Kudha & 2 others v Adhola & another (Civil Appeal E220 of 2024) [2025] KECA 824 (KLR) (9 May 2025) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2025] KECA 824 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal E220 of 2024
HA Omondi, F Tuiyott & LK Kimaru, JJA
May 9, 2025
Between
Arkipo Orwa Kudha
1st Appellant
Kenneth Kaunda
2nd Appellant
Matilda Betha Adhola
3rd Appellant
and
Patrisia Ajuma Adhola
1st Respondent
St Elizabeth Lwak Mortuary
2nd Respondent
(Being an appeal from the Judgment of the High Court of Kenya at Siaya, (Ogembo, J.) dated 12th July, 2024 in HCCA No. E007 of 2024
Civil Appeal E007 of 2024
)
Judgment
1.“In burial disputes, the two questions that will always arise are, who has the right to bury the deceased and the place of burial…”. Three factors frequently take centre stage in burial disputes in Kenya’s family law landscape namely: the deceased person’s wishes, the duty imposed on those closely related to the deceased during his lifetime to bury him; and the customary practices of the ethnic community he hails from.
2.The live but sometimes subtle rivalry, garnished with competing interests between wives in a polygamous household, often find their ultimate arena upon the death of the very man whose attention was a source of unbridled competition in his life time. The position of the first wife vis-a-vis any other subsequent wife is usually tested and questioned, especially when the modern meets tradition. Nelson Sylvester Adhola Kudha (referred to as the deceased) married Patrisia Ajuma Adhola, (Patrisia), the 1st respondent, in the year 1955, under Luo customary law which permits polygamy. They lived together at his father’s home in Asembo Kayoo; and were blessed with ten offsprings. According to Patrisia in the year 1985, they set up their own home on land parcel No. Siaya/Omia/Malo/4245. He thereafter married Matilda Betha Adhola (Matilda), the 3rd appellant herein, who bore him 5 children; then later on he married Phoebe Awuor as the 3rd wife, with whom he had 4 children; and later on, married his 4th wife, Rebecca Oluoch with whom he had six children.
3.Ultimately, on 26th October 2023, Nelson died while at the home of Matilda. Patrisia being the senior in the lineup, naturally expected to be the one with the final say on matters of burial; and in deference to Luo custom, she had no doubt that Nelson would be buried at her homestead. However, Matilda was totally opposed to this, contending that she was closest to the deceased who had spent more years living with her in her home; and as fate would have it, dying in her homestead. She had already moved the deceased’s body to St Elizabeth Lwak Mortuary, and together with her brother in-law Arkipo Orwa Kudha (Arkipo), being the 1st appellant, her son Kenneth Kaunda, the 2nd appellant, had made arrangements for the burial to take place at her homestead; insisting that Patrisia had stopped living with the deceased in 1970; and eventually ceased being a wife in l979 following divorce proceedings, which culminated in the issuance of a decree nisi.
4.Given the prevailing post death state of affairs, Patrisia complained that the appellants:
5.She thus sued the appellants for orders to have the remains of the deceased preserved at St Elizabeth Mortuary, Lwak pending hearing and determination of the matter; the appellants be prohibited from burying the deceased; for the body of the deceased to be released to Patrisia for the purposes of burial at the matrimonial home; that the burial permit be issued to the Patrisia; and that the Officer Commanding Aram Police station be directed to supervise implementation of the orders.
6.The appellants filed a counterclaim seeking orders allowing Arkipo and Matilda to lead the family in the burial arrangements; and determine the date, location and burial site which they described as the matrimonial home in Ongielo village; an order directing Patrisia to meet the cost of preserving the body from the date of filing suit until the date that the determination of the suit; and that St Elizabeth Mortuary, Lwak be directed to release the remains of the deceased exclusively the appellants, for the purpose of conducting a befitting farewell ceremony; and an order prohibiting Patrisia by herself and/or agents from disrupting the burial ceremony. Matilda also sought orders allowing her to hold in trust on behalf of the rightful beneficiaries, all the personal effects belonging to the deceased; and that the Officer Commanding Ongielo Police station or the nearest police station be directed to ensure enforcement of the orders.
7.The suit was heard in the Magistrate’s court at Madiany; and dismissed. Patrisia then appealed to the High Court on several grounds; and in allowing the appeal, the learned judge set aside the trial court's judgement and decree; directed that the deceased's body be released to Patrisia for burial at Kudha (which was held to be the deceased’s matrimonial home), and that the deceased's burial permit, which was in the custody of the Matilda to be surrendered to Patrisia to facilitate the burial of the deceased.
8.The evidence presented through the lenses of Patrisia at the trial, and which the 1st appellate court evaluated and analysed was based on the claim that her marriage to the deceased was celebrated according to Luo Customary law which permitted the deceased to have several wives; and they all initially lived in the ancestral home, where the wives, including Matilda each had a house built by the deceased. That at some point in the course of their relationship, Patrisia and the deceased separated, but reunited in the year 2015 during the traditional wedding of their daughter Florence Adhola.
9.It was Patrisia’s contention that Matilda orchestrated a purported divorce between her and the deceased, because she wanted to be the only wife; a move which according to Patrisia, the deceased was not comfortable with and largely treated haphazardly; and that in any event, she had not been served with any decree absolute. That subsequent to the divorce proceedings which took place in 1979, the deceased gave her a parcel that she resides on to date; that the deceased also bought her 43 iron sheets to construct her house. Patrisia considered herself the de facto first wife of the deceased as a decree absolute was not issued.
10.It was her contention that the deceased had been ill for a long time since 1995 when he was assaulted by a mentally challenged man; that before the assault, they all resided in one home then she moved to her current home. She confirmed that the deceased’s ancestral home was at Kajosiah where she had a home built, but which she left and that the church built her a home in Ngukah.
11.With regard to the alleged will, it was Patrisia’s contention that the same was written while the deceased was already ill; and she only got to know about the will after he had filed the divorce case in court; and that the deceased being sick for long, was not in a good state of mind; pointing out that said will was attested the by the 1st appellant’s son. The respondent further testified that the deceased had 14 children who took care of him yet the Will purported to cater only for one household leaving out the rest.
12.The 1st respondent’s witnesses all testified that under customary law when a polygamous man dies, he is buried in the homestead of the first wife. Wilson Hayanga Okodo, who testified as PW2, described Patrisia as his god-sister; and stated that in 1989 he was informed that Patrisia had established a home in Mikayi where she stayed with the deceased; he had never heard about a divorce between the deceased and Patrisia; and as far as he knew, the deceased had never requested for a dowry refund, which is what would have signified a complete customary dissolution of the marriage; He also pointed out that the deceased attended all dowry negotiations and payments for Patrisia’s daughters at their home; and whenever he visited, he would find the deceased at Patrisia’s home. According to PW2, he once visited the deceased when he was ill and found him at the latter’s home.
13.PW3 Michael Okungu Onjoma, a neighbour of the deceased at Ngukah since 1985, testified that occasionally he would see the deceased within Patrisia’s compound; and that the deceased lived happily and peaceful with Patrisia. He confirmed that the deceased was ill for a long time at his ancestral land in Ong'ielo where he stayed with his 2nd wife, while he stayed in Nguka where Patrisia’s home was located. He explained that a polygamous man would build himself a 'duol' (small cubicle within the homestead), where he would spend his time; and even have meals, then decide where to spend the night; he was aware that the deceased was being taken care at his 10 by 10 unit that as he once visited him in the year 1995.
14.Tobias Ongar Ayiko, PW4, a cousin to the deceased testified that they fellowshipped together with the deceased at Church of Christ; and that although the deceased was being cared for at Ong'ielo during his long-term illness where he resided with the Matilda, it was the first wife who ought to bury the deceased irrespective of the flames of affection having waned off.
15.Arkipo, the 1st appellant, and a brother to the deceased, testifying as DWI confirmed that the deceased and Patrisia were married on 19th November 1955 according to Luo Customary Law, and the couple cohabited at their ancestral home in; Kajosiah Kudha; then later in 1962, the deceased married Matilda, whom he described as the surviving widow; that the deceased then entered into a marriage with 3rd wife Phoebe at his ancestral home; and they were blessed with four issues, but they later separated and 3rd wife remarried. The deceased then married a 4th wife Rebecca (now deceased), who took possession of Patricia’s house at the ancestral home.
16.According to Arkipo, in 1971, Patrisia, out of her own volition, relocated from the ancestral home and established her home at Nguka; that 10 years after their divorce, the deceased, out of concern over the welfare of the children he sired with her, gave Patrisia a parcel of landwhich was developed through the assistance of her children and the Church of Christ in Africa; and the deceased only went to Patrisia’s home in relation to his children with her, i.e. when their child died and when their daughter was getting married.
17.He produced a copy of Chamber Summons in divorce suit No.41 of 1978; that he attended the divorce suit on several occasions; also produced deceased’s written declaration expressing his preferred place of burial; and a Decree Nisi in the divorce suit. On cross examination he stated that although he did not have a decree absolute for the divorce, the lived reality was that Patrisia did not participate in activities within the homestead as a wife, and there was no relationship between her and the deceased after the divorce; and Patrisia’s house was constructed by the church.
18.That in 1991, the deceased relocated from his ancestral home at Kajosiah Kudha, alongside Matilda; and they founded their matrimonial home in a location known as Ongielo village. That in the year 1995, the deceased was attacked by a mentally ill man, resulting in his hospitalization for three months and during this time, he was being cared for by Matilda; that he handled the deceased's treatment needs, visits and care with Matilda; and that he and Matilda were the closest to the deceased and took care of him.
19.According to Arkipo, the deceased had crafted a handwritten will in form of a letter stating his preferred place of burial; that throughout his illness, the deceased resided at his homestead in Ongielo with Matilda; and following the demise, his family held a meeting at his matrimonial home where Patrisia, her sister and daughter insisted on a different burial location for the deceased. It was his contention that Matilda had been solely with the deceased since 1970.
20.Arkipo’s evidence found endorsement in the testimony of DW2, Kenneth Kaunda,the first-born son of the deceased and Matilda, who described how during the 20-year period when the deceased was ill, his primary caregivers were Arkipo, himself and his mother; that Patrisia was absent from the life of the deceased during his lifetime, and only visited the deceased once in his homestead; and that he provided financial support to take care of the deceased through finances. That he was present when the deceased expressed wishes of his place of burial to be his established home in Ongielo village.
21.Matilda Betha Adhola the second wife of the deceased, and being the one who lived with the deceased at Ongielo, confirmed that by the time she got married to the deceased in 1962, he was already in a marriage with the Plaintiff. Matilda’s contention is that Patrisia and the deceased eventually divorced, even though a decree nisi issued, but not made absolute, the deceased never stepped into Patrisia’s house, which in any event, was built by the church; and he only went to her home on matters pertaining to his children; that out of concern over the welfare of the children they shared, the deceased provided Patrisia with a piece of land in Nguka where she established a home with the support of a church. That in 1991, after establishing their matrimonial home in Ongielo with the deceased she took care of the deceased while he was hospitalized; and that the 1st respondent did not participate in the affairs of the deceased during his life time; and the deceased eventually had a written declaration specifying his preferred place of burial as Ongielo village; that although Patrisia would sometimes visit the deceased in the hospital, she never spent the night with him.
22.The trial court found that marriage between Patrisia and the deceased was not legally dissolved as a decree absolute was never obtained, and that the two legally remained as husband and wife; however, the learned magistrate was of the view that divorce is not only a procedure of filing a decree nisi, but is a broader perspective pertaining to intentions and conduct of the affected parties, pointing out that not only had the pair expressed an intention to live apart, they actually had lived apart for over 50 years, and on account of this, they were in fact divorced; that Patrisia could not leverage on the children’s significantly close relationship with their father, to advance her claim that she too was close to the deceased; that the deceased established a home in Ongielo during his lifetime, and lived there with Matilda who took care of the deceased from March 2021 to October 2023 when he was bedridden, thus demonstrating the key role she played; and rendering her the closest wife to the deceased.
23.While acknowledging that the couple were governed by Luo customs, drawing from past decisions, the trial court observed that there were exceptions to the rule of a first wife’s right to bury the husband and stated thus:
24.The trial court found that the document relied on did not meet the requirements of what would legally constitute a will, but it nonetheless was an expression of the deceased regarding his final resting place; and the claims that the deceased was not in a stable frame of mind, were not substantiated. The learned magistrate dismissed Patrisia’s claims, and found in favour of Arkipa’s team stating that the deceased wished to buried in Ongielo, where he had established a home; and resided with Matilda whom he was closest to. In allowing the counterclaim, the trial magistrate was very specific that:a.Matilda Betha Adhola, the 3rd Defendant herein, in the Counterclaim to lead her family in organizing and determining the date, location and burial site of the late Nelson Sylvester Adhola Kudha, the deceased herein, at his matrimonial home in Ongielo Village.b.The Defendants in the Counterclaim herein to sign and retain all the relevant documents regarding the burial of the deceased and appoint any assistance they may require in the process.c.The Plaintiff to meet the cost of preserving the deceased’s body at St. Elizabeth Lwak Mortuary, the Interested Party herein, from date of filing of this suit on Ist November 2023 until the date of this judgment.d.An Order for St. Elizabeth Lwak Mortuary, the Interested Party herein, to release the remains of the Deceased exclusively to the Defendants for the purpose of conducting a fitting farewell ceremony.e.An Order prohibiting the Plaintiff, their servants, or agents from causing any disruption or disorder during the period when the Defendants will be conducting the burial of the Deceased.f.All personal effects of the deceased be held in trust by Matilda Betha Adhola, the 3rd Defendant herein, on behalf of the rightful beneficiaries.g.Officer Commanding Ongielo Police Station and/or Officer Commanding the nearest Police Station be authorized to enforce compliance and/or help enforcement of the Honorable Court's Orders issued herein.
25.Aggrieved by this outcome, Patrisia appealed to the High Court at Siaya setting out grounds which we condense as being a misinterpretation of the evidence regarding the effect of the purported divorce, breathing life to an invalidated document which purportedly expressed the deceased’s wishes; and pronouncing the younger wife who ordinarily lived with the deceased, as the bona fide party to conduct interment and burial rites.
26.The learned judge identified the issue in dispute as being basically who between the appellant and the 3rd respondent had the right to bury the remains of the deceased in her home. The learned Judge agreed with the trial court that in the absence of a decree absolute, then the divorce was not concluded; noted that the deceased bought land at Nguka on which Patrisia’s home is located, well after he had obtained decree nisi, as a demonstration that he was fully aware that the 1st respondent was his wife; and in remaining as the deceased’s wife, she retained the position as the first wife. Further that there was evidence that the deceased had established the home for Patrisia with the help of the church, and that her witnesses who were well advanced in years, being over 80 years old, were persons versed in Luo Customary Law out of prolonged use of the same, though not experts as envisaged under Section 48 of Evidence Act.
27.The learned judge observed that the deceased attended functions at Patricia’s home involving their children; and that when the deceased was ailing, Patrisia visited him in hospital as well as at Matilda’s home; and was of the view that whereas not much affection was shared between the 1st respondent and the deceased, the whole family knew and accepted the fact that the 1st respondent remained the first wife and that the 1st respondent’s home was also the deceased’s home.
28.On the issue of the Will the trial judge was of the opinion that there was no appeal on the finding of the lower court that the same was not a Will as provided for in law as the same was never attested to by more than two competent witnesses, and that there being no property in a dead body a person cannot dispose of his body by will in any event.
29.The learned judge went on to find that the 1st respondent had proved her case on a balance of probabilities, and as the first wife and had the right to bury the deceased in her home according to Luo Customary law, and directed that:a.That the body of the deceased Nelson Sylvester Adhola Kudha, be released to the appellant (Plaintiff in the lower court) to inter the remains at their matrimonial home at Kudha.b.That the burial permit in custody of 1st defendant/respondent, be surrendered to the appellant to facilitate the burial of the deceased.c.That the Officer Commanding Aram Police Station be ordered to supervise the enforcement of this order.Observing that this was a family dispute, and in the spirit of fostering some form of harmony, the learned judge ordered each party to bear its own costs, but directed Patrisia to pay to the mortuary, costs for preserving the body.
30.The appellants aggrieved by the decision of the trial court filed its memorandum of appeal challenging the judgment of the High Court on 12 grounds of appeal some of which are repetitive and we thus condense them into the following:a.The learned judge erred by allowing the respondent's appeal but dismissing the appellants' counterclaim in the trial court,b.the learned misdirected himself by failing to properly consider the totality of and weight of the evidence adduced by the appellants as well as disregarding the written submissions filed in support of the appellants’ counterclaim, binding judicial precedent and settled jurisprudence with regard to the legal principle on the key aspects that will always arise in burial disputes,c.the learned judge misunderstood the evidence on record and introduced extraneous or irrelevant matters specifically a burial place at Kudha which was not even pleaded by any party in the lower court; and misdirecting himself in, delving on and diverting court's focus to, addressing and making determination mainly on Customary Law which was not an issue for determination between the parties, thereby failing to consider relevant material before it that could have influenced the outcome on who had the right to bury the deceased,d.the learned judge failed to appreciate that the persons who testified in support of the 1st respondent claims to bury the deceased based on customary law, did not meet the legal criteria of expert witnesses; and did not consider the provisions in sections 48 and 51 of the Evidence Act,e.the learned judge erred in law and fact by ignoring the provision of section 82 of the Evidence Act to enable him appreciate as proof and prima facie evidence that the 1st respondent separated with and has not been in the life of the deceased as evidenced, on the strength of the chamber summons application filed in Divorce Suit No. 41 of 1978 in District Magistrate Court at Bondo,f.the learned judge erred in law by failing to properly carry out its duty as a first appellate Court by failing to reconsider the evidence, evaluate it and subsequently draw its own conclusions on the issue of who was closest to the deceased during his lifetime and has the right to bury the deceased.
31.Through their counsel Mr. Arika, the appellants submit that the court erred by failing to find that Matilda had the right to bury the deceased, the place of the deceased’s burial being Ongielo village; and finally, that the people closest to the deceased who ought to bury him are the appellants. The appellants argue that all the parties agree that the place called Kudha was erroneously termed in the judgment as the deceased’s matrimonial home is actually his ancestral home properly known as Kajosiah Kudha’s Home, where the 10x10 unit of the deceased was located; the appellants contend that the deceased’s matrimonial home is in Ongielo Village where his 10x10 unit house is located.
32.The appellants point out that Patrisia in her own testimony admitted that she left the ancestral home and built her own home at Nguka; that the deceased left the 3rd appellant as the only widow who had been caring for the deceased, and that the 1st respondent never stayed with nor gave care to the deceased when he was ailing and given these facts the trial court failed in factually ignoring the evidence on record and failing to hold that the 3rd appellant had the right to bury the deceased.
33.The appellants submit that the 1st respondent’s witnesses in the trial court were not expert witnesses and fault the learned judge for finding that the 1st respondent produced expert witnesses just because the said witnesses were advanced in age.
34.In opposing the appeal the 1st respondent through her counsel Mr. Amondi submits that the place called “Kudha” erroneously termed in the instant judgment as the deceased’s matrimonial home is the deceased’s ancestral home popularly named “Kajosiah Kudha’s Home” located within Rarieda Sub-County at Omia– Malo, East Asembo; he urges us to find that by the tenor of the judgment it is prima- facie visible and does not require any detailed examination to establish that the intention of the learned Judge when referring to the deceased’s matrimonial home was the parcel No. Siaya/Ohia Malo/4240 located at Nguka village in Nyilima, Rarieda Sub-County where the deceased bought and constructed a home with his 1st wife the 1st respondent in August 1985; that this is probably a clerical error or otherwise an error apparent in the face of the record which could have been cured through rectification under section 99 of the Civil Procedure Act or an application for review under Order 45 Rule 1(b) of the Civil. We are thus urged to cure the said defect under section 3(2) of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act Cap 9 Laws of Kenya as stated in Vallabhdas Karsandas Raniga vs. Mansukhlal Jivraj and Others [1965] EA 780, where it was held that:
35.This being a second appeal this Court is fully alive to the edict of section 72 (1) of the Civil Procedure Act, that restricts this Court only to consider matters of law in a second appeal, and only to consider facts if it is demonstrated that the two courts below considered matters, they should not have considered or failed to consider matters they should have considered. We reiterate what was stated by this Court in Charles Kipkoech Leting vs. Express (K) Ltd & Another [2018] eKLR that:
36.The main issues in this appeal revolves around who is entitled to bury the deceased? The crux of the appellants’ appeal is that the 3rd appellant was the one to bury the deceased as she is the one who lived with the deceased; took care of him in his old age and illness until the time of his demise, whereas the 1st respondent opted to move out of the ancestral home, and built her own home showing no closeness or affection whatsoever to the deceased.
37.The 1st respondent on the other hand argues that throughout the period that the deceased began experiencing health issues in 1995, alongside her children, she participated in taking care of the deceased in terms of visitation, which according to the 1st respondent demonstrated closeness to the deceased. She relied on the photographs showing those visitations. The respondent also agrees with the trial judge that in the absence of a decree absolute, the divorce proceedings were never concluded and as such the deceased and 1st respondent remained legally married, that the deceased resided in his 10x10 unit within the1st respondent’s homestead and as such the court was correct in finding that the 1st respondent has the right to bury the deceased.
38.As we stated right at the outset, in burial disputes, the two questions that will always arise are, who has the right to bury the deceased and the place of burial. Customary law as the applicable personal law regulating burial disputes versus modern liberalism embracing Western ideals and the Christian faith often form the crux of burial disputes in Kenya. See Virginia Edith Wamboi Otieno vs. Joash Ochieng Ougo & Another No.4), (1987) KLR 407 (the SM case) and Kandie & 2 Others vs. Beatrice Jepkemoi Cherogony (2002) 2 KLR 613.To prove custom, by virtue of section 51 of the Evidence Act, evidence of its existence must be called to provide the juridical and philosophical basis- that was the ratio decidendi in Nyariba Nyankomba vs. Mary Bonareri Munge [2010] eKLR where the High Court held that:
39.We are also urged to consider that this court in SAN vs. GW [2020] eKLR stated:
40.We need not belabor the point that the learned judge rightly found that the divorce process having been incomplete, resulted in the conclusion that Patrisia did retain her position as 1st wife of the deceased. It is also drawn to our attention that the other consideration is that the person claiming the right to bury the deceased must be one who is demonstrated to have been close to him or her during his or her lifetime. Regarding this last limb, the Court of Appeal in Samuel Onindo Wambi vs. COO & Another Kisumu Civil App. No. 13 of 2011 (2015) eKLR expressed the following view:
41.The fact that the deceased conducted his personal affairs under Luo custom is not contested. The learned judge was keenly aware of the incontrovertible evidence that before his death, the deceased had been separated from the 1st respondent for a long period of time and that throughout that period, he was married and lived in the same compound (different houses) with the 3rd appellant in their home in Ongielo Village. Whereas under ordinary circumstances, it would have been easy to say that the 1st respondent ranked higher in order of right to burying the decease, we pause to consider this - did the learned judge err in failing to consider whether the conduct of Patrisia and the deceased while alive extinguished her right to bury the deceased, as to render the burial to fall within one of the exceptions?
42.Since both parties are in agreement that the divorce was never concluded for want of a decree absolute, what would one make of the deceased’s conduct that even after the decree nisi had issued in the divorce cause, he bought land in his name for Patrisia to establish her home at Nguka? From the evidence of the respondent’s witnesses, under Luo custom amorous tendencies alone would not be the yardstick to determine where a polygamous man is laid to rest; the favourite wife syndrome may dance itself lame during the lifetime of the source of such deep affection and the object of such affection, but in death, the light dims; and rank and file principle takes prominence.
43.We are alive to the principles set by this Court (differently constituted) in San vs. GW, Civil Appeal No. 1 of 2020 at Kisumu, that:Unlike the foregoing cases, the years of separation were interspersed with periodical interactions by both spouses; the deceased maintained some level of contact with Patrisia, beyond treating her as an estranged wife, or one for whom no relationship existed. He still participated in activities within her home, recognizing her as the mother of his children, attending the traditional engagement ceremonies of his daughters and receiving dowry, buying land and building materials for her to set up a home, and no amount of judicial craft can change the fact that the deceased’s conduct was simply a reflection of an older man so besotted with his younger wife; and not a totally estranged spouse.
44.Apart from that, the learned judge noted that Patrisia’s conduct had to be counted in her favour, she welcomed the deceased whenever he went to her home, joined him in social ceremonies; and visited him when he was ill. This situation is so distinguishable from the one envisaged in the Samuel Onindo case (supra), that it would be difficult to find that the learned judge departed from well tested jurisprudence; or that he failed to take into account certain relevant factors, as to warrant our interference.
45.Where is the deceased to be buried? PW2 aged 82 years old and PW3 aged 88 years maintained that feelings of affection were not what would determine a polygamous man’s resting place, that even when the flames of love had been lost, as long as there was no divorce, the honours rested firmly with the first wife. The appellant’s counsel argues that the two witnesses are not experts in Luo customs; and we agree, yet in the absence of any other source (it is significant that neither party considered it prudent to call an expert in Luo Custom or even cite texts on Luo custom such as Paul Mboya’s text Luo kitgi gi Timbegi meaning: Luo: Customs, Tradition and Beliefs [Mboya:1986; (1938)], then it was only apt that the learned judge recognized the value of these witnesses’ testimonies, not as expert witnesses, indeed the learned judge was fully aware that they fell short of that mark, but in accepting their evidence as a useful guide, he observed that given their ages, they were “witnesses versed in Luo Customary Law out of prolonged use of the same and not experts as a result of any technical training envisaged under section 48 of the Evidence Act.” It is our considered view, that faced with the lack of adequate resources, this was the most rational approach that was taken which we cannot fault.
46.As regards the place of burial, it is agreed by the parties that the trial judge erred in finding that Kudha was the deceased’s matrimonial home; both parties agree that Kudha was the ancestral home and we concur that the same was merely an error that can be corrected by this court via the ‘slip rule’. The import and operationalization of the powers to review under the Slip Rule was explained by the Court in Sanitam Services (E.A.) Limited vs. Rentokil (K) Limited & Another [2019] eKLR as follows:
47.The Supreme Court on its part in the case of Fredrick Otieno Outa v. Jared Odoyo Okello & 3 Others [2017] eKLR pointed out that the errors to be corrected under the Slip Rule must be those that are so obvious and whose correction cannot lead to any controversy or a change in the substance of the judgment. In that regard, the Court while referring to section 21(4) of the Supreme Court Act stated that:
48.The preceding evaluation and analysis of the evidence persuades us that the learned judge intended to refer to Nguka Village, and particularly parcel No. Siaya/Ohia Malo/4240 located at Nguka village in Nyilima, Rarieda Sub – County where Patrisia’s home was established. Ultimately, the outcome is that there is no basis upon which to interfere with the learned judge’s decision, and this appeal is dismissed. Each party shall bear its own costs.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT KISUMU THIS 9TH DAY OF MAY, 2025.H. A. OMONDI………………………………JUDGE OF APPEALF. TUIYOTT………………………………JUDGE OF APPEALL. KIMARU………………………………JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a true copy of the original.SignedDEPUTY REGISTRAR