Case LawGhana
Amankona v Ankwaa (C1/181/2022) [2024] GHAHC 547 (13 November 2024)
High Court of Ghana
13 November 2024
Judgment
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF JUDICATURE, IN THE HIGH COURTOF JUSTICE,
COMMERCIAL DIVISION “B” (GENERAL JURISDICTION) HELD AT SUNYANI
ON WEDNESDAY THE 13TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2024 BEFORE HER LADYSHIP
JUSTICEJOYCE BOAHEN, HIGH COURTJUDGE
SUITNO. C1/181/2022
AMANKONA KENNEDY ROBERT PLAINTIFF
VS.
NANA YAWANKWAA DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Plaintiff present
Defendant absent
HayfordBaah–Adomakoholding brief ofRomeoAsante Nimo forthe Plaintiff
INTRODUCTION
The Plaintiff issued awrit ofsummons and statement ofclaim on 9th June, 2022claiming
thefollowing reliefs against the Defendant;
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1. Adeclaration of title to and recovery of possession of a farm land approximately
four (4) acres in size forming part of a large tract of land acquired by the late
Kwaku Tabiri at a place commonly called Nsrensre – Agya at “Berekumfour
Akuraamu” on the Tekese stool land and sharing boundary with the Nserensre
Riverand the properties ofAkosuaAsantewaaand oneKaribo.
2. Generaldamagesfortrespass
3. Order of perpetual injunction restraining the Defendant, his agents and all those
claiming through him from having anything to do with the disputed land until
thefinal determinationofthe suit.
The Defendant was served personally with the writ of summons and statement of claim
and a lawyer entered appearance for him. Thereafter the lawyer did not file any process
for the Defendant neither did he attend Court as Counsel for Defendant nor file notice
of withdrawal of his representation for the Defendant. Thereafter, the Defendant never
attended Court despite being served with severalhearing notices by substituted service.
He failed to file statement of defence within the time limited for doing so. The Plaintiff
therefore obtained judgment in default of defence against the Defendant. Pursuant to
the Court’s orders the Plaintiff served the Defendant with the judgment in default of
defence and witness statements for case management conference but the Defendant was
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unperturbed and did not attend Court. Further hearing notices were served on the
Defendant with Court notes apprising the Defendant that the Plaintiff and his witness
had given evidence and gave the Defendant opportunity to attend Court to cross –
examine the Plaintiff and his witness but the Defendant did not budge and spurned the
opportunity to do so. The Court allowed the Plaintiff to prove his claim in accordance
with Order 36 rule 1(1) and 2 (a), (b) and (c) of the High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules,
2004 (C.I 47) and the appropriate case law without further recourse to the Defendant
and adjourned the case for judgment.
ORDER 36 RULE 1(1) AND (2) (A), (B) AND (C) OF THE HIGH COURT (CIVIL
PROCEDURE)RULES, 2004(C.I 47)statesthat;
Failuretoattendat trial
1. (1) Where an action is called for trial and all the parties fail to attend, the trial Judge may
strike the action off the trial list.
(2)Where an action iscalled for trial and aparty fails toattend, the trial Judge may
(a) where the plaintiff attends and the defendant fails to attend, dismiss the counterclaim, if any,
and allowthe plaintifftoprove the claim;
(b) where the defendant attends and the plaintiff fails to attend, dismiss the action and allow the
defendantto prove the counterclaim, if any
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(c)make such other order asis just.
REPUBLIC VS. HIGH COURT (HUMAN RIGHTS DIVISION) ACCRA, EX PARTE
AKITA (MANCELL – EGALA & ATTORNEY GENERAL INTERESTED PARTIES)
[2010] SUPREME COURT OF GHANA LAW REPORT (SCGLR) 374 @ 384; the Court
held asfollows;
A person who has been given the opportunity to be heard but deliberately spurned that
opportunity to satisfy his or her own decision to boycott proceedings cannot later complain that
the proceedings have proceeded without hearing him or her and then plead in aid, the audi
alteram partem rule.
The case of the REPUBLIC V. HIGH COURT (FAST TRACK DIVISION); EX PARTE
STATE HOUSING COMPANY LIMITED (No. 2) KORANTENG – AMOAKO
INTERESTEDPARTY [2009] SCGLR185AT186AND 190statesthat;
(1) a party who disables himself or herself from being heard in any proceedings cannot later turn
roundand accusean adjudicator of having breached the rulesof natural justice…
In the case of WATALAH VS. GHANA PRIMEWOOD PRODUCTS LIMITED [1973] 2
GHANA LAW REPORT 126 – 136 a Defendant failed to attend Court to cross -examine
a plaintiff and judgment was entered against the Defendant, he sought to have the
judgment set aside and the Court held that; this was not a case in which judgment was
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obtained by default of appearance or by blunder on the part of counsel. The defendants were
represented and were given all the opportunity that a party to an action could be given. There
had thereforebeen a trial of the issueson the merits.
The Court found it difficult and refused to accede to a motion for an order to set aside
the judgment because in its view there has been a trial of the issues on the merits of the
case and thatthe judgmentwasnot obtained by default.
THEPLAINTIFF’SCASE
The Plaintiff is aretiredteacher and lives at KenyasiNumber 1 intheAhafo Region. The
Defendant is a farmer and lives at Ampemkro Drobo. The Plaintiff mounted this action
on his own behalf and on behalf of his siblings born of their father, the late Kwaku
Tabiri. The land in dispute according to the Plaintiff measures approximately four (4)
acres and lies at a place commonly known and called Nsrensre –Agya at “Berekumfour
Akuraamu” on the Tekese stool land. The part of the land that is in dispute was
acquired in its virgin state by the Plaintiff’s biological father Kwaku tabiri almost a
century ago from the then chief of Tekese Nana Diawuo @ Nana Yaw Donkor and put
up a cottage on it. His father and other early settlers named the disputed area
“Berekumfour Akuraamu” to wit; Berekum People’s settlement. The land shares
boundary with the lands of Opanin KwaaAmankwaa, Doogo, KofiAmoah, KwasiAnto,
KwaaYeboahall deceased and riverNsrensre.
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The Plaintiff contends that the about four acres of land in dispute now shares boundary
with the farms of Akosua Asantewaa his niece, Karibo and river Nseresre. It is the
Plaintiff’s case that after his father acquired the land, he reduced portions of it into
cultivation of cocoa and food crops. The Defendant’s father who is related to his mother
pleaded with his father for permission to cultivate food crops on a portion of the land
for his subsistence and Plaintiff’s father granted the Defendant’s father the portion of
the land which is currently in dispute. The Defendant’s father clandestinely planted
cocoa and marijuana on the land to the Plaintiff’s father’s annoyance which caused the
Plaintiff’s father to recover the land from the Defendant’s father and the Defendant’s
fathernever stepped ontheland again forabout fifty (50)yearsago.
The Plaintiff’s father continued to cultivate the land including where he ejected the
Defendant’s father with some of Plaintiff’s siblings until his father died in 1998. Upon
his father’s death the land devolved to him and his siblings and it has remained their
property to date. The Plaintiff and his siblings had undisturbed possession of the
disputed land and continued to cultivate it with their nieces and nephews after the
Plaintiff’s father died in 1998 to date. In or around February 2022 the Defendant
appeared from nowhere and started clearing a portion of the land that his father
previously cultivated. It is the Plaintiff’s case that he left a wide expanse of the land
including the disputed land to fallow for bee keeping but the Defendant trespassed
unto that portion of the disputed land. The Plaintiff contends that unless the Defendant
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is restrained by the honourable Court he will persist in his illegality. Wherefore the
Plaintiff claims the reliefs indorsed on the writ of summons against the Defendant. The
Plaintiff repeated his averments in his pleadings on oath without attaching any exhibit
and called onewitness to provehis case.
EVIDENCE OF PW1
PW1 is a teacher and the Plaintiff’s father is his grandfather.According to PW1 the land
in dispute is situate on Tikese stool land which became the bonafide property of Nana
Kwaku Tabiri and his descendants including the Plaintiff and himself. His farm is on a
portion of the disputed land and some of his aunties and other family members also
cultivate the land. According to him neither the Defendants nor their father has any
land in the disputed area. The Defendant’s father cultivated a portion of his
grandfather’s land for his subsistence with the consent of his grandfather but his
grandfather subsequently recovered the land from the Defendant’s father and from then
no member of the Defendant’s family had anything to do with the land. Recently in the
year 2022 the Defendant entered a portion of the land that his father previously
cultivated which constitutestrespass.
EVALUATIONOF THE FACTS, EVIDENCE ANDAPPLICATION OF THELAW
In his book LAND LAW, PRACTICE AND CONVEYANCING IN GHANA, FIRST
EDITIONATPAGES130to131Justice Dennis DominicAdjeistatesasfollows;
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The most common feature of evidence in land matters is the use of traditional evidence.
Whenever there is a dispute over property acquired several years ago and none of the parties and
their witnesses could give eye witness accounts or the acquisition of the property has a long
standing history, the impressions given by the parties when they are in the witness box should
not be used to either credit or discredit them but the court is to examine their evidence with
undisturbed overt acts of long possession or occupation or judgments that have been obtained in
respect of the land. In measuring the success of a case in which traditional evidence has been
adduced, the courts are to use the evidence of living or recentmemory to satisfy itself that aparty
has been able to prove his case by a preponderance of the probabilities…The law is settled that
acts in living or recent memory such as overt acts of ownership and possession over the disputed
propertytake precedence over traditional history.
In the case of YEHANS INTERNATIONAL LIMITED VS. MARTEY TSURU FAMILY &
1OTHER[2018]Dennis Law SupremeCourt(DLSC) 2488the Courtheld that;
It is settled and trite law that a person claiming title has to prove i) his root of title ii) mode of
acquisition and iii) various acts of possession exercised over the land…This can be proved either
by traditional evidence or by overt acts of ownership in respect of the derivatory land in dispute.
Aparty who relieson atitle mustprovethe title of his grantor.
SECTION10(1)AND11(1) OFTHE EVIDENCEACT,1975(NRCD 323)statesthat;
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10.Burden ofpersuasion defined
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the burden of persuasion means the obligation of a party to
establish a requisite degree of belief concerning a fact in the mind of the tribunal of fact or the
Court.
11.Burden ofproducing evidence defined
(1) Forthe purposes of this Act, the burdenof producing evidence meansthe obligation of aparty
tointroducesufficient evidenceto avoid aruling on the issueagainst that party.
From the evidence proffered by the Plaintiff and his witness they both did not tender
any document to establish the case which ordinarily falls short of the MAJOLAGBE VS.
LARBI AND OTHERS standard which requires proof by proper legal means. Proof in
some positive way, e.g. by producing documents, description of things, reference to
other facts, instances, or circumstances. However, the Majolagbe case also held in
holding (1) that a plaintiff's proof of his mere possession of land is sufficient for him to
maintaintrespassagainst anyone who cannot show abettertitle.
It is useful to add that notwithstanding the fact that the Defendant did not come to
Court the Plaintiff must on the strength of his case prove to the Court’s satisfaction that
the land in dispute belongs tohim and that the Defendant trespassed unto the land. The
Plaintiff’s evidence buttressed by the evidence of PW1, established that the Plaintiff’s
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father acquired the land in dispute in its virgin state from the chief of Tekese Nana
Diawuo also known as Nana Yaw Donkor almost a century ago. He further established
that his father put up a cottage on the land and cultivated cocoa and other food crops
on the land. His father upon the Defendant’s father’s request for a portion of the land to
cultivate for his subsistence, gave him a portion of the land which is currently in
dispute tocultivate.
The Defendant’s father clandestinely cultivated cocoa, marijuana and other crops on the
land to the annoyance of Plaintiff’s father who recovered the land from the Defendant’s
father. The Plaintiff further established that after his father’s death, himself, his siblings,
his nieces and nephews continued to cultivate the land without hindrance from anyone
until the Defendant trespassed unto the land recently in February 2022. PW1 buttressed
the Plaintiff’s evidence regarding the Plaintiff’s father’s acquisition of the land and the
fact that the Plaintiff’s father who is his grandfather gave a portion of the land to the
Defendant’s father to cultivate for his subsistence. He further buttressed the Plaintiff’s
evidence that his father recovered the land from the Defendant’s father subsequently
and the Defendant’s father had nothing to do with the disputed land until the
Defendant trespassed unto the land recently in the year 2022. He confirmed that himself
and otherfamily members including his auntsarecultivating the land.
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In the absence of any contrary evidence by the Defendant to challenge the Plaintiff’s
claim of title and ownership to the land, the Court is satisfied that the Plaintiff per his
own evidence and the evidence of his witness, PW1 established the Plaintiff’s root of
title traditionally. The Plaintiff established that his deceased father Kwaku Tabiri
acquired the disputed land in its virgin state almost a century ago from the then chief of
Tekese Nana Diawuo @ Nana Yaw Donkor and put up a cottage on it. His father and
otherearly settlersnamed the disputed area“BerekumfourAkuraamu” towit; Berekum
People’s settlement. According to the Plaintitiff the disputed land measures
approximately four (4) acres and lies at a place commonly known and called Nsrensre –
Agyaat “BerekumfourAkuraamu”onTekese stoolland.
He stated that the disputed land currently shares boundary with the farms of Akosua
Asantewaa his niece, Karibo and river Nsresre. He led further evidence to establish that
his late father exercised overt acts of ownership over the land and cultivated cocoa and
other food crops on the land. Upon his father’s death, himself, his siblings, nieces and
nephews continued to cultivate the land without interference from anyone until the
Defendant trespassed unto a portion of the disputed land in February 2022. In the light
of the evidence adduced by the Plaintiff buttressed by the evidence of PW1 the Court is
convinced that the Plaintiff established his root of title to the disputed land with living
or recent memory and undisturbed overt acts of long possession over the land for
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almost a century notwithstanding the fact that the Plaintiff did not tender any
document tosupport his case.
The Plaintiff claims for general damages otherwise known as noneconomic damages. It
is trite law that general damages are compensation for losses without specific price tag
but comes as compensation for intangible loss. Having heard the Plaintiff and his
witness the Court holds the view that the Plaintiff is entitled to damages for trespass
unto the disputed land by the Defendant. The Court finds it prudent to award cost in
favour of the Plaintiff after considering the length of the trial for two years and three
months, expenses incurred by the Plaintiff regarding processes filed, hearing notices
served on the Defendant, reasonable transport expenses incurred by the Plaintiff in
prosecuting the case, the fact that no cost was awarded the Plaintiff during the
proceedings, the fact that the Plaintiff engaged Counsel in the matter and in the light of
Order74ofC.I 47.
The Court is satisfied from the totality of evidence adduced by the Plaintiff and his witness that
the Plaintiff strictly established his burden of proof regarding title and ownership of the disputed
land by himself and his surviving siblings born by his father Kwaku Tabiri. In the light of the
foregoing the Plaintiff is therefore entitled to the reliefs claimed against the Defendant and the
Courtsoholds in favourof the Plaintifffor;
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1. Adeclaration of title to and recovery of possession of a farm land approximately
four (4) acres in size forming part of a large tract of land acquired by the late
Kwaku Tabiri at a place commonly called Nsrensre – Agya at “Berekumfour
Akuraamu” on the Tekese stool land and sharing boundary with the Nserensre
Riverand the properties ofAkosuaAsantewaaand oneKaribo.
2. General damagesfor trespass in the sum ofGhs 10,000.00is awarded in favour of
thePlaintiff.
3. An order of perpetual injunction is hereby granted restraining the Defendant, his
agents and all those claiming through him from having anything to do with the
disputed land.
4. CostofGhs 20,000.00is awarded in favourofthePlaintiff.
(SGD)
JUSTICEJOYCE BOAHEN
HIGHCOURTJUDGE
13TH NOVEMBER2024
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