Kimeu v Family Signature Limited & 2 others (Commercial Case E106 of 2021) [2022] KEHC 14487 (KLR) (Commercial and Tax) (28 October 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEHC 14487 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Commercial Case E106 of 2021
DAS Majanja, J
October 28, 2022
Between
Antony Munywoki Kimeu
Plaintiff
and
Family Signature Limited
1st Defendant
Anilkumar Virpar Malde
2nd Defendant
Rahab Mwihaki Karoki
3rd Defendant
Ruling
1.The Plaintiff has moved the court by the Amended Notice of Motion dated March 9, 2022 seeking, inter alia, the following interim measures of protection pending arbitration under the provisions of section 7(1) of the Arbitration Act (“the Act”):[2]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, a temporary injunction do issue restraining the 2nd and 3rd Defendants by themselves, their employees and agents from selling, advertising for sale, charging, transferring, alienating, disposing or otherwise interfering with the 1st Defendant’s suit properties known as: Ngaraiam House Plot No 209/136/65 located at Ngariama Road, Brighton House Plot No 209/542 located at Tom Mboya Street, Amber House Plot No 209/4987 located at Mfangano Street, Bektel Building Plot No 209/555 located at Tom Mboya Street, Kings Way Plot No 209/4360/60 located at University Way, Quran House Plot No 209/3842 located at Mfangano Street, Formation House Plot No 209/3842 located at Mfangano Street, Lenana Forest View Apartments Limited Plot No Dagoretti/Riruta/3484 located at Dagoretti Riruta which was a joint venture with Family Signature Limited.[3]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, a temporary injunction do issue restraining the 2nd and 3rd Defendants by themselves, their employees and agents from selling, advertising for sale, charging, transferring, alienating, disposing or otherwise interfering with the 1st Defendant’s interest of Kenya Shillings Ten Million (10,000,000/-) paid as a deposit to uptown Agencies for purchase of Hotel Pearl located at Pangani but never registered in the name of Family Signature Limited and other properties which have been acquired using the company’s funds but registered in other names.[4]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, a temporary injunction do issue restraining the 2nd Defendant by himself, his employees and agents from diluting, pledging dealing, interfering and/or intermeddling in any manner whatsoever with the Plaintiff’s/Applicant’s shareholding in the 1st Defendant company and the 900 unallotted shares in the 1st Defendant company.[5]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, an order compelling the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Defendants to disclose to the Court all the known Bank Accounts operated on behalf of the 1st Defendant/Respondent and for the Applicant to be made a signatory to any such accounts.[6]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, a status quo Order do issue against the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Defendants as a measure of interim protection, not to change the bank operations mandate of the 1st Defendant/Respondent’s accounts as disclosed to the Court.[7]Pending the inter-partes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, the 3rd Defendant be restrained from holding out and acting as a director and/or shareholder of the 1st Defendant/Respondent company.[8]Pending the interpartes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, this Honourable Court do order and direct the 2nd and 3rd Defendants herein to file in Court audited account statements of the 1st Defendant, from 2009 to date.[9]That Pending the interpartes hearing and determination of this Application and the intended Arbitration proceedings, this Honourable Court do order and direct the Interested party herein, the Registrar of companies not to cause any changes or interference with the original shareholding in the 1st Defendant Company.[10]That this Honourable Court do Order that the dispute between the Plaintiff and the Defendants be referred to Arbitration for hearing and determination in terms of Article 31 of the 1st Defendant’s Articles of Association.
2.The application is supported by the Plaintiff’s affidavit sworn on September 3, 2020. The Defendants did not oppose the application despite service of process. The 2nd Defendant however filed a replying affidavit to the original application.
3.Before I deal with the substance of the application, a background of the matters leading to the suit as is apparent from the pleadings will suffice. According to the Plaint dated September 24, 2021, the Plaintiff and the 2nd Defendant were shareholders of the 1st Defendant (“the Company”) with each holding 50 shares leaving 900 unallocated shares. The Company, which was incorporated on November 22, 2007, was, according to the Plaintiff, capitalized by him and the 2nd Defendant and in due course acquired several properties named on the face of the application registered in its name but which the Plaintiff claims to have a beneficial interest.
4.The Plaintiff alleges that he has been subjected to oppressive conduct by the 2nd Defendant as he has been excluded from the day to day management of the Company and denied information and accounts owned by the Company. He accuses the 2nd Defendant of carrying on fraudulent activities including siphoning money from the Company accounts to secret accounts, attempting to register fraudulent returns with the Registrar of Companies with a view to illegally taking sole and exclusive control of the Company, carrying on the business of the Company including investments without recourse to and sanction of the Board and failing to call for and hold a general meeting. The Plaintiff also contends that the 2nd Defendant’s conduct has resulted in breach of the Company’s Articles of Association as no general meetings have been called and that he has purported to call meetings without notice to members. He states that the 2nd Defendant has singlehandedly run the affairs of the Company, failed to publish the Company accounts and has failed to file annual returns since 2009.
5.The Plaintiff pleads that he has suffered loss and prejudice as a result of the 2nd Defendant’s conduct. He complains that the 2nd Defendant has purportedly removed him as a director and shareholder of the Company. As a result, he has not received any emoluments for services rendered to the Company as a director and has been denied access to the Company premises and or any information relating to the Company’s affairs.
6.The Plaintiff therefore seeks several reliefs including the following; a declaration his purported removal as a director and shareholder is contrary to the Companies Act, 2015 and the Articles of Association, an order directing the Registrar of Companies to rectify the Company Register by cancelling the unlawful transfer of shares by the 2nd Defendant, a permanent injunction restraining the 2nd Defendant from selling or in any way dealing with the Company’s properties and an injunction restraining the 2nd Defendant from otherwise dealing with the Company accounts held at Equity Bank.
7.The Plaintiff’s case in support of the application is along the lines I have set out above. Although the 2nd Defendant did not file a replying affidavit to the amended application, he did file a replying affidavit sworn on April 8, 2021 in which he set out his version of events.
8.The 2nd Defendant states that the application is bad in law as the alleged arbitrable dispute arose between the years 2009 and 2012 hence the matter is barred by limitation as it ought to have been filed latest in 2018. While he accepts that he and the Plaintiff incorporated the Company, he depones that the Plaintiff was always acting as a nominee director and shareholder of one Rahab Mwihaki Karoki (“Rahab”) and her family. He also denies that the Plaintiff contributed funds to the Company as he and Rahab are the ones who sourced the funds for the business of the Company. He further avers that by a Settlement Agreement dated April 30, 2021, the 2nd Defendant transferred his 50 shares in the Company to Rahab and or her nominees and the share transfers were executed for onward transmission and registration by Rahab.
9.The 2nd Defendant avers that even prior to the Settlement Agreement, Rahab was running the Company and was publicly well known as its owner and that following the Settlement Agreement, Rahab took over the Company and has been running it since. He points out that although she is in possession of the Shares Transfer, she has not registered them. He avers that since he divested himself of all the interests in the Company following the Settlement Agreement, he has been wrongly sued and cannot be subjected to arbitration proceedings. He also states that issue of the Share Transfer was resolved the Registrar of Companies by the letter dated May 22, 2012.
10.The Company filed a Statement of Defence dated April 14, 2021 in which it simply denied all the allegations in the Plaint. The Registrar of Companies did not respond to the application.
11.The Plaintiff has filed written submissions which I have considered alongside the pleadings, application and depositions. Two issues arise for resolution; whether the court should refer the matter to arbitration and whether the Plaintiff has made out a case for grant of interim measures of protection under section 7 of the Arbitration Act.
12.In the application, the Plaintiff seeks an order that the dispute between the Plaintiff and the Defendants be referred to arbitration in terms of Article 31 of the Company’s Articles of Association which provides that, “every difference shall be referred to the decision of an arbitrator to be appointed by the parties in difference, or if they cannot agree upon a single arbitrator to the decision of two arbitrators, of whom one shall be appointed by each of the parties in difference”.
13.I have read the Plaintiff’s deposition and it is not clear why the court’s intervention is necessary given that arbitration is a consensual process that does require court intervention. The Plaintiff has annexed several letters from its advocates, Amolo and Gachoka Advocates addressed to the 2nd Defendant in the year 2011 regarding resolution of the matters in dispute but none of them mention reference of the dispute to arbitration. What the Plaintiff seemed to threaten at the time was to wind up the Company.
14.Under section 10 of the Arbitration Act, the court can only intervene in arbitration matters in a manner prescribed by or permitted by the Act. The Plaintiff has not pointed to any provisions that allows the court to take over the right of the parties under the Articles of Association to refer the matter to arbitration in these circumstances. For completeness, under section 11 of the Act, the parties to an agreement are entitled to appoint an arbitrator. The process of appointment is provided for in section 12 as follows:12(1)No person shall be precluded by reason of that person’s nationality from acting as an arbitrator, unless otherwise agreed by the parties.(2)The parties are free to agree on a procedure of appointing the arbitrator or arbitrators and any chairman and failing such agreement—(a)in an arbitration with three arbitrators, each party shall appoint one arbitrator and the two arbitrators so appointed shall appoint the arbitrator;(b)in an arbitration with two arbitrators, each party shall appoint one arbitrator; and(c)in an arbitration with one arbitrator, the parties shall agree on the arbitrator to be appointed.(3)Unless the parties otherwise agree, where each of two parties to an arbitration agreement is to appoint an arbitrator and one party (“the party in default”)—(a)has indicated that he is unwilling to do so;(b)fails to do so within the time allowed under the arbitration agreement; or(c)fails to do so within fourteen days (where the arbitration agreement does not limit the time within which an arbitrator must be appointed by a party), the other party, having duly appointed an arbitrator, may give notice in writing to the party in default that he proposes to appoint his arbitrator to act as sole arbitrator.(4)If the party in default does not, within fourteen days after notice under subsection (3) has been given —(a)make the required appointment; and(b)notify the other party that he has done so,the other party may appoint his arbitrator as sole arbitrator, and the award of that arbitrator shall be binding on both parties as if he had been so appointed by agreement.(5)Where a sole arbitrator has been appointed under subsection (4), the party in default may, upon notice to the other party, apply to the High Court within fourteen days to have the appointment set aside.(6)The High Court may grant an application under subsection (5) only if it is satisfied that there was good cause for the failure or refusal of the party in default to appoint his arbitrator in due time.(7)The High Court, if it grants an application under subsection (5), may, by consent of the parties or on the application of either party, appoint a sole arbitrator.(8)A decision of the High Court in respect of a matter under this section shall be final and not be subject to appeal.(9)The High Court in appointing an arbitrator shall have due regard to any qualifications required of an arbitrator by the agreement of the parties and to such considerations as are likely to secure the appointment of an independent and impartial arbitrator and, in the case of a sole or third arbitrator, shall take into account the advisability of appointing an arbitrator of a nationality other than those of the parties.
15.Section 12 of the Act recognises party autonomy by giving each party an opportunity to participate in the appointment of the arbitrator. The Company’s Articles of Association contemplates the appointment of a sole arbitrator hence under section 12(2) of the Act, the parties are required to agree on the arbitrator. Section 12(3) of the Act goes on to provide for what happens when a party defaults or does not participate in the appointment. Section 12(4) then stipulates that once notice has been given to the other party, the party not in default may appoint the sole arbitrator and the arbitrator so appointed shall determine the matter and make a binding award. It is clear from the forgoing provisions, the High Court is not involved in the process of appointment of an arbitrator in these circumstances.
16.In line with the principle of party autonomy, the process remains in the parties’ hands. It is only after the party has made an appointment under section 12(4) of the Act, that the party in default is entitled to move the High Court to set aside that appointment. This section buttresses the fact that the party who is not in default is entitled to make an appointment. It is only after the High Court has dealt with the application to set aside the appointment and allowed the application, that it may, by consent of the parties or on the application of either party appoint a sole arbitrator (see also Wachiuri Wahome t/a Adili Communications v Kenya Automotive Repairers Association ML HC No 1057 of 2010 [2011] eKLR and Trustees, Tourism Promotion Services Staff Pension Scheme v Genafrica Asset Managers ML HC No 161 of 2018 (OS) [2019] eKLR). Since the process remains in the parties’ hands and neither party has defaulted in a manner to invite the court’s intervention, I decline to refer the matter to arbitration.
17.Turning to the application for interim relief, the Plaintiff has invoked section 7 of the Act which provides as follows;7.Interim measures by court(1)It is not incompatible with an arbitration agreement for a party to request from the High Court, before or during arbitral proceedings, an interim measure of protection and for the High Court to grant that measure.(2)Where a party applies to the High Court for an injunction or other interim order and the arbitral tribunal has already ruled on any matter relevant to the application, the High Court shall treat the ruling or any finding of fact made in the course of the ruling as conclusive for the purposes of the application.
18.The leading case in which the Court of Appeal outlined the principles governing the grant of interim measures of protection is Safaricom Limited v Ocean View Beach Hotel Limited & 2 others Civil Application No NAI 327 of 2009 [2010] eKLR where Nyamu JA , observed as follows;
19.Although the amended application was not opposed, the court cannot ignore the 2nd Defendant’s deposition and the issues raised therein. Further, the burden remains on the Plaintiff to make out a case for the grant of orders sought despite the lack of opposition to the application.
20.I have considered the facts and I am not inclined to grant interim measures of protection sought by the Plaintiff for several reasons. First, while the court under section 7 of the Act has jurisdiction to grant interim relief before the commencement of arbitration proceedings, such relief is intended to last pending the reference to arbitration and must not be open ended. In this case there is no indication of what steps the Plaintiff has taken to refer the matter to arbitration since the dispute arose in 2011.
21.Further, the length of delay in seeking relief militates against granting the orders sought. As the maxim of equity states, delay defeats equity. The acts complained of took place in 2011 or thereabouts. The Plaintiff’s deposition is short on what happened over the last 10 or so years in relation to the Company and its property. In these circumstances without full disclosure this court is reluctant to grant relief.
22.The second reason I am not inclined to grant the application is because of non-disclosure of material facts. The 2nd Defendant, in his replying affidavit, has given a detailed account of what transpired in regard to the Company shares between himself, the Plaintiff and Rahab. It is apparent that the Plaintiff executed a Deed of Settlement which had the effect of divesting him and the 2nd Defendant of shares in the Company and leaving the Company under the effective control of Rahab. Whether the Plaintiff contests that account or not, in my view, the court cannot ignore a deposition that is on record (see Trust Bank Limited v Amalo Company Limited Civil Appeal No 215 of 2000 [2002] 2 KLR 627 [2003] 1 EA 350). The 2nd Defendant’s account, which is unrebutted, casts doubt on the Plaintiff’s case particularly in the absence of the response from him.
23.I am not satisfied that the Plaintiff has made out a case for the grant of interim relief under section 7 of the Arbitration Act. Consequently, I dismiss the Notice of Motion dated March 9, 2022. As the Respondents did not participate in the proceedings, there shall be no order as to costs.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 28TH DAY OF OCTOBER 2022D S MAJANJAJUDGEMs Aisha instructed by Amolo and Gachoka Advocates for the Plaintiff.Mr Njenga instructed by Muchoki, Kangata, Njenga and Company Advocates for the 1st Defendant.Mr Odhiambo instructed Office of Attorney General for the Registrar of Companies.