Kitsao & 35 others v Giancarlo & 9 others (Environment & Land Case 2 of 2023) [2023] KEELC 19279 (KLR) (15 June 2023) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEELC 19279 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment & Land Case 2 of 2023
EK Makori, J
June 15, 2023
IN THE MATTER OF: AN APPLICATION FOR DECLARATION THAT THE APPLICANTS HAVE OBTAINED TITLE OVER THE SAID LAND PARCEL NOS 7555, 8561, 1731/1, 9610, 9611, AND 8411 BY ADVERSE POSSESSION
AND
IN THE MATTER OF: SECTION 38 OF THE LIMITATION OF ACTION ACT CAP 22, LAWS OF
KENYA
AND
IN THE MATTER OF: AN APPLICATION FOR DECLARATIN THAT THE APPLICANTS HAVE OBTAINED TITLE OVER THE SAID LAND PARCEL NOS 7555, 8561, 1731/1, 9610, 5780, 5257, 7556,
9611, 10013, 10506, 10139, 7163, 2924, 833330, 9102, 7669, 6820, 6821, 6822 AND 8411 BY ADVERSE POSSESSION.
Between
Safari Charles Kitsao
1st Applicant
David Pola Mramba
2nd Applicant
Ibrahim Ndaa Jenoh
3rd Applicant
Constance Maria Kasuvi
4th Applicant
Elizabeth Akinyi
5th Applicant
William Shauri Mweni
6th Applicant
Saulo Safari Menza
7th Applicant
Alphonse Ali Katana
8th Applicant
Juma Kabao Karisa
9th Applicant
Chembe Kambi Mweri
10th Applicant
Samuel Kaingu Mtiki
11th Applicant
Jane Walicha Munyoki
12th Applicant
Salama Wanje Iha
13th Applicant
Gabriel Karisa Nguwa
14th Applicant
Ishmael Lewa Mwadeje
15th Applicant
Kahonzi Kaingu Mtiki
16th Applicant
Bendera Kahindi Kadogo
17th Applicant
Khalid Ali Hamadi
18th Applicant
Norah Bahati Sabaya
19th Applicant
Gilbert Kahindi Baya
20th Applicant
Elizabeth John
21st Applicant
Sharlet Jumwa Ngalla
22nd Applicant
Janet Kanza Kubuni
23rd Applicant
Priscilla Chadi Mwagadi
24th Applicant
Vincent Nyawah Kitsao
25th Applicant
Maryselina Nyevu Kibamba
26th Applicant
Mariamu Suleiman Bakari
27th Applicant
Samuel Nyerekwe Malalu
28th Applicant
Nixon Kingi Nyule
29th Applicant
John Tabu Kaingi
30th Applicant
Masha Mramba Stephen
31st Applicant
Sidi Chanzera Chara
32nd Applicant
Josephine Mwamba Chiwaya
33rd Applicant
Joshua Charo Shehe
34th Applicant
Stembo Katana
35th Applicant
Victoria Achieng Oyoo
36th Applicant
and
Papa Giancarlo
1st Respondent
Antonietta Maria Colombo
2nd Respondent
Arturo Rollo
3rd Respondent
Gopvani Arrigone
4th Respondent
Harji Mekhji
5th Respondent
Samwel Barkoiyet Kangogo And Others
6th Respondent
River Dwellers Company Limited
7th Respondent
Kenya Airports Authority
8th Respondent
National Land Commission
9th Respondent
Attorney General
10th Respondent
Ruling
1.By an application dated 16th January 2022, the Applicants seek a temporary injunction restraining the Respondents from fencing off the property at the Malindi International Airport described as - Land parcel no 7555,8561,1731/1,9610,2611,5780,5257,7556,96110013,10506,7163,2924,83330,9102,7669,6820,6822 and 8411 with attendant costs.
2.The application is opposed. The court directed parties to file written submissions on the matter.
3.The Applicants’ case is that since 1963, they have settled on the land in question and developed on it with marked developments standing thereon. The survey was done which resulted in parcel nos 7555,8561,1731/1,9610,2611,5780,5257,7556,96110013,10506,7163,2924,83330,9102,7669,6820,6822 and 8411, the applicant is of the assertion that it was out to grab their land since no ground report was done.
4.The 8th Respondent paid a compensation sum to the tune of ksh 424,205.60/= to obtain space to expand the Malindi International Airport. The monies have reached some of the affected members, but not the Applicants, and presently the land is being fenced off in preparation for works to extend the Airport before fully compensating the Applicants. Some of the other Persons Affected were paid in excess and the exercise was marred with inequalities and inequities.
5.The Applicants contended that the Respondents have violated and contravened Article 28, 40(4), 57(b)(c), and (d) and the Land Acquisition Act in the manner the whole process is being undertaken.
6.The Applicants further contended they have been in occupation of the land for over 50 years and have acquired the portion under the doctrine of adverse possession as against the Respondents.
7.The 8th Respondent is said to have instructed the 9th Respondent to have the Applicants vacate the land in question, and that a fencing-off exercise has long commenced
8.The Applicant averred that at this stage the court needs to issue injunctive orders to restrain the Respondents from further fencing or acquirement of the land in question until the existing matter is heard and determined. That the test set in the case of Giella v Cassman Brown [1973] EA 358 of a prima facie case with a probability of success, irreparable damages that cannot be adequately compensated by an award of damages and that in doubt, the balance of convenience has been achieved.
9.The 8th Respondent averred that the Persons Affected by the project have been mapped out, and phase one of the compensation has been finalized. The 9th Respondent will advise on whom to compensate in the next phase. The 9th Respondent believes this is not one of the cases to issue injunctive orders.
10.The 9th Respondent stated that the process of compulsory acquisition is ongoing and those to benefit will know in the due cause via the Kenya gazette. The fencing is necessary to put out more squatters on the land positioning for compensation. The 9th Respondent concluded that the application is misconceived at this stage because the Compulsory Acquisition process is ongoing.
11.Now what to determine is whether injunctive orders should issue at this stage of the trial.
12.The Applicants have commenced this matter by way of Originating Summons. By their admission, they stated that they do not have titles to their land due to illiteracy and will be urging the court to declare them the owners of the respective portions they have curved amongst themselves as adverse possessors.
13.On the other hand, the 8th and 9th Respondents contended that the process of compensation is ongoing and that all Persons Affected will be compensated under the applicable law.
14.The process of Compulsory Acquisition is well elaborated under the Constitution of Kenya and the Land Act. In this matter, we are dealing with the state’s power to expropriate private land for public use otherwise known as eminent domain. The land is needed for the expansion of the Malindi International Airport. It cannot be gainsaid that when the state requires privately owned land for public use, it cannot be stopped from compulsorily acquiring the same. On the other hand, if it is public land and there are squatters on it, it can be gratuitous enough to allocate alternative land or compensate them based on the improvement on the ground.
15.That is why the Constitution of Kennya deemed it essential to provide a clear structure on how the state is to exercise the power of eminent domain. Article 40(3) of the Constitution provides thus:
16.In addition to the preceding constitutional framework, Part VIII of the Land Act provides an elegant framework for exercising the power of eminent domain. Part VIIIA establishes a framework for resolving disputes arising from the state's use of the power of eminent domain. The National Land Commission is required by Section 112 of the Act to publish a notice of intention to compulsorily acquire land on behalf of either of the two levels of government. The section requires the National Land Commission to set a date for an investigation into the proposed compulsory acquisition. During the inquiry stage, the Commission hears issues of propriety and compensation claims made by landowners. Under Section 123, the Commission is required to withdraw or revoke a notice of intended compulsory acquisition provided this is done before the Commission takes possession of the land.
17.In response to the many disputes over the state's use of eminent domain, Parliament established the Land Acquisition Tribunal. The Tribunal's jurisdiction is defined in Section 133C of the Land Act as follows:
18.In its astuteness, Parliament enacted Section 133D of the Land Act, which grants this court appellate jurisdiction in disputes involving the exercise of the state's eminent domain power in the following terms:(1)A party to an application to the Tribunal who is dissatisfied with the decision of the Tribunal may, in the prescribed time and manner, appeal to the court on any of the following grounds:(a)the decision of the Tribunal was contrary to law or some usage having the force of law;(b)the Tribunal failed to determine some material issue of law or usage having the force of law; or(c)a substantial error or defect in the procedure provided by or under this Act has produced an error or defect in the decision of the case upon the merits.(2)An appeal from the decision of the Tribunal may be made on a question of law only.
19.It follows from Part VIII and Part VIIIA of the Land Act that disputes concerning proprietary and compensation claims by persons interested in land subject to compulsory acquisition are to be adjudicated by the National Land Commission through the mechanism of inquiry contemplated by Section 112. If the dispute cannot be resolved satisfactorily, the Land Acquisition Tribunal established under Section 133A of the Land Act is the next stop. If a party is dissatisfied with the Tribunal's decision, the next sojourn is this court invoking this court's appellate jurisdiction on legal issues only.
20.This brings me to the next frontier, where a party has recourse in another forum or organ created in law to handle similar grievances, as a port of first call other than this court, under the doctrine of judicial abstention, the emerging jurisprudence from the Superior Courts, particularly the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal, we now have what the Supreme Court referred to as - the Pullman doctrine (arising from a US decision - US Supreme Court in Railroad Commission of Texas v Pullman Co., 312 US 496 61 S. Ct. 643, 85 L. Ed. 971 (1941)) or what I can call - the Kibos doctrine (arising from the Supreme Court decision in Benson Ambuti Adega & 2 others v Kibos Distillers Limited & 5 Others [2020] eKLR, Petition 3 of 2020 on judicial abstention, which we must confront with when dealing with a mixed grill or multifaceted issues for adjudication, such as the current Originating Summons.
21.In the Court of Appeal in Kibos Distillers Limited and 4 others v Benson Ambuti Adega and 3 Others Civ Appeal no 153 of 2019 [2020] eKLR, Makhandia JA. in overturning the orders of this court on the doctrine of abstention stated as follows: -
22.On appeal to the Supreme Court of Kenya in Benson Ambuti Adega & 2 others v Kibos Distillers Limited & 5 Others [2020] eKLR, Petition 3 of 2020, Maraga, CJ & P, Mwilu, DCJ & VP, Ibrahim, Wanjala, Njoki & Lenaola SCJJ held as follows: -
23.The position taken by the Supreme Court in the Kibos Case is also replicated by the apex Court in United Millers Limited v Kenya Bureau of Standards and 5 Others [2021] eKLR, as follows:
24.In the current Originating Summons, the issues raised touch on adverse possession itself, but with the dominant element being compulsory acquisition. The Applicants have demonstrated that they do not have title documents to the land in question and have approached the court to be declared as owners through adverse possession. The Gazette Notice no 339 of 13th January 2017 discloses the land owners of the part to be expropriated – being the 1st to 7th Respondents - the Applicants are not included. The 8th and 9th Respondents say they will be included in the 2nd phase of the compensation. The Gazette Notice is yet to be published for that purpose. These are claims in my view which cannot be addressed contemporaneously. The Applicants needed to have their claim based on adverse possession heard first before seeking compensation. The doctrine of adverse possession is inapplicable where the land is public or trust land or is owned by the Government. Section 41 of the Limitation of Actions Act excludes Public Land from the application of the Act. Section 41(a) of the Act provides:-
25.On compulsory Acquisition, the Applicants have to follow the path I have indicated above, which certainly cannot be by an originating summons, nor can it be before this court in the 1st instance.
26.Since the Applicants have no title to the land in question yet, and looking at the authorities, we have on the doctrine of abstention and exhaustion, the 8th and 9th Respondents have put mechanisms on how to compensate the Persons Affected by the proposed Malindi International Airport expansion. The Applicants have not shown that the 8th and 9th Respondents have failed to compensate them. They are ready to do so. The Gazette Notice for that purpose is not yet out. The Applicants are placing the cart before the horse or eating the cake and wanting to have it at the same time. They want to turn this court into the Land Acquisition Tribunal envisaged under Section 133A of the Land Act. It cannot be. It is against the law. Why the rush to approach this court when the 8th and 9th Respondents are ready to compensate them? As alluded to earlier, one cannot stop the government from exercise of its powers under the eminent domain doctrine. The Applicants are biting the hand that seeks to compensate them. They have put their hands deep into the lion’s mouth!
27.Lastly, I pose a question, what will the Originating Summons herein achieve against the 8th and 9th Respondents? Which title is to be impeached as against those Respondents via the Originating Summons? Could it have been prudent to deal with the 1st to 7th Respondents first on the issue of adverse possession? Was this a Constitutional Petition disguised as an Originating Summons? Back to the Applicants.
28.The application dated 16th January 2023 is premised on wrong pleadings. In my view, I think the court has been wrongly moved. The suit on which to peg the orders sought is not properly drawn and I need not consider whether the test in Giella v Cassman Brown (supra) has been achieved. It will be an exercise in futility. It is dismissed with costs.
DATED, SIGNED, AND DELIVERED AT MALINDI VIRTUALLY IN OPEN COURT ON THIS 15TH DAY OF JUNE 2023E.K. MAKORIJUDGEIn the presence of :Mr mogaka for the ApplicantsM/s Mwendwa for the 8th RespondentsM/s Someren for 10th RespondentsIn the absence of:Mr. Kiilu for 9th Respondents