AT DAR ES
SALAAM
CIVIL APPLICATION
NO. 34 OF 2007
TANTRACK
AGENCIES LIMITED…..………………………….…………APPLICANT
VERSUS
TANZANIA MOTORS SERVICES LTD……………………….………RESPONDENT
(Appeal from
the decision of the High Court of Tanzania
at Dar es Salaam )
(Kimaro,J.)
Dated the 17th day of February, 2004
in
Civil Appeal
No. 58 of 2004
…………………….
R U L I N G
24th May & 7th June, 2007
KAJI,
J. A. :
By
a notice of motion made under Rule 3(2)(a)(c) and 45 (1) of the Court of Appeal
Rules, 1979, the applicant, Tantrack Agencies LTD, is moving the court for the
following orders:-
(i) The
order for stay of execution of
the
decree issued on 13th(sic) May, 2005 in application No.257 of 1995
(sic) be vacated and execution of the decree issued on 30th March,
2001 proceed accordingly;
(ii) Any
other order(s) the court may
deem fit and just to grant;
(iii) An
order that the costs of and
incidental
to this application be paid by the respondent.
This application has a rather chequered
history. But for easy appreciation of
the sequence of events leading to this application, it is desirable to outline,
albeit briefly, the historical background of the matter.
The subject matter is a building known
as Ex-Riddoch Motors building, situate on plot No.24 Upanga Road , Dar es Salaam ,
where the applicant is a tenant and the respondent, Tanzania Motors Service LTD
is the landlord.
In or around 1995 the respondent served
the applicant with a notice to vacate.
The applicant resisted the notice and filed application No.257 of 1995
in the Regional Housing Tribunal at Dar
es Salaam praying inter
alia, to be declared a statutory tenant and be given an option to renew the
Lease Agreement. The applicant’s
application was granted as presented.
The respondent was dissatisfied.
But for reasons which are irrelevant for the purpose of this
application, was late to lodge notice of appeal within the period prescribed by
the Housing Appeals Tribunal (appeals) Rules, 1987. Under section 12 ( 1) (5)
of the Rent Restriction Act, 1984,Rule 7 of the Housing Appeals Tribunal (
Appeals) Rules, 1987 and section 14(1) of the law of Limitation Act, 1971, the
respondent filed an application in the Regional Housing Tribunal for extension
of time within which to file a notice of appeal.
The
applicant raised a preliminary objection that the Regional Housing Tribunal had
no jurisdiction to extend time for filing a notice of appeal by virtue of rule
7 and the decision of the High Court in the case of Kangham Venesh Paretch V
Agakhan Education Services (1996) TLR 104. The preliminary objection was
sustained and the application was dismissed.
The respondent was dissatisfied and lodged an appeal in the Housing
Appeals Tribunal. The tribunal rejected
the appeal summarily under Rule 24(1) of the Housing Appeals Tribunal (Appeals)
Rules.
Still undaunted, the respondent
unsuccessfully lodged an appeal in the High Court. The court (Kimaro,J, as she then was) held
the same view as in the case cited above that, although in terms of Rule 5 the
Regional Housing Tribunal has jurisdiction to extend time for lodging an
appeal, yet there is no provision that it can also extend time to file a notice of appeal.
Still
undaunted the respondent expressed its desire to appeal to this Court and applied
for the requisite leave which was granted to consider, not only whether the
Tribunal has jurisdiction to extend time in which to file a notice of appeal,
but also whether, after the respondent had been declared a specified public
corporation by GN. No. 400 of 1995 it was proper for the Housing Tribunal to
proceed with the matter without leave being sought and granted by the High
Court as required by section (9) (1) of the Bankruptcy Ordinance Cap.25.
While pending determination of the
intended appeal the respondent applied in this Court for stay of execution of
the Regional Housing Tribunal under Rules 3(2)(a) and (b), 9(2)(b) and 45(1)
and (2) of the Court of Appeal Rules, 1979.
The application was granted under conditions that the respondent should
not sell, alter, change, transfer, pledge, mortgage, destroy, damage or do
anything bad to the disputed premises.
On 23rd February, 2007, the
respondent wrote a letter to the applicant titled “Notice to vacate the
premises” with the following message, inter
alia:-
The
purpose of this letter, therefore is to inform you that the said plot No.24
where your leased office is also located, is now due for handing over to its
owner. We therefore have no option, save
that of giving you a ONE MONTH NOTICE, from the date of this letter, to vacate
the said occupied space, and thus give us vacant possession of the same, on or
before 31st March, 2007.
It is this letter which prompted this
application. According to Mr. Ntonge,
learned counsel for the applicant, this letter was a clear message that the
respondent was no longer interested in the suit premises and the stay order’s
protection and was going to sell and transfer the suit premises to a third
party which is a breach of the stay order conditions, and a contempt of court.
Mr.Ntonge contended further that, since the respondent is no longer
interested in the stay order which was in its favour, the same (stay order)
should be vacated.
On the other hand Mr.Fungamtama, learned
counsel for the respondent, contended that the word “owner” in the letter
Annextures DAN 2 meant the Presidential Parastatal Sector Reform Commission
(PSRC) under which the respondent had been placed after being declared a
specified public corporation, and not that it meant somebody else as a third party.
Mr. Fungamtama pointed out that the whole purpose was meant to protect the
safety of the suit premises after realizing that the applicant had sublet some
of the rooms to subtenants, and not that it was a process for selling or
transferring the suit premises to a buyer.
The learned counsel remarked that, after the respondent had been placed
under PSRC, it could not sell or transfer the suit premises without approval by
PSRC, and that such approval has neither been sought nor granted. The learned counsel observed that, the
conditions attached to the stay order were neither meant to prohibit the
respondent from taking control measures to protect the suit premises, nor
granting ownership of the suit premises to the applicant. The learned counsel wondered why the
applicant lodged this application instead of instituting contempt of court
proceedings if the respondent had really contravened the order of the
court.
In his rejoinder the applicant’s counsel
insisted that the word “owner” in Annexture DAN 2 did not mean PSRC
because PSRC had been the “owner” since
1994 when the respondent was declared a specified public corporation, but that it
meant a third party (buyer) other than the PSRC. The learned counsel contended that DAN 2 was
not a protective measure because the respondent did not produce any evidence
that the lease Agreement prohibited the applicant to sublet any of the
rooms. The learned counsel pointed out
that, the processes for sale mentioned by the respondent’s counsel are internal
matters which can be carried out without outsiders knowing the same, and that
with modern technology a building can be sold without necessarily publishing or
inviting tenders in news papers. On why
the applicant lodged this application instead of instituting contempt of court
proceedings or resisting the eviction in a Land and Housing Tribunal, the
learned counsel replied that, those were also options open to the applicant but
it was not bound to take either of them.
As pointed out earlier, the applicant’s
advocate had objected the original of annexture PSRC 1 to be tendered by the respondents’
counsel as exhibit on the ground that it was neither stamped nor
registered. I allowed the respondents’
counsel to tender it but I reserved my reasons for so doing which I now
give. Annexture PSRC 1 is alleged to be
a lease agreement between Gregory Kilasi and Makoba Juma Makoba to rent a
portion of the suit premises described as “fremu iliyopangishwa.” Gregory
Kilasi is the one who has deponed to the affidavit in support of the notice of
motion as the principal officer of the applicant. The respondent is not party to PSRC 1. There
is nothing indicating that it was its duty to register it or stamp it. Admittedly in terms of section 47(1) of the
Stamp Duty Act Cap.189, an instrument chargeable with duty is inadmissible in
evidence unless stamped or under the exceptions listed thereunder. But in the instant case my decision will
not be based on Exh 1-PSRC 1 as will be seen later, which means it can be expunged
without any harm.
Coming to the merits or otherwise of the
application itself, the main contention by the applicant through its advocate
is that the import of Annexture DAN 2 is that the respondent is no longer
interested in the stay order granted by the Court on 12/5/2005, and that it is
intending to sell or transfer the suit premises to a third party contrary to
the conditions attached to the stay order, and so the order should be
vacated. On the other hand the
respondent’s contention is that it still needs the protection of the order, and
that Annexture DAN 2 was just a control measure aimed at protecting the suit premises
against possible misuse by the applicant, and further that it was for handing
over the suit premises to PSRC who are the owner by operation of the law, the
Public Corporation Act and GN NO.400 of 28/7/1995.
I have carefully considered the learned counsel’s
submissions. I have also carefully
considered Anexture DAN 2 which prompted the applicant to lodge this
application. Whether that was an
indication that the respondent was intending to sell or transfer the suit
premises to somebody else other than PSRC as alleged by the applicant’s
counsel, or it was for the purpose asserted by the respondent’s counsel, is of
little concern. I say so for the
following reasons:-
Firstly,
if the respondent will unlawfully breach the condition(s) attached to the stay
order, this country is not short of relevant laws to deal with such
incidence. These include contempt of
court proceedings. What the applicant
should wisely do at this stage is just to wait and see.
Secondly,
if the applicant is worried that the respondent is probably going to evict it
from the suit premises unlawfully, it can resist the eviction in a duly
constituted forum such as a District
Land and Housing Tribunal
or in the High Court Land Division depending on the monetary value of the
subject matter.
Thirdly, the applicant’s fear that
through modern technology the respondent can sell the suit premises to a third
party without their knowledge should not be of so much concern. The applicant’s counsel did not
elaborate. But he probably, had in mind
Internet Technology. If that happens,
this country is not short of relevant laws to cater for such situation.
Fourthly,
as indicated in the stay order, the purpose of the conditions attached is to
protect the applicant’s interest in the event the respondent loses the intended
appeal. The applicant’s interest
contemplated in the order is the decretal amount. There is nothing indicating that the
respondent, a government agent, having been declared a specified corporation by
GN No.400 pf 28/7/1995 can fail to satisfy the decree in the event it loses the
appeal.
Since the applicant has failed to convince
the court that the respondent has breached the stay order conditions or that
the respondent is no longer in need of protection by the stay order for the
reasons stated above, this application must fail.
In the upshot, and for the reasons
stated above, the application is dismissed with costs.
DATED
at DAR ES SALAAM this 7th day of June, 2007.
S. N. KAJI
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
I
certify that this is a true copy of the original.
I. P. KITUSI
DEPUTY REGISTRAR
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