Institute for Social Accountability & another v National Assembly of Kenya & 4 others (Petition 1 of 2018) [2020] KESC 74 (KLR) (4 August 2020) (Ruling)
Institute for Social Accountability & another v National Assembly of Kenya & 4 others [2020] eKLR
Neutral citation:
[2020] KESC 74 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Petition 1 of 2018
DK Maraga, CJ & P, PM Mwilu, DCJ & VP, MK Ibrahim, SC Wanjala & N Ndungu, SCJJ
August 4, 2020
Between
Institute For Social Accountability
1st Appellant
Centre for Enhancing Democracy And Good Governance
2nd Appellant
and
National Assembly Of Kenya
1st Respondent
The Senate
2nd Respondent
The Attorney General
3rd Respondent
Constituency Development Fund Board
4th Respondent
Commission for the Implementation Of The Constitution
5th Respondent
(Appeal from the Judgment of the Court of Appeal of Kenya at Nairobi (Githinji, Okwengu & G.B.M Kariuki, JJ. A) in Civil Appeal No.92 of 2015 dated 24{{^th}} November, 2017)
Ruling
Introduction
1On November 8, 2019, we delivered a ruling on the appellants’ Notice of Motion application dated 30th January, 2018 and lodged in the Supreme Court Registry on 31st January, 2018 allowing the application in the following terms:aThe Application dated 30th January, 2018 is hereby allowed;bThe Applicants shall file its Supplementary Record of appeal containing the Certified Order of the Court of Appeal and the typed proceedings within 7 days of receipt of those documents; andcCosts shall be in the cause.
2Following the said ruling, the appellants lodged a supplementary record of appeal on 14th November 2019 incorporating the order issued by the Court of Appeal; certified proceedings by Honourable Mr. Justice Githinji and Honourable Lady Justice H.M. Okwengu and a copy of the letter dated 4th September 2019 to the Deputy Registrar requesting for the exclusion of proceedings by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki from the intended supplementary record of appeal for non-availability and copies of correspondence between the appellants and the Court of Appeal registry.
The Applications
3The 4th respondent by way of a Notice of Motion application dated 5th February 2020 and filed on 7th February 2020 now seeks orders to strike out the record of appeal herein for being incomplete and therefore invalid. The application is based on the annexed affidavit of Isaac O. Miencha, Advocate, reiterating the grounds that the record as filed is incomplete; that if relied upon, the incomplete record of appeal will cause miscarriage of justice to the respondents and that the appellants have not made an application, pursuant to Rule 335 of this Court’s Rules to exclude the proceedings by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki, a fact which they had intimated in their letter of 4th September 2019.
4On their part, the appellants, under Rule 335 of this Court’s rules filed an application dated 10th February, 2020 seeking to exclude from the record of appeal the trial notes of Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki. This application is founded on the grounds that the main petition is ready for hearing and parties have filed submissions on it; the appellants have exercised due diligence to get the trial notes by the said retired judge to no avail; that the omission of the proceedings by the said judge cannot be attributed to any fault by the appellants; that the appellants reminded the Deputy Registrar of this Court to mention the matter before the Court to enable the appellants make an oral application under Rule 335 to which the Honourable Deputy Registrar directed the appellants to file a formal application; and that in any case, the presence of trial notes in a second appeal is not a mandatory requirement under Rule 334 and their omission is not fatal to the hearing and determination of this matter.
5The application is supported by an affidavit sworn on 10th February, 2020 by Michael Kioko Munguti, the Legal Assistant to the appellants’ counsel, in which he sets out the efforts he took to follow up the proceedings. He annexes correspondence in support of his assertion. The appellants have further filed submissions in support of the application. They submit that the Court has discretion under Rule 335 to exclude a document where a matter can sufficiently proceed without the particular document.
Appellant’s Case
6The appellants raise three main grounds to support their argument. First, that the trial notes are not a mandatory requirement under Rule 334 and their omission is not fatal to the hearing and determination of this matter on the merits they refer to Sammy Kemboi Kipkeu v Bowen David Kangogo & 2 others [2018] eKLR and Hamida Yaroi Shek Nuri v Faith Tumaini Kombe & 2 others [2019] eKLR. Second, and in the alternative, that even if the trial notes were compulsory, they are unavailable by no fault of the appellants, despite the appellants’ diligent effort spanning the course of two years they refer to Hassan Nyanje Charo v Khatib Mwashetani & 3 others [2014] eKLR. And lastly, that the public interest in the constitutionality of the Constituency Development Fund Act and the Fund call for an expeditious hearing of the main appeal on the merits and without undue regard to technicalities of procedure allowing this Court to address the transition from former attempts at decentralization including through the Constituency Development Fund to the current devolved system of governance. The appellants thus invite us to fix an early hearing date for the main appeal which has been pending for far too long.
7In addition, and in response to the 4th respondent’s application to strike out the appeal, the appellants rely on Alfred Asidaga Mulima & 2 others suing as representatives of Ex-East African Airways Staff Welfare Association v Attorney General & 8 others [2019] eKLR in which the Court was mindful to exercise favourable discretion to a party who sufficiently explains the omission taking into account the prejudice to be suffered by the other party.
The 4Th Respondent’s Case
8The 4th respondent filed its submissions on 30th April 2020 in support of its application to strike out the appeal for non-compliance with Rule 33 of the Supreme Court Rules. It submits that the appeal should be struck out for being incomplete for lack of the record of proceedings in the Court of Appeal contrary to Rule 334. They rely on Law Society of Kenya v Centre for Human Rights & Democracy & 12 others [2014] eKLR which relates to what constitutes a competent appeal before the Supreme Court.
9The 4th respondent further submits that the appellant did not make any application under Rule 335 at the time of filing the supplementary record of appeal but instead wrote to the Deputy Registrar of this Court seeking to bring the matter for mention before the bench to enable them make an oral application for exclusion of the proceedings by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki. That the appellants did not pursue this and instead filed the supplementary record and only responded to the 4th respondent’s application by filing their application for exclusion of Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki’s proceedings.
Analysis
10.Upon considering the two rival applications, the issue that emerges for our determination is whether or not to exclude the trial notes by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki of the Court of Appeal. This determination will also address the issue on whether the record of appeal should be struck out as sought by the 4th respondent.
11In considering this issue, we note that our ruling of 8th November 2019 allowed the filing of the Supplementary record within 7 days of receipt of those documents. Accordingly, the filing of the supplementary record was dependent on the documents being availed by the Court of Appeal. This presupposed that all the documents would have been made available to the appellants at the same time. It turned out otherwise. If we understand the 4th respondent correctly, it is his contention that the appellants should not have filed the supplementary record containing documents already received from the Court of Appeal despite our ruling until all the documents were received by them. With respect, this is untenable. We need not belabour the fact that the appellants exercised due diligence and bear no fault in the lack of the said trial notes, a situation that the 4th respondent does not challenge.
12This is compounded by the fact that Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki has since retired from public service as a judge of the Court of Appeal. The appellants had as early as 4th September 2019 brought to the attention of this Court’s Deputy Registrar of the intention to exclude the notes by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki through an oral application. This is a position that was reiterated both in correspondence and when the matter was last mentioned before the Honourable Deputy Registrar who in the end asked the appellants to make a formal application. Rule 335 allows for the making of oral applications and the appellants were entitled to that option until otherwise directed, as they were eventually, to file a formal application.
13In the intervening period, the 4th respondent applied to strike out the petition barely a day after the mention before the Deputy Registrar and three days before the appellants could file their formal application under Rule 335. We do not think that the application by the 4th respondent has been made in good faith under the circumstances considering its timing. The 4th respondent had reasonable notice that the appellants faced challenges in obtaining the trial notes of the now retired judge of the Court of Appeal and that they intended to seek court intervention, albeit orally, under Rule 335. To allow the action by the 4th respondent would be to validate sharp practice of law that this court would not sanction.
14Further, in considering the nature of the document to be excluded, we are persuaded that the same is so far untraceable. There is no purpose to be served by stalling the appeal and continuing to wait for a document on which nothing might eventually turn. In addition, the judgment by the Court of Appeal, the subject of this appeal, is unanimous and the trial notes by Justice Rtd G.B.M. Kariuki are not likely to fundamentally affect the record. We maintain the position we adopted in Hamida Yaroi Shek Nuri case supra thus:
15In the Alfred Asidaga Mulima case supra we excused the applicant for a delay occasioned by the Court of Appeal. We are therefore inclined to exercise our discretion under Rule 335 in favour of the appellants and hasten to add that since the parties have already filed submissions on the substantive appeal and cross appeal, it is imperative that the legal and constitutional questions raised therein be determined on their merits in line with this Court’s mandate without further delay.
Determination
16The upshot of our findings leads to our making the following Orders:aThe Appellants’ application dated and filed on February 10, 2020 is allowed;bConsequently, the 4th Respondent’s application dated 5th February, 2020 and filed on February 7, 2020 is disallowed;cCosts shall be in the appeal.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 4TH OF AUGUST 2020.D. K. MARAGA P. M. MWILUCHIEF JUSTICE & PRESIDENT DEPUTY CHIEF JUSTICE & VICE PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE SUPREME COURTM. K. IBRAHIM S.C. WANJALAJUSTICE OF THE SUPEME COURT JUSTICE OF THE SUPEME COURTNJOKI NDUNGUJUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURTI certify that this is a true copy of the originalRegistrar,Supreme Court Of Kenya