IN THE HIGH COURT OF MALAWI
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
Civil Cause number 3019 of 2003
Between
TONY HAWKINS
AND OTHERS
Plaintiff
And
EDITH MLINER
. Defendant
CORAM: DF MWAUNGULU (JUDGE)
Kadwa, legal practitioner, for the
plaintiff
Makhalira, legal
practitioner, for the defendant
Matakenya, official court
interpreter
Mwaungulu, J.
ORDER
The defendant, Ms Mliner, applies to
dissolve a second injunction the plaintiffs, Mr. Hawken and others, obtained ex parte. On 25th
December, 2003,
when dissolving the injunction, the detailed reasons were reserved. The events
on the file so far are important for the conclusion. It is useful, therefore,
to rehearse the events necessary to the 25th December,
2003 order.
The plaintiffs and the defendant have
residences in Sunnyside here in the City of Blantyre. Other residents have resided there
for forty-eight years. The area is essentially residential, schools and a golf
course are the only public amenities. It was relatively quiet until the
defendant, it appears, rebuilt her residence into a restaurant, a discotheque
and sundries. The complex borders Mr. Hawkens residence. It also appears the
construction defied Town Planning directions and prohibitions. The plaintiffs
contend the defiance premises on connections with the powers. The plaintiffs
displayed communications from the City Council showing resignation and
powerlessness to intervene. The plaintiffs mention the loud noises from music,
revelers, expanded traffic exuding from the premises. The residents complain
that the expanded traffic has increased the risk of accidents and may be a
whole problem for residents. The residents have, with little success, written
the City Assembly and sought police assistance.
On 13th
November, 2003
the plaintiffs took out an originating summons for declarations that the
defendants conduct is a public nuisance and that the operation of a night club
in the locality is a nullity and an injunction restraining the defendant
herself, her servants and/or agents from operating the night club and bar. It
is unclear whether the plaintiff served the originating summons on the
defendant. On the same day the plaintiff obtained an interlocutory injunction ex parte restraining the defendant from operating
the Sunset Plaza Night Club and Bar until the hearing of an application inter partes. On 14th
November, 2003
this Court rejected the defendants application ex parte to dissolve the injunction. This Court ordered the
application to be heard inter partes.
The matter was set for 17th November, 2003.
The application came on 17th
November, 2003.
The parties sought an adjournment to enable negotiations. On 24th
November, 2003
there was a consent order signed by the judge. Under the consent order the defendants
by themselves, their servants and/or agents were not to play loud music at the Sunset Plaza; the defendants were to take all
lawful steps to control the noise levels made by the patrons to the said Sunset Plaza; and the defendants were to remove
anything that might constitute a public nuisance. It was part of the consent
order that the Malawi Bureau of Standards were to monitor noise levels every
week and report to the Court and the plaintiff.
On 23rd
December, 2003
the plaintiff obtained another injunction ex
parte. Essentially that order was granted because neither the Court nor the
plaintiff have, in accordance with the consent order, received any report from
the Malawi Bureau of Standards on the noise levels. The plaintiff deposes that
the Malawi Bureau of Standards could not furnish the report because their
equipment is not working. The plaintiffs further state that shortly after the
consent order, on the 29th November, the defendants organized a
Discotheque competition. The plaintiff, therefore, complain that the defendants
have breached the said order on the fresh evidence preferred.
On the view taken on the matter it is
unnecessary to comment on all these aspects. It suffices just to make two
comments. First, that on the record there are two orders of injunction: the one
dated 13th November, 2003 and the other dated 24th
November 2003.
It is unclear which one has been breached. The consent order did not withdraw
the earlier order. Even accepting that the latter was breached, there is little
to suggest in the evidence that the defendant acted in breach of the order. All
DEK8 suggests is that the previous night (to the date of the letter) was a
nightmare.
The first point taken for the defendant
was that the plaintiff was estopped by the consent order from getting the
injunction. True, following Kinch v
Walcott [1929] AC 483; Re S.
American, etc., Co [1895] 1 Ch 37; and Law
v Law [1905] 1 Ch. 140 at 158, a judgment by consent,
unless set aside, binds the parties and acts as an estoppel. This, however, was
an agreement, by consent, embodied in a judges order and no final judgment is
signed. There cannot, on the authority of Rice
v Reed [1900] 1 Q.B. 54, and in particular the words of Vaughan Williams,
L.J., at 66, be an estoppel on such consent order.
The critical point, however, is that
already there is an injunction against the defendant. The one sought here is in
much like the first one. There should be no other injunction to the same
effect. If, as the plaintiffs allege, there are breaches of the injunctions,
the next course of action is not another injunction but proceedings on disobedience
of the injunction. The defendant having disobeyed, the plaintiff can institute
committal proceedings.
Made
in court this 29th
Day of December 2003
DF Mwaungulu
JUDGE