IN THE COURT
OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT DAR ES
SALAAM
CIVIL
APPLICATION NO. 39 OF 2008
1.
MANGENYULE IRUMBILA
2.
SELEMANI NASSORO
(as representative of 54 Others…………………….…….….APPLICANTS
VERSUS
DAR ES
SALAAM CITY COMMISSION……………………..……RESPONDENT
(Application
for Restraint Orders from the decision of the High Court of Tanzania at Dar es Salaam )
(Mihayo,
J.)
Dated the 24th
day of April, 2007
in
Civil Case No. 140 of 2000
-------
RULING
16th June & 11th July, 2008.
MUNUO, J.A.:
The applicants, through the services of
Mr. Ogunde, learned advocate, brought this notice of motion seeking an order to
restrain the respondent from demolishing their premises at Yombo Vituka,
pending payment of Tsh. 494,970,000/= compensation awarded to them by the trial
court. They made a similar application
before Mihayo, J. but he dismissed the same with costs. Hence the present application.
Mr. Ogunde adopted the affidavit in
support of the application. He stated
that the applicants filed a Notice of Appeal on the 25th April, 2007
and duly served a copy of the same on the respondent on 27th April,
2007. At paragraph 6 of the affidavit,
the applicants stated that they have also filed a Memorandum of Appeal so the
Court should issue a restraint order pending the determination of the appeal.
In his submission, counsel for the
applicants contended that the applicants will suffer irreparable loss if a
restraint order is not granted because the respondent has commenced
construction at the suit premises and is likely to evict them.
Mr. Nchunga, learned advocate for the
respondent, faulted the applicants for filing the application without annexing
therewith, copies of the Notice of Appeal and the Ruling appealed from. The
omission, counsel for the respondent argued, renders the application
incompetent. He further observed that
the respondent no longer exists because it was dissolved some years back. In that regard, it was the view of counsel
for the respondent that the premises of the applicants were demolished, and
classrooms have since been constructed at the material place so the order for
restraining the respondent would serve no useful purpose. Hence the Court should dismiss the
application because it lacks merit, counsel for the respondent urged.
The issue is whether there is ground for
granting an order for restraint.
As counsel for the respondent rightly
pointed out, the copy of Ruling or Order allegedly appealed against as well as
the Notice of Appeal were not annexed to the Notice of Motion under
consideration. This omission is fatal
irregularity.
In the case of DLL Investment
International Ltd. versus Tanzania Harbours Authority and Two Others, Civil
Application No. 8 of 2001, (CA) (unreported), it was held that decisions or
orders appealed against must be annexed to the application. A similar decision was grounded in the case
of East African Development Bank versus Blueline Enterprises Ltd; Civil
Application No. 35 of 2003, (CA) (unreported) wherein the Court observed that:
“…….it hardly needs to be
emphasized that both logic and common sense demand that the court should be
seized with the decision by way of judgment, ruling or order which is the
subject matter for stay of execution.
This is so in order to
enable the Court to see and satisfy itself of the application before it.”
The
Court held the same in the case of Blue Star Service Station versus Jackson
Massati 1997 TLR 310 at Page 311 in which the Court stated that –
“………It is obvious that
since the Court is empowered to impose terms as it may think just upon an order
of stay of execution, it is assumed that the application would in any event be
accompanied with the decision or sufficient information concerning such
decision……… in the light of which the Court may determine whether to impose
conditions………when the decision sought to be stayed does not accompany the
application and no information concerning the terms of such decision is
contained in the affidavit, the application cannot be anything but incompetent.
Although
this application is not for stay of execution, the above decision are relevant
in this case because in any application or appeal, the subject matter must be
annexed to the same to enable the Court to view the order or ruling complained
of or sought to be challenged.
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