The High Court has dismissed most of Dr Peter Musoke Gukiina’s land claims against businessman Sudhir Ruparelia and Speke Hotel 1996 Limited, handing the hotel company a decisive victory in a dispute that had dragged on for years. Dr Gukiina walked away with compensation for just a sliver of encroached land, far less than he had sought.
Justice P. Basaza-Wasswa ruled that Dr Gukiina had no legal interest in the contested land in Kongero, Wakiso District, beyond a single plot, and ordered Speke Hotel to pay him Shs81.4 million in total damages for encroaching on that one parcel.
The dispute centered on Busiro Block 443 plots 49, 52, 74 and 76. Dr Gukiina had argued these plots formed part of his kibanja interest derived from Plot 50. The court found no merit in that argument. Every document he presented confined his rights strictly to Plot 50, and his attempts to stretch that claim through oral assertions did not hold up.
The court also took issue with Dr Gukiina’s failure to call critical witnesses, including the original vendors and prior registered proprietors. Their absence gave the court grounds to draw an adverse inference against him, further weakening his position.
His case was also undermined by his own earlier legal filings. Previous proceedings he had brought were limited to boundary disagreements involving Plot 50 and Plot 75. The additional plots he was now fighting over had never come up before, and that inconsistency did not go unnoticed.
On the question of occupancy, Justice Basaza-Wasswa found that Dr Gukiina did not meet the legal threshold to qualify as either a lawful or bona fide occupant under Uganda’s land laws, putting an end to his broader claims of ownership and unlawful eviction.
The court did find one area where Speke Hotel had overstepped. Part of the hotel’s perimeter wall had encroached onto Plot 50 by roughly 0.09 acres. Rather than order demolition, the court awarded Dr Gukiina Shs66.4 million for the encroached land and Shs15 million in general damages, with interest at 10 percent per annum until fully paid.
The ruling underscores how heavily Ugandan courts lean on written agreements in land disputes, and how difficult it is to expand a claim beyond what the paperwork actually says.
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