAR OF TITLES......................2ND RESPONDENT

THE NATIONAL LAND COMMISSION.............3RD RESPONDENT

SAYANI INVESTMENTS LIMITED.............EX-PARTE APPLICANT

JUDGMENT

1. The exparte applicant in this case is Sayani  Investments Ltdand is the  registered  owner and in actual occupation of all that property described as LR No. 209/923, 209/924 and 209/925 “the suit property,”and a commercial building   erected thereon commonly known as Caxton House.  The three leases took effect   from 1st January 1911 and the terms for each of the leases were to expire on 1st January 2010.

2. In 2007, and prior to the expiry of the leases in issue, the exparte applicant applied for their renewal or extension.  According to the exparte applicant’s  Notice  of  Motion dated  22nd  August   2014, the  grounds  in support  thereof, the chamber summons  for application for leave  to apply  and statutory  statement as  well  as the verifying   affidavit   sworn by  Nazlin Jetha  on  7th August  2014, the exparte applicant complied  with all the  conditions  for renewal of the leases  and so it  embarked  on following  up on the issuance  of the  new  grants.  However, the original title files vanished from the Lands Registry at Ardhi House.  The  exparte  applicant’s founding  director  also died on  12th March  2012  hence there  was delay  in the issuance  of the grants.

3. Strangely, as alleged  by the exparte  applicant, the Director  of Surveys  by  a letter dated   2nd  July  2013    informed the applicant that  the applicant  could not  be issued with the Deed  Plans   for the suit properties   because  the three parcels    had allegedly  been amalgamated  into LR  No. 209/18869 and another  Deed Plan  issued in respect of  the suit properties.

4. Another  letter dated  31st March  2014   to the applicant   by the Director  of Surveys  informed the applicant that the  earlier  letter of  2nd July  2014 was typed  erroneously  and that the  correct Deed   Plan was 356256 amalgamated  into LR 209/20737.  It  followed that  fresh grants  were being prepared  to be issued to a  different person from the exparte applicant; without  consulting the  exparte applicant  and that  indeed    the Deed Plan  356256   was issued   to a stranger.

5. That  despite  repeated  demands, the respondents had refused and or  neglected  to exercise their statutory  duty to issue  the renewal of  or extension of the grants  or leases  hence, the institution of  these proceedings  seeking  Judicial  Review  Orders of Certiorari, Mandamus  and Prohibition vide the notice of  motion dated  22nd  August   2014.

6. The exparte  applicant obtained leave  to commence  these Judicial Review   proceedings   vide  leave granted  on  13th  August  2014  by Honourable  Lady Justice  M. Ngugi.

7. The Judicial Review application by  way of notice of  motion  was  filed on  26th August  2014   within  the  14 days  granted.  The main prayers sought are:

1) An order of Certiorari to remover into the High Court for purposes of being quashed Deed Plan No.  356256 issued  by the Director of Surveys for the consolidation/ amalgamation  of all the  properties   known as LR Numbers  209/923,  209/924,  and  209/925  together  into LR  209/20737;

2) An order of Mandamus to compel the National Land Commission and the Chief Registrar of Titles to issue grants to the applicant in respect of the suit properties for a renewed term of   99 years.

3) An order of Prohibition to stop the National Land Commission and  Chief   Registrar  of Titles   from  issuing grants  in respect  of the suit properties or a grant  in respect  of LR Number  209/20737  to any other person  or persons   other than the  applicant, or dealing  with the suit  properties in any manner  that will  deprive  the applicant  proprietary  rights and  interest  in the suit properties.

4) Costs of the Judicial Review proceedings.

5) Any other further and consequential orders and or directions that may be given.

8. The facts  and grounds  of the exparte  applicant’s claim are found in the grounds, statutory statement and the verifying affidavit of  Nazlin Jetha  the  director of  the exparte  applicant  company Sayani  Investments Limited.

9. In a summary, the exparte  applicant states that  it is the  registered  owner of the suit  properties  and is  in   occupation thereof, with a commercial  building  erected   thereon called   Caxton House and which the  exparte  applicant  has over  the years been  leasing  to several  tenants.

10. That the term for the  respective  suit properties/leases  is  99 years  from  1st  January 1911 hence the leases  were  to expire on 1st January 2010 but that  prior to such expiry, the exparte  applicant did  in 2007  apply for renewal/extension  of the leases   and vide two letters dated  14th January 2008  the  then  Commissioner of Lands  did confirm  that the leases would  be renewed  for a further  99 years.  That the applicant  duly complied  with the conditions  for renewal  of the leases  and submitted all the required documents  to the  then Commissioner of Lands  for Issuance of  the new  grant.

11. However, that the original  file   went  missing   and vide  letter  dated  31st March  2014  the Director  of Surveys  informed  the exparte  applicant  that the suit  property  had  by Deed  Plan   No. 356256  been amalgamated  into LR  209/20737  which amalgamation  was done without  the consent  of the exparte  applicant   and the new Deed  Plan  issued to a stranger.

12. It is  averred   that the National Land Commission  and the Chief Registrar  of Titles  are under  a duty to  renew  leases and issue new  grants to the applicant  but that  they have  refused  to do so, which refusal, according  to the   exparte  applicant, is an  abuse of statutory   powers and duties  and hence, malafides.

13. The applicant  further avers that  it has a  legitimate expectation  to continue enjoying  proprietary rights  and interests  and the benefits  of the investments  in the said  properties  which will be jeopardized  unless  the  court intervenes by issuing  Judicial Review orders  of Certiorari, Mandamus  and Prohibition  against  the respondents, to ensure that  they do not  misuse  or abuse  their statutory  powers, and  in the interest  of justice.

14. The respondents, despite being  served with  the  notice of motion  for Judicial Review orders, they neither  entered  appearance  nor filed  any grounds  of opposition or replying  affidavit  to the notice  of motion.

15. The exparte applicant therefore filed submissions in urging the Judicial Review orders sought.  The  submissions dated 16th June  2015 and filed in court  on 17th June   2013  mirror the grounds, statutory  statement  and  verifying  affidavit depositions   as filed by the   exparte  applicant.

16. On the applicable  law, the  exparte  applicant’s  counsel submitted  that at  all material   times  to these   proceedings  the suit  properties  were registered under   the Government   Lands Act   and that the then Commissioner of Lands  was  responsible  for the statutory obligations on land and as public officer, the Commissioner  of Lands was charged with the performance  of public acts   and duties   pursuant  to Sections  3,5  and  7 of the Government   Lands Act.(repealed).

17. That Section 3 of Government Lands Act empowered  the Commissioner  of Lands   to make   grants or dispositions  of any  estates, interests or  rights over  un-alienated  Government  Land  as  defined  under Section  2 of Government   Lands Act.  That  the  three parcels  of land subject matter of these proceedings were  private  properties  belonging to the applicant  by lawful acquisition  and that  the exparte   applican’s  right to   the suit  properties is protected under Article 40  of the Constitution, which Article expressly  prohibits  the State from depriving a person  of property  of any description  or any interest  in, right  over, property  of any  description,  unless the deprivation results from  an acquisition in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution  or is  for public purposes and  carried out in accordance with the Constitution.  The exparte  applicant further  submitted that the  National Land Commission having succeeded the Commissioner of Lands  following  the repeal of the  Government Land Act  on 2nd  May  2012   with the  enactment  of National Land Commission Act  and the Land Registration Act, the functions of the Commissioner  of Lands    were  transferred  to the National Land  Commission which include  renewal  of leases to the exparte   applicant’s  pieces of land. In the premises, that the respondent could not re-alienate the suit parcels but to renew the  leases  and issue  fresh grants to the applicant.

18. Further, that even if the said lands were available for re-alienation, Section  13  of the Land  Act  stipulates   that  where  any land  reverts to the Government  after expiry of the leasehold tenure, the National Land Commission has  a statutory duty to first offer to the immediate  past holder of the  leasehold interest  pre-emptive  rights  to allocation of the land.  Reliance was placed on Halsbury’sLaws of England 4th Edition VOL 1(1) paragraph 59.

19. It was  also the  submissions   by the applicant’s  counsel  that the respondent’s  acts  and  omissions  are  illegal  in that  under Article  67 of the  Constitution, Section 108  of the  Land Registration Act and  Section  30  of the  National Land Commission  Act, it  was  not open  to the respondents to purport   to re-alienate   the suit properties  by purporting  to issue Deed  Plan  356256  or a grant   in respect of  suit  properties to any  other person(s)  other than the  applicant hence  the  Deed Plan  356256  issued for  LR  209/20737  being  an amalgamation  of the three titles   to any  other person  other than  the applicant  is void  ab initio.

20. Reliance   was placed  on the case  of  Insurance  Company of East Africa  for East  Africa Ltd  Vs Attorney  General  & Others Mombasa  HCC 151/97  (unreported)  where the court( Waki J (as he then  was)  upheld the  proposition  that once  a parcel of land has been alienated, it was not open for the Commissioner of Land to re-alienate the same and any  such purported alienation is void  ab initio.

21. The  applicant also relied on the decisions in Kenya Ports Authority  V Commissioner of  Land  & Another  Mombasa  HCC  124/2001 LLR 3367; and  Wreck  Motor  Enterprises  v Commissioner  of Lands &  3  Others  Nairobi  CA  71/1997( unreported) where  the Court of Appeal  held that  title  to land comes  into existence  after issuance  of the letter  of allotment, meeting  the  conditions stated  in such letter  and  actual issuance  thereafter of title  document  pursuant  to provisions  held. ( see also Dr Joseph  N.K. Songok  V Justice  Moijo Ole Keiwa   & 4 Others Capp No.  Nairobi 60 of 1997) page 6   of that judgment.

22. It submitted that any attempts   by the respondents  to issue  grants to any other person is ultra vires the above cited provisions of the law and therefore courts of law must  intervene  to ensure  that the powers   of public  decision making bodies are exercised  lawfully, so that such a  body will not act  lawfully  if it  acts ultra vires or outside the limits of its jurisdiction.

23. Further reliance was placed on Republicvs Kajiado Land DisputesTribunal, Senior Resident Magistrate’s Court  Kajiado & 3 Others  HCC 689/2001 where Nyamu  J  (as he ten was) applied  the principles set out in the Anismic Vs Foreigh  Compensation [1969] 2 AC  147  that  out of  nothing comes  nothing.

24. It  was  also submitted   that the  respondents   acted  malafides  and in abuse of statutory  powers in that although  the applicant acted   well in advance  of expiry of the said leases by applying  for their renewal  in  2007, which  application for renewal  was approved,  the files  relating  to the suit properties  went missing from the  offices of the Commissioner of  Lands, hence the   respondents are estopped  from issuing  the grant  to any other  person.  Reliance   was placed  on Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Edition VOL 16(2) paragraph 1082and Commissioner  of Lands  Vs Kunste  Hotel Ltd  KLR  [E& L] 249 (CA) where  it  was held, inter alia, that the exercise  of discretion by the Commissioner  of Lands affected  the  legal rights  of the applicant.  It was   therefore judicial in nature   and so the Commissioner of Lands   was obliged to hear all those who were likely to be affected by his decisions.

25. The applicant further submitted  that  it had  a legitimate expectation  of being issued   with new  grants  to the suit  properties   for the renewed   terms  as  was held  in Karume   Investments  Ltd  V Kenya  Shell Limited  & The Commissioner of Lands   CA 201/2008; Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Edition VOL 1(1) paragraph 92,that  where the Government approves  of the renewal of the applicant’s  leases, then the  respondents did not  have to  secretly  purport  to issue  a grant  to another person  other than the applicant  as  that would  be dishonest, malicious  and a deliberate improper   purpose  and motive  of depriving  the applicant  its legally   acquired  property   hence   subject to  review  by this court.

26. Further reliance was placed on RepublicVs Commissioner of Cooperatives Exparte Kirinyaga Tea Growers [1999] 1EA 245 where it was held that:

“Itis s axiomatic that statutory powers can only be exercised validly if they are exercised reasonably.  No statute ever allows anyone on whom it confers a power to exercise such power arbitrarily capriciously or in bad faith.”

27. The applicant  also relied  on  Republic V The Minister  for Local  Government & Another   2008 e KLR citingRepublic Vs Ministry of Planning & Another Exparte Professor  Mwangi HCC Miscellaneous  Application No.  1769/03 where the court quashed a decision of a statutory body for failure to comply with the legislative purpose.  The applicant prayed for the Judicial Review orders of Certiorari, Mandamus and Prohibition to issue   as prayed, in the interest of justice.

Determination

28. I have carefully  considered  the Notice of Motion  dated  22nd  August  2014 and all the grounds and accompanying statutory statement, verifying  affidavit, annextures  and  detailed  useful  submissions by the exparte  applicant’s  counsel supported  by  constitutional provisions, statutory  as well as case  law decided.

29. To succeed in an application for Judicial Review, an applicant   must demonstrate that the decision or indecision complained of is tainted with illegality, irrationally and procedural impropriety.  Illegality  manifests itself   when the decision making  authority  commits   an error  of law  in the process  of making  that  decision  complained of.  Instances of illegality in decision making include acting ultra vires, or contrary to the statutory provisions   or established principles of law.

30. On the other hand, irrationality  manifests   itself  when there is such  gross unreasonableness in the decision  taken or act   done that  no  reasonable   authority, addressing  itself  to the facts  and the  law before  it, would have  reached   such  a decision.  In other words, a decision is irrational or unreasonable if it defies   logic and acceptable moral standards.  Procedural  impropriety  occurs when  there is  failure  on the part of  the decision  making  authority to  act fairly  in the process of  decision making.

31. Unfairness  manifests  itself  in the failure to adhere to the Rules of Natural Justice  or to act  with procedural  fairness  towards the  person affected or to  be affected  by the decision.  It may also  involve failure to comply with the procedural rules expressly set out in a statute or regulation by which the authority exercises jurisdiction to make a decision, as  was held in Pastoli  V Kabale  District  Local Government  Council and   Others [2008]  2 EA  300.

32. The issues for  determination  in this   Judicial Review   notice of motion  is whether the exparte  applicant is  entitled  to  the Judicial Review  orders of Certiorari, Mandamus  and Prohibition  as sought.

33. Section 8(1) of the Law Reform  Act  Cap  26  Laws of Kenya  denies  the High  Court  the power  to issue  orders of Mandamus,  Prohibition  and Certiorari  while exercising  civil  or criminal  jurisdictions.  It follows  that in exercising  the power  to issue  or not to issue  Judicial Review  Orders, the court  is neither  exercising  civil jurisdiction  nor  criminal  jurisdiction.  It would be   exercising   special   jurisdiction.  Judicial Review is concerned not with the merits of the decision being challenged but with the decision making process.  Its  purpose is to  ensure that the individual is given fair treatment by the authority  to which  he has been subjected  ( see  Commissioner  of Lands   Vs  Kunste  Hotel  Ltd(supra).

34. Applying  the above  principles  to these proceedings, the exparte  applicant  avers that it is the lawful owner/occupier  and registered  proprietor  of the three suit properties  LR No. 209/923, 209/924 and  209/925   on which  a commercial building  called  Caxton House  is constructed  and occupied  by tenants.  That the  leases  for   the said  properties expired  in 2010  but before  such expiry,  the applicant  sought for  renewal of the leases  when   they  expired and that vide  letters  dated  13th August 2007, the respondents  through the Director  of  Physical  Planning  approved  the  renewal thereof after inspection  of the properties.  By  letter dated  4th December  the Commissioner  of Lands   approved   extension of the leases   on LR  209/923 and  925, 924  for  a term of 50 years from 1st December  2007  on conditions that  the applicant:

1) Surrenders the original title in exchange for a new   one.

2) Submits a new Deed Plan duly signed and sealed by the Director of Surveys.

3) Pays legal fees and enhanced annual rent to be determined by a government valuer.

4) Payment of shs 5,000 being approval fees.

35. Vide letter dated 14th January 2008 to the applicant, the  Commissioner of Lands  communicated  that the valuation  for the said  plots  had been  done and new  ground  rent  given  for LR  209/923 with effect from 1st December  2007 as shs  480,934/-  inclusive   of conveyancing fees, rent, registration fees, stamp  duty  and approval  fees; and  valuations for Plot   LR 209/924 was shs 1522,480 whereas valuation for plot  LR 209/925  was shs   404,300.

36. On 12th March  2010,  the Director  of the applicant  company  died  aged  92    years  as per death  certificate   issued  on 7th April  2010, cause of death  being cardiac  failure  due to  cardiomyopathy.

37. Then on 2nd July 2013 the Director of Surveys informed Mr S.O.  Ambani  a licensed  surveyor  tasked by the applicant  that the three  parcels  had earlier  been  amalgamated  into LR  209/18869  ( Deed Plan   291430) and extension  of lease  done.  It is however not indicated in whose favour the lease  was extended and or who made the request for such amalgamation.

38. The Director  of Surveys  however  wrote another  letter  dated   31st May  2014   to Mr Ambani, further  to the letter  of  2nd July  2013  after nearly  8 months, indicating   that  the earlier letter  of 2nd  July 2013  had typing  errors   regarding  the three  amalgamated parcels and the Deed Plan, giving LR  209/20737 (DP No.  356256).

39. According  to the exparte  applicant,  the file  went missing  after the  approval for  extension of the leases  was given by the Commissioner  of Lands in 2007.

40. By letter of  15th April  2014  the  applicant’s  advocates Kaplan &Stratton  complained to the Acting Chief  Land Registrar, Ardhi  House  and  by a letter of  24th July  2014 the  Director of Surveys  responded to the effect  that the matter  was being investigated  and the applicant’s  counsel’s  would be  informed of  the outcome  of the investigations  as soon as possible.  Todate, there has been no communication on what transpired and or whether   the Deed Plan 356256 had been presented for issuing  of a letter of allotment or new title to any other person.

41. In the intervening period between 2007 and 2014, the constitutional and statutory provisions changed.  It is also not clear   when the amalgamation of the three titles  were done, on whose request and in whose favour.  The Ministry of Lands   has remained silent.

42. All the above matters complained of have not been controverted by the respondents. Albeit  the Judicial Review  application is not opposed, there are certain factors  that the court must   take into  account in granting  Judicial Review   orders sought  since Judicial Review  remedies are discretionary  and the  court may not grant  them in certain  circumstances  even if  the same  are  merited.  In Halsbury’s  Laws of England   4th Edition  VOL  1(1)  paragraph  12  page  270, it is   stated as  follows:

“ The  remedies   of quashing  orders  ( formerly known  as  orders of  certiorari), prohibiting  orders ( formerly  known as  prohibition),  mandatory orders  ( formerly known as  orders of mandamus)……are all discretionary.  The court has a wide discretion whether to grant relief at all and if so, what form of relief to grant.  In deciding  whether  to grant  relied  the court will  take  into account  the conduct of the  party applying, and consider  whether  it has not  been such  as to disentitle  him  to relief.  Undue  delay,  unreasonable  or unmeritorious conduct, acquiescence in the irregularity  complained  of or waiver  to the right  to object  may also  result  in the court  declining  to grant  relief.  Another consideration   in deciding whether or not   to grant relief   is the effect of doing so.  Other  factors which  may be  relevant  include  whether the grant of the relief or remedy  is unnecessary  or futile, whether  practical problems, including  administrative  chaos  and public  inconvenience  and the effect   on third parties  who deal  with the body in question, would  result from the order  and  whether the form of  the order would  require  close supervision by the court  or be  incapable of practical  fulfillment.  The court   has an ultimate discretion whether to set aside decisions   and   may decline to do so in the public interest, not withstanding   that it holds and declares the decision to have been made unlawfully.  Account of demands of good public administration may lead to a refusal of relief.  Similarly, where public bodies are involved the court may  allow  contemporary  decisions  to take their   course, considering the complaint and  intervening  if at  all, later  and in retrospect by declaratory orders.”

43. An in responding to prayers for Judicial Review  remedies, the court  should always  opt for  a lower  rather than  the higher  risk of injustice.( see  Suleiman V Amboseli  Resort Limited  [2004] 2 KLR  589).

44. In Municipal Council of Mombasa vs Republic & Umoja Consultants, CA 185/2001, it   was held that:

“Judicial review is concerned with the decision making process, not with the merits of the decision itself.  The court would concern itself  with such  issues as to whether  the decision  makers  had the  jurisdiction, whether  the persons  affected  by the decision were heard   before it   was made  and whether  in making the decision  the  decision maker  took into account  relevant  maters of did  take into  account  irrelevant  matters.  The court  should not  act as  a  Court of  Appeal over the decider  which would   involve  going into  such as whether  there  was   or there  was not sufficient   evidence  to support  the decision.  It is the   duty of the decision maker  to comply with the ……in coming to its decision, and  common sense  and fairness demands that  once  the decision is made, it is  his duty to bring it to  the attention  of those affected  by  it moreso where  the decision  maker  is not a limited  liability  company  created for commercial purposes  but  is it a statutory body which can  do what  is authorized  by the statute  creating   it and in the manner  authorized  by statute.”

45. It is  not in dispute  that the  suit properties  were registered in the name of the applicant on leasehold  basis  for  a term of 99 years  ending  1st January  2010.  It is  also not  in dispute  that  three years  before  the tenure  of the said  leases, the applicant  sought for extension for  a further  term and that the Commissioner of Lands did approve  the renewal of  the leases  for a further 50 years  with effect from   1st December   2007 vide his letter  dated  4th December  2007.  What is surprising    is that after the said approval for renewal of the subject leases, the file relating to the three titles vanished from the lands office.  When it  resurfaced  in 2013   July 2nd, the Director  of Surveys  returned documents (plan F/R 544/9 representing   survey/re-establishment for the  suit properties  with remarks  that the  three parcels had earlier  been  amalgamated  into LR  209/20737 (DP 356256 ( as corrected  vide letter of   31st March  2014) and  extension of lease done.

46. The Director  of Surveys  does not  provide  details  of,  on whose  request  the amalgamation was done  and in whose    favour  the leases  were extended.  Despite  requests  by the applicant  for more information, the Director  of Surveys  and  the Chief  Land  Registrar  were  and  remained  nonresponsive  and todate  they  have not bothered to respond to these Judicial Review  proceedings.

47. In my humble view, the exparte applicant deserved to be treated fairly.  Being the registered owner of the  suit properties, any decision by the Commissioner of Lands  to amalgamate,  re-establish  the titles  or to  re allocate  the plots  to any other   person should  have been  made only  after  according the  exparte applicant a fair hearing, in view of the earlier representations  to the exparte  applicant that  the renewal  of the leases  had been approved  way back  in 2007, which representations the exparte applicant  acted upon by  complying  with all the conditions  for renewal  of the leases.

48. Failure to accord  the applicant a hearing  in my view, was  in flagrant  disregard  of the  assurance  that the suit leases  would be   renewed.

49. In addition, and as correctly  submitted by counsel for the exparte  applicant, Section 3 of the  Governments Lands Act (repealed) but which was then applicable  clearly  provided  that the Commissioner of Lands could only make grants or dispositions of any estates, interests  or rights  over  unalienated  Government land.  Under Section 2 of the said Act, unalienated Government Land   was defined as:

“Land  which is not for  the  time  being  leased  to any other person, or in respect of which the  commissioner has not issued  any letter of allotment.”

50. In the instant situation, the three suit properties were alienated in 1911 when leases were granted to David Goldberg, Richard Mannall, Greater and Ethel Sarah Learn.  The ownership thereof  severally  changed  hands before  the exparte  applicant finally  acquired  titles  thereto  as shown  by the  annexed  copies of indentures  and assignments  exhibited  as NJ1, NJ2 and  NJ3.  In addition, the Commissioner of Lands confirms extending the leases   for 50 years from 1st December 2007.

51. It therefore  follows that  any re-alienation  or deprivation of the exparte  applicant  of the suit   properties   as at  2013   when the decision  on amalgamation and re-alienation  was made, must be  in  compliance   with Article  40 of  the Constitution.  Section 40 of the Constitution expressly guarantees every person the right to own property of any description in any part of the county.

52. Under Article 40(3)  the  Constitution  prohibits  the State from  arbitrary  deprivation of property  unless  such deprivation results   from acquisition  in accordance with the provisions   of the Constitution or for  public purposes  and in accordance   with the Constitution.

53. As the suit  properties  were not  amenable  to any form of  alienation,  what the respondents were  obliged   to do, in their   discretion, was to   issue fresh grants  for the renewed   period of  50 years  from 1st December  2007.  Accordingly, the purported alienation of the suit properties   is ultra vires.

54. Even assuming that the respondents  could re-alienate  the suit properties,  Section 13 of the  Land Act  is clear  that where any land reverts to the Government   after expiry  of the leasehold  tenure, the National Land  Commission is under a statutory  duty  to first  offer  to the  immediate  past holder  of the  leasehold  interest  pre-emptive  rights of allocation of the said land.  Accordingly, I find that  the  purported   renewal  of the expired  lease  to any  other  person without first  according the applicant  an opportunity  to be reallocated  the  lands  which are  fully  developed  is  ultra  vires  the provisions  of the statute.  It  follows  that the  deed plan  356256 for  LR No. 209/20737 being  an amalgamation of 3  suit properties  which  was  done  without   according  the applicant  a hearing  was   done  in breach  of the Rules of Natural  Justice   and therefore  amenable  for quashing.

55. In Insurance  Company  of East Africa  Ltd Vs  Attorney General  & Others   (supra)  Honourable  Waki  J (as he then was) held  that land  once alienated, it  was not  open for  the Commissioner of Lands to re- alienate  the same  and therefore  any purported  alienation  is void  ab initio.

56. Furthermore, in Wreck Motor Enterprises V The Commissioner ofLands & 3 Others (supra).  The  Court of Appeal  held that title  to land  comes  into existence  after  issuance  of the letter of  allotment, meeting  the conditions   stated in such  letter  an actual issuance thereafter of title  document  pursuant  to provisions  held.

57. In this  case, the Commissioner  of Lands  having  approved   the renewal  of the leases  in favour of the exparte  applicant, which  approval  was acted  upon by the applicants, the respondents  are estopped from denying  that the requisite  approval   was given , and  moreso, they  have not  attempted  to deny that such approval  was given  for renewal  of the leases  for a further  50 years.

58. In Commissioner of Lands Vs Kunste Hotels Ltd (supra) the Court of Appeal while dealing with a similar issue to the one at hand observed that:

“ The  appellant     was exercising  his statutory  powers  under the  Government Lands  Act, when  he decided   to allot  the subject  plot to the  interested  party.  The exercise of that discretion clearly affected   the legal rights of Kunste Hotel Ltd.  The exercise  of that  power  was   therefore  judicial  in nature  and he  was therefore  obliged  to hear all  those who  were likely  to be  affected by  his decision ( see Mirugi Kariuki V Attorney  General  CA 70/91 (unreported).  It is our view and we so hold, that the hotel along with the other partiesbefore he decided   to allot the plot to the interested party.  He   was aware if the request   Mr Kagiri had made   in 1976.  Consequently, it does not   lie in the appellant’s  or anybody’s  else’s  mouth  to argue, as counsel   for the interested  party  sought  to do,  that in absence  of  registration the interest Kunste  Hotel seeks  to protest   was nonexistent, and it  was,  therefore  disentitled  to a hearing  before  the plot   was allotted  to the  interested  party.  Rimita J was therefore right in the conclusions he came to and we accordingly affirm his decision and dismiss this appeal with costs.”

59. In the same vein, I find  that  in this case, the Commissioner of Lands  having known and approved the  interests  of the exparte  applicant  herein for  renewal of the leases  to the suit   properties  in  2007,   it  was  incumbent  upon the respondents  herein to consult  the exparte  applicant before deciding  in 2013  or thereabouts , to  re-allienate  and or re- allocate  the suit properties  and  or re-renew  the leases  thereto  in favour  of any other person (s) since  the discretionary  power to renew the leases  clearly  affected  the legal  rights  of the exparte  applicant  hence  the respondents  were obliged  to  hear all those  who were  likely  to be affected by  that exercise  of discretion.

60. In Karume Investments Limited is Kenya Shell Limited & Commissioner of Lands (supra).  The Court of Appeal  following  the case  of James  Joram  Nyaga   & Another  V Attorney  General  2007eKLR  stated that  the  powers  of the Commissioner of Lands  were ministerial  and did not  include  the issuance of land…..but  only limited to executing  the leases.

61. The Court  of Appeal  further found  in the above  Karume  Investments  Ltd case that “ the  respondent  having complied  with the conditions for  extension  of the lease  as  per the letter of approval  by paying all the  charges  required, it  was  unreasonable  for  the Commissioner of Lands  to  grant  such approval  of the lease  to shell, requiring   them to fulfill certain conditions, then turn around  and  impose  new conditions  purely for creating   a  reason for granting  the lease  or letter of  allotment  the  appellant.”

62. Just like  in the present case, I  find it  unreasonable  and irrational  that the Commissioner  of Lands would approve   renewal of the lease in favour of the exparte  applicant  by requiring  it to  comply  with certain  conditions  but after  the exparte  applicant  had complied  with such  conditions, the Commissioner of Lands  or his successors in title, now the respondents herein, would  turn around and purport to  amalgamate  the suit  properties, issue   a new Deed Plan and  purport to renew the lease for  the amalgamated  parcels  in favour of a person  who is not even disclosed  todate, despite  the exparte applicant making efforts  to know the position  of the new title, to no avail.

63. In my humble view, the respondents acted not only  unreasonably   and irrationally, but that  they failed to take  into account  or consideration  relevant  matters in that, they failed  to consider that the exparte applicant had been  given an  approval for  the extension of the leases for the three suit  properties; The exparte  applicant  had fulfilled  the conditions  for the  extension/renewal of the  leases for the suit  properties and  surrendered  the original  leases;  That while the  exparte  applicant  was waiting  for the extension/renewal  of the said  leases,  and having   surrendered the  original  leases, and while it was waiting for the new  grants, the relevant file went   missing   at the lands  office before  the new grant  could be issued.

64. By failing to consider  the above matters, and instead  purport to amalgamate   the three  titles  into one  and  issuing   a new Deed  Plan  and renewal of   the leases  in favour of  any other  person  other than the exparte  applicant, I am of the view that the respondents  considered  irrelevant factors  which came  after the conditions for  extension of the three leases were fulfilled   namely, that the exparte applicant was, infact, in actual occupation of the suit properties  which parcels were  fully developed.

65. In addition, I am  persuaded  beyond  any doubt  that  the  Commissioner of Lands  letter  approving  the  extension of the leases  for the suit  properties  created  a legitimate  expectation on the exparte applicant’s  part,  that after  complying   with the conditions  precedent to the extension of the leases, the leases  would be  granted.  Therefore, denying the exparte applicant   the extension of the leases after the expectation was created   amounted to unfair treatment.  In such  circumstances   of unfair  treatment, courts  have issued  Judicial Review  orders of  Prohibition, to prohibit  a public authority  from exercising  power that amounts to unfair  conduct.( see Regina V Liverpool Corporation exparte Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operation Association [1972] 29 KB, 299.

66. The Court of Appeal in the Njenga Karume Investments Ltd (supra) case appreciated the trial Judge’s observation that:

“It is the responsibility of this court to ensure that executive action is exercised responsibly and as Parliament intended so as to uphold the rule of law.  The manner in which the respondent acted is not consistent with what Parliament intended of a public officer like the respondent.  The respondent  having agreed  to extend  the applicant’s lease  by virtue  of the  letter  dated 19th March, 1999  and  given  conditions  for the said extension, had exercised  his discretion  he could not  renege  on it  once  the  applicant  met the  conditions  of the lease by payment  of the requisite   fees for his  rights   to an extension of a lease  came into being  and the same  can be   enforced by an order of  mandamus.  InMadowo’s  case (supra)  the court  said that  an order  of mandamus should  not be  sought to  determine  rights  but ought  to be used to enforce…..”

67. This court entirely agrees with  the above  position as  adopted by the Court of Appeal  in the Karume  Investments Limited (supra) case and  add  that the exparte  applicant  in this  case  was not only subjected  to  unfair   treatment   but  was not  given an opportunity to be heard before the decision to  amalgamate  the titles  was  made and a purported  re-establishment  done through  a new Deed  Plan  and a new Land Reference number given  to the  amalgamated  titles  and the  lease  renewed in  favour of a non  disclosed  person ( if  at all it  was renewed).  There is nothing to show what  procedure  was adopted to cancel the approval for extension of the leases in favour of   the exparte applicant.  I therefore  concur with  the exparte  applicant’s averment  that there  was a legitimate  expectation created on its part  that  was  thwarted  by the respondents  thereby entitling  the  exparte applicant to seek for a Judicial Review  remedy(ies), which  remedies are vested in this court to exercise  the power to  check on the excess  of  exercise or  authorities   or persons in authority, but not to interfere  with the  mandate of  the respondents  under the Constitution or other written law.

68. I find that had the respondents acted  reasonably, and  fairly, they   could not   have  arrived at the  decision that they did  to amalgamate  the titles  and  renew  the lease in the name of an  unidentified  person.In Republic V Commissioner of Co-operatives exparte Kirinyaga Tea Growers Co-operative Savings & Credit   Society Ltd CA 39/97 [1999] EALR 245   the Court of Appeal warned that:

“……it is axiomatic that statutory powers can only be exercised validly   if they are exercised reasonably.  No statute   ever allowed   anyone on whom it confers power to exercise such power arbitrarily, capriciously or in bad faith.”

69. The exparte applicant  avers  that the respondents’  impugned  omissions to issue  the applicant with grants for the renewed  terms   was malafides and an abuse of statutory power in that  immediately  after the approval  for renewal of the leases, the  files went missing  from the  Lands  Ministry  only to resurface,  after expiry  of the lease  period  with an  amalgamated  title  nearly  five years  later, and   that the refusal   to exercise  their mandate  under  Article  67 of the Constitution, Section  108 of  Land  Registration Act  and Section  30  of the National Land  Commission  Act to issue  grants  in respect  of the renewed  leases in the applicant’s favour was in  bad faith  hence they should be  compelled  to do so. In HC Miscellaneous Application  1769/2003  Nairobi  Republic Vs  Ministry  of  Planning  and  Another Exparte  Professor  Mwangi  Kimenyi, the court held, concerning  malafides:

“ So, where a body  uses its power  in a manifestly  unreasonable  manner, acted  in bad faith, refuse  to take  relevant  factors  into account  in reaching  its decision  or based  its  decision  on irrelevant  factors the court  would intervene that  on the ground  that the body  has  in each  case abused  its power.  The reason  why the court  has  to intervene   is because  there is  a presumption  that  where parliament  gave  a body  statutory  power  to act, it could  be implied  that parliament intended  it to  act in  a particular manner.”

70. Thus, the refusal of the respondents in this case to issue  the grants  for the suit  properties  after approval of renewal of  the leases, in my humble  view  is not  only unreasonable, but  malafides  and arbitrary  hence it  must be  checked  by Judicial Review orders.

71. Irrationality and unreasonableness on the part of the respondents  is a ground for  Judicial Review  to issue  as  was held   in Associated  Provincial  Picture  Houses Ltd Vs   Wednesbury  Corporation [1947] 2  ALL ER  680inter alia  that:

“ Bad faith, dishonesty- those, off course, stand  by themselves- unreasonableness, attention given to extraneous  circumstances   disregard  of public  policy, and  things  like  that have all been referred  to  as being  matters  which  are relevant for consideration…….unreasonableness  is frequently  used to describes things what must not be  done.  For instance, a person enstrusted with discretion must direct him properly in law.  He  must  call  his own  attention to  the matters   which he is  bound  which he is  bound to  consider.  He must   exclude from his considerations matters   which are irrelevant   to the matter that he has to consider.  If he does not obey those rules, he may truly be said and often is said, to be acting “unreasonably”.  Similarly you may have something   so absurd that no sensible person could   ever dream that it lay within   the powers of the authority.”

72. Where  a public  authority  or body  acts in  bad faith, then he/it  abuses  discretion  or jurisdiction and  it is therefore unlawful  and the  High Court  shall not  hesitate  to  quash such  exercise  of discretion  in bad faith.  In Halbbury’s Laws   of England 4th Edition 1(1) paragraph 82, it is   stated inter alia that:

“…….A decision is taken in bad  faith if it is  taken dishonestly  or maliciously,  although courts  have  equated  bad  faith with any  deliberate  improper  purpose.”

73. In this case, Iam persuaded that the respondents’ actions of refusal to issue grants in favour of the applicants as per the renewals was done unreasonably, irrationally and in bad faith with a deliberate improper purpose. The disappearance of the original files for the suited parcels of land and only for their resurfacing after expiry of the three leases with a new Deed Plan and an amalgamation into one parcel is, in my view, a manifestation of how decayed our public institutions are and how the officers serving therein can be used to abuse their powers for personal financial gain.

74. In the end,  I find that  the  exparte  applicant  has on the material placed before the court established  that the respondents  did  not, in the exercise  of their  discretion to extend and  later cancel the extension of the leases to the three  suited  properties  follow the established  procedures  of  the law.

75. In addition, I find that the respondent’s decisions  to amalgamate  the three titles  into one  and on purporting   to issue  extension of the leases in  favour of  an indentified  person(s)  without according the applicant an opportunity to be heard was unlawful and in breach of  the rules of natural  justice.

76. Accordingly, the order that commend itself to issue in this case is that the exparte  applicant’s  notice  of motion application dated  is allowed  in terms of prayers  No. 1 and  3  of the Notice of  Motion dated  22nd August  2014.

76. With regard   to prayer No. 2,  as the decision  to issue  grants after renewal of the leases  is mandatory   and  not discretionary  I order  that  a Judicial  Review Order  of Mandamus  do issue to compel National Land Commission  and Chief  Registrar  of Titles  to consider  issuing  grants to the applicant  in respect of  the suit  properties for a  renewed term of  50 years  as per the  approval for renewal  granted in  2007  with effect  from  1st December  2007.

77. The exparte   applicant shall have costs of these Judicial Review proceedings and for the application for leave to apply, to be paid by the respondents jointly and severally.

78. Dated, signed and delivered in open court at Nairobi this 21st day of September 2016.

R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE

In the presence of:

Mr Kotonya h/b for Muthui for the exparte applicant

Miss Kerubo from Ministry of Lands for the Respondents, (appearing for the first time in these proceedings after notice of judgment was served on the respondents)

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