Masters Kenya Limited & another v desert Runner Services Company Limited & 5 others (Civil Application E562 of 2024) [2024] KECA 1493 (KLR) (25 October 2024) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KECA 1493 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Application E562 of 2024
K M'Inoti, F Tuiyott & FA Ochieng, JJA
October 25, 2024
Between
Masters Kenya Limited
1st Applicant
Stephen Kamau Ngungu
2nd Applicant
and
John Saleh Oketch
1st Respondent
Desert Runner Services Company Limited
2nd Respondent
Sylvia Alivitsa Litunda
3rd Respondent
Housing Finance Corporation of Kenya
4th Respondent
The Ngong Land Registrar
5th Respondent
The Chief Land Registrar
6th Respondent
(Being an application for stay of execution pending the hearing and determination of an intended appeal from the Judgment and Decree of the High Court of Kenya at Nairobi (E. K. Wabwoto, J.) dated 19th September 2023 in HCCC No. 916 of 2013
Environment & Land Case 916 of 2013
)
Ruling
1.Before us is an application dated July 26, 2024, in which the applicants pray for the following orders pending the hearing and determination of this application and CACA E562 of 2024:1.Spent.2.The Honourable Court be pleased to stay the execution of the judgment by the 4th respondent (sic) entered on 19th September 2023 in Civil Case No. 916 of 2013 pending the hearing and determination of Civil Appeal No. E562 of 2024 which seeks to challenge the ruling on the review delivered in the above-captioned suit.3.The Honourable Court be pleased to grant an order of stay barring the 4th respondent from exercising its statutory of sale over land parcel No. LR Ngong/Ngong/20987, (hereinafter, “the suit property”), pending the hearing and determination of Civil Appeal No. E562 of 2024.4.Costs of this application be provided for.”
2.The application is brought under Rule 5(2)(b) of the Court of Appeal Rules, Articles 159 & 164 of the Constitution, Sections 3, 3A & 3B of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, and Sections 1A, 1B & 3A of the Civil Procedure Act. The application is based on the following grounds:a.The suit property, which belongs to the applicants was advertised for sale in the Standard Newspaper on 18th July 2024 by the 4th respondent, through Taifa Auctioneers.b.The 4th respondent’s loan with its co-respondents was not ascertained and approved by the court and as such there is no monetary decree in force capable of execution.c.In the impugned judgment, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents were to pay the applicants the outstanding purchase price of Kshs. 8,000,000 before the 4th respondent exercises its statutory power of sale which to date has not been honoured.d.The impugned judgment and the subsequent ruling were couched in such nebulous terms that could partially allow execution on the side of the 4th respondent only and thus it would be discriminatory to allow the 4th respondent to proceed with the execution while leaving the applicants stranded yet all parties ought to enjoy the fruits of the judgment.e.The 2nd applicant has been staying on the suit property with his family for the past 24 years as their matrimonial property, yet the 4th respondent is about to sell it without due compliance with Orders 3 and 4 of the impugned judgment.f.The 4th respondent has since advertised the suit property for sale and an auction has been scheduled for 2nd August 2024.g.If the stay order is not granted, the applicants will suffer irreparable damage and they lack the financial muscle to purchase an alternative settlement as the 1st, 2nd 3rd respondents failed to pay them the full purchase price resulting from the sale of the suit property.h.The applicants have an arguable appeal with high chances of success as enumerated in the filed memorandum of appeal, and if the orders sought are not granted, the appeal will be rendered nugatory, and they will suffer irreparable loss by losing their matrimonial home.
3.The application was supported by the 2nd applicant’s affidavit sworn on 26th July 2024 in which he reiterated the grounds on the face of the application and further stated that:a.He was the director of the 1st applicant and therefore had the authority to swear the affidavit on its behalf.b.The applicants’ attempts to have the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents comply with order 3 of the impugned judgment and pay them the outstanding balance of the purchase price have been in vain.c.It is important for this Court to analyze, evaluate, and interpret order 3 in the sense that no monetary decree can be drawn from the said judgment.d.Due to the vacuum in the trial court’s judgment and the review ruling, parties have been left in limbo to choose their own ways of executing a non- monetary decree which gives the 1st respondent the upper hand in execution.
4.Opposing the application, the 1st respondent in its replying affidavit sworn by its director, Stephen Gakere Macharia on 5th August 2024 stated that:a.The court did not make any finding that the applicants were owed Kshs. 8,000,000 being the balance of the purchase price.b.The applicants already moved the trial court on review which court expressed itself that it did not make a mistake and could not superimpose the payment of Kshs. 8,000,000 in respect of order 3 of the final judgment.c.As the applicants chose the remedy of review as opposed to an appeal, what is before this Court for consideration is the ruling dated 22nd February 2024 and not the judgment dated 19th September 2023.d.The applicants have not demonstrated that there was an erroneous finding in the ruling.e.The applicants have not met the mandatory requirements of Rule 5(2) (b) to warrant stay of execution because; the trial court already expressed itself on the ownership of the suit property and the obligations of the 1st, 2nd & 3rd respondents to the 4th respondent, the applicants’ appeal is limited to the ruling on review, and no arguable point has been made against the ruling nor has it been demonstrated how the appeal against the ruling would be rendered nugatory if stay is not granted.f.The application lacks merit and it should be dismissed.
5.Further opposing the application, the 4th respondent through the affidavit of its director, legal and company secretary sworn on 6th August 2024 stated that:a.Being dissatisfied with the impugned judgment, the applicants filed an application for review dated 20th November 2023.b.The application partially succeeded as the court corrected the names of the 1st and 3rd respondents but declined the rest of the prayers including the prayer to insert a monetary figure of Kshs. 8,000,000 at the end of order 3.c.There are no adverse or executable orders made against the applicants in the ruling to warrant the grant of an order for stay of execution.d.The orders sought by the applicants to bar the 4th respondent from exercising its statutory power of sale cannot be issued because the judgment giving the order is not the subject of the appeal.e.As the applicants did not challenge the orders made on the ownership of the suit property, or the order permitting the 4th respondent to exercise its statutory power of sale, they do not have locus to clog the 4th respondent’s rights over the suit property.f.The applicants are not the owners, chargors, or guarantors in the suit property, and therefore the allegation on the valuation of the suit property is baseless.g.The application herein has not satisfied the conditions precedent for grant of orders of stay of execution.h.The applicants’ application seeking similar orders before the trial court was dismissed.
6.The applicants further filed a supplementary affidavit dated 23rd August 2024, a further supplementary affidavit dated 9th September 2024, and two affidavits in response to the 1st and 4th respondents replying affidavits dated 12th August 2024, respectively. In the said affidavits, the applicants reiterated their statements in the supporting affidavit and the grounds on the face of the application.
7.There was no response from the other respondents.
8.When the application came up for hearing on 1st October 2024, the 2nd applicant, Mr. Kamau Ndungu, appeared in person for the applicants whereas Ms. Kisotu, learned counsel holding brief for Mr. Makumi appeared for the 1st respondent and Mr. Ayieko, learned counsel appeared for the 4th respondent. There was no appearance by the other respondents despite having been served. Parties relied on their respective written submissions which they opted to briefly highlight.
9.Mr. Kamau Ndungu submitted that he had filed the application dated 26th July 2024 seeking a stay of execution order of the judgment dated 19th September 2023, to stop the 4th respondent from auctioning the suit property. He submitted that the 1st respondent has yet to pay him the outstanding balance for the purchase of the suit property, yet the 4th respondent has advertised the same for sale.
10.He further submitted that he has no liability to the 4th respondent because he was not a guarantor to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents. He was apprehensive that his appeal would be rendered nugatory if the stay of execution was not granted and the appeal succeeded because the suit property would have been sold and he and his family would not have an alternative place to stay having lived on the suit property for over 25 years.
11.In their written submissions dated 5th August 2024, the applicants submitted on the principles for grant of stay of execution as set out in the case of Giella v Cassman Brown. In their further submissions dated 12th August 2024, the applicants submitted on the substantive appeal but failed to submit on the twin principles under Rule 5(2)(b).
12.Opposing the application, Ms. Kisotu submitted that since the applicants had sought a prayer for review against the impugned judgment, they cannot in the same breath appeal against the said judgment.
13.In its written submissions, the 1st respondent submitted that for the applicants to succeed in their application for stay of execution, they must demonstrate that the appeal is arguable and not frivolous and that, if the order of stay is not granted, the appeal will be rendered nugatory.
14.On the first principle, the 1st respondent relied on the case of Jennifer Akinyi Osodo v Boniface Okumu Osodo & 3 Others [2021] eKLR in submitting that the applicants have not demonstrated that they have an arguable appeal as the ruling did not order the parties to do anything or refrain from doing anything. It was a negative order which was incapable of execution.
15.On the second principle, the 1st respondent pointed out that the trial court found that the suit property was lawfully and validly sold to the 1st respondent, and was therefore no longer the applicants’ property, hence they could not bar the 4th respondent from exercising its statutory powers of sale.
16.Citing the case of Dickson Sinket Mapi (suing as the personal representative of Benjamin Mapi Ole Partimo - Deceased v Mutunkei [2021] KECA 235 KLR, the 1st respondent submitted that the applicants had failed to satisfy the requirements under Rule 5(2)(b) and even relied on the wrong provisions of the law by relying on Order 40 Rules 1 & 2.
17.On the other hand, Mr. Ayieko pointed out that when this matter first came up for hearing, the Court noted that the prayers sought in the application were intended to stay a judgment which was not the subject of an appeal. This led to the applicants filing a supplementary affidavit attaching a fresh notice of appeal. However, the substratum of the applicants’ appeal as per their memorandum of appeal, is an appeal against the ruling on review.
18.Counsel submitted that that the ruling on review was a negative order dismissing the application for review. There was no judgment, order, or decree, capable of execution to warrant a stay of execution order. Counsel further submitted that the application was misguided and without merit as it was clear that the applicants were not appealing against the judgment that found that the sale of the suit property and the charge registered against the title were valid.
19.Counsel pointed out that the applicants lost the ownership of the suit property the moment they sold it to the 1st respondent. Therefore, the applicants cannot be seen to suggest that if the 4th respondent exercises its statutory power of sale to realize the security, they will suffer loss because the suit property does not belong to them.
20.Counsel submitted that should the appeal succeed and the court finds that the 1st respondent owed the applicants the amount of money in question, it is not to be settled on account of the security that was offered to the 4th respondent. This matter can only be settled between the applicants and the 1st respondent.
21.Counsel submitted that the appeal will not be rendered nugatory as the 4th respondent will realize the security, take the amount owed to it, and the surplus will be remitted to the borrower. Should the court deem it fit, the 4th respondent can hold onto the surplus until this matter is determined.
22.Finally, counsel reiterated the 1st respondent’s submissions that the applicants having chosen to seek a review of the judgment, cannot have a second bite of the cherry by seeking to appeal against the said judgment. Be that as it may, the 4th respondent is not seeking to execute the judgment but is intent on exercising its statutory power of sale, guaranteed under the law. He urged that the appeal be dismissed with costs.
23.In its written submissions, the 4th respondent relied on the case of Amina Shiraz Yakub v David Baburam Jagatram [2017] eKLR to buttress the oral submissions by counsel.
24.In a brief rejoinder, Mr. Kamau Ndungu submitted that he made a mistake which he would wish to rectify by amending the application. To his mind, the application for review was not substantive, but one for an amendment because the court did not specify the outstanding amounts to be paid.
25.We have carefully considered the application, along with the supporting documents, affidavits, submissions by the parties, relevant case law, and legal provisions. The issue for determination is whether or not the application meets the requirements under Rule 5(2)(b).
26.It is common ground that the applicants sold the suit property to the 1st respondent. It is alleged that there is an outstanding balance of the purchase price which is still owed to the applicants. The trial court ordered the 1st respondent to pay the applicants any outstanding balances within 90 days of the judgment. The court also directed that the 4th respondent was at liberty to exercise its statutory power of sale and realize its security after the 90 days had lapsed.
27.These orders were not set aside or appealed against, hence they are still enforceable as the applicants' application for review seeking to correct the names of the parties and for the figure of Kshs.8,000,000 to be inserted in order 3 of the impugned judgment was declined. From the ruling on the application for review, the parties remained in the same position they were in after the impugned judgment was delivered. (See: Jennifer Akinyi Osodo v Boniface Okumu Osodo & 3 Others, (supra).
28.The 4th respondent advertised for the sale of the suit property on 18th July 2024, in the realization of its security, which the trial court had found to be valid.
29.This prompted the applicants to file the present application against the judgment of the court dated 19th September 2023 seeking to challenge the ruling dated 22nd February 2024 as per prayer 2 in the application.
30.From the onset, it is evident that the applicants intended to appeal against the ruling on review rather than the impugned judgment. When the applicant filed an application for the extension of time within which to lodge a notice of appeal and a memorandum of appeal, this Court by the order dated 15th July 2024 noted that the extension of time was in relation to the ruling on review and not the impugned judgment. Further to the foregoing, the applicants in their memorandum of appeal dated 22nd July 2024 refer to the ruling on review.
31.It, therefore, beats logic for the applicants to suggest that they are appealing against the impugned judgment when they have not sought leave to appeal against the said judgment. The applicants have framed their grounds around the ruling on review, yet they still claim to be appealing against the impugned judgment; that is inexplicable, in our view.
32.In the circumstances, we find that the application herein is not properly before us.
33.Nevertheless, the jurisdiction of this Court under Rule 5(2)(b) is original, independent, and discretionary. However, we must exercise this discretion judiciously and rationally, and not out of impulsiveness or sympathy.
34.Rule 5(2)(b) is a procedural provision that allows the court to protect the subject matter of an appeal or an intended appeal. In the case of Stanley Kang'ethe Kinyanjui v Tony Keter & 5 Others [2013] eKLR, the court held that:
35.It follows therefore that, to succeed in an application for a stay of execution, the applicants must show that their intended appeal is arguable. Once this has been established, the applicants must also demonstrate that if their appeal were to be successful, it would be rendered nugatory. This principle was demonstrated in the case of Trust Bank Limited & Another v Investech Bank Limited & 3 Others [2000] eKLR.
36.In the case of Dennis Mogambi Mang'are v Attorney General & 3 Others [2012] eKLR, this Court held that:
37.On whether or not the applicants have established a valid basis for an arguable appeal, the applicants contend that the trial court ought to have inserted Kshs.8,000,000, in order 3 of the impugned judgment, as the outstanding balance of the purchase price. However, the applicants have not explained why they did not specifically plead the amount in their pleadings for the court to consider the same given that they had this figure while filing their pleadings. We do not think it is an arguable point.
38.In the case of Reliance Bank Ltd v Norlake Investments Ltd [2002] I EA 227, the court held that the factors which can render an appeal nugatory are to be considered within the circumstances of each particular case, and in doing so, the court is bound to consider the conflicting claims of both sides. In the circumstances of that particular case, the Court stated inter alia:
39.In the application before us, the applicants have not demonstrated to our satisfaction the hardship they are likely to suffer should a stay of execution order not be granted. They sold the suit property to the 1st respondent hence they have no claim of ownership over the suit property. The dispute between the applicant and the 1st respondent ought not to stand in the way through which the 4th respondent is entitled to exercise its statutory power of sale. In any event, the applicants have not suggested that the 4th respondent would be unable to refund any money found to be owing from it, should the appeal succeed.
40.In the result, we are not inclined to exercise the Court's discretion in favour of the applicants. Consequently, the application dated July 26, 2024 lacks merit and is accordingly dismissed with costs to the 1st and 4th Respondents.Orders accordingly.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 25TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 2024.K. M'INOTI.................................JUDGE OF APPEALF. TUIYOTT.................................JUDGE OF APPEALF. OCHIENG.................................JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a true copy of the original.SignedDEPUTY REGISTRAR