Kidero & another v Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission & 4 others (Election Petition E001 of 2022) [2022] KEHC 15829 (KLR) (26 November 2022) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2022] KEHC 15829 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Election Petition E001 of 2022
RE Aburili, J
November 26, 2022
Between
Evans Odhiambo Kidero
1st Petitioner
Elijah Odondi Kodoh
2nd Petitioner
and
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission
1st Respondent
County Returning Officer, Homabay County Fredrick Apopa
2nd Respondent
Gladys Atieno Nyasuna Wanga
3rd Respondent
Joseph Oyugi Magwanga
4th Respondent
Orange Democratic Movement Party
5th Respondent
Ruling
1.On 18th November, 2022, this court delivered a three pronged ruling covering three applications dated 29th September, 2022, 4th October, 2022 and 30th October 2022. Prior to that date, the court had on 28th October 2022 heard the oral highlights on the applications dated 29th September 2022 and 4th October, 2022. On the said even date, the 3rd and 4th Respondents sought leave of court to file an application seeking to strike out some new affidavits and parts of the further affidavit evidence filed by the Petitioners in their further affidavits pursuant to the directions of this court given on 7th October, 2022. The court directed that such application should be filed and served simultaneous with the written submissions within five days of 28th October 2022 upon which the petitioners would have 5 days of the date of service to file and serve their responses and written submissions and that a ruling on the said application would be delivered simultaneous with the rulings on the applications dated 29th September, 2022 and 4th October, 2022 respectively.
2.The court while giving directions on the already filed and argued applications and the yet to be filed application was conscious of the tight schedule and timelines for the hearing and determination of the main election petition as stipulated in law and all parties agreed to that arrangement for the hearing.
3.The court was equally aware that parties were required to file their pleadings, documents as well as the responses through the Judiciary e-portal but that the parties had earlier on been directed that whenever they filed their documents through the e-filing system, they must also and as soon as possible, file the hard copies into court. The date of filing and compliance with the given timelines would then be taken to be the date of the e-filing.
4.The main reason for requiring the filing of hard copy documents is because there is intermittent power outage and internet instability in this part of the country and I take judicial of that fact, having served in the region for now close to five years now. Furthermore, the delivery of this very ruling should have been yesterday morning but owing to the total blackout from 24th November 2022 afternoon extending right into the night, it was impossible for me to sit in darkness and prepare the ruling whether handwritten or otherwise.
5.In addition, this court is aware that where there is no internet or power, or where the equipment fail or malfunction, then it would be difficult to read the e-filed documents hence the need to have hard copies as backup so that there is no excuse for the court failing to deliver on its mandate within the stipulated timelines. It must at all times be appreciated that even the most sophiscated or automated systems at times flop.
6.Further to the above requirements, this court went further and advised the parties counsel right from the onset and reminded them from time to time that in order to enable the court work efficiently, the court had created a special email address annextures@gmail.com specifically dedicated to receiving only soft copy word format pleadings, affidavits and or word documents as already officially filed by the parties, so that the court does not have to rewrite the parties’ pleadings or affidavits which are normally filed in pdf formats and therefore not capable of being edited during judgment or ruling writing.
7.All these measures have been applied by this court as an innovation to expedite delivery of justice hence the efficiencies that are experienced and appreciated by those parties and their counsel who appear and or litigate before the court.
8.The law also enjoins all parties and their counsel to be active participants in aiding the court to administer justice expeditiously, efficiently and effectively. In doing so, the parties and their counsel are also expected to adhere to the directions or practice directions that the court may issue from time to time. Where parties act in good faith and comply with the court’s directions which are in no way meant to be punitive but intended to aid in the fair, just and expeditious delivery of justice, the principles and objectives of Article 159 of the Constitution and which all courts and tribunals are enjoined to adhere to in administering justice are fulfilled.
9.In the instant petition, the court upon giving necessary directions and setting the ruling date for the already filed and argued as well as the yet to be filed applications, it retired to consider the filed applications as it awaited the parties to comply with the directions given. In the intervening period, I observe that the other parties’ counsel who had filed the pleadings and affidavits via e-portal also filed the hard copies of their e-filed documents and further forwarded their word documents as filed into court to the aforementioned email address annextures@gmail.com upon being reminded as the court realized that they were taking too long to forward the same and which documents the court accessed and considered in the rulings aforesaid. Regrettably, the 1st and 2nd Respondents’ counsel did not comply with the filing of hard copies of the e-filed documents and neither did he send the word documents to the annextures@gmail.com as requested by the court.
10.As a result, this court was unable to access the e-filed documents or even the hard copies which were to be filed by Mr. Olendo counsel for the 1st and 2nd respondents. The court was also unable to access the e-filed documents due to low internet in Siaya High Court as at the time that it was writing the delivered rulings. The court, upon delivering the 3 rulings, has learnt, from the now filed application by Mr. Olendo Advocate for the 1st and 2nd Respondents that indeed, it considered the applications dated 29th September 2022 and 30th October 2022 but left out the replying affidavit and written submissions filed by Mr. Olendo advocate on behalf of his clients. However, the court did consider the oral submissions which were predicated on the replying affidavit and the written submissions and this was not by design but owing to the above scenario as explained by this court.
11.It is the above situation that brings us to where we are in this matter, where the 1st and 2nd respondents have by their application dated 23rd November 2022 seek from this court the following orders:
12.The said application is predicated on the following grounds which are also replicated in the supporting affidavit sworn by Mr. Raymond Olendo advocate for the applicants:
Determination
13.I have considered the application by the 1st and 2nd respondents, the grounds in support and the supporting affidavit.
14.The main issue now is whether this court should review and or set aside its ruling delivered on 18th November, 2022 on account of the complaints raised by the 1st and 2nd respondents herein. To resolve the above issue, I must first examine the legal and constitutional provisions and the court record further.
15.The question of whether this Election Court has the jurisdiction to review its own orders was considered in a similar situation arising in the case of Godfrey Masaba v IEBC & 2 others [2013] eKLR, where the Election Court was called upon to review its orders on account that it had not considered the replying affidavit and written submissions filed by the applicant
16.H. Omondi J (as she then was) stated as follows, extensively, and I will heavily rely on this holding in my determination that:
17.The learned Judge, now Judge of Appeal then went on to determine the circumstances under which an election court would review its orders and stated as hereunder:
18.As to whether the applicants had established a case for review of the orders thereto, the learned judge had this to say further:
19.I have extensively cited the above decision because it is in parimateria with the application before me and just like in the instant case scenario, the applicants’ counsel in the cited case submitted that:
20.In determining this application, I shall bear in mind the above holding. Article 159 of the Constitution obligates the court to administer justice without undue regard to procedural technicalities. On the other hand, Section 80(1) (d) of the Election Act, 2011 allows an Election Court to decide all matters before it. Further, Section 80(3) of the Act thereof allows the election court to decide all interlocutory matters. In addition, Section 2 of the Election Act defines an Election Court and gives it jurisdiction similar to those given to the Court in civil and criminal cases.
21.On the application dated 29th September 2022, the 1st and 2nd respondents impugn this court’s ruling of 18th November 2022 on account that the same did not take into consideration the 1st and 2nd respondents’ replying affidavit and written submissions.
22.I have considered the said replying affidavit sworn by the second respondent herein Mr. Fred Apopa sworn on the 13th October 2022 as well as the 1st and 2nd respondents written submissions dated 25th October 2022. I observe that the two documents mirror the oral submissions made by Mr. Olendo in open court on the 28th October 2022, in opposition to the petitioners’ application dated 29th September 2022.The said oral submissions were highlights of the written submissions and the replying affidavit filed by the 2nd respondent on his own behalf and on behalf of the 1st respondent.
23.In addition, from the e logs annexed to this application by the 1st and 2nd respondents and dated 23rd November, 2022, as obtained from the judiciary efiling website, I note that the replying affidavit sworn by one Mr. Fred Apopa sworn on the 13th October 2022 as well as the 1st and 2nd respondents’ written submissions dated 25th October 2022 were filed on the 25th October 2022.
24.This court also recalls that on the 7th October 2022, the court issued directions regarding filing of responses to the Petitioner’s application dated 29th September, 2022, directing that all the Respondents had 7 days of 11/10/2022 to file and serve their responses to the said application. A calculation of the said days takes the final date for the respondents to file their responses to the petition dated 29th September, 2022 to the 18th October 2022.
25.From the judiciary e-filing log attached herein and relied on by the 1st and 2nd respondent, they admittedly filed their replying affidavit and written submissions on the 25th October 2022, which was 7 days past the last date for filing, contrary to the directions of the court given in open court and in the presence of all the parties. Although no party raised the issue of the late filing of the said responses, I observe that there was no leave of court sought and obtained to admit the said responses as filed out of the stipulated timeframes.
26.Further to the above, the court openly directed the parties to share the filed responses and all necessary pleadings with the judge through the email annextures@gmail.com, but the 1st and 2nd respondent’s advocate admittedly failed to do so.
27.Further, Rule 5(2) of the Election Petition Rules 2017 provides that:
28.For the aforesaid reasons and whereas it is true that this court did not refer to the replying affidavit and written submissions filed by counsel for the 1st and 2nd respondents, it is clear that the court cannot, in the first instance, be blamed for being in error regarding the responses filed by the 1st and 2nd respondents to the petitioners’ application dated 29th September 2022, out of time and without leave of court to admit them as duly filed.
29.This Court has discretion to extend time but cannot do so without a specific request by a party requiring the intervention. Even as at the time that the parties were arguing that application on 28th October 2022, the 1st and 2nd respondents’ counsel knew that the replying affidavit and written submissions in opposition to the petitioners’ application dated 29th September 2022 were filed out of time but the 1st and 2nd respondents did not make any formal request to expand the time for admission of those two documents. It follows that legally, those documents ought not to be part of this court’s record. However, as shall be seen in the paragraph below, this court already heard oral submissions on the same, and without any objection from the other parties especially the petitioners, that is now water under the bridge.
30.Nonetheless, it is apparent from the ruling of 18th November 2022 that his court considered and indeed, took into account the oral submissions made by Mr. Olendo, counsel for the 1st and 2nd respondents, which oral submissions the court notes that they mirrored the replying affidavit sworn by Mr. Fred Apopa on the 13th October 2022 as well as the 1st and 2nd respondents’ written submissions dated 25th October 2022, which this court has now accessed and perused upon being filed in hard copy format on 22nd November 2022 and after the delivery of the impugned ruling.
31.It cannot, therefore, be true as complained by the applicants’ counsel that this court’s failure to refer to the filed replying affidavit and written submissions described above renders the advocate for the 1st and 2nd respondents a joy rider or pedestrian advocate to these proceedings and petition. I hasten to add that Mr. Olendo advocate has and is defending his clients in these proceedings with all the vigor and that therefore that lapse on his part cannot be interpreted and should not be interpreted to mean that he is or has shown any form of incompetence before this court in the manner that he is representing the interests of the 1st and 2nd respondents who represent the public in these proceedings and petition.
32.Turning to the application dated 30th October 2022, the court on the 28th October 2022 directed that the intended application by the 3rd and 4th Respondents shall be filed together with written submissions of not more than four pages font 12, 1.5 spacing, within 5 days of that day and that on the part of the Petitioners, they had 5 days of the date of service to file and serve their Replying affidavit together with written submissions of not more than 4 pages font 12, 1.5 spacing.The court indeed trusted the parties and it also trusted its own judgment that if the parties complied with the directions of the court, it would burn the midnight oil, coupled with the fact that the court is handling two other
33.courts, and render a well-reasoned and balanced decision on all the filed and argued and the yet to be filed application by 18th November, 2018.
34.I have examined the e-filings logs filed by the 1st and 2nd respondents which show that the responses and submissions to the 3rd and 4th Respondents’ application dated 30th October, 2022 were filed on the 11th of November 2022 by the 1st and 2nd respondents, fully supporting the 3rd and 4th respondents’ application seeking to strike out some evidence filed in the further affidavits filed by the petitioners pursuant to the directions given by this court on 7th October, 2022.
35.Regrettably, at this stage, despite the court’s inability to refer to that replying affidavit and written submissions for the reasons advanced above, the court is not in a position to determine when the 1st and 2nd respondents were served with the said application dated 30th October, 2022 by the 3rd and 4th respondents as per the directions given on 28th October, 2022, as the 1st and 2nd respondents have not disclosed to this court in their affidavit, the date that they were served with the application dated 30th October 2022 so that the five days for their filing of their replying affidavit and submissions could start running. It follows that this court cannot establish whether the 1st and 2nd respondents complied with the court’s directions as to the timelines for the filing of their responses and submissions.
36.However, the court notes that it openly reminded the parties to forward their filed pleadings to the email annextures@gmail.com in word format but once again the 1st and 2nd respondents’ advocate admittedly failed to do so. He has only managed to comply with that request when he filed the application herein on 23rd November 2022 which he also forwarded in word format to the said email address on 23rd November 2022.
37.Therefore, in as much as the replying affidavit and written submissions were in the e-portal, as explained above, this court did not deliberately or by any design fail to consider the replying affidavit and submissions filed by the 1st and 2nd respondents as the same were not placed before the court in compliance with the court’s directions, for ease of access.
38.The 1st and 2nd respondents indeed filed their documents via e-filing system which this court has found are in the portal. However, the said documents were never dispatched to me in hard copy formats or via the email provided by me for purposes of facilitating writing of the rulings expeditiously as requested of the parties and in addition, this court was not enabled to access the portal to establish which documents had been filed and which ones had not. In my frantic effort to receive the filed copies, I called the Deputy Registrar Hon Joy Wesonga who reminded the parties by calling them and all the other parties except the 1st and 2nd respondents’ counsel send the hard copies and word format documents.
39.Notwithstanding all the above, this court has carefully considered the responses filed by the 1st and 2nd respondents to both the applications dated 29th September 2022 as filed out of time on 25th October, 2022 without leave of court as well as the application dated 30th October 2022 and notes that the replying affidavits and submissions as filed mirror the oral submissions made on 28th October 2022 by their counsel Mr. Raymond Olendo while the 1st and 2nd respondents’ replying affidavit and written submissions to the application dated 30th October 2022 wholly supported the grounds and depositions by the 3rd and 4th Respondents in their quest to have some affidavit evidence filed by the petitioners in the further affidavits expunged from the record.
40.Iam therefore persuaded that had the court then been seized of the said filed documents at the time that it was writing the three rulings, it would have reached the same verdict or result as it did and therefore I find no reason that would make me alter the findings and or holding in the ruling delivered on the 18th November 2022. I further find that the 1st and 2nd respondents have not been denied the opportunity to be heard and that the failure by the court to consider their said affidavit and written submissions has not prejudiced them at all as their positions were well articulated in the oral submissions highlighting the replying affidavit and written submissions to the application dated 29th September 2022, in as much as the same were on record without leave of court and the replying affidavit and written submissions filed by the 3rd and 4th respondents.
41.The upshot of the above is that the application dated 23rd November 2022 by the 1st and 2nd respondents is declined and dismissed with no orders as to costs.
DATED, SIGNED AND DELIVERED AT HOMABAY THIS 26TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 2022R.E. ABURILIJUDGE