Veronica Chesemes Akokor, Pauline Kokita, Christiphus Toroitich Kokita, Tobias Kemei Kokita & Anastancia Cheptoo Kokita v Ben Veronica C. Kitelapong, Solomon Pkach Kokwo & Attorney General [2021] KEELC 4550 (KLR) | Trusts In Land | Esheria

Veronica Chesemes Akokor, Pauline Kokita, Christiphus Toroitich Kokita, Tobias Kemei Kokita & Anastancia Cheptoo Kokita v Ben Veronica C. Kitelapong, Solomon Pkach Kokwo & Attorney General [2021] KEELC 4550 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE ENVIRONMENT AND LAND COURT

AT KITALE

ELC MISC. APPL. NO. 7 OF 2020

1. VERONICA CHESEMES AKOKOR

2. PAULINE KOKITA

3. CHRISTIPHUS TOROITICH KOKITA

4. TOBIAS KEMEI KOKITA

5. ANASTANCIA CHEPTOO KOKITA...APPLICANTS

VERSUS

BEN VERONICA C. KITELAPONG

SOLOMON PKACH KOKWO

ATTORNEY GENERAL........................RESPONDENTS

RULING

1. There is in the court record an application dated 24/7/2020 and filed in court on 11/8/2020. The application is supported by the sworn affidavit of Chrispine Toroitich Kokita. It is brought under Sections 1A, 1B, 3and3Aof theCivil Procedure Act andOrder 1 Rule 14, Order 51 Rule 1of theCivil Procedure Rules. The 3rd, 4th, 5th and 5th plaintiffs/applicants (herein after also referred to “the instant applicants”) seek the following orders:

1. That the names of the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th plaintiffs/applicants be struck out from the proceedings herein.

2. That costs of this application and the main suit be borne by the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs and Mr. S. Nyakundi personally in any event.

2. The grounds on the face of the application are that the applicants have never instructed the firm of Ms. Nyakundi & Co. Advocates to institute the instant suit on their behalf; that they have never authorized Veronica Chesemes AkokorandPauline Kokita to sign any affidavits on their behalf. The applicants aver that the action of filing suit by the said Veronica Chesemes Akokor and Pauline Kokita is intended to sow discord between the applicants and their mother.

3. The 1st plaintiff filed a replying affidavit on 3/9/2020 opposing the instant application. Having reiterated that the instant applicants are the offspring of James Mariachi Kokita and that they are the cestui que trust in respect of the trust bestowed on the 1st defendant in respect of the suit land, she depones that the estate of the late James has an interest in the trust and that his children must benefit from the trust as intended by the court. The 1st plaintiff avers that in the year 2019 the instant applicants sought her help in regaining the suit land from the 2nd respondent and she therefore sought legal advice from the firm of S. Nyakundi & Co. Advocates who wrote a demand letter to the defendants which has not been answered to to date. Further, she states that the beneficiaries of the trust have filed the application only for fear of incurring their mother’s wrath, and adds that the court can not properly adjudicate the suit if they are struck off the proceedings.  It is further deponed that the lands purchased by the 1st defendant between 2010 and 2014 were bought in her name and that no title deeds in the names of the instant applicants have been demonstrated to have been obtained by the 1st defendant.

4. The applicants filed their submissions on 9/12/2020. The respondents written submissions was filed on 18/12/2020.

5.  I have considered the application, the response and the filed submissions.

6. The issues that arise for determination in the instant application are whether the names of the applicants should be struck out of these proceedings and whether the costs of the application and of the main suit should be borne by Mr. S. N. Nyakundi personally.

7. The background to the instant application is that a Miscellaneous application (being the main suit herein was filed on 16/3/2020 alleging that the High Court in Kitale HCCC No. 74 of 2002 had ordered the 1st defendant to hold part of LR No. West Pokot /Keringet”A” /2728 in trust for the applicants herein; that the 1st defendant was subsequently registered as proprietor of the said land in trust for the instant applicants but she subsequently transferred the suit land to the 2nd respondent in a fraudulent manner. It is sought that the trust bestowed upon the 1st respondent be determined and that the suit land do vest in the names of the instant applicants. By the instant application the instant applicants now seek to disown the instant suit and that Mr. Nyakundi the counsel who filed it, do meet the costs of the suit personally.

8. Veronica and Pauline, the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs in the main suit aver that they are the legal representatives of the estate of James Mariach Kokita who was the former husband to the 1st respondent.  Veronica also refers to James as “my late husband”in her supporting affidavit.

9. The further facts revealed in the main suit are that after James and the 1st defendant divorced, the former sued seeking deletion of the latter’s name from the title to the suit land but the court ordered the rectification of the land register to read that the 1st defendant holds her part of the land in trust for the instant applicants. The suit land was then registered as ordered by court in 2007 but in 2010 the 1st defendant sold the suit land to the 2nd defendant. It is alleged that the Land Registrar allowed the transfer of the land without an order of the Court dissolving the trust, which trust he was aware of. Consequently the instant applicants dropped out of school and the 2nd respondent evicted them from their home and they have been living in penury ever since. It is also alleged that the 1st defendant has abandoned the instant applicants. The plaintiffs seek that the suit land be registered in the instant applicant’s names in equal shares and payment of mesne profits and that all buildings erected on the suit land be demolished. The plaintiffs deny having any interest in the land and aver that they are only acting in the best interests of the instant applicants.

10. This is an application in which the good Samaritans’ apparently selfless and benevolent acts strangely appear to be rejected by the intended beneficiaries. The beneficiaries, the instant applicants claim that they are now adults and could have brought the suit in their own names if they had wished to do so. That is not in doubt as the court has seen the birth certificates attached to the instant application. It is however noteworthy that by 2010 when the suit land was sold the 3rd and 4th plaintiffs were 21 and 11 years old respectively while the 6th plaintiff was 13 and the 5th plaintiff was 9.

11. The foregoing notwithstanding it is noteworthy that the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs have sued in their capacity as the legal representatives of the deceased father to the instant applicants who also happened to be a husband to the 1st plaintiff. Subject to  further evidence, they prima facie have capacity to institute some proceedings on behalf of his estate, and whether the extent of their liberty to do so extends to filing the instant proceedings can only be examined at the main hearing.

12. In the event the instant applicants are struck out of these proceedings as sought, that would leave only the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs as parties in the suit. The orders sought would not have the effect of terminating the entire suit and the proceedings would still pend before this court.

13. Ordinarily a plaintiff voluntarily chooses who to sue and the cause of action to plead. The suit herein is in respect of whether land was sold in breach of a trust in favour of the 4applicants who now seek to be struck out of the suit.

14. This is an application that in my view is rightly filed by the applicants; however, this court also finds that during the proceedings in this suit the presence of the applicants may still be rendered necessary as they were the intended beneficiaries of the trust.

15. I must state that in a case of this nature where the 1st and 2nd plaintiffs have attempted to paint a picture of the adverse social consequences on the instant applicants of the disposal of the land, the propriety of that disposal has to be examined in a substantive hearing and the sale either upheld or nullified depending on the evidence.

16. In the light of the foregoing I find that the instant application should be granted only in so far as the instant applicants seek to be struck out in their capacity as plaintiffs and no more.

17. Consequently, only Prayer No. (1) of the application dated 24/7/2020 is granted and that only to the extent that the names of the applicants in their capacity as plaintiffs shall be struck out. As the court has found that by reason of having been named as the cestui que trust they are necessary parties in the suit, I hereby issue an order suo motu that the instant applicants shall be enjoined as interested parties in the same order in which they appeared when listed as plaintiffs.

18. I hereby also order that the plaintiffs shall amend the Originating Summons dated 11/3/2020 to reflect on the face thereof the changes wrought by the foregoing orders.

19. Each party shall bear their own costs of the application.

Dated, signedanddeliveredatKitale via electronic mail on this 26thday of January, 2021.

MWANGI NJOROGE

JUDGE, ELC, KITALE.