Thoya & 4 others v Kaingu Through agent, representatives Francis Baya Kaingu & 2 others (Environment and Land Miscellaneous Application E024 of 2024) [2024] KEELC 4960 (KLR) (25 June 2024) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEELC 4960 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment and Land Miscellaneous Application E024 of 2024
FM Njoroge, J
June 25, 2024
Between
Pastor Benjamin Kahindi Thoya & 4 others
Applicant
and
Japheth Katana Kaingu Through agent, representatives Francis Baya Kaingu & 2 others
Respondent
Ruling
1.By an application dated 5th June, 2024 the applicants herein sought against the respondents the following orders:1.………… spent2.That the intended personal representatives be enjoined or be substituted on behalf of the deceased respoindent;3.………… spent;4.That pending the hearing of this application and intended appeal this honourable court be pleased to issue a stay of execution and judgment dated 29/5/2024 and restrain the respondent’s relatives and family being Francis Baya, Reuben Chengo, And Changawa Kaingu and anybody on their behalf from interring the remains of the respondents in plot number 220;5.That the costs of this application be in the cause.
2.The application is opposed. The persons named as agents or representatives filed a replying affidavit sworn by Reuben Chengo Kaingu. In it, the deponent stated that Japhet Katana Kaingu is already deceased, having passed away on 25/5/2024, and is improperly named in these proceedings as a respondent; that as no grant of letters of administration has been issued to them, the agents/representatives lack locus standi to be sued in these proceedings; that the application filed in the lower court by the applicants was dismissed for non-attendance and the grounds for the dismissal were recorded; that the dispute between the deceased and the applicants was finally settled by the court whereby the applicants were found not to own any land; that it is intended that the deceased be interred on Plot No 219 which belongs to his estate; that there is no appeal filed against the decision of the lower court; that there is no suit by way of petition, plaint, originating summons or an appeal and so the court ought not issue an injunction as it would be contrary to Order 40 of the CPR.
3.The applicants thereafter filed a supplementary affidavit of Patrick Charo, one of their own, who stated as follows under oath: that the deponent of the replying affidavit is not seized of all the facts and ought not to have sworn the said affidavit; that the son of the deceased is going to be an administrator of the deceased’s estate; that the disputed portion is no 220 on which a grave has been dug for interment of the deceased’s remains. The rest of the contents of that affidavit are argumentative and I will not set them out in this ruling for that reason.
4.This court has considered the application and the supplementary affidavit, the replying affidavit and the submissions filed by both parties in compliance to the order of the court. The issue arising in this court is whether the orders granted can be granted by this court but before delving into a merit assessment of the application on the principles in the renowned cases of Giella v Cassman Brown [1973] EA 358 and Mrao v First American Bank of Kenya as to whether orders of injunction are merited, it is necessary to consider the principal preliminary legal objections voiced by the respondents in these proceedings. They are twofold as follows:a.Whether the application is fatally defective for having joined the deceased rather than his legal representatives;b.Whether the grant of an injunctive order would be in violation of order 40 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
5.Regarding the first objection it is clear that proceedings may only be commenced against a living person with capacity to be sued or the estate of a deceased person represented by his legal representatives. The description given in the title to these proceedings implies that it is the deceased who is the respondent.
6.If a person dies he can not be named in a suit save through the representatives to his estate. The contrary has occurred in the present proceedings where the deceased has been named as the respondent, with a preliminary prayer being sought that the intended personal representatives be subsequently joined or substituted on his behalf, which in this court’s view is plainly wrong. A suit or proceeding against a deceased person is a non-starter, null and void ab initio.
7.It should have been that the legal representatives ought to have been sued on behalf of the deceased’s estate and not the deceased being sued with the intention of having the legal representatives substituted later.
8.Further when the so called representatives of the deceased denied being the administrators to the deceased’s estate the applicants, rather than exhibit a grant of letters of administration to prove them wrong, could only state that in any event it is expected that the son of the deceased who is one of the named persons shall finally be an administrator of the deceased’s estate. Quite an erroneous view in my opinion as the appointment of an administrator in subject to succession proceedings in court, and such appointment is only issued to an applicant who finds favour with the court upon convincing it of his ability to faithfully administer the estate.
9.In the case of Japhet Nzila Muangi v Hamisi Juma Malee [2022] eKLR the court stated as follows:
10.It is thus clear that proceedings commenced against a deceased person whether in the proper manner as a suit or an application does not lie.
11.The applicants clearly know who they want to injunct and against what but they have for some reason failed to join them in their application for orders. Consequently, I find that there is no application, the same having been commenced against a deceased person.
12.I will proceed to the next point in the event that this court’s opinion on the first point is incorrect. The issue is whether the applicants have approached the court in the right manner so as to merit an order of injunction in the event the ingredients of such an application are seen to have been made available to the court.
13.It is the correct position that Order 40 Rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Rules envisages injunctions in cases where there is an existing suit. the provisions of that order are as follows, verbatim:
14.Has a suit been brought into existence in the present case? The answer lies in examining the methods prescribed by law for the institution of the suit.
15.Section 19 of the Civil Procedure Act Cap 21 states that: -
16.Order 3 Rule (1) (ii) of the Civil Procedure Rules 2010 provides that:-
17.These methods are therefore acknowledgeable to be: by way of plaint, petition, originating summons or appeal. The proceedings herein have been commenced by way of a miscellaneous application. A Miscellaneous Application clearly does not fall into the category enumerated herein above, hence there is no suit in existence, just an application. The grant of an injunctive order against a party, even he who has locus standi in a matter on the basis of a miscellaneous application is not allowed. The application must be rooted in an existing suit.
18.In the case of Geoffrey Ndungu Theuri v Law Society of Kenya [1988] eKLR, the court observed:
19.In Proto Energy Limited v Hashi Energy Limited [2019] eKLR the court stated that:
20.In Wanja & another v Roothaert (Miscellaneous Application E193 of 2021) [2022] KEHC 10255 (KLR) (3 June 2022) (Ruling) where the application was not rooted in a suit the application was struck out. The same result occurred in Mwavumbo Group Ranch v Kenya Electircity Transmission Company Limited (KETRACO) (Environment & Land Miscellaneous Case 2 of 2022) [2023] KEELC 18844 (KLR) (22 June 2023) (Ruling)
21.The question would arise as to what would be pending perchance they are confirmed as it has been proved now that there is no suit in existence. The orders granted at the initial stages this matter were meant to preserve the status quo pending hearing of the Miscellaneous Application and clearly it is a principle of the law that no person sought to be condemned unheard. However, in view of what this court has stated, those orders require to be now set aside.
22.The application before me is not a suit and is not premised on any existing suit or appeal. Even if this court proceeded to investigate the merits of the applicant’s quest for an injunction, in the end such an order would not be issued for the reasons stated in this paragraph.
23.The upshot of the foregoing is that the two objections raised by the respondents have merit and the application dated 5/6/2024 is hereby dismissed with costs to the respondents. For the avoidance of doubt the injunctive orders issued on 6/6/24 and extended variously thereafter are hereby set aside entirely. In addition, the mortuary expenses for cadaver preservation only in respect of the deceased for the period between 13/6/2024 to 25/6/2024 shall upon proof before the taxing master be added to the costs of the application for settlement by the applicants, and shall be executed in the same manner as the costs if not paid within 45 days of this order.
RULING DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT MALINDI VIA ELECTRONIC MAIL ON THIS 25TH DAY OF JUNE 2024.MWANGI NJOROGEJUDGE, ELC, MALINDI