Civil Case No 52 of 2015 Nakuru Sammy Ndungu Mungai

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Sammy Ndungu Mungai t/a Kinamba Evans Enterprises Nakuru v Anti-Counterfeit Agency [2016] eKLR

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA AT NAKURU

CIVIL CASE NUMBER 52 OF 2015

SAMMY NDUNGU MUNGAI

T/A KINAMBA EVANS ENTERPRISES NAKURU.......PLAINTIFF

VERSUS

ANTI-COUNTERFEIT AGENCY.............................. RESPONDENT

RULING ON THE PRELIMINARY OBJECTION DATED 3RD NOVEMBER 2015

1. The Plaintiff/Applicant by its Notice of Preliminary objection dated 3rd November 2015 objects to the
hearing of the Notice of Motion dated 18th November 2015 on the following grounds:

(1) That the plaintiff objects to the firm of Sichangi and Associates coming on record for the
defendant and pray that the Notice of Appointment be struck out.

(2) That the appointment of Sichangi and Associates did not follow due process i.e procurement
rules.

(3) That the Defendant was already represented by the Attorney General.

2. This suit was instituted by the plaintiff against the Anti-Counterfeit Agency, the defendant. Upon
service of the necessary court process, the defendant appeared through the Honourable Attorney-
General and answered by filing its responses to the plaintiffs application dated 13th July 2015 and which
the parties compromised by recording a consent order on the 20th July 2015.

The plaintiff thereafter filed a Notice of Motion dated 12th October 2015 and served the Honourable
Attorney General on behalf of the Defendant.

On the 17th November 2015, a Notice of Change of representation was filed by the firm of Sichangi
Partners Advocates to represent the defendant, and at the same time filed a Replying Affidavit to the
application dated 12th October 2015. On the 18th November 2015 when the application come up for
hearing before me, the defendant sought leave to file a response to the preliminary objection which was
granted and a replying affidavit was duly filed on the 3rd December 2015, both on the preliminary
objection and to the substantive application being supplementary to its earlier replying affidavit sworn on
the 17th November 2015.

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Sammy Ndungu Mungai t/a Kinamba Evans Enterprises Nakuru v Anti-Counterfeit Agency [2016] eKLR

3. The thrust of the preliminary objection as stated by Mr. Mongeri, Advocate for the plaintiff in his
submissions is that procurement procedures by the Attorney General for legal services that brought in
the firm of Sichangi Partners into this suit to represent the defendant, a Government Agency, were not
followed. It was his submission that while the Hon. The Attorney General were on record, the said firm
of Advocates filed their Notice of Appointment without first withdrawing the earlier notice by the Attorney
General. It is submitted that the said Notice of Appointment and Notice of Change of advocates filed on
the 17th November 2015 were unprocedural and ought to be struck out.

4. In opposing the preliminary objection, Ms. Mwathani Advocate relied on the replying affidavit filed on
the 3rd November 2015 and stated that a Preliminary Objection must only raise issues of law and by its
nature, ought to strike out the suit in its entirety. She relied on the Court of Appeal decision in the
Owners of Motor Vessel “Lilian S” -vs- Caltex Oil Kenya (1989) KLR. She submitted that issue of
representation is not a matter of law, and stated that such issue ought to have been brought through a
Notice of Motion where affidavit evidence could be filed for and in opposition. For this, she cited the
case of Samuel Waweru -vs- Geoffrey Muhoro Mwangi(2014) KLR.

5. On procurement process, it was stated that the Respondent/defendant being a state agency is subject
to the Public Procurement And Disposal Act in matters of procurement, and such process was duly
adhered to, and by a letter dated 11th July 2014 Ref: ACA /PROC/1 (32) written by the Agency on the
11th July 2014 informed the law firm of its having been prequalified for legal services by the said agency,
and its response accepting empanelment dated 22nd July 2014.

6. The court has considered the rival arguments by both counsel. The plaintiff, in my view, had genuine
concern as to whether or not the defendant's Advocates, M/S Sichangi Partners Advocates had been
procedurally procured to competently represent the defendant. These are matters of both law and fact. I
have seen the procurement documents annexed as exhibits in the defendants/respondents replying
affidavit. I am satisfied that the said law firm was empaneled after prequalification into the Defendants
legal panel on the 22nd July 2014 and to date are still in the panel, and authorised to represent the
respondent in courts of law as external legal counsel. A party is always at liberty to be represented in
court of law by Advocates of its own choice.

The said law firm filed a Notice of Appointment to represent the respondent on the 2nd November 2015
and followed up with a Notice of Change of Advocates on the 17th November 2015.

7. The court has considered that issues of representation of parties require evidence and cannot be
adequately urged by way of preliminary objections but by formal applications – as stated in the case
Samuel Waweru -vs- Geoffrey Muhoro Mwangi (Supra). In this present case, the defendant being a
State Agency was under an obligation to follow the laid down procurement procedures pursuant to the
Public Procurement and Disposal Act as opposed to individuals and corporates and non-
governmental bodies/entities – which bodies are not bound by the above procurement rules. To that
extent, the plaintiff was in order to bring the preliminary objection to ascertain adherence to the
procurement process which, in my view, is a matter of law and bound under the Act, and thus falls under
the armpit of the principles laid down in the Mukisa Biscuits Manufacturing Co. Ltd. -vs- West End
Distributors Ltd (1969) EA 696, that:

“a preliminary objection consists of a point of law which has been pleaded, or which arises
by clear implication out of pleadings, and which if argued as preliminary point may dispose of
the suit ---- it cannot be raised if any fact has to be ascertained or if what is sought is the
exercise of judicial discretion -----”

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Sammy Ndungu Mungai t/a Kinamba Evans Enterprises Nakuru v Anti-Counterfeit Agency [2016] eKLR

The said procurement process having been followed, then, the application lacks merit.

8. For the above reasons, the preliminary objection is dismissed, but with no orders as to costs.

Dated, signed and delivered in open court this 17th day of March 2016

JANET MULWA

JUDGE

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