Case Metadata |
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Case Number: | Civil Case 2132 of 1991 |
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Parties: | NOSISI MUEMA v DARIUS MBELA & 7 OTHERS |
Date Delivered: | 15 May 1994 |
Case Class: | Civil |
Court: | High Court at Nairobi (Milimani Law Courts) |
Case Action: | Ruling |
Judge(s): | John Wycliffe Mwera |
Citation: | NOSISI MUEMA v DARIUS MBELA & 7 OTHERS [1994] eKLR |
Case Summary: | [Ruling] Civil Practice and Procedure-review-application to review and enhanced award of damages-application brought on the ground that new evidence had come into light after the hearing and judgment of the case –whether the new and important evidence warranted a review of the award- Order 44 rule 1 |
Disclaimer: | The information contained in the above segment is not part of the judicial opinion delivered by the Court. The metadata has been prepared by Kenya Law as a guide in understanding the subject of the judicial opinion. Kenya Law makes no warranties as to the comprehensiveness or accuracy of the information |
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
NOSISI MUEMA..................................................... PLAINTIFF
VERSUS
HON. DARIUS MBELA & 7 OTHERS...........DEFENDANTS
RULING
On behalf of Alice Waki Muema the Plaintiff (in HCCC2133/91) an application was filed in Court on 14.12.93 underOrder 44 rule 1 and the main prayer was for orders.
"1. 'That the judgment of 25th May 1993 by Hon. JusticeMwera be reviewed."
The applicant appended her affidavit sworn on 19.9.93in support thereof. Briefly put she said more or less what wasgiven in evidence leading to the judgment of 25.5.93. That whenthe accident, the cause of this suit took place she was astudent in India. She had been a good student but after theaccident her performance deteriorated. Still eager to pursueuniversity education and feeling, after treatment that she waswell enough for this she entered the University of Nairobi.She had to put in extra effort to cope with her studies even asat the time this suit was heard on 23.2.93. She deponed tofurther that to her dismay she performed so badly in theexaminations and she had to be discontinued. Various medical and psychological tests were carried out which, to her, pointedto the accident aforesaid. This state of affairs has causedthe applicant' such anguish and hardship especially now that her university education has come to a stop. That this courtshould consider this new evidence coming after the hearing andjudgment of the case, and a review should Be undertaken - anenhanced award of damages..
The parties filed, written submissions which the courtwill revert to presently. But a glance back at the judgment first. There the court considered, the injury, the treatmentand the prognosis by Prof. Sande. He. had observed inter aliathat the applicant had not suffered brain damage and herintellect would recover to pre-trauma level. A post-traumaticepilepsy could only occur in the first two years but this couldgo down slowly to 2% in ten years. If this occurred theapplicant's life style could change significantly and she couldneed drugs to manage her condition, but she had not developedany of this at all.
The court also noted 5 years after the accident that although the applicant had not continued her Universityeducation in India after this accident, she had returned to
Kenya, completed a Secretarial Course and even got admitted toUniversity to complete her studies. Indeed she had lookedintelligent alert and capable in the witness box. A sum ofshs. 3 50,000/= 'was awarded to her in general damages - after,of course considering cited cases.
U 4 4 L . I( CPRS) Says -
1. Any person considering himselfaggrieved -a. by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed but from which no appeal has been preferred; or by a decree or order from which no , appeal is hereby allowed,and who from the discovery of new and important matter or evidence which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within his knowledge or could not be -produced by him at the time whenthe decree was passed or the order made or on account of some mistake or errorapparent on the face of the record, or for any other sufficient reason desire to obtain a review of the decree or order, may apply for a review of the judgment of the court which passed the decree or made the order. It is considered that the applicant wished to rely on O44, 4 1(1) only and this is apparent from her affidavit andher counsel's submission.
It was submitted more or less on the same lines of the applicants affidavit that her current state of mental andintellectual condition should be attributed to the accident.The general damages should be enhanced to a Shs. 1.2 million(i.e. by Shs.; 350,000/=}. It was added that the applicants life has, as it were, been ruined and she will have to settle for something a lot less than her pre-accident life and reviewing a Judgment to enhance damages initially awarded at all.
On behalf of the Defendant/Respondent the submissionopened by questioning what new and important evidence that had been discovered which could not be placed before court During the hearing. She had given evidence and had been Cross examined during the trial. A medical report (by Prof. Sande) had been produced. The applicant had successfully completed a Secretarial Course on her return to Kenya, She. was an average student at the University of Nairobi. She had not seen a doctor for over 4 years and she said that she was feeling quite well.
Mr. Mwiti went into Prof. Sande s report (supra) andconcluded that Prof. Ndetei ONLY tested the applicant'smental and intellectual position AFTER she failed herUniversity examination. According to him this should have been before or during the trial whereat the report could havehelped the court. The submission urged the court not to relyon Prof. Ndetei's report since it did not reveal any new andimportant evidence. Prof. Sande's report was the morecomprehensive, over a long period and incorporating testslike brain scanning. Prof. Ndetei did. none of these and hisreport was more inclined to assumptions. The original awardshould thus remain undisturbed.
After considering (or rereading) the judgment, theapplication before me with the appended affidavit plus the msdical report by prof ndetei ( of 29.7.93) recourse has also been attending to the applicant; he examined her and did tests which included brain scans. He found no damage to the brain and he set out in her case, what could or could not be. Prof. Sande's report set out a prognosis. Conceded, he could not be 100% accurate as things change in a human body.
But he was the best man whom the applicant attended and it is assumed that he gave the best report he could come up with. On the other hand Prof. Ndetei' s report cannot be said to be faulty in its own right. He examined the applicant mentally. He observed her well and also considered what her mother said of her changed personality and behavior. But to this court's view this report did take in some few assumptions, e.g. "Those changes in personality would suggest some damage on the frontal lobes". This statement hardly appears firm and specific. Then after perusing Prof. Sande's report which he had as he examined the applicant Prof. Ndetei said"
- - - the brain scan reports were normaland did not show any obvious pathology.This of course does not rule out moresubtle brain damage which cannot be ruledout by a brain scan."That could as well be true but how can the court be helped by such a statement to conclude that new and important evidence had been discovered long after the trial? In no way at all. Probably Prof. Ndetei could help more by carrying out tests/examinations and establishing that indeed there was more subtle brain damage which Prof. Sande did not detect at the time of his examination. Indeed the court was equally inclined to say that Mr. Ndetei further assumed' when he stated that
"Equally important is the fact that thedamage during the accident must have fee-contributed significantly to her failureto finish university education."Again granted the applicant suffered a head injury in the accident and she was unconscious for several days. Prof. Sande said as much but if there was no brain damage and after 4 or 5 years,epeleptic attacks had not occured, how did Prof. Ndetei come to this conclusion?
Prof.. Ndetei evaluated the applicant AFTER she failedher University examination. She had earlier on successfullyfinished a secretarial course (so her evidence went) could itbe that at this point, like any student who failsexaminations the applicant was depressed and despondent?Could it have been of more use had Prof. Sande done theevaluation rather than Prof. Ndetei? This court will not gofar in asking such questions.
At the end of the day, the court was not satisfied thatnew and important evidence since the trial had been placedbefore it to warrant a review of the award of Shs. 350,000/ =in general damages. The application is dismissed with costs.
As for special damages amounting to Shs. 35,384/50supported by receipts, placed before the defendant who didnot object, if that be true, then that sum is hereby awardedto the applicant.
Orders accordingly.
Delivered and dated this 15th day of May, 1994.
J .W. MWERA
JUDGE