Commission for Human Rights and Justice v Director Land Administration & 9 others (Environment & Land Petition E008 of 2023) [2024] KEELC 14079 (KLR) (19 December 2024) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEELC 14079 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment & Land Petition E008 of 2023
EK Makori, J
December 19, 2024
Between
Commission for Human Rights and Justice
Petitioner
and
The Director Land Administration
1st Respondent
The County Land Registrar Kilifi
2nd Respondent
The Cabinet Secretary Ministry of Land and Housing
3rd Respondent
The Honourable Attorney
4th Respondent
Wycliffe Tembe Mwangome
5th Respondent
Ngumbao Kungu Iha
6th Respondent
Joseph Karisa Fondo
7th Respondent
Esther Kache Mayele
8th Respondent
Geoffrey Kamau Ngoiya
9th Respondent
Bambani Kilio Community CBO
10th Respondent
Judgment
1.The petitioner has filed this petition seeking the following reliefs:a.A declaration that the Respondents’ actions have jointly and severally infringed on the Members of the Bambani Community as enshrined under Article 40 of the Constitution, a clear violation of their rights and a cause for concern.b.An order directing the 1st and 3rd Respondents to cancel the grant and recall certificate of title for cancellation by the 2nd Respondent and the land Register be rectified.c.An order cancelling all subleases, transfers, and dispositions already entered into by the 5th to 9th Respondents with third parties and the same be declared null and void alienation by violating the express provisions of the lease.d.The costs of this petition be provided.
2.None of the Respondents entered appearance.
3.The petition was canvassed through written submissions.
4.After carefully analyzing the materials and submissions, I framed the issues to determine whether the current petition meets the threshold for bringing constitutional petitions generally, whether the Bambani Community's rights to own property under Article 40 of the Constitution have been violated, whether the reliefs sought are sustainable, and who will bear the costs of the petition.
5.Sometimes, on the 22nd of April 2016, the 10th Respondent was registered as a Community-Based Organisation to champion land rights and seek resolution for historical land injustices. Under its watch, the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Respondents did accede to their requests. They reverted several parcels of land around the Takaungu and Kikambala areas into community land under the trusteeship of the County Government of Kilifi.
6.The Petitioner avers that in 2020, the 2nd Respondent carried out a verification process to identify the beneficiaries of the land that the 3rd Respondent had granted the 10th Respondent. For the land situate at Kikambala and Takaungu area, a certificate of Title CR NO. 79015 LR NO.663/W/MN measuring 325.9 Hectares was issued and registered in the names of the 5th to 9th Respondents, who have since subdivided the same and intend to sell it to other members of society other than the intended members—the Bambani Kilio Community, potentially causing harm to the community.
7.The Petitioner avers that the registration of the land in the names of the 5th to the 9th Respondent by the 1st and 3rd Respondent violated the rights of the 10th Respondent to own property and hence the prayers sought in the current petition.
8.Ms. Amugune, learned counsel for the Petitioner, has cited the decision in Munyu Maina v Hiram Gathiha Maina [2013] eKLR to support the assertion that the title held by the 5th to the 9th Respondents is illegally in their hands and should revert to the 10th Respondents, who are the rightful beneficiaries.
9.Counsel proceeds to cite the decision in Kenya Anti-corruption Commission v Online Enterprise Limited & 4 others [2019] eKLR, highlighting that the Court can rectify the title if an error is noted under Section 80 of the Land Registration Act.
10.I have considered the petition which is ostensibly brought for and on behalf of the 10th Respondents, who are said to have been entitled to the suit property as beneficiaries. Instead, the land was registered in the names of the 5th to 9th Respondents, who are now on a selling spree to other parties who were never the intended beneficiaries.
11.What is curious about this petition is that while contending to vouch for the 10th Respondent, the petitioner names the 10th Respondent as an adversary! If you propagate a matter for the benefit of another, do you sue them as Defendants or Respondents?
12.In the petition, I did not see any consent granted by the 10th Respondent(sic) authorizing the Petitioner to sue on their behalf.
13.Besides, when I looked at the petition, I realized that other than citing various constitutional provisions said to have been infringed, the Petitioner’s allegations of fraud perpetuated by the 5th to 9th Respondents can quickly be redressed by the 10th Respondents, who have been deprived of the land, and not through a constitutional petition.
14.See, for example, Communications Commission of Kenya & 5 others v Royal Media Services Ltd & 5 others Pet. 14A, 14B & 14C of 2014 of [2014] eKLR, where the court observed:[105].We shall now turn to the Constitutional Avoidance Doctrine. The doctrine is at times referred to as the Constitutional Avoidance Rule. Black’s Law Dictionary, 10th Edition, page 377, defines it as:[106].The doctrine interrogates whether there are other ways of resolving a dispute outside a constitutional petition. The Supreme Court in Communications Commission of Kenya & 5 Others v Royal Media Services Ltd & 5 Others Pet. 14A, 14B & 14C of 2014 of [2014] eKLR held:[256].The principle of avoidance entails that a Court will not determine a constitutional issue when a matter may properly be decided on another basis.”
15.As I have said, the 10th Respondent, if genuinely deprived of the suit property by the 5th to 9th Respondents, can approach this Court via a plaint and get the desired remedy.
16.This petition then fails the Anarita Karimi Njeru test and is hereby dismissed with no order as to costs since no contestation against it was mounted.
DATED, SIGNED, AND DELIVERED AT MALINDI VIRTUALLY ON THIS 19TH DAY OF DECEMBER 2024.E. K. MAKORIJUDGEIn the Presence of:Mr. Ojwang, for the 1st to 4th RespondentsMs. Kimani, for the 5th to 9th RespondentsHappy: Court AssistantIn the Absence of:Ms. Amugune, for the Petitioners