Tororei & another v Tororei & 2 others (Environment and Land Appeal E024 of 2022) [2024] KEELC 4192 (KLR) (16 May 2024) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEELC 4192 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment and Land Appeal E024 of 2022
L Waithaka, J
May 16, 2024
Between
Mathias Tororei
1st Appellant
Augustine Maina
2nd Appellant
and
John Kimutai Tororei
1st Respondent
Charles Kurgat
2nd Respondent
Bernard Kurgat
3rd Respondent
(Being an appeal from the Judgment of Hon. Charles Kutwa SPM delivered on 2nd November 2022 in Iten MCELC No. E23 of 2021)
Judgment
Introduction
1.By a plaint dated 30th May 2021, the plaintiffs (now appellants) instituted a suit in the lower court to wit Iten SPMC ELC Case No E028 of 2021, seeking judgment against the defendants for a declaration that the parcel of land known as Itong/Mutei/154 (hereinafter known as the suit property) is ancestral land; that the registration of the 1st defendant as the proprietor of the suit property is subject of a trust in equal shares in their favour; a permanent injunction to restrain the defendants by themselves, their agents and/or any other person acting on the defendants’ authority from interferring with the plaintiff’s right of enjoyment, use and occupation of the plaintiffs’ share of the suit property; general damages; interest and costs (prayers paraphrased).
2.The plaintiffs’ claim/suit was premised on the ground that the suit property is ancestral land; that the registration of the 1st defendant as proprietor of the suit property is subject of a trust in the plaintiffs’ favour.
3.The plaintiffs pleaded that the suit property belonged to their father, Tororei Maina, deceased; that they (the plaintiffs) were brought up in the suit property; that their parents were buried in the suit property and that the suit property is their only known home (plaintiffs’ have no other place as home).
4.The defendants filed a statement of defence and counterclaim, dated 21st June 2021, denying the plaintiffs’ allegation that the suit property is ancestral land and that registration of the 1st defendant as proprietor of the suit property is subject of a trust in favour of the plaintiffs.
5.According to the defendants, registration of the 1st defendant as proprietor of the suit property is absolute/not subject to any trust in favour of the plaintiffs as claimed by the plaintiffs. The defendants further pleaded/contended that their ancestral home was in Kapterik and not Irong.
6.Terming the plaintiffs’ allegation that the suit property is their only known home misleading, the defendants pleaded that each of the sons of their father, the late Toronei Maina, got their share of their ancestral land in Kapterik.
7.The defendants acknowledged that the 1st plaintiff had been occupying a small portion of the suit property but contended that he had been doing so as a licensee of the 1st defendant and not as a bona fide owner thereof.
8.Stating that the licence pursuant to which the 1st plaintiff occupied a portion of the suit property had been terminated, by way of counterclaim, the defendants sought judgment against the plaintiffs for an order of eviction of the 1st plaintiff from the suit property; an order of permanent injunction to restrain the plaintiffs from interferring with the 1st defendant’s ownership, possession, occupation and use of the suit property, cost of the suit.
9.When the suit came up for hearing the plaintiffs and defendants reiterated their pleaded cases.
10.Upon considering the case presented before him, the learned trial magistrate held/observed:-
11.Aggrieved by the decision of the lower court, the plaintiffs appealed to this court on 21 grounds which can be reduced to one broad ground namely that the learned trial magistrate erred by dismissing their case and allowing the defendants’ defence and counterclaim.
12.Pursuant to directions given on 31st October 2023, the appeal was disposed off by way of written submissions.
Submissions
Appellant’s Submissions
13.In their submissions filed on 11th February 2023, the appellants have identified the following as the issues for the court’s determination:-i.Whether or not the 1st respondent holds the suit property in trust for himself and his mother Sanieko (deceased) and his siblings;ii.Whether the judgment delivered on 6th November 2022 should be set aside and a permanent injunction issued to restrain the respondents from interferring with the appellants’ right to the suit property.
14.On Whether or not the 1st respondent holds the suit property in trust for himself and his mother, Sanieko (deceased) and his siblings, reference is made to the case of Isack M’Inanga Kiebia v Isaaya Theuri M’Lintari & another (2018) eKLR where the Supreme Court listed the elements that would qualify a registered owner of land as a customary trustee and submitted that in the circumstances of this case, where the parties are siblings, the plaintiffs/appellants proved that registration of the 1st defendant/respondent as the registered proprietor is subject of a customary trust in favour of the 1st defendant/respondent and other siblings.
15.According to the plaintiffs/appellants, the evidence they adduced to the effect that the parties lived in the suit property in their childhood (prior to independence) and that the suit property was adjudicated when the entire family lived in it, negates a determination that registration of the 1st defendant/respondent was intended at rendering the other family members homeless.
16.It is the plaintiffs/appellants’ case that the 1st defendant/respondent was registered as proprietor of the suit property because it was not practicable to list all members in the adjudication record.
17.It is contended that the family gave the name of one of the family members to hold the land in trust for others as was the practice that time.
18.Further reference is made to the case of Mukangu v Mukangu (Environment & Land Case 88 of 2015) (2022) KEELC 14787 (KLR) and submitted that the plaintiffs/appellants have up a case for interference with the decision of the trial court.
19.As at the time of writing this judgement, the respondents had not filed submissions or if they had, the submissions were not placed in the court file.
Analysis and determination
20.In exercise of the duty vested in this court as a first appellate court, I have re-evaluated the evidence adduced before the lower court with a view of reaching my own conclusion on it. I have reminded myself that a first appellate court will not ordinarily interfere with findings of fact by the trial court unless they were based on no evidence at all, or were based on misapprehension of the evidence or unless it is demonstrated that the trial court acted upon wrong principles in reaching the finding. In that regard see the cases of Selle & another v Associated Motor Boat Co. Ltd (1968)E.A 123, Mwanasokoni v Kenya Bus Service Ltd (1982-88)1 KAR and Kiruga v Kiruga & another (1988)KLR 348.
21.As pointed out herein above, a review of the pleadings and the evidence adduced before the lower court, which evidence is aptly summarized in the judgment of the lower court reproduced herein above, shows that the suit property was registered in the name of the 1st defendant/respondent in 1977; that at the time the property was registered in the name of the 1st defendant, the plaintiffs were adults; that the plaintiffs have land registered in their names elsewhere and that apart from the 1st plaintiff, the plaintiffs do not live in the suit property and have never lived there. The evidence further shows that the plaintiffs’ ancestral land is in Kapterik and not Irong.
22.Contrary to the plaintiff’s pleaded case that they have no land elsewhere, the evidence adduced before the lower court shows that the plaintiffs have their own parcels of land in Kapterik.
23.Augustine Maina, who testified as PW5, gave evidence which contradicted that of the other witnesses by informing the court that the suit property belonged to his mother. He explained that the 1st defendant was registered as the proprietor of the suit property because his mother had no title deed.
24.DW1, Charles Kurgat, admitted that their parents (plaintiffs’ and defendants’) were living in the suit property and that their parents are buried in the suit property but stated that the parents were buried in the suit property according to Keiyo customs (the 1st defendant was their parent’s first born).
25.DW2, Benard Kurgat, informed the court that the 1st plaintiff had been living in the suit property with his family and that his grandmother was buried in the suit property before he (the 1st defendant) was born. DW2 informed the court that he accommodated the 1st plaintiff in the suit property because his marriage had issues.
26.DW3, Barnaba Maina, informed the court that the plaintiffs are his brothers; that they had disputes before the chief over ownership of the suit property; that they did not agree. He further informed the court that the suit property belongs to the 1st defendant.
27.DW4, David Lemiso, informed the court that he knows the parties’ family very well, they are his neighbours. Concerning the suit property, he stated that it belongs to the 1st defendant.
28.Arising from the pleadings filed in the lower court, the evidence and the grounds of appeal taken up by the plaintiffs/appellants, I find the sole issue for the court’s determination to be whether the plaintiffs/appellants have made up a case for interference with the decision of the lower court.
29.As pointed out herein above, the plaintiffs/appellants premised their case on the ground that registration of the 1st defendant/respondent as the proprietor of the suit property is subject to a trust in their favour. Although the plaintiffs/appellants did not plead the exact type of trust claimed, from their pleadings, evidence and submissions it is clear that the plaintiff/appellants’ claim is based on customary trust. This can be inferred from their claim that the suit property is ancestral land.
30.From the evidence adduced before the lower court, it is not in dispute that the suit property was at some point used as family land. It is common ground that the parties parents lived in the suit property and that upon the death of the parties’ parents, the parents were buried in the suit property.
31.There is evidence that at the time the 1st defendant/ respondent was registered as the proprietor of the suit property, all the plaintiffs were of majority age and that the suit property is not the parties’ ancestral home. According to the evidence adduced before the lower court, the parties ancestral home is Kapterik and not Irong.
32.Apart from proving that the suit property was, at some point in time occupied by their parents and that their parents are buried there, the plaintiffs did not prove that registration of the 1st defendant as the proprietor of the suit property was/ is subject to any trust in their favour.
33.I note that apart from the 1st plaintiff, none of the other plaintiffs or siblings of the 1st defendant ever laid a claim to the suit property. From the conduct of the parties, regarding possession and use of the suit property, I have no reason for buying the plaintiffs’ claim that they are entitled to an equal share of the suit property on account of the pleaded trust. The only person who proved sufficient interest in the suit property, on account of his use and possession of a portion of the suit property is the 1st plaintiff. That use and possession, though, is not proof that the suit property is subject of any trust in his favour. The 1st defendant pleaded that his use and possession of the suit property was on account of permission or licence given to him by the 1st defendant.
34.Trust being a question of fact, it behooved the plaintiffs to not only plead it but also prove it by production of evidence.
35.The plaintiffs pleaded that they have no land elsewhere. The evidence adduced before the court proved otherwise. The evidence showed that the plaintiffs have land elsewhere given to them by their father.
36.Upon review of the evidence adduced in the lower court, I agree with the trial court that the evidence is incapable of proving the plaintiffs’ pleaded case, on a balance of probabilities. I hasten to point out that the plaintiffs, through the testimony of PW5, and their submissions, attempted to depart from their pleaded case, by leading evidence to the effect that the suit property belongs to their mother, yet they had, in their pleadings pleaded that the suit property belongs to their father. That kind of evidence could not avail the plaintiffs the orders sought as parties are bound by their pleadings. In that regard see the case of Raila Amollo Odinga & another v Independent Electoral & Boundaries Commission & 2 others (2017) eKLR the Supreme Court stated:-
37.Also see Order 2 Rule 6(1) of the Civil Procedure Rules which provides as follows:-
38.The upshot of the foregoing is that the appeal has no merits. Consequently, I dismiss it with costs to the defendants/respondents.
39.Orders accordingly.
JUDGMENT DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT ITEN THIS 16TH DAY OF MAY, 2024.L. N. WAITHAKAJUDGEJudgment delivered electronically in the presence of:-Ms. Mutai holding brief for Mr. Cheruiyot for the appellantMs. Chelogoi holding brief for Mr. Kenei for the respondentCourt Asst.: Christine Towett