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Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited Vs Dowans Holdings (Costa Rica) Anoth

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475 views12 pages

Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited Vs Dowans Holdings (Costa Rica) Anoth

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shadhirukhassim
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA

AT PAR ES SALAAM

fCORAM: RUTAKANGWA, 3.A., BWANA. 3.A., And LUANDA, 3.A.1

CIVIL APPLICATION NO. 142 OF 2012

TANZANIA ELECTRIC SUPPLY

COMPANY LIMITED ............................................................... APPLICANT

VERSUS

1. DOWANS HOLDINGS SA (COSTA RICA) 1


2. DOWANS TANZANIA LIMITED (TANZANIA)/............. RESPONDENTS

(Application for stay of execution of the decree of the


High Court of Tanzania
at Dar es salaam)

fMushi. 3.1

Dated 28th day of September, 2011


In
Misc. Civil Application No. 8 of 2011

RULING OF THE COURT

RUTAKANGWA. 3.A.:

Dissatisfied with the judgment and decree of the High Court (Mushi,

j.) dated 28th September, 2011, the applicant duly lodged a notice of

appeal to this Court, in terms of Rule 83 of the Tanzania Court of Appeal

Rules, 2009 (the Rules). The notice of appeal was lodged on 04th October

2011.

i
Subsequent to the lodging of the notice of appeal the applicant,

proceeding under Rule 11 (2) (b) of the Rules, formally moved the High

Court to grant an order staying the execution of the decree. The High

Court (Twaib, J.) declined to grant the relief sought predicating his decision

on want of jurisdiction. The application was accordingly "dismissed"on 6th

September, 2012.

Following the dismissal of the application by the High Court, the

applicant purported to try a '!'second bite" in this Court by way of this

application seeking the same relief. This application, by notice of motion,

is premised under Rule 11 (2) (b) and (c) of the Rules. The application

was lodged on 19th September, 2012.

We have found it very convenient to reproduce at the outset the

relevant enabling provisions. It is provided in Rule 11 (2) (b) (c) and (d) as

follows:-

"11.-(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-rule (1), the institution


of an appeal, shall not operate to suspend any sentence or to
stay execution, but the Court may-

(a) in any criminal proceedings, where notice of


appeal has been given in accordance with
Rule 68, order that the appellant be released
on bail or that the execution of any warrant of
distress be suspended pending the
determination of the appeal; and
(b) in any civil proceedings, where a notice of
appeal has been lodged in accordance with
Rule 83, an appeal, shall not operate as a stay
of execution of the decree or order appealed
from except so far as the High Court or
tribunal may order, nor shall execution of a
decree be stayed by reason only of an appeal
having been preferred from the decree or
order; but the Court may upon good cause
shown, order stay of execution of such decree
or order.
(c) where an application is made for stay of
execution of an appealable decree or order
before the expiration of the time allowed for
appealing therefrom, the Court, may upon
good cause shown, order the execution to be
stayed.
(d) no order for stay of execution shall be made
under this rule unless the Court is satisfied

3
(i) that substantial loss may result to the
party applying for stay of execution
unless the order is made;
(ii) that the application has been made
without unreasonable delay; and
(iii) that security has been given by the
applicant for the due performance of
such decree or order as may ultimately
be binding upon him"
[Emphasis is ours].

The application has been challenged by the two respondents on

merit. It's competency has also been challenged through a notice of

preliminary objection lodged on 20th November, 2012 containing two points

of law. All the same, when the matter came up for hearing, Mr. Kennedy

Fungamtama, learned advocate for the respondents, abandoned one of the

said two points. The remaining point of objection to the competency of the

application, reads thus:

"The application is time barred having been lodged

out of the prescribed period of 60 days".


Mr. Fungamtama's submission in support of the raised point of

preliminary objection, was brief but focused. He argued that in terms of

Rule 11 read together with Rule 90 (1) of the Rules, the application ought

to have been filed within 60 days of the lodging of the notice of appeal. As

the application was lodged on 19/09/2012, after an elapse of 351 clear

days, and no extension of time was sought and granted, the matter is

hopelessly time barred and ought to be struck out with costs, he pressed.

In support of his stance he referred us to these decisions of the Court:-

(i) Irene William Mkenga v. Costa Othiniel Ohia, Misc. Civil

Application No. 4 of 2011, •

(ii) Mantrac Tanzania Ltd vs Raymong Consta, Civil

Application No. 11 of 2011,

(iii) Tanganyika Bus Service Company Ltd vs Israel G.

Maregesi and Another, Civil Application No. 1 of 2011, and

(iv) Muhoni Kitege v. Issa Elias, Civil Application No. 5 of 2011

(all unreported).

Mr. Richard Rweyongeza, who together with Dr. Angelo Mapunda,

Mr. Majura Magafu and Mr. Lugano Mwandambo, learned advocates,


represented the applicant, treated the objection with the seriousness it

deserves. He prefaced his counter submission with an apt observation to

the effect that the validity or otherwise of the preliminary objection

depended wholly on the proper interpretation of Rule 11(2) (b), "//? so far

as it makes reference to the powers o f the High Court to direct otherwise."

While not doubting the soundness of the decisions relied on by Mr.

Fungamtama on the issue of limitation, he sought comfort in the words

"except so far as the High Court or tribunal may order, " in Rule 11

(2) (b), words not found in Rule 9 (2) (b) of the revoked Tanzania Court of

Appeal Rules, 1979 (the 1979 Rules). To him the current legal regime

confers the High Court and the Court with concurrent jurisdiction to grant

stay orders even after a notice of appeal had been lodged. Forthrightly

conceding that he had no authority to prop up this proposition of law, he

strongly urged us to rule in his fovour and dismiss the preliminary objection

with costs, as the application was lodged within 13 days following the High

Court ruling. He also quickly pointed out that if his construction is found to

be flawed, then "the previous decisions should prevail."


Mr. Fungamtama's brief response was to the effect that once a notice

of appeal had been lodged, the High Court ceased to have jurisdiction

over the matter.

We have found the crucial issue before us to be whether or not Rule

11(2) (b) of the Rules confers the High Court with jurisdiction to grant a

stay order pending appeal once a notice of appeal to this Court has been

lodged. Indeed, we have gleaned from the ruling of Twaib, J. that he

faced the same predicament. After scrupulously analysing the learned

counsel's submissions on the issue, he came out with a firm finding that

the "new law" does not confer the High Court with jurisdiction to "order

stay of execution of its decree even where a Notice of Appeal has already

been filed". We are increasingly of the view that he was right, for the

following reasons.

It is settled law in our jurisprudence, which is not disputed by

counsel for the applicant, that the lodging of a notice of appeal in this

Court against an appealable decree or order of the High Court, commences

proceedings in the Court. We are equally convinced that it has long been

established law that once a notice of appeal has been duly lodged, the
High Court ceases to have jurisdiction over the matter: see Aero

Helicopter (T) Ltd v F.N. Jansen [1990] T.L.R. 142. Counsel for the

applicant do not challenge this legal position. The burning issue is whether

this position has been radically changed by Rule 11 (2) (b) of the Rules, by

the insertion of the words "except so far as the High Court or tribunal may

order".

As we have already intimated above, the learned High Court judge in

the application before him contended with the same issue. We have found

it instructive to have recourse to his holding on it. He held:-

"I wish to state, with all due respect to learned


counsel [meaning Mr. Mwandambo], that I do not
think so. Though there is a statement to the effect
that the court, can, under clause (b) of the Rules,
grant stay of execution upon good cause being
shown, it is also clear in my mind that the enabling
provision under the 2009 Rules is clause (c) of sub
rule (2) of rule 11, read together with Rule 3. It
grants powers to order stay of execution exclusively
to the Court of Appeal and sets out the terms on
which the order may be granted.... The Hon. Chief
Justice must have been aware of the legal position
as laid down in several decisions of the Court of
Appeal to the effect that once proceedings in the
Court of Appeal have been commenced by filing of
a notice of appeal this Court ceased to have
jurisdiction to entertain an application for stay of
execution... If His Lordship the Chief Justice had
wanted to change the legal position and vest in the
High Court and Tribunals the power to order stay of
execution, he would have done so expressly."

We have, indeed, found the above reasoning of the learned High

Court Judge to be a correct exposition of the law on the issue and we

subscribe wholly to it. The inclusion of the words relied on by Mr.

Rweyongeza in Rule 11 (2) (b), was not meant to change the prevailing

law, in our considered view. Although unnecessary, it was only a

recognition of the prevailing view of law that the High Court and/or

Tribunals had actually their inherent jurisdiction to grant orders of stay of

execution pending appeal saved under section 95 of the Civil Procedure

Code, Cap. 33. This, however, has always been subject to one condition

that no proceedings in the matter have been commenced in this Court. For
the order of the High Court or Tribunal, in our respectful firm opinion, to be

valid, it should be or should have been made before a notice of appeal is

lodged. This, in our considered view, is the only logical conclusion to be

derived from the fact that the Rules exclusively apply to the Court of

Appeal. Furthermore, the "Court" being referred to in the entire Rule 11

with powers to grant a stay order once a notice of appeal has been lodged

is this Court.

Apart from the case of Aero Helicopter (supra), this Court had

other occasions on which to express itself explicitly on the issue of the High

Court's jurisdiction once a notice of appeal has been lodged. See, for

instance:

(i) Komba Mkabara v. Maria Luis Frisch, Civil Application No. 3 of

2000 and

(ii) Matsushita Electric Co. Ltd v Charles George t/a CG Travers,

Civil Application No. 71 of 2001 (both unreported.)

In the Matsushita case, the Court lucidly held that:-

"Once a notice of appeal is filed under Rule 76 then

this Court is seized of the matter in exclusion of the

10
High Court except for applications specifically

provided for, such as leave to appeal, provision of a

certificate of law...."

We may as well add applications for extension of time to lodge a notice of

appeal out of time. This jurisdiction, we must quickly point out, was

conferred on the Court by the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, Cap. 141 (the Act)

and not by the 1979 Rules. It goes without saying, therefore, that it will

need an amendment to the Act to confer jurisdiction to the High Court to

entertain matters relating to stay of execution once a notice of appeal has

been duly lodged.

All said and done, we have found ourselves constrained to hold that

although the High Court still retains its inherent powers to grant stay

orders pending appeals to this Court, it ceases to have such powers or

jurisdiction once a notice of appeal is lodged in accordance with the

governing provisions of the Rules. It was, therefore, legally wrong for the

applicant to seek a stay order in the High Court, under Rules 11 (2) (b) of

the Rules, which incidentally do not apply there, after it had lodged the

notice of appeal. This so called "second bite" application is, in our view,
totally misconceived since the applicant has no right to it under any

prevailing law. The only right it has was to apply to this Court, as a matter

of right, for a stay order under Rule 11 (2) of the Rules, within 60 days of

the lodging of the notice of appeal. As fate would have it, it did not do so

but attempted to move the Court 351 days later. The application is,

therefore, unarguably time barred. We accordingly uphold the preliminary

objection, find the application to be incompetent and strike it out with

costs.

It is so ordered.

DATED at DAR ES SALAAM this 27th day of March, 2013

E.M.K RUTAKANGWA
3USTICEOF APPEAL

S.J. BWANA
3USTICEOF APPEAL

B. LUANDA
3USTICEOF APPEAL

I certify that this is a true copy of the original

:S^^KW IZU
DEPUTY REGISTRAR
COURT OF APPEAL

12

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