(DAR
ES SALAAM DISTRICT REGISTRY)
AT
DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL
CASE NO. 79 OF 2006
MATHEW MARTIN………………………………….………PLAINTIFF
VERSUS
THE MANAGING
DIRECTOR
KAHAMA MINING CORPORATION…………………..DEFENDANT
---------
RULING
KALEGEYA, J.
The Defendant challenges the action
filed by the Plaintiff on two preliminary objections – that the suit is time
barred as it was filed beyond three years after the accrual of a cause of
action and also that this court has no jurisdiction to deal with a workman’s
compensation dispute as the relevant court is the Resident Magistrate’s Court.
Facts undisputed are that the Plaintiff
was employed by Defendant as an electrician; that in May, 2001, he was detailed
to effect repairs on a miller and starter; that immediately after effecting the
said repairs he suffered pain to both his legs and this was thought to have
resulted from “chemicals and acid” at the repair scene.
The Plaintiff contends further that the
injuries seriously affected his legs leading to incapacity notwithstanding
various medications and that on 13/10/2001 the Defendant terminated his
services. He insists that he is still
undergoing treatment for his disabled legs which had to receive patchments from
his thigh in order to create the required skin.
He urges that the Defendant’s conduct has caused severe pain, economic
hardship and psychological problems for which he claims shs. 93 million as
specific damages and shs. 80 million as general damages with interest and
costs.
Briefly, submitting in support of the
said preliminary objections the Defendant states that counted from May, 2001
three years expired long before 30/5/2006 when the suit was instituted and made
reference to (HC) Civil Case No. 70 of
1998, John Cornel vs A. Grevo (T) Ltd, and, further that under Section 3 of
the Worker’s Compensation Act, Cap 263, R.E. 2002 the court vested with
jurisdiction is a Resident Magistrate’s Court.
On his part, the Defendant counters by
saying that he is not time barred because between “2001 up to the year 2004” he
was still under medication and so continued, attending “at Aghakan Hospital
under his own expenses up to the year 2006”.
According to him time started to run starting in 2006.
Unfortunate as it is, for it leans
against the physically incapacitated Plaintiff, there is nothing this Court can
do to assist him in relation to the obvious barrage of his action by limitation
of time. In Cornel’s case referred to by the Defendant, I observed:
“However
unfortunate it may be for the Plaintiff, the Law of Limitation on actions knows
no sympathy or equity. It is a merciless
sword that costs across and deep into all those who get caught in its web.”
I still hold the same view and it
applies squarely in the present case.
By his own pleading, (the plaint) the
Plaintiff concedes that the “cause of action arose when the Plaintiff was
ordered to perform work in the area contained acids and other chemicals which
severely affected” his legs causing permanent incapacity. I agree, and so does the Defendant that
indeed that is when the cause of action accrued. And that was 2001. This claim falls under Section 6 (e) of the
Law of Limitation Act, No. 10 of 1971, which provides:
“in
the case of suit for compensation for a wrong which does not give rise to a
cause of action unless some specific injury actually results therefrom, the
right of action shall accrue on the date when an injury results from such
wrong”.
Being sent to areas where acids and
other chemicals were stored per se is not actionable as such unless an injury,
as was the case here, is suffered. The
Plaintiff suffered immediately and this was vividly exposed in the same year,
2001. That being the case, a three years
period for tortuous actions as provided under item 6 of the First Schedule to
the Law of Limitation Act ends, at most, even discounting the whole of 2001 to
provide for the establishment of actual injury and its extent by doctors, in
2004. Filing an action in 2006, as was
done in this case, is glaringly beyond the prescribed period of
limitation. Sympathetic as we may be to
the incapacitated Plaintiff, we cannot avoid upholding the first preliminary
objection as we hereby do. With this
finding it is unnecessary to tackle the 2nd preliminary
objection. The suit is dismissed for
being time barred.
DATED at DAR ES SALAAM this day of 2009.
L. B. KALEGEYA
JUDGE
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