Olondo & another v Otieno (Civil Appeal 97 of 2017) [2022] KECA 831 (KLR) (13 May 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KECA 831 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal 97 of 2017
PO Kiage, M Ngugi & F Tuiyott, JJA
May 13, 2022
Between
Meshack Onyango Olondo
1st Appellant
Joseph Okoth Onyango
2nd Appellant
and
Syprine Akoth Otieno
Respondent
(Appeal from the ruling of the High Court of Kenya at Migori (Mrima, J.) dated 10th May, 2017 in Succession cause No. 307 of 2015
Succession Cause 307 of 2015
)
Judgment
JUDGMENT OF KIAGE, JA.
1.By this appeal, the appellants, who were respondents in the High Court at Migori, challenge the ruling of Mrima, J. by which the learned Judge revoked the grant of Letters of Administration made to the 1st appellant in respect of the estate of Shadrack Opala Ojwando (deceased) and the resultant certificate of confirmation. The applicant, now the respondent, had sought a number of other orders including;2.Thatthe Registration of Title No. Kamagambo/Kanyajuok/769 in the names of Respondents be revoked upon granting of the prayer 1 above herein;3.Thatthere be an order of injunction restraining the respondents herein from intermeddling in any manner whether by sale, lease, mortgage, charge or in any manner detrimental or adverse to the interest of the applicant herein pending hearing and determination of the application herein;
2.The respondent complained in that application that the 1st appellant had fraudulently obtained the grant by making false statements and concealing from the court matters material to the case. Particulars of the alleged fraud as enumerated in a supporting affidavit sworn by the respondent were that the 1st appellant; forged an undated letter allegedly written by one Samwel Omulo Nyagaya, a retired assistant chief and therein that the deceased was survived by nobody, and that the deceased died in 1992 when the deceased had died on 26th January 1991. The respondent further averred that the 1st appellant misrepresented that he was a cousin to the deceased when he was not related to the deceased in any way, and alleged that the said retired assistant chief had no objection to him obtaining the grant, when that was not the case.
3.The 1st appellant filed a replying affidavit, sworn both on his behalf and that of the 2nd appellant, his son, in response. He admitted having petitioned for grant of Letters of Administration to the estate of the deceased but denied that it was fraudulent. He maintained that he was a cousin to the deceased, and disputed the claim that the respondent was married to a son of the deceased, contending that she was only a concubine. The 1st appellant further deposed that the subject property had been part of a dispute and in 1959, the dispute was resolved in favour of his father, upon which his father gave him the land.
4.The application was heard by way of viva voce evidence. The learned Judge upon evaluating the matter, held that the grant as issued was a result of a flawed process and that the 1st appellant had intentionally made a false statement that he was a close cousin to the deceased. The court further found the 1st appellant culpable of concealing the fact that their claim to the land was based on fraud and not inheritance.
5.That ruling aggrieved the appellants and after filing a notice of appeal they followed it up with a memorandum of appeal containing four grounds. However, during the hearing they abandoned two of those grounds. The appellants’ remaining complaints are that the learned Judge erred in law and fact;
- When he failed to appreciate that this was a land matter and not a succession matter per se, hence would have taken judicial notice to refer it before the Environment and Land Court for determination.
- By totally excluding the appellants interest on the parcel LR. No. Kamagambo/Kanyajuok/769, a land they had lived, cultivated for a period of over 40 years.
6.In consequence, the appellants prayed that the appeal be allowed and the learned Judge’s ruling be set aside. They also sought costs.
7.The parties filed written submissions which were highlighted by counsel at the hearing of the appeal. For the appellant, learned counsel Mr. Odero, faulted the learned Judge for cancelling registration of the suit parcel land LR No. Kamagambo/Kanjuok/769 in the appellants’ name, claiming that the jurisdiction to adjudicate over issues of ownership of land lay in the Environment and Land Court. For this argument counsel relied on the decision by the learned Judge in re Estate of Noreri Chacha(Deceased) [2020] eKLR, which he cited extensively in his submissions.
8.For the respondent, learned counsel Mr. Kisera started by pointing out that the appeal was riddled with a massive breach of the Court of Appeal Rules being; the notice of appeal was filed out of time without leave of Court and neither had it been served upon the respondent; the letter requesting for certified copies of proceedings, the record of appeal and the notice for case conference had never been served upon the respondent. Counsel assailed the appellants’ contention that the trial court did not have jurisdiction to deal with the matter arguing that the suit land was part of the estate of the deceased person and the appellants having obtained title thereto by way of transmission, the trial court had jurisdiction in the matter. Moreover, it was submitted, the trial court’s decision to revoke the grant of letters of administration was correct since proceedings before the trial court confirmed that the appellants were guilty of the three major grounds enumerated in section 76(a)(b) and (c) of the Law of Succession Act for revocation and/or annulment of grant.
9.Mr. Kisera contended that fraud was apparent as it emerged during proceedings that the introductory letter allegedly authored by the Assistant Chief, claiming that the 1st appellant was a cousin to the deceased, had been forged. He indicated that the 1st appellant was subsequently charged with the offence of fraud, and his acquittal in the criminal case does not sanitise and validate the said forged introductory letter, as the alleged author testified in court and disowned it. Further, it was submitted, the proceedings revealed that the appellants were not related to the deceased at all, while the respondent was the closest surviving relative of the deceased, being his daughter in law.
10.Counsel defended the learned Judge’s holding, positing that upon revoking the grant, the learned Judge rightly cancelled the registration of the suit land in favour of the appellants as the said registration was anchored on the certificate of confirmation of a grant which had been revoked. Ultimately counsel urged that we uphold the decision of the trial court and dismiss the appeal with costs.
11.In this appeal, what is being challenged is the exercise of discretion by the learned Judge. As an appellate court, we are extremely slow to interfere with a first instance court’s decision that lies in its discretion, and it matters not that had we been dealing with the matter ourselves, we might have arrived at a different decision. This was well-expressed by Madan, JA. (as he then was) inUnited India Insurance Company Limited -vs- East African Underwriters (Kenya) Limited [1985] EA 898 thus;
12.Before I delve into the merits of this matter, I note the respondent’s objection to the appeal for being in clear breach of this Court’s Rules. Although the appellants did not respond to this protest, for one, I observe that while the ruling was delivered on 10th May 2017, the notice of appeal was lodged on 30th June 2017 almost 50 days later, contrary to Rule 75(2) of this Court’s Rules. Nonetheless, I also note that in the face of such breach, the respondent did not approach this Court for the appropriate remedy as stipulated under Rule 84 of the Court of Appeal Rules. The Rule expressly states;
13.As we were not so moved, I say no more on the respondent’s objection which comes too late in the day when the appeal sought to be impugned is at the hearing stage.
14.The appellants claim that the learned Judge was bereft of jurisdiction in handling the matter because this was not a succession matter per se but a dispute over ownership of land which the learned Judge ought to have referred to the Environment and Land Court. From my perusal of the record, however, and as admitted by the 1st appellant, the grant of letters of administration over the deceased’s estate was at the instance of the 1st appellant, and subsequently the suit land was registered in the names of the appellants. It is this grant of letters of administration and the resultant registration that the respondent sought to revoke/cancel at the trial court, and which orders she was granted. The learned Judge upon evaluating the matter, found that the appellants were not in the line of consanguinity in respect of the deceased, and as such they could not inherit from his estate. The learned Judge further observed;
15.While stating the foregoing, the learned Judge also advised that the claim on ownership of the suit land could be pursued in another forum.
16.I find the learned Judge’s holding to be proper. He addressed himself properly on the law and took into account all relevant factors in exercising his discretion. Ultimately, I do not think that the learned Judge committed any error of principle, misdirected himself or was otherwise plainly wrong so as to entitle me to interfere with his exercise of discretion. He arrived at the only decision that accords with justice and good conscience in the circumstances.
17.In consequence, this appeal is devoid of merit and I would dismiss it with costs.
18.As Mumbi Ngugi and Tuiyott, JJA agree, it is so ordered.
JUDGMENT OF MUMBI NGUGI, JA.I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment of my learned brother Kiage, JA with which I am in full agreement.
JUDGMENT OF TUIYOTT, JA.I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment of my learned brother Kiage, JA with which I am in full agreement.DATED AND DELIVERED AT KISUMU THIS 13TH DAY OF MAY, 2022.P. O. KIAGE........................JUDGE OF APPEALMUMBI NGUGI......................JUDGE OF APPEALF. TUIYOTT.....................JUDGE OF APPEALI confirm that this is a true copy of the original.SignedDEPUTY REGISTRAR