YUSUFU MNTAMBO AND OTHERS v MOEZ ALIDINA 1985 TLR 145 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Dar Es Salaam
Judge Mapigano J
3 December, 1985
CIVIL APPEAL 9 OF 1985 F
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - Appeal - Requirement that a memorandum of appeal
be accompanied by a copy of the order appealed against - What amounts to a copy of
the G order appealed against - 0.40 r. 2, 0.39 r. 1 and s.3 of the Civil Procedure
Code.
-Headnote
Order 40 rule 2 read together with Order 39 rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Code
provide H that in order for a memorandum of appeal to be competent it must be
accompanied by a copy of the order appealed against. The Court considered what
amounts to a copy of the order appealed against.
Held: An order is a separate entity which has to be abstracted from the ruling,
supplied I and exhibited.
1985 TLR 146
MAPIGANO J
Case Information
Order accordingly. A
Cases referred to:
1. Kotak v Kooverji [1967] E.A. 348
2. Warsama and Mohamed v Ibrahim [1971] H.C.D. 78
M. Marando, for the appellants B
M. Raithatha, for the respondent.
Judgment
Mapigano, J.: The appellants are dissatisfied with the decision of the principal resident
magistrate at Kisutu titled Ruling/order and dated 11/2/85, refusing C their
application for temporary injunction, and have come to this court. Mr. Rainthatha
representing the respondent has taken a preliminary point namely that the
memorandum of appeal is incompetent in that it is not accompanied by a copy of the
order appealed from as required by the provision of 0.40 r.2. C.P.C. (as read together
D with 0.39 r. 1 C.P.C.) He has urged this court to strike out the appeal and cited the
decision in Kotak's case [1967] E.A. 348 which he said is on all fours with the present
appeal.
0.39 r.1 is framed in imperative terms. It imposes a mandatory and not a directory
requirement that every memorandum of appeal must be accompanied by a copy of
the E decree appealed from. 0.40 r.2 assimilates the provision of 0.39 r.1 and read
mutatis mutandis it says that in the case of an appeal from an order the memorandum
of appeal must be accompanied by a copy of the order appealed against. By section 3
C.P.C. order is the formal expression of the decision of the court. It is now settled by
several F judicial pronouncements, too many to mention, that the attachment of a
copy of the order appealed from is absolutely essential and that where the appellant
has failed to comply with the provision of 0.40 r. 2 the appeal is not properly before
the Court and must be dismissed. G
Responding, Mr. Marando counsel for the respondent submitted that the Ruling
which is attached to the memorandum of appeal is essentially an order or
incorporates the order appealed from and sufficiently meets the requirement of 0.40
r.2. He made reference to the decision of this Court in Warsama & Mohamed v
Ibarahim [1971] H.C.D. 78. H
In the case just mentioned the appellant obtained an order from the trial court for
vacant possession of their premises. They then duly commenced execution and had
the Court Broker extract shs.1,972/= from the occupant, the respondent, who
happened to be not the tenant. The respondent objected to the execution and it
seems the issues were: I (a) whether the respondent was a statutory tenant; (b)
whether the decree
1985 TLr p147
MAPIGANO J
passed against the respondent was enforceable against him; and (c) whether the sum
of A shs.1,972/= paid to the Court Broker was refundable to the respondent. In its
Ruling the trial court answered all these issues in the affirmative. On appeal to the
High Court at Arusha against that decision, the respondent argued as a preliminary
point, relying on Kotak's case, that the memorandum of appeal having been filled
without a separate B copy of the order appealed from, the appeal was incompetent,
notwithstanding that a copy of the Ruling was attached.
Kwikima Ag. J. was of the opinion that there was no need to draw a separate order,
because, he stated, purporting to distinguish Kotak's case, the learned magistrate had
C incorporated the order in his Ruling which stated at the bottom paragraph that "in
the whole therefore, I rule that the objector is a statutory tenant of the suit premises
and the decree passed against the judgment-debtor is not enforceable against him and
that the payment of shs.1,972/= paid to the Court Broker as a result of the attachment
levied by him should be refunded to the objector". D
With due respect to the learned acting judge, I fail to see on what material respects
that case was distinguishable from Kotak's case. In actual fact it was also the
appellant's argument in Kotak's case that the copy of the Ruling contained also a copy
of the order and the late Hamlyn, J. implicitly accepted the respondent's contention
that an order is a E separate entity which has to be abstracted from the Ruling,
supplied and exhibited. I think the provision of 0.40 r. 2 is plain and clear. It
contemplates a separate copy of the order appealed from.
I can hardly imagine a comprehensive Ruling that does not contain answers or
decisions F on the points raised in an application, and as we know, the summary of
those answers are often to be found at or towards the end of the Ruling and are the
very stuff by which the order that has to be drawn is constituted. If therefore Mr.
Marando's argument is valid then the provision of the rule under consideration will
be rendered trifling if not G nugatory. I understand that procedural rules are
intended to serve as the handmaidens of justice and not to defeat or frustrate it, and it
cannot be denied that the strict application of the rule in question may in certain
cases amount to a mere legal formalism. However, I do not feel that I have a mandate
to disregard the omission to attach a separate copy of the order to the memorandum
of appeal. H
In the event, the preliminary point is sustained and the appeal is dismissed. The
respondent will have his costs in this court.
Delivered before the advocates.
I Order accordingly.
1985 TLR p148
A
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