Waqooy Merchants Limited v Nairobi City County & another (Judicial Review Application E002 of 2023) [2023] KEHC 26846 (KLR) (Constitutional and Judicial Review) (20 December 2023) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEHC 26846 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Judicial Review Application E002 of 2023
JM Chigiti, J
December 20, 2023
Between
Waqooy Merchants Limited
Applicant
and
Nairobi City County
1st Respondent
The Director, Lands, Housing & Urban Planning & Development Nairobi City County
2nd Respondent
Ruling
1.The Application seeks orders:1.Spent2.This Honourable Court be pleased and do hereby grant Judicial Review Order of Mandamus do issue against the Respondents compelling the Respondents to issue the Applicant with the stamped and approved architectural and structural plans for the construction on LR No. 209/11953 pending the hearing and determination of this application.3.That this Honourable Court be pleased and do hereby grant Judicial Review Order of Mandamus do issue against the Respondents compelling the Respondents to issue the Applicant with the stamped and approved architectural and structural plans for the construction on LR No. 209/11953 pending the hearing and determination of this suit.
The Applicants case:
2.It has a lease of business space within Green Park terminus on LR No. 209/11953 off Haile Selassie Avenue and it has paid the Respondent the required annual rent for the lease.
3.The Applicant submitted the required architectural plan to the Respondents for their approval and paid for the approval of the architectural and structural plans on 4th October, 2022.
4.The Applicant moved the court after the Respondents refused to issue it with the stamped architectural plans and the structural plans to enable the Applicant to start constructing on the said parcel of land and this is causing the Applicant irreparable harm in terms of money and time as it would have already started constructing and developing on the piece of land.
5.It is the Applicant’s contention that the provisions of the Physical Planning and Land Use Act that were cited by the Respondent to challenge the jurisdiction of this court is only applicable in cases where a decision has been made by the county executive committee member and further where one was aggrieved by the said decision and hence filed an appeal.
6.Section 61(3) of the Physical and Land Use Planning Act, 2019 provides that;
7.According to the Applicant the afore stated sections apply ONLY when an Applicant is aggrieved by the decision of a county executive committee member which needs to be referred to the County Physical and Land Use Planning Liaison Committee.
8.The Applicants are not challenging any decision made by the County Physical and Land Use Planning Liaison Committee; but rather the manner in which the Respondents are acting in bad faith in refusing to release the said development plan to the Applicant.
9.The Applicants further submit that the application herein for judicial review is rightly before this Honorable court, as there exists exceptional circumstances as herein above demonstrated to justify the departure from the appellate procedure prescribed for under Sections 61(4) of the Physical and Land Use Planning Act, 2019. Reliance was placed on the case of Republic v Commissioner of Customs Services Ex parte Imperial Bank Limited [2015] eKLR where the Court cited with approval the decision in Pastoli v Kabale District Local Government Council and Others [2008] 2 EA 300 Where it was stated as follows
10.In the foregoing it is submitted that there was no any alternative remedy available to the applicant herein, to fortify this position, Republic v Nairobi City County, Director of Planning Nairobi City County & Engineeer of Roads Nairobi City County Ex -parte: Suad Salim Abubakar t/a Saab Royale Hotel for the holding that: -
11.Further in the case of Charles Migichi Mungai & 7 others v County Government of Kiambu [2019] eKLR the Honourable Judge Gacheru stated that:
Respondents' Case
12.It is the Respondents case that the Applicant has moved the court prematurely, and the applicant is abusing the court process as it has failed to meet and exhaust all possible mechanism for dispute resolution as stipulated by section 61(3) of the Physical and Land Use Planning Act, 2019. Reliance is placed in the case of Mukisa Biscuit Manufacturing Co. Ltd v West End Distributors Ltd [1969] EA 696. At page 700 Law JA stated;
13.At page 701 Sir Charles Newbold, P added:
14.The Physical and Land Use Planning Act, 2019 provides for a means of redress to a person aggrieved by the decision of the County Executive Committee Member regarding an application for development permission. Section 61 (3) of the said act states that;
15.Section 61(4) of the above mentioned Act states that,
16.The application is an abuse of the court process. Article 159(2) provides that courts should be guided by alternative forms of dispute resolutions in the exercise of its duties. Reliance is placed in the case of Speaker of the National Assembly vs Njenga Karume (2008) 1 KLR 425 where the court held as follows:
17.The applicant has not adduced any evidence to show that they exhausted all possible redress provided in the act before moving to this honorable court.
18.This Honourable court should down its tools for lack of jurisdiction as was stated in the case of Owners of the Motor Vessel "Lilian s" v Caltex oil (Kenya) ltd (1989) where the court pronounced itself as below:
19.According to the Respondent costs follow the event as was in Petition No. 4 of 2012 Jasbir Singh Rai & 3 others Tarlochan Singh Rai & 4 others; [2014] eKLR where the Supreme Court stated:
Issue for Determination
20.Following are the issues for determination are as follows:a.Whether this court has jurisdiction to hear and determine this suit.
Analysis and Determination
Whether this court has jurisdiction to hear and determine this suit
21.Section 61(3) of the Physical and Land Use Planning Act, 2019 provides that;
22.The Final Report of the Committee of Experts (CoE) that prepared the draft that ultimately became the Constitution of Kenya 2010, leaves no doubt that the ELRC and its twin sibling, the ELC, were intended to be “specialized courts” with certain, specific and precise jurisdiction, in contradistinction to the High Court which enjoys unlimited original jurisdiction in criminal and civil matters; and the jurisdiction to interpret and apply the Constitution, including enforcement of fundamental rights and freedoms. The report expressly refers to the two courts as “specialized” courts and further explains that the CoE rejected a proposal to remove the two courts from the Constitution and leave it to Parliament to establish “other courts” with such jurisdiction as it may determine. The CoE reasoned that to do so would give Parliament an opportunity to establish courts with broad jurisdiction capable of supplanting that of the other superior courts established by the Constitution, which “would not signal establishment of specialized courts” on employment and labour and land/environment, and might lead to competing jurisdiction with the High Court.
23.The Supreme Court emphasized this background in Republic v Karisa Chango & Another [2017] eKLR, when it stated as follows:
24.Later on in the same judgment, the Supreme Court concluded as follows:
25.In the cases of Beatrice Wambui Kiarie & 2 others vs Tabitha Wanjiku Ng’ang’a & 9 others (2018) eKLR and Isaac Kinyua & 3 Others v Hellen Kaigongi [2018] eKLR, Wilson Mthui Mutungu v Beatrice Gathoni & Another (2016) eKLR, nGerick Kenya Limited v National Environment Management Authority [2015] eKLR and Republic v Chief Land Registrar & Another, JR ELC No. 11 of 2010 [2019] eKLR, the court held as follows on the issue of distinctiveness of jurisdiction of the High Court and courts of equal status as follows: -
26.The jurisdiction of this court is well settled in the case of Pastoli v Kabale District Local Government Council and Others [2008] 2 EA 300 it was held:
27.I am satisfied that the Applicants are challenging the failure to act procedurally on the part the Respondents in refusing to release the said development plan to the Applicant which is within the purview of the Fair Administrative Action Act.
28.The issue raised in the Application fall within the principles laid out in the Pastoli v Kabale District Local Government Council and Others [2008] 2 EA 300 wherein it was held that:
29.I need not delve into the merits of the case at this juncture lest I compromise the parties’ respective cases.
30.On its part, the Environment and Land Court is vested with such facilities that the Environment and Land Court also has powers to issue judicial review orders.
31.It is this court’s finding that the issues raised in the suit go beyond judicial review ambit. They are not simply issues of illegality, irregularities or procedural improprieties.
32.Section 13 (7) (b) the Environment and Land Court Act provides that:
33.From the above analysis, as guided by the pleadings, it is quite obvious this suit is related to environment, use and occupation/use of land and; I so hold.
34.In the case of Dickson Ngigi Ngugi v Commissioner of Lands S.C Petition No. 9 of 2019 [2019] eKLR, [36] the Supreme Court made binding finding that Jurisdiction goes to the root of any cause or dispute before a court of law. A court must exercise restraint to avoid overstepping its constitutional role in order to maintain its legitimacy. If a court has no jurisdiction, a judgment rendered therein does not adjudicate the dispute. It does not bind the parties, nor can it be made the foundation of any right. It is a nullity without life or authority. In short, it is coramnon judice and amounts to a nullity because, as Nyarangi, JA famously said in the locus classicus, Owners of the Motor Vessel “Lillian S” v Caltex Oil, (Kenya) Ltd [1989] KLR 1, “jurisdiction is everything. Without it, a court has no power to make one more step”.
Disposition:
35.I lack the jurisdiction to deal with the other issues before this court.
Order:
36.Orders:-1.The Preliminary Objection is upheld.2.Costs to the Respondent.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 20TH DECEMBER, 2023..................J. CHIGITI (SC)JUDGE