HAMSON D. GHIKAS v LUDWINA G. GHIKAS 1992 TLR 288 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Arusha
Judge Mfalila JJA, Kisanga JJA, Mapigano Ag. JA
21 September 1992 B
Flynote
Administration of Estates - Grant of probate - Conditions for grant - Necessity of a
will.
-Headnote
The respondent petitioned for, and was granted, probate by the High Court in respect
of the estate of her late father. The appellant, also the child of the same deceased C
father applied for a revocation of the grant of the probate to the respondent but the
High Court refused the application. The appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal. In
the course of hearing and upon perusal of the High Court proceedings, the Court
noted a D number of irregularities whose details are found in the order of the Court.
Held: The petition for probate by the respondent was misconceived as the deceased
died intestate and the purported grant of the same was null and void. E
Case Information
Order accordingly.
Ngalo, for appellant
Masuma, for the respondent. F
Judgment
Kisanga and Mfalila, JJ.A. and Mapigano Ag. J.A.: The record in the matter before us
shows that the respondent has petitioned for, and was duly granted, probate by the
High Court (Chua, J.) in respect of the estate of her father, the late Adolf D. G
Ghikas. Subsequently the appellant who is also the child of the deceased, applied for a
revocation of the grant to the respondent, but the High Court (Mroso, J.) refused the
application.
It is from that refusal that this appeal is preferred. Before us the appellant is
represented by Mr. C.M. Ngalo, learned advocate, while Mr. C.J. Maruma, learned
advocate is H for the respondent.
When the appeal was called on for hearing counsel for both sides informed us that
they were applying for a consent order to provide for, inter alia, a variation of the
Grant of Letters of Administration issued to the respondent so as to include the
appellant I
1992 TLR p289
KISANGA JJA, MFALILA JJA, MAPIGANO AG. JA
as a joint grantee of Letters of Administration in respect of the estate in question. A
It was at once apparent that there was a serious problem in the matter. While the
learned counsel are asking us to vary the Grant of Letters of Administration issued to
the respondent, the record makes it quite plain that what was issued to the
respondent B was not a Grant of Letters of Administration; it was a Grant of Probate
duly issued in pursuance of the respondent's application for the same. It is therefore
impossible to make the consent order as proposed by counsel for the simple reason
that we cannot vary a Grant of Letters of Administration which was never issued in
the first instance. C
But the matter does not end there. There is the further question of the validity of the
said Grant of Probate issued to the respondent. Section 24(1) of Probate and
Administration Ordinance (Cap.445) provides that: D
24-(1) Probate may be granted only to an executor appointed by the will.
And rule 33 of the Probate Rules requires, inter alia, that: E
(a) the last will of the deceased and all codicils thereto shall accompany the
petition for grant of probate.
The reading of both provisions makes it abundantly clear that the petition for, and
grant of, probate presuppose the existence of a will. In the instant case, however, the
F purported position for probe by respondent was not accompanied by any will, and
going through the entire record there is no mention whatsoever of any will left by
the deceased. Indeed the very fact that counsel are asking for consent order, to vary
the grant of Letters of Administration so as to make the appellant a joint grantee of G
Letters of Administration clearly suggests that no will of the deceased exists or has
been traced.
In the circumstances, therefore, it seems plain to us that the petition for probate by
the respondent was grossly misconceived and the purported grant of the same was
simply H null and void. When those matters were pointed out to the learned counsel
for the parties, they readily conceded.
In the result we set aside the purported grant of probate as being null and void, and as
this is entirely a family matter we make no order for costs.
I Order accordingly.
1992 TLR p290
A
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