Daqare Transporters Limited v Barclays Bank of Kenya (Civil Case 30 of 2007) [2021] KEHC 160 (KLR) (Commercial and Tax) (14 October 2021) (Ruling)
Neutral citation number: [2021] KEHC 160 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Case No. 30 of 2007
F Tuiyott, J
October 14, 2021
Between
Daqare Transporters Limited
Plaintiff
and
Barclays Bank of Kenya
Defendant
Ruling
1.The Application dated 5th September 2020 is brought by the Defendant and seeks the dismissal of this suit for want of prosecution.
2.The Application is anchored on the provisions of order 17 rules (2) and (3) of the Civil Procedure Rules which read:-
3.Prior to the filing of the application, this matter was last in Court on 13th July 2018, which would be more than a year before the bringing of the application. The one year threshold of the rule is therefore achieved.
4.The applicant contends that although this matter is more than 13 years old, the suit has never been certified ready for hearing and the plaintiff has not shown any interest in prosecuting it. The defendant thinks the plaintiff to be an indolent litigant. In an affidavit sworn by Dennis Joseck Mare on 5th September 2020 it is deponed that:-
5.In Court, counsel sought to add two more grounds. That the defendant’s witnesses have left employment and that the defendant has over time undergone transformation. The Court will not consider these two additional grounds because they are matters of evidence which cannot be raised from the bar.
6.In a replying affidavit sworn by Suleiman Bashir Warsame, a director of the plaintiff Company, he seeks to explain the inaction that this matter has suffered. In the main, it is that a co-director, one Abdi Abshir Warsame who was personally seized of the matter on behalf of the company, died on 27th January 2018 and for that reason the advocates could not reach him. That after the death of Abdi, he took up the running of the company but was still not aware of this matter until 9th March 2021 when served with a hearing notice to the current application .
7.He pleads with the Court not to grant the orders as the defendant is still keen to prosecute this matter which had certified ready for hearing on 29th June 2016.
8.The delay in the prosecution of this matter is inordinate when one considers that it was filed about over 13 years ago. Whilst the matter was certified ready for hearing on 29th June 2016, the record shows the three attempts at hearing were unfruitful due to reasons attributable to the plaintiff. See Court proceedings of 18/05/2017, 31/10/2017 and 10/4/2018.
9.The only reason given for the current delay is that the director who was seized of this matter passed on 27th January 2018 and Mr. Suleiman Bashir Warsame who is now in charge of the matter was not aware of it. Further, that the advocate was unable to reach them. In considering the merit of those reasons, the Court must give regard to the material already on the record.
10.On 10th April 2018, Mr. Busiega holding brief for the plaintiff’s advocates informed Court that the plaintiff’s case could not proceed because one of its witness Abdi Abshir Warsame had passed on. This was on information they had received the previous day. This is the person who, the court is told, was the director seized of this matter. The source and how the information of the death of the director was given was not disclosed.
11.After a lapse of about 20 months, the Advocates for the plaintiff applied to cease acting through an application of 5th February 2020. In the affidavit in support by George Kithi, the managing partner of the firm of Kithi & Co. Advocates, no mention of that death is made. He deposes:-
12.That firm was granted leave to cease acting on 25th February 2021 but came back on record through a Notice of appointment of 17th March 2021.
13.The Plaintiff in this matter is a limited liability company and not the deceased director. A party to a suit ought to be interested in the progress of his/her action. In this case it is the plaintiff company, not just one director, who ought to have been following up on the prosecution of the suit. It will be a derelict of duty on the part of the current director not to have an interest in this litigation. And I very much doubt that Mr. Sulieman would not be aware that this suit had been filed when the core objective of the suit is to compel the defendant bank to accept him (Sulieman) as a signatory of an account held by the company at the bank. Paragraph 15 of his own affidavit filed in response to the current application is testimony that he could not possibly not have been aware of these proceedings. He depones;
14.Mr. Sulieman was at the very heart of the controversy that is the subject of these proceedings. He confesses that failure to make changes regarding the signatories has caused great hardship to the daily affairs of the company. Is it believable that he would then not be aware of litigation whose objective was to relieve the company of that hardship?
15.The Court does not accept the explanation proffered by the plaintiff and in view of the prolonged and inordinate delay in prosecuting this matter must accede to the request by the defendant. The application dated 5th September 2020 is allowed as prayed. Costs of the application and the suit to the defendant.
DATED AND SIGNED THIS 29TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER 2021F. TUIYOTTJUDGEDATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 14TH DAY OF OCTOBER 2021A. MABEYA, FCI ArbJUDGE