IN THE COURT
OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT MWANZA
(CORAM: LUBUVA, J.A., MROSO, J.A., and RUTAKANGWA, J.A.)
CIVIL APPEAL
NO. 108 OF 2005
VIRIAN
TANZANIA LTD. …………………………………….. APPELLANT
VERSUS
BARIADI
DISTRICT COUNCIL ………………………….. RESPONDENT
(Appeal from
the Ruling and Order of the High Court
of Tanzania
at Mwanza)
(Nchalla,
J.)
dated the 19th
day of July, 2001
in
Miscellaneous
Civil application No. 224 of 2000
--------------
RULING OF
THE COURT
14 March & 12
June 2007
MROSO, J.A.:
In a summary suit in the High Court at
Mwanza, Civil Case No. 42 of 2000, the respondent, Bariadi District Council,
sued the appellant Virian Tanzania Limited, for recovery of Tshs. 15,165,000/=
alleged to be unpaid produce cess. The
appellant made application No. 224 of 2000 to the High Court for leave to
defend the suit. The High Court,
Nchalla, J., dismissed the application with costs on 19th July,
2001. The Applicant believed that the
High Court had erred in refusing the leave to defend the suit and, therefore,
duly filed a notice of intention to appeal to this Court against that ruling of
the High Court.
Subsequent to the filing of the notice of
appeal, the appellant filed in the High Court Miscellaneous Civil Application
No. 169 of 2001 seeking under section 5 (1)
(c) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 leave to appeal against the
High Court ruling. That application was
lodged on 31st August, 2001.
Leave to appeal to this Court was granted on 16/05/2002, though not with
a view to challenging the decision of the High Court in refusing leave to
defend the suit but to consider if the Government Notice which imposed a duty
to pay produce cess could lawfully have retrospective effect.
Following from the decision to grant the
appellant leave to appeal, the present Civil Appeal No. 108 of 2005 was
lodged. But before the appeal could be
heard the respondent filed in this Court a notice of preliminary objection
under Rule 100 of the Court of Apppeal Rules, 1979 (The Rules), containing two
grounds. At the commencement of the
hearing of the preliminary objection the first ground of objection was
abandoned and Mr. Butambala, learned counsel for the respondent, chose to
proceed to argue the second ground which reads:-
“2. That the proceedings and Ruling in High Court
Misc. Civil Application No. 169/2001 which gave leave to appeal to Court were
an abuse of the Court process and hence the present appeal is incompetent”
It
was then prayed that the appeal be struck out with costs. Mr. Butambala was of the view that in order
to effectively argue that ground of objection, he needed to file a
supplementary record. So, he sought from
the Court and was granted leave to file such supplementary record within a stipulated
period.
The supplementary record was duly filed
and the hearing of the preliminary objection proceeded after an adjournment of
three weeks; Mr. Silvan Galati
Mwantembe, learned advocate, appearing for the appellant.
It would appear that before the High
Court granted to the appellant leave to appeal in Misc. Civil Application No.
169/2001, there had been an application No. 222 of 2001 which was made under
section 14 (1) of the Law of Limitation Act, 1971 for extension of the time
within which the application for leave to appeal to this Court could be
made. That application is shown to have
been lodged on 13th November, 2001.
The application was on 4/7/2002 fixed by the District Registrar, in the
presence of Mr. Galati Mwantembe, to be heard on 11/02/2003. On the hearing date Mr. Galati was shown as
absent and the High Court, Masanche, J., dismissed it for want of appearance by
Mr. Galati. It is now Mr. Butambala’s
contention that since no extension of time had been granted to the appellant to
apply for leave to appeal, there was no legal basis for the High Court to grant
leave to appeal as it did in Miscellaneous Civil Application No. 169 of 2001. Civil Appeal No. 108 of 2005 which resulted
from the order in Civil Application No. 169 of 2001 would, therefore, be
incompetent.
In replying to the submission by Mr. Butambala,
Mr. Mwantembe retorted that this Court has no jurisdiction to decide on the
preliminary objection. According to him,
Mr. Butambala should have raised the objection when Civil Application No. 169
of 2001 was being heard by the High Court.
Furthermore, according to Mr. Mwantembe, Mr. Butambala had tacitly
conceded to leave to appeal being granted and should not, therefore, be heard
now to impugn the High Court decision to grant the appellant leave to appeal to
this Court. The respondent could also
have either appealed against the decision in Civil Application No. 169 of 2001
or applied for review of that decision if he thought it was improperly
obtained. So, since there was no
decision of the High Court on whether or not Civil Application No. 169 of 2001
was or was not properly decided, the respondent could not challenge it by way
of a preliminary objection to the appellant’s appeal. He prayed that the preliminary objection be
dismissed with costs and cited the decision of this Court in Sebastian Rukiza Kinyondo vs. Dr. Medard
Mutalemwa Mutungi, Civil Appeal No. 83 of 1998 (not yet reported) in
support of his submissions.
Mr. Butambala explained that when Civil
Application No. 169/2001 was being heard by the High Court he was not aware of
the existence of High Court Civil Application No. 222 of 2001 or of the High
Court (Masanche, J.) decision in that application. No representative of the respondent was in
Court when Masanche, J. dismissed the appellant’s application for extension of
time to apply for leave to appeal. Mr.
Mwantembe did not inform the High Court at the time Civil Application No. 169
of 2001 was being heard that the hearing was premature because there was Civil
Application No. 222/2001 which was pending hearing. He submitted that it was not fair for Mr.
Mwantembe to take advantage of the respondent’s counsel’s ignorance about the
existence of the application for extension of time. He reiterated that the appeal was not
properly before the Court and should be struck out.
It is not disputed by Mr. Mwantembe that
after application No. 169 of 2001 was filed in the High Court on 02/08/2001 it
was realized that the application was filed outside the period stipulated under
the law. The reasons for the delay are
contained in an affidavit which was sworn by Mr. Mwantembe on 6th
November, 2001 in support of a chamber application for extension of time in
Application No. 222 of 2001. In that
same affidavit Mr. Mwantembe intimated that he would withdraw “the former
application as the same was filed out of time without leave of the court”. He must have had in mind Miscellaneous Civil
Application No. 169 of 2001. Even so,
that “former application” was never withdrawn as undertaken in the affidavit. It is also not disputed that the merits or
otherwise of that application were not considered by the High Court because the
application was dismissed for want of appearance by the appellant and/or its
advocate. Obviously, therefore, when
leave to appeal was granted to the appellant on 16/5/2002 in Civil Application
No. 169 of 2001, that was done in ignorance of the existence of a pending
application for extension of time to apply for leave to appeal. Similarly, when the appeal (No. 108 of 2005)
was eventually lodged on 6/7/2005 the position had remained the same, that is
to say, there had been no extension of time to apply for leave to appeal. The question now is whether the respondent
can object to the hearing of the appeal for the reason that leave to appeal had
been granted out of time without such time having been extended. Mr. Mwantembe, as we understand him, is
arguing that that issue cannot be raised at this forum. It should have been raised in the High Court,
which it was not, whatever may have been the reasons for the respondent’s
failure to raise it there.
The judgment in Sebastian Kinyondo which was cited by Mr. Mwantembe, discussed
among other things whether the issues of jurisdiction and limitation could be
made a ground of appeal to this Court where such issues had not been raised in
the High Court. It was held in that case
that a ground of appeal should arise from a decision of the court from which
the appeal is preferred and that a memorandum of appeal should specify the
points (of law) which are alleged to have been wrongly decided by the court
against whose decision it is being appealed.
Since the court against whose decision the appeal was preferred did not
discuss the issues of jurisdiction and limitation because they had not been
raised and decided in the High Court, they could not be made grounds of appeal
to this Court.
In the matter now before the Court, the
respondent, of course, is not appealing, let alone appealing on a matter which
was not the subject of a decision of the High Court. It is saying that the appeal by the appellant
is not properly before the Court. It is
not even complaining on the ground of limitation. It is, however, in effect saying that the
Court has no jurisdiction to hear an appeal which is prematurely before
it. This appeal could only be properly
before this Court where leave to appeal had been obtained by applying for such
leave within 14 days of the decision against which the appeal is intended, as
required under Rule 43 (a) of the Rules.
The objection to the appeal is therefore based on the fact that the
application for leave to appeal having not been made within fourteen days of
the High Court Ruling of 19th July, 2001 in Civil Application No.
224 of 2000, there was need for extension of time to make such application but
that there has not been any such extension of time. An appeal which is lodged in this Court in
contravention of such legal requirements is, according to Mr. Butambala
incompetent.
We think Mr. Butambala is correct and
justified in raising ground (2) in the Notice of Preliminary Objection. Although there is no material in the record
from which to infer that Mr. Mwantembe filed the appeal on behalf of his client
with full knowledge that the procedure had not been followed, we are satisfied,
however, that Mr. Butambala having known the true status of the purported
appeal had a duty to raise the preliminary objection to the appeal so that it
would not be heard because the appropriate procedure had not been followed by
the appellant.
With respect, we uphold the second
ground in the notice of preliminary objection that the appeal is incompetent
for the reasons we have given and it is struck out with costs.
GIVEN
at DAR ES SALAAM this 24th day of April,
2007.
D.Z. LUBUVA
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
J.A. MROSO
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
E.M.K. RUTAKANGWA
JUSTICE
OF APPEAL
I certify that this is a true copy of
the original.
( S.M. RUMANYIKA )
DEPUTY
REGISTRAR
Delivered under my
hand and Court Seal in open Court/Chambers at Mwanza this ………………. day of
……………………………………….
DEPUTY
REGISTRAR
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