Raphael Kitur v Standard Group Limited [2016] KEHC 2750 (KLR)

Raphael Kitur v Standard Group Limited [2016] KEHC 2750 (KLR)

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

CIVIL CASE NO.  336 OF 2013

RAPHAEL KITUR.............................................................PLAINTIFF

VERSUS

THE STANDARD GROUP LIMITED............................DEFENDANT

JUDGMENT

1. The plaintiff  Raphael Kitur  sued the defendant  the Standard  Group Limited  vide a plaint dated  15th August   2013  and filed  in court on 15th August  2013.

2. The plaintiff’s claim against the defendant is for general damages,  Exemplary  damages, punitive  and aggravated  damages; an order for  publication of an apology; costs  of this suit  and interest; and  any other  relief  the court  may deem fit to grant.

3. The plaintiff’s claim is predicated on the tort of defamation (libel).  In the said plaint, the plaintiff  averred that on or  about  the 18th day of September  2012  at page 12  of  the “Standard Newspaper ”captioned  “ Ex MP in court  over bouncing  cheque”, the defendant  maliciously  published  the following  words of and concerning the plaintiff

former Transport  and Communications Assistant Minister Raphael Kitur was charged  in a Nairobi  court for  issuing  the Intercontinental  Hotel a cheque  for kshs  450,000/- to the Intercontinental  Security Manager John Maina  Muraguri on June 6th, last year.  The money   was drawn on the MP’s Equity Bank Mama Ngina Street account which according to the charge sheet, he knew did not have sufficient funds to settle the amount.

4. The  plaintiff averred that the aforesaid  words in their  natural  and   ordinary  meaning  and in  the context  in which  they were  written  and published  by the  defendant  had defamatory connotations and  were maliciously published.

5. The defendant  entered an  appearance and filed defence  dated  20th September 2013   through  the firm of Guram &Company  Advocates, denying each  and every allegation  leveled  against it  by the  plaintiff.  In the alternative , and  without  prejudice to the specific  denials  by the defendant, it  contended that the words  complained of  were facts, true  in substantive   and fact and that they  consisted  of opinions, were fair  comment   on a  matter of  public interest namely, issuing  of bouncing  cheques.

6. The defendant  also  pleaded  particulars  under Order  VI Rule  6A of  the Civil Procedure Rules  contending inter alia, that the  plaintiff  an Ex MP for Konoin constituency  and a former  Assistant Minister  for Transport and Communication was a public official  and  that he had  been arraigned  in a Nairobi court over  issuing  a bouncing  cheque of  shs  450,000 to Intercontinental Hotel  when he  knew that the account  did not  have sufficient  funds.

7. The defendant  also relied   on Section 15  of the Defamation Act  Cap 36 Laws of Kenya; pleaded  the defence of justification; that  the plaintiff had failed  to exercise  his right of reply  under Section 7 ‘A’ of the Defamation  Act, Cap 36  Laws of Kenya; failed to mitigate  his alleged loss under Section 7 ‘A’ of the Defamation  Act Cap 36  Laws  of Kenya  and that although it received  demand  and notice of  intention to sue, it  was of  no consequence in view of the  defences  raised.

8. The plaintiff filed reply to defence  dated  25th September  2013  joining  issues with the defendant  and  reiterating  the contents  of the plaint as  pleaded.

9. On 15th March 2014, the plaintiff’s  counsel  filed an application under Order  2 rule  15(1) (a), (b), (c), (d)  Order 51  of the Civil Procedure Rules Sections  and sections 1A, 1B and 3A, of the Civil Procedure Act  seeking for the striking out of the defendant’s  defence  and that the judgment   be entered  for the plaintiff against the  defendant  as prayed   in the plaint.  It  was  averred  that the defence  by the defendant  disclosed  no reasonable  cause of  action as  the plaintiff  was never  charged  with the offence  as published; the  defence   was scandalous, frivolous, vexatious  and an abuse of  the court process and that   the matters  published   were so  obviously  libelous  of the plaintiff since the  defendant  never sought  any clarification and information from the plaintiff, it  was  further averred  that the defences  of fair comment  and justification  are totally inappropriate  to the  case and  that the defendant  had not complied  with Order  3  of the Civil Procedure  Rules (2010).

10. When the application  came up for hearing  before  Honourable Onyancha J  on 22nd September  2014, the defendant’s counsel  conceded  and the defendant’s defence   was  by consent  struck  out; and judgment as prayed   was entered  in  favour of the plaintiff against  the defendant on liability at 100% with costs. The plaintiff was then directed to fix the suit for assessment of quantum of damages.

11. The plaintiff testified as PW1 stating that his name was Raphael Kiprono Arap Kitur.  That he was a businessman   and lives in Muthaiga, Naivasha Lane, Nairobi.  He relied on his witness statement filed on 15th August 2013   which he had signed, and which was adopted as his evidence in chief. 

12. The plaintiff  testified  that he had sued  the defendant  for publishing  an article  that the plaintiff had  issued a  bouncing  cheque, which allegation  was not true.  He stated that the  article  as reproduced  herein above  was  on page  12  of the defendant’s  publication The Standard  on National  News  Tuesday 18th September, 2012  which  was  a Quick Read  Column.  The plaintiff produced the said entire Newspaper as Exhibit 1.

13. The plaintiff stated that he was never charged with any offence as reported by the defendant’s publication.  That between 1997 and 2002, he was a member of Parliament and an Assistant Minister for Transport   and Communications, Assistant to Honourable Musalia Mudavadi.  He represented d Konoin Constituency in Bomet County.  That he was   surprised to read himself in the papers yet he had never   issued any bouncing cheque.

14. Further, that people called him after reading the publication and one such person   was Koros who asked the plaintiff whether he (the plaintiff) had done what was   alleged in the said publication.  That the defendant never contacted the plaintiff to verify the correctness of the story before publishing it.  The plaintiff stated that  he  was a member  of several clubs  which include  Parklands, Kericho Sports Club, Muthaiga Golf Club  and that  his fellow  members  were shocked  when they learnt  that he had  issued  a bouncing  cheque since they  knew  that he  settled  his bills by credit card  and cheques.

15. The plaintiff  also produced  a copy of a charge  sheet as PEX2  and copy of his National identity card as  PEX 3  after the  court  verified  its original.  He also  produced  copy of demand  letter  mailed  to the defendant  dated  19th September  2012  as PEX4.

16. The plaintiff further testified that the defendant never apologized to him.  He therefore urged the court to clear his name and order the defendant to pay him damages.  He stated  that the  publication spoiled  his chances  of becoming  a senator  as his opponents used the false  publication  to disparage  him by photocopying it  and supplying  copies  to the constituents to read.

17. In cross examination by  Mr  R. Billing counsel for defendant, the plaintiff  responded  that he became  an MP in 1997 and  was appointed  a Minister until  2002.  He stated that from 2003 he was not an MP and that he is engaged in the clearing and forwarding business since the year   2003.

18. The plaintiff also testified that in 2012 he decided to rejoin politics to vie for Senatorial seat on a Jubilee affiliated party.  That he went through the normal process of becoming a senator including filling of forms and vetting approval, but that when the impugned publication was circulated to the people, his reputation was damaged.

19. He restated his membership to various clubs including Muthaiga, Nairobi, and Parklands, stated that to be accepted as a member of those clubs, one must be a reputable person.

20. The plaintiff stated that committee members of the respective clubs   know him as a reputable   person although he denied that they took to him the article in question.  He stated that he   was still a member of the said clubs.  He stated that he   read the publication in the Standard Newspaper and was upset because it was false.  He stated that apart from his advocate’s demand letter, he did not call the standard.  That he was still in business to date but that he had lost business with the Ministry of Health for a tender   worth  12 million.

21. In  re-examination by Mr Mahoho the plaintiff stated that his  fellow  club members  talked  about the article  and he  had to explain to them the  truth.  Further, that the article  was used by his  political  opponents to his disadvantage  during political  campaigns.

22. The plaintiff  also called  PW2 Mr Bernard  Kibet  Koros  who testified  that  he  was a businessman in Konoin, Bomet County.  That he   knew the plaintiff Raphael Kitur.  The witness relied on  his   witness statement  signed  on 25th July 2013.  He stated that the article   was published  before the  2013  general elections.  That  he knew the plaintiff  as a very  straight forward  person  and honest.  That on  18th September  2012  he  bought the Daily Nation and the Standard  Newspapers and that on perusing  the Standard Newspaper  for that day, he saw a publication on Raphael Kitur  that he had been charged in a Nairobi Court  for having issued  a  bad cheque.  PW2 called  Mr Kitur   and informed   him of the  publication  and asked him  what the status  was as  the publication would affect his political  standing  and reputation.  That   the plaintiff informed PW2 that  he had not been charged  with any criminal offence as  published  and that the story   was false  and malicious.

23. The plaintiff’s witness testified that from  the name and description in the publication, he believed that the publication referred to the plaintiff.  That as the chief campaigner for the plaintiff, he knew that the plaintiff had  vied for a  senatorial  seat in Bomet  County but  that the electorate were questioning the  credibility   of a person  who  issues  bad cheques. 

24. PW2 stated that the  plaintiff’s  political foes  used the publication  to spread  propaganda that  the plaintiff  could not be trusted  with a public  office in  view of lack  of financial  honesty and discipline.  That the publication   greatly  negatively  affected the standing  of Mr Kitur  before his former constituents  and  his political opponents  made  political  capital out of it leading  to him losing  in the nominations for Bomet County senatorial seat.

25. In cross examination by Mr  R. Billing  counsel for  the defendant, the  witness stated that he   was  the chief campaigner for the plaintiff  Mr Kitur and that Mr Kitur  complied with and went through all the nomination processes for candidature but that his opponents  photocopied the article and circulated it  saying the plaintiff  was untrustworthy. That the article was distributed throughout the county. The witness stated that his main opponent was Professor Lesan. He also conceded that during election process, people use very opportunity to tarnish the reputation of others. He denied that they reported the matter to the police or the IEBC.

26. In re-examination by Mr Mahoho, PW2 stated that   he had not read any retraction by the defendant.

27. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant  did not  tender  any evidence   since judgment  had been entered  against  it  following the striking  out its  defence by the consensus  reached  on 22nd September   2014 between the parties’ respective advocates. 

28. Both parties’ advocates were directed  to file and  exchange  their written  submissions  both soft  and  hard copies  within 21 days   and the matter   was scheduled   for mention on 8th February  2016   to confirm compliance.

29. Regrettably, by 8th February  2016  only the  plaintiff had filed  his submissions  and despite leave of  30 days  granted  to the defendant’s counsel to file  and serve  their written  submissions, by 7th March  2016,  and a further  enlarged  period to  24th March  2016,  bore no fruit as  they had not  filed any submissions hence his court  had to set down the  matter for judgment.

30. In the plaintiff’s written submissions filed on 5th February 2016, the plaintiff  reiterated his  pleadings and  evidence  in court and urged the court  to rely on HCC 1706/96  JP Macharia  V Wangethi Mwangi &  Another    where the court  explained what  constituted  malice  and in CA 9/1975 (Kitto V Chedwick & Another [1975] CA  141 where the Court of Appeal  made it  clear that where the allegations made are false   and the same  are not disputed  by correspondences  or evidence and in  the absence of any attempt  to show some  belief  in the truth  of the allegation, then malice  is established  and there is not  sustainable   defence.   Further reliance   was placed on  HCC 102/2000 Daniel Musinga  V National Newspapers  Ltd Where the court cited  with approval Godwin Wachira V Okoth [1977] KLR 24  that failure to inquire  into the facts  is a fact  from which inference  of malice may properly  be drawn; and  in Machira (supra)  where it was held, inter alia, that deliberate lies can also  be evidence  of malice. The plaintiff also relied on HCC 1896/99 Mueke Nguli t/a Nguli  & Company Advocates  V Nation Newspapers & Printer where it was stated that, malice can be  inferred from deliberate  or reckless  or  even negligent  ignoring of  facts.  The plaintiff urged the court  to find the defendant  liable  for the  tort  of libel.

31. On quantum of damages, it  was  submitted by the plaintiff’s counsel that an  action for defamation is essentially  an action to compensate a person for the harm to his reputation and no apology or retraction or withdrawal can ever be guaranteed  to completely  undo  the harm done  of the hurt  caused  by a defamatory  publication.  That in libel, the tort is actionable perse and the sum to be awarded  are said  to be at  “large.”

32. It  was further  submitted by the plaintiff’s  counsel  that the  following  considerations  should guide  the court  is assessing damages: 

1. The  plaintiff’s position  and standing  in society  vis vis  what  has been published  of him;

2. The mode and extent of publications.

3. The apology offered  and at what  time  in the proceedings.

33. It  was  submitted that in  the instant  case, the plaintiff  at the material time  had served as former Assistant  Minister  in the Kenya Government; that he was vying for Bomet  County Senatorial seat; that the article  referred  to him using  his previous   government  position  and constituency; that the defendant  did not  bother to confirm  with the plaintiff whether it   was him who was charged  in court for  issuing  a bouncing cheque  before publishing  the article; and the offending  article  had never  been withdrawn and no apology  has ever been tendered. Reliance   was placed on Chirau Ali Makwere V Nation Media  Group & Another [2009] e KLR  citing  with approval John V Ms Ltd  [1996] ALL ER  35 on what  damages  a successful plaintiff  in a defamation action is entitled  to. 

34. The plaintiff’s  counsel also prayed for aggravated damages where compensatory  damages are not  sufficient  and where  it’s proved that the defendant  knew when publishing the article that  he  was committing a tort  or  was reckless, whether  his  action   was fictitious or not  and decided to publish  because  the prospects of material  advantages  outweighed  the prospects  of material  loss; that the defendant was  actuated  by malice  as  it insisted on a flimsy  defence  of justification and fair  comment  and never apologized. 

35. The plaintiff also prayed  for aggravated  damages  in addition to general injury  going beyond  that which  would have  flowed  from the  words  complained  of but for the presence  of the aggravating  circumstances.  The plaintiff  further prayed for exemplary  damages  which are  meant ‘ to punish’ the defendant.  He relied  on the Machira  and Chirau Ali Makwere (supra cases).The plaintiff  quantified  damages as follows:-

a. General compensatory damages  shs  25,000,000

b. Aggravated damages shs 5,000,000 for refusal to apologize.

c. Shs  5,000,000 in lieu of an apology.

36. The above  proposals   were guided  by the following cases: HCC 420/2011 Samuel Mukunya  Ndungu V Nation Media  Group Ltd  & Another  where shs  15,000,000 general damages was awarded, shs   1.5  aggravated  damages  and damages in lieu of apology; JP Machira  case(supra)  where shs  8,000,000 general  damages   was awarded  and shs  2,000,000 aggravated damages  and the  two latter awards   were upheld by the  Court of Appeal;and in CA 148/2008; Chirau  Ali Makwere where shs  10,000,000 general damages  was awarded  and in  HCC 1068/99 Nicholas  Kiprono  Biwot  V Ian West &Another where  shs  30,000,000 general damages was  awarded  as a global  sum whereas  shs  7,000,000 general damages  was awarded to the plaintiff in HCC 1230/2004 Francis Ole Kaparo v The Standard  Limited. The plaintiff proposed an ward of shs 32,000,000 plus costs and interest.

37. I have carefully considered the case herein, the pleadings, evidence both oral and documentary and the submissions filed by the plaintiff both on liability   and on quantum; and the supporting authorities.

38. In my humble view, the  issues for  determination are:

a. Whether  the plaintiff  has proved  on a balance  of probabilities  that he  was defamed  by the defendant  and if so;

 b. what  damages  is he entitled to;

c. what orders  should this court make; and

d. who should  bear the costs  of this suit.

39. On the first  issue of  whether  the plaintiff has made  out a case  for defamation (libel) against  the defendant, the law is  clear that  he who alleges   must proof, even  if the case  proceeds  by way of  formal proof. But I must first determine what defamation is and its essential elements.

40. Defamation is the publication of a statement which  tends to lower a  person’s  reputation or character in the estimation of right thinking members generally and which makes  them shun and avoid  him.  The burden of  proof  lies on the claimant to establish that the  published  words or statements as published of and concerning the plaintiff are  defamatory of him or her.  The  claimant  must prove, on a balance  of probabilities, that the words  complained of  were published  of and concerning him; that they  were published  by the defendant; that they  were false; and  that they  were defamatory  in character of  the claimant by tending  to  lower him in  the estimation of  right thinking members of  the society generally, making them shun or  avoid him).  Finally,  the claimant  must prove that the publication  was  done with  malice( see Wycliffe A. Swanya V Toyota East Africa  Ltd & Another [2009] e KLR.

41. In the instant  case, the defendant’s  defence  was struck  out  and judgment  on liability  entered  against it  in favour of the plaintiff at 100% by consent.  It therefore  follows that  the issue of liability of the defendant  for libeling the plaintiff is settled and  I will therefore  only assess the evidence  via avis  the pleadings for purposes of  determining  what  damages  are  awardable.

42. The mere fact that there is a publication to the effect that the plaintiff was charged in court with the stated offence would in itself  not be defamatory if it was indeed true that the plaintiff had been charged in court with the disclosed offence, as that would be reporting of proceedings pending in court which reporting is protected by the doctrine of qualified privilege. Nonetheless, having considered the material that was published  in the Standard  Newspaper “ Kenya’s Bold Newspaper” for Tuesday, September, 2012  at  page  12/National: courts at the extreme  left side  of the  page titled  “Quick Read”: Nairobi: Ex MP in court  over bouncing  cheque” and the  publication  there under  as reproduced  in the plaintiff’s  pleadings and in this judgment; and considering the evidence adduced by the plaintiff , which evidence was not rebutted or at all that he was never charged with any criminal offence as reported by the defendant’s newspaper, Iam persuaded  that the words as published  were  ordinarily defamatory of the  plaintiff as they meant in their ordinary sense that  the plaintiff had been arraigned  in court and charged  with the  offence of issuing  a bouncing  cheque  valued at  shs 450,000  to the Intercontinental Security  Manager  Mr John Maina Muraguri  on June  6th 2011.

43. I am also  in agreement  with  the plaintiff that the  said words  were clearly  understood  to mean that the  plaintiff  was a criminal  and  had committed an offence under the Penal Code Cap 63  Laws of Kenya; and was an untrustworthy person who does  not service his  debts.

44. Considering  that the plaintiff  was clearly named  in his  former  capacity  as the former  member of  Parliament  for Konoin Constituency  and a former  Transport  and Communications Assistant  Minister  and   by his   two names  Raphael  Kitur, I have no doubt that the  publication referred  to the plaintiff and  was intended  to paint him as a person who  was  untrustworthy and not  fit to  hold  public office.

45. That the article  was published is not in doubt  since it  was   published  in the  Standard Newspaper of Nationwide  circulation.  That the said  defamatory material or article  as a whole  was published  by the defendant  is not in doubt  as the Standard  Newspaper, on its  last page  68  of PEX1 clearly states that  the paper is  published  and printed  at the Standard Group Centre, Mombasa Road, Nairobi –Kenya, by the  Standard Ltd.  I therefore  find that the defendant, the  Standard, is the appropriate  party to these proceedings as  the publisher  and printer  of the impugned  article. 

46. In addition, PW2 Mr Koros who knew the plaintiff read the said publication and called the plaintiff to find out if what had been published of and concern9ing the plaintiff was the truth.

47. The plaintiff pleaded  and testified  to the fact that  the defendant’s  actions of publishing  the article  was actuated by ill will and malice  which was  demonstrated  by certain facts namely: that the publication  was false; that no clarification  was  sought  from him; that the plaintiff   was  never  consulted  or given an  opportunity to defend  himself or  to respond to the allegations before  the defendant published   the article; no apology   was given nor  a correction made;  the defendant  referred  to the  plaintiff by name and his  previous capacities and status in life.

48. In his  evidence, the plaintiff denied  that he   was ever  charged with any offence or offence related to issuing  of the bounced  cheque.  His witness PW2  clearly stated that he read  the article  and  was shocked at the contents  because  he knew  the plaintiff as an honest  and trustworthy  person who  could not  have committed  the offence alleged.  That PW2 was the plaintiff’s  chief campaigner. In the charge  sheet PEX2  vide OB No. 68/14/9/2012 Police  Case File No. 111/449/12 date  to court  on 17th October  2012, the person charged  in that  charge sheet  is Raphael Kupkurui  Kitur male adult  Kenyan  care of  Nairobi with the offence of  cheating contrary to Section 315  of the Penal Code.

49. In count 1  it  was alleged  that on the  6th day of June  2011, at  Intercontinental  Hotel, Nairobi, within  Nairobi County, by means  of fraudulent  tricks,  obtained  kshs 200,000 from John Maina Muraguri  by falsely  pretending  that  you  could incorporate  him in your business    of supplying diaries, calendars  to the Kenya  Medical Training  Institute a fact  you knew to be false.

50. Count two read as follows:   Issuing  a bad cheque  contrary to Section 316  A of (1) (a) as  read with Subsection 4 of the  Penal Code.  The particulars of  the offence    were that: Raphael Kipkurui Kitur  on the  6th day of June  2011 at Intercontinental Hotel, Nairobi, within  Nairobi county, issued  a certain  cheque  No. 000029 for kshs  450,000 to John Maina  Muraguri  drawn on account No. 0296839100 of Raphael Kipkurui Kitur  at  Equity Bank Limited  Mama Ngina  Branch  knowing that  the account has  insufficient funds.  The charge sheet  was  signed by OCS Central Police station on 17th October  2012.

51. The plaintiff also produced  his  original national identity card which the  court had  an opportunity to verify  before accepting  a copy thereof.  It is  National identity  card  No. 000080  serial  No. 237065496.  It in  the name of Raphael Kiprono Kitur male  adult from Sotik District.

52. What I gather from the above  evidence  is that  the defendant publishing  an article  on a page  dedicated to happenings  in the courts  as shown by  the larger  article  in the middle of that  page  12  “ Former  MP charged  for defiling schoolgirl, 15, intended that the article  be read  by many of  the newspaper  readers  who would  want to  know what  was trending  in  the national news in our courts.  And noting that the impugned  publication was a Quick read, ie “ Nairobi : EX MP in court  over bouncing  cheque.”  The  question is, did the  defendant ensure that the  publication  was accurate  and that it referred to  no other  person but the plaintiff as the person who was charged in  court with  the above stated  offences?

 53. From the plaintiff’s evidence, I have no doubt in my mind  that he is not Raphael Kitur  who was charged  in court with  cheating and issuing  a bad  cheque.  I am also  persuaded  that the article  specifically referred  to  the plaintiff herein since it  mentioned his former  position in  top government circles  and as a  former Konoin  legislator.  The naming  of the plaintiff by his two  names  and his former  status  in my view, was done  recklessly and without  verification of the facts.  Had  the defendant  verified the facts from the court or police records,  or even attempted to reach him since he  was a renowned politician, they would have  established  as a fact, that the plaintiff  was never  charged  with any offence  in a court  of law and that  the charges  relating  to cheating  and issuance of  a bad cheque  related to a totally  different  person from the plaintiff herein. 

54. It  was   incumbent  upon the  defendants  to demonstrate  that the  person charged  in court  with the  named  criminal offences  was the plaintiff.  They did not.  It therefore  follows that the  defences of justification, truth, fair comment  and or publication in the public interest  were not  available  to the defendants even if their defence had not been struck out and moreso, with the defendant’s consent for being  scandalous, frivolous, vexatious, disclosing  no reasonable  defence  and being an  abuse of the court process.

55. In my humble  opinion, the  plaintiff proved, on a balance of probabilities, that the defendant, in publishing  a false   article  without verifying  the facts, was actuated  by malice.  I find the publication by  the defendant so irresponsible and  reckless that it  cannot be protected by the  constitutional  right of  freedom of the media, and of the press as  espoused  in  Article  33 and  34  of the Constitution.

56. The freedom of the press, like all  other rights, carries with it  responsibilities, and  one of these obligations is not  to  abuse the  public trust  by knowingly  or recklessly publishing  defamatory  falsehoods of  and concerning  individuals.

57. The constitutional right of freedom of the press  does not  encourage  falsehood reporting.  Neither  does it  cover persons who  write with  the intention of vilifying  or disparaging  others.  Malice  in this case  can be  inferred  from failure  to inquire about whether  or not  the person  actually charged  in  court  was the plaintiff, former  Assistant Minister  for  Transport  and Communications and former  Member  of Parliament  of Konoin Constituency. 

58. The reckless manner in which the defendants   published the impugned article without verifying the facts and its refusal to tender/publish  an apology or correction, even after receiving  a  demand letter;  and failing to contact the plaintiff to establish the truth before publication is a clear  evidence  of malice.  In Rosenblatt V Bear, 383 US.  75,86 [1966], the US court  held:

“ Society has a pervasive and strong  interest  in preventing  and redressing attacks   upon reputation”  Stewart J, concurring  in the above  case  stated that the right  of  an  individual to maintenance  of his or her good  name “ reflect  no more than our basic  concept  of  the essential dignity and worth of  every  human being,  a concept at   the root of  any decent  system  of ordered  liberty.”

59. The law of defamation  reflects  the long  standing  interest in protecting  reputation.  According to Gerald  R. Smith  “ of malice  and men:  The  Law of Defamation” [1992] VOL 27 No 1 Valparcuso University Law  Review  page  39-93, (available at http:|| scholar.valpo.edu|vulv|VOL27|iss1|2; at page  41. It is stated that:

“Reputation is a  dignitary interest  worthy of protection apart from any  other harm that  might attach. Additionally, specific types  of harm resulting  from damage to the reputation  justify  legal protection.  Reputational  damage  involves the loss of   esteem in the eyes  of others, a threat  to existing  and future relations  with third  persons, a threat  to an existing   positive  public  image, and  a potential  for development of a negative  public  image for one  with no previous public reputation.  Loss of reputation may also  result  in lowered self esteem and personal integrity and may lead to  public embarrassment,  humiliation, and  mental anguish.  Defamation  law allows  a plaintiff to  mitigate these damages by setting  the record  straight in a public  forum……”

60. Article 33 and 34 of the Kenya Constitution 2010 recognizes the importance  of free speech upon which  all  other constitutional freedoms depend.  ( see  Whitney V California , 274 US. 357, 375[1927] Brandels, J  that:

 “ free speech is essential to discovery and spread of political truth.”  It promotes receiving  or importation   of  information or ideas.  However, the interests  protected by free speech must be balanced  with other  interests which include the right to inherent  dignity and the right to have that  dignity respected  and protected; the right  not to be vilified by others

61. Where, like in the instant  case, it is  clear that the publication concerning  the plaintiff  was false  and overtly  incorrect, the plaintiff had a  right  under Article  35(2) of the Constitution  to the correction or deletion of  untrue  or misleading information  that  affects  the person  (plaintiff) in  this case.  However, even after  being notified  of the  falsity of  the publication, the defendant  insisted  that the information  was  true, that  it  was justified  in publishing  that information and  that it  was in the public  interest   that the information be published. 

62. In my humble view,  that  insistence, without  stopping  to  investigate  into the  falsity  of the publication  as pointed out by the plaintiff, was a clear  manifestation of malice  on the part  of the defendant.  The publication, in my view, was a  statement  of fact  and not of   opinion.  Read  as a whole, that  statement  of and concerning  the plaintiff   tended  to harm or injure  the reputation of the plaintiff in the eyes  of right thinking  members of the society generally or deter other persons  from associating  with the  plaintiff ( shun him). Libel  is actionable  perse without  proof of any loss or  pecuniary  damages. The  statement  as published by the defendant  concerning the plaintiff  was, in my  humble view, without  any lawful justification. It  was  intended  to disparage  the plaintiff’s character. 

63. However, although  the plaintiff  testified that he lost nomination for senatorial  seat due  to the publication  which his political rivals took  advantage of and photocopied  and circulated  to the citizens  in the county, there  was no  single  photocopied/distributed material produced  in court.  However, in  libel, publication is sufficient and proof of damage is not a must although where there is specific damage or loss it would increase the award of damages.

64. It is not in dispute  that  the  impugned article   was read  by other people  including PW2, the plaintiff’s  chief  campaigner and who  esteemed  and respected the  plaintiff and described him  as an  honest  and trustworthy person.  He called  the plaintiff  after reading  the article, to  establish whether  the plaintiff had  indeed been  charged  in court  with issuing  a bad  cheque.

65. What I gather  from the article  and the charge  sheet  produced  in evidence is that the defendant  selectively and deliberately isolated only count II  of the charges  that faced the person  who was accused  in that case, and left   out the  first count  of cheating.  The only  inference I can make of that selection by the defendant of the plaintiff from the charge sheet is that the defendant acted  with malice.  It knew  that the  status of the plaintiff could  fit in  very well  with issuance of bad  cheques  and not that  of cheating  which is a more simplistic  offence.

66. On the whole, I find that the plaintiff has proved, on a balance of probabilities  that he  was  defamed  by the defendant; that the  impugned  publication  was capable  of bearing  defamatory  meaning, and that the recipients  such as  PW2 understood  the meaning  to be  defamatory and intended  to spoil  the plaintiff’s  chances  of winning  nomination for  senatorial seat  for Bomet County,  as the publication  came a few  months  before the  last general elections  held on 4th  March 2013; which conduct  of the defendant   was incompatible  with the  plaintiff’s  trade- business  and  as a former  and aspiring   political  leader. 

67. I further find that  the subject  impugned  publication  was not of public concern or  otherwise  qualified for a conditional  privilege.

68. Accordingly, the defendant  is hereby found to be  100% liable for  defaming the plaintiff’s  character  and reputation.

69. Having  so found  that the plaintiff  has established  that the published  statement  was defamatory of him, the next issue  is whether   he is entitled  to damages  and if  so, how much.

70. A successful plaintiff in  a defamation  case is entitled  to recover  the general  compensatory  damages  of such sum as will compensate him or her for the wrong suffered.  The award must compensate  him for damages  for loss of reputation. Section 16A of the Defamation Act Cap 36  Laws of Kenya provides that:

“ 16A in any action for libel, the court  shall access the amount  of damages  payable  in such amount   as it   may deem just; provided that where  the libel  is in respect  of an offence  punishable    by death, the amount  assessed  shall  not be less than one million shillings, and  where the libel is in respect  of an offence  punishable  by imprisonment for a term of not less than three years  the amount  assessed  shall  not be less than  four  hundred thousand  shillings .”

71. In Chirau Ali Makwere Vs Royal  Media  Services  Ltd CA 283/2005 [2013] e KLR  the Court of Appeal  stated that:

“ No case is  like  the other.  In the  exercise of discretion  to award damages  for defamation, the court  has wide  latitude.  The factors  for consideration in the exercise  of that discretion as enumerated  in may decisions  including the guidelines  in Jones V Polland [1997] EMLR  233-243 include objective  features of the libel  itself, such  as its  gravity, its  province, the circulation of the medium in which  it is published  and any repetition; subjective  effect on the plaintiff’s  feelings not only  from the  prominence  itself but from the  defendant’s  conduct thereafter  both  up and including  the trial itself; matters  tending  to mitigate  damages  for example, publication of an apology; matters  tending to  reduce  damages; vindication of  the plaintiff’s reputation past and future.” 

72. The  above checklist  was also  set out  in  Johnson  Evan Gicheru V Andrew  Morton & Another  [2005] e KLR. In Standard Media  V Kagia & Company Advocates where the court observed that in situations  where  the author or publisher  of a libel  could have  with due diligence verified  the libelous story or  in other words, where the  author  or publisher  was reckless  or negligent, these factors  should  be taken into account  in assessing  the level of damages.  The court also stated that  the level of  damages  awarded  should be  such as  to act as  deterrence  and to instill a sense of  responsibility  on the part of the authors  and the publishers  of libel and that  personal rights, freedoms  and values  should never be sacrificed at the altar of  profiteering  by authors and publishers.

73. Applying the above principles to the  instant case, I Must  note that   false, malicious,  disparaging  and vilifying speech has no value.  It does not  inform or impart  information. That is why the Constitution of Kenya, 2010 detests it.  Such malicious,  disparaging  and vilifying speech must be  deterred. 

74. The plaintiff  was a public  figure  as described  in the article  as  published.  It  was  not difficult  for the  defendant   to carry out investigations  before publishing  an article  that  was  false and defamatory  concerning  the plaintiff.  The conduct of the defendant, in  my view, was highly unreasonable and constituted  an extreme  departure  from the standards  of investigation and responsible  reporting  ordinarily adhered to  by responsible  publishers. 

75. I would  therefore  find that not only is the plaintiff entitled to  general compensatory  damages but to punitive  damages  to deter  such irresponsible  media  reporting  in future.  The defendant fabricated  inaccurate  publication  concerning the plaintiff and anybody  reading the impugned  article  would  form the  opinion that the plaintiff  was a criminal and an  untrustworthy person  who did not  honor  his financial  obligations.  As seen from the charge  sheet belonging to  someone  else, issuing a bouncing cheque is a  criminal offence  and a person found guilty would be  liable to a fine of not exceeding fifty thousand shillings, or to imprisonment   for a term not  exceeding  one year  or to  both, under Section 316A of the Penal Code. Section 197 of the penal Code provides that;

“ Any publication  of  a defamatory  matter concerning  a person  is unlawful within the  meaning of  the Chapter unless:

The matter  is true  and it  was for the  public benefit  that it  should be  published   or

It is  privileged on one  of the  grounds  hereafter  mentioned in Chapter XVIII of  the Code.

76. Although the case before me is not  a criminal one, no doubt, the publication by the defendant  concerning the plaintiff  was  unlawful, unjustified  and laced with spite and malice. The libel  touched  on the plaintiff’s  personal integrity, professional/trade reputation, honour  and the core  attributes of his personality.  As a  politician and businessman, the  plaintiff was  expected  not to  be an  angel for there  are none in this  world, but  to be a person of  integrity and law abiding citizen.  The publication   was made   on a page  dedicated  to National news  on what  was  transpiring  in the courts.  It  was  therefore meant  to be read by many people  since the defendant’s paper  the Standard  Newspaper  has nationwide  circulation.  The significance  of that publication  was made  much greater by the defendant’s  assertion  that it  was the truth, and that the defendant   was  justified  in publishing  the article  and refused to apologize  or  to retract  the publication or to  express any regret  that the  libelous  publication  took place.  ( see  the  holding in John V MGN Ltd [1966] 2 ALL ER 35  page  42  cited with  approval by the Court of Appeal in Nation Media  Group Ltd  & 2 Others  V John Joseph Kamotho & 3 Others [2010] e KLR.

 77. In determining  how much damages  should be  awarded to the plaintiff, the case  of The Standard  Limited  V GN Kagia T/A Kagia & Company Advocates CA  115/2003  is instructive.  In the  said matter, the Court of Appeal  stated that there is need  in  having regard  to comparables  even in terms of the standing  of the libeled  person because  both the law and the level  of awards  must of necessity  continue to be certain and predictable.

78. However, where the awards  appeared to be repressive, the Court of Appeal  in Gicheru  V Morton & Another  (supra) observed that the high  awards  did not have  any juridical basis, were  manifestly excessive,  could  be taken as  persuasive  or as  guidelines of the awards to  be followed by trial courts, that they  departed   from fundamental principles of  awarding  damages in libel cases.

79. Those principles   were summarized by the  Court of Appeal in the above  Gicheru  V Morton & Another case as  follows:

a. The court  has wide  latitude in awarding  damages in an action  for libel;

b. In assessing  damages in an action  for libel, the court  is entitled to look at the whole conduct  of the defendant  from the time  of the libel  was published   down to the  time of judgment;

c. An award  in a case of defamation  is not compensation for the plaintiff’s damaged reputation but is a vindication  to the public  and a consolation for a wrong done  to him.

d. Where  the defendant   could have, with due   diligence verified  the facts of  the libelous  story or   where he   was simply  reckless  or negligent, such   recklessness or  negligence   must be  taken into account.

e. The level of  damages, should be such as to act  as deterrence and to instill a sense of responsibility  on the part of  the defendant.

f. The gravity  of the libel; and

g. The extent  of the publication is also a factor  to be  considered

80. As earlier  stated, the Standard Newspaper enjoys  wide and nationwide  circulation.  PW2  read the paper and  called the plaintiff  to establish  the status of the publication –whether it  was true that   he had been charged with the offence of  issuing  a bad  cheque; the publication  was also  placed  centrally on a page    dedicated  to court matters nationally.  The  plaintiff  wrote a demand letter to  the defendant  seeking for an  apology and a retraction but the  defendants  ignored.  When the suit   was filed, the defendants  insisted  in their defence   that they  were  justified in publishing  the impugned  article because the publication was nothing but the truth concerning the plaintiff issuing a bouncing cheque to the manager of Intercontinental Hotel, Nairobi.  That defence  was  struck out   after the defendants conceded as to its being scandalous, frivolous, vexatious , abuse of the court process and disclosing no reasonable   defence. 

81. I note that the  publication  was only  done  once.  In order to  vindicate   the plaintiff to  the public and  give him consolation for the wrong  done to him, I would   in the premises   award  him shs  6,000,000 general damages  based on Nation Media Group Ltd and  2 Others  V John Joseph Kamotho & 3 others [2010] e KLR where the plaintiff/respondent ( on appeal)  was  awarded  shs  6,000,000 for general  damages  and shs  1,000,000 aggravated  damages.  The plaintiff was a Cabinet Minister and a prominent politician with reputation.

82. I also in the circumstances of this case award to the plaintiff shs 1,500,000 punitive damages.  As the publication  was not repeated  after the first  publication, I decline  to  award  aggravated  and exemplary  damages  since  the plaintiff also failed to  demonstrate  that his failure to  capture Bomet County senatorial seat  was entirely  due to the publication.  No copies of the allegedly photocopied  and circulated  publication  was produce  as evidence  that  all the county  residents  or voters  were  necessarily influenced by that publication. I do not think that in the circumstances of this case it would have been difficult to keep those copies of the circulated publications as evidence.

83. I however award to the plaintiff  a sum of  shs  500,000/- damages  in lieu  of an apology due  to the time lapse   since the  publication  was done, this being  any other relief that this  court deems  fit and just to grant. 

84. Total damages awarded shs 8,000,000.  I further  award  to the  plaintiff costs of this suit and interest  at court rates  on damage to accrue  from the date of this  judgment  until payment  in  full.

Dated, signed and delivered in open court at Nairobi this 20th day of July 2016.

 

R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE

 

In the presence of:

Mahoho for plaintiff

R. Billing for Defendant

CA: Adline

 

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