Dreamgeast Limited v Vischi & 7 others (Civil Appeal 157 of 2019) [2021] KECA 101 (KLR) (22 October 2021) (Judgment)
Neutral citation number: [2021] KECA 101 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal No. 157 of 2019
W Karanja, M Ngugi & P Nyamweya, JJA
October 22, 2021
Between
Dreamgeast Limited
Appellant
and
Fernando Vischi
1st Respondent
Renzo Quaciari
2nd Respondent
Alberto Mukare Mulewa
3rd Respondent
Francis Karema Mulewa
4th Respondent
Benjamin Mukare Mulewa
5th Respondent
Paul Chai Mulewa
6th Respondent
The Land Registrar, Kilifi
7th Respondent
Mumbu Holdings Limited
8th Respondent
(An appeal from the ruling and order of the Environment and land Court at Malindi (J. Olalo J.) dated 8th October, 2019 in ELC Case No. 210 of 2017)
Judgment
1This appeal arises out of a ruling by the Environment and Land Court (ELC) dated 8th October 2019 in which the court declined to strike out the 8th respondent’s counterclaim against the appellant and the 1st, 2nd and 7th respondent. The 1st and 2nd respondents are the plaintiffs in the suit, while the 8th respondent and the appellant are the 6th and 7th defendants respectively.
2By its application dated 17th October 2018, the appellant had sought orders for the striking out with costs of the plaintiffs’ suit against the 1st to the 5th defendants in the suit. It also sought orders for the counterclaim by the 8th respondent to be struck out with costs.
3The application was premised on the grounds, first, that the plaintiffs’ suit against the appellant was unsustainable in law in view of the ruling of Ouko J. (as he then was) dated 21st November 2006 and the fact that the suit premises were transferred to the appellant upon purchase for valuable consideration. Secondly, that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim was legally unsustainable in the absence of any specific relief sought against it by the 1st and 2nd respondents in the plaint and in the absence of any joinder thereof in the suit.
4The third reason advanced was that the 8th respondent was estopped by deed and conduct from sustaining any counterclaim against the 1st to 7th respondents and the appellant as it had filed and then voluntarily withdrawn Malindi HCCC No. 78 of 2006 without paying costs to the said defendants. Finally, the appellant argued that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim was time-barred, unsustainable and an abuse of the court process in light of the fact that similar facts were raised in Malindi Misc. Application No. 27 of 2012 which allegations were discounted by the judgment of Angote J. delivered on 26th April 2013.
5In dismissing the appellant’s application, the ELC observed that it was evident that the dispute in the suit related to whom, between the appellant and the 1st, 2nd and 8th respondents, were the rightful owners of the two suit properties, Chembe/Kibabamshe/387 and Chembe/Kibabamshe/406. It observed further that it was not contested that the court file on the matter went missing for a while, and that to-date, the record on the matter remained incomplete in regard to the proceedings that took place at the initial stages following the institution of the suit. Further, that none of the parties could be blamed for failing to file documents at a time when the court file was missing. Additionally, that the matter had been transferred from Mombasa to Malindi in June 2006, and it was apparent that not much had happened in the matter until 24th October, 2017 when the High Court in Malindi transferred the matter to the ELC for hearing and disposal.
6The court further observed that a perusal of the record revealed that the 8th respondent’s title was cancelled and the appellant was instead registered as the owner of the suit properties in May 2007. It took the view that the circumstances under which the cancellation and registration of the appellant occurred were matters that could not be considered a sham to warrant the striking out of the 8th respondent’s pleadings at that stage. It accordingly dismissed the appellant’s application with costs to the 8th respondent.
7It is against that decision of the ELC that the appellant now appeals to this Court. In the memorandum of appeal dated 9th December 2019, the appellant has raised four main grounds of appeal, two of which are in several limbs. The appellant contends, first, that the ELC erred in fact and in law and exercised its discretion erroneously by dismissing its application dated 17th October 2018. It is its contention, secondly that the court wrongfully exercised its discretion in failing to make a finding regarding the substantive issues raised in the application to the extent that the 8th respondent’s counter claim was statutory barred and no leave of the court had been obtained before it was filed.
8The second limb of this ground was that the 8th respondent was estopped by deed and conduct from bringing a counter claim against the appellant because of its voluntary withdrawal of Malindi HCCC No. 78 of 2006, Mumbu Holdings Ltd vs David Mkare Mulewa & 9 Others by a notice of withdrawal dated 7th November 2017 andbecause of the findings of the court in Malindi Misc. Application No. 27 of 2012 (formerly Nbi. Misc. Application No. 1220 of 2009) Fernando Vischi vs Dreamgeast Limited & Another.
9In the third limb of this ground, the appellant contended that the counter claim against it was unsustainable in that the 8th respondent had not been joined as a defendant to the plaintiff’s suit in the ELC. Further, that it was unsustainable as the 1st and 2nd respondents had not sought any specific relief against the 8th respondent, the proper defendants being the 1st - 4th respondents. These respondents had also not sought any contribution, set off or indemnity from the 8th respondent.
10In the fourth limb of its second ground of appeal, the appellant contended that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim was unsustainable in view of findings of fact by Ouko J. (as he then was) given in a ruling dated 21st October 2006 that the suit properties were registered in the names of the 3rd - 6th respondents and one Samuel John Mulewa (deceased) as proprietors in common and that the appellant had a genuine legal and equitable interest in the suit property.
11The appellant argued in the fifth limb of its second ground of appeal that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim is unsustainable in view of the provisions of Order 25 of the Civil Procedure Rules. This was on the basis that it was raised by the 8th respondent without first having paid costs in Malindi HCCC No. 78 of after the 8th respondent withdrew the suit.
12The appellant’s third ground of appeal is that the ELC erred in law and fact in failing to consider the issues raised in the appellant’s application and thereby exercised its discretion wrongly, thereby reaching a wrong conclusion on the facts of the appellant’s application before it.
13The appellant challenges the ruling of the trial court, in its fourth ground, on the basis that it erred in fact and law in failing to make a finding that upon withdrawal of the 1st and 2nd respondents’ suit against the respondents (sic), the counterclaim of the 8th respondent was unsustainable against the appellant. It asks this Court to vacate and set aside the ruling and order made on 8th October 2019 and enter judgment for it as prayed in the application dated 17th October 2018. It also asks this Court to strike out the 8th respondent’s counterclaim in the ELC.
14The appellant and the 8th respondent filed written submissions in support of their respective positions on the appeal. The 1st - 7th respondents did not participate in these proceedings though the record indicates that they were duly served. However, the record of the ELC indicates that the 1st and 2nd respondents had withdrawn their claim against the 3rd - 6th respondents, leaving the contestation over the ownership of the suit properties between the appellant, the 1st, 2nd 7th and 8th respondents.
15In its written submissions, the appellant sets out the background to the appeal. It submits that the 1st and 2nd respondents had filed Mombasa HCCC No. 12 of 2016 against the 3rd - 7th respondents by plaint dated 25th January 2006. The claim was that the 1st and 2nd respondents had bought the suit properties from the 3rd - 6th respondents.The 1st and 2nd respondent sought specific performance of the agreements for sale in respect of the suit properties. They also sought an order to restrain the Land Registrar, the 7th respondent, from making entries in the title to the properties.
16The appellant submits that it sought to be enjoined as an interested party by way of an application dated 16th February 2006 as it had been affected by the orders restraining the Land Registrar from making entries against the title to the properties as it had bought the properties by an agreement dated 25th September 2005. It was registered as the proprietor of the properties on 30th May 2007. The appellant was joined as an interested party and the orders restraining the making of entries against the title were vacated. Following the filing of a defence and counterclaim by the 8th respondent on 26th February 2018, the appellant filed its application dated 17th October 2018 seeking to strike out the counterclaim. The 1st and 2nd respondents withdrew their claim against the 3rd -6th respondents by way of a notice dated 19th October 2018.
17The appellant asks this Court to determine three issues. The first is whether the 8th respondent’s counterclaim was barred under the provisions of the Limitation of Actions Act and the Public Authorities Limitation Act Cap 39. It cites section 35 of the Limitation of Actions Act, Cap 22 and the decisions in Harith El-Busaidy vs Kenya Commercial Bank Limited (2008) eKLR and Gladys Njeri vs Lang’ata Development Company Ltd and Another (2002) to support its contention that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim is subject to the statutory framework of limitation of actions. It notes that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim is based on a tortious liability of fraud and, under Section 4(2) of the Limitation of Actions Act, such a claim has a limitation period of 3 years.
18The appellant submits that since it was registered as the proprietor of the property on 30th May 2007, the 8th respondent ‘s cause of action arose on that date. Further, that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim could only be brought between 2006 - 2007. Despite knowing that the appellant was the registered owner, it had not brought its counterclaim until 26th February 2018 and the counterclaim was therefore barred as it was filed out of the 12-year statutory period. Support for this argument is sought in the case of Peter Kimani Njenga v Mugo Kamabuni Mugo & 3 others [2018] eKLR in which the court held that the 12-year limitation period in respect of recovery of land began to run from the date of the sale agreement.
19Regarding the allegation that the counterclaim is time barred under the Public Authorities Limitation Act, the appellant contends that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim against the 7th respondent, the Land Registrar, should have been brought by 2008, one year after the appellant was registered as the owner of the suit properties. The 8th respondent’s counterclaim was therefore barred under Section 3(1) of the Public Authorities Limitation Act.
20The appellant further argues that the 8th respondent is estopped from raising a counterclaim by deed and conduct. It had filed Malindi HCCC No. 78 of 2006 and then withdrawn it. It had not paid the costs to all the defendants after it withdrew the suit on 7th September 2007. It is the appellant’s contention therefore that having withdrawn the suit, the 8th respondent was estopped from claiming any property right in the suit properties as it had led the appellant to believe that it had waived its right to the said properties.
21.Regarding the last issue on whether the counter claim is sustainable in view of the withdrawal of the suit by the 1st and 2nd respondents against the 3rd - 6th respondents, the appellant contends that the 1st and 2nd respondents had never made a claim against the 8th respondent in the ELC. Upon withdrawal of the suit against the 3rd - 6th respondents, they ceased to be parties to the suit. It is the appellant’s case, therefore, that the counterclaim cannot be sustainable as it was claiming interests in land from the 3rd - 6th respondents who had ceased to be parties to the suit in the ELC. The ELC had therefore erred in failing to strike out the counterclaim.
22The appellant also contends that the 8th respondent’s counterclaim is unsustainable in law in the absence of joinder of the 8th respondent as a defendant. It submits that this is the position following the ruling of Ouko J in HCCC No. 69 of 2006 – Fernando Vischi and Another vs Albert Mukare Mulewa & Others dated 21st November, 2006. It asserts that the court had in that ruling found that the 8th respondent had no justiciable proprietary interest in the suit property but had recognized the property interest of the 1st - 6th respondents and the beneficial property interests of the appellant. The appellant submits that from the said ruling, it is the registered proprietor of the suit property after having purchased it from the 3rd - 6th respondents. The appellant contends that the ELC had therefore erred in dismissing its application and this court should enter judgment in its favour.
23The 8th respondent filed submissions dated 29th March, 2021 in which it supports the decision of the ELC and asks this Court to uphold it. It had been joined as the 1st interested party in the ELC. That it was after it filed its defence and counterclaim on 26th February 2018 that the appellant filed the application dated 17th October 2018 seeking to strike out the 1st and 2nd respondent’s suit against the 3rd - 7th respondents and to strike out its counterclaim. The 8th respondent submits that it had been properly joined to the proceedings before the ELC, an application for its joinder having been made on 8th February 2006. This was a fact captured in the ruling of Ouko J. dated 21st November 2006.
24To the appellant’s contention that its counterclaim was time barred, the 8th respondent submits that its title was cancelled in May 2007 and its cause of action therefore arose in May 2007. Since the limitation period for recovery of land was 12 years, the time would have expired in May 2019. Its claim and counterclaim was filed on 26th February 2018 and was accordingly within time. The counterclaim was seeking determination of its proprietary rights under Articles 40, 63, 64, 68 and 162 (2) (b) of the Constitution and the ELC had the jurisdiction and power to deal with the counterclaim under Sections 18 and 19 of the Environment and Land Court Act.
25The 8th respondent further submits that the appellant had, in several documents filed in court, acknowledged that the 8th respondent was a party to the suit. It cites affidavits sworn by a Director of the appellant in Misc. Civil Suit No. 27 of 2012, one Philemon Mwavala; in HCCC No. 78 of 2006 by the same Mwavala; and an acknowledgement by the court in Judicial Review No. 12 of 2006. It had also been acknowledged as a party in the ruling of Ouko J. dated 21st November 2006. It is its case therefore that it is a party to the suit and the issues in contention cannot be adjudicated effectively and completely in its absence.
26The 8th respondent observes that the court proceedings from 27th January 2006 to 2nd March 2006 which capture its joinder in the suit are missing from the court file. The court file had also been hidden and missing for 10 years, actions which it sees as calculated to frustrate the case. It contends that it’s a proper party to the suit as set out in Order 1 Rule 10(2) of the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC). Its grievance has never been heard and determined, a right guaranteed under Articles 47 and 50 of the constitution.
27Regarding the contention that it is estopped from filing its counterclaim because it withdrew HCCC No. 78 of 2006, it submits that such withdrawal does not bar its counterclaim. That the suit had been withdrawn once its Advocate discovered the existence of Malindi HCCC No. 69 0f 2006 (ELC 210 of 2017) in order to pave way for hearing of the suit filed earlier. It had sought in the suit the same reliefs sought in the counterclaim, and to allow both suits to run concurrently would have amounted to an abuse of process.
28According to the 8th respondent, the appellant had not given any reason for striking out its counterclaim, its only contention being that the counterclaim was legally unsustainable in the absence of any specific relief sought against it by the 1st and 2nd respondents, and in the absence of an order of joinder in the suit. The 8th respondent relies on the provisions of Order 1, Rule 24 of the CPA to submit that it had filed and served a notice against the appellant and the 7th respondent and the other respondents. It had thereafter filed the counterclaim and served, and its counterclaim was therefore properly before the court. It is its case that a counterclaim is a suit in which the defendant seeks relief from the necessary party, and therefore the fact that no relief was sought against it by the 1st and 2nd respondents was of no consequence.
29.The 8th appellant further submits that the court exercised its discretion properly in declining to strike out its counterclaim. That the power to strike out pleadings granted under Order 2 Rule 15 of the CPC is a discretionary power which must be exercised judiciously and not capriciously. Reference is made to the case of D.T. Dobie & Co. (Kenya) Ltd vs Muchina (1982) KLR I with regard to the yardstick to be followedin striking out pleadings, which is that the power to strike out pleadings is a discretionary one to be applied very sparingly and in very plain cases. It prays that this appeal should be dismissed with costs.
30We have considered the decision of the ELC, the appellant’s Memorandum of Appeal and the respective submissions of the parties which have participated in the appeal. The ELC was called upon to exercise its discretion under Order 2 rule 15 of the Civil Procedure Rules which provides as follows:-
31.The issue for consideration before us, then, is whether the ELC exercised its discretion properly in declining to strike out the 8th respondent’s counterclaim.
32.The principles to be considered in determining whether or not to strike out pleadings were set out in the case of D.T. Dobie & Co. (Kenya) Ltd vs Muchina (supra) in which the court observed that in an application to strike out pleadings:-
33.The Court concluded as follows:
34.In Kenya Commercial Bank Ltd vs James Karanja (1981) eKLR Miller J stated:
35It is thus settled law that whether or not to strike out pleadings is an exercise of the court’s discretion. The exercise of such discretion will not be interfered with by an appellate court unless it is shown that the court improperly exercised its discretion in allowing or dismissing an application to strike out pleadings.
36In the present case, we note that the ELC considered only the appellant’s application to strike out the 8th respondent’s counterclaim, the prayer for striking out the 1st and 2nd respondent’s claim against the 3rd to 7th respondents having been rendered moot by the withdrawal of the claim against them. In addressing the prayer to strike out the 8th respondent’s counterclaim, the ELC made various observations with respect to the position of the 8th respondent and the proceedings before the court that the appellant raises in the present appeal.
37It noted, first, that the 8th respondent had been joined as a party to the suit before it.We agree with this conclusion. Contrary to the appellant’s contention, the 8th respondent had been joined to the suit as the 1st interested party, while the appellant had been joined to the suit as the 2nd interested party. However, as Ouko J. observed in the ruling dated 21st November 2006, the suit before the court, being a civil claim, the proper nomenclature for the two interested parties was as defendants. The 8th respondent was therefore joined as the 6th defendant while the appellant was joined to the suit as the 7th defendant. Seeking to strike out the counterclaim on the basis that the 8th respondent was not a party to the suit therefore had no basis.
38.The appellant also based its application before the ELC on the ground that the 8th respondent had withdrawn its suit, Malindi HCCC No. 78 of 2006, voluntarily, and was therefore estopped from filing its counterclaim which should accordingly have been struck out. Further, that the withdrawal of the suit amounted to a waiver of its claim, which waiver the appellant had relied on. The counterclaim was also, according to the appellant, filed outside the period of limitation provided under the Limitation of Actions Act.
39The 8th respondent counters this argument by submitting that it had withdrawn its suit to make way for the hearing of the suit then pending before the High Court. It had been joined to the proceedings on 8th February 2006, but the proceedings for the period 27th January 2006 to 2nd March 2006 had gone missing. Further, the court file on the proceedings had gone missing for a period of 10 years. All that notwithstanding, its counterclaim was within time as it had been filed before the expiry of 12 years from May 2007 when its title had been cancelled and the appellant registered as the proprietor of the suit properties.
40In addressing itself to the above issues, the ELC observed as follows:-
41We agree with the reasoning of the ELC set out above. As was observed by the Court of Appeal in D.T. Dobie vs Muchina (supra), a court should aim at sustaining a suit rather than terminating it by summary dismissal, and no suit should be summarily dismissed unless it appears so hopeless that it obviously discloses no reasonable cause of action and is so weak that it is irredeemable and incurable even by amendment.
42We observe further that after setting out the history of the case set out above, the ELC observed as follows:
43In our view, the ELC cannot be faulted for reaching this conclusion. The facts of this case show that the claim before the court requires a determination of who, between the appellant and the 8th respondent, is the rightful owner of the suit properties. Both these parties had been properly joined to the suit before some of the proceedings before the court, and later the entire court file, went missing. The question of how the 8th respondent’s titles to the suit properties were cancelled and transfers registered in favour of the appellant in May 2007 during the pendency of the suit is a question that requires ventilation before the court, in a full hearing, on the merits. The contention by the appellant that Ouko J. had, in his ruling dated 21st November 2006, determined that the appellant was the rightful proprietor of the suit properties is not borne out by a reading of the said ruling, which we have carefully read and considered.
44It is our finding, therefore, and we so hold, that the ELC properly exercised its discretion in declining to strike out the 8th respondent’s appeal and in directing that the suit proceeds as between the 1st and 2nd respondents, the appellant and the 7th and 8th respondents.
45We therefore find this appeal to be without merit. It is hereby dismissed with costs to the 8th respondent.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 22ND DAY OF OCTOBER, 2021.W. KARANJA…………………………….JUDGE OF APPEALMUMBI NGUGI…………………………….JUDGE OF APPEALP. NYAMWEYA…………………………….JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a truecopy of the original.DEPUTY REGISTRAR