Mbaya v Kamau & another (Civil Appeal E012 of 2023) [2023] KEHC 24945 (KLR) (7 November 2023) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEHC 24945 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal E012 of 2023
AK Ndung'u, J
November 7, 2023
Between
Boniface Mutuma Mbaya
Applicant
and
Justus Njachi Kamau
1st Respondent
James Mwangi Kibanya
2nd Respondent
Ruling
1.This ruling resolves the notice of motion dated 25/07/2023 brought under Article 48, 50 and 159(2) of the Constitution, section1A, 1B, 3A and 63(e) of the Civil Procedure Act, Order 51 rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Rules and all other enabling provisions of the law. The application seeks the following orders;i.Spentii.Spentiii.That execution of decree, notice to show cause dated 11/01/2022 and all other proceedings in Nanyuki CMCC No. 19 of 2006 be stayed pending the hearing and determination of this suit.iv.Costs of the application be in the cause.
2.The application is based on the grounds on the face thereof and a supporting affidavit by the Applicant. It is the applicant’s case that the decree in Nanyuki CMCC No. 19 of 2006 arose from a road accident and at the time the Applicant was duly insured by Blue Shield Insurance Company Limited against claims by third parties and therefore, the insurer was legally bound to settle any decree arising from the insurance policy. That the insurer was however placed under statutory management and a moratorium was issued that stayed all the matters against the insurer.
3.It is averred that the 1st Respondent took out a notice to show cause why the Applicant should not be committed to civil jail for failing to settle the decree. Thereafter, the Applicant filed an application seeking stay of execution in lieu of the moratorium which application was dismissed by the trial court on 12/07/2023. The Applicant is therefore in imminent danger of being committed to civil jail for failure to satisfy the decree contrary to the said insurance policy and it is in the interest of justice that the notice to show cause and the proceedings in Nanyuki CMCC No. 19 of 2006 be stayed pending the prosecution of the appeal.
4.The 1st Respondent filed a replying affidavit dated 19/08/2023 and raised a preliminary objection. He averred that he will be greatly prejudiced if the application is allowed since it will delay execution and will amount to exposing him to liquidity issues of an insurance company with which he had no contractual engagement. That the Applicant has been delaying the execution process by filing several applications since the judgment was issued on 13/02/2020. That Nanyuki CMCC 19 of 2006 was against a tortfeasor so he had no connection to the insurance as a policy holder or a creditor to the insurance and he was not privy to the contract for the moratorium to extend to a third party.
5.In the Preliminary objection, the 1st Respondent averred that the court has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal as the Applicant failed to seek leave of this court in line with Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
6.In response to the preliminary objection, the Applicant filed a replying affidavit dated 14/09/2023 explaining why the appeal was filed out of time without responding to the flaunting of Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules. The Applicant further filed an application dated 13/09/2023 seeking leave to appeal against the ruling dated 12/07/2023 and leave to appeal out of time. No directions were issued by this court in respect to the application dated 13/09/2023.
7.The application is not opposed by the 2nd Respondent and this was confirmed in court by the 2nd Respondent’s Counsel on the 9th September 2023.
8.The application was canvassed by way of written submissions. In the Applicant’s submissions dated 28/09/2023, he addresses the issues raised in his application dated 25/07/2023, the preliminary objection dated 19/08/2023 and on his application dated 13/09/2023. On the application at hand, the Applicant’s counsel submitted that Order 42 Rule 6 of the Civil Procedure Rules grants this court power to issue order for stay of execution if three conditions are met which are risk of substantial loss to the Applicant, the application being made without unreasonable delay, and payment of security for costs.
9.As to the third condition, the Applicant submitted that the order sought to be stayed was a negative award and therefore has no quantifiable value. On the application being filed without unreasonable delay, the Applicant alluded to the averments in his replying affidavit dated 26/09/2023 replying to the preliminary objection. On substantial loss, the Applicant submitted that he risked being committed to civil jail which will render the appeal nugatory.
10.In response to the preliminary objection, the Applicant conceded that indeed the intended appeal does not lie as matter of right and the Applicant was supposed to seek leave before appealing which he failed to do. The Applicant’s counsel averred that Order 43 of Civil procedure Rules is a procedural rule whose strict application would oust the Applicant from the seat of justice. That the Applicant rectified the default by filing the application dated 13/09/2023 seeking to regularize his appeal. It is urged that Article 159, Article 48 of the Constitution and section 1A and 1B of the Civil Procedure Act binds the court to administer justice to all parties without undue regard to procedural technicalities. He urged the court to dismiss the preliminary objection.
11.The 1st Respondent filed submissions dated 05/09/2023. Counsel submitted that the order sought to be appealed is not appealable as a matter of right and that an aggrieved party ought to obtain leave from the court before filing the appeal and in the instant application, no leave was obtained thereby rendering the application dated 25/07/2023 impotent and deprives this court of jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The order sought to be appealed from is not among the orders listed in section 75 of the Civil Procedure Act and Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
12.As to whether the Applicant’s application is merited, the Respondent did not address the issue of stay of execution but instead delved into the issue of moratorium. It is submitted at length on the relationship of an Insurer and an Insured, and more specifically, their obligations under a contract of insurance. It is submitted that a third party is not privy to the contractual obligations between the insurer and the insured. That even if the insurer is under moratorium, nothing bars a third party to execute a decree against a tortfeasor which is the case herein.
13.I have considered the application, the response by the 1st Respondent including the preliminary objection and the rival submissions by the parties herein.
14.As per demands of the law, the preliminary objection, if it musters the legal threshold, ought to be considered first before addressing the application since a proper preliminary objection is one that has the potential to dispose of the application or suit as the case may be.
15.The legal threshold for a preliminary objection to lie is well settled. Gikonyo J in Catherine Kawira v Muriungi Kirigia [2016] eKLR put it succinctly thus;I will not forget the admonitions by Sir Charles P Newbold (as he then was) when he stated in the same case that:Ultimately, I wish to associate myself with an apt statement on preliminary objection which was expressed in sheer simplicity in the case of ORARO vs. MBAJA [2005] 1 KLR 141 by Ojwang, J (as he then was) that:
16.In our instant suit, the Applicant has invoked Order 42 rule 6(2) of the Civil procedure Rules seeking to appeal the subordinate court’s ruling dated 12/07/2023 dismissing the Applicant’s application for stay and declining to grant the Applicant stay of execution of the decree in Nanyuki CMCC No. 19 of 2006. The application before this court seeks stay of execution pending appeal against the ruling of the subordinate court. The application elicited a preliminary objection on ground that the court has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal as the Applicant failed to seek leave of this court in line with Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
17.Going by the law as settled above and on the material before court, the preliminary objection raised herein is on the face of it a pure point of the law capable of finally disposing the application before the court.
18.It is urged that the intended Appeal is not one that lies as a matter of right but one that requires leave of court to be sought and granted.
19.Section 75 of the Civil Procedure Act and Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules set out decrees/orders that are appealable as a matter of right. Under Section 75 of the Civil Procedure Act, an appeal shall lie as of right from the following orders: -
20.On the other hand, Order 43 of the Civil Procedure Rules lists those orders from which appeals would lie as a matter of right. The Order provides:
21.The court in Directline Insurance Co. Ltd v Onyango (Civil Appeal E345 of 2022) [2022] while faced with a similar application as the instant application had this to say;
22.I have noted and considered the Applicant’s reliance on Article 159, Article 48 of the Constitution and section 1A and 1B of the Civil Procedure Act to explain the legal infraction. This has been a popular route by many a party who fall foul of the law. The application of these legal provisions has been a subject of attention by our courts and the law is settled on the matter. In Jaldesa Tuke Dabelo v Independent Electoral & Boundaries Commission & another [2015] eKLR, the Court of Appeal had this to say of the matter: -
23.There is no automatic right of appeal of the order sought to be appealed from by the Applicant in the instant matter. There can therefore be no competent Appeal that would clothe this court with jurisdiction to entertain an application for stay of execution or for stay of proceedings pending Appeal. In essence, this court has no jurisdiction to hear the intended appeal unless leave of the court from which the order was made is sought and obtained. The belated filing of the application dated 13/09/2023 cannot regularize the anomaly.
24.From the foregoing, the preliminary objection herein was well taken and succeeds. With the result that the application dated 25/07/2023 is dismissed with costs to the 1st Respondent.
DATED SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT NANYUKI THIS 7TH DAY OF NOVEMBER 2023A.K. NDUNG’UJUDGE