Kingdom Bank Limited v Okotsi (Civil Suit E004 of 2021)
[2022] KEHC 12771 (KLR) (30 August 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation: [2022] KEHC 12771 (KLR)
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE HIGH COURT AT VIHIGA
CIVIL SUIT E004 OF 2021
PJO OTIENO, J
AUGUST 30, 2022
BETWEEN
KINGDOM BANK LIMITED ................................................................... PLAINTIFF
AND
ALFAYO MAGOMA OKOTSI ............................................................... DEFENDANT
Prerequisites for the creation of informal charges.
A clause in a letter of offer that showed that a loan facility would not be availed until and unless all security
documentation would be finalized and pledged in favour of the bank created an informal charge.
Reported by John Ribia
Land Law – charges – informal charges - creation of an informal charge - where a loan that had been secured
by property gets defaulted - whether a loan secured via a parcel of land created an intention to create an informal
charge - whether a dispute as to calculation of interest was a ground to deny a chargor of the right to realise the
security offered - whether the circumstances of the suit entitled the plaintiff to realise the security hence the need to
grant leave - Land Act (Act No. 6 of 2012) section 79.
Brief facts
The plainti (bank) sought to be granted leave to exercise its right of sale of a property (suit property). The
plainti contended that the suit property had been pledged to it by way of an informal charge under section
79(6)(b) of the Land Act. The respondent objected to the application on grounds that the instant court lacked
jurisdiction to determine the matter and that whereas the suit title was deposited with the plainti to secure the
payment of the loan advanced and the respondent been paying the loan but the plainti negligently managed
the account by debiting the account with illegal non-contractual and unconscionable charges. The respondent
also denied being served with statutory notices.
The plainti took the position that the title having been deposited on the understanding that it would secure
the debt, it was the duty of the court to enforce that covenant not to diminish or rewrite it and that the oer
of it as security equated the property to a commodity to be sold upon default.
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Issues
i. Whether a loan secured via a parcel of land created an intention to create an informal charge.
ii. Whether a dispute as to calculation of interest was a ground to deny a chargor of the right to realise
the security oered.
iii. Whether the circumstances of the suit entitled the plainti to realise the security hence the need to
grant leave.
Relevant provisions of the Law
Land Act (Act No. 6 of 2012)
Section 79 - Informal charges
(1) An owner of private land or a lessee, by an instrument in the prescribed form, may charge the interest in the
land or a part thereof for any purpose including but not limited to securing the payment of an existing or a future
or a contingent debt or other money or money’s worth or the fulfillment of a condition.
(2) The power conferred by subsection (1) shall include the power to create second and subsequent charges.
(3) A charge of a matrimonial home, shall be valid only if any document or form used in applying for such
a charge, or used to grant the charge, is executed by the chargor and any spouse of the chargor living in that
matrimonial home, or there is evidence from the document that it has been assented to by all such persons.
(4) The power conferred by this section shall be exercisable subject to—
(a) any prohibition or limitation imposed by this Act or any written law; and
(b) any restriction contained in an instrument creating or affecting the interest in land that is to be the subject
of a charge.
(5) A formal charge shall take effect only when it is registered in a land register and a chargee shall not be entitled
to exercise any of the remedies under that charge unless it is so registered.
(6) An informal charge may be created where—
(a) a chargee accepts a written and witnessed undertaking from a chargor, the clear intention of which is to charge
the chargor’s land or interest in land, with the repayment of money or money’s worth, obtained from the chargee
plus interest as agreed by the chargor and the chargee";
(b) the chargor deposits any of the following—
(i) a certificate of title to the land;
(ii) a document of lease of land;
(iii) any other document which it is agreed evidences ownership of land or a right to interest in land.
(7) A chargee holding an informal charge may only take possession of or sell the land which is the subject of an
informal charge, on obtaining an order of the court to that effect.
(8)An arrangement contemplated in subsection (6)(a) may be referred to as an “informal charge” and a deposit
of documents contemplated in subsection (6)(b) shall be known and referred to as a “lien by deposit of documents.”
(9) A chargor shall not possess or sell land whose title documents have been deposited by a chargee under an
informal charge without an order of the court;
Held
1. Section 79 of the Land Act created prerequisites for the creation of both formal and informal charges.
For informal charges what was required was writing to disclose clear intent to oer the title out
laid or an interest in land to secure the payment of a debt whether existing, contingent or future,
which instrument was then accepted by the chargee as a written commitment and the deposit of any
document agreed to evidence the ownership of the land by the chargor.
2. The only document exhibited to demonstrate the agreement between the parties was the letter of oer.
To establish if the parties intended to create an informal charge one had to peruse that document and
establish if the requirements of section 79 (6), (7), (8), and (9) of the Land Act had been established.
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3. The intention had to be that the chargor and the chargee agreed that the document deposited with
them was to secure the payment of the debt. While there had not been exhibited any document to
show what document of title was pledged or deposited, there was a demonstration in the letter of oer
to show the intention to charge the property, informally, to secure the payment of any amount that
would be availed to the defendant in the form and nature of a temporary overdraft facility.
4. It was proved within a balance of preponderance that there was created an informal charge. A case was
made out for the court to grant the leave sought. It was the default to pay that founded the right for
leave to sell or possess. Leave was granted to the plainti to take possession, and if need be, sell the
property whose title and interest were charged to the bank pursuant to section 79(9) of the Land Act.
5. Once the informal charge was determined to have been created, the duties and obligations of a chargee
including the obligation to protect and secure the equity of redemption and trusteeship to the chargee
were called into play and the statutory notices, including notices of default and notice of intention to
sell, was to issue, if not yet issued in strict compliance with the Act.
6. Section 79 of the Land Act appeared to be incorrectly headed. While its head note was clearly on
informal charges, subsections 1 to 4 had to be read and understood to regard formal charges while
subsections 6 to 9 strictly applied to informal charges. The heading could be relooked at in law reform.
Application allowed.
Orders
i. The originating summons dated August 17, 2021 was allowed.
ii. Leave was granted to the plaintiff to sell its security in the informal charge subject to compliance of the
law on realisation of securities.
iii. Costs of the suit were awarded to the plaintiff.
Citations
Cases
Kenya
1. Ibrahim Seikei t/a Masco Enterprises v Delphis Bank Civil Appeal 160 of 2003;
[2004] KEHC 89 (KLR) - (Mentioned)
2. Jamii Bora Bank Limited v Wapak Developers Civil Suit 22 of 2018; [2018] eKLR - (Mentioned)
3. National Bank of Kenya Ltd v Pipeplastic Samkolit (K) Ltd & another Civil Appeal 95 of 1999; [2001]
eKLR - (Mentioned)
4. Njeru, Jim Kennedy Kiriro v Equity Bank (K) Limited Civil Suit 47 of 2019;
[2019] KEHC 9788 (KLR) - (Mentioned)
Statutes
Kenya
1. Land Act, 2012 (Act No 6 of 2012) sections 79(6-9); 90; 96 - (Interpreted)
2. Land Control Act (cap 302) In general - (Cited)
Advocates
None mentioned
JUDGMENT
1. The bank took out an originating summons dated August 17, 2021, and sought an order that it be
granted leave to exercise its right of sale of title No Kakamega/Chagenda/459 pledged to it by way of an
informal charge under section 79(6)(b) of the Land Act No 3 of 2012. It also prayed that it be granted
the costs of the suits.
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2. The grounds advanced to premise the summons were that the plainti advanced to the defendant the
sum of Kshs 1,000,000/= secured by an informal charge over the suit property and that there was a
default to service and repay the loan culminating in the loan remaining outstanding in the sum of
Kshs 1,131,731.76 as at May 5, 2021. Following the default the plainti served notices pursuant to
section 90 and 96 of the Land Act but the defendant persisted on his default leaving the plainti with
no alternative but to seek the leave of the court to realise its security in the informal charge pursuant
to 79(8) of the Act.
3. The summons was resisted by both replying adavit of the defendant and a notice of preliminary
objection both led in court on the October 15, 2021. The notice of preliminary objection contends
that the matter ought to have been led before the Magistrate’s Court with the requisite jurisdiction
and that the summons is fatally defective for failure to seek the consequential orders after leave.
4. On the other hand, the gist of the replying adavit is that indeed the suit title was deposited with the
plainti to secure the payment of the loan advanced and that he had been paying the loan but the
plainti negligently managed the account by debiting the account with illegal non-contractual and
unconscionable charges thereby increasing the defendant’s indebtedness hence the payments made
were not sucient to reduce the indebtedness by the defendant. He exhibited to court the three deposit
slips for Kshs 70,000/=, 40,000/= and 20,000/= dated September 9, 2021, September 22, 2021 and
September 27, 2021. The defendant denied having been served with the statutory notices and on a
without prejudice basis asserted that the land is subject to the Land Control Act but no consent to
charge was ever sought nor obtained.
5. When the matter came before court on the July 20, 2022, only the plainti’s counsel attended court
without the counsel for the defendant and requested the court for directions on the originating
summons as he had led written submissions but the defendant had not led.
6. In his submissions, the plainti takes the position that the title having been deposited on the
understanding that it would secure the debt, it was the duty of the court to enforce that covenant not
to diminish or rewrite it and that the oer of it as security equated the property to a commodity to
be sold upon default.
7. It was added that a dispute as to calculation of interest is not a ground to deny a charge his right to realise
the security oered. The plainti cited to curt the decisions in Jamii Bora Bank Ltd v Wapak Developers
[2018] eKLR, National Bank of Kenya Limited v Pipeplastic Samkolit [2001] eKLR, Ibrahim Seikei t/
a Masco Enterprises v Delphis Bank [2004] eKLR and Jim Kennedy Kiriro Njeru v Equity Bank (K) Ltd
[2019] eKLR on creation of an informed charge, the need to respect the intentions of the contracting
parties and that the interests of the bank on its security needs to be protected and not obstructed by
the court.
8. I have anxiously considered the originating summons, the adavits led by both sides and the
submissions then applied the same to the law. I have in that endevour discerned that there are only two
issues for determination. The issues are whether there was an intention to create an informal charge
and if circumstances have arisen to entitle the bank to realise the security hence the need to grant leave.
9. Section 79 of the Land Act, 2012 upon which the suit is guided is worded in the following fashion:-
“ (1) An owner of private land or a lessee, by an instrument in the prescribed form, may charge
the interest in the land or a part thereof for any purpose including but not limited to securing
the payment of an existing or a future or a contingent debt or other money or money’s worth
or the fulllment of a condition.
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(2) The power conferred by sub section (1) shall include the power to create
second and subsequent charges.
(3) A charge of a matrimonial home, shall be valid only if any document or form
used in applying for such a charge, or used to grant the charge, is executed by
the chargor and any spouse of the chargor living in that matrimonial home, or
there is evidence from the document that it has been assented to by all such
persons.
(4) The power conferred by this section shall be exercisable subject to—
(a) Any prohibition or limitation imposed by this Act or any written
law; and
(b) Any restriction contained in an instrument creating or aecting
the interest in land that is to be the subject of a charge.
(5) A formal charge shall take eect only when it is registered in a land register and
a chargee shall not be entitled to exercise any of the remedies under that charge
unless it is so registered.
(6) An informal charge may be created where –
(a) A chargee accepts a written and witnessed undertaking from a
chargor, the clear intention of which is to charge the chargor’s
land or interest in land, with the repayment of money or money’s
worth, obtained from the chargee plus interest as agreed by the
chargor and the chargee";
(b) The chargor deposits any of the following –
(i) A certicate of title to the land;
(ii) A document of lease of land;
(iii) Any other document which it is agreed evidences
ownership of land or a right to interest in land.
(7) A chargee holding an informal charge may only take possession of or sell the
land which is the subject of an informal charge, on obtaining an order of the
court to that eect.
(8) An arrangement contemplated in subsection (6)(a) may be referred to as an
“informal charge” and a deposit of documents contemplated in subsection (6)
(b) shall be known and referred to as a “lien by deposit of documents.”
(9) A chargor shall not possess or sell land whose title documents have been
deposited by a chargee under an informal charge without an order of the
court.”
10. I discern and consider the provision to create prerequisites for the creation of both formal and informal
charges. For informal charges what is required is writing to disclose clear intent to oer the title out laid
or an interest in land to secure the payment of a debt whether existing, contingent or future, which
instrument is then accepted by the chargee as a written commitment and the deposit of any document
agreed to evidence the ownership of the land by the chargor.
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11. In this matter, the only document exhibited to demonstrate the agreement between the parties is
the letter of oer dated November 13, 2018 and duly signed and witnessed by the advocate on the
November 30, 2018. To establish if the parties did intend to create an informal charge one must peruse
that document and establish if the requirements of section 79 (6 – 9) Land Act have been established.
12. The intention must be that the chargor and the chargee agreed that the document deposited with them
was to secure the payment of the debt. While there has not been exhibited any document to show what
document of title was pledged or deposited, the letter of oer at the clause headed “principal covenants”
show that the facility would not be availed until and unless all security documentation would have
been nalized and pledged in favour of the bank. In addition, the respondent has unequivocal and on
oath swore of paragraph 3 of the replying adavit that he ‘deposited his title deed with the plainti
bank to serve (sic) the repayment of a loan borrowed from it’. I do nd, on the documents led, that
there was a demonstration in the letter of oer to clearly show the intention to charge the property,
informally, to secure the payment of any amount that would be availed to the defendant in the form
and nature of a temporary overdraft facility.
13. That being the case, I nd it satisfactorily proved, within a balance of preponderance, that there was
created an informal charge. That being the nding of the court and it being shown by the bank
statement exhibited, and agreed between the parties in the clause headed, “evidence of debt” in the
letter of oer to be evidence of indebtedness, i do nd that a case is made out for the court to grant the
leave sought. it is the default to pay that founds the right for leave to sell or possess
14. Accordingly, leave is granted to the plainti to take possession, and if need be, sell the property whose
title and interest were charged to the bank pursuant to section 79(9) of the Act. For clarity purposes,
once the informal charge is determined to have been created, the duties and obligations of a chargee
including the obligation to protect and secure the equity of redemption and trusteeship to the chargee
are called into play and accordingly, the statutory notices, including notices of default and notice of
intention to sell, shall issue, if not yet issued in strict compliance with the act.
15. Before the court concludes and pens o, section 79 appear to be incorrectly headed. while its head note
is clearly on informal charges, subsections 1 – 4 must be read and understood to regard formal charges
while subsections 6 -9 strictly apply to informal charges. maybe when time comes for law reform that
heading could be relooked at.
16. In conclusion, the originating summons dated August 17, 2021 is allowed as prayed, leave granted to
the plainti to sell its security in the informal charge subject to compliance of the law on realisation
of securities.
17. The plainti having succeeded, the costs of the suit are awarded to it.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY AT KAKAMEGA, THIS 30TH DAY OF
AUGUST 2022.
PATRICK J. O. OTIENO
JUDGE
In the presence of:
No appearance for the Plainti
No appearance for the Defendant
Court Assistant: Kulubi
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