Case Metadata |
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Case Number: | Petition 9 of 2020 |
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Parties: | Getao v Mokare & 4 others |
Date Delivered: | 16 Jul 2021 |
Case Class: | Civil |
Court: | Supreme Court of Kenya |
Case Action: | Judgment |
Judge(s): | Isaac Lenaola, Mohammed Khadhar Ibrahim, Philomena Mbete Mwilu, Smokin Charles Wanjala, Njoki Susanna Ndungu |
Citation: | Getao v Mokare & 4 others (Petition 9 of 2020) [2021] KESC 36 (KLR) (16 July 2021) (Judgment) |
Case History: | (Being an Appeal from the Judgment of the Court of Appeal (Makhandia, Musinga & Gatembu, JJ.A) in Civil Appeal No. 361 of 2014 delivered at Nairobi on 1st December 2017) |
County: | Nairobi |
History Docket No: | Civil Appeal 361 of 2014 |
History Judges: | Daniel Kiio Musinga, Milton Stephen Asike-Makhandia, Stephen Gatembu Kairu |
Case Summary: | Equality in undivided shares of a group ranch is based on acreage as opposed to the value of the property. Brief facts The appellant was the administrator of the deceased’s estate, whom it was alleged that at the time of his death, had been in occupation and possession of the suit property. The 3rd respondent was a group ranch comprised of about 519 members and owned about 100,000 hectares in a parcel of land from which the suit property was excised. The Ministry of Lands consented to the dissolution and subdivision of the ranch into equal individual holdings to the registered members. After subdivision, the deceased’s estate was allocated a different parcel of land (the allocated land) and not the originally occupied land. The import therefore was that the appellant and other beneficiaries of the deceased’s estate had to vacate the suit land and relocate to the allocated land. The appellant and one of his brothers failed to vacate the suit property thereby compelling the 1st respondent to institute a suit at the trial court in a bid to evict them. The appellant claimed that the dissolution of the 3rd respondent was conditioned on the principle that, all the members would be allocated a share of all that parcel occupied at the time of dissolution. It was contended that the 2nd and 3rd respondents contravened that condition and allocated the suit property to the 1st respondent. He therefore claimed that his and the dependents’ fundamental rights to a fair administrative action, to own property, equality and freedom from discrimination had been violated. The trial court found that the 1st respondent had been lawfully allocated the suit property, ordered the appellant to vacate and deliver the same with vacant possession to the 1st respondent within 90 days of the date of the judgment and in default thereof, be evicted. Aggrieved, the appellant filed an appeal at the Court of Appeal which dismissed the appeal with costs. The appellant was further aggrieved and thus filed the instant appeal. Issues
Held
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History County: | Nairobi |
Case Outcome: | Petition dismissed. |
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