Zedka Services Limited v County Secretary, Uasin Gishu County & another (Judicial Review 7 of 2023) [2024] KEHC 5908 (KLR) (24 May 2024) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2024] KEHC 5908 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Judicial Review 7 of 2023
JRA Wananda, J
May 24, 2024
Between
Zedka Services Limited
Applicant
and
The County Secretary, Uasin Gishu County
1st Respondent
The Chief Finance Officer Finance, Uasin Gishu County Government
2nd Respondent
Ruling
1.The Application before Court is the Chamber Summons dated 8/08/2023 and filed through Messrs Kiprop Luseria & Co. Advocates. It seeks prayers as follows:a.Spent [……..]b.An order of mandamus to issue against the Respondents herein namely the County Secretary Uasin Gishu and the Chief Officer, Finance Uasin Gishu, to compel them to proceed and pay the Applicant Kshs 29,437,700/- as per the Certificate of Order against Government issued on 15th June 2023 in the High Court Civil Case No. 9 of 2016.c.The Court be pleased to set a timeline and/or duration within which the Respondents will settle the ordered sum with interest accruing until the date of payment.d.That the Applicant be at liberty to apply to this Court for necessary and/or consequent orders that the Honourable Court may deem fit and just to grant in the circumstances.e.Costs of this Application be borne by the Respondents.
2.In response, the Respondents filed the Notice of Preliminary Objection dated 18/10/2023 as well as the Replying Affidavit sworn on the same date, and both filed on 24/10/2023 through the County Solicitor, County Government of Uasin Gishu.
3.In the Preliminary Objection, quoted verbatim, the Respondents averred as follows:i.That the Application is time-barred, contra statute and a nullity.ii.That the Application offends the provisions of Order 53 Rule 1 & 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules and Section 9(2) and (3) of the Law Reform Act, Cap. 26 Laws of Kenya.iii.That a Judicial Review must be filed within 6 months from the date of the Judgment or decision.iv.That the Ruling herein subject to the Judicial Review Application was issued on 2nd October 2018.v.That the Application is bad in law and an abuse of the Court process and the same should be struck out with costs to the Respondents.
4.In the Replying Affidavit sworn by Eliud Kipkorir Chemaget, the Chief Finance Officer of the County Government of Uasin Gishu, the matters stated in the Preliminary Objection were reiterated. It was then deponed that satisfaction of decrees of judgment is deemed to be an expenditure by Parliament/County Assembly and as a result, must be notified in law and provided for in the Government expenditure, and that it is for the above reason that Section 32 of the Government Proceedings Act provides that any expenditure incurred by or on behalf of the Government shall be used out of the monies provided by Parliament.
5.He deponed that Parliamentary control over expenditure is based upon the principle that all expenditure must rest upon legislative authority, in this case, the County Assembly by dint of County Government Act and the Public Finance Management Act, no payment out of public funds is legal unless it is authorized by statute in this case by fiscal plan and a budget process, only through an appropriation can the Respondents pay a debtor and as such immediate payment upon issuing of decree and judgment is not tenable. In conclusion, he deponed that in the event that the instant Application is allowed then the Court do set a timeline for payment that will not put the Respondent in clash with any statute.
Hearing of the Application
6.It was agreed, and I directed, that the Preliminary Objection be canvassed by way of written Submissions. Pursuant thereto, the Respondents filed their Submissions on 9/11/2023 while the Applicant filed on 8/12/2023.
Applicant’s Submissions
7.Counsel for the Applicant submitted that a reading of Order 53 Rule 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules indicates that the 6 months’ timeline only applies to orders of Certiorari and not Mandamus. She also submitted that Section 9(1) of the Law Reform Act which was to give effect to Section 9(2) is not framed in mandatory terms as it uses the word “may” and also that the Section remains a recommendation as no rules requiring the filing of a Mandamus application within 6 months exist. She then cited the case of Joseph Mureithi Nyaga vs Embu County Government [2021] eKLR and also the case of Patrick Mbayu Lumbasi vs Principal Secretary of Ministry of Interior & Co-Ordination of National Government [2021] eKLR.
Respondent’s Submissions
8.On his part, Counsel for the Respondent reiterated the matters already set out and cited the case of Judicial Review Application No. 1 of 2021: Peter Orengo Migiro vs Samwel Omagwa James & 2 Others as authority that an Application for leave to file an application for an order of mandamus must be made within 6 months of the subject decision or judgment. He submitted further that the Court has no discretion to enlarge time within which to file an Application for leave. It was also Counsel’s contention that the Preliminary Objection meets the threshold stipulated in the case of Mukisa Biscuit Manufacturing Co. Limited vs West End Distributors Ltd (1969) E.A. 696(supra) and
9.Counsel reiterated the argument that only through an appropriation can the Respondents pay a debtor and submitted that in the event that the instant Application is allowed then the Respondents should be given time so that it can factor in the debt in the next financial cycle of 2024/2025 financial year and that the Court do set a timeline for payment that will not put the Respondent in clash with any statute.
Determination
10.The issues for determination in this matter are the following:i.Whether the Application for leave to apply for an order of mandamus is statute barred on the ground that the same was filed outside 6 months.ii.Whether therefore the order for mandamus should be granted.
11.The Preliminary Objection is premised under Order 53 Rules 1 & 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules and Section 9(2) and (3) of the Law Reform Act, Cap. 26.
12.Order 53(1) and (2) provide as follows:
13.Section 9(2) and (3) of the Law Reform Act then provides as follows:
14.It has been the case that in Kenya, execution of money decrees against the Government or Governmental bodies or County Governments in the ordinary manner of instructing Auctioneers to proclaim and attach assets is prohibited. I am however aware of recent High Court decisions which are now advancing the view that this prohibition on execution is unconstitutional. Decree-holders have therefore had to always proceed under the provisions the Government Proceedings Act. Cap. 40 which was enacted, among other, to provide the “the law relating to the civil liabilities and rights of the Government and to civil proceedings by and against the Government”. The Act is the one that regulates conduct of civil proceedings against the Government, including County Governments.
15.Section 21 of the Government Proceedings Act. Cap. 40 provides for the procedure which a decree holder is required to invoke and follow as a means of executing a decree against the Government or County Governments. The Judicial Review proceedings herein has therefore been instituted pursuant to that provision of the law.
16.The Preliminary Objection raised herein is not new. Government bodies and County Governments and before them, Local Authorities, when faced with applications of the nature herein, seeking payment of Court decrees, have regularly brought up the same Objection. For instance, in the case of Joseph Muriithi Nyaga v Embu County Government [2021] eKLR, faced with a similar Preliminary Objection and in dismissing the same, Hon. Lady Justice L. Njuguna held as follows:…………………………………………………………………..15. What is clear from Section 9(2) is that the rules made under subsection (1) may prescribe that applications for an order of mandamus, prohibition or certiorari shall, in specified proceedings, be made within six months, or such shorter period as may be prescribed, after the act or omission to which the application for leave relates. My understanding of this section is that it is the rules which are made to govern court proceedings which can (discretionally) provide for the time limit within which an application for mandamus (as the case herein) can be made. The only instance when section 9 limits such time is where an applicant seeks for orders of certiorari.16. The power to make rules as contemplated under section 9(1) is actually actualized by the provisions of Order 53 of the Civil Procedure Rules 2010. Indeed, there are no other rules besides Order 53 of the Civil Procedure Rules 2010.17. I have clearly looked at the said Order 53 of the CPA and there is nowhere in that Rule is it stated that an application for the order of mandamus must be made within six months of the date of the act complained of. It is only in Order 53 Rule 2 that a specific timeline is given for the application for the order of certiorari. That particular Rule reads as follows:……………………………………18. Further, from the reading of the said section 9(2), the prescription as to the time within which applications for an order of mandamus, prohibition or certiorari ought to be made is in regards to specified proceedings. There are no other rules which have been made in regards to execution against the government taking the same as specific proceedings as contemplated by the said section.19. It is my view therefore, that the respondent herein misconstrued the law in raising the preliminary objection. It is clear that section 9(2) does not limit the time for filing an application for mandamus to six months but provides that rules made to provide for the procedure of the courts may limit such time. The procedural rules (CPR 2010) which are the only applicable rules do not provide for such a limitation on time in relation to an application for orders of mandamus but only when seeking for orders of certiorari.”
17.I agree and associate fully with the above logic, reasoning and holding as eschewing the correct position of the law. I do not believe that the 6 months statutory limit could have been intended place a bar on a decree-holder’s entitlement to pursue a lawful Court Judgment passed in his favour. to frustrate or bar a decree-holder from pursuing payment of a lawful decree. Such argument, if accepted, will only lead to an absurdity and an unacceptable state of affairs where decree-holders are automatically shut out from pursuing payment of their judgments upon lapse of 6 months unless they have commenced mandamus proceedings. This could not have been the intention of the drafters
18.Counsel for the Respondent relied on the case of Peter Orengo Migiro (suing on behalf of the Late Christopher Orenge Makori) v Samwel Omagwa James & 2 others [2022] eKLR as authority that an Application for leave to file an application for an order of mandamus must be made within 6 months of the subject decision or judgment. However, that authority may not be applicable in this case as it relates to a Judicial Review Application seeking to quash the decision of a Land Disputes Tribunal, and not execution of a Court Judgment or decree as herein. The authority is therefore distinguishable.
19.I therefore reject the Preliminary Objection and now proceed to determine the Application on its merits.
20.As aforesaid, the basis of the instant Application is Section 21 of the Government Proceedings Act already referred to. As regards the steps to be taken in enforcing orders as against Government organs in civil proceedings, the Section provides as follows:
21.The logic for shielding the Government from the ordinary manner of execution was also well explained by D. Kemei J in the case of Republic v Maiyu & 2 others; Lumbasi (Exparte Applicant); Principal Secretary Ministry of Interior & Coordination of the National Governement (Interested Party) (Judicial Review E003 of 2022) [2022] KEHC 13484 (KLR) (19 July 2022) (Ruling) as follows:...................................................................................................17. It is therefore clear that apart from the fact of the existence of a judgement against the Government, the law recognizes that due to the special role played and the central position held by the Government in the management of the affairs of the country, there is a necessity for further proceedings to be undertaken before the judgement can be implemented.
22.Uasin Gishu County is one of the Counties established by Article 6 of the Constitution and the First Schedule thereto, and is constitutionally recognized as a distinct government level of government by the said Article. An order of Mandamus is normally issued when an officer is by law required to perform a duty and as was held by Nyamweya J (as she then was) in the case of Republic v County Government of Kiambu Ex Parte Laban J Macharia Muiruri [2021] eKLR, execution proceedings against the government under the Government Proceedings Act can only be as against the Accounting officer or Chief Officer of the governmental body in issue, who is the one under a statutory duty to satisfy a judgment made by the Court against that body.
23.In regard thereto, Githua J in the case of Republic vs Permanent Secretary Ministry of State for Provincial Administration and Internal Security (2012) stated as follows:
24.In this case, the Respondents, as the County Secretary and the Chief Officer, respectively, of the Uasin Gishu County Government have not denied that indeed, they are the Officers within that County Government with the statutory obligation to pay the Applicant the sum of Kshs 29,437,700/- as per the Certificate of Order in issue herein in satisfaction of the Decree issued therein. The Applicant has indeed supplied copies of the relevant supporting documents, including the said Certificate, duly signed by the Deputy Registrar of the High Court, and the authenticity thereof have not been challenged or denied.
25.As aforesaid, the Respondents argue that by dint of County Government Act and the Public Finance Management Act, no payment out of public funds is legal unless it is authorized by statute, in this case by fiscal plan and a budget process, and that only through an appropriation can the Respondents pay a debtor. They have then stated that in the event that the Application is allowed then the Respondents should be given time so that they can factor in the debt in the next financial cycle of 2024/2025 financial year and that the Court do set a timeline for payment that will not put the Respondents in clash with any statute.
26.I must disabuse the Respondents from the myth that compliance with a Court order can be subject to any other extra judicial processes outside Court or that it can be subject to the whims or discretion of any third party or process. I must remind the Respondents that once a Court order of any nature is given, compliance therewith becomes immediately mandatory. Disregard or non-compliance may as well amount to contempt of Court. In regard to a money decree, whether there is a budget or contingency fund for payment is not and cannot be a ground for failure to comply.
27.In any event, the Court order in issue herein was given on 2/10/2018 vide the Ruling delivered by Hon. Justice D. O. Ogembo. That is almost 6 years ago. The Respondents cannot therefore be heard to still plead for more time. The Court has to balance the interests of both parties in making decisions and in this case, considering the delay and length of time that the Applicant has been waiting for payment, the interest of the Applicant must prevail. I will therefore only grant the Respondents a period of two months to pay the amount due.
28.In reaching my findings as above, I again cite with approval the holding of D. Kemei J made in the case of Republic v Maiyu & 2 others; Lumbasi (Exparte Applicant) (supra) as follows:18.Where a party has complied with all the procedures leading to the grant of an order of mandamus to subject the party to the normal procedures relating to contempt of court proceedings would engender a miscarriage of justice yet article 159(2)(b) of the constitution mandates that justice ought not to be delayed. To take a successful litigant in circles when adequate notices have been given to the Government to settle a decree would be to turn the legal process into a theatre of the absurd. It is only proper and appropriate that the applicant who has exhausted all the remedies available should be granted the judicial remedy of mandamus so as to enjoy the fruits of his judgement.”
29.The upshot of my findings above is that the Application succeeds.
30.On the Respondent’s prayer that I also grant interest on the amount due, I find that at this stage, the Court is simply dealing with execution of an already passed decree. The proper forum for the Applicant to have asked for interest was the Court that passed the decree. I therefore find that it will be wrong for this Court, at this stage, to delve into awarding award interest
31.Before I pen off, I observe that, as was also noted by the Court of Appeal in the case of Republic v Charles Lutta Kasamani & another ex parte Minister for Finance & Commissioner of Insurance as Licencing and Regulating Officers [2006] eKLR, despite clear guidelines given in the case of Mohammed Adhmed v. Republic (1957) EA 523 and also in the case of Farmers Bus Service & others v. The Transport Licensing Appeal Tribunal (1959) EA 779 on the proper form of heading an application for judicial review, the problem of the form of title continues to persist.
32.I may remind the Applicant’s Counsel that as was established on the authority of the case of Farmers Bus Service (supra), prerogative orders, like the old prerogative writs, are issued in the name of the Crown at the instance of the applicant and are directed to the person(s) who are to comply therewith. For this reason, the form of the application ought to have reflected the “Republic” as the Applicant instead of “Zedka Services Limited”. However, since that irregularity, is in my view, a question failure in form and not substance, I do not believe that it is fatal to the entire application. On the authority of the case of Farmers Bus (supra), and also under Article 159 of the Constitution, I find that the omission, though not encouraged, to be one that is merely on form and not substance. However, Counsel should take caution as he may in future come before a Juge who may not share a similar view.
Final Orders
33.In the end, the Applicant’s Notice of Motion dated 8/08/2023 is hereby allowed in the following terms:i.An order of mandamus do and is hereby issued against the Respondents herein, namely the County Secretary, and the Chief Officer Finance, respectively, County Government of Uasin Gishu, compelling them to, within a period of sixty (60) days, pay the Applicant the sum of Kshs 29,437,700/- as per the Certificate of Order against Government issued on 15/06/2023 in Eldoret High Court Civil Case No. 9 of 2016.ii.Costs of the Application herein are awarded to the Applicant.
DELIVERED, DATED AND SIGNED AT ELDORET THIS 24TH DAY OF MAY 2024WANANDA J. R. ANUROJUDGEDelivered in the Presence of:
Eldoret High Court Judicial Review Case No. E007 of 2023
| Ms. Luseria for Applicant |
| N/A for Respondent |