Maina & another v Kenya School of Law; Education (Interested Party) (Appeal E012 & E014 of 2022 (Consolidated)) [2022] KELEAT 1 (KLR) (27 May 2022) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KELEAT 1 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Appeal E012 & E014 of 2022 (Consolidated)
R.N Mbanya, Chair, EO Arwa & R.W Kigamwa, Members
May 27, 2022
Between
Paul Ndichu Maina
1st Appellant
Asha Abdisalan Gureh
2nd Appellant
and
Kenya School of Law
Respondent
and
Council of Legal Education
Interested Party
(Being consolidated appeals against the decisions by Dr. H. K. Mutai – Director of the Kenya School of Law rejecting applications for admissions to the Advocates Training Programme during the 2022/2023 academic year)
Judgment
A. Introduction and background.
1.The appellants Paul Ndichu Maina and Asha Abdisalan Gurehlodged individual appeals against the Kenya Schoolof Law as a respondent and the Council of Legal Education as an interested party with the Tribunal. The appeals were consolidated for ease of disposal. The appeals were served upon the respondent and the interested party. The interested party did not appear or file any documents in the matter despite being duly served. The respondent entered appearance and lodged a response to the appeals through Mr. Fredrick Muhia – the Academic Services Manager of the Kenya Schoolof Law. The appeals were directed to be disposed of by way of written submissions. The appellants lodged the respective appeals through the firm of Flora C & Company Advocates while the respondent was represented by Ms. Pauline Mbuthu; Advocate.
B. The appeals.
2.Paul Ndichu Mainathe 1st appellant seeks to impugn the decision of the respondent as taken on the 22nd March, 2022 and subsequently affirmed on the 30th March, 2022 in respect of his application for admission to the Advocates Training Programme. The 1st appellant attained a mean grade of x – minus and grades x – minus in English and x + plus in Kiswahili languages in the Kenya certificate of Secondary Education examination. He was admitted by the respondent to pursue a Diploma in Law. He undertook the course in the years 2014 – 2016. He successfully completed the course with a grade of distinction. He worked as a Clerk from 2016 – 2020.
3.The appellant secured admission to pursue a Bachelor of Laws degree at the Kenyatta University in the year 2017. Prior to the University granting him admission it sought confirmation as to the eligibility of the appellant from the interested party. The interested party on the 30th August, 2017 wrote to the University confirming that the appellant was eligible for admission. An extract of the letter is in the following terms;
4.The appellant graduated with an LL.B degree from the Kenyatta University on 17th December, 2021 with a Second Class Honours Upper Division.
5.In rejecting the appellant’s application to the Advocates Training Programme the respondent wrote as follows;
6.The appellant appealed against the decision and in the communication of the 30th March, 2022 he was informed;
7.Asha Abdisalan Gurehthe 2nd. appellant attained a mean grade of x plain in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary School (KCSE) with grades x + (plus) in English and x – (minus) in Kiswahili. She was enrolled at the Kenya School of Law in the year 2015 where she successfully completed a Diploma in Law course with a grade of a Credit in the year 2017. She was employed by a local NGO as an intern. She was then admitted to the Kenyatta University vide an admission letter dated the 29th September, 2017 which was after the University had received confirmation of her eligibility to the undergraduate degree programme from the interested party and from the extract of the letter in the following terms;
8.She pursued the Bachelor of Laws Degree and graduated on the 17th December, 2021 with an award of a Second Class Honours Upper Division. She made an application for admission to the Advocates Training Programme and was informed of the rejection of her application on the 8th. February, 2022. In the communication it is indicated as follows:
9.The appellant lodged an appeal against the decision to the Board of the respondent. The same was not responded to until she withdrew the same on the 23rd May, 2022.
C. The response to the appeals.
10.The respondent contends that it is a state corporation established under section 3 of the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 and is the successor of the erstwhile School established under the Council of Legal Education Act, Cap. 16A (repealed) with the mandate to train persons for the purposes of the Advocates Act, Cap. 16. To this end it offers the Advocates Training Programme. Matters of admission to the said Programme are solely regulated by the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 while the Tribunal is established under the Legal Education Act, 2012 and it is devoid of jurisdiction. The appellants made their respective applications to the Programme and were found not to have satisfied the criteria set in section 16 of the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 as read with section 1 of the Second Schedule to the said Act. It is the view of the School that based on the said law, the appellants in order to be eligible for admission to the Advocates Training Programme they ought to have attained a mean grade of C + plus and a B plain in English or Kiswahili languages at the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examinations.
11.The respondent contends that the appellants were relying on academic progression to gain admission into the Advocates Training Programme which is not provided for in the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012. The respondent is bound by its statute to only admit students who meet the admission requirements in it. It contends that allowing people to join the Advocates Training Programme on the basis that they had a Diploma in Law prior to enrolling for admission to the LLB Degree would amount to discrimination and application of double standards while circumventing the clear provisions of the law.
12.The respondent contends that the High Court has on more than one occasion supported its interpretation of the law on admission to the Advocates Training Programme (ATP). The interpretation to be accorded to the conjunction ‘or’ in sections 1 (a) and (b) of the Second Schedule to the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 ought to be a conjunctive one in order to avoid absurdity and discrimination of applicants to the Advocates Training Programme. They seek to challenge the application of the statutory cannon on interpretation by contending that it ought only to apply where it furthers the legislative intention. They seek to have an interpretation that will not create an obnoxious result on public policy even when words prima facie carry only one meaning. The prayer of the respondent is for dismissal of the appeals.
D. Analysis and determination.
Jurisdiction and competence of the appeals.
13.The respondent has taken up the issue of the jurisdiction of the Tribunal to deal with the consolidated appeals. The issue of jurisdiction was addressed in the decision in Owners of Motor Vessel “Lillian S” v Caltex Oil Kenya Limited, (1989) KLR 1 in which Justice Nyarangi JA. as he then was held;
14.The Tribunal in addressing its jurisdiction revisits the facts of the appeal. The 1st and 2nd appellants herein obtained Diploma in Law qualifications from the respondent before enrolling for a Bachelor of Laws degree at the Kenyatta University. The said University in order to grant them admission wrote to the interested party to confirm eligibility. The interested party in its communication to Kenyatta University on the 30th August, 2017 confirmed that the appellants were eligible for admission to the Bachelor of Laws degree. It took into account the High School and Diploma in Law qualifications. The interested party relied on regulation 5 of the Legal Education (Accreditation and Quality Assurance) Regulations, 2016 as made by it. The interested party’s statutory mandate under section 8 (3) (a) of the Legal Education Act, 2012 is to make Regulations in respect of persons wishing to enroll in Legal Education Programmes. The same provides;
15.The interested party and the Tribunal are established in the same statute. The Tribunal finds that an inquiry into this matter is part of the functions of the Tribunal in this appeal. The Tribunal will be addressing matters within the confines of section 31 (1) of the Legal Education Act, 2012. The Tribunal stands guided by the authority in Republic v Kenya School of Law & 2 others Exparte Kgaborone Tsholofelo Wekesa (2019) eKLR in which Justice Mativo held at paragraph 33 therein;
16.The appellants also rely on academic progression in seeking to gain admission to the Advocates Training Programme of which the respondent on its part contends that it is not provided for in its establishing law. The Tribunal finds that in section 8 (3) of the Legal Education Act, 2012 it is provided inter – alia on the interested party’s functions;
17.The Tribunal finds that in determining the question of application of academic progression as a consideration to admission to the Advocates Training Programme which is well spelt-out in the Legal Education Act, 2012 in section 8 (3) (c) it will be dealing with matters within its statutory mandate.
18.The Tribunal has taken time to consider the application of the authority relied on by the respondent in Republic v Rent Restriction Tribunal Ex-parte: Mayfair Bakeries Limited & Another, (1982) eKLR in which Justices Sachdeva and Brar JJ were dealing with the exercise of jurisdiction by the Rent Restriction Tribunal and in which the challenge as to its jurisdiction failed. The Learned Judges as they then were found that a Tribunal is a creature of statute and has only such jurisdiction as has been specifically conferred upon it by the Statute. In this instance section 31 of the Legal Education Act, 2012 expressly confers upon this Tribunal the jurisdiction to deal with any dispute on admission to a Legal Education Programme since section 8 (3) (a) of the Act reposes upon the interested party the mandate to make regulations as to admission requirements to the said Programmes. These include the Diploma in Law, the LLB degree and the Postgraduate Diploma in Law being offered by the respondent. Before the Tribunal are appeals’ by the appellants who applied for admission to the Advocates Training Programme whose qualifications were set by the interested party in its Regulations. Section 31 provides;
19.While section 8 (3) (c) of the Act addresses progression. The appellants are parties who have appealed in writing to the Tribunal under section 31 (1) of the Act. The Tribunal has wide powers to inquire into any matter under the Act. The Tribunal thus finds that it has powers to hear the appeals.
The 1st and 2nd appellants appeals.
20.The respondent has denied the 2 appellants admission to the Advocates Training Programme on the basis of failure to meet minimum Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education qualifications.The interested party confirmed eligibility of the appellants for admission to the Bachelor of Laws degree based on the state of the law as it existed when they sought admission to the undergraduate Programme at the Kenyatta University. The respondent cannot at this time seek to upset the state of affairs as communicated by a public institution on the appellants’ eligibility being the Council of Legal Education. The Tribunal is well guided by the authority in Robert Uri Dabaly Jimma v Kenya School of Law & Another, (2020) eKLR by Justice Antony Mrima as follows at paragraphs 85 – 86;
21.The law relied on by the interested party in making the representation as to the eligibility was regulation 5 of the 3rd Schedule to the Legal Education (Accreditation and Quality Assurance) Regulations, 2016 which provided;
22.The appellants relied on the said Regulations as they then were in force before the Court of Appeal declared the same to be invalid for want of compliance with the Statutory Instruments Act, 2013 on December 21, 2021 in the decision of Javan Kiche Otieno & Another v Council of Legal Education, (2021) eKLR in securing admission to the undergraduate Degree Programme. The respondent cannot now deny them admissions to the Advocates Training Programme as their admissions were crystallized actions prior to the declaration of invalidity.
23.The respondent by virtue of the Fair Administrative Action Act, 2015 was not empowered to take the decision or undertake the exercise it did by inquiring into minimum undergraduate LL.B degree entry requirements as it was a function of the interested party as a regulator. The same provides at section 7 (2) (a) (i) therein while empowering the Tribunal to review the decisions of the respondent in the following terms;
24.As regards, the application of section 1 (a) of the Second Schedule to the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 as opposed to 1 (b) of the said Schedule to the appellants, the Tribunal finds that the appellants being from a recognized University in Kenya were only to be subjected to section 1 (a) thereof. The provisions in issue provide;
25.The conjunction ‘or’ can only be read as connoting an election of the route an applicant to the Advocates Training Programme choose in pursuing his/her LLB Degree qualification. The wisdom of Parliament in the enactment can only be left to it and it is not for the Tribunal to make a finding which is inconsistent with the express text of the law in seeking to allegedly remedy what the respondent refers to as the application of double standards or perceived discrimination that has not been substantiated before the Tribunal. The Tribunal is guided by the authority in Warburton v Loveland, (1831) 2 Dow & Cl. (H.L) at page 489 in which Tindal LJ held;
26.The Tribunal is further fortified by Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 12 edition page 1 in which it is observed;
27.The Tribunal finally, winds up by adopting the interpretation of the second schedule to the Kenya School of Law Act, 2012 in Republic v Kenya School of Law & Another ex – parte Kithinji Maseka Semo & Another, (2019) eKLR by Justice Mativo as follows;
E. Disposition.
28.The Tribunal now decree as follows:-a.That the 1st and 2nd appellants appeals namely Paul Ndichu Maina and Asha Abdisalan Gureh are allowed.b.That the decisions as communicated by the Director of the Kenya School of Law dated the 22nd March, 2022 and 30th March, 2022 declining the 1st appellant namely Paul Ndichu Maina admission to the Advocates Training Programme are quashed.c.Thatthe decision of the Director of the Kenya School of Law dated 8th February, 2022 declining the 2nd. appellant namely Asha Abdisalan Gureh admission to the Advocates Training Programme is quashed.d.That an order is issued directing the respondent to forthwith admit the 1st and 2nd appellants namely Paul Ndichu Maina and Asha Abdisalan Gureh to the Advocates Training Programme.e.That each party to bear own costs of the appeal.f.That any party aggrieved has the liberty to appeal to the High Court under section 38 (1) of the Legal Education Act, 2012 on a point of law.It is so ordered by the Legal Education Appeals Tribunal.
DATED AT NAIROBI THIS 27TH. DAY OF MAY, 2022.ROSE NJOROGE – MBANYA - (MRS.) - CHAIRPERSONEUNICE ARWA - (MRS.) - MEMBERRAPHAEL WAMBUA KIGAMWA (MR.) – MEMBERI Certify this is a true copy of the original judgment of the Tribunal.GILBERT ONYANGO - REGISTRAR