Trattoria MD Gaetano Ruffo (left) with his lawyer, Philip Murgor, at the restaurant on Friday. Photo/Diana Ngila
By GALGALLO FAYO
In Summary
- The High Court has directed Joaninnah Maina, the owner of the building that houses Trattoria, to refrain from interfering with the water tanks, smoke extractor and the gas cylinder located at the backyard of the building.
- Ms Maina in September gave the hotel seven days to remove the tank, gas cylinder and smoke extractor, claiming it is blocking the fire exit.
- This prompted Trattoria, which early last year fought attempts by the landlord to evict it from property, to move to court.
Italian-owned Trattoria has won battle over the
space for a water tank with the tycoon who owns Town House building that
houses the restaurant.
High Court Judge Jacqueline Kamau has directed
Joaninnah Wanjiku Maina, the owner of the building, to refrain from
interfering with the water tanks, smoke extractor and the gas cylinder
located at the backyard of the building.
Ms Maina in September gave the hotel seven days to
remove the tank, gas cylinder and smoke extractor, claiming it is
blocking the fire exit. This prompted Trattoria, which early last year
fought attempts by the landlord to evict it from property, to move to
court.
“The High Court intervention stopping the threat
was timely and saved a further loss by the restaurant,” said lawyer
Philip Murgor who acted for Trattoria Restaurant.
“It is very damaging to foreign investment when
rule of law is disregarded and, in particular, a court order but this
saga had a happy ending following timely High Court intervention,” added
Mr Murgor.
The vicious row between the owner of the
restaurant Gaetano Ruffo and his landlord, which degenerated into a
fight over space occupied by waters tanks, erupted in 2008 shortly after
Mrs Maina acquired the building from Kenya National Assurance Company
(KNAC).
Mrs Maina bought Town House, located at the
junction of Kaunda and Wabera streets in Nairobi, in 2007 through her
company M/s Gatma Holdings Limited for Sh210 million.
The property was one of the prime assets including
Corner House, Bima House, Protection House and Salama House that KNAC
had put on the auction block after its collapse in 1996.
The State-owned insurer collapsed due to
mismanagement following political interference and sold off some assets
to pay claims amounting to nearly Sh4 billion.
Mrs Maina was not keen to deal with Trattoria
after the KNAC deal and issued Mr Ruffo a three-month notice terminating
the 20-year lease agreement—which was inked in 2005. Trattoria moved to
court, which referred the matter for arbitration.
Retired Justice Aaron Ringera was the arbitrator
and last January ruled that Mrs Maina is bound by the 20-year lease,
taking Trattoria’s tenancy to November 2025.
“A declaration that the notice of termination of
lease is unlawful, not provided for and in flagrant breach of the
registered lease dated November 11, 2005 be and is hereby granted,”
ruled Ringera.
But the dispute re-emerged in September when the
landlord asked the restaurant to remove the tank, smoke extractor and
gas cylinder on the grounds that City Hall had ordered their removal.
Contempt charges
A group of people allegedly hired by the landlord
removed the tanks and damaged the smoke extractor in November,
paralysing Trattoria’s operations.
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