INPHA Phamceuticals Limited v Waweru & another (Civil Appeal E014 of 2021) [2023] KEHC 25933 (KLR) (29 November 2023) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEHC 25933 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal E014 of 2021
AK Ndung'u, J
November 29, 2023
Between
INPHA Phamceuticals Limited
Appellant
and
Geoffrey Mwaniki Waweru
1st Respondent
Joseph Gachegea Ngunjiri
2nd Respondent
(Being an appeal from the ruling of the Senior Resident Magistrates Court delivered on 2nd September 2021 in Nanyuki Chief Magistrate Court Civil Suit No. 68 of 2017)
Judgment
1.By a ruling dated 2nd September 2021, the Appellant’s suit was dismissed for want of prosecution following a Notice to show cause undated but set for hearing on the 21st June 2021. In response to the Notice to show cause, the Appellant had filed a replying affidavit.
2.Aggrieved by the ruling and order of dismissal, the Appellant lodged this appeal against the whole of the said ruling raising the following grounds;i)The Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact for dismissing the suit for want of prosecution yet the Applicant had a prima facie case with a high probability of success.ii)The Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact in find that the Plaintiff did not give sufficient reasons for the delay in setting the suit down for hearing.iii)The Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact in failing to consider the element of public policy in preparation for his rulingiv)The Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact in failing to appreciate the long established principle of stare decisis bringing law into confusion and thereby deciding on erroneous findings.v)The Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact in failing to appreciate that justice should be served without undue regard to procedural technicalities.
3.Despite evidence of service, the Respondents did not respond to the Appeal.
4.The Appeal was disposed of by way of written submissions.
5.In its submissions, the Appellant narrowed down the issues for determination as follows;a)Whether the Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact for dismissing the suit for want of prosecution yet the Appellant had a prima facie case with a high probability of success.b)Whether the Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact in finding the Appellant did not give sufficient reasons for the delay in setting down for hearing.c)Whether the Learned Magistrate erred in law and fact I failing to appreciate justice should be served without undue regard to procedural technicalities.
6.This being a first appeal my duty is clearly set out in law. Mativo J (as he then was) in Bwire v Wayo & Sailoki (Civil Appeal 032 of 2021) [2022] KEHC 7 (KLR) (24 January 2022) (Judgment) put it succinctly as follows;
7.A summary of the Appellant case in answer to the Notice to show cause as gleaned from the replying affidavit is that the suit before the trial court was filed on the 3rd August 2017. The summons were extracted on 4th August 2017. About 1 year down the line, an application to serve the defendants by way of registered post and for extension of the validity of summons was filed on 17th July 2018. The application was allowed on 26th July 2018. Service of summons by way of registered post was effected on the 18th October 2018.
8.It is the Appellant’s case that in the intervening period counsel handling the matter namely Everline Nyanchama, Moffart Maroko and Geoffrey Ngeresa departed from the firm.
9.Counsel Maroko is said to have written to the court on 10th April and on 25 October 2019 seeking issuance of the order dated 26th July 2018 with a view to making a request for judgement. Maroko left the firm on 30th March 2021.
10.A further request for the order dated 26th July 2019 (sic) was sent via email on 3rd June 2021. There was no response and subsequently the firm’s process server on a visit to the court was handed a Notice to show cause. It is urged that counsel for the plaintiff took action before the Notice to show cause was issued and that no prejudice would be visited on the Defendants.
11.The Appellant recounts the above narrative of facts in their submissions. It is submitted further that the Appellant was genuinely and honestly ready to prosecute its case and the failure to prosecute it arose from the premature dismissal of the case. It is urged that the Appellant should not be condemned by an unlawful dismissal premised on a procedural mistake and technicalities which he knows nothing about. This, it is urged, would be against the overriding objective of the Civil Procedure Act.
12.Counsel urges that the failure to prosecute the matter is an error that should not be visited on the Appellant and reliance is placed on the case of PMM v JNW [2020] eKLR and James Lenawanchingel v Gulsan Insaat Sanayi Tuirizn & another [2021] eKLR.
13.As to whether the delay was explained, it is urged that the Appellant had prepared for the matter including filing documents to be relied on. The matter was prematurely dismissed as the mandatory minimum timeline had not lapsed since the last date in court.
14.The Appellant further submits that it has a good claim which should be heard on the merits. The court is urged to do substantive justice to the parties undeterred by procedural technical rules. It is submitted that the court has unfettered discretion to set aside the dismissal order and reliance is placed on the case of Nicholas K. Cheruiyot v Kenya Midland Sacco Limited [2021] eKLR and Trade Circles Limited v Family Bank Limited and another[2021] eKLR.
15.On inability to file the request for judgement, it is submitted that the Appellant moved the court vide email sent on 3rd June 2021 seeking the orders issued on 26th July 2018. The court is blamed for not giving any response to the email thus making it difficult for the Appellant to request for judgement.
16.Before the trial court was a Notice to show cause why the subject suit should not be dismissed. The Appellant responded to it by way of a replying affidavit. The court found the case suitable for dismissal and dismissed it. For determination is whether the Appellant demonstrated sufficient cause why the suit should not be dismissed.
17.I have had due regard to the Notice to show cause and the replying affidavit. I have perused the record of the trial court. I have taken into account the elaborate submissions by counsel.
18.The applicable law is to be found under Order 17 Rule 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules. The rule provides;
19.The court’s exercise of power to dismiss a suit for want of prosecution under Order 17 rule 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules is a discretionary one. The applicable principles are summed up succinctly in the case of Allen v Sir Alfred McAlpine & Sons Ltd (1968) All ER 543 as follows;
20.These principles are broken down in our local jurisprudence in Ecobank Ghana Limited v Triton Petroleum Co Limited & 5 others [2018] eKLR, the court observed:
21.A party’s right to be to heard is ring fenced in clear language under Article 50 of the Constitution. Article 159(d) goes further to shield parties in litigation from the rigours of undue technicalities. I hasten to add that the two constitutional edicts are not a carte blanche for parties to ignore legal procedure embedded in statute or for laxity and lethargy in prosecution of cases.
22.The need for expeditious disposal of cases cannot be gainsaid. Indeed, the constitutional underpinnings on conclusion of matters in a timely manner is contained in Article 159 of the Constitution, which at Sub Article (2b) provides;It is the duty of the court, litigants, as well as advocates, to ensure that matters are concluded expeditiously without inexcusable delay. Sections 1A and IB, of the Civil Procedure Act, Cap 21, Laws of Kenya speak loudly on this duty. One of the issues that usually confront the courts with respect to dismissal of suits for delays and the subsequent applications for reinstatement, is the need for expeditious conclusion of suits. In Mobile Kitale Service Station v Mobil Oil Kenya Limited & another [2004] eKLR (Warsame J as he then was) it was held:
23.Turning back to the facts before the court in this matter, the cause of action arose from a road traffic accident that occurred on 12th August 2014. The suit was filed on 3rd August 2017. The record readily shows that the Defendants neither entered appearance nor filed defence. The Appellant made an application to serve summons by way of registered post which orders were granted on 26th July 2018. A letter seeking re-issuance of summons dated 13th August 2018 was received by court on 12th October 2018. Service was effected on 18th October 2018.
24.The subsequent action in the matter relate to letters dated 10th April and on 25 October 2019 seeking issuance of the order dated 26th July 2018 with a view to making a request for judgement. A further request for the order dated 26th July 2019 (sic) was sent via email on 3rd June 2021.
25.The duty to explain the delay to the satisfaction of the court lies with the Appellant. The Appellant’s explanation is predicated on letters written to the court requesting for orders of court issued on 26th July 2018. To put the matter in proper perspective, it is worthwhile to mention that those orders essentially granted the Appellant leave to serve summons by way of substituted service through registered post. I note that the letters dated 10th April 2019 and 25th October 2019 are not on the court record.
26.Suffice it to note that even assuming all the letters were written and received by the court, the letters do not explain the delay in the prosecution of the case. By their own admission, the plaintiff confirm that service of summons was effected on 18th October 2018. It is submitted that that upon service, the Respondents delayed to enter appearance within the stipulated time of 14 days. Having been granted the order to effect service by way of registered post, orders which are in the court file, nothing stopped the Appellant to file a request for judgement with an affidavit of service by the process server confirming how the process was served. The unavailability of the orders of 26th July 2018 is a red herring and does not assist the Appellant to explain away the delay.
27.Covid and departure of counsel from the firm have been cited as causes for the delay. The default in the filing of defence by the Respondents occurred long before Covid was confirmed in Kenya by the Ministry of Health in early 2020. The departure from the firm by counsel handling the matter is not a satisfactory explanation for the delay. If changes in staffing in legal firms was to be liberally accepted as a cause for failure to prosecute matters timeously, we would be opening up a pandoras box in the litigation arena whose effect would impact negatively on the administration of justice. It is upon legal firms to manage change-overs and hand-overs seamlessly alive to client’s interests.
28.The delay in the prosecution of the matter before the court is inordinate and inexcusable. Even if I was to take the view that the delay was excusable or consider that even if inexcusable, justice could still be done to the parties, I have reviewed the facts of the case. The cause of action as noted above was a road traffic accident that occurred on the 12th August 2014. A successful prosecution of the matter would depend on the recollection of the witnesses of an event that occurred 9 years down the line. In those circumstances, a fair trial may be elusive given human frailties of memory loss, misplacement of documents or even non-availability of witnesses.
29.The position was well articulated in Ivita v Kyumbu [1984] KLR 441 (Chesoni J), where the court stated:
30.In the instant suit there would be obvious prejudice on the Respondents as recounting the happenings at an accident scene a decade after is no mean task given that such incidents occur in a quick flash and reliance would be placed on the evidence of eye witnesses who may not be found or who may not be in a position to vividly remember important details after a long lapse of time.
31.Finally, I have perused the record and have been unable to find a properly filed Notice of Change of Advocates other than the one exhibited as “Exhibit CNO’’ annexed to the affidavit of Chellion Nyamweya Onuko in reply to the Notice to show cause at the trial court. In essence therefore, it is questionable whether the firm of Mose, Mose & Mose Advocates were properly on record in the subsequent proceedings before the trial court and now before this court, the result of which, appeal would stand struck out.
32.In the end, I reach the conclusion that the exercise of discretion on the part of the trial magistrate cannot be faulted. With the result that the Appeal herein has no merit and is dismissed.
DATED SIGNED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY THIS 29TH NOVEMBER 2023A.K. NDUNG’UJUDGE