IN THE MALAWI SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
AT BLANTYRE
MSCA CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7 OF 2000
(Being High Court, Lilongwe District Registry
Civil Cause No. 531 of 1995)
BETWEEN:
CATHERINE
J
KACHALE.................................................APPELLANT
- and -
ALEXANDER
J
ASHANI...............................................RESPONDENT
BEFORE: THE
HONOURABLE JUSTICE KALAILE, JA
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE
TAMBALA, JA
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE MSOSA,
JA
Banda, Counsel for the
Appellant
Mvalo, Counsel for the
Respondent
Mchacha, Court
Interpreter/Recorder
J U D G M E N T
Kalaile, JA
The appellant in this case is
Catherine J Kachale. She was offered by
the Malawi Government a 99 year lease effective from 1st September 1976. This was an agricultural lease under which
she was expected to pay a rental of K37.00 per month. The lease stipulated that she should spend K36,000.00 by 31st
August 1979 by way of development on the land.
The respondent, the late
Alexander John Ashani, was also granted a similar lease for 99 years over the
same land effective from 1st August 1972.
He was expected to pay a monthly rental of K37.00 and spend K20,000.00
by way of agricultural improvements by 31st July 1973.
How did it happen that the
same land which was leased to the respondent was later leased to the appellant
on 1st September 1976? The explanation
to this puzzle is given by a Memorandum to the President issued by the
erstwhile Secretary to the President and Cabinet, the late John R Ngwiri.
The late Ngwiri wrote the late
State President, Dr Kamuzu Banda, indicating that the District Commissioner for
Mchinji had inspected the farm owned by the respondent when the development
period had expired, and, advised that the development by the respondent was
limited to the construction of a house and office valued at K9,000.00.
Furthermore, the District
Commissioner advised the late Ngwiri that:
(a) the land had not been farmed since the
1972/3 season;
(b) should Mrs Ashani’s assessment of the
value of improvements be correct, the figure involved was in any case
considerably less than the total expenditure stipulated in the lease; and
(c) no farming operations for the current
season had commenced by the 16th October 1975 being the date upon which the
estate was last inspected.
The late Ngwiri accordingly
recommended to the State President that the existing lease be determined for
the continuing breach of the development covenant. The State President accepted the recommendation and the lease was
determined. It would seem, therefore,
that the lease was legally and properly determined.
The reason why the District
Commissioner was dealing with Mrs Ashani and not the respondent is that the
respondent was arrested and detained with effect from 13th August 1973. According to the testimony of Henry S
Sabola, PW3, a retired police officer, the respondent was arrested amongst other
reasons, for stealing tobacco belonging to Dr Kamuzu Banda and certain Malawi
Young Pioneer farms. A total of five
arrests were made, including that of the respondent, on the same grounds.
However, according to the
testimony of the respondent, the appellant acquired the estate through the
backing of the late Honourable A A Muwalo, who was at that point in time
Minister of State in the President’s Office, and after his fall from power,
through the backing of the Honourable J Z U Tembo. We found that these allegations were based on hearsay evidence
and we accordingly ignored them as the basis upon which the appellant acquired
the estate.
The respondent also testified
that he spent K24,000.00 in developing the estate prior to his arrest and
detention on 13th August 1973. There
was no documentary evidence in support of this contention. We, therefore, believe that the correct
amount which the respondent spent was K9,000.00, as indicated in the late
Ngwiri’s Memorandum dated 20th November 1975, and, as supported by the evidence
of PW4, Mr Walter M Chalemba, who was the Senior Lands Inspector in the
Department of Lands, Housing and Physical Planning.
It is the evidence of the
respondent that in September 1995, after the change of government from the
one-party State to a multi-party system of government, he sent his Manager and
employees to the disputed estate to commence farming thereon. This conduct is what prompted the appellant
to commence proceedings in the Court below.
Again, this Court is satisfied that the respondent’s conduct was
illegal, since he lost his legal title to the estate in November 1975.
It is not the intention of
this Court to examine the individual grounds of appeal as argued by the
appelant’s Counsel, because we believe that this case turns on who had legal
title to the disputed land. We are
satisfied, on a balance of probabilities, that the appellant acquired her title
to the estate from the Government of Malawi legally. We take the view that the
respondent committed trespass when he entered the appellant’s estate in
1995. One point though requires the
further attention of this Court. This is the failure by the trial Judge in
the Court below to award damages for trespass to the estate by the respondent.
What was particularised in the amended statement of claim related to Zingalume
Estate. But surprisingly, the
appellant’s grounds of appeal in paragraph (d) stated that the learned Judge
erred in failing to assess damages for trespass against the defendant/respondent
in respect of Msulula Estate.
Nowhere in the grounds of appeal is Zingalume Estate referred to
regarding the issue of damages for trespass.
We, therefore, decline to award damages with regard to Zingalume Estate.
It is evident from the way the
trial Judge in the Court below came to his judgment that he did not evaluate or
assess the evidence before him, but chose to endorse the judgment of Kumange,
J, who made his judgment based on the provisions of Order 113 of the Rules
of the Supreme Court. Mr Mvalo, Counsel
for the respondent, urged this Court to consider ordering a retrial in the
Court below, because the trial Judge appeared to have ignored the numerous
facts such as the Memorandum to the late Dr Banda by the late Ngwiri which were
brought to his attention in the course of the second trial. Our response to this prayer is that we had
sufficient evidence on record to come to the decision which we have arrived at.
The second trial at which Nyirenda,
J presided was wholly independent of the first at which Kumange, J
presided, and, the rulings of Kumange, J were not res judicata
and were, therefore, not binding on Nyirenda, J at the second trial
which, in any event, was a trial de novo. See Bobolas v Economist Newspaper Ltd [1987] 3 All ER 12. This is not a case where fresh evidence was
being sought for purposes of the proposed retrial. Our view is that all the evidence that was required was on
record, and Nyirenda, J misdirected himself by thinking that he was
bound by the rulings of Kumange, J.
We are of the clear opinion that the appellant’s lease was legally
valid, so that her appeal should succeed. We accordingly allow the appeal.
The appellant shall have the
costs of this appeal.
DELIVERED in open Court this
17th day of September 2002, at Blantyre.
Sgd .......................................................
J B KALAILE, JA
Sgd .......................................................
D G TAMBALA, JA
Sgd .......................................................
A S E MSOSA, JA