SALUM SURURU NABHANI v ZAHOR ABDULLA ZAHOR 1988 TLR 41 (CA)
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Zanzibar
Judge Makame JA
6th May, 1988
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - Appeals - Application for leave to appeal - Notice filed
out of D time - No sufficient reason for delay shown - Rule 8 of Court of Appeal
Rules 1979.
Court of Appeal Rules -Appeals - Application for leave to appeal - Notice filed out of
time - No sufficient reason for delay shown - Rule 8 of Court of Appeal Rules 1979.
E
Civil Practice and Procedure - Judgment - Who may receive judgment.
-Headnote
The applicant had attended court proceedings until the last hearing date. After the
court F had informed the parties that judgment would be delivered on a specified
date, about two months later, the applicant who was the respondent in the case left
for Oman. He was still in Oman on the date of judgment which was received on his
behalf by another person who offered no proof that he had been sent by the
applicant. The judgment was delivered against the applicant. The applicant went back
to Zanzibar about 3 weeks after G the judgment. Dissatisfied he sought to appeal but
was well out of time. He applied for leave to appeal out of time.
Held: (i) In order to receive judgment for another person, the receiver need not have
H power of attorney; it would be enough if the representative can produce any
convincing proof that he was sent and authorised by the party concerned to receive
judgment on the latter's behalf;
(ii) the applicant has failed to advance sufficient reasons to justify leave to file
I appeal out of time.
1988 TLR p42
MAKAME JA
Case Information
A Application is dismissed.
[zJDz]Judgment
Makame, J.A.: This application arises from a transaction in a financial culture I found
interesting. The applicant, resident in Pemba, borrowed from the respondent, in
Zanzibar, B various sums of money for each of which he issued what was described
as a warka, pledging some of his date trees in Muscat. Thereafter the applicant kept on
issuing warkas to other people pledging more trees so as to raise more and more sums
of money. That complicated matters for the respondent, who eventually had to file a
suit in C the High Court of Zanzibar to recover shs. 300,000/=. The sum prayed for
was duly awarded to the respondent in a judgment delivered by the learned Chief
Justice on 16/10/86. On that day the applicant was not in court, but, according to the
record, one Abbas Nada Hija, who said he and the applicant were married in the same
family, D received the judgment, "k.n.y. Mdaiwa" - on behalf of the defendant.
On 17th December, 1986, that is over two months later, the applicant swore an
affidavit to say that he was away in Oman when the judgment was delivered and did
not return to E Zanzibar until 6th November, 1986. He came to know of the
existence of the judgment only when he was called to the High Court on 15th
November, 1986. Two days later he filed a Notice of Appeal but was advised that he
was already out of time.
F At the hearing of this application Mr. Lipiki, learned advocate, represented the
applicant, while the respondent appeared in person. Mr. Lipiki submitted, in effect,
that the Notice itself was in fact in time because the applicant did not know, and
could not have known, of the judgment until on 15th November, 1986. Mr. Lipiki
said that the man Abbas Nada Hija was not the applicant's representative, as he had
no power of G attorney, and had no business to receive judgment on behalf of the
applicant. In reply the respondent, unrepresented as he was, had nothing of moment
to say, only that he was wondering what this application was all about, when the
applicant had admitted liability and had in fact paid the money.
H I would not go as far as saying that to receive a judgment on behalf of another one
would necessarily need a power of attorney, as Mr. Lipiki submitted. He was not able
to refer me to any authority. In my view it would all depend on the circumstances
and, ordinarily, it would be enough if the representative can produce any convincing
proof that I he was sent and authorized by the party concerned to receive judgment
on the latter's behalf. In the present case, however,
1988 TLR p43
MAKAME JA
Hija is shown in the coram as being "k.n.y. Mdaiwa" without any indication as to
where A that information came from. "Mdaiwa is mume mwenzangu" seems to be
the answer to the only question Hija was asked; and that information, per se, even if
true, does not make Hija authorized and entitled to receive judgment on behalf of the
applicant. I am satisfied that Mr. Lipiki's submission on this is quite sound, and I
would have allowed the B application if there was no other factor to be considered.
There is however another factor I have to take into account, and it is this: Going by
the record, the parties were both present in court, on 25/7/86, when the hearing was
concluded and the case was adjourned for judgment on 16/10/86. The judgment was
delivered on the appointed day, C 16/10/86, and if the applicant chose to be away in
Oman Arabia, or any other place, and absent from the court, it was his duty to make
provisions for him to learn of the outcome of the case soon. It cannot do just to go
away and wait until one is called by the court. The Notice the applicant received from
the High Court, dated 8/11/86, said D "Madhumuni ya wito utaelezwa baada ya
kufika" and one is entitled to surmise, especially as, as far as record went, Hija had
already received the judgment k.n.y. the applicant, that the purpose was to make the
applicant pay up the decretal amount. If 15th November, 1986 was the day he came to
know of the judgment it was the result of his E own lack of diligence and he had
only himself to blame. The purported Notice on 17/11/86, if there was one, was
clearly out of time and I am not persuaded to hold that the applicant has advanced
any credible reason why I should exercise my discretion under Rule 8 to extend time
as prayed. F
This application is accordingly dismissed and the applicant is ordered to pay the
respondent's costs.
Application dismissed. G
1988 TLR p44
A
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