Ndegwa & another v Muthamia & 2 others (Environment and Land Appeal E055 of 2021) [2022] KEELC 15136 (KLR) (1 November 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEELC 15136 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment and Land Appeal E055 of 2021
JA Mogeni, J
November 1, 2022
Between
Jackson Kamau Ndegwa
1st Appellant
Anne Njeri Wanyeji
2nd Appellant
and
Everlyne Muthamia
1st Respondent
Markford Muoki
2nd Respondent
Maworks Property Management Co.Ltd
3rd Respondent
(Being an Appeal from the Judgment and Decree of the Business Premises and Rent Tribunal by Hon Andreww Muma (Vice-Chairman) on the 18/06/2021 in Nairobi BPRT No. 232 of 2021)
Judgment
1.This appeal arises from the Ruling of Hon Andrew Muma, Vice-chairman of the Business Premises Rent Tribunal of Kenya delivered at Nairobi on June 18, 2021 in respect of Tribunal Case No 232 of 2021. In the said decision the Chairman dismissed the application and ordered that the applicant vacates the suit business premises and picks his belongings failure to which the landlord was at liberty to evict the tenant (applicant).
2.Being dissatisfied with the said ruling, the Appellant filed this appeal. The Appeal is based on sixteen grounds and can be summarized inter alia as follows:
3.The Appeal was dispensed by way of written submissions.
4.The 1st Appellant in his submissions gave a summary of how he came to be a Tenant on the demised premises and what led to the filing of a reference at the Tribunal which is reasons for this appeal. He alleged that he rented the business premises of the 1st Respondent who is a director of the company that owns the business premises, Maworks Property Management Company Limited and the 2nd Respondent is a care-taker of the suit premises. He contends that he paid the 1st Respondent rent so that he could enter the rented premises and run a beauty pallor through the 2nd Appellant.
5.In his Plaint dated 9/03/2021, averred that he had been running a business managed by the 2nd Appellant on premises leased from the 1st Respondent. He claimed that in the month of March on 6/03/2021, the 1st Respondent entered upon those premises and closed them alleging that he had not paid rent for the month of October, November and December including service charge yet according to him he had paid the rent fully including the month of January and February of 2021. The rent was paid by the 2nd Appellant.
6.He claimed that as a result of the illegal acts of the Respondents, he suffered loss of business and also his business tools were locked in the suit premises except a few which were in use on the morning of 6/03/2021 for which he seeks on appeal the quashing of the judgment, damages, compensation for fittings and loss of business, conservatory orders and that the Respondent deposits with court Kesh 2 million pending the hearing and determination of this suit.
7.The Tribunal in its ruling stated the 1st Appellant in their application dated 9/03/2021 stated that the tenant’s rights had been violated by the action of the landlord of illegal closure of the suit premises on 9/03/2021 and the Tribunal had jurisdiction to order the re-opening of the suit premises since there was no legal justification for closing the premises
8.Further that the 1st Appellant’s notice of motion was premised on the fact that their rights of dignity had been eroded despite the same being guaranteed under the constitution.
9.The 1st Respondent on her part averred that the 1st Appellant failed on their part to honor the tenancy agreement by accumulating rent upto Ksh 52,500 making it untenable to have the Appellants as tenants in the suit premises.
10.That the burden of proof to produce receipts to show payment of rent as had been agreed between the 1st Appellant and the 1st Respondent was an obligation of the 1st Appellant and he was not able to discharge this burden of proof effectively since the mpesa payments do not attest to full payment of rent, deposit and service charge and therefore the 1st Appellant had failed to honor his duties of a tenant. The 1st Respondent also stated that the Notice of Termination of Tenancy dated May 20, 2021 had lapsed having run its full course and therefore the 1st Appellant needed to have moved out.
11.The 1st Appellant on his part denied having been service with any notice and only got to hear about the notice from the replying affidavit filed by the 1st Respondent. As such he stated that he was illegally locked out of his business premises while there was a reference filed before the tribunal dated 9/03/2021.
12.The 1st Respondent submitted that the tribunal was right in finding that the Appellant’s application dated 9/03/2021 had no legal leg to stand on and it lacked merit
Analysis and Determination
13.I have perused the entire record of the appeal and I have considered the grounds of appeal set out in the memorandum of appeal. I have also considered the parties’ respective submissions. Similarly, I have considered the relevant legal framework and jurisprudence on the key issue in this appeal.
14.From the memorandum of appeal and the submissions, the issues for determination are found to be;-a.Whether the tribunal had jurisdiction to hear and determine the dispute preferred before it.b.Whether the tribunal erred by finding in favour of the Respondent?c.Whether the Appellant is entitled to the orders sought?
15.On whether the Tribunal had jurisdiction to hear and determine the dispute preferred before it, I begin by pointing out that the Appellant had not challenged the tribunal’s jurisdiction per se but only as it related to the orders made, the process of reaching its determination and what he has termed as his rights being violated. This does not go to the core issue of jurisdiction.
16.In my view, irrespective of the dispute presented before it, under Section 12(1) of Cap 301, the Tribunal had power to, inter alia, determine whether or not any tenancy is a controlled one (12(1)(a)) and make orders, upon such terms and conditions as it thought fit, for re-opening of the tenant’s (Appellant’s) business premises, and conservatory orders prohibiting eviction of the Appellant from the business premises to allow his quiet possession, which orders may be applicable to any person, whether or not he is a tenant, being at any material time in occupation of the premises comprised in a controlled tenancy.
17.The vice-chairman was however of the view that there is no controlled tenancy since the Appellant did not pay the deposit, service charge and was in rent arrears. He stated that controlled tenancies being contracts their substratum failed when the 1st Appellant was in rent arrears. He further stated that having established that the 1st Appellant failed to proof payment of rent and therefore collapsing the substratum of there being no valid contract where controlled tenancies also fell under then he was “….forced to down his tools..”
18.The issue of a court downing its tools was discussed in the case of Owners of the Motor Vessel Lillian S v Caltex Kenya [1989] KLR 1. In that case, Hon Justice Nyarangi JA (as he then was) said this of jurisdiction and the consequence of a court holding that it lacks jurisdiction: -
19.In the instant case the vice-chairman of the tribunal downed his tools as he stated but he then went ahead to make a finding about the application on its merit without the case being heard. This in my view prejudiced the 1st Appellant who was persuaded by filing the reference before the Tribunal that it had jurisdiction.
20.As a starting point, it is common cause that on October 19, 2021 the 1st Appellant paid the 1st Respondent a sum of Kesh 10,000 as rent for the premises that the 2nd Appellant was to set up a business enterprise. The 1st Appellant and the 1st Respondent negotiated the rent from Ksh 13,000 downwards to Kesh 10,000 according to the replying affidavit of the 1st Respondent dated 9/04/2021. Therefore, the 1st and 2nd Appellant were by operation of the law the 1st Respondent’s tenant in the suit premises. It is also uncontested that the tenancy was not reduced into writing. For that fact and that the business carried out in the premises by the tenant was a beauty pallor then the tenancy would be a controlled tenancy within the meaning of Section 2 of the Landlord and Tenant (Shops, Hotels and Catering Establishments) Act (the Act). I therefore do not agree with the vice-chairman of the tribunal that there was not controlled tenancy I find that the relationship between the 1st Appellant and the 1st Respondent was a controlled tenancy.
21.In his submissions at the tribunal, the advocate of the 1st Respondent was also persuaded that the relationship between the 1st Appellant and the 1st Respondent was that of a controlled tenancy and he relied on the cases of Rogan Kamper vs Lord Grosvenor (No2) [1977]KLR 129, East Africa Power and Lighting Co Ltd vs Attorney General [1978] eKLR, Msabaha Girls Secondary School v Gaetemo Grass [2014]eKLR.
22.Further the 1st Respondent in her affidavit notes that she issued a notice of termination of tenancy agreement. The issuance of this notice points to existence of a tenancy. I however note that there is was not copy attached by the 1st Respondent of the said notice. The 1st Respondent avers to having entered into a negotiation of payment of rent by the 1st Appellant and even reduced it to Kesh 10,000 from the initial Ksh 13,000. All this point to a tenancy relationship which was however not reduced into writing. Paragraph 11 of the Replying Affidavit has a tabulation of payment of rent by the 1st Respondent.
23.In a controlled tenancy under the Act, the tenant enjoys some protection and the termination of or alteration of the terms and conditions of such a tenancy cannot be effected without the giving of the notice required by the Act. In this regard Section 4 of the Act reads:
24.Provided that—
25.A tenancy notice shall not be effective for any of the purposes of this Act unless it specifies the grounds upon which the requesting party seeks the termination, alteration or reassessment concerned and requires the receiving party to notify the requesting party in writing, within one month after the date of receipt of the notice, whether or not he agrees to comply with the notice.
26.A tenancy notice may be given to the receiving party by delivering it to him personally, or to an adult member of his family, or to any other servant residing within or employed in the premises concerned, or to his employer, or by sending it by prepaid registered post to his last known address, and any such notice shall be deemed to have been given on the date on which it was so delivered, or on the date of the postal receipt given by a person receiving the letter from the postal authorities, as the case may be.
27.In view of the foregoing, I find and hold that the Tribunal had jurisdiction to determine whether the tenancy that allegedly existed between the parties to this dispute was a controlled one. In doing so, the Tribunal was duty bound to consider the evidence tendered by both sides concerning that issue. By dint of the provisions of Section 15 of Cap 301, this court similarly, has jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal herein.
28.It is not lost to the court that Clause 9 of the Memorandum of Appeal the Appellant refers to a Notice of Eviction which was issued by the Respondent. It therefore follows that the Respondents recognized that theirs was a controlled tenancy relationship.
29.Since the Tribunal by operation of law had power to hear the dispute presented before it for, among other purposes, determining whether there existed a tenancy agreement between the parties to the dispute and if found to exist, whether or not the tenancy was a controlled one; it is not right to say the Tribunal vice-chairman misdirected and misapplied his powers and discretion in the orders issued. What the Appellant should be saying is that, based on the evidence adduced before it, the Tribunal should not have made the decision it made.
30.Did the Tribunal err in finding in favour of the Respondent? My answer is, it did. I say this based on the pleadings presented before the Tribunal namely that the 1st Appellant had been in use and occupation of the suit premises for a four months or thereabout and had paid monthly rent as agreed although defaulting in some months and what he stated in his plaint as service charge. The Tribunal Vice-Chairman did not however find that there was a controlled Tenancy and therefore did not apply the required standards by law to allow for an eviction. On this point therefore I find that the 1st Appellant was not given a chance to adduce evidence a controlled tenancy.
31.On the question of whether the Appellant is entitled to the orders sought.
32.The 1st Appellant has sought six orders namely:
33.Having found that the vice-chairman of the tribunal erred in fact and in law by finding that there was not controlled tenancy and that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction I am reluctant to consider any of the orders sought by the 1st Appellant except to allow the prayer for the appeal and subsequently order for a retrial at the tribunal.
34.I find that there was undisputed conduct between the parties that pointed to an existing tenant and landlord relationship.
35.Whereas the matter of drafting of pleadings was not the subject in this case, I feel constrained to comment on it. The pleadings drafted by the 1st Appellant disclose a cause of action but the court noted that the brief was badly drafted and by the Appellant submitting a poorly written brief, the litigant fails the Court as well as himself. The pleadings contained conjectures which may prejudice an important matter before the court. The 1st Appellant needs to relook at this and maybe seek legal representation in future.
36.I have said enough on drafting of pleadings let me now give my disposal orders. Given the fore-going the upshot is that:
a.The appeal is merited.b.I refer back this case for retrial at the tribunal within the next 21 days.c.Costs are awarded to the 1st Appellant.It is so ordered.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY AT NAIROBI THIS 1st DAY OF NOVEMBER 2022.…………………………MOGENI J.JUDGEIn the Virtual Presence of :-Mr Alosa for the DefendantsMr Jackson Ndegwa in person (Plaintiff/Applicant)Sagina/Yvette : Court Assistants……………………MOGENI J.JUDGE