Equity Bank chairman Peter Munga. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Billionaire businessman and Equity Bank chairman Peter Munga has entered into negotiations with Bethany
Vineyards, a firm owned by his friend-turned-adversary Joseph Muturi
Kamau, to settle a seven-year court battle that has seen him accused of
defrauding the company of Sh150 million.
Justice Fred
Ochieng has agreed to adjourn the suit for three weeks to create room
for out-of-court negotiations following a request by lawyers
representing Mr Munga, Bethany Vineyards and Mr Kamau.
Bethany
Vineyards and Mr Kamau had claimed in the suit that Mr Munga has since
2011 refused to pay for three million Transcentury shares worth Sh150
million that he purchased from the firm.
Mr Kamau sold
the shares in 2011 at Sh50 each to Mr Munga after failing to settle a
Sh40 million loan he took from Equity Bank. The deal was to see Mr Munga
clear Mr Kamau’s loan and remit the balance to him and his firm,
Bethany Vineyards.
But Mr Kamau sued claiming that Mr
Munga only cleared the loan balance then refused to remit to him or
Bethany Vineyards the balance.
“By consent of the
parties, mention of the case will be on July 20, 2017 for purposes of
recording a settlement,” Justice Ochieng said after a request from
lawyer Charles Kihara, representing Mr Munga, and Mr Kamau’s
representative, Owino Opiyo.
Mr Munga had in March
lodged a fresh bid to strike out the suit, arguing that Mr Kamau had not
sought permission from the Bethany Vineyards board of directors before
filing the suit.
But
Mr Kamau denied the claim, and filed a resolution from Bethany
Vineyards directors allowing him to pursue the case. Mr Kamau’s
co-directors in Bethany Vineyards were businessman George Mburu and Mr
Munga’s son.
Mr Kamau claims that his co-directors have
since abandoned him as Mr Munga’s son allegedly grew cold feet while Mr
Mburu left the firm after receiving 20 title deeds for land in Karen.
Mr Kamau, who describes himself as a long-time friend of Mr Munga, said the new application was meant to delay hearing of the suit on March 27, 2017.
Mr Kamau, who describes himself as a long-time friend of Mr Munga, said the new application was meant to delay hearing of the suit on March 27, 2017.
He claimed Mr Munga had verbally assured him that
the case ‘‘will never reach the hearing stage.’’ The parties were to
appear before Justice Ochieng for directions, but instead asked him to
adjourn the matter to allow them negotiate an out-of-court settlement.
Mr
Kamau had also enjoined Equity Bank in the suit, as he blamed the
lender for releasing his shares to Mr Munga before the entire purchase
price had been paid.
The bank in 2015 lost its bid to
exit the suit after Justice Ochieng ruled that its culpability in the
alleged fraud could only be determined after the suit had been heard in
entirety.
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