Case Metadata |
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Case Number: | Election Petition 2 of 2013 |
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Parties: | Lemmy Samatei Kamuye v Born Bob Maren,Malonza M. Mule & Independent Electoral & Boundaries Commission |
Date Delivered: | 24 Jun 2013 |
Case Class: | Civil |
Court: | Election Petition in Magistrate Courts |
Case Action: | Ruling |
Judge(s): | Temba A. Sitati SRM |
Citation: | Lemmy Samatei Kamuye v Born Bob Maren & 2 others [2013] eKLR |
Advocates: | Lel & Associates, Advocates for Petitioner Sisule Munyi Kilonzo & Associates, Advocates for 2nd and 3rd Respondents |
Court Division: | Civil |
County: | Narok |
Advocates: | Lel & Associates, Advocates for Petitioner Sisule Munyi Kilonzo & Associates, Advocates for 2nd and 3rd Respondents |
Case Summary: | Election Law-election petition-striking out of election petition- where the petition was drawn and filed by an advocate who did not have a valid practicing certificate- where the petition and related documents were filed under the wrong provisions of the law- Elections( Parliamentary & County Elections) Petition Rules rule 8 |
History Advocates: | One party or some parties represented |
Case Outcome: | Petition Struck Out |
Disclaimer: | The information contained in the above segment is not part of the judicial opinion delivered by the Court. The metadata has been prepared by Kenya Law as a guide in understanding the subject of the judicial opinion. Kenya Law makes no warranties as to the comprehensiveness or accuracy of the information |
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE SENIOR RESIDENT MAGISTRATE’S COURT
AT NAROK
ELECTION PETITION NUMBER 2 OF 2013
LEMMY SAMATEI KAMUYE.............................................PETITIONER
-AGAINST-
BORN BOB MAREN................................................1ST RESPONDENT
MALONZA M. MULE..............................................2ND RESPONDENT
THE INDEPENDENT ELECTORAL &
BOUNDARIES COMMISSION..............................3RD RESPONDENT
RULING
This ruling relates to two applications filed by the 3 Respondents with both applications seeking to strike out the petition filed against the 3 Respondents.
The first to be filed is the Notice of motion dated 11-04-2013 by the 2nd and 3rd Respondents jointly who are represented by the firm of Sisule Munyi Kilonzo & Associates, Advocates. The second one is dated 08-MAY-2013 by the 1st Respondent represented by Mengich & Company Advocates.
The Petitioner has not, as of the time of drawing up this ruling, filed any formal response to these 2 applications. The Petitioner is represented by Lel & Associates, Advocates.
The main ground relied on by the 2nd and 3rd Respondents in their joint motion on notice is that the petition is fatally defective, incompetent and bad in law for being filed under the following repealed laws:
Their argument was that the proper enabling laws and statutes in force are:
On his part, the 1st Respondent relied on the main grounds that the petition did not conform to Rule 8 of the Petition Rules 2013 providing for standard forms of petitions; the petition relied on a repealed constitution and repealed statutes as pointed out by the 2nd and 3rd Respondents.
Further, the Petitioner’s advocates did not have the requisite qualifications of an advocate namely that the petitioner’s counsel Mr. Kilele diid not have a practising certificate at the time of drawing up and filing of the petition.
As a basis for their contentions, the 3 respondents filed numerous authorities in support of their positions.
The petitioner did attend court on the date fixed for the inter –partes hearings of the interlocutory applications. They put up no fight; it was a no contest.
Instead of contesting these 2 interlocutory applications, the petitioner through his advocate sought to have the inter-partes hearing adjourned to enable the petitioner lodge an application to withdraw the petition. This request was not met by the Court when I ruled that withdrawal of election petitions was a highly regulated procedure and the court could not be held in abeyance just to enable the petitioner take intended actions.
The Petitioner put up no submissions to the arguments raised by the 3 Respondents.
Later in the day, the Petitioner lodged his formal application to withdraw the petition. This was on 07-JUNE-2013 a few hours after the conclusion of the inter-partes hearing.
The Court directed the Petitioner to serve his application for leave to withdraw the Petition on all 3 Respondents for inter-partes hearing on 24-JUNE-2013 shortly before the delivery of the Ruling on the striking out.
When the parties returned to court on 24-06-2013, the Court discovered, upon inquiry, that the petitioner had not published a notice of the application for leave to withdraw in the Kenya gazette as required by Rule 24 of the Elections( Parliamentary & County Elections) Petition Rules 2013.
With this failure, the Court opted to proceed with the delivery of the Ruling on the striking out since the legal duty to publish the said notice of an application for leave to withdraw the petition firmly rested with the Petitioner/applicant. The failure to publish the notice in the Kenya Gazette fatally affected the applicant’s right to proceed with the withdrawal. He cannot withdraw the petition.
Having considered all the pleadings, arguments, authorities and submissions including the conduct of the parties in petition, the Court finds no difficulty to rule that the petition is fatally defective, incompetent and bad in law for the following 3 major reasons:
It is clear that this petition, like a still-born child, died even before birth; it died in the advocate’s chambers where it was drawn up.
Having perused and considered the numerous authorities cited by the Respondent’s counsels- they must be commended for thier diligence and able representations- the Court hereby strikes out in its entirety the petition filed by the Petitioner on 21-MARCH-2013 the same being incurabley defective, incompetent and bad in law.
The Costs of the entire petition and related interlocutory applications shall be awarded to the 3 respondents.
The pleadings, documents and/or applications lodged by the petitioner also collapse with the the petition.
Right of appeal to the High Court is 30 days.
DATED, READ AND DELIVERED AT NAROK THIS 24th DAY OF JUNE 2013
TEMBA A. SITATI
AG. SENIOR RESIDENT MAGISTRATE
NAROK