Ethics & Anti-Corruption Commission v Lodwar Midwest Hotel Limited & 2 others (Miscellaneous Civil Application E246 of 2023) [2024] KEHC 6240 (KLR) (31 May 2024) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEHC 6240 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Miscellaneous Civil Application E246 of 2023
JRA Wananda, J
May 31, 2024
Between
Ethics & Anti-Corruption Commission
Applicant
and
Lodwar Midwest Hotel Limited
1st Respondent
Samuel Kuwom Eregae
2nd Respondent
Kenya Commercial Bank Limited
3rd Respondent
Ruling
1.On 24/05/2023, in Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 which involves the same parties herein and relates to the same subject matter as in this instant matter, I granted ex parte orders to the same Applicant herein as follows:
2.Now before the Court for determination is the Applicant’s Originating Summons dated 22/11/2023 filed through E.W. Githinji Advocate, and which seeks orders as follows:i.[………] Spentii.[………] Spentiii.That this Honourable Court be pleased to extend the Order of Preservation issued on 25th May 2023 prohibiting the withdrawal, transfer, disposal of or other dealings howsoever with the sum of Kshs 3,684,208.80 and Kshs 2,866,884.15 or any amount thereof held in Bank Account No. [……….] and [….…..] at Kenya Commercial Bank (Kenya) Ltd which accounts are held in the name of the 1st and 2nd Respondents, for a further period of six (6) months pursuant to Section 56(3) of the Ant-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act, 2003.
3.The Application is brought under Section 56 of the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act No. 3 of 2003, and “all other enabling provisions of the law”. The Application is premised on the grounds stated on the face thereof and is supported by the Affidavit sworn by one David Mutua.
4.In the Affidavit, the deponent stated that he is an Investigator with the Applicant, that on 8/05/2023, the Applicant received a report touching on fraudulent payments made by the County Government of Turkana to the 1st and 2nd Respondents without any justification, that the complaint alleged that the 1st and 2nd Respondents had received fraudulent and irregular payments totalling Kshs 67,107,743.10 transferred by the said County Government between 1/01/2019 and 11/05/2023 into the 1st and 2nd Respondents’ said bank accounts, that pursuant to the investigations, the Applicant on 23/05/2023 applied for preservatory orders under the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act (ACECA) which application was granted on 25/05/2023 prohibiting the Respondents from withdrawing, transferring, disposing or in any other way dealing with the amounts in the bank accounts, and that the preservation orders are set to expire on 27/11/2023.
5.The deponent stated further that since the preservation orders were granted, the Applicant has carried out extensive investigations and has made remarkable progress pertaining to the matter in issue. He then particularized a lengthy list of the matters established and which implicate the 1st and 2nd Respondents into the fraudulent and/or corrupt activities and stated further that there are however crucial investigative points yet to be covered and which the Applicant will require a further 6 months to investigate conclusively, that despite the Applicant making some headway, the pace at which the investigations is taking has been hampered by failure by the County Government to provide documents, that this has led to the Applicant issuing a notice to the County Secretary under Section 27 of the ACECA to provide the documents and record a statement to that effect, that a considerable number of statements from relevant persons have been recorded but due to the prevailing security and weather situation in the County, it has been impossible to travel to the County to record further statements from crucial witnesses.
6.The deponent further stated that due to the colossal amounts involved which were paid through more than 90 payments, more documents need to be collected from the County as well as other Government agencies and private entities thus protracting the investigations further, that the Applicant has also written to various Government agencies and private entities to provide information/documents which have not yet been provided as they require technical expertise. He deponed that this Court is clothed with special jurisdiction under Section 56 of the ACECA to entertain an application for extension of an order of preservation for a further period of 6 months, that the Applicant is apprehensive that if the order for extension of preservation is not granted, the Respondents may transfer, withdraw or dispose the funds in a manner that may frustrate the ongoing investigations and defeat the intended recovery proceedings and prosecution of persons who may be found culpable.
7.The Application came up ex parte before my brother, R. Nyakundi J who was the duty Judge at that time and who on 23/11/2023 granted the orders sought although on an interim basis and fixed the matter for inter partes hearing.
8.In the intervening period, the 1st and 2nd Respondents, through Messrs Nyachoti & Co. filed a Notice of Preliminary Objection challenging the Application. The grounds raised were basically that the said Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 on the same subject matter and between the same parties was still pending for hearing and determination of the dispute, that the orders made by Nyakundi J on 23/11/2023 are final and thereby determining the ex parte Application without inter partes hearing of the Application which is contrary to law and that the orders should be discharged forthwith. It was further stated that the filing of these proceedings separately is an utter abuse of the Court process in view of the aforesaid Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 and that the same should therefore be struck out.
9.Upon considering the matter, Nyakundi J on 10/01/2024 delivered a Ruling herein agreeing with the Respondents. In setting aside and/or discharging his said earlier ex parte orders, the Judge rendered himself as follows:
10.It is pursuant to the above background that this matter was placed before me.
Hearing of the Application
11.It was then agreed, and I directed, that the Application, together with the Preliminary Objection be heard together, and by way of written Submissions. However, up to the time of concluding this Ruling, I had not come across any Submissions filed by either of the parties.
Further developments in Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023
12.During the intervening period, material developments occurred which have a direct bearing on the “survival” of this matter
13.As aforesaid, the 6 months preservation order given in Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 was given by myself on 24/05/2023. The order was based on the provisions of Section 56 of the ACECA, Section 56 (1) and (3) whereof provides as follows-1.On an ex parte application by the Commission, the High Court may make an order prohibiting the transfer or disposal of or other dealing with property on evidence that the property was acquired as a result of corrupt conduct2.An order under this Section shall have effect for six months and may be extended by the Court on the application of the Commission
14.It is therefore clear that the statutory lifespan of proceedings filed under Section 56 of the ACECA, in the first instance, and unless extended, is limited to 6 months. Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 having been filed under that provision of law, was therefore subject to this 6-month lifespan scenario. The preservation order having been granted on 24/05/2023, such statutory 6 months lifespan of Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 therefore lapsed or was to lapse on or about 24/11/2023. As aforesaid however, Nyakundi J on 23/11/2023, in these separate proceedings, extended the orders for another 6 months thus breathing some life into Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 and thus salvaging it. As aforesaid however, on 10/01/2024, Nyakundi J subsequently vacated and/or set aside the orders granting the extension.
15.In light of the foregoing situation, when the parties appeared before me on 21/02/2024 for mention of Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023, it was appreciated that the same had long been overtaken by events and retaining it in the Court system would serve no purpose. I accordingly marked the matter as concluded and the file as closed.
Determination
16.The question that now arises is whether these proceedings having been instituted merely for the purposes of extending the preservation orders given in the separate Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023, can this action still be sustained and deemed to exist despite and/or in view of the fact that Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023, has itself since been already closed.
17.The indisputable answer is obviously that, no, these proceedings cannot be sustained any longer. With the closure of the file in Eldoret HCMA Civil Case No. E109 of 2023, this instant action, as a natural consequence, suffered a natural death. This Cause cannot therefore be sustained or salvaged as it now has no legs to stand on, its substratum having already ceased to exist.
18.Before I pen off however, like Nyakundi J and the Respondents’ Counsel, I too, wonder why the Applicant opted to filed these fresh proceedings when the same Applicant had already instituted Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023 on the same subject matter and between the same parties and which was still pending for hearing and determination. In the absence of a clear explanation for this irregular mode of litigation, there is merit in the 1st and 2nd Respondents’ Counsel’s assertion that the filing of these proceedings separately was an abuse of the Court process in view of the existence of the earlier filed Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023. In view thereof, even if these proceedings had not been overtaken by the natural death of Eldoret High Court Miscellaneous Civil Case No. E109 of 2023, still it would have been liable for striking out for offending the sub-judice rule, also referred to as the rule against duplicity, as stipulated under Section 6 of the Civil Procedure Act. The Section provides as follows:
Final Orders
19.In the end, the Applicant’s Originating Summons dated 22/11/2023 and by extension, this whole action is hereby dismissed.
20.I however make no order on costs considering that, despite the apparent blunder of filing parallel proceedings, I believe that the Applicant filed this action in the honest execution of its statutory mandate, namely, pursuit of recovery of property perceived to have been acquired as a result of corrupt conduct.
DELIVERED, DATED AND SIGNED AT ELDORET THIS 31ST DAY OF MAY 2024WANANDA J.R. ANURO..................................JUDGEI certify that this is a true copy of the originalSignedDEPUTY REGISTRAR