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THE STOOL OF ABINABINA V. CHIEF KOJO ENYIMADU

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POLICY AND PRACTICE LAW REPORTS, 2PLR

THE STOOL OF ABINABINA

V.

CHIEF KOJO ENYIMADU

THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL

12TH DAY OF JANUARY, 1953

2PLR/1953/10 (P.C.)

OTHER CITATION(S)

(1953) XII WACA PP.

LEX (1953) – XII WACA

BEFORE THEIR LORDSHIPS:

LORD NORMAND, LORD REID AND LORD COHEN

BETWEEN:

THE STOOL OF ABINABINA – Appellants

AND

CHIEF KOJO ENYIMADU (ON BEHALF OF THE STOOL OF NKASAWURA) – Respondents

ORIGINATING COURT(S)

Appeal from the West African Court of Appeal

ISSUE(S) FROM THE CAUSE(S) OF ACTION

REAL ESTATE AND PROPERTY LAW – LAND:- Claim to declaration of title — Proof by traditional evidence — Point of law not taken below — Exception to rule as to concurrent findings of fact.

CASE SUMMARY

On a claim by the appellants for a declaration of their title to certain lands, known as Nkasawura lands, to which the respondents, who had admittedly been in possession of them for many years, claimed to be entitled, the appellants alleged that tribute had been paid to them by the respondents for a number of years in respect of the lands, and that whether or not tribute was proved to have been paid the respondents were only in occupation of the lands by the appellants’ leave and licence. The evidence called on both sides was partly traditional as to rights alleged to have existed beyond living memory-and partly factual as to events within living memory. The trial Judge, in summing up his conclusion, in favour of the respondents, said that in claims for a declaration of title the plaintiff “must evidence such positive and numerous acts within living memory sufficiently frequent and positive to justify the inference that be is the exclusive owner”, and he held that the appellants had failed to satisfy that test. On appeal by the appellants to the West African Court of Appeal the decision of the trial Judge was affirmed without qualification, and they made no observations as to the nature of the evidence required to establish title.

On appeal by the appellants on the ground, iffier alia, that the trial Judge was wrong in holding that sufficient and frequent positive and numerous acts within living memory were necessary to establish title and, inferentially, that such title could not be supported by traditional evidence alone:-

DECISION(S) OF THE WEST AFRICAN COURT OF APPEAL

Held: First, that although that point was not taken before the West African Court of Appeal, it involved a substantial substantive point of law and it was plain that no further evidence could have been adduced which would affect it, and the Board would therefore entertain it.

Held: Secondly, that the opinion of the trial Judge that frequent and positive numerous acts within living memory were essential to justify the inference of exclusive ownership, with which opinion the West African Court of Appeal must be taken to have agreed, was not well founded.

Nchirahene Kojo Ado v. Buoymhene Kwadwo Wusu (4) and Kwawina Kuma v. Kofi Kuma (5) applied. Further, the appellants had satisfied the conditions which brought into operation the exception to the rule as to concurrent findings of fact which, as stated in Srimati Bibhabati Devi v. Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy (3) is that “in order to obviate the practice, there must be some . . . violation of some principle of law or procedure” as therein defined.

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