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Last Updated: 25 May 2007
Kampala City Council V Value Market Services Ltd-
HCT-00-CC-MA-0008-2007 [2007] UGCommC 18 (23 February 2007)
THE
REPUBLIC OF UGANDA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF UGANDA AT
KAMPALA
COMMERCIAL COURT DIVISION
HCT-00-CC-MA-0008-2007
Arising
From HCT-00-CC-CS-0532- 2003
Kampala City Council
Applicant/Defendant
Versus
Value Market Services Ltd
Respondent/Plaintiff
23 February 2007
HON.
MR. JUSTICE LAMECK N. MUKASA
RULING:
This
is an application by Chamber Summons under Order 6 rules 19 and 31 of
the Civil Procedure Rules for leave to amend the Defendant’s
written statement of defence.
The Application is supported by
an affidavit sworn by H.S. B. Karugonjo the City Advocate wherein the
grounds for the application
are stated as follows:-
|
(i) |
The Applicant/Defendant has discovered new facts which merit incorporation in the defendant’s written statement of defence. |
|
(ii) |
The said new facts are that whereas the mandatory statutory notice was drawn on the Central Division, the suit was brought against Kampala City Council. |
|
(iii) |
The defendant Kampala City Council was not served with the requisite statutory notice. |
In paragraphs 6 of the affidavit it is averred
that under the Local Governments Act, a Division Council and City
Council are separate
entities with capacity to sue and be sued in
their own names. Annexed to the affidavit is the intended Amended
Written Statement
of defence whereby the following amendments are
indicated:-
1. That it will be averred that the plaintiff sued a wrong party.
2. The defendant, City Council of Kampala, was not served with the requisite Statutory Notice.
I have studied the pleadings before me and
noted that the defendant in HCCS No. 532 of 2003 is stated to be City
Council of Kampala.
Annexed to the Affidavit in support is the
Statutory Notice. The intended defendant named therein is City
Council of Kampala, Central
Division. It was to be served upon.
1. The Principal Assistant Town Clerk, Central Division, City of Kampala
2. The Town Clerk City Council of Kampala
In its affidavit in reply, sworn by Ben
Tungwako, the Respondent’s managing Director, it is averred that
the statutory notice was
served on both the City Council of Kampala
and the City Council of Kampala City Central Division and that the
statutory notice was
responded to by the office of the City advocate.
It is argued that the intended amendment will delay or defeat the
justice of the
Respondent/plaintiff case.
The general rule is
that amendments to pleadings should be freely allowed at any stage of
the proceedings where a Court is satisfied
that the amendment will
enable the real question in controversy between the parties to be
adjudicated upon and no injustice would
be occasioned to the opposite
party and there is no injustice if the other party can be compensated
by way of costs. See Order 6
rule 19 Civil Procedure Rules, Edward
Seninde Vs Fred Luwaga (1995) IV KALR 149 .
Section 3 (3) of the Local Government Act provides:-
"(3) The Local Governments in a City shall be –
(a) The City Council
(b) The City division Councils"
And
section 6 of the same Act provides:-
"Every Local
government council shall be a body corporate with perpetual
succession and a common seal and may sue or be sued
in its corporate
name."
It follows that a City Council and a City Division Council are separate corporate bodies irrespective of whether they are of the same city. The Statutory Notice in the instant suit indicated the intended defendant as "City Council of Kampala, Central Division" however the suit was filed against the Applicant "City Council of Kampala" The Statutory Notice was stated to be served on:
1. The principal Assistant Town Clerk, Central Division, City of Kampala.
2. The Town Clerk, City Council of Kampala.
There is an issue of the intended defendant;
was it the Central Division, City of Kampala or City Council of
Kampala or both. The
amendment sought is intended to address that
issue and the issue whether the defendant was served with the
mandatory statutory notice.
If the Respondent/Plaintiff was in doubt
as to who of the two corporate bodies to proceed against rule 7 of
Order 1 of the Civil
Procedure Rules provided a solution. It states:-
"Where the plaintiff is in doubt as to the persons from whom he or she is entitled to obtain redress, he or she may join two or more defendants in order that the questions as to which of the defendants is liable and to what extent, may be determined as between all parties"
An amendment ought to be allowed if thereby the
real substantial question can be realized between the parties and
multiplicity of
proceedings avoided. See Harji Karon Vs
Monjee Regharjee (1943) 190 EACA 10
In the
circumstances of the instant case I find that the amendment sought
will enable the Court to effectively and completely adjudicate
upon
the question of liability of the defendant/applicant and most likely
result into avoidance of a multiplicity of suits and will
not cause
injustice to the respondent. I accordingly allow the application. An
amended written statement of defence should be filed
within 7 days
from the date hereof. The order as to costs in the main suit shall
bind the costs of this application.
I so order .
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