In re CMN (Child) (Adoption Cause 81 of 2015) [2015] KEHC 7890 (KLR) (Family) (6 November 2015) (Ruling)
In re of C M N (child) [2015] eKLR
Neutral citation:
[2015] KEHC 7890 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Adoption Cause 81 of 2015
WM Musyoka, J
November 6, 2015
C M N ................................ THE CHILD
In the matter of
JN
1st Applicant
CIAO
2nd Applicant
Section 176 of the Children Act, 2001 provides for the recognition of a foreign child adoption decree but does not enable the court to grant orders for registration as a citizen & issuance of an identification card and passport
The applicants sought among other orders that the adoption order issued by the Zambian court be adopted and issued by the High Court; and a declaration that their adopted child was a Kenyan citizen. The court found that the foreign adoption decree would be capable of adoption under section 176 of the Children Act and the rules made thereunder. The court further held that section 176 only provided for the adoption of the foreign adoption order in relation to the adopted child by a Kenyan court. The adoption of the foreign adoption decree would only provide the applicant with additional documentation to facilitate the application for the child’s registration as a citizen.
Constitutional Law – citizenship – registration of a child adopted by a Kenyan citizen as a Kenyan citizen – procedural requirements relating to acquisition of citizenship by adopted children in Kenya – whether registration as a citizen was the automatic right of an adopted child or such registration required the adopted child to follow the applicable procedure and meet the set requirements – Constitution of Kenya, article 15(3); Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act (cap 170), section 14.Civil Practice and Procedure - judgments – enforcement of foreign judgments – adoption by the High Court of a foreign decree for the adoption of a child – what was the nature of considerations governing the adoption by the High Court of a foreign decree for the adoption of a child - Children Act (cap.141), section 176; Civil Procedure Act (cap 21), section 9; Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act (cap 170), section 14.Statutes – interpretation of statutory provisions - interpretation of section 176 of the Children Act - whether section 176 of the Children Act enabled the court to grant orders for registration of an adopted child as a Kenyan citizen and the issuance of a passport and national identity card - Children Act (cap 141) section 176.
Brief facts
Through an originating summons, the applicants sought various orders. Particularly, the applicants sought orders that the adoption order dated September 10, 2004 issued by the Subordinate Court of the First Class Holden at Lusaka, Zambia be adopted and issued by the High Court. They also sought orders declaring that their adopted child was a Kenyan citizen and for the Directorate of Immigration and Registration of Persons to issue the child with a national identification card and a passport.The applicants adopted the child whose biological father was the 1st applicant while the 2nd applicant was his step-mother. The child’s biological mother was married to his father but she died and his father married the 2nd applicant. The 2nd applicant was a Kenyan citizen who married the 1st applicant at Nairobi.
Issues
- What was the nature of considerations governing the adoption by the High Court of a foreign decree for the adoption of a child?
- Whether section 176 of the Children Act enabled the court to grant orders for registration as a Kenyan citizen and the issuance of a passport and national identity card to an adopted child.
- What was the effect of the failure to make the rules envisaged in section 176 of the Children Act on the effect of an overseas adoption.
Held
- Section 176 of the Children Act provided a mechanism for the recognition and enforcement of foreign adoption decrees and it meant that a person seeking to enforce a foreign adoption decree did not need to rely on the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act. The foreign adoption decree would be capable of adoption under section 176 of the Children Act and the rules made thereunder.
- Article 15(3) of the Constitution provided that a child who was not a citizen but was adopted by a citizen was entitled to make an application to be registered as a citizen. Section 14 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act made provisions for requirements relating to such an application for citizenship. The requirements included proof that the adopting parent had Kenyan citizenship, production of a valid adoption certificate issued in a reciprocating state or other jurisdiction whose orders and decrees were recognised in Kenya and proof of the child's lawful residence in Kenya. Therefore, the application for citizenship required the applicant to follow the set procedure and provide proof. It was not an automatic entitlement that was available without following the requisite procedure.
- The registration of a child as a Kenyan citizen was subject to the procedure set out in the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act and the rules made under it. Section 176 of the Children Act did not enable the court to issue declarations that a child was a Kenyan citizen as such an issue on citizenship was governed by the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act.
- Section 9 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act allowed a court to issue orders for a child to be presumed to be a citizen by birth under circumstances where a child was found lost or abandoned within Kenya. That presumption was made after following the procedure set out in section 9 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act. Section 9 was not applicable to the applicant's circumstances.
- Section 176 of the Children Act only provided for the adoption of the foreign adoption order in relation to the adopted child by a Kenyan court. The adoption of the foreign adoption decree would only provide the applicant with additional documentation to facilitate the application for the child’s registration as a citizen.
- The requirements of section 176(3) of the Children Act were to the effect that the foreign adoption award was to be lodged in court within such a period and in such manner as specified in the rules made by the Chief Justice for that purpose. The contemplated rules for purposes of operationalizing section 176 of the Children Act had not been made. However, the enjoyment of rights provided for in section 176 would not be hampered or frustrated by the omission by the Chief Justice to make rules to facilitate their enforcement. The court could entertain applications under that provision in exercise of its inherent jurisdiction.
- The foreign adoption order was made in Zambia, a Commonwealth country and adoption orders made by competent courts of that country was envisaged under section 176 of the Children Act. Additionally, the 2nd applicant was a Kenyan citizen who had not lost her nationality by marrying a Zambian. Therefore, the requirements for the adoption of the foreign adoption decree had been met.
Application partly allowed.
Orders
The court granted orders for the adoption of the foreign decree but declined to grant orders for the registration of the adopted child as a citizen and for the issuance of a passport and a national identity card.
Citations
StatutesKenya;
- Children Act (cap 141) sections 176, 176(3) - (Interpreted)
- Civil Procedure Act (cap 21) section 9 - (Interpreted)
- Constitution of Kenya articles 15(3); 18; Chapter 3 - (Interpreted)
- Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act (cap 43) In general - (Cited)
- Kenya Citizenship And Immigration Act (cap 170) section 14(a-c) - (Interpreted)
- Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Regulations, 2012 (cap 170 Sub Leg) regulation 10 - (Interpreted)
Ruling
1.The originating summons dated March 18, 2015 seeks three principal orders, namely-(a)That the adoption order made on September 10, 2004 by the Subordinate Court of the First Class Holden at Lusaka, Zambia, be adopted and issued by this court as such;(b)That CMN, hereinafter referred to as M, be declared to be a Kenyan citizen by virtue of being adopted by a Kenyan citizen; and(c)That the Directorate of Immigration and Registration of Persons be authorised to issue the said M with a national identification card and passport.
2.The applicants are the adoptive parents of the said M. The first applicant, JN, is his biological father. The second applicant is his step-mother. His biological mother was a wife of the first applicant and she died, whereupon the first applicant married the second applicant, after which the couple then adopted M.
3.The second applicant is a Kenyan citizen by birth, having been born in Nairobi on December 14, 1969 to Kenyan citizens called HO and MO. She holds a Kenyan national identity card being number [Particulars Withheld] issued on July 6, 1999. She married the first applicant in Nairobi on July 6, 2002.
4.The application dated March 18, 2015 is premised on section 176 of the Children Act and section 9 of the Civil Procedure Act.
5.Section 176 of the Children Act dwells on the effect of overseas adoptions. It provides as follows:-
6.Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Act on the other hand provides-
7.As the proceedings herein concern the enforcement of a foreign judgment or decree, it would be relevant to mention the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act, cap 43, Laws of Kenya. That should be the primary law on enforcement of foreign judgments. By its preamble, it makes it clear that the enforcement of foreign judgments is subject to the principle of reciprocity, and Kenya grants reciprocal treatment only to judgments emanating from courts of countries that accord reciprocal treatment to Kenyan judgments.
8.The enforcement of a foreign adoption award should be tested against the provisions of the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act. Section 176 of the Children Act, should be read against the provisions of the said statute.
9.My reading of section 176 of the Children Act is that it provides a mechanism for recognition and enforcement of foreign adoption decrees outside the provisions of the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act which would mean that a person seeking to rely on and enforce a foreign adoption decree need not rely on the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act. Such foreign adoption decree can be adopted in Kenya through section 176 of the children and the rules of procedure made thereunder without recourse to the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act.
10.The Originating Summons before me in principle seeks a declaration that M is a Kenyan citizen by virtue of having been adopted by a Kenyan citizen. The other prayers are secondary, the prayer for adoption of the decision of the Zambian court and that seeking that the Directorate of Immigration and Registration of Persons be directed to issue M with a national identification card and passport. Whether I can grant these prayers will depend largely on whether the main prayer can be properly granted on an application founded on section 176 of the Children Act.
11.The law on citizenship in Kenya is governed by the Constitution of Kenya, 2010, and the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act, cap 172, Laws of Kenya.
12.The whole chapter three of the Constitution deals with citizenship. M is not a Kenyan citizen, he is asking to be declared one. He was not born in Kenya nor was he born of Kenyan parents, therefore article 14 of the Constitution dealing with citizenship by birth does not apply to him. The provision which applies to his case is article 15 of the Constitution, which governs citizenship by registration. The most relevant provision is article 15(3) which states-
13.The Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act draws its life from article 18 of the Constitution which provides, and for our purposes we are limited to its paragraph (a), as follows-
14.The said legislation was enacted after the promulgation of the Constitution of Kenya, 2010. It commenced on August 30, 2011. It deals with acquisition of citizenship by adopted children at section 14, which mirrors article 15(3) of the Constitution, where it provides as follows-
15.From the wording of article 15(3) of the Constitution and section 14 of the Kenyan Citizenship and Immigration Act, a non-citizen child adopted by a Kenyan citizen does not become a Kenyan citizen automatically. An application ought to be made for registration of such child as a Kenyan citizen. Such application shall then be evaluated on the basis of the criteria set out in section 14(a)(b) and (c) of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act.
16.The application for citizenship by registration is governed by regulation 10 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Regulations, 2012, which, for avoidance of doubt, states as follows-
17.The registration as a citizen of a foreign child adopted by a Kenyan citizen is thus governed by the very detailed provisions of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act. There is nothing in the Children Act which gives the adoption court jurisdiction to declare such child a Kenyan citizen. The child’s registration as Kenyan citizen must follow the process laid down in the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act and the rules made under it. Certainly, section 176 of the Children Act does not enable me to make the sort of declarations that are sought in the originating summons before me, and there is therefore no basis for using the provisions of the Children Act on adoptions to achieve that which is governed by the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act. The parties ought to exhaust the processes set out in regulation 10 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Regulation before resorting to court action.
18.18. Perhaps the applicants in this case perhaps had section 9 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act in mind when they made their application. The said provision empowers a court, in the circumstances to which that provision applies, to issue an order directing that a child be presumed to be a citizen by birth. That provision is limited to cases where the child is found abandoned or lost within Kenyan borders. The making of a presumption that the child is a Kenyan citizen by birth should be made after the steps set out in section 9(1), (2), (3), (4) and (5) of the Act have been taken.
19.The Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act does not have a provision that parallels section 9 thereof with regard to foreign children adopted by Kenyan citizens. There is no provision in that law that would allow a court seized of a matter of such nature to declare that such child is a Kenyan citizen by adoption. In the absence of such provision the parties have to resort to section 14 of the Act and regulation 10 of the Regulations.
20.The reference to “on application” in article 15(3) of the Constitution and section 14 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act, to my mind, means the application envisaged by regulation 10 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act. It does not refer to an application to be made in court under section 176 of the Children Act. Needless to say, the provisions of the Children Act do not provide a route for the registration of a person as a citizen without passing through the mechanism provided by the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act.
21.The provision in section 176 of the Children Act only provides for adoption of an adoption order made by a foreign court. Where a Kenyan court eventually adopts such an order under section 176 of the Children Act, such adoption would not have the effect of automatically making the adopted foreign child a Kenyan citizen. Such child will still have to comply with the requirements of article 15(3) of the Constitution, section 14 of the Kenyan Citizenship and Immigration Act and regulation 10 of the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Regulations. The adoption of the foreign adoption decree by the Kenya court only avails to the applicant additional documentation that they may present to the Cabinet Secretary as required by regulation 10.
22.In view of what I have said so far, I am unable to grant the orders sought in prayers 2 and 3 of the originating summons dated March 18, 2015.
23.With regard to prayer 1 of the application, I have to contend with section 176(3) of the Children Act, which requires that the foreign adoption decree ought to be lodged in court within such a period and in such manner as may be specified in rules to be made by the Chief Justice. Apparently, the rules contemplated to be made by the Chief Justice to operationalise section 176 of the Children Act have not been made. As it is there is no framework under the said Act for entertaining applications under section 176 of the Children Act.
24.What is the effect of the absence of such rules? Does it mean that section 176 of the Children Act is therefore inoperative and should remain so until such rules are made? I do not think so. The substantive law has conferred a right under section 176. The enjoyment of that right should not be hampered or frustrated by the omission by the Chief Justice to legislate rules to facilitate enjoyment thereof. This court has inherent jurisdiction to do justice in such circumstances as those in the present case. The application in prayer 1 is one that this court can entertain in exercise of its inherent powers.
25.The adoption order in question was made by a court of law in Zambia. I take judicial notice of the fact that Zambia is a Commonwealth country and adoption orders made by competent courts of that country are among those envisaged in section 176 of the Children Act. I have noted that one of the adoptors is a Kenyan citizen by birth. There is no evidence that she lost her citizenship after she married a Zambian citizen. She holds a Kenya national identity card issued in 1999. I am satisfied that prayer 1 of the application is available for granting.
26.In the end, I allow the application by way of the originating summons dated March 18, 2015 in terms prayer 1 thereof, prayers 2 and 3 thereof are dismissed. The applicants shall bear their own costs.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 6TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2015.W MUSYOKAJUDGE