PKA (Suing on her behalf and as next friend of her Minor Children) v NCBA Bank Kenya PLC & 3 others (Environment & Land Petition 17 of 2020) [2022] KEELC 3271 (KLR) (28 July 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEELC 3271 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Environment & Land Petition 17 of 2020
SO Okong'o, J
July 28, 2022
Between
PKA (Suing on her behalf and as next friend of her Minor Children)
Petitioner
and
NCBA Bank Kenya PLC
1st Respondent
Michael Angaya Arunga
2nd Respondent
Athinya Muthuri Haron
3rd Respondent
Purple Royal Auctioneers
4th Respondent
Ruling
1.By a petition dated 3rd March 2020, the Petitioner sought the following reliefs against the Respondents;i. A declaration that Article 27 of the Constitution is under threat of violation by the Respondents.ii. A declaration that the rights of the Petitioner and her children guaranteed under Articles 40 and 53 of the Constitution are under threat of violation by the Respondents.iii. Interpretation of the letter of offer dated 12th February 2014 issued by the 1st Respondent and executed by the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent.iv. An injunction stopping the 1st, 3rd and 4th Respondents either by themselves, their agents, workers and/or anyone claiming through them from concluding a sale and/or transferring the property known as L.R No. Kiambaa/Kihara/2861(hereinafter referred to as “the suit property”) to the 3rd Respondent or any other person.v. A declaration that any sale in respect of the suit property was in contravention of the rights of the Petitioner and her children and as such null and void.vi. An order prohibiting the Respondents from continued infringement of the rights of the Petitioner by discriminating and interfering with her quiet possession and enjoyment of her home on the suit property.vii. An order directing the 1st and 2nd Respondents to open a mortgage account, reconcile accounts in respect to the mortgage and forward all communication in respect to the said account with bank statements to the Petitioner.viii. Costs of the petition.ix. Any other relief that the court may deem fit and just to grant.
2.The Petitioner amended her Petition on 7th April 2020. The reliefs sought were not changed in any material respect save that in place of an injunction, the Petitioner sought a conservatory order. What I now have before me are two applications by the Petitioner. The first application was brought together with the original petition by way of Notice of Motion dated 3rd March 2020. In the application, the Petitioner sought the following orders;1.That the court do issue conservatory orders granting a stay of the intended sale purported to emanate from the unlawful and/or unprocedural auction that took place on 20th February 2020, the payment of the balance of the purchase price, transfer and/or any other dealings with the suit property and any further infringement of the rights of the Petitioner and her children by the Respondents, their agents and/or servants pending hearing and determination of this petition.2.That the costs of the application be provided for.
3.The application that was supported by the affidavit of the Petitioner sworn on 3rd March 2020 was brought on several grounds. The Petitioner averred that together with the 2nd Respondent, they took a loan from the 1st Respondent that was secured by a mortgage over the suit property that was registered in their joint names. The Petitioner averred that since the 1st Respondent failed to open a joint mortgage account in her name and that of the 1st Respondent, she was kept in the dark with regard to the repayment of the loan and the balances in respect thereof. The Petitioner averred that the 1st Respondent instructed the 4th Respondent to sell the suit property through public auction. The Petitioner averred that the 4th Respondent advertised the suit property for sale by public auction on 20th February 2020 but ended up selling the property to the 3rd Respondent by private treaty at a paltry sum of Kshs. 22,400,000/-. The Petitioner averred that the suit property had been valued in April 2019 at Kshs. 87,500,000/- being the open market value and Kshs. 65,625,000/- as the forced sale value. The Petitioner averred that the purported sale of the suit property was a sham and as such null and void. The Petitioner averred that she was apprehensive that the 1st Respondent would proceed and transfer the suit property to the 3rd Respondent on the basis of the said stage managed purported auction at the detriment of the Petitioner unless stopped by the court.
4.The Petitioner averred that her right to information and ownership of the suit property had been infringed by the Respondents. The Petitioner averred that she had been treated with contempt by the 1st and 2nd Respondents in that they refused to supply her with the statements of the loan account. The Petitioner averred that the 2nd Respondent was less bothered with the 1st Respondent’s said acts of aggression and had even threatened to divorce the Petitioner. The Petitioner averred that if the orders sought were not granted, the petition would be rendered nugatory.
5.The 1st and 4th Respondents opposed the application through a replying affidavit sworn by Dr. Jacob O. Ogola on 10th March 2020. The 1st and 4th Respondents termed the Petitioner’s application bad in law and an abuse of the process of the court. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the issues raised in the petition were substantially in issue between the same parties in ELC Suit No. 4 of 2018(hereinafter referred to as “the ELC Suit”). The 1st and 4th Respondent averred that the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent sought orders in the said ELC Suit to stop the sale and transfer of the suit property to the 3rd Respondent but the court declined to grant the orders in light of the fact that the suit property had already been sold. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that after the sale of the suit property, the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent amended their plaint in the ELC Suit and claimed reliefs similar to those sought in the petition herein.
6.The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the issues raised by the Petitioner as grounds in support of the present application were raised in the ELC Suit and considered by the court in a ruling that was delivered on 24th January 2019 and as such the same were res judicata. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent were given amble time by the 1st Respondent to clear the loan arrears but failed to do so. The 1st and 4th Respondents denied that they sold the suit property at undervalue. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the valuation report that was relied on by the Petitioner in support of that assertion was retracted by the valuer concerned and the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent were duly notified. The 1st and 4th Respondents denied that the public auction that was conducted by the 4th Respondent was a sham. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the Petitioner’s right to property must be weighed against the rights of the 1st Respondent as a chargee to exercise its statutory power of sale in the event of default by the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent to pay the outstanding loan. The 1st and 4th Respondents contended that the exercise of such power could not constitute a violation of the Petitioner’s property rights. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that they did not have an obligation to provide the Petitioner and her children with shelter which obligation was upon the state under Article 43 and 53 of the Constitution. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the issue of the legality of the auction sale of the suit property was pending determination in the ELC Suit and as such the same could not be determined in parallel proceedings brought by the Petitioner herein.
7.The Petitioner filed a further affidavit sworn on 7th April 2020 in response to the affidavit filed by the 1st and 4th Respondents. In the affidavit, the Petitioner to a large extent reiterated the contents of her affidavit in support of the application. The Petitioner contended that she had raised constitutional issues that this court had no jurisdiction to determine in the ELC Suit. The Petitioner denied that the issues raised in this petition had been raised and determined in the ELC Suit.
8.I have not seen on record a response by the other Respondents to the application dated 3rd March 2020.
9.The Petitioner’s second application was brought by way of Notice of Motion dated 14th March 2022. In the application, the Petitioner sought the following orders;1.That the court does issue an injunction against the 3rd Respondents’ agents and servants from continuing to distress for rent against the Petitioner pending the hearing and determination of the application for conservatory orders dated 3rd March 2020 scheduled for ruling on 28th July 2022.2.That the court does issue such directions as it deems fit for the expeditious hearing and determination of the petition.3.That the costs of the application be provided for.
10.he application dated 14th March 2022 that was supported by the affidavit of the Petitioner of the same date was brought on the grounds that the 3rd Respondent had purported to levy distress against the Petitioner while the Petitioner had no tenant and landlord relationship with the 3rd Respondent. The Petitioner contended that there was an application for conservatory orders pending ruling on 28th July 2022. The Petitioner averred that the 3rd Respondent had not responded to the petition and that save for the preliminary objection to the petition dated 7th March 2020, the 3rd Respondent had not filed any other pleading in the matter. The Petitioner averred that it had established a prima facie case against the Respondents with a high probability of success.
11.The application was opposed by the 1st and 4th Respondents and the 3rd Respondent by separate grounds of opposition. The 1st and 4th Respondents filed grounds of opposition dated 21st March 2022. The 1st and 4th Respondents contended that the Petitioner had no interest in the suit property having lost her right to equity of redemption upon the sale of the suit property. The 1st and 4th Respondents averred that the 3rd Respondent was a bona fide owner of the suit property having purchased the same at a public auction and was protected by law. The 1st and 4th Respondents contended that the 3rd Respondent was entitled to levy distress to recover mesne profits. The 1st and 4th Respondents termed the application an abuse of the process of the court.
12.The 3rd Respondent filed his grounds of opposition dated 25th April 2022. The 3rd Respondent contended that the application lacked merit. The 3rd Respondent contended that the court was functus officio over the issues raised in the application having made a ruling on similar issues. The 3rd Respondent averred that as the registered owner of the suit property, he was entitled to rent or mesne profits from the property. The 3rd Respondent contended that the reliefs sought were not based on the petition. The 3rd Respondent urged the court to declare the Petitioner a vexatious litigant and to dismiss her application.
The submissions:
13.The petitioner’s application dated 3rd March 2020 was heard by way of written submissions. The petitioner filed submissions dated 16th July2020 while the 1st and 4th Respondents filed submissions dated 20th January 2021. The 3rd Respondent did not file submissions in respect of this application. The applicant submitted that she had established a prima facie case of violation of her constitutional rights that entitled her to the conservatory order sought. On their part, the 1st and 4th Respondents submitted that a case had not been established for the grant of the conservatory order sought by the Petitioner.
14.The application dated 14th March 2022 was heard through oral submissions on 28th April 2022. In her submissions, the Petitioner reiterated the grounds set out on the face of her application and the supporting affidavit. The Petitioner submitted that the 3rd Respondent had employed the law of the jungle in his bid to take possession of the suit property. The Petitioner submitted that she was entitled to the orders sought pending determination of her application for conservatory orders. The advocate for the 3rd Respondent also reiterated the contents of the 3rd Respondents grounds of opposition and urged the court to dismiss the application. The 3rd Respondent submitted that the Petitioner’s application had been overtaken by events and that the Petitioner’s remedy if any was to seek damages. The 3rd Respondent submitted that the distress for rent complained of was not illegal as the 3rd Respondent as the owner of the suit property was entitled to enjoy his investment.
15.On their part, the 1st and 4th Respondent’s advocate submitted that the sale of the suit property to the 3rd Respondent had not been set aside. The 1st and 4th Respondent’s advocate submitted that the 3rd Respondent was entitled to recover mesne profits from the Petitioner who was occupying the suit property unlawfully. The 1st and 4th Respondents urged the court to dismiss the application as the Petitioner’s remedy was in damages.
Determination:
16.I have two applications before me. I will start with the application dated 3rd March 2020 which was the first to be filed and on which the second application dated 14th March 2022 was based.
The Notice of Motion dated 3rd March 2020:
17I have considered the application together with the affidavits filed in support thereof. I have also considered the responses by the Respondents to the application and the submissions by the parties. Article 22(1) of the Constitution provides as follows:Article 23(3) which deals with remedies for violation of or threat to fundamental rights or freedoms provides as follows:
18.The Petitioner’s contention is that the Respondents have violated her constitution rights and the constitutional rights of her children. The principles applied by the court in applications for conservatory orders are settled. In Nairobi High Court Petition No. 16 of 2011, Centre ForNRights Education and Awareness (CREAW) & 7 Others v Attorney General, the court stated as follows:
19.In Kevin K Mwiti & others v Kenya School of Law & others [2015]eKLR the court stated as follows on an application for conservatory order:
20.The Petitioner had a duty to establish on a prima facie basis that her right or fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights had been denied, violated or infringed by the Respondents. I am not satisfied that the Petitioner has discharged this burden. In Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta v Nairobi Star Publications Ltd. [2013] eKLR the court stated as follows:
21.This position was further emphasised in Leonida Aloo Odhiambo v Attorney General & another [2020] eKLR where the court stated as follows:
22.In Communications Commission of Kenya & 5 others v Royal Media Services Limited & 5 others [2014] eKLR the Supreme Court stated that:
23.The thread running through all the cited cases is that a court will not determine a dispute brought as constitutional issue where the same can be determined through other processes provided for in law. On the material before me I am unable to see any constitutional issue in the complaints that the Petitioner has put forward against the Respondents. I can only see a commercial dispute between a bank and a customer. It is not disputed that there is a civil suit pending before this court between the parties namely, ELC No. 4 of 2018 in which the issues that have been raised herein as constitutional issues have been raised. I am not persuaded that the jurisdiction of this court as a constitutional court has been properly invoked. In my view the proper forum for determination of the dispute between the parties is the pending civil suit.
24.I am also not satisfied that a prima facie case of violation or threatened violation of fundamental rights and freedoms has been established by the Petitioner. In Anarita Karimi Njeru v Republic [1980] eKLR the court stated that:
25.In the amended petition the Petitioner has set out several provisions of the constitution which she claims were violated by the Respondents. The Petitioner has also set out what she has referred to as particulars of violation of her rights. In my view, it is not enough to say that a right has been violated. The Petitioner was under a duty to show that the acts set out as violations of her rights are actually contrary to the provisions of the constitution that have been cited. In my view, the alleged violation of constitutional rights if true are mere breaches of the contractual arrangements that the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent had with the 1st Respondent and the statutes guiding that relationship which is the subject of the pending civil suit between the parties. Failure by a bank to provide a customer with a statement of a loan account or irregular or illegal sale of a property charged to a bank to secure a loan in my view raises contractual issues rather than constitutional issues.
26.What I have stated is enough to dispose of the application dated 3rd March 2020. I wish to add however that even if I had found that a prima facie case had been established by the Petitioner, I would still not have granted the conservatory order sought as prayed. The conservatory order is sought to stay the sale of the suit property through the alleged unlawful and/or unprocedural auction that took place on 20th February 2020, payment of the balance of the purchase price, transfer and/or any other dealings with the suit property and any further infringement of the rights of the Petitioner and her children by the Respondents, their agents and/or servants pending hearing and determination of this petition.
27.It is common ground that the sale of the suit property has been completed and the property transferred to the 3rd Respondent. The court cannot restrain or stay an act that has taken place. It is also worth noting that in the pending civil suit between the parties, the court had dismissed an application seeking to stop the sale of the suit property. In the circumstances, I would not have granted a conservatory order to stay the sale or transfer of the suit property.
28.Due to the forgoing, the Petitioner’s application dated 3rd March 2020 is not for granting.
The Notice of Motion application dated 14th March 2022:
29.I have considered this application together with the supporting affidavit. I have also considered the responses filed by the Respondents in opposition to the application. Finally, I have considered the submissions that were made before me by the parties. There are somethings that are beyond argument. The Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent were at all material times the registered proprietors of the suit property. They charged the suit property to the 1st Respondent as a security for a loan that was advanced to them. They failed to pay the loan. The 1st Respondent in exercise of its statutory power of sale sold the suit property through the 4th Respondent to recover the outstanding loan. The property was sold and transferred to the 3rd Respondent. The 3rd Respondent is now the Registered owner of the suit property. However, the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent have refused to vacate the suit property arguing that the sale thereof was unlawful.
30.Distress for rent can only be levied against a tenant. Does the refusal by the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent to vacate the suit property make them tenants of the 3rd Respondent? The answer is no. It is therefore my finding that the purported distress for rent that was levied against the Petitioner and the 2nd Respondent by High Class Auctioneers under the Distress for Rent Act, Cap. 293 Laws of Kenya to recover alleged rent arrears of Kshs. 4,800,000/- was illegal. The Petitioner is therefore entitled to an injunction to restrain the 3rd Respondent from continuing with an illegal distress against her.
Conclusion:
31.In view of the foregoing, I find no merit in the Notice of Motion application dated 3rd March 2020. The application is dismissed accordingly. With regard to the Notice of Motion dated 14th March 2022, an injunction is granted restraining the 3rd Respondent from levying distress or continuing with the distress for rent that he had commenced against the Petitioner pending the hearing of the petition. Each party shall bear its own costs of the two applications.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 28TH DAY OF JULY 2022.S. OKONG’OJUDGEJudgment read through Microsoft Teams Video Conferencing platform in the presence of;Mrs. Pamela Arunga, the Petitioner in personMr. Kabaiku for the 1st and 4th RespondentsMr. Owaga for 2nd RespondentMr. Kurauka for the 3rd RespondentMs. C. Nyokabi-Court AssistantPage 5 of 5