WILLIAM KIMARO & 475 OTHERS v COOPERS & LYBRAND AND ANOTHER 1996 TLR 252 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Dar es Salaam
Judge Ramadhani JJA, Mnzavas JJA and Mfalila JJA
B
CIVIL APPEAL NO 5 OF 1995
23 October, 1995
(Appeal from the judgment of the High Court of Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, Bahati J.) C
Flynote
Company Law - Winding up - Creditors' claims against company in liquidation -
Proof of debt on affidavit is required for cause of action - Companies (Winding Up)
Rules, 1929. D
-Headnote
The First Appellant filed a representative suit on behalf of the other appellants against
the Respondents. The First Respondent is the liquidator of Zambia Tanzania Road
Services Ltd, the Second Respondent. The Appellants were all employees of the
Second Respondent. E
During August 1985, the Second Respondent was placed into liquidation. The Second
Respondent then informed the Appellants that their terminal benefits could not be
paid immediately, owing to the financial state of the now liquidated Second
Respondent and bearing in mind the order of preference of the various creditors.
After obtaining a 'loan' from the Government of Tanzania, one of the shareholders,
the Appellants were paid F Shs 32,761,927/= in total and in full and final settlement
of their claims. This payment was made in July 1987, some two years after their due
date in August 1985.
The Appellants duly filed a suit in the court below for Shs 84,779,770/05, being in
respect of `repatriation costs, luggage allowance, outstation allowance and a
subsistence G allowance for 664 days' based on the devaluation of the Tanzanian
shilling, increased transport costs and outstation allowances which had taken place
over the two-year period since the company's liquidation when the benefits were due
and payable.
The trial Judge found that the claims were valid, but dismissed them on the basis that
the claims had not been proved as required by the Companies (Winding Up) Rules, H
1929, and that therefore the entire claim was premature.
The Appellants appeal on the ground that the trial Judge erred in holding that the suit
was premature and that therefore there was no cause of action.
Held: I
(i) For the trial Judge to have determined the validity of the claims after
1996 TLR p253
A finding that they were premature was incorrect, since he was thereby
virtually pre-empting the decision of the liquidator.
(ii) The Companies (Winding Up) Rules, 1929, require any debt to be
proved by affidavit; and until this is done, there can be no cause of action.
(iii) The two claims in this suit were thus prematurely lodged. B
(iv) The appeal is dismissed in its entirety, with costs.
Case Information
Ordered accordingly.
Semgalawe, for the Appellants.
Nguluma, for the Respondents. C
[zJDz]Judgment
Mfalila, JA:
The appellant William Kimaro filed a representative suit in the High Court, on behalf
of himself and 475 other fellow ex-employees of Zambia Tanzania Road Services Ltd.
The D suit was filed against the liquidators of the said company because it was then
under liquidation. The liquidators are Coopers & Lybrand, the present respondents.
The appellant demanded a total of Shs 84,779,770.05/= being the difference between
repatriation costs paid in July 1987 but calculated at the rates obtaining on 8 August
E 1985 when the company was wound up and those actually obtaining in July 1987.
Perhaps a brief background to the claim would clarify the position. Zambia Tanzania
Road Services Ltd was a limited liability company incorporated in Zambia and was F
registered in Tanzania as a branch of a foreign company, but the shareholders of the
company were the Governments of Tanzania and Zambia and an Italian company
named Intersommer Condrad Spa. The appellant and his colleagues were employees
of the Tanzania branch of the company. In August 1985 the shareholders passed a G
resolution to liquidate the company. On 26 August 1985 the respondents as
liquidators terminated the employment of all the employees except a few. But due to
financial difficulties, the liquidators could not pay the employees' terminal benefits
immediately. All H that the liquidators could do in the circumstances was to ask all
employees to leave for their respective homes but to leave their contact addresses
behind through which they could be reached. The appellant said that he and his
colleagues could not leave for their homes because they had no money to pay for
themselves and their families as well as I freight for their personal belongings. They
therefore remained at their respective stations in Dar es Salaam, Iringa and Mbeya.
The
1996 TLR p254
MFALILA JA
respondents were faced with the problem of paying the appellants who were
classified A as unsecured creditors ahead of other secured creditors of the company.
To get round the problem, the respondents approached one of the shareholders, the
Government of Tanzania for a loan equivalent to the sum claimed by the appellants.
The Government of B Tanzania agreed and advanced the amount needed to the
respondents through the National Transport Corporation. On receipt of this loan, the
liquidators paid the appellants all their entitlements which included salaries and/or
allowances and repatriation costs. All these amounted to Shs 32,761,927/=. These
payments were C effected in July 1987, ie two years after the payments were due in
August 1985 when the company was liquidated. The appellants accepted these
payments as representing their full claims and that they had no further claims against
the respondents. However, the appellants later became of the view that these
payments fell far short of their actual D requirements and lodged fresh claims with
the respondents who rejected them, maintaining that the appellants no longer had
any claims against them, they having been paid in full all their entitlements.
Following the rejection of their additional claims by the respondents, the appellants
lodged this claim in the High Court and in para 14 of their E plaint, they stated:
`14. That the plaintiffs are claiming from the defendants a total of Shs
84,779,770/05/= being repatriation costs, luggage allowance and outstation allowance.
The plaintiffs are entitled to be paid the same by the defendants because the
defendants failed and/or neglected to pay F them their terminal benefits
immediately after serving them the notices of termination as required by the law and
had a duty to pay them the repatriation costs, luggage allowances and outstation
allowances taking into account the devaluation of the Tanzania shilling, increased G
transport costs and outstation allowances.'
The appellants also claimed an interest of 30 per cent per annum on the sum claimed
from the date of filing to the date of final judgment plus costs. H
We agree with the Trial Judge that the claim as framed was vague although it appears
to have been drawn up by a very brilliant lawyer, the late Malingumu Rutashobya.
However, in the course of the hearing, the evidence revealed that the appellants were
actually I claiming the difference between the repatriation costs including luggage
allowances which were paid in July 1987 but calculated at
1996 TLR p255
MFALILA JA
1985 rates when the company was wound up and the actual costs of repatriation in
July A 1987 at the time of payment. The appellants also made it clear that this figure
of Shs 84,779,770/05/= includes subsistence allowances for 664 days which they spent
while waiting at their respective stations to be paid their entitlements.
At the commencement of the trial, three issues were framed, issues on which would
B depend the outcome of the case. These were as follows:
(1) whether the defendants assured the plaintiffs that all terminal benefits
would be paid immediately C
(2) whether the defendants requested the plaintiffs to remain at their
respective work stations after issuing them with notices of termination
(3) whether the defendants neglected to provide or pay the plaintiff's
terminal benefits D
(4) to what reliefs are entitled.
With regard to issues (1) and (2), the appellant who gave evidence as PW1 told the
Trial Court: E
`We were informed that the company had been wound up and we were given
two weeks' leave. After that the General Manager announced that their services were
being terminated and that they would be paid their terminal benefits . . . it was the
liquidator who was actually terminating our employment. We were required to leave
an address for the purposes of future correspondence. But we did not F leave any
addresses because we had not been paid our benefits as employees.'
It is clear that this statement does not contain any suggestion that the respondents as
G liquidators promised the appellants that all their terminal benefits would be paid
immediately, and also that they were told to remain at their respective stations after
being issued with notices of termination pending the payment in full of their claims.
In the circumstances, the Trial Judge answered both these issues in the negative. H
With regard to the third issue, the Trial Judge accepted the evidence given by the
liquidator Mr Mundolwa, that the respondents as liquidators did not pay the
appellants' terminal benefits sooner because of negligence, he said that the appellants'
terminal I benefits could not be paid immediately because there was no money, the
company was insolvent. He produced documents to establish this
1996 TLR p256
MFALILA JA
and that on the contrary every effort was made to secure the necessary funds from
one A of the shareholders, efforts which enabled the appellants to be paid even
ahead of secured creditors. In the circumstances, the judge held that it could not be
said that the respondents neglected to pay the appellants their terminal benefits,
because there was B no money available for this purpose until after the same was
borrowed from one of the shareholders. Accordingly he also answered this issue in
the negative.
Having answered all the main issues in the negative, the Trial Judge then proceeded
to deal with the last standard ancillary issue, namely to what reliefs are the parties
entitled? C In answering this question the judge asked himself whether the
appellants' two pronged claim is maintainable in law. The first prong concerned their
claim for the difference between the rates of fare and freight charges obtaining on 26
August 1985 when they were computed and July 1987 when the payments were
made, arguing that D between these two dates the fares to their homes as well as
freight charges had almost doubled. The second prong concerned their claim for
subsistence allowances for 664 days they spend waiting to be paid their terminal
benefits. The judge held that both these E claims were properly made and are
supported by s 53 of the Employment Ordinance, but he dismissed them because they
had not been proved as required by the Companies (Winding up) Rules, and that
therefore the entire claim was premature.
In this appeal, Mr Semgalawe who appeared for the appellants, filed only one ground
of F appeal, namely that the Trial Judge erred in law in holding that the suit is
premature and that therefore there was no cause of action. At the hearing of this
appeal and in support of this ground, Mr Semgalawe argued that there was no need
for further proof of the debt G made up of additional claims because the liquidator
was merely being asked to pay what he had already paid particularly when what was
being asked were statutory claims.
On our part we think it was not correct for the Trial Judge to determine the validity
of these claims after saying that they were premature. This was virtually pre-empting
the H decision of the liquidator. The liquidator should be left free to determine the
validity of each debt submitted to him. In our view, the Trial Judge should have based
his decision on the reasons he gave at p 131 of his judgment and should not have
discussed the validity of the claims in law. In this passage, the judge stated: I
`I agree with Mrs Maajar that whatever claims there may be they
1996 TLR p257
must be brought in accordance with the Companies (Winding Up) Rules 1929.
In para 15 of the A plaint, it is stated that "plaintiffs have repeatedly demanded the
aforementioned amount from the defendants but the defendants have refused and/or
neglected to pay them the same". This may be so, but that would not be enough
because the Companies (Winding Up) Rules 1929 require any debt to be proved by an
affidavit verifying the debt. The plaintiffs do not claim to have done so. Therefore B
until such proof is done there cannot be any cause of action.'
We agree, and say that the Rules do not make any distinction between debts arising
out C of different claims. The original claims were subjected to proof and paid, and
additional claims must be treated separately and subjected to the same process of
proof under the Rules. This was not done, accordingly we agree with Dr Nguluma,
counsel for the respondents that the two claims in this suit amounting to Shs
84,779,770/05/= were D prematurely lodged in court. There is no need to go further
than this lest we prejudice any proceedings that may come from the liquidator for
proof of these claims.
For these reasons we are satisfied that this appeal has no merit and we dismiss it in its
entirety with costs. E
1996 TLR p257
F
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