TANZANIA DEVELOPMENT FINANCE CO. LTD v CALICO TEXTILEINDUSTRIES LTD AND ANOTHER 1996 TLR 80 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Dar es Salaam
Judge Kyando J
E
MISC. CIVIL CAUSE NO. 51 OF 1992
3 September, 1992 F
Flynote
Company Law - Charge to secure a loan - Misstatement on charge document of
amount secured - Rectification of.
-Headnote
The Applicant in the present case applied for the rectification of two documents to
record G properly a secured amount of US$ 904,000, loaned by the Applicant to the
First Respondent. The two documents in question were `Form No.9', being the
particulars of a charge to secure a loan from the Applicant, and a Certificate of
Registration of Charge (`Form C.2'), held by the Registrar of Companies (Second
Respondent). H
Form No.9 repeated the terms of the debenture, issued by the First Respondent as
security for the loan from the Applicant, as follows: `Single debenture for US$
904,000 (or the equivalent thereto (sic) in other convertible currencies) being
approximately Shs.16,626,500/=.'
In Form C.2, however, the Second Respondent entered that the debenture was `to I
secure the sum of shillings sixteen million six twenty six thousand five hundred (Shs
16,626,500/=) only'.
1996 TLR p81
The Applicant contended that the amount in both documents expressed in shillings
was A a misstatement and that both documents should be rectified to state the
amount expressed in United States dollars only.
Held:
(i) The loan agreement, which gave rise to the two documents under
consideration, indicates clearly that the loan advanced by the Applicant to the B
First Respondent was US$ 904,000 by way of a foreign currency loan.
(ii) The amount secured by the debenture throughout it was stated to be
US$ 904 000.
(iii) The amount of Shs 16,626,500/= expressed in both documents was
clearly a misstatement. C
(iv) The preliminary objections raised by the Respondents, against the
bringing of the application itself, the validity of the affidavit used by the Applicant
and time-barring of the application, such preliminary objections are overruled.
(v) The application succeeds with costs. D
(vi) The Second Respondent is ordered, within 14 days from the date of
delivery of ruling, to rectify forms No.9 and C.2, as well as his register of charges, to
show that the amount secured is US$ 904,000.
(vii) The First Respondent is similarly ordered to rectify his register of
charges to reflect that the debenture is security for US$ 904,000 only. E
Case Information
Ordered accordingly.
Cases referred to:
1. In re Mechanisations (Eaglescliffe) Ltd [1964] 3 All ER 840
2. National Bank of Commerce v Mannbha Shankarbhai Desai [1969]
HCD 206 F
Kameja, for the applicant.
Ismail, for the first respondent.
[zJDz]Judgment
Kyando J: In this application Tanzania Development Finance Co Ltd, the applicant, G
applies for the following reliefs against the respondents:
`(a) An order that in both companies Form No 9, being particulars of a
charge created by the first respondent to secure a loan from TDFL misstated the
amount to Shs 16 626 500/= and a Certificate of Registration of Charge issued by the
second respondent in respect thereof be H rectified so as to properly record the
amount secured as being US$904 000 on grounds that the misstatement of the sum
secured was due to inadvertence or alternatively, that on grounds stated in the
supporting affidavit it is just and equitable to grant the relief. I
(b) Costs of this application.'
1996 TLR p82
KYANDO J
The deponent of the affidavit in support of the application is Rugambwa Cyril John A
Pesha, the Company Secretary of the applicant, and in his affidavit it is shown, inter
alia, that the objects for which the applicant was established are, amongst others, to
lend money with or without security. `As such lender,' he states in para 3 of his
affidavit, `the B applicant was to serve as a conduct for channeling external
assistance to economically feasible and financially attractive projects in the country so
as to effectively utilise the country's development potential. Shortly after its
incorporation it commenced to carry on and has since carried on the business in
pursuance of the said objects.' C
The above therefore are the functions of the applicant. Needless to say, both the
applicant and the first respondent, Calico Textile Industries Ltd, are companies
registered under the Companies Ordinance, Cap 212. The second respondent is the
registrar of companies in terms of the provisions of the Companies Ordinance. D
In para 4 of the affidavit in support of the application it is stated that pursuant to the
objective for the applicant's establishment the Government of the United Republic of
Tanzania in 1978 permitted the applicant to borrow funds from the International
Bank for E Reconstruction and Development (`The World Bank') for lending to
projects in Tanzania. In para 5, it is stated,
`5. That on 27 April 1979; the applicant agreed to provide Calico Textile
Industries Limited, the first Respondent herein, with Shs2,500,00/= by way of Income
Notes and US $904,000 (or the equivalent F in other convertible currencies) by way
of a foreign currency loan.'
The respondents do not dispute that this loan was advanced-as stated by the
applicant. It (the loan) was provided under a Loan Agreement entered into between
the applicant G and the first respondent dated 8 December 1985 (exh `C' annexed to
the affidavit of Mr Pesha). It was then secured by a debenture created and issued by
the first respondent. The debenture, in terms of s 79 of the Companies Ordinance,
was then registered by the second respondent.
On the top cover of the debenture it is stated in the form of a title or subject as
follows: H
`Single Debenture for US $904,000 (or the equivalent thereto in other
convertible currencies) being approximately Shs16,626,500/=.' I
In registering the debenture the second respondent entered in the
1996 TLR p83
KYANDO J
Certificate of Registration of a charge (form C2) (exh `F' to Mr Pesha's affidavit) that
the A debenture was to secure the sum of shillings sixteen million six twenty six
thousand five hundred (T Shs 16 626 500/=) only. The form for the particulars of a
mortgage or charge created by a company registered in Tanzania, pursuant to s 79
(supra) (form No 9) (exh `E' to Mr Pesha's affidavit (the second respondent says the
correct form No 9 is B annex (i) to his counter affidavit, and I think this is so) had
been presented to the second respondent and it was on the basis of it that he issued
form C2.
This year the first respondent sent to the second respondent a `Memorandum of C
Satisfaction of Mortgage or Charge', dated 6 May 1992. The memorandum is as
follows:
`CAP 212
MEMORANDUM OF SATISFACTION D
OF MORTGAGE OR CHARGE
CALICO TEXTILE INDUSTRIES LIMITED P.O. BOX 9021, DAR ES
SALAAM,
HEREBY gives notice that the registered Charge being DEBENTURE DATED
DECEMBER, 1985, TO SECURE THE SUM OF SHILLINGS SIXTEEN MILLION SIX
HUNDRED TWENTY SIX THOUSAND FIVE E HUNDRED (T.SHS.16,626,500/=
ONLY IN FAVOUR OF TANGANYIKA/TANZANIA DEVELOPMENT FINANCE
COMPANY LIMITED of which particulars were registered with the Registrar of
Companies on the TWENTIETH day of DECEMBER 1985, was satisfied on the
TWENTY THIRD day of F DECEMBER 1988 to the extent of T.SHS. SEVENTEEN
MILLION FOUR HUNDRED THIRTY EIGHT AND CENTS THIRTY FIVE
(T.SHS.17,418,438/35) ONLY.
In witness whereof the common seal of the company was hereunder affixed
the SIXTH day of MAY 1992.' G
A `Declaration Verifying Memorandum of Satisfaction of Mortgage or Charge' in
terms s 84 (exh G) was duly issued and the memorandum was annexed to it. On the
basis of the memorandum and exh `G' to Mr Pesha's affidavit, the second respondent
issued a H certificate (exh `H'). Certifying that the charge created on 18 December
1985 by the first respondent in favour of the applicant `to secure the sum of Shs
sixteen million six twenty six thousand five hundred (Shs 16,625,500/=) only has been
discharged'. I
The certificate is dated 7 May 1992 and is signed by the second respondent.
1996 TLR p84
KYANDO J
It is now the case for the applicant in this application that the sum of Shs 16 625 500/=
A which is indicated in form No 9 and the Certificate of Registration of Charge (form
C2) (exhs `E' and `F' respectively) was a misstatement and that it ought to have been
mentioned in them that the sum which was secured by the debenture was US $904,00
B only ie without stating the Shs 16 626 500/= as now stated therein. Hence the
request that:
`The register of charges be rectified by deleting therefrom reference to
T.Shs.16,626,500/= (both in words and figures) so as to reflect the amount secured by
the debenture as being US $904,000 only.' C
It is contended by the applicant that by the terms of the loan agreement and the
debenture, the money loaned, and secured, was US $904 000 (or the equivalent in
other convertible currencies) by way of a foreign currency loan. In para 6 of his
affidavit, Mr D Pesha states that the repayment of the loan was to be made in
shillings at the National Bank of Commerce selling rate on the date of payment for
the foreign currency. Finally, in para 15, he states that the only reference to Shs 16
625 500/= in the loan documents was, as shown already, on the cover of the
debenture, and that the reference thereon, E
`was solely meant to state the Tanzania shilling equivalent of the foreign
currency loan at the date thereof for the purposes of calculation of stamp duty which
was payable in Tanzania shillings. To the extent that T.Shs were referred to in the
loan agreement and the debenture it was solely for the F purposes of providing for
the manner of payment of the foreign currency loan and not for defining the
currency in which the loan was to be secured.'
It is finally the applicant's case that the declaration of satisfaction and the
memorandum G of satisfaction of a charge or mortgage (supra) are false and the
certificate issued by the second respondent certifying the discharge of the charge is
void ab initio.
I have already stated that the respondents do not dispute that the loan was advanced
as H asserted by the applicant. Looking through their counter affidavits and written
submissions (I required counsel for both sides to file written submission), they do not,
too, seem to dispute that the loan advanced was US $904 000 (or the equivalent in
other convertible currencies) by way of a foreign currency loan. They did not, in
other words, I contend that what was agreed between the parties to be loaned, and
what was actually loaned, was
1996 TLR p85
KYANDO J
Shs 16 626 500/=. Their contention appears to me to be that even if the agreed loan
was A US $904 000 (or the equivalent in other convertible currencies) by way of a
foreign currency loan, such amount in the documents of registration of charges Form
9 and C2 (supra) could only have been expressed in Tanzania currency and that
amount at the relevant time was equivalent to Shs 16 626 500/=. They make this point
in passionate B terms, the first respondent's counsel Mr Ismail submitting, for
instance as follows:
`My learned friend has dealt at great length on the loan agreement and the
admissions, but suffice it C so may it is the debenture that is important in the
application at hand.
The amount secured by the debenture in equivalent to the foreign currency
loan ie as at 1985 $904,000 was equivalent to Shillings 16,626,500/=. Indeed it would
have been impossible to inset a figure other than Shs.16,626,500/= as at that time that
was the value of $904,000. My learned friend is D seeking to insert a foreign
currency in the charge! It is my respectful submission that the suggestion is
preposterous. The Companies Ordinance like all other legislation in this country is
meant to provide for situations in this country. The Bank of Tanzania Act 1966
specifically states in Section 1, of Part III-that "the unit of currency in Tanzania shall
be the shilling, each shilling shall be E divided into one hundred cents".
Section 26 of the same Act states--"the bank shall have the sole right to issue
bank notes and coins for Tanzania and subject to Section 33, only bank notes and
coins issued by the Bank shall be legal tender in Tanzania" (Section 33 is only a
transitory section). F
Indeed it would be unlawful for any government department to accept or
quantify any documents in a currency other than the Tanzanian shilling. It should
always be remembered that currency, like a flag, national anthem etc, are the
ingredients of sovereignty and one should not treat such issues lightly. It G would
amount to Tanzania subjecting her sovereignty to that of the United States if my
learned friends' submissions were accepted. And one can imagine the chaos and mess
it would bring. What would be the position if a loan were pegged to the Japanese
Yen, Australian dollar, Saudi Arabia's rial, Oman's rial, Dubai's dirham etc etc? Indeed
it is a well known fact that institutions and our own H government received
aid/loans/grants from various foreign donors-but that it is a matter of international
trade and not within the precincts of our courts.
The evidence on record, and even my learned friend admits that the figure of
Shs.16 626,500/= was recorded in form 9 as against that of sus. $904,000 without
malice. He however submits that it was I done inadvertently. In my respectful
submission that that is the understatement of the year. All parties were aware that the
debenture was
1996 TLR p86
KYANDO J
for security of Shs.16,626,500-but the instalments were to be paid at the rate of
the dollar to the A shilling at the material time. Indeed the loan agreement was a
mere formality, as the money was disbursed to the First Respondent between 1980 to
January 1985 (Paragraph 8 of the First Respondent's affidavit)--whereas the debenture
and the loan agreement were registered and signed in December 1985.' B
And the second respondent submits:
`It is not my intention to reply to every submission by the Applicant because
most of them involve the C Loan Agreement which is a Contract between the
Applicant and the First Respondent and the Second respondent is a stranger to the
said contract, thus I will only devote to these submissions that concerns me and I
submit as follows:
(i) The relief sought by this Application is only one and is clearly stated in
paragraph 20 of Mr. D Pesha's Affidavit and with my foremost humble apologies to
your Lordship I beg to quote the same as I do hereby quote:
" That in the premises it is just and equitable for an order to be made by
this Honourable Court that the register of charges be rectified by deleting therefrom
reference to Tshs.16,626,500/= E (both in words and figures) so as to reflect the
amount received by the debenture as being US dollars 904,000 only" I quote. (The
emphasis is mine.)
(a) In this prayer the Deponent on behalf of the Applicant states
that the amount was received by the debenture.
F And this is the Content of his prayer of relief. What his
statement means is that the amount was received by somebody else or another entity
and not by the first respondent. One wonders as to why there should be an
application against the first respondent if the Applicant states that the Applicant was
not the recipient of the amount. G
(b) The Applicant is apparently praying for equity. It is my humble
submission that it is a principle of law that equity should follow the law and not vise
versa.
(c) It is apparent that the Applicant is not applying for an increase
or decrease of the amount H but is praying for the substitution, declaration and
erasing of the currency Tanzania Shillings and replacement with a foreign currency
called US dollars. This prayer is objected to in the strongest terms and intention due
to the fact that it is a prayer/application which is totally against the laws of the
Sovereign State of United I Republic of Tanzania and the said laws are.
1996 TLR p87
KYANDO J
(i) The Companies Ordinance A
Section 2(1) of the Companies Ordinance Cap 212 provides among
other things the definition of rules to the Companies Ordinance as follows and I
quote:
"Rules" means rules made under section 285 of this Ordinance and
includes forms; B
I humbly submit that the Certificate of Registration of a charge is a
form and is commonly known as form C2 and therefore is part of the rules to the
Companies Ordinance and it was so made under the provisions of Section 285 of the
said Cap. 212. Annexure marked (ii) to my Affidavit is a photocopy of the said form
C2 otherwise known as certificate of registration of a C charge. The greater part of
the said form is prepared and only provides some dotted gaps where the Registrar
enters the necessary entries eg. dates, name of the creator of the charge, name of the
entity for which the charge is created in favour of, the amount secured-etc.
The said form clearly mentions the currency shillings and leaves no
doubt that the currency to D be stated in shillings and no other currency. In
Annexure II to my Affidavit I have marked the place where the currency shillings is
stated in the form and the marking is in light red colour.
I humbly request your Lordship to see the said mark and note the
stated currency. E
The Applicant's prayer is that this Honourable Court should order the
deletion or erasing of the term (currency) shilling.
It is my humble submission that if such order was to be issued same
would amount to amending form C2 (Certificate of Registration of a Charge) and
therefore amending the F rules-which are made under Section 285 of the Companies
Ordinance Cap. 212. Section 285 gives the power to make rules to the Minister
responsible for Companies Incorporation and with due respect not to the Court.
I further submit that rules to any state are part and parcel of that
statute. An Application to the G Court for an order amounting to an amendment of
any rules is an application to the Court to amend the statute in question.
With all humbleness and due respect I have to inform the Applicant
and remind the Applicant's Advocate that courts of law have powers to interpret laws
but not to enact nor amend laws. H
(ii) The Bank of Tanzania Act No. 12 of 1966
(a) Section 24 of Act No. 12 of 1966 provides as follows and I quote
"The Unit of currency in I Tanzania shall be the Shilling, each shilling being divided
into one hundred cents."
1996 TLR p88
KYANDO J
(b) Section 26 of Act No. 12 of 1966 provides as follows and I quote:
A
"The Bank shall have the sole right to issue bank notes
and coins in and for Tanzania and, subject to Section 33, only bank notes and coins
issued by the bank shall be legal tender in Tanzania.
I submit that from the provisions of the above quoted Sections of the
bank of Tanzania Act, Act B No. 12 of 1966 it is too obvious that the currency and
legal tender of Tanzania is the shilling or to be more specific Tanzania Shilling and no
other currency.
The charge in question is a charge created by a Tanzanian Company in
favour of another C Tanzanian Company. It is a charge between two artificial
Tanzanians and it is absurd for them to be governed while within Tanzania by a
currency and legal tender other than their national currency.
National currency, are like national flags, anthems and borders, they
are the landmarks of D sovereignty and they cannot and should not be taken lightly.
We know from our recent history that when Idi Amin took our national borders
lightly we went to war against him to defend our sovereignty. National currency
shares the same status like the borders and the National anthem and an application
that the National currency should be deleted from a government E official document
is nothing less than an insult to Tanzania and its sovereignty.
It is my submission that this prayer should fail because it contravenes
an existing statute enacted by the Parliament of Tanzania. Further that if it is allowed
it will set a bad precedent F which will cause untold chaos, mess and confusion in
the carrying out of the duties of the Registrar of Companies and the registrar of
Charges under the custody of the Registrar will end up being a completely unsystematic
registrar containing every conceivable currency on G earth depending on
what every applicant prefers. Same would include Dutchemarks, Kroners, Rubles,
Rials, Rand, Kwachas, Naira etc.
While I concede that some of the foreign loans are given in foreign
currencies, that is a matter of international trade but not within the practice of our
Court. Indeed even the national budget H is composed of local resources and foreign
resources but the framing of the budget is strictly on the national currency and not
any other currency. To allow this prayer to succeed will, to quote the distinguished
words of the Honourable Judge Kyanod in the case of Seiff Hamad Shariff v R "will
create a bad policy and a wrong policy." I therefore repeat that this prayer and I the
whole Application should be dismissed.
1996 TLR p89
KYANDO J
He also disputes that there was a misstatement in the forms registering the charge and
A on this he submits as follows:
`To do some justice to the submissions of the applicant I will make the
following few submissions/replies.
(i) On page two (2) of the submissions of the Learned Advocate of the
applicant, the Learned B Advocate states that the first respondent misstated the
amount (of money) secured by stating in Form No 9 which is the Applicant's exhibit
`E'. This allegation is strongly denied and the true fact is as follows: C
Form No. 9 is divided into five (5) columns two (2) of the columns in
which the amount secured by the Mortgage or charge is stated. I humbly crave to
draw your Lordship's attention to my Annexure (i). In the said column two the first
respondent or his Advocate stated as follows and I quote "Amount Secured by the
Mortgage or Charge as US Dollars 904,500 D being approximately Shs.16,626,600/=.
The first respondent did not state that the amount secured is Shs.16,626,500/= being
approximately US Dollars 904,000." The statement is exactly in the same manner that
the Applicant is submitting to the Court and it is surprising E that the Applicant is
disputing it, a situation which amounts to disputing his own submission. I humbly
submit that there was no misstatement on the part of the first respondent and this
submission by the applicant should not be entertained.
There having been no misstatement on the part of the first respondent,
it is my submission F that the issuance of the Certificate of Registration of the
Charge by the second respondent in the manner it was issued was not occasioned nor
influenced by any misstatement by the first respondent. G
The registration and issuance of the certificate was done in accordance
with the provisions of the law.
I further submit that if the Second respondent had registered and issued
the certificate in any H other manner e.g. entering the amount secured in US Dollars
same would have been illegal because it would have contravened the provisions of the
governing law.'
The other important arguments made by the respondents are that there is no longer
any charge created by the first respondent in favour of the applicant `due to the fact
that the I then existing charge was discharged on 6 May, 1992', and that as no
application has
1996 TLR p90
KYANDO J
been made for a declaration that the discharge is null and void the application is A
incompetent as there is nothing presently to rectify.
The other argument relates to the legality of the loan agreement of the debenture. It
is contended that as execution of the agreement and debenture was made after the B
disbursement of the amount of the loan had been made, the loan agreement and the
debenture are tainted with illegality.
I propose to consider and deal with all these points seriatim.
The application is made under s 85 of the Companies Ordinance. The section
provides: C
`85. The Court, on being satisfied that the omission to register a charge within
the time required by this Ordinance, or that the omission or misstatement of any
particular with respect to any such charge or in a memorandum of satisfaction, was
altered or due to inadvertence or to some other sufficient D cause or is not of a
nature to prejudice the position of creditors or shareholders of the company, or that
on other grounds it is just and equitable to grant a relief, may on the application of
the company or any person interested, and on such terms and conditions as seem to
the court just and expedient, order that the time for registration shall be extended or,
as the case may be, that the omission or E misstatement shall be rectified and may
make such order as to costs of the alterations it thinks fit.'
Section 82 of the Ordinance provides for the Registrar of Charges to be kept by the
Registrar of Companies, the second respondent herein. F
There are three important documents to consider in this application: (1) the loan
agreement; (ii) the debenture and (iii) forms 9 and C2. In relation to this, especially to
the debenture, in the case of In re Mechanisations (Eaglescliffe) Ltd (1), a case cited
by G Capt. Kameja, learned counsel for the applicant, the mortgagee presented to the
companies registration form CF (corresponding to form No 9 supra) which had been
completed by the solicitors of the company in respect of a charge securing certain
sums. The particulars therein were misstated as to the amount secured in that no H
reference was made therein to interest and additional money secured by the charge.
The companies registrar registered the charge as per submitted particulars and issued
a certificate under s 98(2) of the Companies Act 1948 (corresponding to s 82 of the
Ordinance).
In a subsequent creditor's voluntary winding up, for the total sum advanced by them
I including the excess interest and the additional money not mentioned in the
particulars of the charge and the regis-
1996 TLR p91
KYANDO J
trar's certificate. The Liquidator sought a declaration that in respect of the excess the
A charges were void as against him or any creditor for want of registration, arguing
that the effect of s 98(2) aforesaid is to make the registrar's certificate conclusive
evidence of due registration of a charge securing such amount as is stated on the face
of the certificate. Rejecting the argument, Buckley J stated, at 35: B
`In order to discover the terms and effect of the charge ... one must look at the
document creating the charge and not at the register. It is from that document that
one will discover what moneys are secured and what is the total amount secured by
the charge.' C
Capt Kameja submits that the instrument creating a charge, `in this case debenture,
constitutes primary evidence of the extent of the charge and the amount thereunder'.
With respect, I agree. In addition I would add that though the amount stated in a loan
D agreement may not necessarily all have to be secured, where, as in this case, it is
contended the amount stated in the loan agreement was secured by a charge, the
agreement becomes, as I have stated already, an important document too, to look at in
order to discover what amount was loaned and then secured. E
Now, according to the loan agreement in this case, the loan advanced by the applicant
to the first respondent was US $904 000 (or the equivalent in other convertible
currencies by way of a foreign currency loan . Looking at the debenture, apart from
the cover as F shown, the amount indicated to be secured by it throughout its (the
Debenture's) body is stated to be US $904 000. This is the flow of the statement of
amounts in the two documents. According to these two documents, what was the
amount which was loaned and secured? Obviously US $904 000. There is no mention
of T Shs 16 626 500/= in the loan agreement or the body of the debenture. I agree
therefore that the G amount which was advanced by the applicant to the first
respondent which was then secured by the debenture created and issued by the first
respondent in this application is US $904 000. I have already said that even the
respondents in their counter-affidavits and submissions do not appear to dispute this.
H
Was it necessary to state the US $904 000 only in form No 9 and C2? (In the column
`Amount secured by the Mortgage or Charge (In form No 9 Annex (i) to the second
respondent's counter affidavit) it is stated that the amount secured is US $904 000
being approximately Shs 16 626 500/=). This is, as stated already, the crucial point in
this I matter. The responding arguments on it have been reproduced above. To them
Capt Kameja replies as follows:
1996 TLR p92
KYANDO J
`My Lord, the respondents' submission that the amount secured by the
debenture was T Shs A 16,626,500/= because under the laws of Tanzania no charge
could be registered in foreign currency is as far fetched as it is fanciful. The
respondents' arguments in support of national sovereignty, the national flag, national
anthem etc. may be patriotic and, perhaps, good material for a political dissertion but,
in my view, certainly not practical. Respondents' have not cited any authority, and I
am B not aware of one, to support the proposition that a Tanzania person, individual
or corporate, cannot borrow money in foreign currency, secure it as a foreign
currency debt and repay it in foreign currency.
Equally fanciful in the respondents' submission that the applicant, in the
words of counsel for the first C respondent, is "seeking to insert a foreign currency in
the charge". My Lord, the charge, being the debenture dated 18 December, 1985,
speaks for itself and, at the risk of repeating what I stated in the main submission, I
refer to condition 1 of the said debenture which clearly provides that "This Debenture
is security for principal moneys not exceeding US $904,000 (or the equivalent thereof
in D other convertible currencies) in aggregate together with interest thereon." In
this regard, I reiterate my arguments at pages 9 and 10 of the main submission and in
particular the fact, which the respondents have not disputed, that "the Tanzania
Shilling is not and has never at any material time E been a convertible currency". It
is too obvious to be seriously disputed that the Tanzania shilling, being a nonconvertible
currency, was not contemplated by the parties as being the currency of
the charge.
The second respondent also argues that the currency stated in Companies
Form C2, i.e. the certificate of registration, is Shillings and that recording the amount
secured in any other currency F would amount to amendment of the said form and
"therefore amending the rules which are made under section 285 of the Companies
Ordinance". My Lord, section 285 of the Companies Ordinance only provides for
"General rules and fees for Winding up" and, for sure, registers of such charges G
have nothing to do with section 285 aforesaid.
At any rate forms are applied as far as is practicable. Substitution of the word
"Shillings" by the words "United States Dollars" in the said form would not have
offended any law. In the said Form C.2 issued by the second respondent, and which
he apparently holds to be sacrosanct, the second H respondent crossed out the word
"charge" and substituted therefore the word "Debentures" so as, in our view, to clearly
identify the type of charge created. If the second respondent's argument is pursued to
its logical conclusion his own act, above, amounted to an amendment of the form and
the rules and the second respondent doesn't even suggest he has powers to make such
amendments. I How come then that substituting "United States
1996 TLR p93
KYANDO J
Dollars" for "Shillings" on the said form so as to specify the currency of the
charge suddenly A becomes an amendment of the rules! That would, in our humble
submission, be a classic case of hypocritical double standards.'
With extreme respect, I could not agree more with Capt Kameja in his above B
submissions. The immutability except by the Minister's hand, of form C2 has been, as
Capt Kameja rightly contends, violated by the second respondent himself. In that
form the word `Charge' has been cancelled out by the second respondent and above it
the word `Debenture' to accommodate the debenture in this case has been written. If
that C form can so easily be changed by the second respondent, why should
cancelling the word `Shillings' and writing the words `US Dollars' instead amount to
amending the rules, I simply do not comprehend this. As for the other arguments on
the point stated earlier on above, Capt Kameja has tackled them all in his reply and all
that I can say is D that these arguments of the respondents are to me nothing more
than sheer sophistry. I reject them here and hold that the US $904 000 should have
been expressed in forms No 9 and C2, including the register of charges, as the amount
secured by the debenture created and issued by the first respondent in this case. The
loan was a foreign currency E loan, and there was nothing wrong or improper to
express it in foreign currencies in form No 9 and C2.
The statement of T Shs 16 626 500/= in relation to US $904 000 in form No 9 and C2
does, in view of the fast falling value of the Tanzania Shilling, to any mind now look
F ludicrous. I accept as true the explanation given by the applicant for stating the
equivalent of T Shs 16 626 500/= and I think it was because of the purposes stated in
that explanation that the amount was stated as a mere approximation of US $904 000.
If indeed the amount was intended to be the amount to be secured by the debenture,
an G actual amount would have been stated and not a mere approximation.
Concerning the arguments or point that the charge has been discharged, I am of the
view that such arguments or points can be valid only if the loan of US $904 000 has
been paid or notified. The applicant says it has not and if that is so, the so-called H
discharge is no discharge at all. This is because it is based on the erroneous
assumption that the loan was for Shs 16 626 500/= whereas it was not, it was for US
$904 000. No valid discharge has ever taken place therefore. The one effected by the
second respondent on the basis of the first respondent's memorandum and declaration
I of correctness of the memorandum is hereby quashed and set aside.
1996 TLR p94
KYANDO J
As regards the legality or otherwise of the loan agreement and the debenture, I detect
no A illegality in these and I reject the respondents' arguments in relation to this.
The other arguments made by the respondents on the merits of the application do not
seem to be worth any consideration here. I find them all without any substance and I
reject all of them here. B
They (the respondents) have also raised several preliminary points of objection to the
application. One of them is that the application is wrongly made under s 95 of the
Civil Procedure Code 1966. I am of the view that this point would have been valid if
the C application did not cite s 85 of the Companies Ordinance as well. As it,
however, cites this latter section, s 95 Civil Procedure Code can be ignored without
the application being affected in any way.
Another point is that the affidavit of Mr Pesha is defective in that the sources of some
of D the information are not disclosed. Capt Kameja has replied to this by referring
the court to the decision of Georges CJ as he then was in The National Bank of
Commerce v Mannbha Shankarbhai Desai (2) wherein the learned Chief Justice
stated: E
`Similarly, paragraphs 9-1 are clearly sworn to on information and belief, and
since the source has not been set out, the paragraphs are clearly bad and should be
struck out. There remains a body of evidence sufficiently vouched in the affidavits
from personal knowledge or from information and belief F with sources specified to
enable the matter to be disposed of.'
In the present case, the information necessary for the full and final determination of
the application has been properly sworn to and the important documents exhibited.
These are the loan agreement, the debenture, forms No 9 and C2 and those relating to
the G `satisfaction' of the charge. The point raised therefore is of little, if any,
weight.
Finally, there is the point on limitation. It is contended by the respondents that the
application is time-barred. However, the following answer, with which I agree, by
Capt H Kameja in his reply to the contentions of the respondents suffices to dispose
of the contentions in favour of the applicant:
`My Lord, the first respondent has also raised an objection based on the law of
limitation. This objection holds no water. The application herein was based on the
ground that the misstatement of I the particulars was inadvertent or, alternatively,
that it is just and equitable to
1996 TLR p95
KYANDO J
grant relief. In Black's Law Dictionary, already cited, the word "inadvertence"
is said at page 759 A thereof to be used chiefly in statutory and rule enumerations of
the grounds on which a judgment or decree may be vacated or set aside; as
"mistake,...". It connotes a mistake occasioned by intention or excusable neglect. Thus
in this case the application is for relief from the consequences of the respondents'
mistakes. B
Section 26(c) of the law of Limitation Act, No. 10 of 1971 provides that where
the proceeding is for relief from the consequences of a mistake the period of
limitation shall not begin to run until the Plaintiff has discovered the mistake, or
could, which reasonable diligence, have discovered it. C
In this case, Mr. Pesha, the applicant's Company Secretary, has responded, in
paragraph 4 of the reply to the second respondent's counter affidavit, that he
inadvertently overlooked the misstatement of the amount secured at the time the
certificate of registration was issued and that he first discovered the misstatement
after receiving the second respondent's letter dated 16 April, 1992. The D
respondents have not tendered any evidence to show that the applicant was in fact
aware of the mistake, that is to say the misstatement of the amount secured, on a date
earlier than 16 April, 1992 or that he did not discover it earlier for lack of reasonable
diligence.
It is submitted that in this case the period of limitation did not start to run
until April, 1992 and since E the application was filed on 29 May, 1992 well within
the period of limitation of sixty days provided for under item 21 of Part III of the First
Schedule to the law of Limitation Act the objection cannot succeed.' F
On the whole, the preliminary objections raised by the respondents are really of faint,
if any, valued and that is why I did not consider them worthy to be dealt with before
dealing with the application on its merits. I overrule all of them.
Should the application be granted? The statement in forms No 9 and C2 that the loan
G secured by the first respondent's debenture was US $904 000 being equivalent to T
Shs 16 626 500/= or Shs 16 626 500/= respectively is clearly a misstatement. The
correct amount secured by the debenture is US $904 000 (or the equivalent in other
convertible currencies) by way of a foreign currency loan as per the debenture itself.
It was a H misstatement therefore to state in these forms that the amount of the loan
secured was US $904 000 being equivalent T Shs 16 626 500/= (form No 9) or Shs 16
626 500/= (form C2). That mistake has to be rectified in all justice and fairness. I find
and am satisfied, therefore, that it is just and equitable that the relief sought by this
application be I granted. As was done in
1996 TLR p96
the In re Mechanisations (Eaglescliffe) Ltd case (supra) therefore, I grant the
application A as prayed, with costs to the applicant. The second respondent is hereby
ordered to, within fourteen days from the date of the delivery of this ruling, rectify
forms No 9 and C2 (plus his register of charges) to show that the amount secured by
the debenture discussed in this case is US $904 000 (or its equivalent in other
convertible currency) by B way of a foreign loan, or, simply US $904 000 without
any reference to T Shs 16 626 500/=. The first respondent is ordered also to rectify his
register of charges in relation to this loan so that it is shown therein that the
debenture is security for US $904 000 only, as the debenture itself states. C
1996 TLR p96
D
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