Kenya Copyright Board v Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP) & another; Music Copyright Society of Kenya (MCSK) (Interested Party) (Civil Appeal E1035 of 2024) [2025] KEHC 711 (KLR) (Civ) (31 January 2025) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2025] KEHC 711 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal E1035 of 2024
JM Omido, J
January 31, 2025
Between
Kenya Copyright Board
Appellant
and
Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP)
1st Respondent
Performing and Audio-Visual Rights Society of Kenya (PAVRISK)
2nd Respondent
and
Music Copyright Society of Kenya (MCSK)
Interested Party
(Being an Appeal from the Judgement of the Copyright Tribunal (Hon. Elizabeth Lenjo) delivered on 3rd September, 2024 in COPTA/E002/2024 Kenya Association of Music Producers v Kenya Copyright Board & Others)
Ruling
1.Before me is the Appellant’s amended application by way of Notice of Motion dated 29th October, 2024, which seeks the following orders:a.[Spent].b.[Spent].c.That pending the hearing and determination of the appeal, the Honourable Court be pleased to review the ruling dated 15th October, 2024 and issue a stay of execution of the judgement that was rendered by the Copyright Tribunal in COPTA/E002/2024 Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP) v Kenya Copyright Board and others.d.That in the alternative to (c) above, this Honourable Court be pleased to extend the interim stay of execution orders issued on 10th September, 2024 pending the hearing and determination on merit of the Appellant’s application dated 6th September, 2024.e.That costs of the application be provided for.
2.The application is premised on nine (9) grounds that are listed on its face, which are as follows:1.Vide a letter dated 29th October, 2024, the 1st Respondent has issued the Appellant with a three-day notice with the intention of commencing contempt proceedings if the Appellant does not issue them with an operating CMO license, despite the 1st Respondent not meeting the constitutional and statutory requirements.2.The stay of execution orders that were sought by the Appellant in the application dated 6th September, 2024 were meant to preserve the essence and substratum of the instant appeal for it not to be rendered a mere academic exercise.3.The stay of execution orders were only limited to the judgement that was delivered by the Copyright Tribunal in COPTA/E002/2024 Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP) v Kenya Copyright Board and others on 3rd September, 2024 in order to allow this Honourable Court to evaluate the propriety or otherwise of the impugned judgement.4.The Appellant having been granted leave to appeal the impugned judgement by the Copyright Tribunal to the High Court, it was necessary and in the public interest that stay orders be sought pending the determination of the appeal. The appeal was lodged timeously within 3 days of the delivery of judgement.5.The Honourable Court has been deliberately misled to believe that granting the stay orders will lead to existence of conflicting court orders that were issued by Honourable Lady Justice Mong’are in High Court (Commercial, Tax & Admiralty Division) HCCOMPET No. E014 of 2024 Music Copyright Society of Kenya v Kenya Copyright Board & others, this is apparently erroneous for reasons that:i.HCCOMPET No. E014 of 2024 was lodged on 18th June, 2024 by the Interested Party and interim orders were issued on the same day whereas the 1st Respondent filed COPTA/E002/2024 Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP) v Kenya Copyright Board and others at the Copyright Tribunal on 5th August, 2024.ii.Interim orders no. 4 and 5 did not revoke the CMO operating license that was issued by the Appellant to the 2nd Respondent herein – the interim conservatory orders only prevented the 2nd Respondent from collecting any monies and royalties on behalf of the Interested Party herein, MCSK.iii.The Honourable Lady Justice Mong’are’s orders did not extend to the 1st Respondent as they were not parties to the Petition that was filed by the Interested Party.iv.There exists no confusion or any likelihood of any confusion as the interim conservatory orders, which are still in force today, only affect the members of the Interested Party and not the 1st Respondent.v.The 1st Respondent herein only filed COPTA/E002/2024 which the Appellant has already challenged by filing the instant appeal.6.The Appellant did not conceal any material information from this Honourable Court as the impugned judgement stems from the judgement of the Copyright Tribunal in COPTA/E002/2024.7.In the 3rd September, 2024 judgement of the Copyright Tribunal that the Appellant has challenged before this Honourable Court, the Tribunal did not frame any issues for determination in relation to HCCOMPET No. E014 of 2024 nor did it make any findings on the same thus making HCCOMPET No. E014 of 2024 not susceptible to the instant appeal.8.It is in public interest that this Honourable Court urgently intervenes by reviewing the ruling dated 15th October, 2024 in order not to render the instant appeal nugatory and a mere academic exercise.9.This Honourable Court is clothed with sufficient jurisdiction under Order 45 Rule 1 to grant the orders sought as the Appellant has not preferred any appeal against the ruling dated 15th October, 2024.
3.The application is supported by the affidavit of Paul Kaindo, the Appellant’s Acting Assistant Executive Director, Legal Department, sworn on 29th October, 2024. The motion is further supported by the said deponent’s supplementary affidavit that he swore on 12th November, 2024.
4.The 1st Respondent filed a replying affidavit sworn on 4th November, 2024 by its Chief Executive Officer, Maurice Okoth. The 1st Respondent also filed a further affidavit sworn by its said officer on 29th November, 2024.
5.On its part, in response to the Appellant’s motion, the 2nd Respondent filed a replying affidavit sworn on 8th November, 2024 by Joseph Njagih, the 2nd Respondent’s Chief Executive Officer.
6.The Interested Party, though properly notified of the proceedings, did not participate in the application.
7.This court sanctioned that the application be canvassed by way of written submissions and the parties, save for the Interested Party, filed their respective submissions.
8.I have considered the pleadings, the application, the affidavits in support thereof, the replying affidavits, the rival submissions filed by the three sides and the record in its entirety. I note that the substantive orders sought by the Applicant, as is instructive from its application are in the nature of an order for review of this court’s order issued vide the ruling of 15th October, 2024.
9.The brief history preceding the motion filed by the Appellant is that on 10th September, 2024, two applications, both dated 6th September, 2024 were placed before me under certificate of urgency, for directions and/or orders. Upon perusing and considering the two applications, I made the following orders:1.That the applications are certified as urgent.2.That there shall be a temporary stay of the judgement rendered by the Copyright Tribunal in COPTA E002/2024 until 14th October, 2024.3.That service to be effected upon the Respondents and the matter to be mentioned on the 14th October, 2024 for directions.”
10.When the matter was placed before me for directions on 14th October, 2024 in line with the order of 10th September, 2024, this court was notified of the existence of a court order issued on 19th June, 2024 by the High Court (Mong’are J) in High Court (Commercial Tax & Admiralty Division) HCCOMPET No. E014 of 2024 Music Copyright Society of Kenya Limited v Kenya Copyright Board & others. The said order was to the effect that:1.That the Notice of Motion dated 18th June, 2024 be and is hereby certified urgent.2.That the said application be served and be responded to within 14 days.3.That the said application be mentioned for directions on 2nd July, 2024.4.That in the interim, a Conservatory Order be and is hereby issued restraining the Interested Party from collecting and/or distributing any monies and royalties for and/or on behalf of the Petitioner/Applicant and its affiliate members on the strength of the Operating Licence issued to it by the 1st Respondent pending the hearing and determination of this application.5.That in the interim, an order be and is hereby issued allowing and/or permitting the Petitioner/Applicant to continue collecting monies and distributing royalties to its affiliate members pending the hearing and determination of this Application.
11.As this court embarked on issuing directions on the disposal of the application for stay of the judgement of the Tribunal (from which this appeal emanates) pending the determination of the instant appeal, the Appellant sought that the order that I had issued on 10th September, 2024, (which I had ordered would remain in force until 14th October, 2024) be extended, which application was opposed by the 1st Respondent. The parties made their respective submissions and in my ruling that I rendered on 15th October, 2024, I observed and ordered as follows:
12.The Appellant’s application pursuant to which this ruling is made emanates from the above observations and orders issued vide the ruling of 15th October, 2024. The application seeks that I review my orders issued in the ruling declining to extend the interim orders of stay of execution of the judgement of the Tribunal and that I reinstate and/or extend the same.
13.In the affidavits in support of the application, the deponent states that it is necessary for this court to order the stay of execution of the Tribunal’s judgement lest the present appeal be rendered nugatory. The deponent further stated that this court was deliberately misled into believing that extension of the stay order would lead to a conflict with the orders issued by Mong’are J, as a result of which this court declined to extend the interim orders.
14.The said deponent further states in his affidavits that the orders issued by my sister did not revoke the Collective Management Organization operating licence that was issued by the Appellant, contrary to the findings in my ruling. That rather, the effect the orders of my sister had was to prevent the second Respondent from collecting any monies or royalties on behalf of the Interested Party, and therefore did not extend to the 1st Respondent, who were in any event not parties to the matter before Mong’are J.
15.In the Appellant’s view, no confusion would result if this court reinstated the interim orders by allowing the application as the orders subsisting in the matter before Mong’are J do not affect the 1st Respondent. That as such, there was no material non-disclosure by the Appellant.
16.The Appellant further proffered the position that the Respondent, despite being aware of the instant appeal, commenced contempt of court proceedings against the 1st Respondent, which were lodged vide HCOMMMISC/E885/2024 before Visram J.
17.In his further depositions, the said deponent states that it is in the public interest that the order of stay of execution of the Tribunal’s judgement pending the determination of this appeal be reinstated.
18.The deponent adds that the interim orders that I had issued did not have the effect of revoking the CMO operating license that was issued by the Appellant to the 2nd Respondent as the orders only prevented the 2nd Respondent from collecting monies and royalties on behalf of the Interested Party and that the same did not, in any event, extend to the 1st Respondent as they were not part of the petition.
19.The 1st Respondent, while opposing the application through the affidavit of Maurice Okoth, stated that there are no grounds presented in the application that would warrant the court to review the order of 15th October, 2024.
20.The said deponent further stated that the Appellant has not met the requirements for that grant of an application for stay of execution of the judgement of the Tribunal pending the determination of the appeal.
21.The deponent stated further that the allegations by the Appellant that the 1st Respondent misled the court to decline to extend the interim stay orders are untrue as indeed this court properly determined that the interim orders that it had issued were in conflict with the earlier orders that Mong’are J issued.
22.The deponent deposed that contrary to the Appellant’s claims, what the 1st Respondent was seeking is a provisional license and not an operating license and that indeed, what the judgement of the Tribunal ordered is for the 1st Respondent to be issued with a provisional license.
23.The deponent stated that the Appellant did not expressly state the provisions of the Constitution or statute that the 1st Respondent did not meet or satisfy.
24.In his further depositions, the said deponent stated that the Appellant’s application does not disclose any error apparent on the face of the record that is capable of being reviewed.
25.The 2nd Respondent filed a replying affidavit sworn on 8th November, 2024 by Joseph Njagih which supported the Applicant’s motion, whose view was that the present appeal stands to be rendered nugatory if the application is not allowed.
26.The said deponent stated that by the parties simultaneously moving the High Court and the Tribunal, they violated the doctrine of exhaustion.
27.Having gone through the documents providing the respective parties’ positions, I will now proceed to look at the merits of the application.
28.The grounds upon which an application for review of an order or a decree may be premised are provided for under Section 80 of the Civil Procedure Act and Order 45 of the Civil Procedure Rules. Let us read the said provisions of the law:Section 80 of the Civil Procedure Act.80.Review Any person who considers himself aggrieved —(a)by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed by this Act, but from which no appeal has been preferred; or(b)by a decree or order from which no appeal is allowed by this Act, may apply for a review of judgment to the court which passed the decree or made the order, and the court may make such order thereon as it thinks fit.Order 44 of the Civil Procedure Rules.45(1)Any person considering himself aggrieved—(a).by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed, but from which no appeal has been preferred; or(b).by a decree or order from which no appeal is hereby allowed, and who from the discovery of new and important matter or evidence which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within his knowledge or could not be produced by him at the time when the decree was passed or the order made, or on account of some mistake or error apparent on the face of the record, or for any other sufficient reason, desires to obtain a review of the decree or order, may apply for a review of judgment to the court which passed the decree or made the order without unreasonable delay.(2)A party who is not appealing from a decree or order may apply for a review of judgment notwithstanding the pendency of an appeal by some other party except where the ground of such appeal is common to the applicant and the appellant, or when, being respondent, he can present to the appellate court the case on which he applies for the review.
29.Although none of the grounds listed under Order 45 of the Civil Procedure Rules was proffered by the Appellant (i.e. (a). discovery of new and important matters of evidence, which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within the knowledge of the Appellant or could not be produced at the time when the order sought to be reviewed was made; (b). a mistake or error apparent on the face of the record; and (c). other sufficient reason), I will nevertheless proceed to determine if the any of the said grounds have been proved through the material presented before me by the Appellant.
30.The issues then that I am tasked to determine as discernible from the positions taken by the parties on the application before me are;i.Whether the Appellant, has shown the discovery of new and important matters of evidence, which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within the knowledge of the Appellant or could not be produced at the time when the order sought to be reviewed was made.ii.Whether the Appellant has demonstrated that there is an error apparent on the face of the record.iii.Whether there is any other sufficient reason for the court to review its order.
31.As to whether the Appellant, has shown the discovery of new and important matters of evidence, which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within the knowledge of the Appellant or could not be produced at the time when the order sought to be reviewed was made, the simple answer is that the Appellant has not in its application stated that there is discovery of such evidence. So then, that ground is not available in this matter.
32.As to whether the Appellant has demonstrated that there is an error apparent on the face of the record, it is important for this court to state what amounts to an error on the face of the record. To that end, I take guidance from the Court of Appeal in the case of Muyodi v Industrial and Commercial Development Corporation & Anor [2006] 1 EA 243 where it was observed as follows:
33.In the case of National Bank of Kenya Limited v Ndungu Njau [1997] eKLR, the Court of Appeal distinguished between an error apparent on the face of the record that can be subject of review and errors of law which can only be corrected on appeal. The court stated as follows:
34.From the application and the submissions filed herein by the Appellant, I hear the Appellant to be saying that this court was misled into reaching a wrong conclusion (which fact is contested by the 1st Respondent), on the import of the orders made by Mong’are J. That ultimately, the wrong conclusion resulted in the order of refusal to extend the interim orders.
35.The question that then calls for an answer is, if indeed the court arrived at a wrong conclusion, would that amount to an error apparent on the face of the record? I do not think so. That is because, as we have seen in the authorities above, the grounds that the court may have proceeded on an incorrect exposition of the law and may have reached an erroneous conclusion of law does not amount to an error on the face of the record and cannot be a ground for review. Rather, a party aggrieved from such an outcome ought to challenge the same through an appeal. On that ground, my persuasion is that the avenue that is available to the Appellant is that of appeal, not review, as there is no error apparent on the face of the record. Proceeding to allow the application on that ground would amount to this court sitting on appeal over its own decision.
36.With regard to the question as to whether there is any other sufficient reason for this court to review its orders of 15th October, 2024, it is urged by the Appellant that it is the public interest that the order be reviewed and the court reinstates and/or extends the interim stay of execution orders and that the Appellant stands to suffer immense prejudice if the instant application is not allowed as the appeal will be rendered nugatory.
37.Where the ground upon which review is sought is that of other sufficient reason, it is for the court entertaining the application for review to exercise its discretion. That then means that a party that moves the court seeking review of an order must demonstrate that there exist special circumstances that would impel the court to judiciously exercise its discretion in favour of the Applicant in the application for review.
38.It is instructive from the record that there is pending another application by way of motion on notice filed by the Appellant dated 6th September, 2024 in which one of prayers sought is as follows:c.That pending the hearing and determination of the appeal herein, there do issue a stay of execution of the judgement that was rendered by the Copyright Tribunal in COPTA/E002/2024 Kenya Association of Music Producers (KAMP) v Kenya Copyright Board & others.
39.What remains unclear is why the Appellant opted to file an application for review which in essence seeks reinstatement of orders of interim stay of the judgement of the Tribunal, when there was already filed by the same party an application dated 6th September, 2024 seeking for issuance of orders of stay of execution of the judgement of the Tribunal pending the hearing and determination of the appeal herein. It remains unexplained why the Appellant did not simply prosecute its substantive application, which I had certified as urgent.
40.As we have seen above, this court has wide-reaching discretion in determining an application for review on “any other sufficient ground”. Discretion must however be exercised judiciously. It is my inclination that this is not a matter in which this court can exercise discretion in view of the fact that the substantive motion has not been heard. The Appellant, as I have said, has not given any reasons as to why it has not pursued that application. The Appellant is at liberty to move the court to hear the substantive motion apace.
41.Being of the foregoing findings, I reach the result that the Appellant’s amended Notice of Motion dated 29th October, 2024 is devoid of merit. I proceed to dismiss it.
42.Section 27 of the Civil Procedure Act dictates that costs ought to follow the event. Accordingly, the Appellant shall bear the 1st Respondent’s costs of the application. In respect of the 2nd Respondent, I make no order as to costs as the 2nd Respondent supported the application.
43.Orders accordingly.
DELIVERED (VIRTUALLY), DATED AND SIGNED THIS 31ST DAY OF JANUARY, 2025.JOE M. OMIDOJUDGEFor Appellant: Mr. Nyabwengi.For 1st Respondent: Mr. Atieno.For 2nd Respondent: Mr. Mburu.Court Assistants: Mr. Ngoge & Mr. Juma.Court: As I am now serving at Kisumu High Court, this matter will be mentioned before the Deputy Registrar, Milimani High Court Civil Division on 10th February, 2025 for further orders.JOE M. OMIDOJUDGE