AT
DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL
APPLICATION NO.38 OF 2007
ALAWI RAJAB KASSIM……………….………………….APPLICANT
AND
M/S UPAMI GROUP CO.
LTD
AND FOUR OTHERS……………………………….…..RESPONDENT
(Appeal
from the Ruling/Decision of the Court of Appeal of Tanzania
at Dar es Salaam )
(Mjasiri,
J.)
Dated the 30th
day of January, 2007
In
Commercial Case No. 38 of
2006
--------------------------------------
RULING:
20 April 24 May,
2007:
MUNUO, J.A.:
The
applicant, Alawi Rajabu Kassim, through the services of Mr. Nyangarika, learned
advocate, filed the present application under a certificate of urgency seeking
an order for striking out the notice of Appeal instituted against an
interlocutory order in Commercial Case No. 38 of 2006 in the Commercial Division
of the High Court at Dar es Salaam . The respondents, Upami Group Co. Ltd. and 4
others, were represented by Mr. Luguwa, learned advocate.
The
main suit which is still pending in the Commercial Court at Dar es Salaam , arose from a dishonored cheque
issued by the respondents to repay a loan they had raised from the
applicant. The cheque bounced after
which the respondents failed to settle the debt giving rise to the summary
suit. The respondents allegedly declined
to accept summons causing the learned judge, Dr. Bwana, to enter ex-parte
judgment and decree on the 4th September, 2006. Subsequently, the respondents applied for
stay of execution, an order for setting aside the ex-parte judgment and decree,
and leave to appear and defend the suit.
Mjasiri, J. allowed the application on the 30th January, 2007
in the following terms:
(i)
The judgment and decree
dated September 4, 2006 is hereby set aside.
(ii)
Leave is given to the
defendants to appear to the summons and to defend the suit.
(iii)
The defendants deposit in
court the sum of Sh. 33,700,000/= two weeks from the date of this order.
(iv)
Costs to be costs in the
cause.
The
respondents were dissatisfied with the cash deposit order so they filed a
Notice of Appeal to challenge the same.
Meanwhile, the applicant filed this application seeking an order to
strike out the Notice of Appeal on the grounds that:
(a)
the notice of appeal
contravenes the mandatory provisions of section 5 (2) (d) of the Appellate
Jurisdiction Act, 1979 as amended by the Written Laws (Miscellaneous
Amendments) Act, 2002 (Act No. 25 of 2002) in that the cash deposit order is
not appeallable; and
(b)
no leave has been sought
and obtained to appeal against the said order.
The
application is supported by an affidavit, deponed to by Mr. Alawi Rajabu Kassim,
the applicant, stating that he instituted a suit to recover Sh. 33,700,000/= he
had lent to the respondents, plus interest and costs of the suit on the 16th
January, 2006 in the Commercial Court.
Judgment was entered upon the respondents’ default to enter appearance
which judgment was later on set aside by the learned judge. The applicant contended at paragraph 8 of his
affidavit, that the cash deposit order requiring the respondents to pay in
court the sum of Sh. 33,700,000/= within two weeks commencing the 30th
January, 2007, is an interlocutory order which is not appeallable as of right.
Adopting
the affidavit in support of the application, counsel for the applicant
maintained that the cash deposit interlocutory order is not appeallable, no
leave to appeal was sought and obtained before instituting the notice of Appeal
so the intended appeal is incompetent and ought, therefore, to be struck out
with costs. Counsel for the applicant
cited the cases of Blueline Enterprises
Ltd. versus East African Development Bank, Civil Application No. 103 of 2003
(CA) (unreported); Freeman Aikael Mbowe and The Hon. Attorney General versus
Alex O. Lema, Civil Appeal No. 84 of 2001 (CA) (unreported) and the case of Dar
es Salaam Bulky Transport Ltd. versus Hollywood Group (T) Ltd, Civil
Application No. 39 of 2000 (CA) (unreported). In these cases, counsel for applicant
submitted, the court struck out cases because mandatory leave had not been obtained
thereby rendering the appeal incompetent.
He further noted that in the Blueline
Enterprises Ltd. case, the cases
of Shinyanga Region Cooperative Union
(1984) Ltd. versus Pan African Corporation Ltd. Civil Appeal No. 70 of 1999
(CA) (unreported); Asmin Rashid versus Boko Omari (1997) TLR 146; Willow
Investment versus Mbombo Ntumba and 2 others (1997) TLR 93; and Ludovick K. Mboma versus National
Bank of Commerce (1997) TLR 26; were cited as decisions in which the Court
struck out cases for want of mandatory leave to appeal. On these authorities, Mr. Nyangarika urged,
the Court should strike out the Notice of Appeal because the intended appeal is
incompetent.
Mr.
Luguwa, learned counsel for the respondents opposed the application. He contended that leave is not mandatory in
the present case so the authorities cited by learned counsel for the applicant
are distinguishable and thence not applicable to this case. Furthermore, counsel for the respondents
contended, the cash deposit order was issued in exercise if the original
jurisdiction of the High Court so it is appeallable as of right. The case of Freeman Aikael Mbowe, counsel for the respondents observed, was an
election matter governed by Election Rules it so is distinguishable and also
not relevant to the present case.
Counsel
for the respondents opined that the cash deposit order in dispute is a
preliminary decree and in view of the fact that the High Court made the Order
in exercise of its original jurisdiction, the same is appeallable under the
provisions of Section 5 (1) (b) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 so the
intended appeal is competent and should, therefore, not be struck out.
The
issue is whether the cash deposit order in dispute is an interlocutory order.
Counsel
for the applicant contended that the cash deposit order in question is an
interlocutory order and thence not appeallable under section 5 (2) (d) of the
Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 which bars appeals from interlocutory orders
by stating –
5 (2) (d) no appeal shall lie against any preliminary or
interlocutory decision or order of the Commercial Division of the High Court
unless such decision has the effect of finally determining the suit.
The
learned judge did not give reasons for issuing the cash deposit order. The said order was made suo motu. The cash was to be deposited in Court within
a period of fourteen days i.e. two weeks.
Since the Order was made at the instance of the trial court without any
adjudication on the validity or need for the same, the Order is, in my
considered view, final in itself although it does not finally determine the
suit. The Order is final because it
requires the respondent to deposit Sh. 33,700,000/= which is equivalent to the
principal sum reflected at paragraph 8 of the plaint, in court within a
fortnight, impliedly for safe custody, which money would, in the event of the
suit succeeding conveniently pay the principal sum. Because the Order was made suo motu without
recording reasons for the Order, its propriety is questionable. Hence the Notice of Appeal to challenge the
particular Order.
Counsel
for the respondent insisted that the Order is appeallable as of right because
it was issued by the High Court in exercise of its original jurisdiction. Mr. Luguwa asserted that the Order is
appeallable under section 5 (2) (c) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979
which provide, inter-alia:
5 (2) (c) no appeal shall lie against any decision or
order of the High Court in any proceedings under Head (c) of Part III of the
Magistrates Courts Act, 1984 unless the High Court certifies that a point of
law is involved in the decision or order.
The present case did not commence in the
subordinate court so an appeal against the order in dispute would not fall
under section 5 (2) (c) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979.
The cash deposit Order would also not be
a preliminary decree as argued by counsel for the respondents. Section 2 of the Civil Procedure Act, Cap 33,
defines the word decree as:
“decree” means the formal expression of an application
which, so far as regards the court expressing it conclusively determines the
rights of the parties with regard to all or any of the matters in controversy
in the suit and may be either preliminary or final. It shall be deemed to include the rejection
of a plaint and the determination of any question within section 38 or section
89, but shall not include -
(a)
an adjudication from which
an appeal lies as an appeal from an order; or
(b) any
order of dismissal for default.
Explanation: A decree is preliminary when further proceedings have to be
taken before the suit can be completely disposed of. It is final when such adjudication completely
disposes of the suit. It may be partly
preliminary and partly final.
The
Civil Procedure Code also defines the word –
“decree holder” means any person in whose favour a
decree has been passed or an order capable of execution has been made.
The cash deposit Order made by the trial
court would not be a preliminary decree. Counsel for the applicant rightly
rejected this notion by pointing out that the cash deposit order was not made
in favour of the plaintiff so it was not a preliminary decree. Neither was it capable of being executed in
favour of the applicant plaintiff because it simply required the respondents to
deposit Sh. 33,700,000/= in court within two weeks. I am of the settled view that the cash
deposit order was not a preliminary decree because the suit was then at the
stage of pleadings and the rights of the parties had not yet been determined by
the trial court. Moreover, the cash
deposit order was not granted to the applicant plaintiff. Had the material order been granted in favour
of the applicant, it would have qualified as a preliminary decree.
Having ruled that the cash deposit order
was not an interlocutory order in that it was a final order of depositing Sh
33,700,000/= in court within two weeks which order was made by the learned
judge in exercise of the original jurisdiction of the High Court, the next
question is whether such Order is appeallable with, or without leave.
The intended appeal, in my considered
opinion, falls under the provisions of Section 5 (1) (c) of the Appellate
Jurisdiction Act, 1979 which allows appeals
(5) (1) (c) with leave of the High
Court or of the Court of Appeal, against every other decree, order, judgment, decision or finding of
the High Court.
The effect of not obtaining mandatory
leave to appeal under the provisions of Section 5 (1) (c) of the Appellate
Jurisdiction Act, 1979 was observed by Samatta, C.J. in the Dar es Salaam Bulky Transport Ltd. case
cited supra wherein the Court stated:
………… In
my opinion, there can be no rational controversy over the fact that, according
to Section 5 (1) (c) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979, in this case the
respondent cannot come to this Court without first obtaining leave to appeal. It has not sought that leave and the
prescribed period within which to do so has expired, and no application for
extension of time has been filed. That
being so, the respondent’s notice of appeal hangs on nothing; you cannot put
something on nothing and expect it to stay there, it will inevitably fall
down. That is what must happen to the
respondent’s notice.
Likewise, in this case, the respondents
not having applied for, and, or obtained leave to appeal against the cash
deposit order in question, the Notice of Appeal is rendered incompetent.
In the result ground 1 of the
application fails. The application is
accordingly allowed on ground 2 resulting in the notice of appeal and intended
appeal being struck out with costs for want of leave to appeal pursuant to the
provisions of Section 5 (1) (c) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979.
DATED
at DAR ES SALAAM this 24th
day of May, 2007.
E.
N. MUNUO
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of
the original.
S.
M. RUMANYIKA
DEPUTY
REGISTRAR
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