Your Customer Owes You Millions & Has Gone Silent

COMMERCIAL LAW INSIGHT

You delivered. You invoiced. You followed up — once, twice, a dozen times. And now? Silence. The calls go unanswered, the emails bounce into a void, and that six-figure or seven-figure sum sits in your books like a bad dream you cannot wake up from.

You are not alone. Unsecured debt — money owed without a mortgage, charge, or other security backing it — is one of the most common and most painful problems facing Kenyan businesses today. And it carries a double risk: you may lose the money, and you may lose the relationship.

The good news? Kenyan law gives you a clear, staged path to recover what is rightfully yours — often without setting foot inside a courtroom. This article walks you through that path, step by step.

Unsecured debt arises from everyday commercial arrangements: unpaid invoices for goods delivered, fees for professional services rendered, loans advanced on the strength of trust and a handshake, or balances due under a supply or distribution agreement.

Because there is no collateral attached, recovery depends entirely on the legal process — and on how quickly and strategically you move.

Key Law: Limitation of Actions Act, Cap 22 (Laws of Kenya)

Most contractual debts must be pursued within six (6) years from the date the debt became due.

If the debtor makes a part-payment or acknowledges the debt in writing, the clock resets from that date.

Source: Limitation of Actions Act, Cap 22; confirmed by Kenya Law (kenyalaw.org)

Waiting is therefore your biggest enemy. The longer silence continues, the harder recovery becomes — and after six years, your legal remedy may be extinguished entirely.

Before anything else, your advocate should send a formal demand letter. This is not simply a polite reminder — it is a legal document that sets the stage for everything that follows.

Under Order 3, Rule 2(d) of the Civil Procedure Rules, 2020, a demand letter is among the documents that must accompany a suit filed in court. Sending it early is not just best practice — it is a legal prerequisite to litigation.

  • Full identification of the parties and the debt amount
  • A clear factual chronology: the contract, delivery, invoicing, and non-payment
  • The legal basis for the claim — whether contract, statute, or both
  • A firm but reasonable deadline (typically 7 to 14 days)
  • Explicit notice that legal proceedings will follow if the demand is ignored
  • Copies of supporting documents — invoices, LPOs, delivery notes, correspondence

Why does this work? Because most rational businesses do not want litigation either. A letter on law firm letterhead, citing specific legal provisions and attaching a complete documentary record, signals that you are prepared and serious. In our experience, a well-drafted demand letter resolves a significant proportion of commercial debts — quickly, cost-effectively, and without any court involvement.

Procedure Reference: Civil Procedure Rules, 2020 — Order 3, Rule 2(d)

Demand letters are a mandatory pre-litigation document and carry evidentiary weight.

They also establish good faith, which courts consider when awarding legal costs.

If the demand letter opens the door but does not close the deal, the next step is mediation — a structured, confidential negotiation facilitated by a neutral third party. This is where smart creditors separate themselves from those who simply rush to court.

Kenya’s legal framework strongly supports mediation. Court-annexed mediation was formally introduced through the Civil Procedure Act, and accredited mediators have been available through the Judiciary since 2016. Kenya’s premier institutions for structured commercial mediation include the Nairobi Centre for International Arbitration (NCIA) — which administers both domestic and international mediation — and the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (CIArb), Kenya Branch.

  • It is private — protecting your business reputation and your client’s dignity
  • It is fast — a mediation session can be concluded in hours or days, not years
  • It preserves relationships — parties reach an agreed outcome rather than having one imposed
  • It is cost-effective — significantly cheaper than contested High Court litigation
  • Agreements reached in mediation can be made binding and enforceable as a court consent order

At the NCIA, domestic mediation sessions are professionally administered at transparent rates. The parties retain full control over the outcome, and nothing said in mediation can be used against either party in later court proceedings — making it a genuinely safe space to negotiate.

PRACTICAL TIP FROM OUR DESK

Include a mediation clause in all future contracts. A simple clause stating that

disputes will first be referred to mediation under the NCIA Mediation Rules

can save your business hundreds of thousands of shillings in legal costs —

and preserve partnerships that took years to build.

If your debtor is a company and the mediation route has not produced results, the statutory demand is one of the most powerful tools in your arsenal — and one of the most misunderstood.

Under Section 384 of the Insolvency Act, 2015, a company that fails to settle a debt of at least KES 100,000 within 21 days of receiving a statutory demand is legally presumed to be unable to pay its debts. This presumption opens the door to a winding-up petition — a proceeding that can result in a court ordering the company to be liquidated.

Crucially, the mere service of a statutory demand — especially if it is advertised in the press as part of winding-up proceedings — carries serious reputational consequences for the debtor. For many companies, the threat of this scrutiny is enough to prompt immediate payment.

Legal Authority: Insolvency Act, 2015 — Section 384

Minimum debt for a statutory demand: KES 100,000

Deadline for compliance: 21 days from service of the demand

Effect of non-compliance: Company is presumed unable to pay — grounds for winding-up petition

An important caution: the statutory demand is a serious instrument, and courts will scrutinise its use. It is not appropriate where the debt is genuinely disputed on reasonable grounds. Used correctly — for a clear, undisputed commercial debt — it is remarkably effective.

If all pre-litigation steps have failed, it is time to file a civil suit. The court you approach depends on the size of your claim:

CourtClaim AmountKey Feature
Small Claims CourtUp to KES 1 millionFast-track, affordable
Magistrates’ CourtUp to KES 20 millionAccessible & wide reach
High CourtAbove KES 20 millionComplex claims & insolvency

Once you obtain a court judgment, enforcement mechanisms become available to you. These include garnishee orders (attaching funds held in the debtor’s bank account), attachment and sale of movable property, and in appropriate cases, bankruptcy or winding-up proceedings under the Insolvency Act, 2015.

Regardless of which route you take, your case is only as strong as your paper trail. Before engaging counsel, gather:

  • The signed contract, agreement, or purchase order underlying the debt
  • All invoices and statements of account
  • Delivery notes, receipts, or proof that goods and services were provided
  • Any written acknowledgment of the debt by the debtor
  • Email threads, WhatsApp messages, or other communications referencing the debt
  • Any partial payments made (which also reset the limitation clock)

The richer your documentation, the stronger your negotiating position at every stage — from demand letter through to enforcement.

THE CLOCK IS TICKING — DO NOT WAIT

Under the Limitation of Actions Act, Cap 22, most contractual debts

prescribe (expire) after SIX YEARS from the date they fell due.

Once that window closes, even a perfectly documented claim may be

lost forever. Act early, act strategically.

The most common hesitation we hear from business owners is this: “I do not want to damage the relationship.” It is a legitimate concern. Your debtor may also be a long-term supplier, a referral source, or a strategic partner.

The staged approach outlined in this article is specifically designed to give the relationship every chance to survive. A demand letter is not a declaration of war — it is a firm, professional signal that you take your commercial rights seriously. Mediation is explicitly designed to reach a mutually acceptable outcome. Even the statutory demand invites the debtor to engage before the process escalates.

In our experience, debtors who respond to a professional legal approach often do so with genuine relief — they were looking for a structure to resolve the matter, not a way to avoid it. The right legal pressure, applied in the right sequence, frequently produces a payment plan or full settlement that preserves both your money and your partnership.

At Mukamba & Company Advocates, commercial debt recovery is a core part of our litigation and dispute resolution practice. We have helped clients recover millions of shillings in unsecured commercial debts — through demand letters, mediation, statutory demands, and court proceedings — while preserving important business relationships wherever possible.

We act with the urgency your situation demands. We communicate clearly. And we approach every file as a business problem first, not just a legal one.

Our services in this area include:

  • Drafting and serving formal demand letters
  • Advising on and facilitating commercial mediation
  • Preparing and serving statutory demands under the Insolvency Act, 2015
  • Filing and prosecuting civil suits across all court levels
  • Enforcing judgments — including garnishee orders, attachment, and winding-up proceedings
  • Reviewing and strengthening your commercial contracts to prevent future disputes

Contact Us Today

Free 20-Minute Consultation | No Obligation

+254 706 223 157 | +254 797 450 653

info@mukambalaw.com | www.mukambalaw.com

West Park Towers, 11th & 12th Floor, Mpesi Lane, Westlands, Nairobi

Disclaimer: This article is published for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The law stated reflects the position under Kenyan law as at the date of publication. For advice specific to your circumstances, please contact Mukamba & Company Advocates directly.