National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE ENVIRONMENT AND LAND COURT AT NAIROBI
ELC REFERENCE NO 1 OF 2018
THE NATIONAL LAND COMMISSION..........................................APPLICANT AND
AFRISON EXPORT IMPORT LIMITED……….....1ST INTERESTED PARTY HUELANDS LIMITED…………………………......2ND INTERESTED PARTY COUNTY GOVERNMENT OF NAIROBI…….......3RD INTERESTED PARTY DIRECTOR OF SURVEYS………………………....4TH INTERESTED PARTY CHIEF LAND REGISTRAR …………………….....5TH INTERESTED PARTY CABINET SECRETARY - MINISTRY OF
EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY.....6TH INTERESTED PARTY ATTORNEY GENERAL….........................................7TH INTERESTED PARTY ETHICS AND ANTI-CORRUPTION
COMMISSION……………………………................8TH INTERESTED PARTY CABINET SECRETARY - MINISTRY OF
LANDS AND PHYSICAL PLANNING….…….......9TH INTERESTED PARTY DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS….....10TH INTERESTED PARTY PATRICK THOITHI KANYUIRA………........….11TH INTERESTED PARTY RULING OF B M EBOSO J.
Background
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 1/6
National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
1. On 2/8/2018, the National Land Commission (the applicant) brought a reference under Article 162(2)(b) of the Constitution of Kenya 2010 and Section 127 and 128 of the Land Act, seeking a determination of the following six verbatim issues:
a) The construction, validity or effect of the title document over LR 7879/4 - the applicant refers this issue for consideration so that the court can determine whether the two schools sit on public land or private land;
b) Whether or not the compulsory acquisition of the land occupied by the two schools as being undertaken by the applicant meets the constitutional threshold of public purpose – the question shall determine whether there has been loss of public funds as a result of payment of the partial award of compensation of Kshs.1,500,000,000/-;
c) The person to whom compensation is payable – the applicant seeks this court to determine whether an award compensation is payable to an agent/nominee/assignee of the person duly identified as having interest in the land upon request. The validity and/or effects of the payment of the partial award of compensation made to the 1st and 2nd interested parties through their agent/nominee/assignee, Whispering Palms Estate Limited;
d) Of vesting and formal taking of possession of compulsorily acquired land – at what point should the applicant take possession of compulsorily acquired land: either after payment of the initial award of compensation or upon gazettement of the notice of intention to acquire;
e) An opinion on whether a search of a title at the Registrar is conclusive evidence of proprietorship; and
f) What other steps, if any, the applicant and any other person can undertake to confirm the authenticity of a title before transacting on it.
2. Together with the reference, the applicant brought a notice of motion under certificate of urgency, dated 2/8/2018, seeking the following six orders:
a) That this application be certified as urgent and that the same be heard ex parte in the first instance.
b) That the honourable court herein grants conservatory orders staying any civil and/or criminal proceedings in respect of any of the processes touching on the compulsory acquisition of LR 7879/4 pending the hearing and determination of the application herein.
c) That the honourable court herein grants conservatory orders staying any civil and/or criminal proceedings in respect of any of the processes touching on the compulsory acquisition of LR 7879/4 pending the hearing and determination of the Reference herein.
d) That the honourable court herein directs that all the parties herein do file all their respective documents, correspondences and any other instrument used in the process of compulsory acquisition of LR 7879/4 within 7 days from today.
e) That the reference herein be heard on priority basis.
f) That cost of this application be provided for.
3. Both the reference and the notice of motion were supported by an affidavit sworn on 1/8/2018 by Professor Muhammad A Swazuri, Chairperson, National Land Commission. It is also noted that both the reference and the application do not have respondents; they only have the above eleven interested parties. Lastly, it is noted that prayers 1, 2, 4 and 5 of the application are now spent. They were disposed prior to the constitution of the current uneven bench of judges now seized of this matter. By consent of the parties, the question as to whether the conservatory order should be granted were reserved for determination by the uneven bench of judges. Similarly reserved for determination by the bench was the preliminary objection which raised the question as to whether this court has jurisdiction to issue a conservatory order relating to criminal processes. What substantially remains of the application is therefore prayer 3 which relates to the question as to whether this court should issue a conservatory order staying
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 2/6
National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
any civil and or criminal proceedings in respect of any of the processes touching on the compulsory acquisition of Land Reference Number 7879/4 pending the determination of the reference herein. The reference was heard on 25/1/2019 and a determination is scheduled for 10/5/2019. Prayer 6 relates to costs of the application under consideration.
Issues
4. Two issues fall for determination in the Notice
of Motion dated 2/8/2018. The first issue is the question as to
whether the Environment and Land Court established under Article
162(2)(b) of the Constitution as read together with Sections 4 and
13 of the Environment and Land Court Act has jurisdiction to grant a
conservatory order relating to criminal processes. The second issue
is whether the applicant has demonstrated a proper basis for grant
of a conservatory order staying any civil and/or criminal
proceedings in respect of any of the processes touching on the
compulsory acquisition of the suit property. I will deal with the
two issues in that order.
Jurisdiction
5. The first issue relates to the jurisdiction of
this Court. The broad jurisdiction of the Environment and Land Court
is donated by Article 162 of the Constitution which establishes the
three tiers of Kenya’s Superior Courts. It provides thus:
1) The superior courts are the Supreme Court, the Court
of Appeal, the High Court and the courts referred to in clause (2)
2) Parliament shall establish courts with the status of the High
Court to hear and determine disputes relating
to-
a) employment and labour relations;
and
b) The environment and the use and occupation of, and
title to, land.
3) Parliament shall determine the jurisdiction and
functions of the courts contemplated in clause
(2)
4) The subordinate courts are the courts established
under Article 169, or by Parliament in accordance with that
Article. 6. In the discharge of the mandatory
obligation placed on it by the Constitution, Parliament enacted the
Environment and Land Court Act and set out in details, the
jurisdiction of the Court. Section 13 of the Act outlines the
jurisdiction of the court as follows: 13 Jurisdiction of
the Court
1) The court shall have original and appellate
jurisdiction to hear and determine all disputes in accordance with
Article 162(2)b of the Constitution and with the provisions of this
Act or any other law applicable in Kenya relating to environment and
land. 2) In exercise of its jurisdiction
under Article 162(2)(b) of the Constitution, the Court shall have
power to hear and determine disputes-
a) relating to environmental planning and protection,
climate issues, land use planning, title, tenure, boundaries, rates,
rents, valuations, mining, minerals and other natural
resources.
b) relating to compulsory acquisition of
land;
c) relating to land administration and
management;
d) relating to public, private and community land and
contracts, choses in action or other instruments granting any
enforceable interest in land; and
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 3/6
National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
e) any other dispute relating to environment and land.
3) Nothing in this Act shall preclude the Court from hearing and determining applications for redress of a denial, violation or infringement of, or threat to, rights or fundamental freedom relating to a clean and health environment under Articles 42, 69 and 70 of the Constitution.
4) In addition to the matters referred to in
subsections (1) and (2), the Court shall exercise appellate
jurisdiction over the decisions of subordinate courts or local
tribunals in respect of matters falling within the jurisdiction of
the Court
5) Deleted by Act No. 12 of 2012
6) Deleted by Act No. 12 of 2012
7) In exercise of its jurisdiction under this Act, the
Court shall have power to make any order and grant any relief as the
Court deems fit and just, including-
a) interim or permanent preservation orders
including injunctions;
b) prerogative orders;
c) award of damages;
d) compensation;
e) specific performance;
f) restitution; or
g) declaration; or
h) costs
7. It is to be noted that under Article 165(5), the
Constitution expressly bars the High Court against exercising
jurisdiction in respect of matters reserved for the Supreme Court or
falling within the jurisdiction of the third tier superior courts
established under Article 162(2) of the Constitution. Article 165(5)
of the Constitution provides thus:
“The High Court shall not have jurisdiction in respect
of matters:
a) reserved for the exclusive jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court under this Constitution, or
b) falling within the jurisdiction of the courts
contemplated in Article 162(2)”
8. A plain reading of the above constitutional and
statutory framework on the jurisdiction of the Environment and Land
Court reveals that the Environment and Land Court which is the court
contemplated under Article 162(2)(b) of the Constitution, has a
broad constitutional jurisdiction to hear and determine disputes
relating to the environment and the use, occupation, and title to
land. The Constitution donated powers to Parliament to legislate a
legal framework elaborating on that broad constitutional framework.
In so doing, Parliament at Section 13(7) of the Environment and Land
Court Act empowered the Court to make any order or grant any relief
as the Court deems fit and just, including interim and
permanent preservation orders. Parliament did not limit the
jurisdiction to grant interim or permanent preservation orders to
civil processes only. It simply gave the Court jurisdiction to issue
preservation orders. It is therefore my view that, if Parliament
wanted this particular jurisdiction to be restricted
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 4/6
National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
only to civil processes, it would have done so. In its wisdom, it did not restrict the court’s jurisdiction to grant preservation orders to civil processes alone.
9. It is not lost to me that, in its day to day adjudication of disputes relating to environment and the use and title to land, the Court is oftentimes confronted with disputes relating to rival allegations of fraudulent titles. Fraud is a criminal offence. The court is often invited to determine which of the rival titles is fraudulent and which is bona fide. It is expected that whenever the court is invited, in appropriate cases, it will be at liberty to exercise its jurisdiction under Section 13(7) of the Environment and Land Court Act and issue conservatory orders relating to both civil and criminal processes relating to any impugned title facing allegations of fraud. The same applies to cases in which the court is invited to exercise judicial review jurisdiction in criminal proceedings relating to criminal offences under the Environmental Management and Coordination Act (the EMCA) and other relevant statutes. 10. I am therefore satisfied beyond doubt that under Section 13(7)(a) of the Environment and Land Court Act, this court has jurisdiction to issue preservatory orders relating to both civil and criminal processes. That jurisdiction is however limited to matters relating to environment and the use and occupation, and title to land.
Conservatory Order
11. The second issue for determination is whether the applicant has made out a case for grant of a conservatory order. The jurisprudential principle upon which our courts exercise jurisdiction to grant conservatory orders was outlined by the Supreme Court of Kenya in the Case of Gatirau Peter Munya v Dickson Mwenda Kithinji & 2 others eKLR as follows:
“Conservatory orders bear a more decided public law connotation: for these are orders to facilitate ordered functioning within public agencies, as well as to uphold the adjudicatory authority of the court, in the public interest. Conservatory orders, therefore, are not, unlike interlocutory injunctions, linked to such private-party issues as ‘the prospects of irreparable harm’occurring during the pendency of a case; or ‘high probability of success’ in the applicants case for orders of stay. Conservatory orders, consequently, should be granted on the inherent merit of a case, bearing in mind the public interest, the constitutional values, and the proportionate magnitudes and priority levels attributable to the relevant causes”
12. This Court is currently seized of a reference brought by the National Land Commission under Part VIII, Section 127 of the Land Act, which provides thus:
Reference of matters to the Court for determination by the Commission
1) The Commission may at any time, by application in the prescribed form, refer to the Court for its determination any question as to-
a) the construction, validity or effect of any instrument;
b) the persons who are interested in the land concerned;
c) the extent or nature of their interest;
d) the persons to whom compensation is payable;
e) the shares in which compensation is to be paid to tenants in common;
f) the question whether or not any part of a building is reasonably required for the full and unimpaired use of the building; or g) the condition of any land at the expiration of the term of which it is occupied or used.
2) Without prejudice to the powers of the Court under this Part, the costs of any reference to the Court under subsection (1)
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 5/6
National Land Commission v Afrison Export Import Limited& 10 others [2019] eKLR
shall be paid by such person as the court may direct or where the court does not give direction, by the Commission.
13. It is to be noted that Part VIII of the Land Act contains the legal framework under which the state exercises the power of eminent domain. The agency empowered by the Constitution to exercise that power on behalf of the state is the applicant herein. The tenor and import of Section 127 of the Act is that, whenever the National Land Commission has any doubt regarding any of the matters itemized under that section, it is allowed to seek a determination thereon by this court. That is the precise jurisdiction which this court has been invited to exercise in the present reference.
14. Instructively, what is before this court is not a petition by a citizen of this Country alleging apprehended fear of imminent violation of a right under the Bill of Rights. More importantly, no citizen of this Country has placed before us any material to suggest that he is threatened with imminent violation of his constitutional rights through any criminal or civil process relating to the reference herein. If that were to happen, that citizen will be at liberty to initiate an action within the framework of the Bill of Rights and ventilate his grievances before the appropriate forum. None has been ventilated before us by a citizen of this Country. What is before the Court is a reference by the National Land Commission seeking the Court’s interpretation within the framework of Section 127 of the Land Act.
15. It is to be noted that the 10th interested party brought a formal application praying for an even bench of judges to dispose the reference herein. He contended that the reference herein raises substantial questions of law and bears public interest elements. He urged the court to certify the reference as one that deserves to be disposed by an uneven bench. That plea was granted. At this point, nothing has been demonstrated to suggest that the 10th interested party has acted or is about to act in a manner that undermines the work of the court in the present reference.
16. The totality of the foregoing is that the National Land Commission does not deserve the conservatory order it seeks. If any of its commissioners or servants is reasonably apprehensive that any of the interested parties herein is about to take precipitate action in violation of the Constitution, that individual is at liberty to bring an appropriate action and ventilate his grievances.
17. In summary, I overrule the preliminary objection to the jurisdiction of this court. I similarly decline the prayer for a preservatory order by the National Land Commission. Since Justice Obaga agrees with my final findings on the two issues, both the preliminary objection and the prayer for a conservatory order are lost. The final orders of the court shall be as set out in the ruling of Obaga J.
18. Because of the public nature component of the reference herein, my finding on the issue of costs is that each party shall bear their own costs of the material application and the preliminary objection.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI ON THIS 1ST DAY OF FEBRUARY 2019.
B M EBOSO
JUDGE
While the design, structure
and metadata of the Case Search database are licensed by Kenya
Law under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0
International, the texts of the judicial opinions contained in
it are in the public domain and are free from any copyright
restrictions.
Read our Privacy Policy | Disclaimer
http://www.kenyalaw.org - Page 6/6