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Alaha v YTL Wholesale and Retail [2026] SBHC 8; HCSI-CC 360 of 2025 (27 January 2026)
HIGH COURT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS
| Case name: | Alaha v YTL Wholesale and Retail |
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| Date of decision: | 27 January 2026 |
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| Parties: | Job Alaha v YTL Wholesale and Retail, John Taro |
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| Date of hearing: | 27 January 2026 |
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| Court file number(s): | 360 of 2025 |
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| Jurisdiction: | Civil |
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| Judge(s): | Nott; PJ |
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| On appeal from: |
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| Order: | (a) The Statement of Claim filed on 28 August 2025 is struck out pursuant to rule 9.75(b) of the Civil Procedure Rules 2007. (b) The proceeding is dismissed. (c) The Claimant shall pay the First Defendant’s costs. (d) The file is to be closed. |
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| Representation: | Ms D Kukura for the Claimant Mr R Mamae for the First Defendant No Appearance for the Second Defendant |
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| Legislation cited: | Solomon Islands Courts (Civil Procedure) Rule 2007, r 9.75 (a), (b) and (c), r 9.75 Road Transport Act and Regulation, Road Transport Act S 7 and 11 |
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| Cases cited: | |
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS
CIVIL JURISDICTION
Civil Case No. 360 of 2025
BETWEEN:
JOB ALAHA
Rove, West Honiara
Claimants
AND:
YTL WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Central Honiara
First Defendant
AND:
JOHN TARO
Second Defendant
Date of Hearing: 27 January 2026
Date of Judgment: 27 January 2026
Counsel;
Ms D Kukura for the Claimant
Mr R Mamae for the First Defendant
No Appearance for the Second Defendant
Nott; PJ
RULING ON APPLICATION TO STRIKE OUT
Introduction
- This is an application by the First Defendant pursuant to rule 9.75(a), (b) and (c) of the Civil Procedure Rules 2007 to strike out the Claimant’s Statement of Claim filed on 28 August 2025. Although a number of grounds are relied upon, one
ground raises a threshold and dispositive issue, namely whether the Claimant has locus standi to bring these proceedings. That issue
is properly addressed first. Remedies are correlative with rights, and where a claimant has no legally recognisable right or interest
capable of grounding relief, the proceeding cannot, as a matter of law, disclose a reasonable cause of action, even if all pleaded
facts are assumed to be true.
Background
- The Claimant’s case is pleaded on the footing that he was the owner of motor vehicle MA3256, a Caldina taxi, which was involved
in a collision on 31 August 2019 with a 3-ton truck owned by the First Defendant and driven by the Second Defendant. The relief sought
is damages said to arise from that collision. Ownership of the vehicle is not incidental to the claim; it is the foundation upon
which the Claimant asserts standing to sue.
Strike Out - Standing
- The First Defendant applies to strike out the proceeding on the basis that the Claimant lacks standing. It contends that the Claimant
was not, and is not, the registered owner of vehicle MA3256, which at all material times was registered in another name and that
the purchase price was paid, or at least facilitated, by another person. On that footing, the claim is said to disclose no reasonable
cause of action.
- In support of that position, the First Defendant relies on the sworn evidence of Ms Hellen Keinoa, which confirms that inquiries
were made through the First Defendant’s solicitors to ascertain the ownership of vehicle MA3256. The response received on 26
January 2026, by reference to the certificate of registration and ownership issued under the Road Transport Act and Regulations, confirmed that the vehicle remained registered in the name of Mr Wapore and not in the name of the Claimant. Counsel for all parties
agreed that this evidence establishes common ground that, at all material times, the Claimant was not the registered owner of the
vehicle.
- In response, the Claimant accepts that the vehicle remained registered in Mr Wapore’s name at the time of the accident. It
is submitted that he had entered into an agreement to purchase the vehicle in or about 2016, had paid the purchase price, taken possession
of the vehicle and operated it as a taxi providing transport services to the public. He further asserts, in the alternative, that
he acquired an equitable interest in the vehicle and submits that the Court should permit the claim to proceed in the interests of
substantial justice.
- The Claimant submits that his standing arises notwithstanding the absence of registered title. It is submitted that his equitable
interest is founded on payment of the full purchase price, prolonged possession and use of the vehicle, and the fact that steps had
been taken towards transferring registration, albeit not completed at the time of the accident in 2019. It is accepted that the delay
was not inherent in the transfer process, but submits that it may have been an oversight. On that basis, he argues that his equitable
interest is sufficient to confer standing.
Reply - Ownership Evidence
- In reply, counsel for the First Defendant relies on the sworn statement of Mr Benjamin Wapore, which exhibits correspondence at Annexure
1 confirming that the vehicle was sold to another party entirely, and not to the Claimant. That evidence, coming from the registered
owner himself, does not link the Claimant to legal ownership of the vehicle. Counsel also relies on the sworn evidence of Ms Keinoa,
which exhibits at Annexure 3 the certificate of registration and ownership for vehicle MA3256. That certificate records Mr Wapore
as the registered owner and expressly requires that any transfer of ownership be completed within 14 days. Against that documentary
framework, the suggestion that the transfer process might reasonably have extended over several years cannot be sustained. On the
evidence, the Claimant was not the registered owner at the time of the accident and has never been the registered owner.
- The Claimant responds that the letter exhibited to the sworn statement of Mr Benjamin Wapore should be understood as confirming that,
although the vehicle was sold to Mr Wapore’s son, the arrangements for the purchase, including provision of the purchase money,
were made by the Claimant. It is submitted that the claimant was unable to attend on the day of sale and therefore sent his son to
complete the transaction on his behalf. On that basis, he submits that the formal identification of another person as purchaser does
not defeat his substantive involvement in the transaction and that he thereby acquired an equitable interest in the vehicle notwithstanding
that legal title was never transferred into his name.
Rules- Strike Out
- Rule 9.75 of the Civil Procedure Rules 2007 confers a summary jurisdiction on the Court to strike out a pleading, or the whole of a proceeding, where it is apparent that the
claim is legally untenable. Relevantly, the Court may strike out a statement of claim where it discloses no reasonable cause of action,
is frivolous or vexatious, or is otherwise an abuse of the Court’s process. In exercising that power, the Court assumes the
pleaded facts to be true, but does not accept bare assertions, legal conclusions, or characterisations unsupported by facts capable
of grounding a legally recognisable right. Where, even on the claimant’s own pleaded case, the facts alleged are incapable
in law of establishing standing or entitling the claimant to relief, the proceeding is liable to be struck out at the threshold without
the need for a trial.
Locus Standi
- The threshold question for the Court is whether the Claimant has standing to bring this proceeding. The authorities are clear.
- In Ombudsman v Attorney-General [1987] SILR 75, the Court held that a claimant must show that his interest is “peculiarly affected” by the impugned conduct, and that
standing will not be granted where the interest is “too indirect or insubstantial”. These principles were affirmed by
the Court of Appeal in Simbe v East Choiseul Area Council [1999] SBCA 9.
- In Veno v Jino [2006] SBCA 22, the Court of Appeal held that bare assertions of ownership, unsupported by recognised evidence, are insufficient to ground standing.
In Joshua v Valahoana Company Integrated Development [2013] SBHC 113, the Court reaffirmed that standing requires evidence that the claimant’s interests are peculiarly affected
- In Malaita Maasina Forum Trust Board Inc v Attorney-General [2014] SBHC 12, the Court struck out the entire proceeding under r 9.75 on the basis that the claim was frivolous, vexatious and disclosed no reasonable
cause of action, emphasising that a claimant must demonstrate standing grounded in a recognisable legal right:
- The principles governing the issue of locus standi are clear. It has always been an important limitation on the availability of remedies
that they are awarded only to those who have sufficient standing. The law starts from the position that remedies are correlative
with rights and that only those whose rights are at risk are eligible to come to court and seek remedies and no one else... This
simply means that only persons whose rights are under threat have standing to seek redress. Otherwise, they do not have that standing...
Statutory Framework
- The claim must be assessed against the statutory framework governing motor vehicles. Sections 7 and 11 of the Road Transport Act (Cap 131) establish a compulsory system for the licensing and registration of motor vehicles and, through that system, provide the
legal mechanism by which ownership is identified and recognised for statutory purposes. Registration is not merely evidentiary; it
is the means by which the law fixes legal ownership and allocates responsibility and risk in respect of motor vehicles as between
owners, drivers, and third parties.
Analysis
- Applying those principles, the difficulty for the Claimant is fundamental. The pleaded basis of standing is ownership of the vehicle,
yet on the Claimant’s own case he was not the registered owner at the time of the accident. An agreement to purchase confers
contractual rights in personam only and does not operate against third parties.
- Possession and use of the vehicle do not suffice. What is pleaded is factual possession, not a legally recognised possessory interest
such as bailment capable of supporting a tort claim. Nor does the asserted equitable interest assist. Even if assumed, such an interest
would operate only as between the Claimant and the registered owner. It does not confer standing to sue third parties in tort.
- The Claimant’s submission that the difficulty is “only” that title was not transferred cannot be accepted. Transfer
of registration is not a technical or administrative formality; it is a statutory requirement under the Road Transport Act. The certificate of registration itself requires transfer within 14 days. Until transfer occurs, legal ownership remains as recorded
on the register. Non-compliance cannot be displaced by informal arrangements or assertions of equitable interest.
- In substance, the Claimant seeks to litigate rights that, in law, belong to another person. In the absence of legal title, bailment,
or another recognised basis for standing, the Claimant lacks locus standi.
Disposition
- That conclusion is dispositive. The Statement of Claim discloses no reasonable cause of action within the meaning of rule 9.75(b).
It is unnecessary to consider the remaining grounds.
Orders
- The Statement of Claim filed on 28 August 2025 is struck out pursuant to rule 9.75(b) of the Civil Procedure Rules 2007.
- The proceeding is dismissed.
- The Claimant shall pay the First Defendant’s costs.
- The file is to be closed.
By the Court
Hon. Justice Gina Maree Nott
Puisne Judge
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