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GHANA BAR REPORT 1993 -94 VOL 4

 

Attiapa v Mariam [1992 – 1993] 3 G B R 1628 – 1631  C.A

COURT OF APPEAL

ESSIEM, AMUAH, LUTTERODT JJA

3 JULY 1993

 

Land law and conveyancing – Land Development (Protection of Purchasers) Act – Good faith – Plaintiff purchasing disputed land from true owner – Plaintiff constructing platform on land, registering title deed and going abroad – Defendant building and moving into possession without notice of plaintiff’s interest –Plaintiff drawing water from the defendant’s house to complete her house on return from abroad – Whether defendant built in good faith  – Land Development (Protection of Purchasers) Act 1960 (Act 2).

Practice and procedure – Pleadings – Act 2 – Court may apply Act 2 though not pleaded.

The plaintiff purchased the disputed land, registered her title deed, constructed a platform on the land and left for Nigeria. On her return some years later, she discovered that the defendant had constructed a house on a portion of the land in which she was living. The plaintiff sued the defendant for a declaration of title, damages for trespass and perpetual injunction. The defendant claimed that she purchased the land from the Asere Mantse in 1963. On her return from Nigeria, the plaintiff drew water from the defendant’s house to construct her house and moved in. She never raised any objection to the defendant’s occupation of the land in dispute until a quarrel ensued between them. The trial judge found as a fact that the defendant’s conveyance was registered after the commencement of the action and that her grantors had no title as they had sold the land to the plaintiff’s grantor. The trial judge dismissed the pleas of limitation, laches and acquiescence because they were not pleaded. The defendant appealed.

Held: on the facts the defendant built unaware of the plaintiff’s adverse title to the land. Although she did not plead Act 2 the court had discretion to confer title on her. She would be ordered to pay to the plaintiff twice the value of the land at the time of purchase in accordance with section 3(a) of Act 2. Laryea v Oforiwah [1984-86] 2 GLR 410, CA referred to.

Case referred to:

Laryeah v Oforiwah [1984-86] GLR 410, CA.

APPEAL against decision of High Court.

Amarkai Amarteifio for the appellant.

Hansen for the respondent.

ESSIEM JA. This is an appeal against the judgment of Dove J by which the learned judge upheld the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant. The claim was for the following reliefs: (1) a declaration that she is the owner and beneficially entitled to the disputed land; (2) ¢250,000 damages for trespass onto the said land by the defendant; (3) perpetual injunction restraining the defendant her servants agents and assigns from further interfering with the plaintiff’s use of the said land.

From the amended statement of claim, the plaintiff purchased the land, the subject matter in dispute, from one Violet Naanum Whitaker as far back as 1956 and constructed a platform for her building thereon. Although the plaintiff did not obtain any document of title before her vendor died, she later obtained one and registered it.

The plaintiff constructed a platform on the land and left for Nigeria. It was on her return some years later that she discovered that the defendant had trespassed on the land and built a house on part of the land hence the present action.

The defendant, in her statement of defence, denied the plaintiff’s claim. She pleaded that the land was sold to her by Nii Atrema II, Mantse of Asere, Accra by a deed of conveyance made on 12 March 1963.

The trial judge found from the evidence that the defendant’s conveyance was dated 12 March 1963, stamped in 1974 and registered in 1987. The judge found also that at the time that the defendant obtained her grant, her grantors had no title to the land because the land had been sold to the late Dr Nanka Bruce from whose family plaintiff obtained her grant. The same was registered in 1979 in the Deeds Registry as No 3893/1979.

The trial court also found that at the time of the grant made to the defendant in 1963 the Asere stool had already divested itself of title to the land by its grant of a larger area of land including the area in dispute to Dr Nanka Bruce in 1947 which grant had been registered as far back as 1948. On the evidence the learned trial judge found that the defendant had no title by the grant made to her in 1963. The court also found that the defendant went into possession and constructed a dwelling house on the land. He also found that the defendant-appellant’s building was on part of the plaintiff-respondent’s land.

There is no evidence that the defendant-appellant was aware of the plaintiff’s adverse title to the land. However there is sufficient evidence on record that she had completed her building and was occupying it when the plaintiff returned from her trip. The plaintiff, from the evidence, drew water from the appellant’s house to complete her house and she moved in. The evidence also indicates strongly that the contractor who built the plaintiff’s house drew water from the defendant’s house.

On the evidence therefore the defendant-appellant was completely unaware that the plaintiff was the owner of the land on which she had built her house. She sincerely believed that she had title to the land. The learned trial judge declined to invoke section 10 of the Limitations Decree 1972 (NRCD 54) and also declined the plea of laches and acquiescence because they had not been pleaded. I think the trial judge was right because estoppel must be pleaded.

The trial judge found that the defendant-appellant’s document of title, exhibit 1, was registered in 1987 after the commencement of this action while the plaintiff-respondent’s document exhibit A was registered in 1979 and her vendor’s was registered in 1948.

On the totality of the evidence on record, the appellant developed her land in the honest belief that she had obtained good title to the same and was unaware of the plaintiff’s prior grant to the same land. On her return from Nigeria the plaintiff did not raise any objection to the defendant’s occupation of the land in dispute until a quarrel arose between them; it was then that the plaintiff-respondent took the action herein. I am persuaded that on the totality of the evidence the defendant honestly believed that she had valid title to the land in dispute before she developed it.

In Laryea v Oforiwah [1984-86] 2 GLR 410 holding (5), this court observed:

"The provisions of the Land Development (Protection of Purchasers) Act, 1960 (Act 2) vested a discretion in the court in any given case to determine whether or not the provisions of the Act should be applied. The first and foremost factor for the trial court to consider when determining a question of the purchaser’s protection under the Act was the good faith of the purchaser..."

As I have already pointed out, the appellant honestly believed she had title to the land in dispute consequently she is entitled to protection under the Act. The trial court should have invoked this law and protected the appellant. I shall therefore invoke Act 2 and confer title on the defendant-appellant in respect of the land in dispute.

I therefore allow the appeal and order that tittle to the land in dispute be conferred and is hereby conferred on the defendant-appellant. The defendant-appellant should ensure that the plaintiff has access to her house. The plaintiff should be paid twice the value of the land at the time of purchase in accordance with section 3 (a) of Act 2.

AMUAH JA. I agree.

LUTTERODT JA. I also agree.

Appeal allowed. Appellant to pay respondent twice the value of land at time of purchase.

Kizito Beyuo, Legal Practitioner.

 
 

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