Isack M’Inanga Kiebia v Isaya Theuri M’Lintari & Isack Ntongai M’Lintari (Application 46 of 2014) [2015] KESC 28 (KLR) (16 July 2015) (Ruling)
Isack M’Inanga Kiebia v Isaya Theuri M’Lintari & another [2015] eKLR
Neutral citation:
[2015] KESC 28 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Application 46 of 2014
MK Ibrahim, PK Tunoi, JB Ojwang, SC Wanjala & N Ndungu, SCJJ
July 16, 2015
Between
Isack M’inanga Kiebia
Applicant
and
Isaya Theuri M’lintari
1st Respondent
Isack Ntongai M’lintari
2nd Respondent
(Being an application for review of the refusal of certification by the Court of Appeal (Visram, Koome and Otieno Odek, JJA) by the Ruling of 19th November, 2014 in Nyeri Court of Appeal Civil Application No. SUP.5 of 2014)
Ruling
Introduction And Background
1The instant application seeks leave to lodge an appeal before this Court, pursuant to Article 163 4 b of the Constitution. The applicant seeks that we certify the intended appeal as one raising matters of general public importance. The application comes by way of Notice of Motion dated 2nd December, 2014, supported by an affidavit of even date sworn by the applicant. It seeks a review pursuant to Article 163 5 of the Ruling of the Court of Appeal, dismissing an application for certification. The application also seeks conservatory orders preserving the suit-property against the execution of current Orders, pending the hearing and determination of the intended appeal.
2The foundation of the intended appeal emanates from a land dispute involving members of the same family, and a claim in the beneficial interest in land titles: Njia Kiegoi Scheme/70 [Plot 70 and Njia Kiegoi Scheme/86 [Plot 86]. The respondents at the Court of Appeal and in this appeal, are brothers; they were the plaintiffs at the High Court. The applicant on the other hand is the respondents’ uncle, and was the 2nd defendant at the High Court, and 2nd appellant at the Court of Appeal. The first defendant at the High Court is deceased, and his cause thus abated.
3The claim by the respondents at the High Court was that they were members of the Athimba clan, which owned a large parcel of ancestral land in Njia Location, Nyambene District, in 1963 during the process of land consolidation and demarcation. The respondents’ claim was that it had been agreed that the land would be distributed to the various households, but held in trust for descendants by the applicant. The respondents claimed that the applicant held the interest in Plot 70 in trust for their deceased father, Musa Lintari who was entitled to a third-share in the property, according to the family agreement. At the High Court, the respondents urged that they had lived on the said property, were in possession of it, and had made substantial developments on the same.
4The High Court found in favour of the respondents, holding that Plots No. 70 and 86 were ancestral lands. Kasango J. found that the suit properties were protected under Section 27 of the Registered Land Act Cap 300, Laws of Kenya now repealed . The Court also held that the rights in the registered titles were subject to the rights recognized under Sections 28 and 30 g of the Registered Land Act – rights protecting trustees – as well as other overriding interests. Kasango J. relied on the precedents set by the Court of Appeal in earlier cases, Alan Kiama v. Ndia Muthunya & Others, Civil Appeal No 42 of 1978; Kanyi v. Muthiora [1984] KLR 712; and a decision of the High Court, Mbui Mukangu v. Gerald Mutwiri Mbui HCCA No. 281 of 2000. The learned Judge held that the claim of interest by the respondents was one of trust, emanating not as a result of possession or occupation of the suit property, but from the fact that the property was ancestral land, passed on from generation to generation, thus qualifying as an intergenerational trust. The Court ordered that the applicant do transfer 3 acres of the suit properties to each of the respondents, after which the trust would be extinguished.
5The Court of Appeal upheld the decision of the High Court, dismissing the appeal in its entirety. It considered the matter under five specific themes:
6The Appellate Court considered the issue of overriding possessory rights, and whether the respondents had any such rights. The finding was that the respondents had not established on a balance of probability, that they had been in possession of Plot No. 70. The Court held that in these circumstances, the respondents had neither possessory nor occupational interests over Plot No. 70, which could be protected as an overriding interest, by virtue of Section 30 g of the Registered Land Act. The Court, however, held that one needed not be in actual physical possession and occupation of land, to prove the existence of a trust. The Court affirmed the High Court’s position that a trust, indeed, existed over the suit properties.
7Dissatisfied with the said decision, the appellant filed an application seeking certification that the intended appeal involved matters of general public importance, and was therefore appealable to this Court, pursuant to Article 163 4 b of the Constitution. The Court of Appeal considered the application on the basis of principles that have been developed by this Court: in Hermanus Philipus Steyn v. Giovanni Gnecci-Ruscone, Sup. Ct. Civil Application No. 4 of 2012 and Malcolm Bell v. Hon. Daniel Toroitich arap Moi & Another, Sup.Ct. Application No. 1 of 2013.
8According to the applicant’s submissions before the Appellate Court, that Court’s decision on the substantive appeal had created uncertainty as to the relationship between the existence of a trust, and the fact of actual possession. It was the applicant’s contention that, going by precedent, a party ought to have been in possession of the contested property, to be able to claim trust in land. The Court of Appeal, however, held that one needed neither to be in possession, nor in occupation of the land in question, to establish the existence of a trust.
9Does the Appellate Court’s decision create an uncertainty, as to the state of the law? Does it necessitate further consideration by this Court? Will such further consideration have a significant bearing on the public interest? The Court of Appeal found its own decision to be in agreement with that of the High Court – both being consistent with precedent. The effect, as the Appellate Court perceived it, was that the issues in this case neither transcended the circumstances of the case itself, nor had a bearing on the public interest.
10.The applicant was apprehensive that a miscarriage of justice would be occasioned, if the Court of Appeal declined to certify the intended appeal as raising matters of general public importance. The Appellate Court, however, determined that mere apprehension of miscarriage of justice was not a critical factor in determining an application for leave to appeal. The application having been refused, the applicant filed the instant application.
11The respondents contested the application by way of a replying affidavit, sworn by the 1st respondent. The respondent averred that the matter did not involve any issues of public interest, but only concerned personal and family issues.
Issue For Determination .
12The issue for determination in the application before us is: whether a matter of general public importance is involved in the intended appeal.
Submissions Of The Parties
The Applicant
13The applicant was represented by learned Senior Counsel, Mr. Nowrojee appearing with learned counsel, Mr. Wandabwa. Mr. Nowrojee submitted that only one plot was relevant in this matter, namely, Plot No. 70. He urged that the Court of Appeal had found that the respondents did not prove, on a balance of probability, that they had been in possession or occupation of the said property; and that there would be no occupational or possessory rights, unless the existence of a trust was proved. He submitted that the Court of Appeal had found in favour of the respondents, purely on the ground that they belonged to the family that owned the ancestral land now under claim – not because they were in occupation or possession of the land. On that basis, counsel sought to have two issues certified as being “of general public importance”:
14Counsel submitted that the profile of precedent in notable cases, such as Esiroyo v. Esiroyo, [1973] EA 388, Obiero v. Obiero, [1972] E.A. 227; and John Peter Mureithi & Others v. The Attorney General & Others, Misc. Applic. No. 158 of 2005 – was to the effect that the promulgation of the Registered Land Act Cap. 300 , the Land Adjudication Act Cap 284 , the Land Consolidation Act Cap 283 , and the Trust Land Act Cap 288 , extinguished “customary rights” altogether. Thereafter, counsel urged, overriding interests in land were curved out of Sections 28, 30 g and 126 of the Registered Land Act, by the Courts, notably in the case of Mbui Mukangu v. Gerald Mutwiri Mbui, C.A. No. 281 of 2000. The Courts, it was urged, found the existence of a trust only when the parties were in occupation and possession of the suit property.
15Counsel urged that the creation of a trust, on an abstract conception of inter-generational trust – there being no element of possession or anything else to suggest the actual existence of a trust – would create uncertainty. Counsel argued that the introduction of inter-generational trust, without the factor of possession, had the effect of reinstating concepts that were outlawed by statute. Counsel noted that Section 28 b of the Land Registration Act Cap 300 recognized customary trusts in respect of land, but did not clarify the nature of their span, thus beckoning the input of this Court, to avert any mischief such as may occur in the future, under the current legislation. Counsel urged that the resolution of the intended appeal, bore implications for land-holding, with the economic, social and emotional interests in it, on the part of a large number of Kenyans; and to that extent, the matter fell within the purview of Article 163 4 b of the Constitution.
16Counsel submitted that the intended appeal satisfied the third principle of Hermanus, requiring that the pertinent question of law should have arisen in the Courts below. It was submitted that the relevant issue had come up before the High Court and the Court of Appeal, before arriving at this Court. Invoking the fourth Hermanus principle, learned counsel submitted that the decisions of the High Court and the Court of Appeal were in this case, in conflict with previous cases decided by those very Courts in Obiero, Kanyi, Mukangu and John Peter Mureithi. Counsel submitted that there was need to ascertain the law and, in this way, avert any future instances of uncertainty in the tenor and effect of precedent.
The Respondents
17Learned counsel Mr. Ondieki, for the respondents, submitted that the intended appeal did not raise any issues of general public importance. He urged that the Appellate Court had duly resolved the matter, and reopening it at this stage would only amount to improper use of judicial time. He submitted that the dispute, which has been running for years, merited a final resolution. Counsel submitted that, arising from the death of the 1st appellant, only Plot No. 70 was in contention; and that the respondents only held possession over Plot No. 86, even though they cultivated Plot No. 70.
18Counsel submitted that the execution of the Appellate Court’s Judgment would not affect a large section of the community, or the public at large, because it was confined to the individual litigants before the Court.
19Learned counsel submitted that the applicant had been registered to hold the suit-property in trust for the respondents’ father whose share they were entitled to. He urged that the issues entailed in this matter fell short of the criteria in Articles 163 4 b and 163 5 of the Constitution for a review by this Court. He urged the Court to dismiss the same with costs.
The Applicant in response
20.Learned counsel Mr. Wandabwa, submitted that the Courts, in the past, had only protected the customary rights of those in possession of property, under Sections 28 and 30 of the Registered Land Act now repealed ; but in the instant case, the Court of Appeal had gone further, and conceived the concept of inter-generational equity, which stood independently of possession, or occupation, in the creation of a trust. He urged that the “inter-generational trust,” in that Court’s perception, was a conception of merit, that should be sustained. Advancing that argument, counsel submitted that customary land rights were usufructuary in nature, and property-in-land was essentially customary or ancestral, as the person claiming rights either lived on it, grazed on it, cultivated on it, or used it for cultural purposes.
21Learned counsel submitted that the span of issues in this matter exceeded the confines of a family dispute, as the Appellate Court’s findings touched on the application and interpretation of the law relating to customary land rights.
Analysis
22The applicant urges that the intended appeal raises points of customary, statutory and constitutional law, “of general public importance”, as regards national values and principles, equality before the law; and land rights – which are of broad application to the Kenyan public. In particular, the applicant categorises certain issues as being “of general public importance”, insofar as they arise in the intended appeal, and to the extent that their resolution will cast impacts upon other land-owners. The following issues were said to fall in such a category:
23Our task, at this leave-stage, is to consider whether the intended appeal meets the appellate yardstick founded upon Article 163 4 b of the Constitution. The threshold of analysis is already indicated in this Court’s decisions in Hermanus, and Malcolm Bell. In the Hermanus case, paragraph 47 , we upheld the principle laid out by the Appellate Court in Koinange Investment & Development Ltd. v. Robert Nelson Ngethe, that “the requirement for certification under Article 163 4 b is a genuine filtering process to ensure that only appeals with elements of general public importance reach the Supreme Court.” Divers principles have been formulated for the guidance of matters in this category; but in this instance, we find the following to be particularly relevant:
24Do the issues arising in this case transcend the circumstances of this particular case, and do they have a significant bearing on the public interest? It is clear from the record that the claim leading up to the intended appeal, dates back to the year 1997. The dispute had, indeed, been placed before traditional elders earlier, in 1993 and 1994. It is not in dispute that the applicant did not purchase the property which is now in contest. By the record, the land was assigned to the applicant by way of family agreement, to hold in trust for the family.
25From the grounds of the application, and the submissions of counsel, the main issue of law urged for resolution is: the legitimacy of recognizing an inter-generational trust, or a trust in customary law, where neither occupation nor possession of the land has been proved. By the submission of counsel, the finding of trust by the Appellate Court and the High Court, notwithstanding want of possession or occupation, occasions uncertainty, as regards customary land-rights, and the trust concept.
26A related question is, whether the issue raised is a substantial question of law, the determination of which is destined to have a significant bearing on the public interest.
27The High Court and Court of Appeal, over the years, have determined numerous matters relating to acquisition of title, trust in land; and other competing interests in land. Given the standing of land as the very foundation of the economic, in an agrarian setting, and as the physical framework for all social intercourse – it is of substantial, constant interest to the people. For this very reason, one High Court decision, Wangulu Enterprises Limited v. Kugotwa & 6 Others, Mombasa HCCC No. 745 of 2001 O.S Ojwang, J as he then was held that the main issues of land-rights, ought to be resolved on the basis of primary evidence, formally adduced.
28In the instant case, the question of possession and use of land was treated as one of fact, to be ascertained by way of formal evidence. It is such evidence taken at the trial Court, that was subsequently reappraised by the Court of Appeal: and that Court found that, on a balance of probability, the respondents herein had not proved their possession of Plot No. 70.
29Such centrality of land in the full range of litigious questions, and the fact that express legislation had not anticipated the forms of disputes in that sphere, are precisely what led to the Courts resorting to the well-known common-law remit: to mould the relevant terms and principles of the law as appropriate, in any given case. Such law-making has progressed upon the beacons of precedent, thus carrying binding effect, dependent on the hierarchical position of a particular Court. Such is the practical essence of the common law on the question of landrights, as it stands today. It is no longer just an element of history, but is a practical dimension of judicialism, well integrated into the Constitution of Kenya, 2010 – especially Chapter Five on “Land and Environment.”
30.Land and Environment have a special public importance, and have now been entrusted to a special category of Courts, established under Article 162 of the Constitution – operationalised by way of the Environment and Land Court Act Cap 12A, Laws of Kenya .
31It is in this context that the main questions in the instant matter are to be seen: i the connection between “possession”, “occupation” and “customary trust”; ii “inter-generational equity.” These concepts, and the essential relationships entailed, were not, in the instant matter, the subject of elaborate or conclusive treatment. This leaves somewhat blurred, the nature of the undefined land-interests which had appeared under Sections 28 and 30 of the Registered Land Act, and are currently covered under Section 28 of the Land Registration Act. Such elements have not had the benefit of a full explication by the High Court or the Appellate Court – even though they may recur in the future, in cases touching on land-rights and customary trusts.
32We find these questions weighty in law, and note that interpretation of the unspecified interests under Sections 28 and 30 of the Registered Land Act currently covered under Section 28 of the Land Registration Act presents a complex issue of law, that has not been sufficiently addressed by the High Court or the Court of Appeal. The further input of this Court is therefore necessary, in accordance with the remit outlined in Section 3 of the Supreme Court Act, 2011 Act No. 7 of 2011 .
33The applicant brought before the Court a relevant list of authorities highlighting some of the cases of merit. The Obiero, Esiroyo and John Peter Mureithi cases were determined by the High Court – thus leaving room for further settlement by the Appellate Court. In the Kanyi case, the Court of Appeal held that a registered proprietor of land was not relieved of such obligations as attached to him or her as trustee. That case also took into account the competing interests, and the settled practices under Kikuyu customary law. The Court held that trusteeship, under the Registered Land Act, did not necessarily exclude trusteeship under customary law. This precedent effectively upset the position taken in earlier decisions of the High Court, in the Obiero and Esiroyo cases. The two decisions were thereafter distinguished on the facts, in the Mukangu case. There was no contention, however, that customary trusts were not overriding interests; and this position has since been clarified in law, effectively recognising customary trusts as overriding interests Section 28 of the Land Registration Act, Cap 300 .
34The Court of Appeal, in the Mukangu case, remarked that although the language of Sections 27 and 28 of the Registered Land Act was categorical, they were subject to qualifications, for the protection of other persons. That Court also held that trust, in the case of the land in question, arose from possession and occupation of part of the registered land, and was protected under Sections 28 and 30 g of the Act. But in the matter now before us, the Appellate Court held that one needed not be in actual physical possession, or occupation of a parcel of land, to prove customary trust. An issue thus arises, as to the valid position at law.
35Is there a state of uncertainty in the law, arising from contradictory precedents, and warranting this Court’s resolution of the doubt? While the question of customary, or generational trust has been determined from time to time, the resulting body of precedent is not clear on the singular question, whether a claimant of a trust in customary law needs to prove actual physicalpossession, or occupation. Despite an overhaul of the previous land laws, and the enactment of a new Land Registration Act 2012 , to consolidate and rationalize the registration of titles, the manner of resolution of the said question will affect pending matters, as well as matters to be heard in the future pursuant to Section 28 b of the Land Registration Act . The issue, therefore, will continually engage the workings of the judicial organs.
36We are, therefore, satisfied that the intended appeal satisfies the threshold for admission, set under Article 163 4 b of the Constitution. The applicant has demonstrated that the matter in question bears specific elements of real public interest and concern; and that its due consideration and resolution, will give certainty and predictability in the law.
Orders
37As we certify that the intended appeal cause bears elements of general public importance, we will set out specific Orders as follows:
DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 16TH DAY OF JULY, 2015. P. K. TUNOI JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURTM. K. IBRAHIM JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT J. B. OJWANG JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURTS. C. WANJALA JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT S. N. NDUNGU JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT I certify that this is a true copy of the originalRegistrarSupreme Court Of Kenya