Ogaga (Suing as the Legal Representative of the Estate of Turufena Kemunto Ogaga-Deceased) v Ogaga & 3 others (Civil Appeal 45 of 2018) [2022] KECA 1422 (KLR) (16 December 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KECA 1422 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal 45 of 2018
PO Kiage, S ole Kantai & M Ngugi, JJA
December 16, 2022
Between
Grace Adhiambo Ogaga (Suing as the Legal Representative of the Estate of Turufena Kemunto Ogaga-Deceased)
Appellant
and
William Ochieng Ogaga
1st Respondent
Tom Ochieng Ogaga
2nd Respondent
Elkana Okoth Ajuoga
3rd Respondent
The Hon. Attorney General
4th Respondent
(Being an Appeal from the ruling of the Environment and Land Court in Migori (G.M.A Ong’ondo J.) dated 1st February, 2018 in ELC Case Number 290 of 2017 Formerly Kisii ELC Case No. 96 of 2016
Environment & Land Case 290 of 2017
)
Judgment
JUDGMENT OF MUMBI NGUGI JA
1.This appeal arises out of a ruling of the Environment and Land Court (ELC) sitting in Migori in which the court struck out the appellant’s suit with costs to the respondents. In so doing, the court (Ong’ondo J) upheld a preliminary objection by the 4th respondent that it had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the appellant’s claim against the respondents; that the claim is res judicata, disclosed no reasonable cause of action, and was barred by the statute of limitation.
2.Dissatisfied with the ruling, the appellant has lodged the present appeal challenging the ruling of the court. In her memorandum of appeal dated April 26, 2018, she asserts that the trial court erred in all respects in ruling in favour of the 4th respondent on all the grounds set out in the notice of preliminary objection.
3.The appellant was further aggrieved that the trial court found that it has no jurisdiction to entertain the suit. She prays that the ruling be set aside and her suit reinstated, and that the costs in this and the trial court be awarded to her.
4.The appellant had filed a suit by way of plaint dated April 11, 2016 against the respondents. She alleged in her suit that one Turufena Kemunto Ogaga (deceased), who died on March 2, 2005, was the absolute owner of land parcel number 855, now known as Lambwe West/Lambwe West ‘B’/855. She further alleged that on September 19, 2005, the 4th respondent fraudulently inserted the names of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd respondents in the land adjudication record, as a result of which they were registered as co-owners of the suit land and a title deed issued to them.
5.Accordingly, the appellant sought a declaration that the insertion of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents in title number Lambwe West/Lambwe West ‘B’/855 was done irregularly, illegally, unlawfully and unprocedurally, and was therefore null and void; an order directing the Land Adjudication Officer, Homa Bay County, and the Land Registrar, Ministry of Lands, Homa Bay Land Registry, to cancel the names of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents in the land adjudication records and land registry records with respect to the suit property; and an order directed at the Land Adjudication Officer and Land Registrar, Ministry of Lands, Homa Bay Land Registry, to have the suit land parcel revert into the name of Turufena Kemunto Ogaga as the sole and absolute owner. The appellant also sought the costs of the suit and any other relief that the court would see fit and just to issue.
6.The 1st and 2nd respondents each filed a memorandum of appearance dated August 19, 2016 together with a notice of admission of the suit of the same date. The 3rd respondent did not enter appearance or file a response.
7.The 4th respondent, the Office of the Attorney General, who was sued on behalf of the Land Adjudication Officer and the Lands Registrar, Homa Bay, entered appearance and filed a statement of defence dated December 22, 2016 denying the plaintiff’s claim. The 4th respondent further stated that in the event that any registration was done on the suit land, which was denied, then it was done in good faith. Further, that he was not an expert in detecting fraud and could not and is not mandated to either investigate or detect if the documents presented for registration at his office were forgeries. Additionally, the 4th respondent issued a notice of preliminary objection dated December 22, 2016 raising the points of law aforesaid, which were upheld by the trial court.
8.In her written submissions dated May 19, 2020, the appellant submits that the trial court erred in relying solely on the 4th respondent’s submissions and thereby arriving at the conclusion that objections in relation to the adjudication were recorded on the adjudication record without any proceedings of the objections being furnished to the court. That being the custodian of the said documents, the 4th respondent failed to produce the said documents to ascertain whether the objections recorded on the adjudication record were between the owner of the land and the respondents. The appellant further submits that the trial court failed to take into consideration that the 1st and 2nd respondents admitted to the facts of fraud enumerated in the plaint, which she submits confirms that indeed there were no proceedings that took place between the appellant or the deceased whom the appellant represents.
9.Regarding the finding that the suit was time barred, the appellant submits that upon discovering fraud on February 2, 2016, she had requested for the land documents in respect of the suit land, and the documents were supplied on February 4, 2016. She had filed the suit two months later, so her claim was not time barred.
10.With respect to the finding of the trial court that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the claim, the appellant submits that the trial court failed to appreciate that at the time of filing of the suit and/or discovery of fraud by the appellant, the suit land was already registered and was not under adjudication. She relies in support of this submission on the case of Fredrick Tureisa Lekesike v Iman Dahir & 3 others (2019) eKLR.
11.The appellant further submits that the trial court erred in holding that the suit was time barred, noting that the events complained of took place in 2005 while the suit was filed in 2016, a period that is within the period of limitation for recovery of land. It is her submission that the trial court had failed to consider that the suit was for recovery of land and not a tort; that even though the tortious claim of fraud was raised, the suit was for recovery of land that had been illegally registered in the names of the respondents.
12.In highlighting the appellant’s submissions at the hearing of the appeal, learned Counsel, Mr PD Onyango, emphasised that the trial court had erred in holding that the appellant’s suit was res judicata. He observed that the deceased had passed away in 2002 and the objections relied on by the trial court had been raised in 2005. The issues raised in the trial court dealt with fraud and illegality which were not the issues raised in the objection proceedings. If there had been objection proceedings, they had not been supplied to the appellant by the 4th respondent.
13.To the question whether the suit was statute barred, Mr Onyango submitted that this was a claim for land, the limitation period in respect of which was 12 years. The suit was filed when the appellant discovered the fraud pursuant to a letter to the Land Registrar, Homa Bay, dated February 2, 2016. The suit was therefore filed within the 12 years’ statutory period.
14.For the 4th respondent, learned Counsel, Mr Wabwile, submitted that there were two objection proceedings before the 1st and 2nd respondents were registered jointly with another as co-owners of the suit property. Further, that a party who was aggrieved by the objection proceedings was required under the Land Adjudication Act to lodge an appeal to the Minister within 60 days after the determination of the proceedings or by way of judicial review to challenge the decision of the Land Registrar. The appellant had failed to do this, and her suit was therefore unsustainable.
15.In submissions in reply, Mr Onyango argued that the suit land was registered pursuant to section 29 of the Land Adjudication Act. This, therefore, paved the way for the dispute to be handled by the Environment and Land Court. Further, that section 13 of the Environment and Land Court Act gives the court jurisdiction to hear and determine the issues that were before it.
16.Before considering the arguments made in support of and in opposition to the appeal, I observe that there are a few intriguing facts in this matter. From the pleadings before the Court, the appellant and the 1st and 2nd respondent are siblings, daughter and sons, respectively, of the initial owner of the land, Turufena, who passed away in 2002. From the record, at the time of her demise in 2002, she was registered, with the 1st to 3rd respondents, as the owner of the suit land. It appears that adjudication and titling of the land took place in 1986, though there are entries made in the adjudication record in 2005. The land was registered as Lambwe West/Lambwe West ‘B’/855 and title issued in the names of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents.
17.According to the appellant, she discovered that the land had been registered in the names of her siblings in February of 2016, eleven (11) years after the registration, as a consequence of which she filed her claim before the trial court. She alleged fraud against the respondents-that the land was fraudulently registered in the said names, before succession proceedings to the estate of the deceased owner had taken place. I note that she applied and obtained letters of administration ad litem on February 22, 2016.
18.A third intriguing aspect is the response of the 1st and 2nd respondents to the suit. They each filed a notice of admission of the claim-essentially saying that 'Yes, there was fraud in our registration, with the 3rd respondent, as proprietors of the suit land.'
19.This appeal raises the question whether the trial court erred in allowing the 4th respondent’s preliminary objection and finding that the appellant’s suit was res judicata, statute barred, and that the trial court had no jurisdiction to hear and determine it, there being an alternative remedy that the appellant should have pursued.
20.In reaching the decision to allow the 4th respondent’s preliminary objection, the trial court considered the appellant’s contention that no objection had been heard by the Land Adjudication officer, Homa Bay after the death of the proprietor of the suit land and that the names of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd respondents had been entered into the register fraudulently and unprocedurally. The trial court noted the position of the 4th respondent that a first objection, number 966/1.083, had been lodged by one Ramadhan Maftal Ondur and allowed on September 19, 2005 but later reversed. A second objection, No 967, was lodged on 11th October, 2005 by the 3rd respondent and was allowed, resulting in the registration of the 1st -3rd respondents as the proprietors of the suit land. I will revert to this finding later in this judgment.
21.The court observed that the appellant was also one of those registered with the 1st -3rd respondents as proprietors of the suit land, but this appears to be an error. The 1st and 2nd respondents were children of the deceased while the 3rd respondent was a buyer, apparently of one and a half acres of the suit land. The objections had been determined by the Adjudication Officer in accordance with the provisions of section 26 of the Land Adjudication Act Cap 284 Laws of Kenya (now repealed).
22.A party dissatisfied with the decision of the Adjudication Officer on an objection could appeal to the Minister under the Act. Section 26 to 29 of the Land Adjudication Act set out the procedure for resolution of disputes arising under the Act/ Under section 29 (1), it was provided that:
JUDGMENT OF KIAGE, JA
1.I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment of Mumbi Ngugi, JA with which I agree, and have nothing useful to add.
2.As Kantai, JA also agrees, the appeal shall be disposed of as proposed by Mumbi Ngugi, JA.
JUDGMENT OF KANTAI, JA
1.I have seen in draft the Judgment of my Sister Mumbi Ngugi, JA and I am in full agreement with the argument and conclusion reached. It is good law that where a certain procedure is prescribed in law a party aggrieved should follow it and only resort to the courts where that procedure has been followed and exhausted. The Land Adjudication Act had an elaborate procedure for dispute resolution. The appellant failed to follow that procedure at all. The appeal should be dismissed.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT KISUMU THIS 16TH DAY OF DECEMBER 2022MUMBI NGUGI……………………………JUDGE OF APPEALP. O. KIAGE……………………………JUDGE OF APPEALS. ole KANTAI……………………………JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a true copy of the originalSignedDEPUTY REGISTRAR