REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA AT KISII
CORAM: D.S. MAJANJA J.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 74 OF 2016
BETWEEN
JITAN NAGRA……………………………..…………...…..…… APPELLANT
AND
ABIDNEGO NYANDUSI OIGO…………....……..…………..…RESPONDENT
(Being an appeal from the Judgment and Decree of Hon. N. Wairimu, PM dated 14th September 2017 at the Principal Magistrates Court at Ogembo in Civil Case No. 178 of 2013)
JUDGMENT
1. The respondent was injured in a road traffic accident that occurred along the Kisii –Kilgoris road on 19th September 2013, while he was riding as a pillion passenger on motorcycle registration number KMCN 047S which collided with motor vehicle registration number KBU 532N. The issue of liability was settled in the ratio 70:30 in favour of the respondent. The court proceeded to assess damages and awarded Kshs. 1,000,000/- as general damages, Kshs. 100,000/- as future medical expenses and Kshs. 374,523/- .
2. The grounds of appeal contained in the memorandum of appeal dated 12th October 2016, raised two grounds as submitted by counsel for the appellant. First, that the trial magistrate erred in awarding special damages that were not pleaded and second, that the award for general damages was excessive taking into account the nature and extent of the injuries and the decisions cited. Counsel for the respondent supported that award as reasonable and in line with the authorities cited and averred that the appellant has not established a basis to interfere with the award.
3. According to the plaint, the respondent sustained the following injuries: lacerations on the occipital area, deep cut wound on the back, right knee and lateral lane, bruises at the back extending to the right side of the lumbar region, blunt trauma to the chest, bruises on the left elbow, compound fracture of the right tibia/fibula, segmental distal fracture of the right femur. Dr Ogando Zoga (PW 2) examined the respondent on 28th October 2013 and produced the medical report. When PW 2 examined the respondent, he was complaining of severe headache, severe pains on the chest, back, right hand and right leg. He noted that the respondent could not walk without crutches and was still on plaster of paris. The respondent was initially attended to at Kisii Level 5 Hospital then referred to Tenwek Mission Hospital where he was admitted for 3 for treatment including internal fixation which PW 2 noted would cost Kshs. 100,000/- to remove in the future. He also noted that the injuries were yet to heal and permanent disability was anticipated.
4. Before the subordinate court, the respondent submitted that an award of Kshs. 2,500,000/- would suffice as general damages. He relied on the case of Michael Maina Gitonga v Serah Njuguna alias Sarah Wanjiku Mungai NKU HCC No. 202 of 2009 [2012]eKLR where the plaintiff sustained multiple fractures of the pelvis, dislocation of the right hip with displacement of the right acetabulum, comminuted fractures of the right tibia and fibula on the proximal end with a fracture of the tibia plateau and soft tissue on the chest. The court awarded Kshs. 1,200,000/- in 2012. In Mwaura Muiruri v Suera Flowers Limited and Another NKU HCCC No. 189 of 2009, the plaintiff sustained multiple lacerations on the face, soft tissue injuries on the chest case, comminuted fractures of the right humerus upper and lower thirds of the tibia and compound double fractures of the right leg and upper 1/3 tibia fibula. He was awarded Kshs. 1,450,000/- as general damages for pain and suffering in 2014.
5. The appellant proposed Kshs. 300,000/- for pain and suffering and relied on the case of Isaac Mwenda Micheni v Mutegi Murango NRB HCCC 335 of 2004 [2004]eKLR where the plaintiff suffered a fracture of the left tibia and fibula together with soft tissue injuries including a wound on the scalp, cut wound on the knee and bruised right forearm and was awarded Kshs. 100,000/- in 2004.
6. I am now called upon to decide whether the appellant has established a basis to intervene in the award of damages bearing in mind the well-established principle that for an appellate court to interfere with an award of damages, it must be shown that the trial court, in awarding damages, took into consideration an irrelevant fact or the sum awarded is inordinately low or too high that it must be a wholly erroneous estimate of the damage, or it should be established that a wrong principle of law was applied (see Butt v Khan [1981] KLR 349).
7. I will deal with the issue of special damages. The respondent claimed Kshs. 171,535/- as witness expenses, Kshs. 200/- of the police abstract, Kshs. 6,500/- for the medical report and Kshs. 500/- for the motor vehicle search making a total of Kshs. 178,735/-. The trial magistrate found that the receipts for medical treatment amounted to Kshs. 368,023/- which was way above the amount pleaded. Thus the award could not be sustained, I set it aside and award the respondent Kshs. 178,735/- instead.
8. Turning to the issue of general damages, I find that the injuries sustained by the respondent are not contested. What is in issue is the level of award in light of the authorities cited by the parties. In Harun Muyoma Boge v Daniel Otieno Agulo MGR HCCA No. 7 of 2015 [2015] eKLR, I expressed the following view:
The assessment of general damages is not an exact science and the court in doing the best it can, takes into account the nature and extent of injuries in relation to awards made by the court in similar cases. It ensures that the body politic is not injured by making excessively high awards and that the claimant is fairly compensated for his or her injuries.
9. The cases cited by the appellant are in my view on the higher side as they do not reflect the general trend of awards for such injuries. I would in fact consider them an outlier. For example, in Naom Momanyi v G4S Security Services Kenya Limited Meru HCCA No. 145 of 2014 [2018] eKLR, the appellant sustained a fracture of the left-right condylar tibia, blunt injuries on the back and multiple bruises on the left arm. He was awarded Kshs. 300,000/- in 2018 while in Gogni Construction Company Limited v Francis Ojuok Olewe HB HCCA No. 1 of 2014 [2015] eKLR, the claimant was awarded Kshs. 350,000/= as general damages having sustained a fracture of the left distal radius and ulna and dislocation of the left elbow and was hospitalised for 6 weeks. Even factoring inflation in these more recent awards, the award of Kshs. 1,000,000/- is obviously an excessive.
10. I find that a compound fracture of the right femur is more serious than a simple fracture coupled with further fractures of the metacarpal bones. Considering the general trend of awards in comparable cases and the need to maintain consistency, I find the award of Kshs. 1,000,000/- inordinately high.
11. I set aside the award of general damages and substitute it with an award of Kshs. 450,000/- which shall attract interest from the date of judgment before the subordinate court. I also set aside the award for special damages which substitute it with an award of Kshs. 178,735/- which shall accrue interest from the date of filing suit in the subordinate court. Both awards shall be subject to the agreed contribution.
12. I award the appellant costs of the appeal which I assess at Kshs 40,000/= all inclusive.
DATED and DELIVERED at KISII this 12th day of October 2018.
D.S. MAJANJA
JUDGE
Mr Mose instructed by Mose, Mose and Milimo and Company Advocates for the appellant.
Mr Nyangosi instructed by Nyangosi & Company Advocates for the respondent.