Amos v Director of Public Prosecutions & 2 others (Application E059 of 2021) [2022] KEHC 18088 (KLR) (Judicial Review) (28 October 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEHC 18088 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Application E059 of 2021
J Ngaah, J
October 28, 2022
Between
Duncan Ndegwa Amos
Applicant
and
Director of Public Prosecutions
1st Respondent
Director of Criminal Investigations
2nd Respondent
Inspector General of Police
3rd Respondent
Ruling
1The application before court is a chamber summons dated June 6, 2022. It has been filed under Order 53 Rule 1(1) (2) (3) and (4) of the Civil Procedure Rules.
2The applicant seeks leave to file a motion for the order of mandamus and the prayers for the leave have been framed as follows:
3The verifying affidavit sworn by Duncan Ndegwa Amos on April 13, 2022 in support of the summons is to the effect that the deponent is one of the directors and promoters of Muvir Holdings Company Limited alongside Francis Mburu Kimani, Rosemary Muthoni Mwangi and James Nyarunda Ombati. Other directors or promoters have been named as Victor Wachira Muriuki, S.J Richard Olang and Carol Muthoni Mutuanjau.
4The deponent alleges that their names were fraudulently removed from the list of shareholders/directors and replaced with the names of James Irura Kanyamba and Joseph Wachira Mugweru.
5The deponent reported what he thought was fraud to the 3rd respondent in 2014 but when he pursued the matter further, he was advised that a forensic audit had been conducted. He never received any results of the audit though. He also learnt that the 3rd respondent forwarded the investigations or inquiry file to the 1st respondent but no action was taken by the 1st respondent in prosecuting those the applicant had complained about.
6It has also been deposed that one of the properties of Muvir Holdings Company Limited was sold illegally to Engen Kenya Limited and that this sale gave rise to High Court Civil Suit No. 248 of 2016. This suit has been concluded and a decree issued in favour of the company. The applicant fears that the decree will be settled and funds distributed amongst the existing shareholders to his exclusion and detriment.
7The 1st respondent opposed the application and to that end filed grounds of objection dated 20 June 2022 in which he contended that the application is misconceived, frivolous and premature and, in any event, an abuse of the court process. The 2nd and 3rd respondents did not respond to the application.
8I have considered the application the response thereto and the written submissions by the respective parties.
9I must start by saying that, at this stage of the proceedings, all that I would be concerned with is whether the applicant has made out an arguable case; in other words, whether it is a case which upon consideration may merit the grant of the judicial review order of mandamus. The leave stage of the proceedings is not meant to determine whether or not the applicant’s case will succeed but whether it is arguable. Lord Diplock was of this opinion in IRC V National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd (1982) 617, (1981) 2 ALL ER 93) where he suggested the following approach:
10Thus, on this basis, the applicant only has to show not that it is, but that it might turn out to be, an arguable case.Prayer 2 of the chamber summons can quickly be disposed of.Article 157(6) (a) of the Constitution gives the Director of Public Prosecutions not only the power to prosecute but also the discretion to institute criminal proceedings; it states as follows:
11It is obvious from this provision of the Constitution that there is an element of discretion in exercise of the powers of prosecution by the 1st respondent.
12It is trite that a judicial review court will be hesitant to intervene and interfere with the exercise of the discretion unless it can be demonstrated that the discretion was exercised whimsically or capriciously rather than judiciously. The court emphasised this point in Chief Constable of the North West Police vs Evans (1982) 3 ALL ER 141 where it was stated as follows:
13Similar observations were made by Lord Diplock in Secretary of State for Education and Science v Tameside Metropolitan BC [1976] 3 All ER 665 at 695, [1977] AC 1014 at 1064 where he noted:
14Courts may intervene to review a power conferred by statute on the ground of unfairness but only if the unfairness in the purported exercise of the power be such as to amount to an abuse of the power. See Preston v IRC [1985] 2 All ER 327, [1985] AC 835, per Lord Templeman.
15It has not been demonstrated that in opting not to prosecute those persons the applicant complained about, the 1st respondent did not exercise his discretion appropriately or that he abused his powers of prosecution.
16It must also be remembered that mandamus enforces duties and not powers although in certain instances a power may be coupled with a duty so that the donee of power would be obliged to exercise it. (See Foulkes Administrative Law, 7th Edition at page 368).
17Again as in specific performance, the court will not allow mandamus if the form of the order requires day-to-day supervision. (See Foulkes Administrative Law (ibid) at page 371). If the court was to direct the Director of Public Prosecutions to prosecute, there would be some degree of supervision required on whether the prosecution is being undertaken or not. A mandamus order would not issue in such circumstances.
18Turning on the question of retrieval of information from the 1st respondent or any of the respondents for that matter, the information sought by the applicant, if leave is granted in terms of prayer 2 of the chamber summons is, no doubt, in the custody of a public body and therefore access to such information would be subject to the provisions of Access to Information Act No. 31 of 2016. According to section 3 of that Act,the object and the purposes of the Act is to, inter alia,
19The procedure for applying and processing the application to access information is provided for under sections 8 and 9 respectively of the Act. Section 8 states as follows:
8.Application for access(1)An application to access information shall be made in writing in English or Kiswahili and the applicant shall provide details and sufficient particulars for the public officer or any other official to understand what information is being requested.(2)Where an applicant is unable to make a written request for access to information in accordance with subsection (1) because of illiteracy or disability, the information officer shall take the necessary steps to ensure that the applicant makes a request in manner that meets their needs.(3)The information officer shall reduce to writing, in a prescribed form the request made under subsection (2) and the information officer shall then furnish the applicant with a copy of the written request.(4)A public entity may prescribe a form for making an application to access information, but any such form shall not be such as to unreasonably delay requests or place an undue burden upon applicants and no application may be rejected on the ground only that the applicant has not used the prescribed form.On its part, section 9 reads as follows:
9.Processing of application(1)Subject to section 10, a public officer shall make a decision on an application as soon as possible, but in any event, within twenty one days of receipt of the application(2)Where the information sought concerns the life or liberty of a person, the information officer shall provide the information within forty-eight hours of the receipt of the application.(3)The information officer to whom a request is made under subsection (2) may extend the period for response on a single occasion for a period of not more than fourteen days if—(a)the request is for a large amount of information or requires a search through a large amount of information and meeting the stipulated time would unreasonably interfere with the activities of the information holder; or(b)consultations are necessary so as to comply with the request and the consultations cannot be reasonably completed within the stipulated time.(4)As soon as the information access officer has made a decision as to whether to provide access to information, he or she shall immediately communicate the decision to the requester, indicating—(a)whether or not the public entity or private body holds the information sought;(b)whether the request for information is approved:(c)if the request is declined the reasons for making that decision, including the basis for deciding that the information sought is exempt, unless the reasons themselves would be exempt information; and(d)if the request is declined, a statement about how the requester may appeal to the Commission";(5)A public officer referred to in subsection (1) may seek the assistance of any other public officer as the first mentioned public officer considers necessary for the proper discharge of his or her duties and such other public officer shall render the required assistance.(6)Where the applicant does not receive a response to an application within the period stated in subsection (1), the application shall be deemed to have been rejected.
20What these provisions of the law entail is that there is a prescribed procedure in the Access to Information Act for accessing the kind of information for which the applicant is seeking a mandamus order.
21In summary, an application has to be made to a public officer for the information sought. The officer will process the information and make a decision on whether or not to release the information within twenty-one days of the date of receipt of the application. However, where the applicant does not receive a response on his application within the stipulated period, the application shall be deemed to have been rejected.
23Section 9(4) (d) implies that where the application is rejected, the applicant for the information has the option of appealing to the Commission on Administrative Justice established under established by section 3 of the Commission on Administrative Justice Act, No. 23 of 2011.
24No reason has been proffered why the applicant chose to move a judicial review court to obtain information when the manner of accessing such information has been prescribed by an Act of Parliament.
25It is trite that the existence of an alternative remedy is never enough to oust jurisdiction in judicial review (see Leech versus Deputy Governor of Parkhurst Prison (1988) AC 533 per Lord Bridge at 562D). However, it has been held in R versus Inland Review Commissioners, ex p Preston (1985) AC 835 that:
26Addressing the same issue in R versus Peterkin, ex p Soni (1972) Imm AR 253 Lord Widgery CJ had this to say:
27Our very own Court of Appeal has held in the Speaker of the National Assembly v. Karume, Civil Application No. NAI 92 OF 1992 that where there is a clear procedure for the redress of any particular grievance prescribed by the Constitution or an Act of Parliament, that procedure should be strictly followed.
28And section 9 (2) of the Fair Administrative Action Act No. 4 of 2015 is also clear that this court should not entertain disputes whose resolution has been provided for elsewhere by an Act of Parliament. It states as follows:(2)Procedure for judicial review.
29The High Court or a subordinate court under subsection (1) shall not review an administrative action or decision under this Act unless the mechanisms including internal mechanisms for appeal or review and all remedies available under any other written law are first exhausted.
30Thus, both the statute and precedent point to the conclusion that it is pertinent for an aggrieved party to embrace alternative remedies including appellate procedures that have been prescribed by statute before moving court for judicial review remedies. The reviewing courts will always be conscious that in considering whether a public body may have abused its powers they must not abuse their own by entertaining matters which they otherwise need not have entertained.
31To the extent that the applicant has attempted to sidestep the means provided by statute to obtain the information for which he seeks a mandamus order, the application is misconceived.
32But it is also incompetent for one other reason. The mandatory grounds of judicial review upon which the application for judicial review would be grounded upon have not been given. All that the applicant has given as grounds of objection are the depositions he has made in the verifying affidavit.
33It is not in dispute that one of the vital components of an application for judicial review is the grounds upon which it is made. They are important because Order 53 Rule 1(2) states in mandatory terms that the statement accompanying the application must contain, among other things, the grounds upon which the application is made. It reads as follows:(2)An application for such leave as aforesaid shall be made ex parte to a judge in chambers, and shall be accompanied by a statement setting out 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. (Emphasis added).
34And Order 53 Rule 4(1) states unambiguously that no grounds should be relied upon except those specified in the statement accompanying the application for leave.
What are these grounds?
35The grounds for judicial review were enunciated in the English case of Council of Civil Service Unions versus Minister for the Civil Service (1985) A.C. 374,410 in which Lord Diplock set out the three heads which he described as “the grounds upon which administrative action is subject to control by judicial review”. These grounds are illegality, irrationality and procedural impropriety. While discussing susceptibility of administrative actions to judicial review and, in the process defining these grounds, the learned judge stated as follows:
36By “illegality” as a ground for judicial review I mean that the decision-maker must understand correctly the law that regulates his decision-making power and must give effect to it. Whether he has or not is par excellence a justiciable question to be decided, in the event of dispute, by those persons, the judges, by whom the judicial power of the state is exercisable.
37By “irrationality” I mean what can by now be succinctly referred to as “Wednesbury unreasonableness” (Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 K.B. 223). It applies to a decision which is so outrageous in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided could have arrived at it. Whether a decision falls within this category is a question that judges by their training and experience should be well equipped to answer, or else there would be something badly wrong with our judicial system. To justify the court's exercise of this role, resort I think is today no longer needed to Viscount Radcliffe's ingenious explanation in Edwards v. Bairstow [1956] A.C. 14 of irrationality as a ground for a court's reversal of a decision by ascribing it to an inferred though unidentifiable mistake of law by the decision-maker. “Irrationality” by now can stand upon its own feet as an accepted ground on which a decision may be attacked by judicial review.
38I have described the third head as “procedural impropriety” rather than failure to observe basic rules of natural justice or failure to act with procedural fairness towards the person who will be affected by the decision. This is because susceptibility to judicial review under this head covers also failure by an administrative tribunal to observe procedural rules that are expressly laid down in the legislative instrument by which its jurisdiction is conferred, even where such failure does not involve any denial of natural justice. But the instant case is not concerned with the proceedings of an administrative tribunal at all.”
39These grounds of illegality, irrationality and procedural impropriety are ordinarily regarded as the traditional grounds for judicial review. The court will intervene and grant the remedy for judicial review if any of them is proved to exist. But as Lord Diplock suggested, the list is by no means exhaustive. The learned judge hastened to say that further development of this area of law may yield further grounds on a case by case basis. It is in this spirit that the principle of proportionality as a further ground for judicial review has been developed.
40While reiterating the importance of stating grounds for judicial review in concise and precise terms Michael Fordham in his book, Judicial Review Handbook, at Paragraph 34.1 states as follows:
41The ‘new order’ referred to in this passage is Order 53 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of England whose provisions are more or less in pari materia with our own Order 53 of the Civil Procedure Rules, 2010. The point is, however, clear that courts will not entertain applications where grounds have not been identified and accurately stated. Stating the grounds in precise terms is not, as it were, a matter of analytical nicety but it is a practical necessity.
42It follows that where the grounds are not stated, the application is fatally defective as, strictly speaking, it has no foundation upon which it is built. The applicant’s application is such an application and for this reason it cannot see the light of day.
43For these reasons, leave is refused and the applicant’s application is hereby dismissed. I make no orders as to costs.
SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED ON 28 OCTOBER 2022NGAAH JAIRUSJUDGE