IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT
DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL
APPLICATION NO. 161 OF 2007
AMOUR
HABIB SALUM…………………..………………APPLICANT
VERSUS
HUSSEIN
BAFAGI………………………..…………….RESPONDENT
(Application
for stay of execution from the Judgment and Decree of the High Court of Tanzania at Dar es Salaam )
(Oriyo,
J.)
dated
the 29th day of December, 2005
in
Civil Appeal No. 274 of
2001
------
RULING
26 February & 17 March, 2008
MUNUO, J.A.:
The applicant, Amour Habib Salum,
through the services of Ms Hamida Sheikh, learned advocate, brought a notice of
motion under a certificate of urgency, seeking stay of execution in Civil
Appeal No. 274 of 2001 in High Court of Tanzania at Dar es Salaam which
judgment was delivered on the 29th December, 2005, pending the
determination of Civil Revision No. 143 of 2007. The grounds of the Notice of Motion are
stated as follows:
(a) The
notice of motion for revision proceedings has been lodged;
(b) the
application for revision has a lot of merit, as the applicant was a bonafide
third purchaser of the suit property.
(c) that
if stay is not granted, it will defeat the very purpose of filing this
application as well as the nationale of filing the application for revision
proceedings.
(d) that
the applicant will suffer irreparable loss, which cannot be atoned by way of
damages;
(e) fairness,
equity and natural justice.
In
his affidavit in support of the application, the applicant deponed at paragraph
3 that in 1997 he purchased the house in
dispute, located on Plot No. 113 Ndalala Street, Block A, Temeke, Dar es Salaam
from one John Semsela without incumbrance or caveat lodged in the Land
Registry implying that he was a bona fide purchaser for value without
notice. He then put his family into
occupation of the same. To his surprise,
and without notice, the family was evicted by the Court broker per the Eviction
Order dated the 16th January, 2008.
Hence the present application for stay of execution.
Counsel for the applicant contended that
the purported eviction was by way of ambush so it was unlawful. The Court, she urged, should restore the
applicant into occupation of the house because although the applicant was
evicted by the Court Broker, the respondent has not yet been put into
possession so the premises are vacant at the moment. She stated that the applicant’s family will
suffer great hardship if stay is not granted.
Mr. El Maamry, learned advocate for the
respondent, contended that eviction was indeed lawfully conducted by the Court
Broker as ordered by the trial court so execution was completed and as such,
the application for stay of execution has been overtaken by events and ought,
therefore, to be dismissed with costs.
A copy of the Eviction Order was
tendered at the hearing. It shows that
the Court of Resident Magistrate at Kisutu issued it on the 16th
January, 2008. It was executed by the
Court Broker on the 18th January, 2008.
The question is whether execution, the
subject matter of the application for stay, has been conducted.
The Eviction Order, duly endorsed by the
Court Broker, speaks for itself. The
Court Broker’s endorsement at the back of the Execution Order reads:
AMRI
YA MAHAKAMA IMETEKELEZWA TAREHE 18/01/2008 KWA KUMTOA MDAIWA NDANI YA NYUMBA. BAADA YA UTEKELEZAJI NIMEMKABIDHI MDAI NYUMBA
YAKE. MJUMBE HAJATUPA USHIRIKIANO.
HATUKUCHUKUA KITU.
Sahihi
ya Dalali: ……..sgd……..
18/01/2008
Sahihi
ya Mdai: ………..sgd……
Sahihi
ya Mdaiwa: (none)
The
above endorsement simply states that the Court Broker executed the Eviction
Order on the 18th January, 2008 by removing the defendant (now
applicant) and handing over the premises to the plaintiff (now
respondent). The ten cell leader of the
area refused to cooperate with the Court Broker in the execution process.
At the hearing, the parties conceded that
eviction was actually conducted by the Court Broker as ordered by the trial
court but the learned counsel for the applicant challenged the eviction saying
it was by way of ambush so it was unlawful.
Learned counsel for the respondent countered that eviction was lawfully
done in compliance with the court order but that later the applicant blocked
the entrance of the house by parking a motor vehicle at the gate/door to deny
the respondent access to the house.
In such circumstances, can it be said
that the decree has been conducted and the application for stay has been
overtaken by events?
The learned author, Mulla on the Indian
Code of Civil Procedure, 14th Edition, at Page 1188 observes that –
“An order for a stay of
execution implies that the decree has not been executed. Therefore, where a decree has been executed,
no order for stay can be made under this rule.”
The
Court invoked the above rule in the cases of the National Bank of Commerce versus Justo Msechu & Sons Ltd. Civil
Application No. 2 of 1997 (CA) (unreported); and the General Manager KNCU (1990) Ltd. versus Mbatama Rural Cooperative
Society, Miscellaneous Civil Application No. 1 of 1999 (CA) (unreported) in
which the Court struck out applications which had been overtaken by events
because the execution of the decrees had been completed.
In this case, the Court Broker evicted
the applicant from the premises on the 18th January, 2008 per the
endorsement on the Eviction Order. In
that regard, the decree was executed on the 18th January, 2008. Under the circumstances the present
application for stay of execution has been overtaken by events so the
application is incompetent.
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