LAUSA ALFAN SALUM AND 116 OTHERS v MINISTER FOR LANDS HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND NATIONAL HOUSING CORPORATION 1992 TLR 293 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Mwanza
Judge Moshi J
D
6 October, 1992
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - Prerogative orders - Certiorari and prohibition -
Circumstance for issue. E
-Headnote
This is an application for leave to apply for orders of certiorari and prohibition under
section 17, 17A and 18 of the Law Reform (Fatal Accidents and Miscellaneous
provisions) Ordinance Cap 36 as amended by Act No. 55 of 1968 and Act No. 27 of F
1991. The application was intended to challenge the exemption given by the Minister
for Lands, to the second respondent from all the provisions of the Rent Restriction
Act relating to the restriction on the amount of rent that may be charged or collected
and from the provisions of sections 12, 16, 17, 26 and 37 of the Rent Restriction Act.
On G the authority of the first respondent's order the second respondent increased
rents ranging from 845.56% to 14,330.64% among applicants with effect from
September 1st 1992.
Held: (i) Any action of a public official done in official capacity is challengeable on H
the ground of illegality, irrationality and procedural impropriety.
(ii) from the submissions and affidavits a prima facie case has been made out
for the intended application.
Case Information
Application granted. I
1992 TLR p294
MOSHI J
Matata, for Applicants A
Magoma for respondents
[zJDz]Judgment
Moshi, J.: This is an application for leave to apply for Orders of Certiorari and
Prohibition preferred by the learned advocate for the applicants, Mr. Matata, under B
the provisions of sections 17, 17A and 18 of the Law Reform (Fatal Accidents and
Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance Cap. 360, as amended by Act No. 55 of 1968,
and Act No. 27 of 1991. It is supported by the affidavit sworn by one Lansa Alfan
Salum for, and on behalf of, and with the authority of, all the other 116 applicants, C
and it is resisted by a counter-affidavit sworn by William C. Magoma, learned Senior
State Attorney, for, and on behalf of, the Attorney General.
The short background to the matter is as follows. The applicants are tenants in
premises in which the second respondent is the landlord under tenancy agreements
which D stipulate, among other terms and conditions, the rents payable. On January
24th 1992, the first respondent, Minister for Lands, Housing and Urban Development,
made an Order under section 2(1)(b) of the Rent Restriction Act 1984, published
under GN No. 41 of 1992, which exempted the second respondent, National Housing
Corporation, E among other parastatals specified therein, from all the provisions of
the Rend Restriction Act relating to the restriction on the amount of rent that may be
charged or collected by the second respondent from any tenant occupying any part of
their premises. The Order also exempted the second respondent from the provisions
of sections 12, 16, 17, 26 F and 37 of the Rent Restriction Act which operate to
confer upon a tenant a statutory tenancy upon the determination of his contractual
tenancy. This Order was made with the approval of the National Assembly signified
by the Resolution passed at Dodoma on the Twenty third day of January 1992. G
Consequent upon, and on the authority of the first respondent's Order, the second
respondent then increased rents at exorbitant rates ranging from 843.56% to
14,330.64% among the applicants effective September 1st 1992. The percentage of the
increased rent has now been reduced to, and it stands at, 800%. H
Mr. Matata's grounds of contention are threefold: First, that the rent increases are
unreasonably exorbitant, were unilaterally made, are disproportionate among the
applicants, and are discriminatory in that they favour the specified parastatals against
other parastatals and private landlords, and thus offend Article 13 (1) and (2) of the I
Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania,
1992 TLR p295
MOSHI J
as well as the terms and conditions of the tenancy agreements, and the principles of
A natural justice. The case of Madhwa and Others v City Council of Nairobi [1968]
E.A. 406, was cited and relied upon. Secondly, that the Minister's Order casts the
jurisdiction of the Regional Housing Tribunal and that the caster clause offends
Article 13 (3) of the Constitution, and, Thirdly, that the Minister's Order was ultravires
the B enabling provision of the relevant law, in that, section 2 (1)(b) of the
Rent Restriction Act empowers the Minister of exempt from all or any of the
provisions of the Rent Restriction Act, premises or class of premises, and not a class of
landlords. Leave is then being sought to contest the Minister's Order and the second
respondent's C increases of rent on these grounds in the intended application. The
learned advocate prayed for the issue of an interim prohibitory order to restrain the
second respondent from charging the new rents, and from evicting the applicants
until the intended application, in the event that leave is granted, is finalized, on
account of that the D Minister's Order confers on the second respondent powers to
charge any rent and to evict tenants without recourse to Regional Housing Tribunals
or to Courts of law for that matter. A passage from Halsbury's Laws of England
Volume 11, page 72, paragraph 130, was cited and relied upon. E
Mr. Magoma is resisting the application on three grounds. First, that the application is
defective in that Lausa Alfan Salum has no locus standi and that her affidavit is
defective in that it does not give her particulars. But there is an instrument attached
to the affidavit as annexure A executed by the rest of the applicants authorizing Lausa
to F appear and act for, and on behalf of, them. Mr. Magoma has stated that
Annexure A was not served on him, and I am certain that had he seen it, he would
have realized that his contention that Lausa has no locus standi is totally devoid of
merit. I have had sight of Lausa's affidavit. I have examined its form and contents.
With respect, it does G occur to me, on proper reflection, that the affidavit is devoid
of the defect complained of or of any other defect for that matter. It portrays all that a
defective affidavit does not. I am satisfied, and hereby find, that Lausa has locus
standi, and that her affidavit is not defective. H
Secondly, Mr. Magoma has submitted that the first respondent - the Minister was
wrongly joined in these proceedings and that the second respondent would have been
the only respondent. With even greater respect. I find this argument unsustainable.
As rightly pointed out by Mr. Matata, the effect of the minister's order was to confer
I upon the second respondent an unrestricted power to
1992 TLR p296
MOSHI J
determine rents by removing tenants' right of statutory tenancy, and casting the A
jurisdiction of regional housing tribunals. In other words, in raising the rents, the
second respondent was clearly acting upon, and exercising, the power conferred upon
them by the minister through his order. Viewed that way, therefore, it is impossible
to divorce the action of the Minister from that of the second respondent. What they
did, in my view, B was so intermingled and interdependent that one could hardly
proceed against one of them without at the same time proceeding against the other. I
am satisfied, and hereby find, that the first respondent, the Minister, is properly
joined in these proceedings. C
And Mr. Magoma's third point of contention is that this application is devoid of merit
on account of that the Minister's Order was not ultra-vires the enabling provision of
the Rent Restriction Act, and that it was not in violation of any Articles of the
Constitution. Well, quite obviously, in my view, this court cannot properly be called
upon to D adjudicate on these matters, one way or the other, at this stage of the
proceedings. Those are matters touching upon the merits or otherwise of the intended
application. All that the court has to decide at this juncture is whether or not a prima
facie case has been made out for the intended application. E
Broadly speaking, prerogative orders of certiorari and Prohibition may be issued in
certain cases, either to quash a decision made in the course of performing a public
duty or to prohibit the performance of a public duty, where the injured party has a
right to have anything done, and has no other specific means of, either having the
decision F quashed or the performance of the duty prohibited, when the obligation
arises out of the official status of the party or public body complained against. Quite
clearly, the applicants have an interest in the matter they are applying for. The first
respondent, and the second respondent, are a public official, and a public body,
respectively, who had G an imperative legal duty of public nature which they had to
perform in their official capacity. In my considered view, any of their actions or
decisions is challengeable, firstly, if it is tainted with illegality, that is, the power
exercised is ultra vires and contrary H to the law. Secondly, if it is tainted with
irrationality, that is, the action or decision is unreasonable in that it is so outrageous
in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had
rightly applied his mind to the matter to be acted upon or to be decided could have
thus acted or decided. And thirdly if the action I or decision is tainted with
procedural impropriety, that is, failure to observe basic rules
1992 TLR p297
of natural justice or failure to act with procedural fairness towards the person who
will A be affected by the action or decision.
In this matter, I have given due consideration to both learned counsels' submissions,
and I have perused the affidavit as well as the counter-affidavit. I am satisfied that a
prima facie case has been made out for the intended application. Invariably, though,
in an B application of this nature, the grant of leave to apply for an order of
certiorari or prohibition or both operates as a stay of the proceedings in question until
the determination of the intended application or until the court otherwise orders.
There is much good sense in this and, besides, I am buttressed in this by what is stated
at page C 72, paragraph 130, Volume 11, 3rd Edition, of Halsbury's Laws of England.
In the event, I allow the application, and hereby grant leave to apply for Orders of
Certiorari and Mandamus. An interim Prohibitory order to issue restraining the
second D respondent from charging and collecting the new rents from the
applicants, and from evicting the applicants from the promises on account of their
failure to pay the new rents, until the intended application is determined.
E Order accordingly.
1992 TLR p297
F
0 Comments
PLACE YOUR COMMENT HERE
WARNING: DO NOT USE ABUSIVE LANGUAGE BECAUSE IT IS AGAINST THE LAW.
THE COMMENTS OF OUR READERS IS NOT OUR RESPONSIBILITY.