AT
DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL
APPLICATION NO. 2 OF 2007
HAMAD
OMARI …………………………………… APPLICANT
VERSUS
YUSUFU
ISSA ………………………………………. RESPONDENT
(Application
for leave to appeal to the
Court
of Appeal from the Decision
of
the High Court of Tanzania
at
Tanga)
(Longway,
J.)
dated
the 30th day of April, 2004
in
(DC)
Civil Appeal No. 21 of 2002
-------------------
RULING
25 August, 2008
MROSO, J.A
The
respondent Yusuf Issa, as administrator of the estate of late Siwamwe d/o Ally,
successfully sued the applicant, Omari Hamadi (sic) (Hamadi Omari?), in the
District Court at Tanga, for a declaration that a house on Plot No. 11 Block
100 on Street 15 in Tanga Municipality, was part of the estate of late Siwamwe
and, therefore, a transfer of the title relating to the house to the applicant
be nullified. The applicant appealed in vain
to the High Court at Tanga, Longway, J., against the judgment of the District
Court. His application to the High
Court, Mkwawa, J., for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal was thrown
out. He has now resorted to this Court
for leave to appeal.
This
application was to be heard in Tanga during the last sessions there but because
the respondent needed to file an affidavit in reply and there was not enough
time for him to do so while the Court was still in Tanga, both parties agreed
that the hearing could be done in Dar es Salaam.
The
proceedings in the trial District Court, including the judgment of that court, are
not in the record but from the judgment of the High Court and an elaborate
decree of the District Court and also from the filed affidavits, the following
position is apparent.
According
to the applicant, late Siwamwe Ally was the aunt of his late father Omari
Hamad. During her lifetime she gave
absolutely her house referred to earlier in this ruling to the applicant’s
father out of love and affection. She
manifested her intention in writing on 16th June, 1988. She put her thumb mark on the document which
was also signed by the donee and three witnesses, Sefu Sudi and a ten cell
leader one Yusuf Mssangi and one Batuli Hamadi.
On
20th June, 1988 late Siwamwe also signed by a thumb mark another
similar document (Exhibit D2). This
latter document was also signed by the donee Omari Hamadi, as well as by the
same witnesses who had signed on the earlier document. This time, however, the signing was before a
Primary Court Magistrate and the document bears the signature of the magistrate
and a court seal.
On
12th July, 1988 a document titled “Transfer of Right of Occupancy”
relating to the same house was issued by one O.E. Mzava, a Land Assistant of
Tanga Land Office. The transfer
certificate was issued to Omari Hamadi, the applicant’s father. The stamp duty on the document was apparently
paid nine years later, on 2nd June, 1997. That was a day before “Hati ya haki ya Ardhi”
was issued to the said Omari Hamadi on 3rd June, 1997. According to that document Omari Hamadi was
granted a Right of occupancy of the plot comprising Siwamwe’s house for a
period of 33 years.
When
Omari Hamadi died on 2nd January, 2000 the applicant was appointed administrator
of the estate of his late father and he considered the house on Plot No. 11
Block 100 in Ngamiani, Tanga as part of that estate.
It
is not clear to me from the materials that are before me when Siwamwe died, but
it appears her death preceded that of Omari Hamadi. The respondent was appointed administrator of
her estate. He claimed that the disputed
house on Plot 11 Block 100, Ngamiani, Tanga had remained the property of
Siwamwe until she passed away and formed part of her estate after she
died. The two courts below agreed with
the respondent. The applicant thinks that with all the evidence
which showed that the property had been transferred to late Omari Hamadi during
the lifetime of Siwamwe, those two courts below must have erred and it is now
his attempt to go to the Court of Appeal to have his claim indicated.
The
High Court, Mkwawa, J., which as already mentioned, heard the applicant’s application
for leave to appeal to this Court, was of the view that the judgments of both
the High Court and the trial District Court to the effect that the transfer of
the title to the disputed plot to Omari Hamadi was done fraudulently, was
proper. That was because the decision in
the case was based on the credibility of witnesses as assessed by the trial
court and that an appellate court was not entitled to fault a decision of a
trial court which is based on credibility of witnesses. Since a second appeal to the Court of Appeal was
only on a point of law and the learned judge could not find “any material that
will warrant the second appellate court to reverse findings of facts that were
made by the trial court”, he found no merit in the application and dismissed
it.
It
seems to me that since the decisions of the two courts below on the finding
that the transfer of the disputed plot was fraudulent, it is a point of law
worth investigating by the Court of Appeal whether those courts were correct in
their finding that the facts as were before the trial court showed that there
had not been a valid transfer in law of the plot by Siwamwe Ally to Omari
Hamadi, so that the property would form party of the estate of late Omari
Hamadi.
I,
therefore, allow the application and grant leave to the applicant to appeal the
Court of Appeal. The applicant to get
his costs. It is so ordered.
GIVEN AT DAR ES SALAAM this 26th
day of August, 2008
J.A. MROSO
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of
the original.
(F. L. K. WAMBALI)
REGISTRAR
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