Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission v Otieno & 4 others (Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Civil Suit E015 of 2021) [2023] KEHC 17840 (KLR) (Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes) (23 May 2023) (Ruling)
Neutral citation:
[2023] KEHC 17840 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Civil Suit E015 of 2021
EN Maina, J
May 23, 2023
Between
Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission
Plaintiff
and
Bob Kephas Otieno
1st Defendant
Caroline Chepkemoi Sang
2nd Defendant
Maurice Odiwuor Amek
3rd Defendant
David Obonyo and Lilian Achieng t/a Damila Enterprises Limited
4th Defendant
Everlyne Owino Ogutu
5th Defendant
Ruling
1.When this matter came up for hearing before me on April 24, 2023 Learned Counsel appearing for the Plaintiff called Paul Githinji Kariuki (PW6), a bank official, to the stand so as to produce certain bank records, inter alia, bank statements. The production of the documents was however vehemently opposed by Counsel for the Defendants as they were not certified as bank records and also for reason that they were not accompanied by a certificate as provided in Sections 65(6) and 106B of the Evidence Act. After hearing counsel for the parties this court rejected the documents and gave its reasons for the decision in a ruling delivered on the same date. Thereafter on the next hearing date in addition to filing the present application Counsel for the Plaintiff sought to introduce documents which she had had certified when the court adjourned but again the same could not be admitted for reason that they were not accompanied by a certificate under Section 106B of the Evidence Act. Counsel sought to stay the proceedings which application was rejected by this court. However as there was an application already on record this court gave directions thereto and ordered that a ruling would be delivered before the hearing continued.
2.The application which is made under Sections 1A,1B,3A and 63 of the Civil Procedure Act, Order 11, 18 Rule 10 and 50 of the Civil Procedure Rules and seeks the following orders:
3.The Application is made on the following grounds stated on the face of it:-
4.Learned Counsel for the 1st, 4th and 5th Defendants opposed the application vide the affidavit of David Obonyo Mreri dated May 8, 2023 on the grounds that the new documents were procured by the Plaintiff on 25th and April 27, 2023, way after the matter had been certified ready for hearing; that the Plaintiff’s decision to file additional documents was triggered by the nature of the hearing of the matter on 24th and April 25, 2023 where the court dismissed the Plaintiff’s oral application seeking to introduce additional evidence on the reason that they were not accompanied by a certificate of electronic evidence.
5.That the Plaintiff’s recourse against the ruling of April 25, 2023 lies with the court of appeal since this court has already rendered itself on the matter; that the Plaintiff’s introduction of new evidence runs afoul of the principles set in Abdi Mohamud v Ahmed Abdullahi Mohamad & 3 Others [2018] eKLR and the just and expeditious trial for the Defendants. Lastly, that the application is incompetent, ill-advised and it is in the interest of justice and fairness that it be dismissed with costs.
Submissions by the parties
6.The Plaintiff filed written submissions dated May 17, 2023.
7.The 1st, 4th and 5th Respondents on their part relied on their submissions dated May 8, 2023.
8.The 1st, 4th and 5th Respondents framed two issues for determination:
- Whether leave to admit additional evidence should be granted in the matter; and
- Whether it is just and proper for the court to recall PW6 Paul Githinji to produce the additional evidence.
9.The Respondents contend that application has been filed at the tail end of the proceedings where all but one of the Plaintiff’s witnesses have testified; that the court already rendered its decision on the admissibility of the new documents as evidence vide the Ruling of April 25, 2023; that the Application in any case does not meet the threshold of Abdi Mahamud (Supra), whether the Supreme court held that the court could only admit additional evidence sparingly and with abundant caution.
10.They submitted further that it is not just and proper for the court to recall PW6 to produce additional evidence as Order 18 Rule 10 of the Civil Procedure Rules and Section 146 (4) of the Evidence Act limit the circumstances in which the court may recall a witness; that PW6 Paul Githinji testified that he left Equity Bank and the new documents to be adduced were procured by one Austine Amoth in April 2023. As such PW6 is not competent to produce the said documents. They urged the court to dismiss the Application.
11.The Plaintiff/Applicant seeks to adduce additional evidence vide a supplementary list of documents dated April 25, 2023. These are 10 sets of documents serialized as Annexure 1 and 2a-2i in the Plaintiff’s supplementary bundle and include a letter requesting for the production of the suspense account extract book, 3 certificates of electronic evidence, account opening documents and bank statements of the Homabay County Assembly and the Respondent’s bank accounts. The Respondents in opposing the Application have contended that this court made a determination on the production of the additional evidence vide a ruling delivered on April 25, 2023.
12.I have carefully considered the application, the responses, the submissions on record, the cases cited and the law. It is my finding that this application has no merit. I say so for reason that what is sought to be produced is not additional evidence or supplementary documents as alleged by the Applicant but production of documents which were rejected by this court on grounds that they did not comply with the law and rules of evidence regarding production of bankers records as provided under Section 176 to 179 of the Evidence Act. Section 3 of the Evidence Act defined bankers books as:The statements and copies of cheques sought to be produced are therefore for all intents and purposes banker’s books. No evidence whatsoever was however adduced that the same had been compared/examined with the original and that they were correct. Moreover, these were documents that were produced electronically and which therefore required a certificate whether under Section 65(6) or Section 106 B of the Evidence Act. The same did not have such a certificate and they were clearly therefore not admissible. The documents now sought to be adduced in evidence were prepared after the rejection of the initial documents. This is therefore a case of a party trying to patch up his case. In the case of Abdi Mohamud v Ahmed Abdullahi Mohamed & 3 others [2018] eKLR the Supreme Court while considering the issue of additional evidence on appeal was categorical that the discretion of the court to allow additional evidence should never be exercised to allow a party to patch up its case. The court stated:
13.I agree with Counsel for the Defendants that in the circumstances of this case the plaintiff’s recourse lay with filing an appeal against the decision of this court but not in having the documents rectified and somewhat trying to compel this court to admit the same. It would have been different if the statements were indeed additional evidence or if they were documents which were in the possession of the Plaintiff which had inadvertently been left out of the bundle. The opposite is however true and it is that once the documents were rejected Counsel hurried to the bank and sought to remedy the error by having them certified as being from the bank. The certificate under Sections 65(6) and 106B of the Evidence Act were however still lacking in regard to the documents. Rules of evidence are intended to guarantee a fair trial to all the parties. They are not merely technicalities that can be wished away or ignored. Without evidence that the entries in the statements and records had been examined with the original entries and they were correct (Section 177(1)(d) of the Evidence Act), which fact in my view could have been proved through a certification stamp by the bank, and without proof that the records were reproduced from a computer at the bank where they were stored, a fact that could have been proved through a certificate under Section 65(6) or 106B of the Evidence Act, then I still hold the position that the documents are not admissible.
14.On the recall of Paul Githinji (PW6), witness the position is that Counsel herself informed this court that she had no more questions for the witness. He was then cross examined by Counsel for the Defendants after which she re-examined him. If there were any documents for him to produce, then he should have been asked to produce them. Be that as it may, Section 146(4) of the Evidence Act clothes this court with discretion to grant parties an opportunity to recall witnesses. It states: -
15.There is no fetter to this court’s discretion to recall a witness. In the circumstances the court shall accede to the request and have PW6 recalled but not so as to produce documents which this court adjudged inadmissible and no appeal has been filed. As for the prayer for production of the documents produced in HCACEC No 4 of 2022 my view is that nothing stops Counsel from applying for the documents to be released to her or for certified copies of the same for the purpose of producing them in this case. Prayer 6 of the application is therefore rejected. The application therefore succeeds only to the extent that the Plaintiff is granted leave to recall PW6 but is otherwise dismissed. The costs of the application shall be in the cause.
SIGNED, DATED AND DELIVERED VIRTUALLY THIS 23RD DAY OF MAY, 2023.E N MAINAJUDGE