Ochieng (Suing on his Own Behalf and on Behalf of:) & 112 others v Kabarak Farm Ltd & 19 others; County Government of Trans Nzoia & 7 others (Interested Parties) (Environment & Land Petition 3 of 2017) [2022] KEELC 2982 (KLR) (21 June 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEELC 2982 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment & Land Petition 3 of 2017
FO Nyagaka, J
June 21, 2022
IN THE MATTER OF THE CONSTITUTION OF KENYA, 2010
AND
IN THE MATTER OF INFRINGEMENT AND OR VIOLATION OF THE PETITIONERS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS CONTRARY TO ARTICLES 19(2), 20(5), 21(1), 2, 2, 22(1), 23(1,2-a,d&e, 26, 27, 27(6), 28, 29, 35, 40, 40(1),(3)(a-b), (4), (6), 431(c & d),(3), 47,47(1-2), 60(1a), 62(4), 65(4), 66(1), 67, 68(c-iv, v, vii), 73(1),(a),iii &iv, 95 and 165 OF THE NEW CONSTITUTION OF KENYA, 2010
AND
IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 3, 9 & 12 THE GOVERNMENT LAND ACT, CAP 280, LAWS OF KENYA
AND
IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 65, 66, 67,68,69,70,167,177 & PART X11 OF AGRICULTURAL ACT, CAP 318 LAWS OF KENYA
Between
Charles Opondo Ochieng (Suing on his Own Behalf and on Behalf of:)
1st Petitioner
Nick Musungu (Suing on his Own Behalf and on Behalf of:)
2nd Petitioner
Boniface Makokha Telewa (Suing on his Own Behalf and on Behalf of:)
3rd Petitioner
Jacob Pepela
4th Petitioner
John Wekesa Telewa
5th Petitioner
Stanley Shakilo
6th Petitioner
Jamin Wekesa
7th Petitioner
Godfrey Wanjala
8th Petitioner
Simon Engolan
9th Petitioner
Joseph Ochieng
10th Petitioner
Alex Malakwen
11th Petitioner
Wycliff Wafula
12th Petitioner
Stephen Maboko
13th Petitioner
Fred Mutoro
14th Petitioner
Wilson Kimongo
15th Petitioner
Simon Matete
16th Petitioner
Walter Lui
17th Petitioner
Francis Wekesa
18th Petitioner
Patrick Wangira
19th Petitioner
Dismass Wafula
20th Petitioner
Margaret Nasambu
21st Petitioner
Ronald Barasa
22nd Petitioner
Nickson Wekesa
23rd Petitioner
Agnes Karori
24th Petitioner
Lazaro Wekesa Maran
25th Petitioner
Jones Nasambu
26th Petitioner
Joel Mung’are
27th Petitioner
Grace N. Luturian
28th Petitioner
Laban Wefila
29th Petitioner
Linet Kwamboka
30th Petitioner
Stanley Siatako
31st Petitioner
Ruth Chepchumba
32nd Petitioner
William N. Maruti
33rd Petitioner
Peter Wanyonyi
34th Petitioner
Grace Chemayek Kutwa
35th Petitioner
Rhodah N. Mnupi
36th Petitioner
Matayo Mwalati
37th Petitioner
Jacob S. Msiebebe
38th Petitioner
Jane N. Sudi
39th Petitioner
Florence Kerubo Omoyo
40th Petitioner
Juma Nyongesa
41st Petitioner
Richard Wekesa Wandera
42nd Petitioner
Eunice Barasa
43rd Petitioner
Benson Namunyu
44th Petitioner
Ronald Nalulwe
45th Petitioner
Fred W. Makhapila
46th Petitioner
John Simiyu
47th Petitioner
Isaac Mkenda
48th Petitioner
Benson M. Wasilwa
49th Petitioner
Cylus L. Luchacha
50th Petitioner
Kennedy W. Juma
51st Petitioner
Nancy Munyasia
52nd Petitioner
James Wanjala
53rd Petitioner
Richard Kimengich
54th Petitioner
Kathleen K. M
55th Petitioner
Peter Kituyi Mfuti
56th Petitioner
W. Wanjala
57th Petitioner
Everlyne Luturian
58th Petitioner
Edwin Namshule
59th Petitioner
Janifer Simatwa
60th Petitioner
Rafael Simatwa
61st Petitioner
Patrick Madegwa Mataso
62nd Petitioner
Metrine Lusike
63rd Petitioner
Mary N. Nyongesa
64th Petitioner
Agnes Mlongo
65th Petitioner
Wycliffe Mpalio
66th Petitioner
Isaac Wasai
67th Petitioner
Titus Kituyi
68th Petitioner
Teresa Kerubo
69th Petitioner
Wekesa B. Masinde
70th Petitioner
Joyce Kemuma
71st Petitioner
Tom Joseph Omoyo
72nd Petitioner
Wilkister Moraa
73rd Petitioner
Loice Nyambura
74th Petitioner
Wilfred Shirengo
75th Petitioner
James Ngungi
76th Petitioner
Mary Nafuna
77th Petitioner
Melabi Wambia
78th Petitioner
Doris Bwari
79th Petitioner
Esther Kinuthia
80th Petitioner
Emeldah K. Okotoyi
81st Petitioner
Emilly Nekesa
82nd Petitioner
Josphat Wafula
83rd Petitioner
Joseph Masika
84th Petitioner
Andrew Majimbo
85th Petitioner
Robert Wanjala
86th Petitioner
Caleb Wanjala
87th Petitioner
Roseline Onzere
88th Petitioner
Grace Kananu
89th Petitioner
Mourice Nyongesa
90th Petitioner
Joseph Mhemberi
91st Petitioner
David Nyukuri
92nd Petitioner
Mark Raja Okwara
93rd Petitioner
John Ojimu
94th Petitioner
Humphrey W. Barasa
95th Petitioner
Cleophas B. Mayende
96th Petitioner
Chilson Mlupi
97th Petitioner
Nelson Sitoki
98th Petitioner
Alice N. Wekesa
99th Petitioner
Francis Siati
100th Petitioner
Reuben Kachui
101st Petitioner
Kennedy Wafula
102nd Petitioner
Tom Simiyu
103rd Petitioner
Wamalwa Sanyanda
104th Petitioner
John Makokha Talewa
105th Petitioner
Ernest Popoi
106th Petitioner
Roselyne Khakasa
107th Petitioner
Yohana Wafula
108th Petitioner
Josephat Mbito
109th Petitioner
Hellen Wafula
110th Petitioner
Philister N. Nyongesa
111th Petitioner
Ben Mlango
112th Petitioner
Irine Omunaki Vihima
113th Petitioner
and
Kabarak Farm Ltd
1st Respondent
Abma Investment Ltd
2nd Respondent
Kipsinende Farm Ltd
3rd Respondent
Linshire Ltd
4th Respondent
Simon Mbugua Thungu
5th Respondent
Kenneth Hamish Wooler Keith, Desterio Andadi Oyatsi & Elizabeth Klem (Being sued as Executors of the Estate of Hon. Nicholas Biwott)
6th Respondent
Settlement Fund Trustee
7th Respondent
Commissioner for Lands
8th Respondent
Land Registrar, Trans-Nzoia County
9th Respondent
Director, Land Adjudication & Settlement Trans-Nzoia County
10th Respondent
County Lands Surveyor, Trans Nzoia County
11th Respondent
Cabinet Secretary for Lands, Housing & Urban Development
12th Respondent
National Land Commission
13th Respondent
Inspector General of Police
14th Respondent
Director of Public Prosecutions
15th Respondent
National Assembly of Kenya
16th Respondent
Attorney General
17th Respondent
Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Interior & Co-ordination
18th Respondent
Dominic K. Singoei, Albert K. Too, Walter K. Kemboi (As representatives of 205 Members of Kimnon Investment Co)
19th Respondent
Kapsitwet River Estate Ltd
20th Respondent
and
County Government of Trans Nzoia
Interested Party
Area Mp, Kwanza Constituency
Interested Party
Kenya Human Rights Commission
Interested Party
Eldoret Express Ltd
Interested Party
John Lonyangapuo
Interested Party
Henry Kiplagat Kiptiony
Interested Party
John Poriot (On Own Behalf and as The Representative of 80 Others Named In The Application Dated 26/8/2017)
Interested Party
Moses Chelelgo, Job Sang & Daniel Kibundo (On own behalf and as the Representative of 296 Others named in the Application dated 24/6/2019)
Interested Party
Ruling
(On whether to grant an order for status quo pending Appeal)
1.This is a Ruling on an Application filed by the Petitioners on 22/11/2021, also bearing the same date of filing. It was brought under Order 50 Rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Rules, 2010 and Sections 1 and 3A of the Civil Procedure Act, Chapter 21 of the Laws of Kenya and all enabling provisions of law. The application seeks the following orders:1)…spent2)There upon hearing and determination this application this Honourable Court be and is hereby pleased to issue status quo orders as at 22nd November, 20201 be issued against the Respondents and Interested Parties in respect of land parcel No. LR 2046 comprised in Certificate No. IR. 318/1 situated within Trans Nzoia County that gave rise to parcels No. Kwanza/Namanjalala/Block4/1, Kwanza/Namanjalala/ Block 4/2, Kwanza/Namanjalala/ Block 4/3 Kwanza/Namanjalala/ Block 4/4 until the appeal is heard and determined.3)That costs of this application be in the cause.
2.The Application was based on based five (5) grounds and supported by an affidavit sworn jointly by Charles Opondo Ochieng, Nick Musungu and Bonface Makoka Telewa. The grounds were basically that judgment was delivered herein on 3/05/2021 herein the Petitioners partially succeeded as against the 6th and 20th Respondents; the Petitioners were desirous of appealing against the Respondents in respect of the prayers not granted in the Petition; they had filed a Notice of Appeal and requested for proceedings to enable them file the appeal in a timely manner; the Respondents who were in occupation of the parcel of land in issue were currently engaged in the subdivision of the subject parcels of land which actions would render the Appeal nugatory in let to continue hence it was in the interest of justice that the orders sought be granted. The Applicants reiterated the contents of the grounds in the Supporting Affidavit save that they annexed to it a copy of the Draft Memorandum of Appeal to evidence the fact that the intended appeal had high chances of success.
3.The 19th Respondent filed a Replying Affidavit in opposition to the Application. It was sworn by one Dominic Kipsugut Songoei on 07/02/2022. The deponent stated that he was the Chairman of Kimnon Investment Company, the 19th Respondent herein. He restated the fact that the Petitioners’/Applicants’ claims against the 1st-6th, 7th-13th, and 16th-19th Respondents were dismissed with no order as to costs. He then stated that the order of dismissal was incapable of being stayed hence the application was incompetent and a candidate for striking out.
Submissions
4.The Applicants filed written submissions dated 26/11/2021 on the same date. In them they posed a number of issues for the Court to determine. One, was whether they were entitled to orders of status quo in respect of the disputed land. They answered in the affirmative and relied on the case of Meru ELC Appeal No. 31 of 2020, Fatuma Abdi Jollo vs. Kuro Lengeson & Another, where the judge explained that when a Court orders that status quo be maintained it expects that the circumstances as at the time of the order must be maintained so as to preserve the state of affairs. They also relied on Murithi Jon Baobab Beach Resort as cited in In the matter of an application by Saifudeen Abdullabhai & 4 others for leave to apply for judicial review and for orders of certiorari and prohibition [2013]eKLR. They then explained the reasons why, in their understanding, the intended appeal had high chances of success by highlighting on each of the proposed grounds of appeal.
5.The 19th Respondent submitted on 24/02/2022 vide a set of submissions dated 22/02/2022. In them it stated that the Applicant’s submissions were misconceived and bad in law since the order of status quo cannot obtain. It reiterated that the judgment only dismissed the Petitioners’ claim against the parties stated in the Affidavit. They then submitted that Order 42 Rule 6 of the Civil Procedure Rules only applies to situations where a matter is pending in Court for further proceedings and not where none is existing. It then submitted that the Applicants were seeking orders of injunction in respect of the parcels of land named in their application and Order 42 Rule 6 did not donate power to the Court to issue such orders pending the hearing of an appeal. It then stated that only the Court of Appeal could, in an appropriate case, issue injunctive orders under Rule 5(2) (b) of the Court of Appeal Rules.
6.They then summed it that the Court did not, in its judgment, make orders touching on the land parcels Kwanza/Namanjalala Bock 4/1, 2, 3 and 4. They stated that the Court simply dismissed the petitioners’ cases against the named Respondents and all interested parties. They then relied on the cases of West College of Arts and Applied Sciences v Orange and others (1976) KLR, 63 and Peter Anyang Nyongo & 2 Others v Safaricom Limited 92007) eKLR (sic).
Analysis And Determination
7.I have carefully read through the Application and the Affidavit in support thereof, the Replying Affidavit and the submissions thereto. I have also considered the law applicable and the case law relied on by the Petitioners and other relevant case law generally. I find that the issues for determination are:a.Whether the Applicant satisfied the requirements for grant of an order for status quo pending appeal.b.Whether to bear the costs of the Application.
8.I start with an analysis of the first issue before me, which is whether the Court should issue an order of status quo. I have anxiously considered the Application before me. If I understood the Petitioners correctly, they intend that the Court issues orders of maintenance of status quo as at 22/11/2021 in respect of the parcels of land they stated in the prayers of the Application, the grounds thereof and the supporting Affidavit because they intend to pursue and appeal in the Court of Appeal against the judgment of the Court delivered on 3/05/2021. They annexed to the supporting Affidavit both the copy of the Notice of Appeal and the Memorandum of Appeal in that regard.
9.My understanding of the law is that there is a difference between the grant of an order of status quo and one for stay of execution of a decree pending the hearing and determination of an appeal (preferred). According to Bryan A. Garner (2019), Black’s Law Dictionary, 11th Edition, Thompson Reuters, St. Paul, MN, 1703, status quo means “state in which”, that is to say, “The situation that currently exists.” In the same Dictionary, the phrase stay of execution means the “the postponement or halting of a proceeding, judgment or the like”. They cannot be one and the same because the former relates to the state of things as obtains irrespective of others or occurrences of other things. But the latter is in respect of actions taking place, and in this regard, proceedings in a certain action. For relevance purposes, the Applicants moved this Court for issuance of the orders sought due to the fact that they had preferred an Appeal from part of the judgment of this Court. Thus, the relevant provisions thereto are in Order 42 of the Civil Procedure Rules, 2010.
10.I have had to distinguish the two phrases because when a party prefers an appeal from a judgment or order of a Court and wishes the execution thereof halted, he/she should file an Application for stay of execution of the order or decree. And in terms of Order 4 Rule 6(4), once a Notice of Appeal is lodged against a decision of a superior Court, it is deemed that an Appeal has been filed in the Court of Appeal. In such circumstances the Applicant then has to satisfy the conditions for grant of stay of execution of the order or decree pending appeal. But the order of status quo should not and cannot be used as a substitute for an order of stay of execution. I would state that the orders of status quo serve a special purpose in the civil law practice and procedure in comparison with those of stay of execution of a decree or order. To equate the two or treat them as one and the same thing would put the practice into confusion and call into application totally different principles for the grant of such diverse orders. Suffice it to say that orders of status quo serve to maintain the state of things as they are. In my view they should not be sought in situations where one would move the Court for a stay of execution.
11.In Republic vs National Environment Tribunal, Ex-parte Palm Homes Limited & Another [2013] eKLR, Odunga J. stated:
12.Also, in TSS Spinning & Weaving; Company Ltd vs Nic Bank Limited & another [2020] eKLR the court was of the view that:
13.Similarly, in Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA) vs Co-operative Bank of Kenya Limited & another [2020] eKLR, the purpose of a status quo order was explained as follows:
14.In essence Order 42 Rule 6(2) of the Civil Procedure Rules sets out the requirements to be taken account when a party seeks to stay execution of a decree or order of a Court. This, the Applicants neither met nor attempted to show except for stating that the intended appeal raises triable issues and that it would be rendered nugatory. It was not shown what triable issues these were. In any event, the orders of the Court as against the Respondents were negative ones in the sense that they entailed dismissal of the Petitioners’ claims against the Respondents hence incapable of being stayed. Again, the Applicants only merely stated on oath that the Respondents and Interested Parties were, in the recent past, engaged in subdividing the parcels of land and selling them. In my view, this blanket statement that is unsupported by way of specificity and or documentary proof is of no avail to an applicant who wishes the Court to exercise its discretion in his favour. The upshot is that the Application dated 22/11/2021 is not merited hence incapable of being granted.
15.What is left of me to decide is the second issue, which is: who to bear the costs of the instant application. As stated above, the Application dated 22/11/2021 is lost. Since costs follow the event, they shall do so in the instant circumstances. Thus, the Applicants shall bear the costs of the Application.Orders accordingly.
RULING, DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT KITALE VIA ELECTRONIC MAIL THIS 21ST DAY OF JUNE, 2022.DR. IUR FRED NYAGAKAJUDGE, ELC, KITALE.