Case LawGhana
Darko v Sackey (A1/10/20) [2025] GHADC 214 (14 January 2025)
District Court of Ghana
14 January 2025
Judgment
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CORAM: HER WORSHIP BIANCA GYAMERA-BEEKO MAGISTRATE SITTING AT THE
DISTRICT COURT MAMPONG-AKWAPIM ON TUESDAY THE 14TH DAY OF
JANUARY,2025.
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SUITNO. A1/10/20
ALICECONSTANCE NAANADARKO ………….. PLAINTIFF
VRS.
DR.SACKEY …………… DEFENDANT
Plaintiff present.
Defendant represented by DanielBoohene Asante.
Leticia Korshie Lamptey holdsFosterOwusu’sbrief for thePlaintiff.
StephenAsante Bekoeappearsfor theDefendant.
JUDGMENT
This is a land matter that was initiated by a writ filed on 17th September, 2019 before this
court differently constituted. As at 2021 when it was inherited by another magistrate, trial
had still not begun because parties had not been regular in court. After many more
adjournments at the behest of the parties for various reasons including attempts at an
amicable settlement of the issues, trial finally commenced on 25th March 2022. The
magistrate managed to fully conduct the trial but unfortunately, she retired before she
could render her judgment. On the authority of Agyeman substituted by Banahene &
Ors v Anane [2013-2014] 1 SCGLR 241 which states that a judge may exercise his
discretion to adopt previous proceedings in a matter rather than beginning anew, I have
adopted the proceedings so far. It is therefore on the basis of the record of proceedings
passed downtome that Ishall nowproceed tomake adeterminationofthis matter.
The Plaintiff in this matterisseeking the following reliefs.
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1. Declaration of title, ownership and recovery of possession to all that piece and parcel
of land situated, lying and being at “Daakye” Akropong-Akuapem but the Defendant
has trespassed unto.
2. Perpetual injunction restraining the Defendant, his agent, assign etc from having
anything todo withthePlaintiff’s land.
3. Generaldamagesfortrespass and cost.
The Plaintiff’s case
The Plaintiff is a seamstress who resides at Akropong. According to her, she is a member
of the Asona family of Mampong-Akuapem and her family owns land at Daakye
Akropong Akuapem. She was gifted a piece of this land by the family measuring 0.17
acres and she performed the customary ‘aseda’ rites to signify her acceptance of the gift.
She then took possession of this land and registered it at the Lands Commission
Secretariat at Koforidua. On 6th September 2019, Plaintiff visited her land to find people
contractedby the Defendant digging afoundation, hence the present action.
Defendant’s case
The court did not order the Defendant to file a statement of defence probably because this
is not a matter for which a written statement is required under Order 18 of the District
Court Civil Procedure Rules, 2009 (C.I. 59). However, the Defendant on 16th March 2020
filed anaffidavit inoppositionto amotionforinterlocutory injunctionfiled by the Plaintiff
on 6th November, 2019. From the Defendant’s affidavit in opposition, his case may be
surmised as follows. Defendant is a Chartered Accountant and the Group Chief Executive
Officer of Ibis Tel Group of companies. He resides both at Akropong and at Accra.
According to him, the land in dispute became part of the land he purchased from one Mrs
Paulina Darko and her children in 2012. The said Mrs Paulina Darko had acquired the
land by purchase in 2001 from Felicia Teiko and Madam Adwoa Kromea who were at the
time the heads and lawful representatives of the Ayaw and Akuffo families of Akropong
Akuapem. The Defendant therefore insists that the Plaintiff could not be gifted the land in
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2018 as that same piece of land had already been sold to him by the heads of her family in
2013.
Issue
1. Whether the customary gift through which the Plaintiff claims to have acquired the
land in contentionfromthe Asona Family is valid.
Evidentiaryburden.
The principle is that he who alleges must prove. Section 14 of the Evidence Act, 1975 (Act
323)provides that:
except as otherwise provided by law, unless and until it is shifted a party has the
burden of persuasion as to each fact the existence or non-existence of which is
essentialto theclaim ordefence heis asserting.
The Supreme Court in the oft cited case of Serwah v Kesse (1960) GLR 227 stated that “the
general rule, of course, is that that the onus probandi lies on the party who substantially
asserts the affirmative of the issue”. They laid down the tests for who bears the burden as
follows:
“The best tests for ascertaining on whom the burthen of proof lies are, to consider first
which party would succeed if no evidence were given on either side; and, secondly, what
would be the effect of striking out of the record the allegation to be proved. The onus lies
on whichever party would fail, if either of these steps were pursued See Taylor on
Evidence, s.365 quoted inStroud, Judicial Dictionary(3rd. ed.)p. 1996.”
The Plaintiff is therefore under an obligation to prove the facts that will enable the court
conclude that she is the owner of the land as she asserts, and is therefore entitled to the
reliefs she seeks. This being a civil matter, the Plaintiff is required to prove her case upon a
preponderance of probabilities in accordance with section 12 of the Evidence Act 1975
(NRCD323).
Ishall nowproceed todetermine the issue.
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Whether the customary gift through which the Plaintiff claims to have acquired the
land in contention from the Asona Family is valid.
In the case of Adjei Vrs Hosunu & Another [2023] GHAHC 250 (13 February 2023),
Owoahene-Acheampong, J. stated the position of the law in an action for declaration of
title toland thus:
“in land litigation where claims have been made for declaration of title and an
order for perpetual injunction, the claimant is enjoined by law to effectively satisfy
threekeyormajorrequirements, namely;
i. Acquisition
ii. Identity and
iii. Possession,
inordertobe entitled tohis/her claim.
The learned judge then quoted the following holding of the Supreme Court in Mondial
Veneer (Ghana) Ltd vGyebixv [2011] 1SCGLR466.
“In land litigation, even where living witnesses directly involved in the transaction
had been produced in Court as witnesses, the law would require the person
asserting title and on whom bear the burden of persuasion, as the Defendant’s
company in the instant case, to prove the root of title, mode of acquisition and
various acts of possession exercised over the disputed land. It was only where the
party had succeeded in establishing those facts, on the balance of probabilities that
thepartywould be entitled tothe claim.”
In addition, a party seeking a declaration of title must be able to identify the land; see the
case ofAnane and Others vDonkorand Another(Consolidated) [1965] GLR188.
From the evidence before this court, the root of title is not in issue as the Defendant is not
disputing that the Asona Family are the original owners of the land. The identity of the
land is also not in dispute and a composite plan drawn by the Survey and Mapping
Division of the Lands Commission, Koforidua confirms that the site plans submitted by
both parties indeed relate to the land in dispute. That leaves the question of the Plaintiff’s
mode ofacquisition, and whether she exercised actsofpossessionover theland.
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It is the Plaintiff’s case that she acquired the land by way of a gift from the family. In the
case of In re Suhyen Stool [2005-2006] SCGLR 424, the requirements for making a valid
gift under customarylaw werelaid downas follows:
1. A clear intentiontomake the gift
2. Publicity must be giventothe making ofthegift
3. The gift must be accepted by the donee.
These three factors stated above are by no means exhaustive; see the case of Giwah v Ladi
[2013-2014] 2 SCGLR 1139. Equally important is the issue of the capacity of the donor; see
A Concise Guide tothe Study of Ghana Land LawbyK.A. Gyimah, J.at page136.
Evidence of the Plaintiff
The Plaintiff testified that she is a member of the Asona Family of Akropong and that
around March 2018, the family gifted her the land in contention. To signify her acceptance
of the gift, she presented a sheep, a bottle of schnapps and two hundred Ghana Cedis as
‘aseda’. The Plaintiff tendered pictures taken at the said Aseda ceremony. A deed of gift
was subsequently executed to evidence the conveyance and a copy of the deed was also
tendered into evidence. The Plaintiff subsequently took steps to have the deed registered
at theLands Commission, Koforidua.
The Defendant’s cross-examination did not do much to impugn the testimony of the
Plaintiff on the gift that had been made to her. The issue of Plaintiff not being member of
the Asona family because she relates to them through her father rather than her mother is
immaterial as the family can evendecide to gift land to a complete stranger. I am therefore
satisfied that the family acting through their lawful representative expressed a clear
intention to make the gift to the Plaintiff, that there was the requisite publicity, and that
thePlaintiff accepted the gift.
However, as stated previously, these three requirements are not exhaustive. The Plaintiff
must also prove that the donor had the capacity to make the gift to her. It is not in dispute
that the gift was made to her by the currenthead offamily in concurrence withsome other
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family members. What the Defendant has argued is that the head of family did not have
the capacity to make the gift because the family had already conveyed the land to him at
thetime the gift was purportedlymade tothe Plaintiff.
The legal principle, nemo dat quod non habet, stipulates that that one cannot convey a
better title than he has. The Supreme Court elucidated this principle in the case of Adisa
BoyaVrsMohammed and Another [2018] GHASC7(14 February 2018)asfollows:
“proof by either party of a prior grant of the land suffices to deprive the owner of
title to the land as the basic principle in such cases is that after an owner has
granted a clearly determined area of land in favor of a party, he no longer has title
to that parcel of land save in circumstances where the grant is affected by vitiating
circumstances”.
In the case of Kangberee Vrs Mohammed [2012] GHASC 42 (4 July 2012), the Supreme
Courtdescribed the operation ofthis principle oflawasruthless.
The importance of resolving issues relating to claims ofa prior grant in cases ofthis nature
was eruditely rendered by the Supreme Court in the case of Adisa Boya Vrs Mohammed
and Another case as follows:
Given the very narrow compass in which the dispute revolved, namely the
ownership of the disputed property, it was incumbent upon the learned trial judge
to have thoroughly considered the evidence for the purpose of determining which
of the contestants had a prior grant but surprisingly, he placed much reliance on a
conveyance executed by the owners in favor of the plaintiff and the conviction of
the 1st defendant for obstruction of the plaintiff. In our view, the above approach
lost sight of evidence which was led by the defendants to establish their prior
possession of the land based on an allocation letter and their subsequent entry
upon the land and in particular the construction of a place of residence thereon as
well as the payment of property rates which were previous to those paid by the
plaintiff in respect of the land. In our view, the clear evidence of the defendants’
prior grant and the possession which accompanied the grant to their father cannot
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be superseded by the mere fact that the plaintiff who on the evidence obtained his
grant subsequently obtained a conveyance of the disputed property from the
ownersand succeeded in having the1st defendant prosecuted for obstruction.
I take a cue from this decision and shall therefore proceed to consider the evidence led on
theissue ofthe alleged prior grantby bothparties inthe present case.
Even though the Plaintiff had notice that the Defendant’s entire defence to this action is
thataprior grant had beenmade tohim, she herselfdid not leadany evidence onthe issue
of whether the Asona family was still the owner of the land at the time it was purportedly
gifted to her. Her witness, Kwame Boamah Dwira who described himself as the lawful
representative of the Asona family of Akropong, however testified that the family had not
sold or given the disputed land to any other person. Under cross-examination, Kwame
Boamah Dwira admitted that he knew both Madam Felicia Teiko and Madam Adwoa
Kromea. He admitted that both the Defendant and the Defendant’s grantor, Mrs Paulina
Darko, had bought land from Madam Felicia Teiko and that he had been out of the
country when Madam Felicia Teiko sold the lands to them. He also admitted that it was
afterthe deathofMadamTeiko in2018that he gifted the land tothe Plaintiff.
In my respectful view, the mere statement made by the Defendant’s witness that the
family had not sold or given the disputed land to any other person without more is not
adequate to prove that the family had not made a prior grant to the Defendant’s grantor at
the time the gift was made to the Plaintiff. In the case of Majolagbe v Larbi [1959] GLR
190, Justice Ollenu, quoting his dictum in the case of Khoury and anor. V. Richter
delivered onthe8thDecember, 1958explained asfollows:
“Proof in law is the establishment of facts by proper legal means. Where a party makes an averment
capable of proof in some positive way, e.g. by producing documents, description of things, reference
to other facts, instances, or circumstances, and his averment is denied, he does not prove it by
merely going into the witness-box and repeating that averment on oath, or having it repeated on
oath by his witness. He proves it by producing other evidence of facts and circumstances, from
which the Courtcanbe satisfied thatwhat he avers is true.”
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Further more, Mr Boamah Dwira’s answers suggest that he was not privy to the details of
the transactions between the Defendant, his grantors, and Madam Teiko and can therefore
not say with any degree of certainty that the disputed land had not been given to them to
replace the portion of the land that had been affected by the demarcation of the proposed
road.
For his part, the Defendant testified that he came to own the land in dispute in 2012. The
land had been previously acquired by Mrs Paulina Darko. She bought 3 adjoining plots in
2001 from Madam Felicia Teiko and Madam Adwoa Koromea who happened to be the
heads and lawful representatives of the Asona family at the time. The Municipal
Assembly subsequently earmarked a portion of Mrs Paulina Darko’s land for construction
of the road. She decided she was no longer interested in buying the land because the
family had not disclosed to her that the land would be affected by a road project. The
family offered to compensate Mrs Darko with a plot that measured the same as the
portion affected by the road but she declined. The family therefore needed to raise the
money in order to pay Mrs Paulina Darko so they approached the Defendant and asked
him to buy the land from her so that she would convey the land to him. Since the land in
dispute is right behind property he had already acquired from the family, he agreed.
Under cross-examination, the Defendant clarified that he had actually been dealing with
one Madam Diana Dwira who appears to have been the one handling land transactions on
behalf of the family heads at the time. He explained that Diana fell sick and unfortunately
died before she could assist him to perfect the documentation covering the land that had
been offered as a replacement for the portion affected by the road construction. The
Defendant named the twin sister of Madam Diana Dwira and one Addoquaye as key
witnesses tothe transaction.
Portions of the Defendant’s testimony were corroborated by the Plaintiff. She testified that
the land in dispute shared a boundary with the land that had been acquired by Mrs Darko.
Under cross-examination, she also answered that it was Diana Dwira who sold the land to
Mrs Darko. She also testified that the land acquired by Mrs Darko had indeed been
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affected by the proposed road project and because of that Mrs Darko decided she was no
longer interested in the land. She also testified that the Defendant had subsequently
boughtthe land.
Having heard bothparties, I find the Defendant’s case that the land in dispute was offered
to him as a replacement for the portion affected by the road construction more probable
than that of the Plaintiff who insists that the family owned the land at the time it was
gifted toher. Suchan offer by the family to replace the affected land with anotherparcelof
land is the reasonable thing to expect under those circumstances. In any case, the onus lay
on the Plaintiff to prove the family owned the land when it was gifted to her and she has
failed to discharge this burden. Consequently, on the balance of probabilities, I find that
there was a prior grant of the land in contention made by the Asona family to the
Defendant, and that said grant nullifies the subsequent gift made to the Plaintiff. Having
made this determination, the issue of whether or not the Plaintiff exercised acts of
possession over the land in dispute is inconsequential, and for this reason I shall not
bothertointerrogate it.
Inconclusion, I holdasfollows:
1. A prior grant had been made by the Asona family to the grantor of the Defendant and
forthat reason, thesubsequent gift made bythe family toPlaintiff is void.
2. The Plaintiff is notentitled toany ofherreliefs.
3. Cost ofGHS20,000is awarded against thePlaintiff.
SGD.
H/W BIANCAGYAMERA-BEEKO
MAGISTRATE
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