Ndirangu & 5 others (Suing on their own behalf and on behalf of IMPALA GARDEN ESTATE)) v Jiweze Development Limited & another (Petition 18 of 2021) [2022] KEELC 3362 (KLR) (5 May 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEELC 3362 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Petition 18 of 2021
LA Omollo, J
May 5, 2022
Between
Jane Nyambura Ndirangu
1st Petitioner
Susan Virginiah Wachira
2nd Petitioner
Susan Mwihaki Ndirangu
3rd Petitioner
Peter Maina Waikia
4th Petitioner
Maureen Wanjiru Mwaniki
5th Petitioner
Ann Wambui Karugu
6th Petitioner
Suing on their own behalf and on behalf of IMPALA GARDEN ESTATE)
and
Jiweze Development Limited
1st Respondent
The District Land Registrar Nakuru
2nd Respondent
Ruling
1.This ruling is in respect to the applicants’ notice of motion application dated November 30, 2021. The said application is expressed as being brought under order 40 rules 1(2), 2(1), 4(1), (2) and order 51 rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Rules 2010, section 3A of the Civil Procedure Act, section 26(1) and 80 of the Land Registration Act and article 159 of the Constitution.
2.The application is filed under certificate of urgency and seeks the following orders:
3.The application is based on the grounds on its face and supported by the affidavit sworn by one Jane Nyambura Ndirangu and with the authority of the applicants. The supporting affidavit is sworn on the 30th of November, 2021.
Factual Background
4.This suit was commenced by way of petition dated November 30, 2021 and filed on December 2, 2021. In the petition, the petitioners/applicants are seeking among other orders: a declaration that the petitioners are the rightful and lawful allotees of all that parcel of land known as Kiambogo/Kiambogo Block 2/23549 and Kiambogo/Kiambogo Block 2/23558 the suit properties herein, a declaration that the issuance of the title deeds of the suit properties by the 2nd respondent to the 1st respondent was null and void, an order for rectification on the land register by cancellation of the title deed held by the 1st respondent in respect of the suit properties, an order compelling the respondents to deliver vacant possession of the suit properties, an order prohibiting the respondents from re-entering or taking possession of the suit properties and in the alternative an order compelling the 1st respondent to give the petitioners full unfettered physical access to the suit properties.
Plaintiff/Applicant’s Contention
5.The 1st applicant contends that the applicants/petitioners are bona fide purchasers of various plots of land in the suit properties sold to them by the 1st respondent and that they have all constructed permanent residential homes. They have since named the gated community, comprising of the suit parcels, as Impala Garden Estate.
6.It is the applicants’ contention that they were all issued with their respective title deeds and they have all settled on their respective homes leaving some land aside meant for public utility and wayleave for power lines.
7.The 1st applicant further contends that public utility and a wayleave are not private properties as they are meant to be utilized and enjoyed by them, the bona fide purchasers of the suit parcels.
8.The applicant further contends that the 1st respondent are in the process of constructing a perimeter fence on the public utility land which land serves as a wayleave for electricity lines and that the applicants around November, 2021 had raised their concerns about the intended constructions with the 1st respondent but it fell on deaf ears.
9.The 1st applicant avers that the 1st respondent is now claiming to be the registered owner of the suit properties which are meant for public use and which serve as a wayleave for electricity lines.
10.It is her contention that the 1st respondent is claiming to be the registered owner of land title number Kiambogo/ Kiambogo Block 2/23549. It is her deposition that the purported title documents held by the 1st respondent are not authentic.
11.She ends by stating that the applicants’ acquired the suit properties with the belief that the 1st respondent shall set aside the public utility land for their use and that the 1st respondent has since violated their rights.
Respondent’s Response
12.In response to the application, the 1st respondent filed a replying affidavit dated January 13, 2022 sworn by one Joyce Wanjiru Ndirangu a director to the 1st respondent company where she deposes that the application is misconceived without merit and an abuse of the court process.
13.She deposes that the applicants are seeking for final orders on an interlocutory application. It is her deposition that orders for rectification of the land register by cancellation of the title deed held by the 1St respondent in respect of the suit properties is a final order.
14.She avers that the 1st respondent is in the commercial real estate business, that prior to purchasing the suit properties they conducted a search and found no encumbrances. The subsequently purchased the parcels of land from which the suit parcels mutated.
15.She further deposes that having paid the various owners, the 1st respondent sought to have the transfer of ownership to itself in order to subdivide and the same culminated to the issuance of the title documents in its name after which subdivision was done and sold to the applicants save for the 5th applicant.
16.The 1st respondent deposes that upon sale of the said lands, the 1st respondent applied for change of user in order to be issued with development approvals and after being successful, it built off-plan 3-bedroom bungalows and title documents were then issued to the applicants save for the 5th applicant, whom she says is a stranger to it, while the 6th respondent is in breach of an agreement between them.
17.It is her deposition that the remainder of the said land still belongs to the 1st respondent. She has attached copies of the title documents to the suit land.
18.The 1st respondent further deposes that suit parcels are for use by it and do not feature in any register of public lands and that if any claim accrued on the said land the same should have been brought forth by Kenya Power or the National Land Commission. The 1st respondent avers that the applicants’ have not provided any evidence to support their claim and that their application has not met the threshold in granting of the orders sought and should be disallowed.
1ST Applicant’s Response To The Replying Affidavit
19.The 1st applicant filed a further affidavit in response where it reiterated the contents of the supporting affidavit and added that even though the 1st respondent has rights over the suit property, the same rights can be defeated by operation of the law which in the instant case is by creation of public right of wayleave under section 143(1) of the Land Act and by the fact that the grant is subject to easement and conditions contained in the grant.
20.She deposes that the 1st respondent is under a duty to protect them from harm’s way due to the high risk and high-power voltage lines that pass through the utility and or public land and that the 1st respondent should note that its rights to the suit lands are subject to the overriding interests and the public right of wayleave.
21.The 1st applicant avers that the 5th applicant is a bona fide purchaser residing in the USA having left her mother in occupation of the house and that the claims by the 1st respondent against the 6th applicant on the alleged breach of agreement should be raised in another forum and not the instant suit.
22.She further deposes that this court is to determine is whether there exists a public utility land and/or wayleave on “illegally” acquired lands and not whether the 1st respondent is the legal owner.
23.She finally deposed that the 1st respondent has not demonstrated any loss it is likely to suffer in the event the court grants the orders for injunction.
Issues For Determination
24.The applicants filed their submissions on February 4, 2022 while the 1st respondent filed its submissions on February 15, 2022.
25.The 2nd respondent neither filed a response nor submissions.
26.The applicants identified the following issue for determination:a.Whether the conditions for issuance of the injunction have been met.
27.The 1st respondent on the other hand raises the following issues for determination:a.Are the applicants entitled to the orders sought?b.Have the applicants fulfilled the conditions set for granting of the injunction?c.Can the order to cancel the 1st respondent’s title deeds and have the same issued to the applicants be granted in an interlocutory application?d.Costs of the application.
28.Upon perusal of the application, supporting affidavit, replying affidavit, annexures and rival submissions filed in respect of this application, my considered view is that the two issues for determination are:
29.The first issue for determination is whether the plaintiff has met the criteria for the grant of an order of temporary injunction.
30.The guiding principles for the grant of orders of temporary injunction are well settled and are set out in the judicial decision of Giella Versus Cassman Brown (1973) EA 358. This position has been reiterated in numerous decisions from kenyan courts and more particularly in the case of Nguruman Limited versus Jan Bonde Nielsen & 2 others CA No 77 of 2012 (2014) eKLR where the Court of Appeal held that;
31.Consequently, the applicants ought to, first, establish a prima facie case. The applicants submitted that the 1st respondent has caused itself to be the registered owner of the suit parcels of land and that the said title can be defeated by operation of law. Particularly, the applicants submit that section 26 (1) of the Land Registration Act provides that once a certificate of title is issue to a proprietor, it vests the land to such proprietor as the absolute and indefeasible owner subject to encumbrances, easments, restrictions and other conditions.
32.The applicants submit that the 1st respondent’s grant issued to it is subject to easement and conditions such as wayleave and public right of way, as provided for under section 143(1) pf the Land Act.
33.It is their submission that the 1st respondent’s right over the suit land is subject to the overriding interest and the public right of wayleave.
34.In support of this first requirement, the applicants have relied on the decisions in Kenya Power and Lighting Co Ltd Vs Kipevu Inland Container EPZ LTD [2018] eKLR, Kenya Power and Co Ltd Vs Mosiara Trading Company Ltd, Mrao Ltd Versus First American Bank of Kenya Ltd (2003) EKLR
35.In Mrao Ltd Versus First American Bank of Kenya Ltd (2003) EKLR the Court of Appeal explained what comprises of a prima facie case as follows:
36.The applicants have made certain allegations on infringement of their right by the 1st respondent. The right allegedly infringed by the 1st respondent is that the 1st respondent is in the process of undertaking construction on the suit parcels of land and that this goes against their easmentary rights. They further contend that the titles obtained by the 1st respondent are fraudulent as the suit parcels are public land and subject to wayleave for the benefit of all of them.
37.The 1st respondent has denied these allegations and have attached title documents to the suit property, stating that the suit parcels are for their use as they please and that the parcels do not feature in any register of public lands held by the National Land commission.
38.The 1st respondent also submits that no evidence has been attached by the applicants to show that the suit parcels are public land or subject to easmentary rights as they allege.
39.The 1st respondent has relied on the decisions in Alex Wainanina t/a John Commercial Agencies Vs Jonnson Wanjihia [2015] eKLR and Magnate Ventures Limited Vs Eng Kenya Limited (2009) eKLR 538. These decisions speak to the test whether to grant an injunction or not and that there is need for existence of special circumstances.
40.From the material placed before me, I am unable to conclude that there exists a legal right which has been infringed by the 1st respondent. I also note that the National Land commission, Kenya Power and Co Ltd are not parties to this petition. If indeed, the suit parcels are public land and that the 1st respondent’s actions are causing interference with supply of electricity, they are invariably a necessary party to this petition.
41.In my opinion, therefore, the applicants have failed to meet the first requirement for grant of orders of temporary injunction.
42.Secondly, the applicants have to demonstrate that irreparable injury will be occasioned to them if the order of temporary injunction is not granted. The judicial decision of Pius Kipchirchir Kogo Vs Frank Kimeli Tenai (2018) eKLR provides an explanation for what is meant by irreparable injury and it states;
43.The applicants have pointed me to the decision in Pius Kipchirchir Kogo to explain what is meant by irreparable harm but have failed to submit on the question of irreparable harm being caused to them or explain what injury they are bound to suffer if the orders of temporary injunction are not granted or that the said injury is one that cannot be compensated for in damages.
44.In my view, therefore, the applicants have failed to demonstrate that irreparable loss will be occasioned to them if orders of temporary injunction pending the hearing and determination of the suit are not granted.
45.Thirdly, the applicants have to demonstrate that the balance of convenience tilts in their favour. In the case of Pius Kipchirchir Kogo Vs Frank Kimeli Tenai (2018) EKLR which defined the concept of balance of convenience as:In other words, the plaintiff has to show that the comparative mischief from the inconvenience which is likely to arise from withholding the injunction will be greater than that which is likely to arise from granting it”
46.In the case of Paul Gitonga Wanjau Vs Gathuthis Tea Factor Company Ltd & 2 others (2016) eKLR, the court dealing with the issue of balance of convenience expressed itself thus:
47.In the decision of Amir Suleiman Vs Amboseli Resort Limited [2004] eKLR where the learned judge offered further elaboration on what is meant by “balance of convenience” and stated:
48.From the affidavits and responses filed, I note that the 1st respondent is in occupation of the suit parcels, it has documents of title and the encumbrance section of the documents of title has no entry. The National Land Commission is not a party to this suit and has not lent their voice on the question of the suit parcels being public land, Kenya power and Co Ltd which supplies electricity is not a party to the suit and have also not spoken to the question of the 1st respondent causing any inconvenience to them in fulfilling their mandate to supply electricity to the applicants and/or the public in general.
49.Bearing these in mind, I am unable to make a finding that the balance of convenience tilts in favour of the applicants. I am convinced that there is a lower risk in not granting orders of temporary injunction than in granting them, as I wait to hear the petition on its merits.
50.In view of the foregoing, I find that the applicants have failed to meet the requirements for grant of orders of temporary injunction.
51.On the issue on costs, section 27 of the Civil Procedure Act provides that costs shall follow the event. The successful party shall ordinarily have costs.
Deposition.
52.Consequently, the notice of motion application dated November 30, 2021 is dismissed with costs to the 1st respondent.
53.It is so ordered.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY AT NAKURU THIS 5TH DAY OF MAY, 2022.L. A. OMOLLOJUDGEIn the presence of: -Miss Karuga for the Petitioners/applicants.No appearance or the 1st RespondentNo appearance for the 2nd RespondentCourt Assistant; Jeniffer.