Case Law[2025] KECA 2218Kenya
Mohamed & 8 others v Kajoji & 8 others (Civil Application E027 of 2025) [2025] KECA 2218 (KLR) (19 December 2025) (Ruling)
Court of Appeal of Kenya
Judgment
Mohamed & 8 others v Kajoji & 8 others (Civil Application E027 of 2025) [2025] KECA 2218 (KLR) (19 December 2025) (Ruling)
Neutral citation: [2025] KECA 2218 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
In the Court of Appeal at Mombasa
Civil Application E027 of 2025
AK Murgor, KI Laibuta & GW Ngenye-Macharia, JJA
December 19, 2025
Between
Mahmood Abdalla Mohamed
1st Applicant
Yathriba Khamis Rashid Shikely
2nd Applicant
Nasreen Abdalla Mohamed
3rd Applicant
Noor Abdalla
4th Applicant
Majid Abdalla
5th Applicant
Mohsin Abdalla
6th Applicant
Fatma Abdalla
7th Applicant
Naima Abdalla
8th Applicant
Mohamed Abdalla
9th Applicant
and
Gabriel Katana Kajoji
1st Respondent
New Century Marine Trading East Africa Company
2nd Respondent
Chi Fung Lam
3rd Respondent
Patricoan Kavinya Mulwa
4th Respondent
Kalama Rimba Gona
5th Respondent
Kajoji Rimba Gona
6th Respondent
Charo Rimba Gona
7th Respondent
Kea Rimba Gona
8th Respondent
Florence Ningala Chimega
9th Respondent
(Being an application for stay of execution, stay of further proceedings and injunction pending the hearing and final determination of an intended appeal against the Ruling and order of the Environment and Land Court at Malindi (Njoroge, J.) delivered on 26th March, 2025 in Malindi, ELC Case No. 99 of 2019 As Consolidated with Malindi ELC Case No.139 of 2015 And Malindi ELC Case No.28 of 2020 (Formerly Mombasa ELC Case No.93 of 2014)
Ruling
1.By a Notice of Motion dated 4th April 2025 brought pursuant to Rules 5 (2) (b), 47 and 49 of the [Court of Appeal Rules](/akn/ke/act/ln/2022/40/eng@2022-12-31), Sections 3, 3A, 3B of the [Appellate Jurisdiction Act](/akn/ke/act/1977/15), the Applicants seek a stay of execution of the Ruling and Order delivered on 26th March 2025, stay of further proceedings in Malindi ELC Case No. 99 of 2019 (As Consolidated with Malindi ELC Case No.139 of 2015 and Malindi ELC Case No.28 of 2020 (Formerly Mombasa ELC Case No.93 of 2014), pending hearing and determination of the intended Appeal, and that the Respondents be restrained, whether by themselves, their agents, servants, employees as well as any and all other persons claiming any interest or right in the parcel of land known as plot LR. No. MN/11/783 (the suit property) through them, or from entering onto or occupying or using or trespassing onto the suit property or any part thereof, or from damaging, wasting, developing, selling, leasing, alienating, transferring, charging, mortgaging or in any way from dealing howsoever with the suit property pending hearing and determination of the intended Appeal, and that the costs of this Application be provided for.
2.The motion is brought pursuant to the grounds on its face, and on affidavits in support thereof sworn by Abdalla Said Abdalla for the Applicants on 4th April, 2025 in which he contended that they are the lawful and registered proprietors of the suit property situated at Kikambala, Maweni in Kilifi County, having purchased and taken lawful possession of the property in 2013, and that the 8th Respondent, now deceased, was only a caretaker and was never the registered owner; that the trial court, in its ruling of 26th March 2025, granted orders allowing the Respondents, including individuals unknown to the Applicants, access to and occupation of portions of the suit property and, in particular, for family or clan of Kea Rimba Gona, the 8th Defendant, to freely enter and use the land pending determination of the consolidated suits.
3.He stated that they intend to challenge the trial court’s decision to permit the filing of a defence and counterclaim on behalf of the deceased 8th Respondent, arguing that such an order is irregular, unlawful, and contrary to established legal principles governing substitution after death, and that, as a result of such substitution, by a letter dated 28th March 2025, persons claiming to act for the family have already issued a demand for 2.4 acres of the suit property as their alleged portion.
4.He maintained that this claim is unfounded and directly contradicts an earlier consent order of 28th April 2022 made between the Applicants and the 9th Respondent that required the property to remain undisturbed pending hearing and determination of the main suit; that, unless a stay of execution and injunctive orders are granted, the Respondents and their agents may enter, occupy, interfere with, or even inter the remains of deceased persons on the land; that such actions, he stated, would permanently alter the character and value of the property in a manner that cannot be compensated in damages, and render their intended appeal nugatory due to commission of irreversible acts on the ground.
5.It was further contended that the intended appeal raises weighty and arguable issues with a real chance of success and, unless stay is granted, they stand to suffer substantial loss, and that their proprietary rights risk being extinguished or irreparably compromised before the appeal is heard.
6.He therefore prayed for orders of stay of the court’s ruling, further proceedings, and to restrain the Respondents and all persons claiming under them from entering, occupying, developing, selling, burying, or otherwise dealing with the suit property pending hearing and determination of the intended appeal.
7.Annexed to the application is the Notice of Appeal dated 28th March 2025 and a draft memorandum of appeal, which demonstrated that the learned Judge failed to appreciate and properly evaluate the factual evidence that, for all intents and purposes, the Applicants are the lawful owners of the suit property. They submitted that the decision reached by the court is contrary to and unsupported by the weight of the evidence presented.
8.The Applicants further argue that the learned Judge disregarded his earlier Ruling delivered on 23rd September 2024, which has been neither set aside nor varied, and which ought to have guided the determination of the issues before him; that the learned Judge failed to appreciate that the evidence on record and the defects in the application ought to have led to a dismissal of the 8th Respondent’s application dated 8th November 2024; that the Judge disregarded critical documentary evidence in support of the Applicant’s case, and failed to undertake a proper and exhaustive evaluation of all the evidence on record; and that the Judge misapprehended the material facts and applicable legal principles, with the result that the conclusions reached were not supported by the evidence nor grounded on any proper documentation. They further argue that the learned Judge was in error in failing to find that the 8th Respondent’s application was defective as a matter of law and fact, and that it did not meet the threshold for contempt of court proceedings against the Applicants.
9.In response, the Respondents filed a replying Affidavit sworn on 5th April 2025 by one Lucky Kalama Rimba, a resident of Kilifi County, in which he deposed that he is the 8th Respondent and the legal representative of the late Kea Rimba Gona, having been substituted pursuant to a Court’s order of 19th December 2024; and that the Applicants counsel did not object to his joinder of the suit in place of the late Kea Rimba Gona. That his application dated 8th November 2024 was duly heard, and the Court delivered its ruling on 26th March 2024; that his Advocates wrote to the Applicants’ and advised them to comply with the court order, but that relying on an order dated 9th December 2019 and using police officers and County Administrators, Abdalla Said Abdalla, the deponent of the Applicants’ supporting affidavit, denied the family of the late Kea Rimba Gona access to the concerned portion of the suit property contrary to the court’s orders of 23rd March 2021 and 9th December 2021.
10.He further deposed that the late Kea Rimba Gona and his family members had been occupying a portion of the suit property which the Applicants had undertaken to excise and give them, having provided assurances that they would not interfere with the 2.4 acres of the suit property.
11.The 8th Respondent further deposed that it is not in dispute that the Applicants are the registered proprietors of the suit property, but that it was not true that the late Kea Rimba Gona was a caretaker of the premises, nor did the Applicants at any time employ or pay him; that the family members of the late Kea Rimba Gona have their houses and homesteads constructed on a portion of the suit property, and that the issue before the court was whether the Applicants were in contempt of the court’s orders. That the Applicants should not be permitted to defy court orders, and should first purge the contempt before approaching this Court for relief.
12.He also deposed that the ruling of 23rd September 2024 did not prohibit the family members of the late Kea Rimba Gona from accessing their houses or homesteads on the relevant portion of the suit property; that other family members have been buried on the same portion, and that bringing the remains of the late Kea Rimba Gona to be buried on that same land cannot amount to abuse of the court process; and that the Applicants had since constructed a wall around the suit property and had not excluded the 2.4 acres as ordered by the court.
13.On her part, the 9th Respondent opposed the application and deposed that, although the suit was filed in 2013, the main suit has never been heard on its merits; that the continued filing of multiple interlocutory applications has delayed and frustrated the hearing of the suit; that, vide a ruling delivered on 26thMarch 2025, the trial court directed all parties to file and serve their consolidated trial bundle so that a hearing date for the main suit could be fixed; that, instead of complying with those directions, the Applicants filed the present application seeking to set aside the ruling so as to delay and frustrate the hearing and determination of the main suit; that the current application seeking a stay of proceedings pending the hearing and determination of an intended appeal amounts to an abuse of the court process. That the Respondents were at all material times in physical occupation of the suit property, having constructed permanent residential homes, but were unlawfully and forcefully evicted by the Applicants; and that to date they have not regained possession of the property and remain dispossessed despite the existence of a court order granting them access.
14.By a Supplementary Affidavit sworn by Abdalla Said Abdalla, the Applicants further deposed that when determining the Notice of Motion dated 8th November 2024, the trial court delivered a ruling on 26th March 2025 in Malindi ELC Case No. 99 of 2019 (consolidated with Malindi ELC Case No. 139 of 2015 and Malindi ELC Case No. 28 of 2020), granting Lucky Kalama Rimba leave:i)to be included in place of the 8th Respondent, who had died on 19th July 2024, and to file a defence and counterclaim within 14 days of the ruling;ii)to purge contempt of the orders of 23rd March 2021 and 9th December 2021 by giving the family of Kea Rimba Gona access to their homestead situated on a portion of the suit property; andiii)that the order of access be complied with pending the hearing and determination of the suit; that in an affidavit sworn on 7th January 2020 by Kea Rimba Gona before his demise, the deceased expressly deposed that he had been in the employment of Abdulla Mohamed Abdulla as caretaker, and that he had no interest whatsoever in the suit property, and had only signed documents without knowledge; and that he swore the affidavit to make it known that he had no claim over the property.The deponent further contended that, on 23rd July 2017, the 1st Respondent, Gabriel Katana Kajoji, purported to sell part of the suit property to one Benedict Kahindi Munga to the Applicants’ detriment while the suit was still pending. He again denied that the Applicants have disobeyed any court order.
15.Concerning the 8th Respondent’s application for contempt, he deposed that it did not satisfy the principles applicable to contempt proceedings, and that no proof was provided to show that the Applicants had disobeyed the court’s orders; that the late Kea Rimba Gona and his family members were not and have never been in occupation of any portion of the suit property; and that no family members were ever buried on the concerned portion of the suit property.
16.It was contended that the Applicants have demonstrated that their intended appeal is arguable and that, unless stay is granted, the appeal will be rendered nugatory; that the Applicants’ appeal raises valid points of law and fact with overwhelming chances of success, and that it is fair and in the interest of justice that stay of execution be granted; and that unless stay is granted, strangers and land-grabbers will invade and alter the structure of their property, and adversely affect the title, particularly as the 8th Respondent does not have a plausible claim against the Applicants.
17.When the application came up for hearing on the Court’s virtual platform, learned counsel Ms. Kimura and Mr. Lakicha appeared for the Applicants while learned counsel Mr. Odhiambo appeared for the 8th Respondent. Learned counsel Mr. Gikandi appeared for the 9th Respondent. There was no appearance for the 1st to 7th Respondents whom Mr. Odhiambo informed us were since deceased. On this account, Ms. Kimura sought to withdraw the application against the 1st to 7th Respondents. There being no objection, the application against the 1st to 7th Respondents was marked as withdrawn.
18.The parties filed written submissions which counsel briefly highlighted. Submitting on the issue as to whether the appeal was arguable, counsel for the Applicants relied on the issues as raised in the draft memorandum of appeal. It was submitted that a consent was entered into between the Applicants and the 9th Respondent setting aside 2.4 acres pending conclusion of the suit; that amidst the proceedings, the trial court granted access to the family of the 8th Respondent without specifying who should be granted access and to which homestead. It was argued that the order was general, and “sweeping” and may lead to strangers and land grabbers invading the suit property and change its structure and tenure, and adversely affect the title, thereby defeating the appeal altogether; that there is need to issue the injunction to preserve from the 8th Respondent’s acts, and to allow an opportunity for the intended appeal to be heard and determined; and that granting the application will preserve both the property and the beneficial interest of the Applicants.
19.On their part, counsel for the 8th Respondent submitted that, in the ruling of 26th March 2025 , the court allowed the prayers sought and ordered inclusion of Lucky Kalama Rimba in substitution of the 8th Respondent, who had died on 19th July 2024, and further ordered that he filed a defence and counterclaim within 14 days of the ruling; that, the Applicants to purge the contempt of the orders of 23rd March 2021 and 9th December 2021 by giving the family of Kea Rimba Gona access to their homestead situated on a portion of the suit property, and that the order of access be complied with pending the hearing and determination of the suit; that the Applicants have conveniently failed to attach that application in their present Motion; that the trial Court expressly found that the Applicants were in disobedience of the court’s orders, and were subsequently found to be in contempt of the court orders of 23rd March 2021 and 9th March 2021; that the Applicants have no chance of succeeding in their intended appeal; and that the Applicant’s continue to inconvenience the 8th Respondent, who has been denied access to the homestead and houses on the portion of the suit property.
20.Counsel for the 9th Respondent opposed the application and reiterated the contents of the affidavit in reply. It was submitted that the dispute relates to 2.4 acres of the suit property in respect of which the court issued orders allowing access by the Respondents; and that the 9th Respondent has remained locked out of the 2.4 acres contrary to the court orders, as a result of which the Applicants were found to be in contempt, hence this application.
21.As a brief background to the motion before us, the Applicants instituted the suit in the Environment and Land Court against the Respondents seeking an order of temporary injunction be issued restraining the Respondents whether by themselves, their agents, servants, or employees from interfering in any manner whether by way of wrongfully entering, trespassing or continuing to wrongfully enter, demolish or construct houses on the suit property.
22.Filed contemporaneously with the suit was a Notice of Motion application dated 22nd November 2019 seeking temporary orders of injunction to restrain the Respondents from interfering with the property, as well as an order directing them to demolish the structures on the suit property. As a prayer in the alternative, they sought to be allowed to demolish the structures and for the Respondents to be compelled to reimburse them for the costs thereof.
23.When that Motion came up for hearing inter-partes on 9th December 2019, none of the Respondents, though served, had filed any response thereto. In the absence of any objection to the application, the trial court allowed the orders as prayed. On 10th December 2019, the 4th to 9th Respondents filed an application seeking a stay of the orders issued on 9th December 2019 on grounds, inter alia, that their houses would be demolished pursuant to the orders granted. Upon considering the motion ex-parte, the Court stayed execution of the orders. When the application came up for hearing inter-partes on 19th December 2019, the Respondents withdrew the motion with the result that the orders barring the demolition of the houses were vacated.
24.Thereafter, the 5th to 9th Respondents filed an application dated 2nd September, 2020 seeking orders that, pending the hearing and determination of the suit, an order of temporary injunction be issued restraining the Applicants whether by themselves, their agents, servants, or employees from interfering in any manner whether by way of wrongfully entering or trespassing or continuing to wrongfully enter and demolish or construct houses on the suit property.
25.By a ruling dated 23rd March 2021, the trial court allowed the application and ordered maintenance of the status quo ante prevailing as at the date of the orders of 9th December 2019 to be restored pending the hearing and determination of the consolidated suits.
26.The Applicants nevertheless erected a wall around the suit property and, aggrieved, the 4th to 9th Respondents filed an application dated 8th November 2024 seeking substitution of Lucky Kalama Rimba as the 8th Defendant in the suit, and for orders that the Applicants do purge the contempt of court orders of 23rd March 2021 and 9th December 2021 by giving the family of Kea Rimba Gona access to and from their homestead situated on a portion of the suit property, and to comply with the court orders of 23rd March, 2021 and 9th December 2021 respectively pending hearing and determination of the suit, and that the 8th Respondent be granted leave to file a defence and counter-claim in the suit. The trial judge upon considering the motion granted the orders sought. The Applicants were aggrieved and intend to file an appeal, hence the application now before us seeking a stay of the orders of the trial court.
27.Under Rule 5(2)(b) of this [Courts’ ](/akn/ke/act/ln/2022/40/eng@2022-12-31)[Rule](/akn/ke/act/ln/2022/40/eng@2022-12-31)[s](/akn/ke/act/ln/2022/40/eng@2022-12-31). For an applicant to succeed, it must satisfy two essential components before the Court can grant the reliefs sought. First, it must be shown that the appeal, or intended appeal, raises an arguable issue; and second, the applicant must demonstrate that, if stay is not granted, the appeal will be rendered nugatory.
28.This position was reiterated in the case of [Chris Munga N. Bichage vs Richard Nyagaka Tongi & 2 others](/akn/ke/judgment/keca/2013/141) [2013] KECA 141 (KLR) where the Court held that:“The law as regards applications for stay of execution, stay of proceedings, or injunction is now well settled. The applicant who would succeed upon such an application must persuade the court on two limbs, which are first, that his appeal or intended appeal is arguable, that is to say it is not frivolous. Secondly, that if the application is not granted, the success of the appeal, were it to succeed, would be rendered nugatory. These two limbs must both be demonstrated and it would not be enough that only one is demonstrated.”
29.On whether the appeal is arguable, does not mean an appeal that is bound to succeed, but rather, one that presents at least one genuine point of law or fact deserving the Court’s consideration. See [Kenya Tea Growers Association & Another vs Kenya Planters Agricultural Workers Union](/akn/ke/judgment/keca/2012/231), Civil Application No. Nai. 72 of 2011 (UR). Further, the law does not require numerous grounds; and even a single arguable issue is sufficient, provided that the second limb is met. See Damji Pragji Mandavia vs Sara Lee Household & Body Care (K) Ltd, Civil Application No. Nai. 345 of 2005 (UR); [Kenya Airways Corporation vs Ederman Properties Ltd](/akn/ke/judgment/keca/2012/82) (2012) KECA 82 (KLR) and [Ahmed Musa Ismael v Kumba Ole Ntamorua & 4 others](/akn/ke/judgment/keca/2014/689) [2014] KECA 689 (KLR).
30.Based on the draft memorandum of appeal annexed to the application, the Applicants contended that the learned Judge committed errors of both law and fact by failing to give effect to his earlier ruling of 23rd September 2024, which had neither been set aside nor varied, and which, in their view, ought to have informed the determination of the subsequent application; that the Judge overlooked clear and uncontroverted evidence on record that justified dismissing the 8th Respondent’s application of 8th November 2024, yet he nonetheless proceeded to allow it notwithstanding its procedural defects and the substantive evidence placed before him; that the learned Judge disregarded crucial documentary evidence supporting their case and failed to undertake a proper, comprehensive and balanced evaluation of the entire evidentiary record; and that the Judge afforded undue weight to the Respondents’ submissions while overlooking or failing to adequately address the Applicants’ written submissions, thereby occasioning prejudice. Upon consideration of the matters to be canvassed in the intended appeal, we find them to be arguable and worthy of ventilation before this Court.
31.On the nugatory limb, the Applicants submit that, unless the orders sought are granted, the intended appeal will be rendered nugatory because the effect of the impugned ruling will be to fundamentally alter the substratum of the dispute, namely the suit property. They contend that the court’s order permitting the family of the late Kea Rimba Gona to access and occupy a portion of the land creates a real and imminent risk that the suit property may be subjected to irreversible acts, including occupation, interference with the perimeter wall, demolition, construction of structures, and entry by persons claiming rights to 4 acres.
32.The 8th Respondent states, on the other hand, that the intended appeal will not be rendered nugatory, and that the Applicants will suffer no irreparable loss because the only portion of the land to which the 8th Respondent seeks to access is the 2.4 acres which the Applicants themselves have expressly excluded and of which they have averred they would not interfere with as they continued to use and develop the remainder of the suit property.
33.The impugned ruling ordered the Applicants to purge the contempt of court orders of 23rd March and 9th December 2021 by giving the family of the 8th Respondent access to and from their homestead and houses on the 2.4-acre portion of the suit property. The ruling also granted leave to the 8th Respondent to file and serve a defence and counterclaim to the Applicants’ suit within 14 days of the order. In our view, compliance with this order neither dispossesses the Applicants of the suit property, nor does it authorize any irreversible acts of alienation, development, or demolition or even the alleged interment. Without doubt, the substratum of the appeal being the suit property will remain intact,even were the 8th Respondent’s family allowed to access the 2.4 acres. Invariably, we are not able to fathom how granting access to, and from, their homesteads on the suit property will render the appeal nugatory. For this reason, we find that the Applicants have not established that the intended appeal will be rendered nugatory.
34.In sum, the Applicants have failed to meet the established threshold for the grant of orders of stay of the rulings of the Environment and Land Court of 23rd March 2021 and 9th December 2021, stay of proceedings and an injunction, with the result that the Notice of Motion dated 4th April 2025 lacks merit and is hereby dismissed with costs in the appeal.
35.It is so ordered.
**DATED AND DELIVERED AT MOMBASA THIS 19 TH DAY OF DECEMBER, 2025.****A. K. MURGOR****............................****JUDGE OF APPEAL****DR. K. I. LAIBUTA CArb, FCIArb.****............................****JUDGE OF APPEAL****G. W. NGENYE-MACHARIA****...........................****JUDGE OF APPEAL** I certify that this is the true copy of the originalSigned**DEPUTY REGISTRAR**
*[ELC]: Environment and Land Court
*[LR]: Land Reference
*[KECA]: Court of Appeal of Kenya
*[KLR]: Kenya Law Reports
*[Nai]: Nairobi
*[UR]: Unreported
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