AT
DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL
APPLICATION NO. 79 OF 2006
In
the Matter of an intended Appeal
FARIDA MBARAK
FARID AHMED MBARAK………………………………..APPLICANT
AND
DOMINA KAGARUKI………………………………..…RESPONDENT
(Application
for Stay of execution from the
Decision
of the High Court of Tanzania
at Dar es Salaam )
(Kileo,
J.)
Dated
the 21st day of April, 2006
in
Land
Case Civil Appeal No. 51 of 2004
-------------
RULING
8th
Sept. & 19th Oct. 2006
MUNUO, J. A.:
The
Co-applicants, Farida and Farid Mbarak, through the services of Mr. Silyster
Shayo and Mr. Nyangarika, learned advocates, are seeking an order for stay of
execution of the decision in Land Case No. 51 of 2004 in the Land Division of
the High Court of Tanzania before Kileo, J., pending the determination of an
intended appeal to this Court. The
respondent, Domina Kagaruki, was represented by Mr. Rwebangira, learned
advocate.
Mr.
Shayo adopted the affidavit’s of Mr. Farid Ahmed Mbarak, Mr. Kassim Nyangarika,
and a supplementary affidavit in support of the application for stay of
execution.
The
2nd applicant, Farid Ahmed Mbarak, stated at paragraph 3 of this
affidavit that he bought the suit property for Sh. 28 million from the
Liquidator of AISCO and that the respondent possesses part of the land in
question. He deponed at para 4 of his
affidavit that the decision of the High Court deprives him of the property he
purchased without compensation which is against human and constitutional
rights. He stated at paragraph 5 of his
affidavit in support of the application for stay of execution, that his
intended appeal has good chances of success so the application for stay should
be allowed.
Mr.
Nyangarika attacked the decision of the High Court from which the applicants
have lodged a notice of Appeal and also applied for leave to appeal to this
Court. He stated at paragraph 11 of his
affidavit that the applicant will suffer irreparable loss if stay of execution
is not granted for the results of the intended appeal will be nugatory if the
said appeal succeeds. In the
supplementary affidavit in reply to the Counter-affidavit of the respondent,
the 2nd applicant denied alleged forgery and fraud in the sale
transaction. In short counsel for the
applicants urged the Court to grant stay of execution because on the balance of
convenience, the applicants stand to suffer irreparable loss and greater
hardship than the respondent if stay of execution is withheld.
Mr.
Rwebangira, learned advocate, opposed the application. He contended that there is no ground for
granting stay of execution because the applicants did not particularize the
irreparable loss they would suffer if stay of execution is not granted. He cited the cases of National Insurance
Corporation and another versus MECCO UNISYS LTD., Civil Application No. 102 of
2004, Court of Appeal of Tanzania (unreported), and Murtaza Mohamed Raza Virani
versus Mehboob Hassanali Versi, Civil Application No. 16 of 2005, Court of
Appeal of Tanzania (unreported) wherein the Court listed the conditions for granting
stay and stressed that irreparable loss should be substantiated and not merely
alleged.
Counsel
for the respondent opposed the idea of maintaining the status quo for the
reason that the applicants demolished the respondent’s boundary wall so the latter
is now rebuilding it in which case an order for maintaining the status quo
would prevent the reconstruction of the border wall for security.
Furthermore
counsel for the respondent contended that the intended appeal has no chance of
succeeding at all so the application should be dismissed for want of merit.
The
issue is whether there is ground for granting stay of execution.
The
Court pronounced the conditions for granting stay of execution in the case of
Tanzania Electric Supply Co. Ltd. And 2 others versus Independent Power Ltd.,
Consolidated Civil Applications Nos 19 and 27 of 1999, Court of Appeal of Tanzania
(unreported). The factors for granting
stay of execution are three:
(a)
“That
the applicant would suffer irreparable
loss if stay of execution is withheld;
(b)
that
there is a serious triable issue in the intended appeal; and
(c)
that
on the balance of convenience, the applicant would suffer greater hardship than
the respondent if stay of execution is not granted.”
These
ingredients for granting stay of execution, in the opinion of counsel for the
respondent, have not been established by the applicants so there is no ground
for granting stay of execution. In the
case of Tanzania Sewing Machines Co. Ltd. versus CRDB (1996) and another Civil
Application No. 9 of 1999, Court of Appeal of Tanzania (unreported), the Court
observed that:
“The
Court has on a number of occasions held the view that it is not sufficient to
assert in general terms that the applicant will suffer irreparable loss,
particulars have to be shown of the irreparable loss to be incurred.”
At
paragraph 4 of his affidavit is support of the application, the second
respondent stated that the decision of the High Court has deprived him of
property he purchased without giving him compensation implying he will suffer
loss if stay of execution is not granted.
If the problem is compensation, the same could be atoned by way of
damages, if it were claimed or counter-claimed.
Be it as it may, the applicants did not specify the loss they would suffer
if execution is not stayed.
Under
the circumstances, there is no ground for exercising the Court’s discretion for
staying execution in the present case.
In
the light of the above, I dismiss the application with costs.
Dated
at Dar es Salaam
this 19th day of October, 2006.
MUNUO J. A,
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of
the original.
S. M. RUMANYIKA
DEPUTY REGISTRAR
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