Chinese Company Ordered to Surrender 10 Housing Units to Equity Bank over Unpaid Loan

Chinese Company Ordered to Surrender 10 Housing Units to Equity Bank over Unpaid Loan

A Chinese construction company has been ordered to hand over 10 housing units at Fourways Junction Kiambu to Equity Bank to settle a debt owed by the owners of the project.

High Court Justice David Majanja directed China Wu-Yi Limited to surrender the houses located at Hibiscus Villas and Tulip Apartments to Equity.

Muga Developers Limited, the owners of the housing units, built the project using various loans borrowed from Equity Bank between 2011 and 2012.

China Wu-Yi, which constructed the housing project, was controlling the 10 units and is claiming a debt of Sh73 million while Muga is yet to repay the entire loan borrowed from the lender.

Muga appointed Suraya Property Group Limited as its agent to sell the housing units to potential buyers but the Chinese company was forced to hold on to the property due to an unpaid debt totaling Sh73.6 million from both Muga and Suraya.

In its application, Equity accused the Chinese contractor of illegal possession of the property, arguing that it does not have any claim over the houses.

The court ruled in Equity’s favor, stating that the loan granted to the developers has not been repaid in full and that the contractor does not have any proprietary interest in the suit property that would defeat the bank’s securities.

“It is my considered opinion, any person who lays claim to the ownership of any housing units which are on the property charged to the bank, should strive to ensure that the bank loan was paid off,” judge Majanja ruled.
A suspect accused of defrauding the Youth Enterprise Development Fund (YEDF) of Sh180 million was on Thursday sentenced to 27 years in jail.

Mukuria Ngamau and his company Quorandum Company Limited, where he is the director, were found guilty of five counts of conspiracy to commit an economic crime, unlawful acquisition of public property and making false documents.

Milimani Chief Magistrate Douglas Ogoti ordered Ngamau to pay a fine of Sh720.8 million or serve a 27-year jail sentence in default. The court dismissed his appeal for a non-custodial sentence, saying the sentence is dictated by Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act.
Ngamau had been charged alongside his wife Doreen Waithera, who was acquitted of the charges after she entered into a plea bargaining with the the prosecution.During an inquiry into the Youth Fund scandal, parliament’s Public Investment Committee (PIC) heard that two multi-million-shilling contracts were awarded through single sourcing contrary to public procurement […]

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