Week 6 7
Week 6 7
SCENARIOS
Essential Readings
    Outline
      1) Introduction
      2) Standard to unique cases
             a. Statutory power of sale and sale by auction
             b. Attachment and sale by order of the court
             c. Sale and purchase of property off-plan or through a building
                developmentproject
             d. Sale of property through a subdivision sale
             e. Sale and purchase through a cooperative society or property selling
                company
             f. Sale and purchase through a time share
             g. Allotment letters
             h. Questions to consider
1) INTRODUCTION
    Here, we will look at standard to unique scenarios in the exercise of the statutory power
    of sale.
    When Y has all the money needed to buy property X in whichever scenario, due
    diligence has to be conducted, payment of deposit, release of completion documents,
    release of balance of purchase price and registration of transfer. We will now consider
    how this is done is various land purchase scenarios.
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                        2) STATUTORY POWER OF SALE AND AUCTIONS
    (1) If a chargor is in default of any obligation, fails to pay interest or any other periodic
    payment or any part thereof due under any charge or in the performance or
    observation of any covenant, express or implied, in any charge, and continues to be in
    default for one month, the chargee may serve on the chargor a notice, in writing, to
    pay the money owing or to perform and observe the agreement as the case may be.
    (2) States what the notice should contain – The notice required by subsection (1) shall
    adequately inform the recipient of the following matters—
    Note: even if it is not a default relating to money, the usual practice is to give 3 months to
    rectify the default, even if it is on terms which the Act provides for a 2-month period.
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    (3) If the chargor does not comply within ninety days (3 months) after the date of
    service of the notice under, subsection (1), the chargee may—
           (a) sue the chargor for any money due and owing under the charge;
           (b) appoint a receiver of the income of the charged land;
           (c) lease the charged land, or if the charge is of a lease, sublease the land;
           (d) enter into possession of the charged land; or
           (e) sell the charged land;
    (4) If the charge is a charge of land held for customary land, or community land shall
    be valid only if the charge is done with concurrence of members of the family or
    community the chargee may—
                  (i) lease the charged land or if the charge is of a lease, sublease the land or
                  enter into possession of the charged land;
                  (ii) sell the charged land to any person or group of persons referred to in
                  the law relating to community land.
    Note: the notice should be a month after default, should be in writing, should state the
    nature and extent of the breach or default and the amount owed or condition to rectify.
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    at the expiry of the time provided for the rectification of that default in the notice
    served on the chargor under section 90(1), a chargee may exercise the power to sell the
    charged land.
    (2) Before exercising the power to sell the charged land, the chargee shall serve on the
    chargor a notice to sell in the prescribed form and shall not proceed to complete any
    contract for the sale of the charged land until at least forty days have elapsed from the
    date of the service of that notice to sell.
    (3) A copy of the notice to sell served in accordance with subsection (2) shall be served
    on—
           (a) the Commission, if the charged land is public land;
           (b) the holder of the land out of which the lease has been granted, if the charged
           land is a lease;
           (c) a spouse of the chargor who had given the consent;
           (e) any lessee and sublessee of the charged land or of any buildings on the
           charged land;
           (f) any person who is a co-owner with the chargor;
           (g) any other chargee of money secured by a charge on the charged land of
           whom the chargee proposing to exercise the power of sale has actual notice;
           (h) any guarantor of the money advanced under the charge;
           (i) any other person known to have a right to enter on and use the land or the
           natural resources in, on, or under the charged land by affixing a notice at the
           property; and
           (j) any other persons as may be prescribed by regulations, and shall be posted in
           a prominent place at or as near as may be to the charged land.
    (2) If a sale is to proceed by public auction, it shall be the duty of the chargee to ensure
    that the sale is publicly advertised in such a manner and form as to bring it to the
    attention of persons likely to be interested in bidding for the charged land and that the
    provisions relating to auctions and tenders for land are, as near as may be, followed in
    respect of that sale.
    (3) A transfer of the charged land by a chargee in exercise of the power of sale shall be
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    made in the prescribed form and the Registrar shall accept it as sufficient evidence that
    the power has been duly exercised.
    (4) Upon registration of the land or lease or other interest in land sold and transferred
    by the chargee the interest of the chargor as described therein shall pass to and vest in
    the purchaser free of all liability on account of the charge, or on account of any other
    charge or encumbrance to which the charge has priority, other than a lease easement
    to which the chargee had consented in writing.
    (5) In a sale by a private contract, the chargee shall be entitled to rely on a valuation
    carried out by a valuer who is registered with the institute of Surveyors of Kenya
    and the report shall in the absence of a manifest error, be conclusive in relation to the
    market price:
    Provided that the valuation report shall at the time of sale be not more than six months
    old.
    (6) A transfer by charge shall have priority over all entries made after the transfer of
    the charge undertaking the sale and the chargee shall stand discharged upon the
    registration of the transfer.
    (7) Where it is noted in the register that a second charge by the chargor ranks pari passu to
    the charge submitting the transfer, the instrument of transfer by the charge shall
    include a duly executed consent of the charge with a pari passu charge consenting to
    the sale.
    (8) For the purposes of this section, land, a lease, or a charge shall be deemed to have
    been sold when a bid has been accepted at the auction sale.
    (9) If at any time the chargor is entitled to and wishes to repay the money secured by
    the charge, and the charge is absent, cannot be found or if the registrar is satisfied that
    the charge cannot be discharged otherwise, the chargor may deposit the amount due
    with the Court, in trust, for the person entitled to the money, and after which the
    obligations of the chargor under the charge shall cease.
    (10) Upon the deposit referred to in subsection (9), the Registrar shall cancel the
    registration of the charge and the Court shall pay the amount deposited to the chargee
    if the charge applies for it within six years of the deposit, and where the chargee does
    not apply for the amount within the stated period, it shall be deposited with the
    Unclaimed Financial Assets Authority as an unclaimed asset.
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    Section 99: Protection of purchaser
    (1) This section applies to—
    (a) a person who purchases charged land from the chargee or receiver, except where
    the chargee is the purchaser; or
    (b) a person claiming the charged land through the person who purchases charged land
    from the chargee or receiver, including a person claiming through the chargee if the
    chargee and the person so claiming obtained the charged land in good faith and for
    value.
    (2) A court shall not grant leave unless the chargee satisfies the court that a sale of the
    charged land to the chargee is the most advantageous way of selling the land so as to
    comply with the duty imposed on the chargee by section 97(1).
    (3) If the charged land is to be sold by public auction, the chargee may bid for and
    purchase the charged land at that public auction so long as the price bid for the charged
    land by the chargee is the greater of—
    (a) the highest price bid for that land at the auction; and
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    (b) an amount equal to or higher than the reserve price, if any, put upon the land
    before the auction, whichever amount is the greater.
    (4) If a chargee who has sold charged land to the chargee applies to the Registrar to be
    registered as the lawful owner of land under a land or lease, the Registrar may require
    that chargee to provide any evidence that the Registrar may specify showing that the
    provisions of this section have been complied with and the Registrar shall not be obliged
    to register any such land or lease until the chargee has so satisfied the Registrar.
    (5) Section 101: Application of proceeds of sale of charged land
    The purchase money received by a chargee who has exercised the power of sale shall
    be applied in the following order of priority—
    (a) first, in payment of any rates, rents, taxes, charges or other sums owing and required
    to be paid on the charged land;
    (b) second, in discharge of any prior charge or other encumbrance subject to which the
    sale was made;
    (c) third, in payment of all costs and reasonable expenses properly incurred and
    incidental to the sale or any attempted sale;
    (d) fourth, in discharge of the sum advanced under the charge or so much of it as
    remains outstanding, interests, costs and all other money due under the charge,
    including any money advanced to a receiver in respect of the charged land under
    section 92; and
    (e) fifth, in payment of any subsequent charges in order of their priority, and the
    residue, if any, of the money so received shall be paid to the person who, immediately
    before the sale, was entitled to discharge the charge.
    Section 102: Right of chargor to discharge charge on payment of any sum due any time
    before sale
    (1) At any time before the charged land is sold, or withdrawn from sale, the chargor or
    any other person entitled to discharge the charge may discharge the charge in whole or
    in part by paying to the chargee all money secured by the charge at the time of
    payment.
    (2) If payment is made under subsection (1), the chargee shall deliver to the chargor—
    (a) a discharge of the charge in the prescribed form over the whole or that part of the
    charged land to which the payment relates; and
    (b) all instruments and documents of title held by the chargee in connection with the
    charged land.
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    Section 103: Application for relief by chargor
    (1) An application for relief against the exercise by the chargee of any of the remedies
    referred to in section 90(3) may be made by—
    (a) the chargor;
    (b) if two or more persons are joint chargors, by one or more of them on their own
    behalf;
    (c) a spouse of the chargor to the extent that the spouse was required to give consent to
    the creation of the charge but did not give consent; or
    (e) if the chargor has been adjudged bankrupt, the bankruptcy trustee of the estate of
    the chargor.
    (2) If an application made in accordance subsection (1)(b) is not made by all the joint
    chargors, then, unless the court orders otherwise, it must be served on all the joint
    chargors.
    (3) An application for relief may be made at any time after the service of a notice under
    section 90(1), section 91(2), section 94(1), section 95(1), or during the exercise of any of
    the remedies contemplated in those sections.
    (4) An application for relief is not to be taken as an admission by the chargor or any
    other person applying for relief that—
    (a) there has been a breach of a covenant of the charge by the chargor;
    (b) by reason of such a breach, the chargee has the right to exercise the remedy in
    respect of which the application for relief has been made;
    (c) all notices that were required to be served by the chargee were properly served; or
    (d) the period for remedying the breach specified in the notice served under section 90
    was reasonable or had expired,
    and the court may grant relief without determining all or any of the matters described
    in paragraphs (a), (b), (c) or (d).
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               and the remedy proposed is to appoint a receiver, or to take possession of or
               lease the land or a part thereof;
                      (i)    shall, where the charged land consists of or includes, a dwelling-
                      house, and the remedy proposed is to appoint a receiver, or take
                      possession or lease the dwelling house or a part of it, have regard to the
                      effect that the appointment of a receiver or the taking of possession or
                      leasing the whole or a part of the dwelling house would have on the
                      occupation of the dwelling house by the chargor and dependants and if
                      the effect would be to impose undue disturbance on those owners,
                      whether it is satisfied that—
                      (ii) the chargee has made all reasonable efforts, including the use of
                      other available remedies, to induce the chargor to comply with the
                      obligationsunder the charge; and
                      (iii) the chargor has persistently been in default of the obligations under
                      the charge; and
                      (iv) if the sale is of land held for a customary land, the chargee has had
                      regard to the age, means, and circumstance including the health and
                      number of dependants of the chargor, and in particular whether—
                      (aa) the chargor will be rendered landless or homeless;
                      (bb) the chargor will have any alternative means of providing for the
                      chargor and dependants;
                      (v) it is necessary to sell the charged land in order to enable the chargee
                      to recover the money owing under the charge;
                      (vi) in all the circumstances, it is reasonable to approve, or as the case may
                      be, to make the order to sell the charged land.
        (2) A court may refuse to grant an order under subsection (1) or may grant any relief
        against the operation of a remedy that the circumstances of the case require and witho ut
        limiting the generality of those powers, may—
               (a) cancel, vary, suspend or postpone the order for any period which the court
               thinks reasonable;
               (b) extend the period of time for compliance by the chargor with a notice served
               under section 90;
               (c) substitute a different remedy or the one applied for or proposed by the
               chargee or a different time for taking or desisting form taking any action specified
               by the lessor in a notice served under section 90;
               (d) authorise or approve the remedy applied for or proposed by the chargee,
               notwithstanding that some procedural errors took place during the making of
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               any notices served in connection with that remedy if the court is satisfied that—
                     (i) the chargor or other person applying for relief was made fully
                     aware of the action required to be taken under or in connection with the
                     remedy; and
                     (ii) no injustice will be done by authorising or approving the remedy,
                     and may authorise or approve that remedy on any conditions as to
                     expenses, damages, compensation or any other relevant matter as the
                     court thinksfit.
        (3) If under the terms of a charge, the chargor is entitled or is to be permitted to pay
        the principal sum secured by the charge by instalments or otherwise to defer payment
        of it in whole or in part but provision is also made in the charge instrument or any
        collateral agreement for earlier payment of the whole sum in the event of any default
        by the chargor or of a demand by the chargee or otherwise, then for purposes of this
        section the court may treat as due under the charge in respect of the principal sum
        secured and of interest on it only the amounts that the chargor would have expected
        to be required to pay if there had been no such provision for earlier payment.
        (4) A court may at any time before the charged property is sold refuse to authorise or
        approve a remedy if it appears to the court that—
        (a) the default in issue has been remedied;
        (b) the threat to the security has been removed;
        (c) the chargor has taken the steps that the chargor was required to take by the notice
        served under section 90; and
        (d) the chargee has taken or attempted to take some action against the chargor in
        contravention of section 90(4).
        Section 105: Power of the court to re-open certain charges and revise terms
        (1) The Court may reopen a charge of whatever amount secured on a matrimonial
        home, in the interests of doing justice between the parties.
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               of any remedy in connection with a default by the chargor under a charge; or
               (c) on an application by the Registrar in respect of—
                      (i) charges provided by one or more specific chargees where there is prima
                      facie evidence of a pattern of unfair dealing and practices by that chargee
                      or those chargees; or
                      (ii) a chargee, being a corporate body, that appears to exercise
                      discrimination against chargors on account of their gender, or by refusing to
                      grant charges to persons on account of their gender except that a chargee,
                      being a corporate body that is implementing any programme, approved or
                      assisted by the national or county governments, designed to assist women to
                      improve their economic and social position by providing them with
                      advances secured by a charge of land shall not be taken to be acting in
                      discriminatory manner if the advances under that programme are made
                      only to women.
        (3) In considering whether to exercise the powers conferred on it by this section, the
        court shall have regard to—
        (a) the age, gender, experience, understanding of commercial transaction, and health
        of the chargor at the time when the charge was created, if the chargor is an individual;
        (b) the financial standing and resources of the chargor relative to those of the chargee
        at the time of the creation of the charge;
        (c) the degree to which, at the time of the creation of the charge, the chargor was under
        financial pressure and the nature of that pressure;
        (d) the interest rates prevailing at the time of the creation of the charge and during the
        continuation of the charge and the relationship of those interest rates to the interest
        rate applying from time to time in the charge;
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        (e) the degree of risk accepted by the chargee, having regard to the value of the charged
        land and the financial standing and other resources of the chargor;
        (f) the importance of not undermining the confidence of reputable chargees in the
        market for charges; and
        (g) any other factors that the court considers relevant.
1. Default
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                    the auction (for immovable property). The advertisement is to be publicly
                    advertised with particulars or conditions of sale of the property in local
                    newspaper.
                 d. On auction day, the highest bona fide bidder will be entitled to have the
                    property at the price offered by him/her.
                 e. Note: The charge agreement usually grants the charge power of attorney to
                    sell property in case there is default of payment.
                 f. Since sale by auction is not a willing buyer and willing seller scenario,
                    there is no sale agreement, instead, there is a memorandum of sale.
                    Usually, the chargee authorises the auctioneer to sale on his/her/its behalf
                    through the memorandum of sale. It is usually executed by the purchaser
                    and the auctioneer on behalf of the chargee.
                 g. After the auctioneer has signed the memorandum of sale and the 25% or so
                    deposit is paid after the fall of the hammer, the purchaser’s advocate
                    secures the completion documents and is usually in charge of paying
                    outgoings such as land rent and rates, and obtaining land control board
                    consent, if need be. An exception to section 3(3) of the Law of Contract
                    Act is that the Memorandum of sale does not require attestation.
                 h. Protection of purchaser: Section 99 of the Land Act – a bona fide
                    purchaser with notice, in good faith and for value buying land from the
                    chargee is protected because otherwise, purchasers would stay away from
                    auctions. In such cases, if the process has irregularities, the remedy for the
                    chargor is damages and not an injunction etc. Exception is if there was
                    fraud, dishonesty or misrepresentation known by the purchaser.
           7. Note: the statutory notice together with the notice to sell and auction process
              take more than 200 days (90+40+45+30, about 7 months) and hence it can be a
              cumbersome process.
           8. Duty of care owed by the chargee to the chargor:
                 a. Section 97: chargee owes a duty of care to the chargor and any guarantor
                     to obtain the best price reasonably obtainable at the time of sell.
                 b. For the chargee to show that they have discharged the duty of care, the
                     chargee must show that they have first obtained a forced valuation report
                     that is not more than 6 months old to show that the amount they sold
                     the property for is close to the market price.
                         i. Note: the valuer usually gives three prices: 1) the open market
                             value which is the amount a property owner would sell it for if
                             they wake up one day and want to sell; 2) forced sale value – in
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                            instances where a bank wants to sell the land to recover a loan
                            and hence there is no willing seller; and 3) the reserve price –
                            Section 97 of the Land Act stipulates that this should not be less
                            than 25% of the market price, hence setting a statutory reserve
                            price.
                        ii. If the chargee sells the property for less than 25%, there is a
                            rebuttable presumption that the chargee is in breach of the duty
                            of care and the chargor may apply to court to have the sale
                            voided.
                       iii. However, the fact that the chargee has sold the land for 25%
                            below the market value or more does not mean the chargee has
                            satisfied the statutory duty of care, for instance, if the best price
                            reasonable at the time is 90% of the market value.
                       iv. The chargee cannot defend itself in court that it exercised its duty
                            of care in the sale by virtue of the fact that it had a power of
                            attorney from the chargor or authority to act on their behalf. In a
                            charge agreement, there is usually a power of attorney given to
                            the chargee in event of default and when it comes to the exercising
                            of remedies to execute the charge, the power of attorney gives the
                            chargee the authority to do some things on the land or sell.
                        v. The chargee is not liable to any compensation or indemnity
                            from the chargor in relation to liability arising from breach of
                            duty of care.
                       vi. Section 97 is very critical and if the chargee attempts to exclude it
                            in the charge agreement, it is void as it is a mandatory statutory
                            provision.
                 c. Chargee can buy the land/property: but only with leave of the court
                    when exercising its power of sale. The chargee must show that sale to it
                    is the best way to go about it e.g., to get the best price – it’s the most
                    advantageous way. If buying in the auction, the charge an only buy if its
                    bid is the highest offered and if it is offering an amount that is the same
                    or more than the reserve price. Essentially, the chargee should show the
                    Registrar of the Court that it has complied with section 100 of the Land
                    Act. This position also applies to the auctioneer of its agents because of
                    the obvious risk of conflict of interest.
           9. Option 2 – Sale by Private Contract: The charge may also sell the whole land to
              a private person for market value through a private contract.
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                  a. Is there an advantage if selling the property by a private contract?
           10. Process of payment and priority of payment after sell: Section 101 –
                  a. First priority is payment of outgoings such as taxes, rates and rent;
                  b. Payment of prior charges – this means the chargee exercising power of
                     sale is a subsequent chargee. This happens if prior chargees have
                     consented and payment still respects doctrine of priority;
                  c. Any reasonable costs incurred incidental to the sale such as advertisement
                     valuation, legal costs and auctioneer’s fees;
                  d. The sums owing under the charge are recovered;
                  e. Any sums owed under subsequent charges; and
                  f. Then the chargor is finally paid if there is any money left.
        A first charge is the first one created when one registers an encumbrance.
        A further charge is where a proprietor creates an additional charge with the same
        chargee over the same property and under the same facility.
        Scenario
        Ann has property LR 207/700 0.4 Ha (1 acre) in Karen, Nairobi, and wants to set up a
        prestigious law firm. She thus wants to borrow a loan of 20 Million from Equity
        Bank. Kiptoo, who is the advocate for Equity Bank, registers a charge of 20 Million
        upon Ann’s property. The land is work 60 Million. The charge is perfected as Entry
        Number 3 (Entry 1 was Ann’s dad’s title and Entry 2 transfer of land from Ann’s dad
        to her).
               Ann has surrendered her title deed to Equity Bank but she still can borrow more
        money as value of land is 60 Million and only 30 Million is borrowed so far. She can
        borrow a further or supplementary charge loan from Equity Bank through Kiptoo. A
        further charge of 10 Million from Equity Bank, which will be registered as Entry 4 as
        a further charge with same property, same chargor and chargee.
        Second charge
        Same property, same chargor but different chargee.
        Scenario
        Going back to Anne’s example, she has borrowed 30 Million so far and the property
        is worth 60 Million. Note: banks don’t usually lend money worth the full value of the
        land in case the value of the land goes down, so a maximum of 50 Million is what can
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        be lent as according to the value of the land.
               Ann decides to take a vacation with friends to Honolulu. She then takes a loan
        of 10 Million with StanChart Bank which is a better interest rate. A second charge is
        then registered with the consent of Equity Bank. So, it is called a second or subsequent
        charge because it is with the same chargor, over the same property but with a different
        chargee.
        A consent from first chargee is necessary as they have first priority and the completion
        and title documents needed in the registration of the second charge are with Equity
        Bank — a professional undertaking will have to be made for first chargee to release title
        documents for registration of second charge.
                       b. AUCTIONS
        Auctions can be both private and public. In private auction, only a limited group of
        people are invited to buy the property. The bid given does not amount to a contract
        until it is accepted by the knocking down of the hammer. Section 3 of the Law of
        Contract Act does not apply.
        The issue of bona fides applies that is, the seller is under an obligation to fetch the
        highest price possible. Sections 12 & 11 of the Restrictive Trade Practices & Monopolies
        Act prohibits bid rigging.
        Sale of land is usually by private treaty or public auction usually to the highest
        bidderat the fall of the hammer. This can be done in two ways:
                   Execution of a court order; or
                   Pursuant to a statutory power of sale.
        Look at Auctioneers Act 1996 and the rules thereunder, Civil Procedure Act
        (execution of decrees), (sale by chargee). Requirements of section 3(3) of the Law of
        Contract Act relating to execution of contracts for the sale of land does not apply since
        the contractis formed at the fall of the hammer.
        The bid is merely an offer. It can be withdrawn or rescinded at any time and until
        acceptance, the bid is susceptible to challenge, especially where the bidder doesn’t meet
        the reserve price. Reserve price is the value of the property as at the time of the auction. In
        auction sales, the seller is under a duty to act in utmost good faith. If he/she sells the
        property at a value other than the debt owed, say in a charge scenario, he/she must
        account to the chargor. The auctioneer is at liberty to reject a bid that does not meet
        the reserve price. If no bid meets the reserve price the auction will be withdrawn.
        The terms of the auction sale are in most cases pre-set. The auctioneers have already set
        the amount that they want to raise. There are no negotiations. If property is being sold
        pursuant to a court decree, the court will set the terms, for instance, provision of the
        reserve terms.
        (2) Where any movable or immovable property is put up for sale by auction in lots,
        each lot shall prima facie be deemed to be the subject of a separate contract of sale.
        (3) It shall be stated in the particulars or conditions of any sale by auction of any
        property whether such sale shall be subject to a reserve price or not or whether a right
        to bid is reserved.
        (4) If it is stated that the sale be without reserve or to that effect, then it shall not be
        lawful for the seller or any person employed by him to bid at such sale, or for the
        auctioneer to take knowingly any such bidding: Provided that if it is stated that the
        sale shall be subject to a right for the seller to bid, then it shall be lawful for the seller or
        for any person acting on his behalf to bid at suchauction.
        (5) If it is stated that the sale will be subject to a reserve price as regards any one or
        more lots, it shall be lawful for the seller or any person acting on his behalf to give one
        bid for each such lot and no more.
        (6) If the seller or any person acting on his behalf bids at any sale contrary to any of
        the provisions of this section, any purchaser may refuse to fulfill his purchase:
        Provided that the highest bona fide bidder shall be entitled, if he shall so elect, to have
        the property at the price offered by him.
        (7) No auctioneer shall make a bid either on behalf of himself or as agent for any other
        person unless on making such bid, he announces that it is his bid.
(8) A bidder may retract his bid at any time before the sale is complete.
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               (a) receives or makes any bid contrary to the provisions of this section; or
               (b) makes a bid which he cannot honour or is fraudulent, or is intended to avoid
               a valid sale which is subject to the bid, commits an offence.
        (10) Where a person convicted of an offence under this section is a licensed auctioneer,
        he shall, in addition to any other penalty imposed, be liable to having his licence
        revoked.
        Considerations to note:
        See Auctioneers Act:
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              The auctioneer must hold a valid practicing certificate.
              The place, date and time of auction must be advertised in the local newspaper.
              The sale must take place as advertised unless cancelled by notice.
              The presence of a reserve price, if any, must be indicated in the advert.
        If there’s no reserve price, the seller should not bid and the auctioneer knowing this
        fact should not allow such a bid. The property must be sold to the bona fide bidder at
        the price reserved by him/her.
        Order 22 of the Civil Procedure Rules deals with attachment of immovable property.
        Where immovable property is sold in execution of a decree, the purchaser will have good
        title.
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                  the court may summon any person whom it thinks necessary to summon and may
                  examine him in respect of any such matters and require him to produce any
                  document in his possession or power relating thereto.
           (iv)   Directions shall be given as to be made and expense of advertising the sale, which
                  expense shall be costs of the sale.
           (v)    The advertisement shall be in Form no. 15 of Appendix A
        Save in the case of property of the kind described in Rule 37 (attachment of movable
        property other than agricultural produce, in possession of the judgment-debtor), no sale
        hereunder shall without the consent of the judgment-debtor, take place until after the
        expiration of 30 days in the case of immovable property and 15 days in the case of movable
        property, calculated from the date on which the copy of the public notice was affixed to
        the precincts of the court of the judge ordering the sale.
        Who signs transfer documents when property is being sold at the behest of the court?
        The Deputy Registrar of the Court does this. The application of sale is also accompanied
        with an application for valuation.
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  4)                                PURCHASING PROPERTY OFF-PLAN
        Scenario
        A Developer called Topnotch Investment Limited owns Land Reference No. 201/570 IR
        6505, a leasehold of 99 years from 1st January 2012, with revisable annual rent of Ksh.
        10,000. The size of the land is 2 acres and is located in Nakuru town. Topnotch Investment
        Limited is proposing to erect 100 apartments. There will be:
               (i) 3-bedroom apartments all with ensuite master bedroom with high class finishes,
               spacious living room and dining room, huge laundry area, balcony with nice view
               ofthe town, huge kitchen with pantry and granite counter tops.
               (ii) Gardens, a clubhouse at the rooftop, gym, a swimming pool, a generator, a
               borehole, 24-hour CCTV and round the clock security.
               It however has an encumbrance of 500 Million (loan from National Bank).
        They have an early bird offer of 40 Million per apartment and will break ground in
        September 2021 and expected finish date is 31 December 2022. Once they break ground,
        the price will be 60 Million per apartment.
        The purchaser is Amanda
        The advocate is Nyota
        DUE DILLIGENCE
          a) The due diligence will establish who owns the property, the directors of the
             company, if the owner is a company.
          b) To conduct a search at the Nakuru Lands Registry/office whose results should
             show the 500 Million encumbrance which would mean that all apartments will be
             encumbered.
          c) To conduct a search of the Companies Registry to establish the company’s existence,
             who the directors are and whether it is insolvent.
          d) To look at the registered building plans under the Registered Documents Act. The
             plans need to have been approved and registered. You also need to establish that the
             area given in the description is the one in the plans.
          e) National Construction Authority consent/authorization is needed and should also
             beacquired.
          f) NEMA approvals – to make sure than an Environmental Impact Assessment has been
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              submitted (section 17, Land Act).
           g) To ensure that an approval for change of user (if need be) is gotten. Under the
              Physical Planning Act, a physical planner has to check the use, whether it is a
              commercial or residential area, the soil type present and so on, for change of user to be
              approved. If this is not there, there is the risk that the property will be demolished.
           h) See whether consent from the land control board and others are needed.
           i) You also need to request for the maps and plans to confirm the dimensions in the
              description.
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               The date that the Certificate of Practical Completion is issued is the day that the
        Defects Liability begins – in terms of the quality and quantity of materials and
        constructionbased on the bills of quantity and quality.
               The Defects and Liability period is usually 6 months after issuance of Certificate of
        Practical Completion for the vendor to physically inspect the construction/building and
        note down the defects in a defects tag list for rectification by the contractors. The defects
        noted should be patent defects that can be seen. The identification of defects has to be
        within 6 months or otherwise, any additional repairs will be at the vendor’s own extra
        expense.
               Once defects are rectified, the architect makes a Certificate of Making Good. As the
        purchaser’s advocate, you have to ensure that there is a confirmation as to description of
        the property and the actual end results.
The location of the entrance and gardens will be at the sole discretion of the architect…
Vendor to make good of any defects within the Defects Liability Period of 6 months.
       and the vendor shall have discretion to change materials… but shall not substantially alter the
       accommodation of the apartments.
        These 2 samples give the vendor a lot of discretion. Thus, as the purchaser’s advocate, you
        have to limit this by requiring your client’s consent to be sought or certain modifications.
        Consent for changes other than non-material modifications.
The Vendor shall be liable for any repair and rectification of defects for a period of 6 months after
        Non-material variations could be e.g., a different colour of paint but the paint is of the
        quality agreed, despite being of a different colour.
        The modifications identified by the purchaser should be limited such that they don’t identify
        things not related to the agreement but are just related to personal taste of the purchaser. Schedule
        It should state that good workmanship should go into the plans e.g., ‘Works should be
        constructed in a good and workman like manner according to specifications, plans and
        schedule of finishes’.
        You have to ensure that there is a schedule of finishes as when buying a property not built
        yet, the finishes are important as when you are buying off-plan you are buying a promise.
        The fact that ownership in this scenario is ownership of property in strata, does not mean
        that it will automatically be governed by the Sectional Properties Act. Sometimes it will
        be governed by the Land Act or Registered Land Act. So, title issued is either a Sectional
        Titleunder the Sectional Property Act or Certificate if under the RLA.
        Scenario
        If a developer has a leasehold interest from 1 January 2010 for 99 years, 1.5 acres LR
        209/370 IR 36500. Has set up 50 apartments, what interest is it transferring?
        It will be a transferring a sub-lease. The owner creates a lesser interest than the one it owns.
        e.g., the lease for 99 years from 1 January 2010 less 30 or 60 or 90 days before expiry of the
        original lease that the owner has.
                Because the owner has a longer interest, the property reverts to him/her/it. This is
        however a risk as the original owner could die etc, thus what remains is what is called
        reversionary interest, which it is advisable to be transferred to the management company
        which is tasked with renewal of the lease closer to the expiry date.
                Usually, to protect oneself, there is usually a transfer of reversionary interest to the
        management company.
        Transfer of sub-lease?
        In such cases, the sublease document acts as the transfer and title document. However, the
        government is now giving sub-lease certificates. Sub-leases are unique as they contain
        conditions for sub-lessees.
        Who prepares the sub-lease in a development scenario of sale of apartments which is
        different in a normal transfer scenario where the transfer is usually done by the purchaser?
        It is the developer who does this. The advocate of the Vendor prepares the sub-lease for
        purposes of unification of the conditions of the sublease because otherwise, each unit
        purchaser will put their different conditions.
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        Payment of Advocates
        The purchaser usually pays for his/her/its advocate and the vendor’s advocate as they have
        prepared both the sale agreement and sub-lease.
        If the developer is building with a loan of 500 Million and thus when searching the
        property, you will see it has an encumbrance, what happens if you are to buy one
        apartment for 30Million?
        Usually, the developer will enter into an agreement with the bank to have an extra account,
        either normal or escrow, where the payments for each apartment are put or paid into and
        when this is done, each unit sold is discharged. A professional undertaking is entered into in
        relation to this and to ensure that each unit is discharged.
        If a SACCO buys a big parcel of land and has around 100 members with shares in the
        SACCO and it will take time to sub-divide the land, but intends to sub-divide the
        land to its members in half acres, what members get is share certificates as the titles for
        the respective half acre each parcels of land are waiting to be sub-divided. This could
        eventake about 5 years.
               The titles after sub-division will then be in the name of the SACCO until interests
        are transferred.
               If a member of the SACCO in the 5 th year wants to sell his share/title, what is the
        due diligence required?
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              acre to be subdivided and ask for the plans.
           3. Search at the Land’s office, which should show that the land is owned by the
              SACCO.
           4. Certain shares are given to represent a piece of land, these are the ones
              transferred, which means that a seller does not have to sell his or her membership
              shares in the SACCO.
        The transaction that will then take place is for the seller to transfer his/her share in the
        SACCO, which is related to the ownership of the land, to the buyer.
        This is not specifically legislated in Kenya, but is well set out in other developed
        jurisdictions.
        Scenario
        Francis buys land and sets up a villa in Malindi facing the beach but will only stay
        there once a year, and what he wants to do is sell time to stay at the property in a
        year – time share. What they are selling, and the agreement entered into is just in
        relation to time each year. Contracts with international companies are usually
        entered into tomanage this.
        There needs to be legislation on this to fully govern these types of transactions.
9) ALLOTMENT LETTERS
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        areas in Embakasi which have had just allotment letters for a long time.
               The way to curb this is to do a sale agreement and a power of attorney so that
        when title documents come out, they come out in the name of the purchaser.
Note: the person allotted land first in time has a better title.
        Stephen Mburu & 4 Others v Comat Merchants Ltd & Another [2012] eKLR, Kimondo J
        observed at paragraph 11 that:
        Joseph N.K. Arap Ng'ok v Moijo Ole Keiwua & 4 Others [1997] eKLR at page 2
        paragraph 3:
                     It is trite that such title to landed property can only come into
                     existence after issuance of letter of allotment, meeting the
                     conditions stated in such letter and actual issuance thereafter of
                     title document pursuant to provisions in the Act under which
                     theproperty is held.
                   3. Assume that one Juma Makosa has 100 acres of land in Embu and had
                      borrowed 20 Million from National Bank which he is in default of in
                      terms of loan plus interest monthly repayments. Assume that 1 acre is 8
                      Million, so that 100 acres will be worth 800 million.
                       You are working for National Bank as their advocate and have issued the
                       statutory notice and notice to sell. How would you goabout the sell?
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