Khamis & 9 others v Aula & 3 others (Family Appeal 35 of 2018) [2022] KEHC 17157 (KLR) (23 December 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEHC 17157 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Family Appeal 35 of 2018
JN Onyiego, J
December 23, 2022
IN THE MATTER OF: THE WAKF OF MDIGO BIN TABIBU
AND
IN THE MATTER OF PLOT NO.2349/II/MN CR.NO.27313
AND
IN THE MATTER OF: AN APPLICATION FOR DISSOLUTION OF THE WAKF
Between
Hassan Soud Khamis
1st Appellant
Said Soud Khamis
2nd Appellant
Munira Sudi Hamisi
3rd Appellant
Aisha Soud Hamisi
4th Appellant
Aziza Soud Hamisi
5th Appellant
Fatma Soud Khamis
6th Appellant
Zubeida Sudi Khamisi
7th Appellant
Rukiya Sudi Khamisi
8th Appellant
Sudi Arubau Mohamed
9th Appellant
Mwanamvua Arubu
10th Appellant
and
Aula Ali Aula
1st Respondent
Mohamed Juma Mohamed
2nd Respondent
Adam Mohamed Omar
3rd Respondent
Wakf Commissioners
4th Respondent
(Being an appeal from the judgement of the honourable Khamis Ramadhani –Senior Resident Kadhi, delivered on the 25th july,2018 in the Kadhi Court Civil Suit No.74 of 2017(Mombasa)
Judgment
1.The 1st to the 8th appellant (original plaintiffs) were the children of the late Sudi KhamisTabibu who was the son of Hamisi Mdigo Tabibu ason to Mdigo Bin Tabibu whose Wakf in respect to Lr2349/III/MN, Cr No 27313 is the subject of these judgment. By virtue of that relationship, the 1st to 8th appellant were great grand -children to Mdigo Bin Tabibu. The 9th and 10th Appellants (original 9th and 10th plaintiffs) were equally great-grand-children to Mdigo Bin Tabibu through their father Arubu Mdigo Tabibu.
2.On the other hand, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents are the trustees of the Wakf of Mdigo Bin Tabibu. Pursuant to several allegations of mismanagement revolving around the said Wakf, legal intervention through these proceedings was prompted.
3.Consequently, the appellants herein moved the Kadhi’s court vide originating summons application filed on 30th march,2017,seeking orders inter alia; the respondents(defendants) to provide accounts of income of the property known as Plot No 2349/III/MN Cr No 27313 from 1993 to the date of the order; an order dissolving the Wakf Plot No 2349/III/MN Cr No 27313 and a share of the property be divided and registered in the names of the children of the late Sudi Khamisi who are grandchildren of Hamisi Mdigo Tabibu and great grandchildren of Mdigo Bin Tabibu and another share of the property be divided and registered in the names of Sudi Arubu Mohamed and Mwanamvua Arubu being the children of Arubu Mdigo Tabibu, grandchildren of Mdigo Bin Tabibu all being the beneficiaries of the Wakf of the Mdigo Bin Tabibu created on Plot No.2349 /III/MN Cr No 27313 since 1993;further orders by the court in respect of the Wakf and costs of the application.
4.Upon service of the summons, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents filed their response through a replying affidavit sworn on April 27, 2017 thus defending the manner and style in which they were managing the estate and therefore opposing the prayer for dissolution of the Wakf. However, despite service of the summons, the 4th respondent did not enter appearance, file any response nor appear on the date scheduled for hearing.
5.By consent, on the October 24, 2017, parties through their respective advocates herein, agreed to dispose of the application by way of written submissions.
6.Having canvassed the application, the hon.Kadhi in his judgement delivered on July 25, 2018 dismissed the application with costs on the grounds that the application did not establish grounds for dissolving the Wakf of the late Mdigo Bin Tabibu neither did it adhere to Article 109 of the Wakf Commissioner’s Act.
7.Aggrieved by the judgement of the Kadhi’s Court, the appellants herein appealed to this court through a memorandum of appeal dated November 23, 2018 and filed on November 30, 2018 thus citing the following grounds;a.That the learned Kadhi erred in law and in fact in making a finding that the scribbles attached to the respondents’ written submissions amounted to proper accounts, yet the same were not properly on record, having been produced only in written submissions and clearly contrary to laws of production of evidence.b.That the learned Kadhi erred in law and in fact in giving due weight to the scribbles purported to be accounts of the Wakf despite his ambivalence of the veracity of the accounts as no supporting minutes of meetings or evidence of the distribution of the proceeds of the Wakf property was produced.c.That the learned Kadhi erred in law and in fact in making a finding that complaints emanating from two families of the management of the Wakf by the trustees was not enough to demonstrate the need to dissolve the Wakf.d.That the learned Kadhi erred in law and in fact in failing to appreciate the impeccable evidence and his own inference emanating therefrom, and instead found and/or arrived at a wrong and/or erroneous conclusion in dismissing the applicant’s suit.e.That the learned Kadhi erred in law and in fact by generally dismissing the suit.
8.The appellants urged the court to allow the appeal, set aside the judgement of the honourable Kadhi and substitute the same with an order allowing the dissolution of the Wakf.
Submissions
9.The appeal was canvassed by way of written submissions. The appellants through their advocates Kenga & Company advocates filed their written submissions dated April 28, 2021. It was counsel’s submission that the respondents failed to provide accounts of all income generated from the suit property from 1993 to date. That the attempt to sneak in unauthenticated documents purporting them to be the report on the accounts demanded at the submissions stage is against the law more particularly the Evidence Act hence reliance of such evidence by the hon Kadhi was an error.
10.Counsel further submitted that under order 37 rule 1 of the civil procedure rules, aWakf can be dissolved and more specifically when the objective of the donor in the Wakf is not achieved. That the wakfed property is to benefit generations originating from the family tree of the donor. According to learned counsel, the Wakf Commissioners Act is clear in the manner in which transactions affecting a wakfed property should be handled. That section 14 of the said Act prohibits any contracts or agreements whose period is for over one year without sanction of the Wakf Commissioners.
11.Counsel further submitted that despite the court agreeing that the alleged transactions or contracts were being carried by the trustees, which is illegal, the learned Kadhi disallowed the appellants’ claim on the reasoning that the complaints were representing a few members of the family yet that is not the rationale in deciding whether to dissolve a Wakf or not. That from the will that created the Wakf, it is clear that the suit property was initially Plot No 109/III/MN and that 45 acres out of the 81 acres were wakfed to cater for the male and female children of the donor and thereafter to their own children and to further children of the donor’s generations.
12.Counsel submitted that it was not in dispute that the portions of land on the Wakfed property were sold and/or leased without the sanction of the Wakf Commissioners as the evidence of both parties captured transfers registered against the property. That the purchasers proceeded to erect structures as evidenced by scanned copies of photographs in page 37 to 47 of the record of appeal. That the wastage of the Wakf property against the intention of the donor of the Wakf are supposed to be stopped by dissolution of Wakf.
13.Counsel further submitted that no evidence was tendered to show that the appellants were represented by Mrs Tabu Ali for the Khamis family and Mrs Fatuma Harubu for the Harubu /Arubu family neither was their evidence that the purported representatives ever received any proceeds of the Wakf property on behalf of the appellants. According to learned counsel, the commissioners having not opposed the application, the hon Kadhi had no reason not to allow the same.
14.Counsel submitted that the intention of the creator of the Wakf was not being realized thus the same should be dissolved and all beneficiaries subjected to the normal succession process where the shares of each beneficiary shall be ascertained and distributed accordingly as per the Islamic law.
15.The respondents through their advocates Cootow &Associates filed their submissions dated May 19, 2021. It was submitted that the 1st to 3rd respondent were only bound by law to produce accounts of income of the property known as plot no 2349/MN Cr No 27313 upon conclusion of the matter. That the appellants were therefore required to first discharge their burden of proof which they failed. Counsel opined that the learned Kadhi found that the appellants had failed to prove their case and therefore the issue of production of accounts was rendered inconsequential.
16.In counsel’s view, there is no dispute that the Wakf declaration is valid and does exist hence the respondents are the rightful trustees and administrators of the Wakf in question. That the appellants failed to demonstrate to the court how the respondents/trustees are mismanaging the Wakf to warrant dissolution. That none of the appellants is the head of the five families /beneficiaries of the Wakf as listed in paragraph 7 of the replying affidavit and reiterated in the judgement.
17.Counsel further submitted that the Wakf is intended to be perpetual and last forever hence the intention of the donor must be respected as much as possible taking into consideration of his or her objectives to the Wakf for the benefit of generations to come. That the appellants are championing such dissolution for their own selfish gain.
Kadhi’s opinion
18.The Chief Kadhi Alhmuhdar A.S Hussein sitting with the trial judge as an assessor gave the following opinion;
Determination
19.I have considered the record of appeal herein, rival submissions by both advocates and the opinion of the chief Kadhi. Issues that emerge for determination are:a.Whether the parties were given the right to be heard.b.Whether the Wakf should be dissolved
20.This being a first appeal, the duty of the court is to re-evaluate, re-asses and re-analyse the evidence on record a fresh and draw its own conclusion bearing in mind the fact that the trial court had the advantage of listening to and seeing the witnesses testify before it and that it cannot review the decision of the trial court simply because it could have reached a different finding if it were hearing the matter for the first time. See the case of China Zhongxing Construction Company Ltd v Ann Akuru Sophia [2020] eKLR where the court stated that;
21.From the record of appeal, it is clear that there are numerous material facts that would have required witnesses testify on oath so that some of the issues raised via affidavit evidence and documentary evidence adduced through submissions would have been tested on cross examination and their probative value ascertained. A case revolving around disputed facts could not be resolved through submissions without calling witnesses and the makers of the documents attached to submissions. In advancing this position, I am guided by the holding in the case of AHAD v CJE [2019] eKLR where the court stated;
22.On the importance of fair hearing and procedural fairness, the court in the case of Pinnacle Projects Limited v Presbyterian Church of East Africa, Ngong Parish & another [2019] eKLR stated;
23.Although parties by consent agreed to dispose the matter through written submissions, the court had the authority to conduct a hearing through viva voce evidence. It’s my finding that the parties herein were not given a chance to proceeedurally articulate their case before the Kadhi’s court despite the matter being contentious. In my view, the trial process was not in compliance with the rules of evidence and procedure thus amounting to a mistrial. See the case of SM v HGE [2019] eKLR where the court stated;
24.Having found that the trial process in the Kadhi’s Court amounted to a mistrial, I will not delve on the merits of the case in determining whether the Wakf should be dissolved or not.
25.Accordingly, I am inclined to allow the appeal and declare that the trial process in Kadhi Civil Suit No.74 of 2017(Mombasa) was a mistrial. Consequently, the judgement of the Senior Resident Kadhi Hon.Khamis Ramdhani delivered on July 25, 2018 is hereby set aside and the matter referred back for a full trial by way of viva voce evidence in Mombasa Kadhi’s Court before another Kadhi other than hon. Kadhi Khamis Ramadhan.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY IN MOMBASA THIS 23RD DAY OF DECEMBER 2022…………………J.N.ONYIEGOJUDGEPage 4 of 4