Republic v Registrar of Societies Ex parte Michael Ogogo & 8 others [2017] KEHC 2749 (KLR)

Republic v Registrar of Societies Ex parte Michael Ogogo & 8 others [2017] KEHC 2749 (KLR)

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

JUDICIAL REVIEW NO.  587 OF 2016

IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY  MICHAEL  OGOGO, NELSON

ABBOT   AND  JOHNSON  ODUK( suing  as officials  of COLEA

Nairobi  County   Association) FOR  ORDER OF  CERTIORARI,

PROHIBITION AND  MANDAMUS

AND

IN THE MATTER OF CONSTITUTION OF KENYA 2010

AND

IN THE MATTER OF THE SOCIETIES ACT (CAP, 108)

BETWEEN

REPUBLIC........................................................................APPLICANT

VERSUS

THE REGISTRAR OF SOCIETIES............................RESPONDENT

AND

MICHAEL OGOGO]                                                                              

NELSON ABBOT]                                                                                

JOHNSON  ODUK]( suing  as  officials of :-                                 

COLEA Nairobi County Association)......EXPARTE APPLICANT

AND

JECKONIAH ONYANGO OJUNGA]                                                   

SYLVANCE ODHIAMBO OBADE]                                                       

CALEB ODAWO OWANG]                                                                  

BEN OULO]                                                                                           

PETER ODHIAMBO OBIERO]....................INTERESTED PARTIES

JUDGMENT

1. On  6th December  2016  this court  granted to the  exparte  applicant leave  to institute  Judicial Review  proceedings for the following  orders:

a. Certiorari to quash the respondent’s decision to continually condone interference with Colea Limited Nairobi County Association (hereinafter referred to as COLEA) file SOC/65144 by non members/imposters/persons who ceased to be members.

b. Certorari  to quash  the respondent’s  decision to sanction and  oversee  an unlawful and  unprocedural  purported  election of Jeckoniah Onyango Ojunga, Sylvance  Odhiambo Obae, Caleb Odawo Owang, Ben  Oulo, Peter Odhiambo  Obiero as officials  of COLEA  Nairobi County Association;

c. Prohibition against Jeckoniah  Onyango  Ojunga,  Sylvance  Odhiambo Obade, Caleb Odawo Owang, Ben Oulo, Peter Odhiambo Obiero/then agents, servants, principals  restraining  them from dealing in any  manner  whatsoever  with the  assets  of Colea  Nairobi  County Association  and or interfering  in the affairs  of Colea  Nairobi County  Association  as officials  or otherwise;

d. An order for  mandamus compelling  the respondent  to confirm  the exparte  applicants  as the  officials  of Colea  Nairobi County Association whereof  registering  them as  such.

e. Stay of any dealings and  continuous  intermeddling by Jechoniah  Onyango Ojunga, Sylvance  Odhiambo Obade, Caleb Odawo Owang, Ben  Oulo, Peter  Odhiambo Obiero, their agents, servants, principals with the  assets  and  or affairs  of Colea  Nairobi County Association upon  hearing  and  determination  of this application.

f. That all necessary and consequential orders and   directions be given.

g. Costs of the application be provided for.

2. The  motion is based  on the statutory  statement  and verifying affidavit  sworn by  Michael Ogogo  and  Johnson  Oduk  on 24th November  2016   accompanying  the application for  leave.

3. The order  granting  leave  was very  specific  that the  exparte  applicant  were given  14 days  from the date  of leave which  was  6th December  2016 ( Tuesday).

4. In other words, the substantive notice of motion was to be filed on or before 20th December 2016.  The court  was  also directed  the other parties  to file their   response  and the matter  was slated  for mention on 18th January 2017 to confirm  compliance, noting that time stopped  running  from  21st  December  2016  to 6th  January  2017 when the matter  came up for  mention on 18th January 2017, the exparte  applicant’s  counsel  Mr Akech  informed  the court that  they had  filed their  application in time.

5. The court gave directions  and  all the parties  filed responses and  submissions  which they  adopted  as  canvassing  their respective  positions  and the court  was asked  to write  this judgment  on the merits  of the applicants.

6. However, as  I retired  to write  the judgment, I observed  that the notice  of motion  dated  20th December  2016   was filed  on  21st  December  2016  and  court  fees  received  vide  official triplicate  receipt  No. 8047526 dated  21st December  2016  for kshs  25,800 by A. Kalwa  Advocate.

7. According to the  2016  annual calendar, 14 days  end on  20th  December  2016  and not  21st December 2016.

8. This is so because in computing  time, the 1st day (6th December) is excluded and the last  day  (20th December) is  included  to make  14 days.( See Article 259 (5) (a)  of the Constitution and  order 50 Rule 8 of the Civil Procedure Rules  which all stipulate that  in computing  time  for  doing any act, the first  day of the order  is excluded and the last day of the event shall be included.

9. In this  case, the order  for leave  stipulates  that the substantive  motion should  be filed  and  served  within 14  days  from  6th December  2016  which is 20th December  2016.  However, the exparte  applicants  filed the motion on  21st December  2016 and when  their advocates  appeared  in court on18th January  2017, Mr  Akech  piously  notified  the court  that they had  filed the  notice of motion   in time.

10. Therefore, although the parties counsels  on record  have put  forth the strongest  arguments on behalf  of  their respective  clients, this court must  first  and  foremost   determine  whether the  substantive  motion which  was filed  out of the 14 days  granted  on   6th December  2017  is validly   on  record.

11. Order  53  Rule  (1) (1) and  (2)  of the Civil Procedure  Rules provides:

“1. No application for an order of mandamus, prohibition or certiorari shall be made unless  leave  therefore  had been granted in accordance  with this  rule.

2. An application for  such leave  as aforesaid  shall be  made exparte to  a judge  in chambers, and shall be  accompanied  by a statement  setting  out and  the name  and  description of the applicant, the relief  sought, and the grounds on which it is  sought  and by  affidavits  verifying  the facts  relied on.

12. The above  provisions  clearly  stipulate  that for one to apply for  Judicial Review  orders of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus, leave to  apply must  be sought   and  granted by  the court.  It follows  that in the absence  of leave to  apply, or  where such leave  granted has  lapsed  before the  filing of  the substantive  motion, the main motion  cannot lie as the court’s  jurisdiction would be ousted  with the  lapsing of leave  unless  enlargement  of time is  sought  and  granted.

13. The filing  of the substantive  motion upon leave  being granted  goes  to the jurisdiction  of the court to  entertain  the substantive  motion, it is not a procedural technicality curable  by application of the overriding  objective of the law  or the principle  espoused  in Article 159(2)  of the Constitution.

14. Under  Order  53(3) (1) of the Civil Procedure  Rules, the leave  once granted  to apply for the 3 Judicial Review remedies of  Certiorari, Prohibition or Mandamus, the substantive  motion must be  filed  within 21  days  of the date of leave.

15. However, the court having  granted  to the  exparte  applicant  a shorter  period  of  14 days, owing to the urgency  of the matter  before it  as no stay  had been granted, it  was  upon the exparte applicant  to file  the main  motion within  the time  frame  granted  by  the court.

16. Failure  to do  so or to comply  with the order of the court  on the given  timelines  renders  the substantive  motion as filed inept  and  the  question of whether  or not the delay  in filing  of the motion is inordinate   or excusable  does  not arise.

17. It is the leave of court that originates the substantive pleadings in the Judicial Review  applications  for certiorari, mandamus  and  prohibition.

18. Faced within  a similar situation  in JR  97 of  2016  Linda  Okello  vs The  Inspector  General of Police  and The National  Police Service  and  Others[2016] e KLR and Republic vs The Kenya Medical Laboratory  Technicians and Technologists Board Exparte Edna Mwende Kavindu (2017] e KLR where the exparte  applicants, upon being  granted leave of court  to institute  Judicial Review  proceedings  went to slumber  and  filed  the motions out of the  timelines granted  by the court, this court, citing  with approval  the Court of Appeal decision in United Housing Estate  Limited  vs Nyals (K) Limited  Civil Appeal  No. Nairobi  84/96 where the  Court of Appeal stated:

A party who obtains an order of the court on certain  specified  conditions s can only  continue  enjoying the benefits   of that order  if the conditions attaching  to it are  scrupulously  honoured  and in  the event  of a proved  failure  to comply  with the  attached condition, the court  has inherent  power  to recall  or vacate  such an order.”

19. I thus observed:

It follows  that a party  cannot  unilaterally  choose  not to comply with conditions  attached  to the exercise of the court’s  discretion  in his   or her favour on the  ground that  he or she  ought  to access  justice”

20. The exparte applicants had the  option of seeking  leave of  court  to enlarge  the lapsed  time  by applying to regularize  that lapse  as  stipulated   in Order  50 Rule  6  of the Civil Procedure Rules  but they did not hence they have effectively disentitled  themselves of the favourable exercise  of  the court’s  discretion.

21. In Wilson  Osolo v John Ojiambo  Ochola  & Another  CA  6 of  1995, the Court of Appeal  while  appreciating  that Section 9(3)  of the Law Reform  Act Cap 26 Laws of  Kenya  quite  clearly  stipulates  that an application  for  leave to  apply for  an order of  certiorari cannot be  made six  months  after the date  of the order sought  to be quashed  and that there is  no provision  for extending  the time prescribed  there under, nonetheless  was of  the  considered view  that:

“It was  a mandatory requirement of Order 53 Rule  3(1) of the Civil Procedure  Rules then and  it is now  again so that the  notice of motion  must be  filed within  21 days of  grant of such leave.

No such  notice of motion having  been  apparently  filed within  21 days of  15th February  1982, there was no proper  application  before  the  superior  court.  This period  of  21 days  could have  been extended by a reasonable period had there been an  application under Order 49 of the Civil Procedure  Rules.  There was no such application  save the  one  dated  28th  April 1994.  That came  too late  in the day in any  event and the learned  judge erred  in even considering  the extension  of time  some  12  years  after the event.” 

22. In John Ongeri  Mariaria &  2 Others  vs  Paul Matundura  Capp No. 301/2003  [2004]  2 EA  163, the Court of Appeal  quite  properly  guided  that:

“Legal business can no longer  be handled  in such sloppy  and  careless  manner.  Some  clients must learn at  their costs  that the  consequences  of careless  and  leisurely  approach to work must  fall on  their shoulders………..whereas  it is true  that the court  has unfettered  discretion, like all judicial discretion must  be exercised upon reason  not capriciously  or sympathy alone…justice   must  look both  ways as  the rules of  procedure  are meant  to regulate  administration of justice  and they are not  meant to  assist  the  indolent.”

23. Odunga J  quite recently in Republic  vs Cabinet  Secretary, information Communication for Technology & Another  exparte  Celestine Okuta  & others [2016] e KLR, faced  with  a similar situation where the applicant  failed  to file  substantive  notice of motion  within the timelines stipulated  in the order  for leave  to apply, expressed himself  thus and I concur.

“In my view , court  orders are serious decisions  that can only be exercised  based on material  placed before the court  and cannot  be ignored  on the ground  that they  are technicalities.

In my view, the law is  that technicalities  of procedure ought  not to  automatically lead to  termination  of proceedings   and that   the court  must have  the power to  save the same where  material  exist before the court  to justify  non-compliance.  However, where there is none, and where in fact the applicant   adopts an incorrect position of the law to justify his inaction, such omission cannot be exercised.”

24. In this  case, 20th December  2016  which  was  the last day  of the order  for leave   was a working  day and  moreso, court fees for the filing  of  the substantive  notice of  motion   was assessed by the court  registry  on 20th December  2016   at shs  25,800/- with an  endorsement  by the assessment  clerk.  It  was a Tuesday.

25. However the motion was filed  on  21st  December  2016   which  was the 15th day.  No leave to enlarge  the day  was  sought  and  obtained and on the  first mention date to  confirm compliance  with court  order of  6th December  2016, the exparte  applicant’s  counsel piously informed the court that they had filed the  motion within  time, which  was  a lie.

26. It is for the above  reasons  that this court  would be  wasting  very precious judicial  time  if it  delved into the  merits  and  demerits  of  the motion that never  was as  that would  amount to no more than chasing  a wild goose with the  aim of achieving  no results  at the end  of the day.

27. Accordingly,  I find and hold  that the  notice of motion  dated  20th December 2016  and filed  in court  on 21st  December  2017 is incompetently before the court and  incapable  of adjudication  on its merits.  The same is hereby struck out.

28. As the respondents  and interested  party gave  a blind  eye on this  very important  aspect  of the law, I decline  to award  them any  costs  of the incompetent  application.  In this case, the court must take credit for being vigilant. Each party to bear their own costs of these proceedings.

Dated, signed and delivered in open court at Nairobi this 18th day of October, 2017.

 R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE

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