IN THE COURT
OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT DAR ES
SALAAM
CIVIL APPLICATION
NO. 118 OF 2006
VERSUS
TANZANIA ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY
LIMITED ………. RESPONDENT
(Application
to strike out Notice of Appeal from the Judgment of
the High
Court of Tanzania, Land Division,
at Dar
es Salaam )
(Kileo J.)
dated the 1st
day of July, 2005
in
Land Case
No. 73 of 2004
-------------
R U L I N
G
18 September 2007
& 1 February 2008
MROSO, J,A.
The
applicant’s house was razed down by fire believed to have been caused by
electrical fault. The respondent company
which supplied electricity to the house was successfully sued and was ordered
to pay damages to the applicant. When
the respondent was sued in the High Court, Land Division, the Presidential
Parastatal Reform Sector Commission, henceforth to be referred only as the
Commission, was joined as a second defendant because the respondent had been
declared a Specified Public Corporation under section 38 (1) of the Public
Corporations Act, Cap. 257 of the Revised Edition, 2002.
The
respondent was aggrieved by the decision of the High Court and sought to appeal
to the Court of Appeal of Tanzania . It obtained leave of the High Court under
section 47 of the Land Disputes Courts Act, No. 2 of 2002 to appeal to the
Court of Appeal. It did not join the
Commission as a co-appellant.
The
applicant has lodged a Notice of Motion under Rule 82 of the Court of Appeal
Rules, 1979 praying that this Court should strike out the appeal for incompetence,
raising four grounds. First, that the respondent should have
joined the Commission as a necessary party.
Second, that no proper leave
to appeal was obtained from the High Court.
Third, that it should have
sought and obtained leave to amend the memorandum and record of appeal to join
the necessary party. Fourth, that the respondent lacks locus standi in the intended
appeal. At the hearing of the
application the applicant was represented by Mr. Eli Uronu and the respondent
by Mr. Jamhuri Johnson, the respective learned counsel who had also represented
them before the High Court. The said
counsel respectively filed an affidavit in support of the case for their
clients.
In arguing
the first ground Mr. Uronu relied on the provisions of sections 39 (1) and 43
(1) of Cap. 257. Section 39 (1) provides
that once a public corporation is declared a specified public corporation, the
Commission shall be responsible for restructuring it. The powers of the Commission are spelt out in
section 43. Under sub-section (1) of
that section, the Commission acts as the official receiver of the specified
public corporation and acquires the powers and all the rights of a receiver
appointed in accordance with the Bankruptcy Act. It follows that section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy
Act, Cap. 25 of the Revised Edition, 2002 would apply to such a specified
public corporation, it was not competent appeal without joining its official
receiver. To support that argument Mr.
Uronu referred the Court to the provisions of sections 77 (1) and 78 of the
Bankruptcy Act. He also referred the
Court to a decision of the Court in Civil Appeal No. 67 of 1999 – The National Insurance Corporation v J. Mbuna (unreported). He said that those provisions and the Court
decision underscore the point that a specified public corporation could not
take any court action on its own but that the official receiver, as trustee,
would take such action either in conjunction with or on behalf of the specified
public corporation. That was the legal
position, he argued, even though there was no specific legal provision which
deprived a specified public corporation the capacity to take court action on
its own. He distinguished the decision
in the J. Mbuna case from the
decision of this same Court in Kampuni
ya Uchukuzi Tabora (Ltd) v Praxeda
Paulo and Another, Civil Application No. 45 of 1999 which decided that
although the Commission becomes a receiver of the property of a specified
public corporation, the latter still owned the property and that all that a creditor
needed to do before proceeding against the property of such debtor was to
obtain leave of the court. According
to Mr. Uronu, the Praxeda Paulo case related to execution and had not dealt with the
question of joinder in an appeal.
Regarding
the second ground, Mr. Uronu argued that although the High Court granted the
respondent leave to appeal, that was done in error because the Commission,
which was a necessary party in any court proceedings, had not been joined as a
party. It also followed in the third
ground that even the memorandum of appeal which did not cite the Commission was
defective and an application for leave to amend such memorandum of appeal was
necessary but no such leave was sought and granted. The fourth ground summed up the three preceding
grounds in that the end result was that the respondent had no locus standi in the intended appeal
which ought to be struck out for incompetence.
Mr. Johnson
on the other hand told the Court that there was nothing wrong with the filed
Notice of Appeal, a copy of which was made available to Court. He argued that at the hearing in the High
Court both the respondent and the Commission were represented by two different
advocates suggesting that the Commission was not acting for the respondent or
as the official receiver of the respondent.
After the respondent lost in the suit the Commission did not bother to
appeal or instruct the respondent to appeal.
He sought to distinguish the decision of this Court in the J. Mbuna case by arguing that the National
Insurance Corporation was financially bankrupt and had been totally privatized
and thereby became a new legal entity.
On the other hand, the respondent in the present matter still existed as
a viable company. Furthermore, the
respondent was declassified on 2nd November, 2005 so that as from
then it was no longer a classified public corporation and the Commission no
longer had anything to do with it.
Mr.
Johnson, however, conceded that at the time the Notice of Appeal in issue was
lodged in Court, the respondent was still a classified public corporation and
the fact of declassification was irrelevant in this application. Even so, on
the authority of the decision of this Court in Kampuni ya Uchukuzi Tabora Ltd. v Praxeda Paulo and Another referred to earlier in this ruling, the
respondent did not need to join the Commission as a co-appellant.
Regarding
the second ground in the Notice of Motion Mr. Johnson argued that the applicant
cannot be heard in these proceedings to complain against the decision of the
High Court to grant the respondent leave to appeal. If the applicant was unhappy with that
decision it should have appealed against it.
According
to Mr. Johnson, the reliance on the J.
Mbuna decision in support of the third ground in the Notice of Motion was
mistaken because that decision was given on 1st June, 2006 whereas
the respondent was declassified nearly seven months earlier. It would have been a futile exercise to apply
to court for leave to include the Commission as a co-appellant only to apply
again to Court to remove the Commission as an appellant after the
declassification.
As regards
the fourth ground since the respondent is no longer a classified public
corporation, it cannot validly be argued that the respondent has no locus standi in the pending appeal. He prayed that the Notice of Motion should be
dismissed with costs.
It is not disputed that when the Notice
of Appeal was lodged in Court on 5th July, 2005 the respondent was a
classified public corporation. The fact
that it was subsequently declassified is not relevant in this application. The question is whether the Commission was a
necessary party in the intended appeal and that the omission to include it as a
party rendered the intended appeal incompetent.
It is also not disputed that by virtue of the respondent then being a
specified public corporation the Commission acted as the official receiver
thereof. See section 43 (1) of the
Public Corporations Act, Cap. 257 of the Revised Edition, 2002. The provisions of section 9 (1) of the
Bankruptcy Act, Cap. 25 of the Revised Edition, 2002 therefore applied to the
respondent. But how, if at all, do all
those legal provisions affect the capacity of the respondent to appeal on its
own against a decision it considers prejudicial to its best interests? It may be worthwhile to quote the provisions
of section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act which reads:-
“9
(1)
On the making of receiving order the official receiver shall be thereby
constituted receiver of the property of the debtor, and thereafter, except as
directed by this Act, no creditor to whom the debtor is indebted in respect of
any debt provable in bankruptcy shall have any remedy against the property or
person of the debtor in respect of the debt, or shall commence any action or other
legal proceedings, unless with the leave of the court and on such terms as the
court may impose.”
As I understand it, a receiving order is basically made
for the protection of the estate of the debtor.
Thus, a receiver’s fundamental duty is to protect the property of the
debtor for the benefit of both the creditor(s) and the debtor. If appointed manager, then also manage the
property of the debtor. These
fundamental duties of a receiver can be gleaned from sections 5, 10 and 12 of
the Bankruptcy Act. In section 5 it is
underscored that a receiving order is made for the protection of the debtor’s
estate. In section 10 it is provided
that before a receiving order is made the court may appoint the official
receiver an interim receiver of the property of the debtor if it is shown that
it is necessary to protect such property (estate). Such interim receiver may be directed to take
immediate possession of the property.
Section 12 provides that in an appropriate situation an official
receiver may have to appoint a manager to manage the debtor’s estate until a
trustee is appointed.
I gather
from all those provisions that when the respondent was declared a specified
public corporation the Commission, as official receiver was, among other
duties, expected to ensure that no one had access to the property of the
respondent or took legal action against the property of the respondent except
with the leave of the court. That
appears to be the import of section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act. With respect, I do not read it to mean that
the respondent (as debtor) could not on its own initiative or in conjunction
with the official receiver take action to protect its property, and without
seeking leave of the court. In other
words, there does not appear to be a clear, specific provision either under the
Public Corporations Act or under the Bankruptcy Act which deprives a specified
public corporation of its capacity to take legal action in protection of its
property. That in essence was what was
said in the case of Kampuni ya Uchukuzi
Tabora (Ltd) v Praxeda Paulo and
Another (supra) when Kisanga, JA said of section 39 (1) of the Public
Corporation Act –
“I
can see nothing in this provision which suggests that upon being placed under
receivership a public corporation ceases to exist as a legal person or ceases
to own property.”
Section 39 (1) referred to earlier provides as follows –
“39
(1) Where a public corporation has been declared a specified public
corporation, the Commission shall from the effective date be responsible for
the restructuring of that specified public corporation.”
Indeed, the said section 39 gives somewhat
extra-ordinary powers to the Commission over a specified public corporation,
including the power to “cause proceedings
for the recovery of any debt owned to (sic) or by specified public corporation
or for the winding up, liquidation or dissolution of the specified public
corporation to be initiated; …..”
(See section 39 (2) (k) of the Public Corporations Act). Even so, in my view, the legal capacity of
the specified public corporation to take legal action against a third party is
not thereby extinguished.
The
argument that a specified public corporation cannot on its own take any legal
action against a third party without joining the Commission becomes even harder
to defend when, as in the case of the respondent in this application, it was
aggrieved by the decision of the High Court and intended to challenge it in an
appeal. According to the applicant, the
respondent could not appeal unless it joined the Commission as an
appellant. But the Commission apparently
was unwilling or uninterested to appeal!
As
indicated earlier in this ruling, Mr. Uronu relied on the decision of this
Court in National Insurance Corporation v J. Mbuna to bolster up his
arguments that the respondent should have joined the Commission as a necessary
party and that the appeal documents should have been amended to reflect the
fact that the Commission was a party to the appeal.
The J. Mbuna decision itself relied on
another decision of this Court, Mathias
Eusebi Soka v The Registered
Trustees of Mama Clementina Foundation and Two Others, Civil Appeal No. 40
of 2001 (unreported).
In Mathias Soka a preliminary objection
was raised in an appeal against, among others, the National Insurance
Corporation, which was a specified public corporation. Mr. Maruma, who was counsel for the National
Insurance Corporation, argued that the appeal against the NIC should be struck
out because under section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act “no creditor to whom the debtor is indebted ….. shall commence any
action or other legal proceeding, unless with the leave of the court …..” He said no leave of the High Court had been
obtained.
This Court
upheld Mr. Maruma and said –
“The
crux of the matter which concerns us is that on 12th June, 1998, NIC
was declared a specified corporation, and that on 28th October it
was joined as a party without there being leave under section 9 of the
Ordinance” (now the Bankruptcy Act).
The Court upheld the preliminary objection and the
notice of appeal was struck out.
Now, in the
J. Mbuna case, the National
Insurance Corporation was the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 67 of 1999. the advocate for the respondent in that
appeal, Mr. Mafuru, raised a preliminary objection to the appeal, praying that
it be struck out also because the National Insurance Corporation was a
specified public corporation and, therefore, that the Commission ought to have
been joined as a party, which had not been done. He also argued that since the memorandum of
appeal and the record of appeal had not been amended to include the Commission
as a co-appellant the appeal was incompetent and should be struck out.
Mr. Shayo,
learned advocate for the appellant in that appeal, on the other hand argued and
relied on the Kampuni ya Uchukuzi Tabora
(Ltd) case, that a public corporation which was classified did not cease to
exist as a legal entity which could sue and be sued on its own and, therefore,
could appeal without joining the Commission.
The Court
upheld the preliminary objection saying –
“…..
the reasoning by this Court in Soka
similarly applies for purposes of this appeal.
Hence the point need not detain us much.
It will be observed that the record of appeal was filed on 4/12/1999,
which was well after the appellant was declared a specified public corporation
by virtue of the above GN. That being
so, it was necessary for the appellant to seek amendment of the record, as
suggested by Mr. Mafuru, to join PSRC.
Since this was not done it will follow that the appeal is incompetent.”
I pose the question whether the Soka case was authority first, that in a case involving a specified
public corporation whether as a plaintiff or appellant or a defendant or
respondent the Commission has to be joined as a party. Second, that leave of the court is necessary
under section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act even where a specified public
corporation needs to take legal action, say by way of an appeal, against a
party who had successfully sued it in court.
In my
considered view first, section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act does not make any
such requirement. It says “no creditor ….. shall have any remedy
against the property or person of a debtor ….. or shall commence any action or
other legal proceedings, unless with the leave of the court …..” So, where a specified public corporation
is the debtor, a creditor will need leave of the court before it can proceed
against it or its property. It does not
seem to say that the specified public corporation will also need leave of the
court before it can appeal against a court decision which is adverse to its
interests. In the Soka case, the appeal was against the NIC, a specified public
corporation. The Court said Soka could not proceed against the
specified public corporation by way of an appeal because that would be contrary
to the provisions of section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act.
If it is
accepted that the basic duty of a receiver (in this case the Commission) is to
protect the property of the debtor for the benefit of the creditor(s), and even
for the advantage of the debtor (in this case the specified public corporation
while it awaits restructuring) it will be strained logic to say that even where
the Commission is unwilling to appeal against a decision which is unfavourable
to its “ward” as it were, then the
specified corporation is rendered impotent to appeal. I do not, with respect, think that was what Soka decided. Consequently, it was not authority that the
Commission has to be joined as a party in every proceeding in which a specified
public corporation is a party. In the Soka case, since the appeal was against
a specified public corporation it was considered necessary to involve the
Commission as receiver so that it would defend the interests of the debtor
which was a specified public corporation.
I would say, therefore, that where a specified public corporation is an
appellant against a decision which is adverse to its interests, such appeal is
not incompetent merely because the Commission was not joined as a party. It follows that the intended appeal is
competent and there was no need to seek leave of the High Court as a
requirement of section 9 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act. It also follows that there was no need to
apply for leave to amend the Notice of Appeal or any other appeal document in
order to join the Commission as an appellant.
If I am right in deciding as stated above, I would say that the
appellant has locus standi in the appeal.
For the
foregoing reasons the Notice of Motion is dismissed with costs.
DATED AT DAR ES SALAAM this 28th
day of January, 2008.
J. A. MROSO
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of
the original.
(F. L. K. WAMBALI)
SENIOR
DEPUTY REGISTRAR
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