Malindi Law Society v Law Society of Kenya, Nairobi Branch & 5 others (Civil Application 20 of 2017) [2018] KESC 60 (KLR) (19 September 2018) (Ruling)
Malindi Law Society v Law Society of Kenya,
Nairobi Branch & 5 others [2018] eKLR
Neutral citation:
[2018] KESC 60 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Application 20 of 2017
DK Maraga, CJ & P, PM Mwilu, DCJ & VP, MK Ibrahim, JB Ojwang & N Ndungu, SCJJ
September 19, 2018
Between
Malindi Law Society
Applicant
and
Law Society of Kenya, Nairobi Branch
1st Respondent
The Hon Attorney-General
2nd Respondent
The Chief Justice & President of the Supreme Court of Kenya
3rd Respondent
The National Assembly
4th Respondent
The Law Society of Kenya
5th Respondent
The National Land Commission
6th Respondent
(Being an Application for stay of execution of the Court of Appeal decision (Waki, Nambuye, Musinga, Kairu and Murgor, JJ.A,) in Civil Appeal No. 287 of 2016 as consolidated with Civil Appeal No. 3 of 2017 – dated 19 October 2017)
Ruling
1.The Applicant moved this Court by Notice of Motion under certificate of urgency, seeking Orders as follows:(a)Pending the hearing and determination of the application, execution of the Judgment/Orders of the Appellate Court in Civil Appeal No. 287 of 2016 as consolidated with Civil Appeal No. 3 of 2017, be stayed;(b)Pending the hearing and determination of the intended appeal against the said Judgment, its execution be stayed;(c)Costs of the instant application do abide the conclusion of the intended appeal.
2.The Question of certificate of urgency came up, on 31 October 2017, before Ojwang, SCJ who declined to grant the same, directing that a hearing date for the application be set in normal Registry operations.
3.The Matter arises from the decision of a three-Judge Bench of the High Court, in Malindi Petition No. 3 of 2016, which held to be unconstitutional certain sections of the Environmental and Land Court Act, and the Magistrates’ Courts Act. In the background to the High Court decision was the enactment of the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2015, the Magistrates’ Courts Act, and the High Court (Organization and Administration) Act, 2015 – entering into force on 2 January 2016. By the enactments, Parliament had amended the Environment and Land Court Act, conferring upon the Chief Justice the power to transfer Judges from proceedings of specialized Courts to those of the High Court, and vice versa – apart from clothing Magistrates’ Courts with authority to hear and determine disputes relating to employment and labour relations, the environment, and title to, and occupation of land.
4.The Gravamen of the applicant’s cause is: Does it fall within Parliament’s competence to enact legislation bringing under the jurisdiction of Magistrates the determination of disputes relating to labour relations; the environment; land title and land use? Or is the jurisdiction in respect of such issues reserved to the specialized Courts, under Article 162 (2) of the Constitution?
5.The High Court had declared unconstitutional Section 2 of the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2015, insofar as it related to the transfer of Judges from proceedings of the High Court to those of the Specialized Courts, or vice versa; and insofar as it related to the role of Subordinate Courts with regard to environment and land. The High Court held Sections 7(3), 8(d) and 26(3), (4) of the Environment and Land Courts Act, and Section 9(a), (b) of the Magistrate’s Courts Act, 2015 to be unconstitutional.
6.The Said Decisions occasioned the lodgement by the Law Society of Kenya, Nairobi Branch of Civil Appeal No. 287 of 2016, while the Attorney-General filed Civil Appeal No. 3 of 2017 – which appeals were consolidated and determined by the Court of Appeal.
7.The appellate court set aside the High Court Judgment on 19 October 2017; and the aggrieved applicant then filed a notice of appeal in the Supreme Court (dated 30 October 2017), followed by an application before this Court on 31st October 2017, under Articles 2(1), (3), 4 and 163 (4) (a) and (7), of the Constitution; Sections 15(2), 21(1), (2) and 24(1) of the Supreme Court Act, 2011 (Act No. 7 of 2011), as well as Rules 23 and 26 of the Supreme Court Rules, 2012, seeking Orders as set out hereinabove.
8.The Affidavit of Lucy Mwangi, an Advocate, avers that the intended appeal is arguable, and would be rendered nugatory if it were in the end to succeed, and that it is meet that the Orders sought be granted.
9.The Deponent avers that the public interest would favour grant of stay Orders, as the respondents stand to suffer no prejudice thereby.
10.This Court, at this stage, notes that it indeed has authority to issue Orders for the preservation, in an interim period, of a subject-matter of appeal: Board of Governors, Moi High School, Kabarak & Another v. Malcolm Bell, Supreme Court Applications Nos. 12, 13 (2012).
11.This Court, in the circumstances, would expect an appeal on a significant question, and would endeavour to determine it appropriately. But, would the terms of the findings of appeal be rendered nugatory – so that it becomes proper to issue the Orders sought at this stage? It is the applicant’s case that, precious judicial time will have been lost, and costly legal services will have to be engaged, in the event this Court were to allow the forthcoming appeal. These, in our perception, are not compelling ground rendering an appeal nugatory – especially as the appeal cause, so far, remains only conjectural.
12.We Take Note that the applicant has not yet filed a substantive appeal before this Court, since filing the notice of appeal on 30 October, 2017. By Section 33 (1) of the Supreme Court Rules, 2012 an appeal should be lodged within 30 days of the date of filing the notice on appeal – i.e., more than 7 months have expired since the filing of notice – and with no application seeking extension of time.
13.Grant Of Stay of existing Orders cannot be a matter of course. It rests upon genuine conditions of urgency, merit and dispatch – which are missing in this instance. Hence there is no valid basis for the grant of stay orders.
14.We make Orders as follows:(a)There shall be no Orders of stay against the Judgment of the Appellate Court.(b)There shall be no Order as to costs;
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 19TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2018.D. K. MARAGA P. M. MWILUCHIEF JUSTICE & PRESIDENT DEPUTY CHIEF JUSTICE &OF THE SUPREME COURT VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME COURTM. K. IBRAHIM J.B. OJWANGJUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURTS. N. NDUNG’UJUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURTI certify that this is a true copy of the originalRegistrarSUpreme Court Of Kenya.