V W N v F N [2014] KECA 362 (KLR) | Matrimonial Property Division | Esheria

V W N v F N [2014] KECA 362 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL AT NAIROBI

CORAM: WAKI,  M’I NOTI  &  J.  MOHA MMED,  JJ.A.

CIVIL APPLICATION NO. SUP 3 OF 2014 (UR 3/2014)

BETWEEN

V W N …………..………………….………… APPLICANT

AND

F N ……………………………………… RESPONDENT

(Being an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court from the Judgment & Decree of the Court of Appeal (Nambuye, Warsame & Kiage, JJ.A.) dated 26th July, 2013

in

CIVIL APPEAL NO. 179 OF 2009)

*****************

RULING OF THE COURT

On 26th July, 2013, this Court (Nambuye, Warsame & Kiage, JJ.A.),allowed the respondents appeal against the judgment of the High Court, Rawal, J (as she then was),which had ordered that the interests of the applicant and the respondent  in  LR  NO. [particulars withheld]  situated in Karen  [the Karen  property],  be severed and both parties be declared as tenants in common in equal shares.

The Court of Appeal set aside the judgment and decree of the High Court and ordered that the Karen property be surveyed and re-subdivided with the result that the respondent would have 70% of the property on which the main house stands and the applicant would have 30% on which the guest house stands.

Aggrieved by that decision, the applicant wishes to appeal to the Supreme Court.

By a notice of motion dated 29th January, 2014, the applicant seeks that:

“… in the interests of fairness and justice that this Honourable Court do certify that this matter is of general public importance and grant the applicant leave to appeal to the Supreme Court.”

The brief background to the matter is that the parties were married in 1966 under the African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act and set up a home in Nairobi where both were gainfully employed and also engaged in business activities.  The parties purchased property including the Karen property which was registered in their joint names.   The parties also purchased two other properties Ngong/Ngong [particulars withheld] and Ngong/Ngong [particulars withheld](the Ngong properties) which were registered in the applicants name and were later disposed of.  From the records, both parties claim to have largely or solely contributed to the purchase of the Karen property and the Ngong properties.  The parties separated in 1980.  The record indicates that the applicant contends that they have never been divorced while the respondent contends that they divorced in 1986. The fact is that the marital relationship no longer subsists.

Submissions by counsel

The application before us is brought under Articles 159 and 163 (4) of the Constitution and Sections 3A and 3B of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act.

Learned counsel, Mr Bernard Chenge, represented the applicant at the hearing while learned counsel Mr Githinji Mwangi represented the respondent.

Mr Chenge argued that the application merits certification as one of general public importance as it seeks to determine the following issues: whether Article 45 (3) of the Constitutionapplies in matters filed before the promulgation of the Constitution and not yet determined; the extent to which Article 45 (3) of theConstitutionapplies vis-à-visthe principles enunciated in the case of PETERMBURU  ECHARIA  V  PRISCILLA  NJERI  ECHARIA,  (2007)  eKLRregarding matters filed after promulgation of the Constitution; whether property acquired during the marriage of the parties and registered  in one   spouses name and handed as a gift to the children of the union should be taken into account during division of matrimonial property; whether the income generated from a property and/or business should be taken into account and whether it is imperative that a valuation report be presented to the court before the determination of the matter.

Counsel submitted that it is in the public interest and beyond the circumstances  of  this  particular  case  that  there  be  certainty  on  the  legal principles to guide the process and method of division of matrimonial property. Counsel argued that this is important particularly because of the huge number of cases on division of matrimonial property pending in the various courts in Kenya. In counsel?s view, determination of matters they intend to raise in the intended appeal to the Supreme Court will be in the public interest.  Counsel urged us to allow the application and grant the certification sought.

Mr Mwangi, learned counsel for the respondent, relied on the replying affidavit sworn on 28th March, 2014, and opposed the application on the following grounds: the applicant has failed to satisfy the governing principles on what constitutes a matter of  general public importance? as set out by  the Supreme Court  in HERMANUS PHILLIPUS  STEYN  V  GIOVANNI GNECCHI-RUSCONE,Application No. 4 of 2012 (unreported); the issues raised by the applicant to justify certification to appeal to the Supreme Court were not raised in the High Court or in the Court of Appeal and were, therefore, not the subject of judicial determination and that the applicant has failed to illustrate that the issues canvassed are issues, the determination of which transcends the circumstances of this particular case and has a significant bearing on the public interest.

Analysis and DeterminationArticle 163 (4) of the Constitutionprovides the criteria under which leave to appeal to the Supreme may be granted:

“Appeals shall lie from the Court of Appeal to the Supreme

Court –

a) as of right in any case involving the interpretation or application of this Constitution; and

b)  in any other case in which the Supreme Court, or the Court of Appeal, certifies that a matter of general public importance is involved, subject to clause (5).”

The question of what amounts to “a matter of general public importance” has been dealt with in various cases by the courts in Kenya. It is notable that the Constitution is silent on what the phrase “a matter of general public importance” means.

The  Supreme  Court  in  the  case  of HERMANUS PHILLIPUS  STEYN  V GIOVANNI GNECCHI-RUSCONE, (2013) eKLRpronounced itself on the issue as follows:

“[58] The foregoing comparative survey, in our opinion, sheds sufficient light on the position to be taken …. Before this   Court,   “a   matter   of   general   public importance” warranting the exercise of the appellate jurisdiction   would  be  a  matter  of  law  or  fact, provided only that: its impacts and consequences are substantial,   broad-based,   transcending   the litigation-interests of the parties, and bearing upon the public interest.   As the categories constituting the public interest are not closed, the burden falls on the intending appellant to demonstrate that the matter in question carries specific elements of real public interest and concern.

[59]    ……

[60]   In  this  context,  it  is  plain  to  us  that  a  matter meriting  certification  as  one  of  general  public importance,       if   it   is   one   of   law,   requires   a demonstration that a substantial point of law is involved, the determination of which has a bearing on the public interest.  Such a point of law, in view of the significance attributed to it, must have been raised in the Court or Courts below.  Where the said point of law arises on account of any contradictory decisions of the Courts below, the Supreme Court may either resolve the question, or remit it to the Court   of  Appeal  with  appropriate  directions. In summary, we would state the governing principles as follows:

i.     for a case to be certified as one involving a matter   of   general   public   importance,   the intending  appellant  must  satisfy  the  Court that the issue to be canvassed on appeal is onethe determination of which transcends the circumstances of the particular case, and has a significant bearing on the public interest;

ii.     where   the   matter   in   respect   of   which certification is sought raises a point of law, the intending appellant must demonstrate that such    a   point   is   a substantial   one,   the determination of which will have a significant bearing on the public interest;

iii.     such question or questions of law must have arisen in the Court or Courts below, and must have        been     the     subject     of     judicial determination;

iv.     where  the  application  for  certification  has been occasioned by a state of uncertainty in the  law,     arising     from     contradictory precedents,    the  Supreme  Court  may  either resolve the uncertainty, as it may determine, or refer the matter to the Court of Appeal for its determination;

v.     mere apprehension of miscarriage of justice, a matter most apt for resolution in the lower superior     courts,  is  not  a  proper  basis  for granting certification for an appeal to the Supreme Court;  the matter to be certified for a final appeal in the Supreme Court, must still fall within the terms of Article 163 (4) (b) of the Constitution;

vi.     the intending applicant has an obligation to identify      and  concisely  set  out  the  specific elements of “general public importance” which he or she attributes to the matter for which certification is sought;

vii.     determinations  of  fact  in  contests  between parties are not, by themselves, a basis for granting certification for an appeal before the Supreme Court.”

This position was reiterated by the Supreme Court in the subsequent case of MALCOLM BELL V DANIEL TOROITICH ARAP MOI & ANOR, (2013) eKLR. Counsel for the applicant argued that the application raises a number of issues of general public importance, inter alia,concerning the extent to which Article 45(3) of the Constitutionapplies vis-à-visthe principles enunciated in the Echaria case with regard to matters filed before the promulgation of the Constitution and which are pending determination.

Article 45 (3) of the Constitutionstates that:

“Parties to a marriage are entitled to equal rights at the time of the marriage, during the marriage and at the dissolution of the marriage.”

On the application of Article 45 (3) of the Constitutionvis-à-vis theEcharia casethe Court of Appeal in AGNES NANJALA WILLIAM V JACOBPETRUS NICOLAS VANDER GOES, CIVIL APPEAL NO. 127 OF 2011,the Court observed that Echaria (supra)may no longer be good law, and then held:

“Article  45(3)   of   the   Constitution   provides    that parties to a marriage are entitled to equal rights at the time of the marriage during the marriage and  at  the  dissolution  of  the  marriage.  This article clearly gives both parties to a marriage equal rights before, during and after a marriage ends.   It    arguably   extends   to    matrimonial property and is a constitutional statement of the principle that marital property is shared 50-50 in  the  event  that  a  marriage  ends.  However pursuant to Article 68 Parliament is obligated to pass laws to recognize and protect matrimonial property,  particularly  the  matrimonial  home. Although this is yet to happen, we hope that in the fullness of time Parliament will rise to the occasion and enact such a law.  Such law will no doubt direct, a court, when or after granting adecree of annulment, divorce or separation, order a division between the parties of any assets acquired by them during the coveture.  Pending such enactment, we are nonetheless of the considered view that the Bill of Rights in our Constitution  can  be  invoked  to  meet  the exigencies of the day.”

The legislation envisaged by this Court is The Matrimonial Property Act, 2013 which received assent on 24th  December, 2013, and commenced on 16th January, 2014. The passing of the Matrimonial Property Act is an important development in the law of matrimonial property for this country as it clarifies many issues pertaining to matrimonial property and the attendant rights and obligations. Section 7provides:

“Subject to section 6(3), ownership of matrimonial property vests in the spouses according to the contribution  of  either  spouse  towards  its acquisition,   and   shall   be   divided   between   the spouses   if   they   divorce   or   their   marriage   is otherwise dissolved.” Contribution is defined by Section 2to mean monetary and non-monetary contribution. Non-monetary contribution includes:

a.   Domestic    work    and   management    of   the matrimonial home;

b. Child care;

c. Companionship;

d. Management of family business or property;

and

e. Farm work

“Family business”means any business which-

a. is run for the benefit of the family by both spouses or either spouse; and

b. generates income or other resources wholly or part of which are for the benefit of the family;”

The provisions of Sections 2, 6 and 7 of the Matrimonial Property Act,2013breath life into the rights provided in Article 45 (3).  The Matrimonial Property  Act  recognizes  that  both  monetary  and  non  monetary  contribution should be taken into account in determining contribution.

In light of Article 45 (3)and Section 2 of the Matrimonial Property Actwhich define contribution to mean monetary and non monetary contribution, Echaria  [supra]is  no  longer  good  law.    Accordingly,  the  law  having  been clarified, we do  not find  that the applicants application raises a matter of general public importance in line with the principles espoused by the Supreme Court in the case of Hermanus Phillipus Steyn [supra].

On the issue whether property acquired during marriage of the parties and registered in  one   spouse?s name and handed as a gift to children of the union should be taken into account during division of matrimonial property so as to reduce the share entitlement or apportionment of the party granting the gift, considering that it is the children who shall have benefitted; this argument was made in reference to the Ngong properties. The Court of Appeal found that the applicant unilaterally disposed of the Ngong properties.

We find that this issue has been settled by section 12 of the MatrimonialProperty Act, 2013which provides that:

“(1)    An  estate  or  interest  in  any  matrimonial property shall not, during the subsistence of a monogamous    marriage    and    without    the consent of both spouses, be alienated in any form,   whether    by   way   of   sale,   gift,    lease, mortgage or otherwise.”

There is  therefore no   “uncertainty as to the point of law”  on this issue which requires settlement by the Supreme Court.

On the issue whether Article 45 of the Constitutionapplies in matters filed before the promulgation of the Constitution, this Court in the case of Agnes Nanjala William [supra]rendered itself thus:

“This Court is obliged to give a broad and purposive interpretation to the Constitution that enhances the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms but such  an  interpretation  must  be  founded  on  the words  of  the  Constitution.    Any  other  approach would be null and void.  In so holding, we are in agreement  with  Supreme  Court  reasoning  in  the case of  Samuel Kamau Macharia And Another V Kenya Commercial Bank Ltd & 2 Others, SCK Application No. 2 of

2011 [2012] eKLR where the court stated as follows:

If the words used in a particular provision are forward looking, and do not contain even a whiff of retrospectivity, the Court ought not to import it into the language of the Constitution.   Such caution is still more necessary if the importation of retrospectivity would have the effect of divesting an individual  of  their  rights  legitimately occurred before the commencement of the Constitution.

Having found that the right to equality as inherent and indefeasible to all human beings, it matters not that the cause of action accrued before the current constitutional dispensation.”

Accordingly, this Court has authoritatively determined this issue, there is, therefore, no uncertainty as to that point of law.

From the record, we find that the questions of law raised by the applicant did not arise in the High Court and the Court of Appeal and have, therefore, not been the subject of judicial determination to merit certification to appeal to the Supreme Court.

Accordingly, we find that the application does not meet the threshold to merit certification to appeal to the Supreme Court.

In the result, we find no merit in the application dated 29th January, 2014, and we accordingly dismiss it with no order as to costs.

Dated and delivered at Nairobi this 3rd day of October, 2014.

P. N. WAKI

--------------------------

JUDGE OF APPEAL

K. MINOTI

--------------------------- JUDGE OF APPEAL

J. MOHAMMED

---------------------------

JUDGE OF APPEAL

I certify that this is a true copy of the original.

DEPUTY REGISTRAR