Appeal Court. 18
Dec.,1936.
Appeal from Court of Provincial
Commissioner exercising
Appellate Jurisdiction.
Claim
for possession of land (sold
under writ of
Fi. Fa.) against
purchaser-Did latter
acquire a good title?
.
Held: Purchaser's title to
property was good; appeal
allowed.
The facts are sufficiently set
out in the judgment.
Frans Dove
for Appellants.
A. W. K. Thompson
for Respondents.
The following joint judgment was
delivered :-
KINGDON, CJ., NIGERIA, PETRIDES,
C.J., GOLD COAST, AND WEBBER,
C.J., SIERRA LEONE.
J. P. Allotey- Hammond brought
an action in the Asere
Divisional Tribunal against
Messrs. Papafio and Adjomoku
claiming a declaration that he
was the owner of a piece of land
in Zion Street, Ussher Town,
Accra. Judgment in that Tribunal
was delivered in favour of
Allotey-Hammond. There is no
copy of that judgment or those
proceedings in the appeal
record, but it would appear that
AlloteyHammond obtained
judgment for £88 and costs, but
did not obtain the declaration
he sought.
The two defendants, after
unsuccessfully appealing to the
Ga Manche's Tribunal, took the
case on appeal to the Court of.
the Commissioner, Eastern
Province. That Court, coming to
the conclusion that both native
Tribunals had given judgment
concerning a piece of land which
was not in occupation of Messrs.
Papafio and Adjomoku, allowed
the appeal and quashed the
judgment of the native Tribunal.
Before the Commissioner of the
Eastern Province had delivered
that judgment Allotey-Hammond
levied execution on the land in
dispute. The land was sold under
a writ of Fi. Fa. to S.
S. Laryea by public auction for
the sum of £280.
Messrs. Papafio and Adj omoku ,
who are respondents to this
appeal, then sued Laryea in the
Ga Manche's Tribunal claiming
possession of the property sold
to Laryea. J. P. Allotey-Hammond
was subsequently made a
co-defendant in this suit. The
respondents succeeded \ and were
given possession of the
property, and the appellants
were jointly and severally
ordered to pay the plaintiff £25
as mesne profits as well as
costs. The appellants having
unsuccessfully appealed from
this judgment to the
Commissioner of the Eastern
Province have now appealed to
this Court.
The real question to be decided
on this appeal is whether Laryea
obtained a good title as against
the respondents when he bought
the land in dispute. It will be
seen from the record that
Papafio admitted that the
property was sold under a writ
of Fi. Fa. "to cover the
award by the Asere Tribunal
which was confirmed by Ga
Manche's Tribunal."
In our opinion it is not open to
doubt that if Laryea had
obtained a certificate of
purchase in the form provided in
these cases (see Form 16
at p. 333 of Vo1. III) and
produced it at the trial he
would in the absence of any
proof that the sale had been
irregularly conducted have
established a good title to the
land in dispute.
Laryea at the trial said he had
received a receipt for the
purchase price, but he did not
produce either that receipt or a
certificate of purchase. We have
therefore to consider whether
the fact that Laryea has failed
to produce either a receipt or a
certificate of purchase should
deprive him of the property
which he undoubtedly and
admittedly purchased when it was
sold under process of Court.
Hall, J., in his judgment in the
case of Bodukuma v. Abaka
(Div. Court, 1926-29, 124),
examined very thoroughly the
question of the effect of a
purchase of a property at an
execution sale when no
certificate of purchase had been
issued. In the course of his
judgment he said:
" The Court, in granting a
certificate, has not to
determine what property was to
pass by the sale, but merely to
record an already accomplished
fact, and to state what has been
sold. Of this, the certificate
is evidence, but not conclusive
evidence, nor exclusive
evidence, for, in order to
determine what was sold, the
whole execution proceedings
might be looked at."
It is not clear whether the sale
in question was one in respect
of a judgment of the Supreme
Court or some other Court, but
in any event we are of the
opinion that the view expressed
by Hall, J., in that case
applies to an execution sale by
a native court of competent
jurisdiction.
Having regard to the fact that
it was not in dispute at the
trial in the Ga Manche's
Tribunal that the property was
sold under a writ of Fi. Fa.
and purchased by Laryea and
that Laryea obtained possession
of the property by reason of
that purchase, we are of the
opinion that the respondents
were not entitled to recover the
property which had been sold to
Laryea under process of a Court
the competency of whose
jurisdiction was not in dispute.
We accordingly allow the appeal
and reverse the judgments of the
two Courts below.