Attorney General v. Lohay Akonaay and Joseph Lohay
Court
of Appeal (Nyalali C.J., Makame and Kisanga JJA.): December 21, 1994
Civil
Appeal No. 31 of 1994
Constitutional Law-constitutional interpretation-legislation- whether Constitution to be interpreted in manner that subordinates it to any other law
Constitutional Law-
deprivation of property-prohibition-Constitution prohibits deprivation of
unexhausted improvements and where value added to land without fair
compensation-whether law providing for deprivation of property without fair
compensation contrary to Constitution-Regulation of Land Tenure (Established
Villages) Act 1992
Constitutional
Law-justiciable dispute-ouster of courts-whether ouster of jurisdiction of
ordinary courts to deal with justiciable dispute unconstitutional-courts’
inherent jurisdiction to strike out invalid statutes-whether unconstitutional
provisions of statute may be severed leaving remainder of statute
Constitutional Law-Trustee-Public Land- President as trustee
For indigenous inhabitants
of land-whether may deal with land in manner detrimental beneficiaries
The respondents, namely
Lohay Akonaay and Joseph Lohay were father and son, resident in the village of
Kambi ya Simba, Mbulumbulu Ward, Mbulu District, in Arusha Region.
In January 1987, they
successfully instituted a suit for recovery of land held under customary
tenure. An eviction order was subsequently issued for the eviction of the
judgment debtors and the respondents were given possession of the piece of land
in question. At the time of the decision in the present case, Civil
Appeal No. 6 of 1991 was pending in the High Court.
Before that appeal could
be disposed of, a new law, the Regulation of Land Tenure (Established Villages)
Act 1992 came into force on December 28, 1992. It declared the extinction
of customary rights in land, prohibiting the payment of compensation for such
extinction, ousting the jurisdiction of the courts, terminating proceedings
pending in the courts, and prohibiting the enforcement of any court decision or
decree concerning matters in respect of which jurisdiction was ousted. It
also established, inter alia, a tribunal with exclusive jurisdiction to
deal with the matters taken out of the jurisdiction of the courts.
Aggrieved by this new law,
the respondents petitioned against the Attorney General in the High Court under
Articles 30(3) and 26(2) of the Constitution of the United Republic of
Tanzania, for a declaration that the new law was unconstitutional and
consequently null and void. The High Court (Munuo J.) granted the
petition and ordered the new Law to be struck off the statute book. The
Attorney- General appealed and hence the present appeal.
From the lower court records, it was
established that during the colonial days, the respondents acquired a piece of
land under customary law. Between 1970 and 1977, there was a country-wide
operation undertaken in the rural areas by the government and the ruling Party,
to move and settle the majority of the scattered rural population into villages
on the mainland of Tanzania. One such village was Kambi ya Simba, where
the respondents resided.
During the exercise, commonly
referred to as operation Vijiji, there was widespread re-allocation of and
between the villagers concerned. Among those affected were the
respondents, who were moved away from the land they had acquired during the
colonial days to another piece of land within the same village. The
respondents were apparently not satisfied with this reallocation and it was for
the purpose of recovering their original piece of land that they sued in the
case already mentioned.
Before their case could be concluded
in 1989, the Extinction of Customary Land Right Order 1987 was made by the
appropriate Minister under the Land Development (Specified Areas) Regulations
1936 and the Rural Lands (Planning and Utilization) Act, 1973. The Order
extinguishing all customary rights in land in 92 villages within Arusha Region
listed in a schedule and vested the land concerned in the respective District
Councils having jurisdiction over the area where the land was situated.
The respondents’ village was listed as No. 22 in that
schedule.
Held:
1. The
President holds public land on trust for the indigenous inhabitants of that
land. As trustee of public land, the President cannot deal with public land in
a manner in which he wishes or which is detrimental to the beneficiaries of
public land. He may deal with it only where it appears to him to be in
the general interests of Tanganyika.
2. A
law should not be interpreted to lead to an absurdity. The indigenous
population of this country is validly in occupation of land as beneficiaries of
such land under customary law and any disposition of land between them under
customary law is valid and requires no prior consent from the President.
3. Regulation
3 of the Land Regulations 1948, which requires every disposition of a Right of
Occupancy to be in writing and to be approved by the President only applies to
a Right of Occupancy granted under S. 6 of the Land Ordinance and has no application
to customary or deemed rights of occupancy, where a consent is required only in
the case of a transfer by a native to non-native.
4. The
Constitution is supreme to every other law or institution and cannot be
interpreted in a manner that subordinates it to any other law.
5. Customary
or deemed rights in land, though by their nature are nothing but rights to
occupy and use the land, are nevertheless real property protected by the
provisions of Article 24 of the Constitution. Their deprivation without
fair compensation for unexhausted improvements and even where there are no
unexhausted improvements but value is added to the land, is prohibited by the
Constitution.
6. The
Constitution allows for the establishment of quasi-judicial bodies, such as the
Land Tribunal. It does not however allow the courts to be ousted of
jurisdiction by conferring exclusive jurisdiction on such quasi-judicial
bodies. Consequently, the purported ouster of jurisdiction of the
ordinary courts to deal with any justiciable dispute is unconstitutional.
7. Where
a statute is found by a competent court to be null and void, court has inherent
powers to make a consequential order striking out such invalid statute from the
statute book. The court would invalidate the unconstitutional provisions and
uphold the remainder of the Statute.
Appeal partly allowed and partly
dismissed. No order as to costs.
Legislation considered:
1. Constitution
of the United Republic of Tanzania Articles 4, 13(5), 13(6)(a), 24(1)
2. Constitution
(Consequential, Transitional and Temporary Provisions) Act, 1984
3. Extinction
of Customary Land Rights Order 1987
4. Land
Development (Specified Areas) Regulations, 1986
5. Land
Ordinance Cap 113
6. Land
Tenure (Established Villages) Act, 1992
7. Land
Regulations 1948 Regulation 3
8. Regulation
of Land Tenure (Established Villages) Act No. 22 of 1992
9. Rural
Lands (Planning and Utilization) Act, No. 14 of 1973
Cases referred to:
1. Amodu
Tijan v. The Secretary Southern Nigeria [1921] 2 AC 399
2. Attorney
General of Alberta v. Attorney General of Canada [1947] AC 503
3. Hewlett
v. Minister of Finance [1981] ZLR 571
4. Mtoro
bin Mwamba v. Attorney General (1953) 20 EACA 108
5. Shah
v. Attorney General (No.2) [1970] EA 523
Felix Mrema,
Deputy Attorney General and
Sasi
Sasulu, State Attorney for Attorney General
Lobulu and Sang’ka, for the
respondents
0 Comments
PLACE YOUR COMMENT HERE
WARNING: DO NOT USE ABUSIVE LANGUAGE BECAUSE IT IS AGAINST THE LAW.
THE COMMENTS OF OUR READERS IS NOT OUR RESPONSIBILITY.