THE
COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT DAR ES SALAAM
CIVIL APPLICATION NO. 153 OF 2006
In
the Matter of Intended Appeal
MOHAMEDI GEREGEZA
… APPLICANT
VERSUS
HAMADI
JUMA … RESPONDENT
(Application
for extension of time to apply for a Reference from the ruling of a Single
Judge of the Court of Appeal of Tanzania at Dar es Salaam)
(Kileo,
J. A.)
dated
the 28th day of September , 2006
in
Civil
Application No. 86 of 2005
.......
RULING
RAMADHANI,
J.A.:
Mohamedi
successfully sued Hamadi before the Primary Court Magistrate of Manzese in
Civil Case No. 36 of 2000, complaining of trespass committed to his unfinished
house. Hamadi’s defence was that the plot on which the house in dispute is
built was a subject matter of a suit between him (Hamadi) and one Juma Mfaume
before the Primary Court at Magomeni in Civil Case No. 51 of 1997 which went on
appeal to the District Court at Kinondoni (Civil Appeal No. 60 of 1997) and
finally in the High Court as Civil Appeal No. 33 of 1999 (MACKANJA, J.). Hamadi
was successful in all three forums.
However,
that defence was rejected by the Primary Court Magistrate in that Civil Case
No. 36 of 2000 because he was satisfied that Mohamedi bought the plot from the
said Juma Mfaume on 19 April, 1997. Hamadi appealed to the District Court at
Kinondoni in Civil Appeal No. 69 of 2000 and won. The District Magistrate
reversed the Primary Court
judgment and said that the PCM was wrong to hold that Mohamedi was not involved
in the previous suit and subsequent appeals. The plot was held to belong to
Hamadi, and NOT Juma, as the Primary
Court had decided.
However,
the District Court went further that Hamadi did not seek a court order to
restrain Mohamedi from developing the plot. Instead Hamadi went into the plot
and finished the structure that was built by Mohamadi by putting on a roof on the
said building. So, the court held that Mohamedi was the owner of the unfinished
house and ordered Hamadi to compensate him an amount that would be determined
by the Government Valuer.
Both
Hamadi and Mohamedi went to the High Court to have that judgment revised in
Civil Revision No. 42 of 2001 and Civil Revision No. 47 of 2001 respectively. IHEMA,
J. consolidated the two applications as Civil Revision No. 42 of 2001 and
decided in favour of Hamadi saying:
Without labouring
the point it is clear that the District Court, having confirmed that Hamad Juma
was the lawful owner of the disputed plot, proceeded in error to order the
owner to pay compensation for the development carried out by Mohamed Geregeza
who at law is but a trespasser.
The
learned Judge concluded:
For the avoidance of
doubt Hamad Juma’s ownership over the suit plot is confirmed. It is up to
Mohamed Geregeza to seek redress from Juma Mfaume Chuma who fraudulently sold
him the disputed plot which was not his property.
That
decision was delivered on 10/10/2002 in the absence of both parties who were
aware of the delivery date. The learned Judge ordered that the parties be
notified of the ruling. Mohamedi, according to his affidavit before MROSO, J.
A., claims to have known the ruling on 24/10/2002. If so, his 14 days within
which to lodge his notice of appeal expired on 08/11/2002. He lodged it on 29/11/2002,
when he was late by 22 days.
Mohamedi
on 28/11/2002 went
to the High Court with an application for leave to appeal to this Court. That
application was struck out on 30/11/2004
by ORIYO, J. for being out of time. It would then appear that Hamadi came to this
Court in Civil Application No. 68 of 2005 seeking that the notice of appeal lodge
by Mohamedi be struck out for failure to take essential steps and MSOFFE, J. A.
did that on 02/12/2005 .
Mohamedi
made an application, Civil Application No. 86 of 2005, seeking to enlarge time
within which to lodge a notice of appeal. That application came before MROSO,
J. A. The learned Justice of Appeal took it that ORIYO, J. struck out the
notice of appeal on 30/11/2002
and he wondered what notice of appeal was then struck out by MSOFFE, J. A. on 02/12/2005 for he
had not seen any indication that the notice of appeal had been reinstated.
I
say that that holding was an oversight on the part of MROSO, J. A. because
ORIYO, J., as a High Court judge, did not have the power to strike out a notice
of appeal lodged in this Court. What was before her was an application for
leave to appeal to this Court and she gave the following order:
The application is
incompetent and is hereby struck out.
It
is loud and clear, to me, that what she struck out was the application before
her, leave to appeal, and not the notice of appeal.
MROSO,
J. A. took it that the application to enlarge time within which to file a
notice of appeal should be calculated from the date of the ruling of ORIYO, J.,
that is, 30/11/2002 and not when MSOFFE, J. A. gave his ruling on 02/12/2005.
So, MROSO, J. A. found that Mohamedi’s application to enlarge time which he filed
on 9th June, 2005, was made more than seven months after the notice
of appeal was struck out by ORIYO, J. and that no explanation was given for the
delay. So, the learned Judge dismissed the application on 10th April, 2006 .
Two
things have to be pointed out: One, ORIYO, J. did not strike out the notice of
appeal and two, the difference between the ruling of ORIYO, J. on 30/11/2004 , and that of
MSOFFE, J. A. on 02/12/2005 ,
is a year and two days and that makes a material difference in calculating the period
of limitation. Thus MSOFFE, J. A. struck out the notice of appeal 5 months and
24 days after Mohamedi had filed his application for the extension of time
within which to lodge a notice of appeal on 09/06/2005.
I
have to make it clear that Mohamedi applied for the extension of time to file a
notice of appeal not because it was struck out by ORIYO, J., but because he was
out of time when he filed his notice of appeal on 29/11/2002. As I have said, he
became aware of the ruling of IHEMA, J. on 24/10/2002 so time ran out on 8/11/2002.
So, actually MSOFFE, J. A., unknowingly, struck out an improper or a defective
notice of appeal. He merely acted upon the application of Hamadi on the grounds
of failure to take essential steps: One, failure to serve Hamadi with a copy of
the letter applying for the record of appeal. And, two, failure to institute
the appeal with sixty days of the lodging of the notice of appeal.
But
apart from those two grounds before MSOFFE, J. A., there were two others: One,
the notice of appeal was filed out of time, as I have already demonstrated.
And, two, there was no leave to appeal. ORIYO, J. struck out the application
for leave and there was no fresh application in this Court. I am aware that this
matter started in the Primary
Court and, strictly speaking, there ought to have
been a certificate of point of law. However, before IHEMA, J. there were two applications
for revisions and not appeals. So, what was required was leave to appeal.
So,
despite the oversight, the ruling of MROSO, J. A. to dismiss the application
for extension of time within which to file a notice of appeal remains valid. The
notice of appeal had already been struck out by MSOFFE, J. A. and the
application before MROSO, J. A. was not a response to the decision of MSOFFE,
J. A.
Of
course, Mohamedi was dissatisfied with that ruling of so he came back to this
Court with Civil Application No. 60 of 2006 seeking an extension of time within
which to file a reference against that ruling of MROSO, J. A. On 28th September, 2006 ,
KILEO, J. A. dismissed that application on two grounds: One, the application
was made under wrong provisions of the law. Two, there was no reason why
Mohamedi was late again to seek the reference.
Mohamedi
has yet filed this application, Civil Application No. 153 of 2006, seeking an
enlargement of time within which to file a reference against the ruling of
KILEO, J. A. This application has been lodged on 31st October, 2006 , while the
ruling of KILEO, J. A. was on 28th September, 2006. So, this
application, again, is 25 days late because he had to seek the reference not
later that 05th October, 2006.
One
wonders why there is this chain of delays beyond the prescribed times and
Mohamedi, admittedly, a layman, keeps on repeating the same failure. The
question which comes to mind is whether Mohammedi is really serious with the
matter or he is just applying delaying tactics to inconvenience the decree
holder, Hamadi. IHEMA, J. gave Mohamedi a sound advice, that is, to sue Juma
who unscrupulously sold him the plot which is beset with legal tangles. The
advice has not been heeded.
I
have deliberately taken pains to trace out the history of this matter so as to
put it in one record and demonstrate this abuse of the process of the Court.
Besides,
Mohamedi was aware that he was buying a plot which had a dispute in court. When Mohamedi bought the plot from
Juma Civil Case No. 51 of 1997 between Hamadi and the said Juma was pending in
the Magomeni Primary Court .
Mohamedi himself said before IHEMA, J. thus:
Respondent – My
Lord I am not satisfied with the decision in 60/97 dated 2/2/2001 due to:
That the plot sold
to me was sold in error this is not true because I bought the plot on 19/4/97
from Juma Mfaume. There is a sale agreement to that effect. I started
construction immediately. On 25/5/97 I had done substantive development on the
area. As regard the case [Civil Case
No. 51 of 1997 of the Primary Court ,
Magomeni] I recall that it was mentioned
for the first time on 19/3/97. (Emphasis is supplied.)
Mohamedi
bought the plot a whole month after the case was first mentioned. So, he was
aware that there was a dispute over the plot he was buying. He is, therefore,
not a bona fide purchaser for value.
I
have no hesitation to dismiss this application in its entirety with costs.
DATED
at DAR ES SALAAM this 19th
day of April, 2006.
A. S. L. RAMADHANI
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of the original.
( S.M. RUMANYIKA )
DEPUTY REGISTRAR
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