Politics and policy
By BRIAN WASUNA, bwasuna@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The NSSF was in a 2009 judgment awarded the Sh258 million it lost in the Shah Munge scam, which has to date earned interest to stand at Sh619 million.
- The NSSF says in court papers that the stockbroker’s collapse had made recovery of its investment close to impossible as its assets have remained a secret.
- Shah Munge collapsed in 2002 amid revelations that it had deposited Sh1.4 billion in Euro Bank (which collapsed in 2012) on behalf of a number of State corporations.
The National Social Security Fund (NSSF) has been
allowed to attach the last known assets of fallen stockbroker Shah
Munge, taking the provident fund closer to recovering some of the money
it lost in the 2002 Euro Bank collapse.
The decision was made after the NSSF moved to court seeking
orders to discharge a separate one that Shah Munge got blocking the sale
of the broker’s assets.
The NSSF was in a 2009 judgment awarded the Sh258
million it lost in the Shah Munge scam, which has to date earned
interest to stand at Sh619 million.
The NSSF says in court papers that the
stockbroker’s collapse had made recovery of its investment close to
impossible as its assets have remained a secret.
The fund had last July sought to attach Shah
Munge’s Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) shares following fears that
the stockbroker would sell them after the NSE allowed transfer of the
same with the demutualisation of the market.
The NSSF move was blocked by Southern Bell, another
company that broke onto the scene claiming it bought the shares from
the stockbroker in 2011 and had been unable to formally transfer them
because of the law on pre-emptive rights that was only lifted in April
last year.
Justice Jacqueline Kamau last week dismissed
Southern Bell’s claim over the 1.5 million shares registered in the name
of Shah Munge at the NSE, paving the way for the pension scheme to sell
the property.
The judge found that Southern Bell had failed to
prove its ownership claim, making it impossible for the court to stop
the shares from being attached to settle the debt.
“Southern Bell had no title to the shares as
envisaged in the Companies Act. Southern Bell may or may not have been
an innocent purchaser but the fact that it was not the legally
registered owner of the shares means it could not bar NSSF from
attaching the same,” she said.
The judge dismissed Southern Bell’s argument that
it had signed transfer documents after the shelving of some laws on
pre-emptive rights at the NSE but did not get approval to transfer the
shares because of a “glitch at the Central Depository and Settlement
Corporation (CDSC)”.
The firm had claimed that it later tried to follow
up on the matter, but the CDSC informed it of a court order barring the
sale of the shares.
“The fact that Southern Bell signed the transfer
forms in April 25 and paid stamp duty in July 2014 was immaterial. The
bottom line was that the shares were still in Shah Munge’s name. NSSF
was therefore legally entitled to attach the same,” she added.
The judge further faulted Southern Bell for not
providing proof that it had paid Shah Munge Sh13 million for 300,000
shares that have since matured into 1.5 million.
The NSSF has since losing the funds in 2002 pursued
the collapsed stockbroker but only found the Nairobi bourse assets
through its lawyers, Shapley Barret & Company.
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