Dopp Investments Limited v Kenya Railways Corporation & 2 others; Kahia Transporters Limited & 5 others (Interested Parties) (Environment & Land Case 39 of 2019) [2024] KEELC 13907 (KLR) (19 December 2024) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEELC 13907 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment & Land Case 39 of 2019
NA Matheka, J
December 19, 2024
Between
Dopp Investments Limited
Plaintiff
and
Kenya Railways Corporation
1st Defendant
National Land Commission
2nd Defendant
Chief Land Registrar
3rd Defendant
and
Kahia Transporters Limited
Interested Party
Trade Lead Limited
Interested Party
Kachungo Edward Bekwekwe
Interested Party
Charles Mulole Shanga
Interested Party
Hamisi Tsuma Mwero
Interested Party
Redalumbovu Mgaidi
Interested Party
Judgment
1.The suit was instituted vide a plaint dated 7th March 2019 and filed on 8th March 2019. The plaintiff's case is that the 2nd defendant inquired into the acquisition and ownership of Plot No. MN/VI/1040/2 and on the strength of its determination dated 12th February 2016 made an award on 11th October 2017 of Kshs 667,903,887/=. The plaintiff contended that there has been a series of fictitious litigation against their title over the years but they have never materialized to anything substantial, they include Mombasa Constitutional Petition No. 18 of 2016, Mombasa ELC No. 258 of 2016, Mombasa Criminal Case No. 1213 of 2017, Kiambu Civil Suit No. 424 of 2017, and Mombasa Judicial Review Misc Application No. 56 of 2017. The plaintiff prayed for judgement against the defendants jointly and severally for:a.An order do and is hereby issued that the 1st defendant and 2nd defendant forthwith pay the plaintiff the sum of Kenya shillings six hundred and sixty seven million nine hundred and three thousand eight hundred and eighty seven only (Kshs 667,903,887).b.Interest on (a) above at court rates until in full.c.Costs and interest thereon of the suit.
2.The 1st defendant filed a statement of defence on 27th March 2019 and a counterclaim on 6th July 2022. It was the 1st defendant’s case that the plaintiff’s case has fundamental contradictions and inconsistencies and as such it would be impossible to make a meaningful response to it. Further, the 1st defendant argued that given the various litigations against the title of the plaintiff, it was prudent management of public funds to withhold payment to the plaintiff. The 1st defendant contended that the said funds, which the plaintiff lay claim to, were dispatched to the 2nd defendant and as such should be able to explain the use of the funds disbursed. In defence of the 1st and 2nd interested party counterclaim, the 1st defendant contended that they acquired a portion of LR No. MN/VI/1040/2 and not LR No. 31537. The 1st defendant claimed that the plaintiff’s suit does not disclose any reasonable cause of action and as such the suit should be dismissed with costs.
3.The 2nd defendant filed their amended statement of defence on 16th May 2022 and contended that Plot No. LR 1040/2 was one of the suit properties acquired for the construction of SGR. Following the compulsory acquisition process, they upheld the plaintiff as the owner of the suit property and issued a gazette notice Vol. CXIX No. 167 Notice No. 11043 dated 10th November 2017. The 2nd defendant averred that due to the large number of properties that were compulsory acquisition, there was a lot of information being relayed to the government press. It was claimed that inadvertently errors occurred during the publication of the gazette notices and that some documents erroneously read MN/VI/1040/2 instead of LR 1040/2 Kwale with regards to the suit property. The 2nd defendant affirmed that the suit property that was partially acquired for the SGR Phase 1 was LR 1040/2 located in Kwale county registered in favour of the plaintiff.
4Concerning LR 31537, the 2nd defendant claimed that it was fraudulently acquired and registered in 2017 long after the compulsory acquisition and gazettement in 2015. That LR 31537 erroneously overlaps LR 1040/2 and even the private surveyor who surveyed it has since requested the Director of survey for its cancellation for it to be expunged from records as it erroneously overlaps on the plaintiff’s suit property causing a duplication of title. The 2nd defendant maintained that Plot No. MN/VI/1040 was a subdivision of Plot No. 247/VI/MN that the government acquired on 26th July 1975 for Moi International Airport. The 2nd defendant sought to explain that LR 1040/2 is located in Bonje Kwale county and Plot MN/VI/1040 in Port Ritz Mombasa and are not related to each other at all.
5.Vide an application 9th June 2023, the 1st interested party sought and was granted orders on 15th June 2023 to enjoin the 3rd defendant into the suit, however, the plaintiff confirmed they have no claim against the 3rd defendant. The 3rd defendant filed a witness statement where the historical analysis of the suit property was given; and concluded that LR No. 31537 was irregularly allocated as the plaintiff owned it and was not available for alienation to another party.
6.On 11th November 2019, the parties herein reached a consent that was adopted as an order of the court, by consent the interested parties joined the suit by filing their respective pleadings. The 1st and 2nd interested parties filed a statement of defence on 11th December 2019, amended it on 27th January 2021, averred that they are the registered owners of Plots No. LR 31537 which is in the same location as the plaintiff’s alleged Plot No. VI/MN/1040/2. They advanced a counterclaim against the plaintiffs where they maintained they were the registered owners of Plot No. LR 31537 and that the plaintiff’s Plot No. MN/VI/1042/2 had encroached and overlapped into it. It was their case that the SGR had passed through Plot No. LR 31537 however the 1st and 2nd defendants have illegally and unlawfully made a compensation award to the plaintiff. The interested parties urged the court to compel the 1st and 2nd defendants to cancel the proposed compensation award to the plaintiff and make the payment to themselves instead, and prayed for the plaintiff's suit to be dismissed with costs and for the counterclaim to be allowed as follows:a.The assessment for compensation dated 11th October 2017 done in favour of the 3rd defendant in the counterclaim be cancelled forthwith.b.An order do and hereby issue that the 1st and 2nd defendants in the counterclaim forthwith do pay the plaintiff in the counter claim the amount that had been assessed on 11th October 2017 as compensation for their Plot No. LR 31537 which has been affected by the Standard Gauge Railway Line.c.Interest on the above and costs of the suit.
7.The 3rd to 6th interested parties claimed that Plot No. MN/VI/1040/2 is part of their ancestral community land and the acquisition by the plaintiff is unlawful and illegal and urged the court to dismiss the suit with costs.
8.The plaintiff responded to the 1st to 6th interested parties’ statement of defence on 21st December 2021. The plaintiff emphasized that it was the bonafide registered proprietor of the suit property, a fact that was acknowledged by the defendants hence the compensation award. The plaintiff claimed that the Ministry of Lands is investigating Plot No. 5153/VI/MN, 5141/VI/MN and 5154/VI/MN and further claimed that the interested party’s suit was an afterthought aimed at denying the plaintiff the award. Further, the plaintiff maintained that the Survey of Kenya surveyed Plots No. 5141/VI/MN, 5153/VI/MN and 5154/VI/MN as new grants and issued deed plans number 393141 and 407082, which were declared as Plots No. MN/VI/909 and MN/VI/910. The plaintiff averred that the interested parties three surveyed Plots No. 5141/VI/MN, 5153/VI/MN and 5154/VI/MN were erroneously surveyed and granted as they fall within and overlap Plots No. MN/VI/909 and MN/VI/910 which titles are freehold. It is the plaintiff’s case that the said plots do not exist and even if they do they do not border the suit property and as such, the plaintiff’s title is owned by the plaintiff.
Proceedings before the court
9.PW1 was Hashid Patel, the director of the plaintiff, and he produced his statement and the plaintiff’s list of documents. He stated that in 2015, the suit property was acquired for SGR and the plaintiff was involved in the acquisition process. The process culminated with an award of Kshs 667 million from the 2nd defendant but they have never received any payment. He claimed that LR No. 31357 overlaps on the suit property, and has been confirmed by the director of surveyor to be irregular. On cross-examination, he confirmed that the plaintiff attended two inquiries, one on review of the grant and squatters issue and both were determined in the plaintiff’s favour. He clarified that the award was made on MN/VI/1040/2 and not MN/1040/2 or LR No. 31357 as they were not gazetted for compensation. He sought to clarify that though his title was LR1040/2 the award did not have the plot number since there was a typing mistake. He maintained that the SGR passed through the suit property and that the error on the award was occasioned by the NLC and not the plaintiff.
10.PW2 was Wilson Kibichi, working with the Ministry of Land as Head of Survey records office. He confirmed LR No. 31357 had overlapped on LR No. 1040/2 and that MN/VI/1040/2 and LR No. 1040/2 were in different localities. He claimed that 1040/2 was surveyed in 1932, while LR No. 31537 was surveyed in 2017 and ought not to have been registered. He also clarified that there exists no plot like MN/VI/1040/2.
11.PW3 was Erastus Chege Mwangi, a licensed surveyor. He stated that he was contracted by the plaintiff to confirm LR 1040/2 and MN/VI/1040/2. He discovered that they were two different parcels in different locations. LR 1040/2 was in Kwale while MN/VI/1040/2 was in Mombasa and had been extinguished. He further stated that LR 31357 overlapped with LR 1040/2 which was illegal. He sought to clarify that MN/VI/1040/2 has a road to the airport while LR 1040/2 has SGR and other developments. He insisted that the suit property exists on the ground and that there cannot be two titles for the same property as it amounts to double allocation. With that the plaintiff closed their case.
12.DW1 was Duncan Mwangi, he produced his statement and stated that the 1st defendant identified the suit property, which was at the boundary between Kwale and Mombasa County. He stated he acquired LR MN/VI/1040/2 and other plots that were acquired from the compensation schedule from NLC. With that the 1st defendant closed their case.
13.DW2 was Abigail Mbagaya a former chair of NLC, where she chaired the committee for the review of grants and dispositions. She claimed that they received a complaint from Mombasa County on LR 1042/1, which led to a notice being put on the Kenya Gazette for an inquiry. The same was heard, and they ruled in favour of the plaintiff and the director of valuation issued the award. She maintained that there was a typographical error in the description of the plaintiff’s suit property, which was rectified.DW3 was Sospeter Odour Ohanyo, a surveyor at NLC, he also confirmed that LR 1040/2 and LR MN/VI/1040/2 are far apart and have different acreage. He confirmed that LR 1040/2 has SGR in Kwale while MN/1040/2 is a road near the airport. He also confirmed that LR 31357 was surveyed in 2017 long after LR 1040/2 was surveyed in 1932, and that it was manned with irregularities like a missing PDP. During cross-examination, he clarified that the interested parties participated in the hearing of the acquisition and review of grants between 3rd and 6th August 2015, and by then LR 31357 did not exist until 2017. He claimed that he relied on the survey plan done in 1932 and deed plan for 1040/2 and confirmed that LR 31357 was irregular and an encroachment. He further claimed that the acquisition plan was for LR 1040/2 and that LR 31357 was not captured since it did not exist. He confirmed that the award letter had an error and another letter corrected it. DW3 further stated that he got the original survey plan done in 1932 and the deed plan for 1040/2 and found that LR 31357 was irregular, it did not even have an access road. He maintained that the survey of 1040/2 was already there when LR 31357 was done.
14.DW4 was Maulo Kiphour Kahamai is the Chief Valuer at NLC. He claimed that on 24th May 2015, LR 1040/2 was in existence, however, LR 31357 was not in their acquisition plan. He confirmed that there was an error in the award that was made to the plaintiff, the error was discovered during review of grant in 2019 and the same was corrected by the second award that was issued on 31st March 2023 and accepted on 4th April 2023. He explained that the first award was for MN/VI/1040/2 as well as the acceptance, since there was no flaw in the process, they cancelled the award, which was surrendered to them and issued a fresh one. He confirmed that he visited the suit property, which was occupied by various families who were compensated for their structures. He admitted that they were aware of the case in court when they made the final award. With that the 2nd defendant closed its case.
15.DW5 was Ojwang Omolo Patroba is the Assistant Director at the Ministry of Lands. He gave a history of LR 1040/2 and claimed that it was registered to the plaintiff while claiming that LR 31357 was irregular. He maintained that the suit land was privately allocated and could not be allocated again by the commissioner of lands. He stated that LR 31357 overlaps the suit property and should be impeached for lacking a letter of allotment, PDP, acceptance or proof of payment of land rates. He stated that the land registrar is the custodian of all land records and that he has only seen the file for LR No. 1040/2. With that, the 3rd defendant’s case was closed.
16.Osman Ahmed Kahia, took the stand on behalf of the 1st and 2nd interested parties. He claimed to have bought his plot after conducting due diligence and obtained the title in 2018. He claimed when the government purchased land for SGR, his land was not in the Gazette Notice. He went to the NLC but got no response, instead the award was given to MN/VI/1040/2. He claimed that the land has three deed plans of 1970, No. 31929 then No. 156221 which is the plaintiff’s title. He claimed that LR 1040/2 was not in the Gazette notice since it no longer exists since it was closed in 1975. He claimed that when he searched in 2012 it showed that it was subdivided and the title closed, this was after he had a MOU with the seller. He also claimed to have inspected the land and had it surveyed and registered in 2017 and acquired title in 2018. He maintained that the seller was born in 1978 and allotment happened in 1984. He further claimed that before purchasing, the seller owned him money so he gave him the plot instead. On further cross-examination, he maintained that his plot was LR 31357 which was surveyed in 2017 and the first title issued the same year and later transfer was conducted in 2021. He clarified that he bought the land in 2012 from Ali Osman Abdi, for Kshs 37 million but paid only 10% since Osman owned him Kshs 19.5 million for transport and his purchase price was a set-off. He further claimed that Osman showed him the allotment letter, the letter of offer as well as the PDP. He admitted that he does not remember how much he paid for stamp duty or even when they went to the lands control board neither does he have land rent receipts or clearance. On reexamination, he maintained that his land is LR 31537, having transferred it on 11th November 2021. He contended that the first award referred to MN/VI/1040/2 while the second award referred to LR/1040/2. He claimed that NLC did not revoke the first award that MN/VI/1040/2 does not exist and that the court cannot approve an award of a nonexistent land. With that the 1st and 2nd interested parties closed their case.
17.Hamisi Tsuma Mwero, the 5th interested party produced a statement and list of documents. He claimed that the suit property was trust land, which has never been adjudicated. He stated that he had never seen the plaintiff and that he had made no developments on the suit property. He maintained that the NLC has never compensated them for the acquisition. He maintained that the natives do not have title documents as they are waiting for the suit land to be adjudicated. He contended that about 200 people are living on the suit land with the SGR passing in the middle and urged the court to order their compensation. He admitted that he had no documents to prove ownership and insisted that his forefathers were buried on the suit land. With that, the 3rd to 6th interested parties closed their case.
Analysis and determination
18.The court has considered the pleadings, evidence presented before it, submissions made as well as the authorities relied upon by the parties. The issues for determination are:
19.Looking at the detailed history of LR No. 1040/2, it has been demonstrated by the 3rd defendant, who is the custodian of land records that LR No. 1040/2 was initially surveyed on 15th August 1932 as per FR No. 39/59. The first registered proprietor was Mohamed Afzal Khan who held the suit land for a term of 99 years from 1st October 1908. On 2nd August 1957 Mohamed Afzal Khan transferred LR 1040/2 to Aniceto Dias and Charles Dias who held as tenants in common in equal share. On 15th July 1963, Aniceto Dias and Charles Dias transferred the suit land to Ramji Jethabhai Limited, who in turn transferred to Peter Muigai Jomo Kenyatta on 17th July 1970. After the demise of Peter Muigai Jomo Kenyatta, his estate’s administrators (John Kamau Muigai and Dr Richard Kamau Muigai) executed an indenture of conveyance in favour of Mukinye Enterprise Limited on 15th April 1991. Mukinye Enterprise Limited sought to extend the lease since they were left with an unexpired term of 16 years, which was approved by the Commissioner of Lands for a 45-year unexpired term on 3rd June 1991. Later on, 7th June 1991 Mukinye Enterprise Limited executed an indenture of conveyance in favour of Dopp Investment Limited, stamp duty was paid on the same day and it was registered in the Lands Registry Mombasa on the very same day. On 20th August 1991, Dopp Investment Limited was registered as the proprietor of LR No. 1040/2, holding a Grant No. CR 21749 on Land Survey Plan No. 156221 for a term of 45 years from 1st June 1991.
20.The 1st and 2nd interested parties’ case was presented by Osman Ahmed Kahia the director of the 1st and 2nd interested parties. It was their case that they bought LR 31357 from Ali Osman Abdi pursuant to a Memorandum of Understanding dated 25th June 2012 and an agreement of sale dated 1st March 2018. In the Memorandum of Understanding, Ali Osman Abdi claimed to be the owner of the unsurveyed industrial plot at Mombasa Miritini measuring 50.01ha for a term of 99 years from 1st January 1994 and sold the same for Kshs 37,000,000/= to Kahia Transporters Limited. Osman Kahia instructed Edward Kiguru a private surveyor to undertake a new grant survey, with a letter of allotment dated 30th May 1994 and PDP No. 12.3.CT.7.94 as supporting documents. Edward Kiguru, as per his letter dated 22nd January 2022, to the DCI; claimed that he surveyed the land which was approved by the Director of Survey and the plot was issued with a New Grant No. LR 31537. After the plot was issued with an LR number, Ali Osman Abdi entered into an agreement of sale with Kahia Transporters Limited on 1st March 2018. In the agreement of sale, it was noted that the vendor acknowledged having received 10% of the purchase price upon signing the memorandum of understanding dated 25th June 2012 and was confirming receipt of 60% of the balance as the final settlement. Ali Osman Abdi executed a transfer on 2nd November 2020 in favour of Kahia Transporters Limited and the same was registered on 11th November 2021. The 1st interested party maintained it is the registered proprietor of LR No. 31537 as seen from the Certificate of Postal Search dated 23rd May 2023.
21.Osman Ahmed Kahia claimed he bought an unsurveyed plot from Ali Osman Abdi who was an allottee. The court has perused a letter dated 22nd January 2022 by Edward Kiguru to the DCI, where the private surveyor who surveyed the plot claimed he was issued with a Letter of allotment Ref No. 90751/XI dated 30th May 1994. The plaintiff has produced this allotment letter which corresponds with the reference number that Edward Kiguru claimed to have used to survey the plot. The Letter of allotment Ref No. 90751/XI was issued on 30th May 1994 to one Osman Ahmed Kahia for an unsurveyed site for farming measuring 21ha for a term of 99 years from 1st January 1994. Further to that, the plaintiff has produced the 1st interested party’s CR 12 dated 8th February 2021 which indicated that Osman Ahmed Kahia is a director at Kahia Transporters Limited. Notwithstanding this inconsistency, the 1st interested party has produced a certificate of title LR 31537 CR No. 70900 that was issued to Ali Osman Abdi measuring 50.01ha on 29th December 2017 and later transferred to Kahia Transporters on 11th November 2021.
22.The 1st interested party has not demonstrated how Ali Osman Abdi, his predecessor in title acquired title to LR 31537. The question that is in the mind of this court is how, Osman Ahmed Kahia, a director of the 1st interested party, has the letter of allotment that was issued on 30th May 1994 in his name, while claiming to have purchased the same plot in 2012 from Ali Osman Abdi. The Court of Appeal in Munyu Maina vs Hiram Gathiha Maina (2013) eKLR held that;
23.It is the view of this court that it is fraudulent for the 1st interested party’s director Osman Ahmed Kahia, to have a letter of allotment that was issued on 30th May 1994 bear his name while claiming to purchase the very same plot from Ali Osman Abdi in 2012. It is evident that the Letter of Allotment Ref No. 90751/XI is a forgery as it bears the name and postal address of Osman Ahmed Kahia, who is a director of the 1st interested party. Also, the letter of allotment refers to an unsurveyed site for farming on Mombasa Mainland North measuring 21ha with an annual rent of Kshs 44,100 while the memorandum of understanding which the 1st interested party claims to have entered into with Ali Osman Abdi referred to an unsurveyed industrial plot situated at Mombasa Miritini measuring 50.01ha for an annual rent of Kshs 128,200.
24.Be that as it may, by the time the letter of allotment, lease document and certificate of title were issued to the 1st interested party the land had already been alienated and was not available for allocation.
25.In the Court of Appeal case of Benja Properties Limited vs Syedna Mohammed Burhannudin Sahed & 4 others (2015) eKLR the court held as follows;
26.Similarly, in the case of Bahati Properties Limited vs Attorney General & 7 others (2019) eKLR the court held that;
27.It is evident to the court which party has proved the root of its title. The plaintiff has led evidence, that has been supported by the defendants of how he acquired ownership of the suit property. It is clear to the court that the plaintiff purchased the suit land from Mukinye Enterprise Limited on 7th June 1991 for Kshs 1,000,000/= and paid stamp duty of Kshs 40,000/= then became registered owner on 20th August 1991. The 1st interested party, on the other hand, his evidence is tainted with fraud and irregularity that go to the root of his title. For a start, the 1st interested party could not explain why the letter of allotment dated 30th May 1994 bears the name of its director while claiming to have bought the land. Further to that, the interested party neither called the one who sold him the plot nor the surveyor who surveyed the land to adduce evidence in support of his case. There is no valuation report adduced to support the claim for Kshs 1 billion as compensation as pleaded in the counterclaim. During cross-examination, he was at pains to explain why he did not produce the letter of allotment or the PDP in support of his claim over the suit land. The court has no reason to believe the evidence adduced by the 1st interested party as to how it acquired the certificate of title.
28.The plaintiff acquired title to the suit land on 20th August 1991, the 1st interested party’s letter of allotment (which the court has found to be a fraud) is dated 30th May 1994. It is clear to the court that the plaintiff is the first in time and his title ought to prevail. This position was also supported by one W. Kibichii from the office of the Director of Surveys on 20th December 2021 as he responded to Agimba Advocates concerns as far as LR 1040/2 and LR 31537. In the said letter, he stated “Having compared the two (2) survey that is LR No.1040/2 and LR No. 31537, it is clear that it was an encroachment on the earlier survey (LR No. 1040/2) and therefore based on the findings, LR No. 31537 should not have been approved in regards of LR No. 1040/2 which was existing by then.” The court has also perused google earth images and an illustrative topo cadastral plan of the two plots and it is clear that LR No. 31537 overlaps LR No. 1040/2. To put it more clearly, LR No. 31537 overlaps into the suit property, creating a title duplication. The court in Joseph Kiprotich Bor vs Tabutany Chepkoech Chebusit (2021) eKLR held that;
29.The 3rd to 6th interested parties claimed that the suit land was trust land that had never been adjudicated and that the natives in occupation were waiting for it to be adjudicated to get title documents. He maintained that they have lived on the suit land for years they have buried their forefathers there, and that the plaintiff has made no developments on the land and they should be compensated hat the 2nd defendant should compensate the interested parties and their families. The 5th interested party, however, admitted that he had no documents to prove ownership, and indeed they adduced no evidence to support their claim that the suit land was trust land or that it was never adjudicated upon. Further to that suit land is vast, 610 acres and the interested parties have not demonstrated to court through a survey report that they occupy the part that was acquired by the 1st and 2nd defendants for SGR. There is no evidence of their occupation on the suit property and the court is also aware that they had advanced a claim for adverse possession but later withdrew it.
30.On 27th March 2015 vide The Kenya Gazette Vol. CXVII No. 32 Gazette Notice No. 1991 the 2nd defendant issued an Inquiry Notice under Section 162 (2) of the Land Act to hear claims to compensation for interested parties in LR No. 1040/2 among other land parcels that were to be compulsory acquired for the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR Line Project. During the acquisition process, the 2nd defendant received complaints from the County Government of Mombasa on the legality of the grants issued on LR No. 1040/2 on the basis that it was illegally acquired. The 2nd defendant issued a public notice on the local dallies to all interested parties including the complaint, the plaintiff and squatters. After reviewing the grants, the 2nd defendant made a determination on 12th February 2016 and concluded that the plaintiff is the registered owner of MN/VI/1040/2. Following that determination, on 11th October 2017 the 2nd defendant awarded the plaintiff Kshs 667,903,887 for the compulsory acquisition of 13.3480 ha on Plot No. MN/VI/1040/2. Before the award was made, the 2nd defendant’s CEO wrote an internal memo to its chairman on 26th February 2017 requesting further investigations into LR No. 1040/2 before compensation; on the basis that MN/1040 no longer exists since it was acquired by the Government in 1974 and hence MN/VI/1040/2 cannot be a result of a subdivision from a parcel that does not exist. After the award was made, yet another internal memo was done by the 2nd defendant’s CEO to its chairman recalling the award issued to the plaintiff for MN/VI/1040/2 until this case is determined by the court. On 2nd November 2017, the 2nd defendant through its Director of Valuation and Taxation recalled the compensation award given to the plaintiff for MN/VI/1040/2.
31.The plaintiff has placed evidence before this court that demonstrates that MN/VI/1040 was surveyed in 1994 as per Survey Plan F/R No. 50/37 and measures 0.22ha which was originally part of MN/VI/247 located in Port Ritz area of Mombasa County. The said plot has been resurveyed twice in 1995 altering the shape and acreage of the original parcel as seen from F/R No. 290/181 and F/R No. 294145. The Director of Survey in his letter dated 20th December 2021 confirmed to the plaintiff’s counsel that MN/VI/1040/2 does not exist since there was no subdivision of MN/VI/1040 for it to be created. The director of survey also confirmed to the 1st and 2nd interested parties counsel on 4th July 2022 that MN/VI/1040/2 does not exist. In the letter, it was said “In respect of survey records regarding parcel of land number LR No. MN/VI/1040/2, the Director of Surveys has no survey record in support of such parcel of land in the form of cadastral plan or cadastral map”
32.The plaintiff, through Kolmans Geomatric Consultants produced a survey report dated 19th November 2021. The report sought to give a contrast of LR No. 1040/2 and MN/VI/1040, the former being created in 1932 within Kwale County and measures 610 acres while the latter was created in 1944 within Mombasa County and measures 0.56 acres. The report emphasized that the two plots were not related to each other, sharing no boundary and were located in different geographical locations with a distance of 8 km between them. It was further reported that MN/VI/1040 once existed but does not anymore since it was resurveyed and acquired by the government. The court has studied the Google Earth map showing the position compassion of LR No. 1040/2 and LR No. MN/VI/1040 and it is clear that the plots are miles apart and are not related to each other in any way. This position supports the one taken by the director of survey that MN/VI/1040/2 could not be said to have existed since there was no MN/VI/1040 in the first place.
33.The 1st defendant, in its letter to the 2nd defendant dated 22nd February 2023 admitted an error was made in the award where the suit land was referred to as MN/VI/1040/2 as opposed to LR No. 1040/2 and advised for an amendment. A fresh award was made on 31st March 2023 to the plaintiff and was accepted on 4th April 2023 by the plaintiff. The plaintiff and the defendants have urged the court to find that the reference to the suit property as MN/VI/1040/2 as opposed to LR No. 1040/2 was a typographical mistake made out of human error that was admitted to and corrected. The plaintiff argued that MN/VI/1040/2 does not exist and that all other details in the said award were correct, it was therefore for the court to allow the award as amended.
34.I find that with the wrong plot number, the plaintiff was not able to get their award. The Constitution is clear in Article 159 (2)(d) that the courts are to be guided by the principle that justice shall be admitted with undue regard to procedural technicalities. For the plaintiff to access justice, it is fair and proper for the court to allow the amended award, for the reason that they have proved to this court on a balance of probabilities that they are the registered owners of the suit property; and as such is entitled to an award of compensation following the compulsory acquisition of a portion of his suit property. What is crucial is, what was the 2nd defendant’s intention when issuing the award. It is clear to the court that the 2nd defendant’s true intention was to award the plaintiff for the compulsory acquisition of the suit land and that the interested parties have not demonstrated otherwise. Even court’s makes room for the correction of errors in Section 99 of the Civil Procedure Act on the slip rule states that;
35.The court in Nedermar Technology BV Limited vs Kenya Anti - Corruption Commission & another (2009) eKLR held that;
36.The court has also seen the two internal memos dated 26th February 2017 and 17th October 2017 respectively sent by the 2nd defendant’s CEO, to its chairperson and director of valuation and taxation. It is clear to the court that the 2nd defendant at the time of reviewing grants for determination, that was before issuance of the award, was aware that MV/VI/1040/2 did not exist, and went ahead to recall the award pending the determination of this suit for saving public funds. It only meant that the award to MN/VI/1040/2 was a mere typographical error and did not go to the root of the award.
37.In the end I find that the has plaintiff established its case on a balance of probabilities and that the 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th and 6th interested parties’ counterclaims are devoid of merit and are dismissed with costs. Consequently, the court orders as follows;
It is so ordered.
1.An order is hereby issued that the 1st defendant and 2nd defendant forthwith pay the plaintiff the sum of Kenya shillings six hundred and sixty seven million nine hundred and three thousand eight hundred and eighty seven only (Kshs 667,903,887/-).
2.Interest on (1) above at court rates until payment in full.
3.The 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th interested parties to jointly and severally pay the costs of the plaintiff, 1st, 2nd and 3rd defendants.
DELIVERED, DATED AND SIGNED AT MOMBASA THIS 19TH DAY OF DECEMBER 2024.N.A. MATHEKAJUDGE