The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mining firm awarded US$195 000 damages

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Samambwa whose testimony inconsiste­nt and his behaviour inconsiste­nt with someone who had bought an excavator and fully paid for it.

The court further noted that Mr Samambwa’s conduct was inconsiste­nt with someone dealing with an individual he did not trust.

“On a balance of probabilit­ies, plaintiff has proven its claim that it did not sell its excavator to defendant and defendant defaulted in servicing the lease agreement and had the excavator against its will,” the court said.

“The unsanction­ed possession is causing plaintiff financial prejudice justifying an order for holding-over damages.”

The court heard that between April and May 2022, Mr Samambwa receded into arrears, and African Chrome sought to get back its excavator.

And on June 15 2022, African Chrome human resources manager Mr Laszlo Takacs went to Mr Samambwa with a lowbed truck to uplift the excavator but the man refused to release it.

E-mails were dispatched to Samambwa regarding the arrears and in June 2022, arrear rentals had accumulate­d to US$10 900.

He in turn said he had prepared a schedule for payments made and amounts owing.

African Chrome wrote a letter of demand in July 2022 but that yielded nothing leading to the start of legal proceeding­s.

According to African Chrome, the excavator was never sold to Samambwa but it had been leased to him for six months and thereafter it continued on the same terms and conditions.

In his defence to the claim, Samambwa argued that after the expiry of the written lease agreement, a sale agreement was entered into between the parties in terms of which African Chrome sold to him the excavator for US$70 000 which was to be paid on or before June 30 2022.

He argued, through his legal counsel, that he could not return the excavator because he bought it and paid the purchase price in full.

But Mr Samambwa also told the court that he was never issued any receipts when he made payments both for rent and purchase.

The excavator purchase price, he said, was made in instalment­s which were to be paid on or before June 30 2022 with no specific figure per month as all that the mining company wanted was cash flow to keep it afloat.

Mr Samambwa does not have the licence book for the excavator in question. Mr Ignatius Mupfiga and Mr Wellington Davira of Gundu, Dube and Pamacheche Legal Practition­ers acted for African Chrome while Mr M. Hore and Mr A. Chingwe of Hore and Partners represente­d Mr Samambwa.

 ?? ?? Farmers tour a tobacco field during a field day at Munhenga village in Goromonzi yesterday
Farmers tour a tobacco field during a field day at Munhenga village in Goromonzi yesterday

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