Republic v Public Procurement Administrative Review Board & Kenya Power & Lighting Company Limited Ex-Parte Kleen Homes Security Services Limited [2017] KEHC 7805 (KLR) | Public Procurement | Esheria

Republic v Public Procurement Administrative Review Board & Kenya Power & Lighting Company Limited Ex-Parte Kleen Homes Security Services Limited [2017] KEHC 7805 (KLR)

Full Case Text

REPUBLIC OF KENYA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF KENYA

AT NAIROBI

JUDICIAL REVIEW NO.  503/502 OF 2016

IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY KLEEN HOMES SECURITY SERVICES LIMITED

AND

IN THE MATTER OF THE PUBLIC PROCUREMENT ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW BOARD DECISION MADE ON 4TH OCTOBER, 2016

BETWEEN

REPUBLIC………………………………………………….APPLICANT

VERSUS

THE PUBLIC PROCUREMENT

ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW BOARD………..…....1ST RESPONDENT

KENYA POWER& LIGHTING

COMPANY LIMITED…………………………....…2ND RESPONDENT

EXPARTE

KLEEN HOMES SECURITY SERVICES LIMITED

RULING ON THE PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

1. On  18th October  2016  this court  considered  chamber  summons  under certificate  of urgency, dated  17th October  2016  filed by the  applicant  Kleen Homes  Security  Services Limited   and  granted  it leave to  institute Judicial Review proceedings to  challenge the decision  of the 1st respondent Public  Procurement Administrative Review Board made on 4th October 2016 dismissing the request for review in respect of Tender No.KP1/9AA-2/0T/02/SS/16-17 for provision of Security Guarding Services   to  the Procuring Entity (PE) Kenya Power  & Lighting  Company  Ltd ; directing the PE  to proceed  with and  complete  the procurement  process; and that each  party to bear   their  own costs  of  the request  for review.

2.  The court   also directed  the applicant  to file  and serve  the substantive  notice of motion  within 21 days from the date of leave, in accordance  with Order  53  Rule 3 of the Civil Procedure  Rules.

3. The leave granted   was also  ordered  to operate  as stay of  the proceedings  and the decision of the Review  Board  in  Review case  No. 74/2016  with regard to the above quoted  tender  for provision  of Security  Guarding Services by the  2nd respondent  pending hearing and final determination of these Judicial Review  proceedings.

4. On 8th November 2016 the exparte applicant dutifully filed the substantive motion. The 2nd respondent Kenya Power  & Lighting Company Ltd  filed replying affidavit  on  23rd  January  2017  sworn  by Jude Ochieng on the same  day. The deponent is the Chief Legal Officer, Litigation and Prosecutions of the Procuring Entity herein Kenya Power & Lighting Company Ltd.

5. At  paragraphs  21,22,23 and  24  of the  said replying  affidavit, the 2nd respondent  raised  a preliminary point of law contending that pursuant to Section 175(5) of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal Act No. 33  of 2015, the exparte  applicant’s   application must be  heard  and  determined  by this  court within  45 days  of filing  failure to  which the  decision of the  1st  respondent Review Board shall remain valid  and  final; that   as the court record shows that the motion   was filed  on 8th November  2016  and is yet  to be  heard  or determined  to date, such  proceedings  herein  have lapsed  by operation of the  law thereby  rendering  the same  nugatory, mute, statute  barred, ineffective, irrelevant   and  a waste of judicial  time; that in the light of the prevailing circumstances, this court has no jurisdiction to entertain the exparte applicant’s application  whatsoever  and the  2nd   respondent shall crave  for leave of the  court to  strike out  the application in limine and the decision of the 1st  respondent  declared  final  and  binding; and that  the orders sought by the Exparte applicant  are incapable of being  granted  and/or enforced  by this  Honourable  court as  the same  have not only lapsed by operation of the law but are also underserved  and  unjustified  and it is  only fair, just  and lawful that the same be dismissed   with costs  to  the  2nd  respondent.

6. The above  replying  affidavit  was  followed by a preliminary   objection  dated  23rd  January  2017  and filed  in court  on 24th January  2017, replicating  paragraphs   21, 22,23 and  24  of the replying  affidavit  of Jude Ochieng.

7. On  30th November  2017  the  2nd respondent’s  counsel  also filed a list of authorities  in support of the preliminary  objection  dated  23rd  January  2017.  The exparte applicant’s counsel filed their list and bundle of authorities on 8th February 2017.

8. The parties advocates orally canvassed the preliminary  objection  on  9th February  2017  with Mr  Muga  counsel  for  the  2nd respondent/objector   urging  the preliminary  objection and Mr Kiplangat representing  the exparte  applicant  opposing   the preliminary  objection, urging the court to dismiss it with costs.

9. No replying affidavit was filed to the preliminary objection. According to Mr Muga, the court   has no jurisdiction to entertain these proceedings pursuant to Section 175(3) and (5) of the Public Procurement Administrative Review Board Act, 2015 which implements Article 227 of the Constitution, that the Act mandates the High Court to hear and determine Judicial Review   application within 45 days of the date of filing of the application which 45 days had lapsed.  That as the application  was  filed on  18th October  2016  seeking for  leave, the matter ought to have been decided   by 3rd   December, 2016.  As a result, it was contended that the application is spent and in accordance with Section 175(5) of the Act, the decision of the Review Board stands final.

10. Further, it was submitted that this court   cannot entertain   proceedings which have lapsed by operation of the law.  That the hearing dates in this matter were taken after 5the lapse of time.  That there is no room for explanation by the court or by the party or even for an extension of time hence this court has no alternative but to down its tools.

11. It  was submitted that the reason  for the Section 175 of the PPAD Act is to ensure  public procurement proceedings are canvassed within the shortest  time possible   to avoid any  prejudice  caused by  delay  of proceedings, as  stipulated  in Section 3 of the  Act  on the objectives of  the Act; to provide  efficient  and timely resolution  of disputes.

12. It was further submitted by the objector/2nd respondent’s counsel that there is no denial   on the part of the applicant   that time lapsed.

13. Reliance  was  placed on  Joseph  C. Kiptoo & Another  vs Kericho Water & Sewerage  Company Ltd  [2016]  e KLRwhere Mumbi  Ngugi J  held inter alia, that if  an Act of Parliament  provides for  a mechanism  for dispute   resolution, it    has to be followed  strictly  and that as  a  result,  the learned  judge  struck out   the review  which  was  filed after  14 days  as stipulated under the Act.  Counsel urged this court to uphold    that decision and the timelines set up in the Act.

14. Further reliance was placed on Public Procurement Administrative Review Board & another Exparte Wajir County Government [2016] e KLR where it was submitted that Odunga J upheld Section 175 of the Act as it relates to timelines   for disposal of Judicial Review application.

15. Mr Muga  further  submitted that even  other legislation  like the Elections Act provides for timelines  within which  Election Petitions must be heard  and  determined which is  within 6 months as  was held  in Petition No. 1/2014  Christine  Talaam  Vs Jennifer  Nanamut   Koipiri  & URP & IEBC  [2014] e KLR  where the magistrate  delivered  her decision  4 days  after the six months  period for determination of such disputes  had lapsed.  Honourable Ochieng J held that the magistrate had no  jurisdiction  to deliver  a decision after  6  months hence  it was a nullity and  an appeal could  not be mounted  to challenge   a null decision; and  that no explanation for delay  can cure  a decision  delivered  after the lapse  of 6 months  hence, and in the same vein, this court   must down  its  tools.

16. Mr  Muga  also  relied  on the decision from   other  jurisdiction such as the Nigerian Supreme Court in Senator John Akpanudo Edehe & 2 Others vs Goodwill Obot Akbabio & 3 Others  where the  matter had not  been  concluded  outside  the  Constitutional  Provisions of Section 285(6)  of the Nigerian  Constitution within the set  timelines   for  disposal.  The court held    that the decision was a nullity as the court could only have jurisdiction if the case before it was still alive and that therefore   the petition was dead  by effluxion   of time hence  the issue   of fair hearing  could not be   raised.

17. Mr Muga maintained that these   proceedings are extinguished and therefore the court cannot sit to entertain any further proceedings in this matter.  He  urged the court  to uphold the  preliminary objection as the matter herein is spent  and therefore  it is in the interest  of  justice  and fairness  that the delay  should not be  entertained  by the court  as delay  in procuring  services for  security affects  the security of the 2nd respondent’s various  installations country wide  hence the matter  should be struck  out with  costs.

18. In opposing the preliminary objection, the exparte applicant’s counsel, Mr Kiplangat submitted on three grounds. It was submitted by the applicant’s counsel that Section 175(3) and (5) of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal Act  (PPADA)  violates the applicant’s rights of access to justice under Article 48 of the Constitution and the right  to have the dispute  determined  by the court: that the  provisions of   the Act  are  therefore  unreasonable and by  fixing timelines  it  fails  to consider individual  circumstances of each case, the availability and allocation of Judicial  Resources; and that there  are other  equally  important   matters  which  deserve equal  time allocation.

19. Further, it was submitted that the Section renders rights   ineffective  leaving the applicant  with  no rights  or  effective remedy and that the Section renders constitutional rights  illusory and  deprives  the court  the discretion  to manage   time within which matters  should be  dealt  with.

20. It was also submitted that the Section of the Act violates Article 24 of the Constitution.  That the Constitution does not limit   access to justice and that the limitation in unreasonable.

21. That the Section does not limit rights and neither does it expressly  limit  jurisdiction  of the court  hence  the court  has power  under Section  11 of the  Fair Administrative  Action Act  to make  declaratory  orders  and  under Article 23 (3)  of the Constitution to declare any law invalid to the extend of that  violation of the Bill of Rights. Counsel urged the court to declare that Section 175(3) and (5) of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal  Act 2015 violates  Articles  48 and  50 of the Constitution  and therefore  null and void.

22. According  to Mr Kiplangat, this  court  vide Republic V Kenya Revenue  Authority  exparte  Webb  Fontaine  Group  FZ – LLC  & 3  Others [2015] eKLR  (KRA CASE) determined a similar  issue which affected  the previous Section 100(4) of the repealed  Act and found the Section unconstitutional hence the court  could hear and  determine  the application  beyond  the  30 days.  It was submitted that in this case, Section  175(3) and (5)  of the Act is  a replica  of Section  100(4) of the Old  Act  with the  difference being  the number  of days, which  does not  affect  the decision.

23. Further reliance  was placed on  Blic vs Public Procurement Administrative Review Board & Another Exparte Selex  Sistemi  Integrati [2008] e KLRas extensively cited  by Odunga J  in the KRA(supra) case.

24. It was submitted that this court has power to consider constitutional questions relating to breach of fundamental rights and freedoms.  Counsel further relied on Suchan Investments V Ministry of National Heritage and Culture & 3 Others[2016] e KLR CA to support the argument that availability of other remedies is not  a ground to bar the applicant from pursuing its  constitutional  rights. That in this case, a petition was unnecessary as the application invokes the Fair Administrative Action Act, 2015 which is relevant.

25. The second ground of opposition to the preliminary objection as submitted by Mr Kiplangat is that Section  175(3) (5) of the Act  is unconstitutional in that it violates Article 1(3) of the Constitution on separation of powers and independence of the judiciary as stipulated  under Articles  165 and  151  of the Constitution hence the  Section is invalid and therefore this court has power under Article 2(4) of the Constitution to declare such law invalid because judicial  authority  is  exercised  by courts and not through directives  by the legislature.

26. Further, that the management of cases is a judicial function and not  for Parliament  to allocate  time for  management  of cases  otherwise  it  deprives  courts of  the discretion  to  determine  priority  of hearing   cases in  the circumstances   of each case, which  makes the Section of the Act  an  unjustified legislative and  executive  intrusion of  judicial functions.

27. Mr Kiplangat further submitted that the Public Procurement Administrative Review Board is an executive body hence if its decision becomes effective unless the challenge thereof is determined within the stipulated 45 days from the date of filing thereof in the High Court; the Court’s role in the process is removed.  Counsel   relied on the KRA (supra) case where Odunga J  held that  the sharing  of judicial function with the executive and legislature is unconstitutional and urged this court to uphold the same principles.

28. The third ground argued by Mr Kiplangat is that in the  alternative, Section 175(3) (5) of the Act  is an  ouster  clause which is to be interpreted  by the court  restrictively  in a manner  that preserves  the jurisdiction of the court to  preside  over disputes  before it.

29. Further, that the language in Section  175(3)(5)  does not  oust   the jurisdiction of the  court to  specify   the consequences  of failure to hear  the  application within 45  days  hence the clause  is vague, ambiguous  and  not an  express ouster of jurisdiction  of the court.  Counsel argued that the 2nd respondents are giving the section literal interpretation as opposed  to  proper purposiveinterpretation.  Reliance was placed on Regina Vs Soneji & Another [2005] UK HL 49 which case sets principles applicable to statutory interpretation.

30. It  was  submitted  that in view  of  the ambiguity  in clause  (3) of section 175 of the Act, Parliament   could not  have intended  that failure  to decide  the case   within  45 days  invalidates  the proceedings  pending  before the court.

31. It was submitted that courts frown upon  provisions like  Section  175(3) and (5)  hence  this court should  construe   such provisions  to preserve  the jurisdiction of  the court.

32. On Mr Muga’s submissions and  authorities  relied  upon, it  was submitted that they are  irrelevant and  distinguishable.  That in the Joseph  Kiptoo (supra) case, the matter was concerned with whether  the applicant should have filed a constitutional petition to challenge  a procurement process  and the court  reminded  the applicant   that he could have lodged  a review before the Public Procurement Administrative Review Board.  That the court in the said case never dealt with Section 175(3) (5) of the Act hence there  was no determination of the issues similar to the ones before this court.

33. Concerning the case of Republic v Public Procurement Administrative Review Board Exparte Wajir County Government, Mr Kiplangat submitted that the issue was Section 175(1) of the Act which stipulates time for commencement of the Judicial Review  application, and which was not  complied with, and not  Section 175 (3) and (5)  of the Act, as is  the case herein.

34.  Mr Kiplangat  further submitted  that the case of  Christine  Talaam  (supra) and the Nigerian  decisions (supra)   relied on by   the objector  concern  election  petitions   and  timelines for  their determination   unlike   in this case which is not an election petition.  Further, that Odunga J in the KRA (supra) case dismissed such arguments.

35. It  was submitted that the Constitution  empowers  Parliament  to set timelines for  determination of election petitions  unlike Article  227(1)  which does not stipulate  timelines  for determination of disputes  in  public procurement  matters.

36. Counsel  for the applicant urged the  court to find   the  preliminary objection as misconceived, frivolous and dismiss it  with costs  contending that  no explanation   for the delay is necessary  as it is the  court that  manages  proceedings   before it.

37. In a rejoinder, Mr Muga submitted that the preliminary objection  is not frivolous   as it is  anchored  on the legal provisions  and that  45 days  have lapsed   since the  filing of the Judicial Review  proceedings.

38. Further, that Section  100(4) of the  repealed  Act is  inapplicable  to these proceedings  and that current Act   expressly  provides that the High Court shall determine  the application  within  45 days.

39. It was  submitted that in any  case,  all authorities  submitted by  the exparte  applicant  relate to Section  100 of the  repealed  Act  whereas  the decisions  provided by the 2nd respondent are  2016 decisions.

40. Counsel for  the  2nd respondent  maintained  that Section  175  of the Act  is not  unconstitutional  as there is no  part  of it that ousts  the right to  a fair hearing  and that the section only  stipulates  the period  for litigating  disputes  in public procurement  cases.

41. It  was  submitted that it appears  that  the exparte  applicant herein  is inviting  the court to rewrite  the law by  interpreting  Section 175(3), (5)  to breath  life  into this application, when the  Section 175(5) is clear that once the  decision of the High Court is not  made in  45 days, the decision of  the Review Board  takes effect and becomes binding on all the parties.

42. It  was submitted that as matters  stand now, the decision  of the Review Board  has taken effect hence parties are merely engaging  in an  academic exercise.

43. It  was further  submitted that it  is  farfetched  for  the applicant  to claim that   jurisdiction of the court to manage  cases is being  impeded  since Parliament  and the Constitution  grant jurisdiction and that the Section does not allocate time for  setting down the  hearing.

44. Counsel  urged the court to  interpret  Section  175(3), (5)  in accordance  with the statutes  of interpretation Act, and that  since the mandatory  language  is shall, it does not  give any room for maneuvers hence  the preliminary objection is  well  grounded in law  and should be  upheld  with costs  to the  2nd  respondent.

Determination

45. This court has carefully considered the 2nd respondent’s preliminary objection, the response by the exparte applicant, and the respective counsel’s able oral submissions as supported by constitutional, statutory and case law.

46. The main issue for determination is whether this court has jurisdiction to hear and determine these proceedings which were filed over 45 days ago, as stipulated in section 175(3),(5) of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act that where the High Court does not determine the judicial review within 45 days from date of filing, the decision of the Review Board shall be final and binding on all parties to the review..

47. The commencement point is to define what a preliminary objection is.  A  rational answer  can be  found  in what  the  Court of Appeal  for Eastern  Africa  observed  in the case  of Mukisa  Biscuits  Manufacturing  Company  Ltd  vs  West End  Distributors  Ltd [1969] EA  696  at page  700  where Law JA  observed  that:

“ a  preliminary objection consists of a point of law which  has been  pleaded  or which  arises  by clear implication out of the  pleadings  and  which, if  argues  as  a preliminary  objection  may dispose   of the suit……….

………a preliminary objection is in the nature of what   used to be a demurer.  It raises a pure point of law which is argues on the assumption that all facts pleased by the other side are correct.  It cannot be raised if any fact has to be ascertained or what is the exercise of judicial discretion…..”

48. Therefore the question is whether the preliminary objection taken in this case passes the test.  In my view, the preliminary objection raised touching on jurisdiction of the court  to hear and determine the Judicial Review application, in view  of the provisions  of Section  175 (3) (5) of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2015 passes the test of a preliminary objection as it does not seek the discretion of the court.

49. Section 175 of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2015 states:

175. (1) A person aggrieved by a decision made by the Review Board may seek judicial review by the High Court within fourteen days from the date of the Review Board’s decision, failure to which the decision of the Review Board shall be final and binding to both parties.

(2) The application for a judicial review shall be accepted only after the aggrieved party pays a percentage of the contract value as security fee as shall be prescribed in Regulations.

(3) The High Court shall determine the judicial review application within forty-five days after such application.

(4) A person aggrieved by the decision of the High Court may appeal to the Court of Appeal within seven days of such decision and the Court of Appeal shall make a decision within forty-five days which decision shall be final.

(5) If either the High Court or the Court of Appeal fails to make a decision within the prescribed timeline under subsection (3) or (4), the decision of the Review Board shall be final and binding to all parties.

(6) A party to the review which disobeys the decision of the Review Board or the High Court or the Court of Appeal shall be in breach of this Act and any action by such party contrary to the decision of the Review Board or the High Court or the Court of Appeal shall be null and void.

(7) Where a decision of the Review Board has been quashed, the High Court shall not impose costs on eitherparty.

50. In determining this preliminary objection, this court’s attention was brought to the novel case of  HC Miscellaneous Civil Application 1260 of 2007  Republic  V Public Procurement Administrative Review Board& Another Exparte Selex Sistemi Integrati[2008]eKLR,decided by Nyamu J(as he then was)wherea preliminary  objection   was raised to the effect  that:

1. The notice  of motion dated  20th  December  2007 is fatally  defective  and  is time   barred   in accordance  with Section  100(4)  of the Public  Procurement  and  Disposal  Act No. 3 of  2015 as Judicial  Review  was not declared  by the High Court within  30 days  from the date  of filing;

2. The matter  having  been  filed  on 3rd  December 2007 because  statutory  time  barred  on  3rd  January  2008.

51.  The preliminary  objection in the Selex Sistemi Integrati case was predicated heavily on Section 100(4) of  the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2005 ( now repealed) and which is in pari materia with the section 175 (3) of the 2015 Act which  stated:

“ (4) if  Judicial Review  is not declared  by the High court within  30 days  from the date  of filing, the decision  of the Review Board  shall take  effect.”

52. The new Act did some panel beating to the section but the tenor and spirit is the same. The arguments  raised in that case  by the objector, just  as was the  case herein, in support  of the preliminary objection  were that the spirit behind Section  100(4)  of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2005 was to ensure that the public interest is served  in the least  amount of time possible  and that  projects  are carried out   expeditiously  by the making sure that  Judicial Review  applications  are  heard within 30 days  from the date of filing of the application.

53. Further, that the aim is to ensure that  there are  no delays in finalizing the  tenders  intended  to improve  the welfare  of Kenyans and that the funds  are disbursed expeditiously to commence  the project  hence  the limitation  of time on Judicial Review  process  which guarantees  that the process is quick and effective.

54. The objector in the said motion further maintained that the application was statute barred and cited a description of statutes of limitation from Black’s Law Dictionary 6th Editionthus:

“ statutes  setting  maximum time  periods  during  which  certain actions can be brought or rights  enforced……..declaring that no suit  shall be maintained  on such causes  of action…unless brought  within a  specified  period of time after  the right  accrued.”

55. It  was thus argued that the court was meant  to announce clearly an opinion  or resolution over the  matter  within  30  days after  filing of the  application by the applicant; that the  period of  30 days  began  running from  the date of  filing of the   application for leave and  stay by the applicant  on  3rd December  2007 and  expired  3rd January  2008  which would make that   application  time barred and  hence it   could not be  heard and determined  by the court.

56. Further reliance was placed on Section 57 of Cap 2 Interpretation and General Provisions Act which states:

“In computing time for the purposes of a written law, unless the contrary intention appears-

A period of days from the beginning of an event   or the doing  of an act  or thing shall be deemed to be exclusive  of the day on which  the event   or the act  or thing  was  done.”

57. Further reliance was placed on Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Edition VOL 45 paragraph 1134 which   addresses   the aspect of the period within which   an act must be done thus:

“The court has no power to extend a period of time limited by statute for  doing an act unless  the statute provides”

58. It was contended that the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal  Act, 2005 did not  provide for  extension of  time and   hence the preliminary objection  should be  allowed and the notice  dismissed  with costs.

59. On the part of the applicant in the Selex Sistemi Integrati case, in opposing the preliminary  objection, the court was urged to  consider  the principle  laid down  by Lord  Denning  in his book: The Discipline  of Law  1979  London Butterworth  at  page  12 as follows:-

“ whenever  a statute  comes up  for consideration it must be  remembered  that it is not within human powers  to foresee the manifold sets  of facts  which may arise, and, even if it were, it is not possible  to provide for them in terms  free from  all ambiguity….

The English language is not an instrument of mathematical precision.  It would certainly save judges trouble if Acts of Parliament were drafted with divine precision and perfect clarity.  In the  absence of it, when a defect   appears, a judge cannot  simply  fold  his hands  and  blame the  draftsman….he must supplement  the written  word  so as to give force   and  life to the intention  of the legislature.”

60. It was contended that Section 100(4) of the 2005 Act was unconstitutional as  neither  the Constitution, the Law Reform  Act  nor Order  53  of the Civil  Procedure Rules, put  any timeline  or limit on when  the High Court  should determine  an application for Judicial Review.  It  was  argued that the public  interest  served  by Judicial Review  as expressed  in Section 65(2)  of the  then Constitution was to  ensure that inferior courts, tribunals and administrative bodies act lawfully, fairly, transparently and  reasonably  and  upholding  the preliminary objection would defeat  that  very reason.

61. Further, and material to this case, that the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act, 2005 does not govern the court’s procedure in Judicial Review proceedings and that the issue of  time within which  the court  must determine  a suit  is an   issue of  procedure  set out  in Order  53  of the Civil Procedure  Rules  which does not  make any  time limits   within which  the High Court  should  make a decision; as opposed to Section 100(4)  of the Act  which only provides  for a right   to the Judicial Review relief,  not a  procedure  to be followed  in Judicial Review proceedings  hence Section  100(4)  of the Act is  absurd, oppressive, unjust  and  contrary  to public policy because the decision of the Review Board   is challenged not on time considerations but because it is manifestly unlawful, irrational, unjust  and  antithetic  to the public  interest   and  no effluxion of time should give  it, the qualities of lawfulness, rationality  or reasonableness.

62. Further, that Section 100(4) of the Act purports to give effect to an otherwise unlawful decision and as such the section is defective, unjust, oppressive and absurd.

63. Reliance was placed on Lord Dennings decision in Nothman  V Barnet  Council [1978]1  WLR 220 where  he  stated:

“it  [literal]interpretation is the voice of strict  constructionists.  It is the voice of those who go by the letter.  It is the voice   of those  who adopt   the strict  literal  grammatical construction of words, needless of the consequences.  Faced with staring injustice, the judges are, it is said, impotent, incapable, and sterile.  Not with us in this court.  The literal method is now completely out of date.  It has   been  replaced  by the approach which Lord  Diplock  describes  as the “purposive  approach.”  In all cases  now in the  interpretation of statutes  we adopt  such a construction  as  will “promote the general legislative  purpose” underlying  the  provision…It is  no longer  necessary  for  judges to wring their  hands   and  say: “ there is nothing   we can  do about it.” Whenever  the strict  interpretation of a statute   gives   rise to  an absurd  and  unjust  situation, the  judges  can and  should use  their good  sense  to remedy…by  reaching words  in, if necessary- so as  to do what  parliament   would have   done,  had they had the situation in mind.”

64. It was  submitted in contention  that  the defect  in a statute  cannot be  ignored  by the judge, he must  set out to  work  on the constructive  task of finding  the intention  of Parliament.  That the  judge  should  not only  consider the language  of the statute  but also the  social context  and conditions  which  gave rise  to it, and  supplement the written word so as  to give  “force  and life” to the  intention of the legislature.

65. Further, that Section 100(4) of the Act does not apply to situations where it is impracticable to determine Judicial Review proceedings within 30 days from the date of filing, in view of heavy backlog.

66. The court in determining that case framed the following issues.

1. Whether Section 100(4) of the Act ousts the jurisdiction of the court in Judicial Review.

2. Whether the public interest of finality in public procurement procedures outweigh judicial adjudication.

3. Whether Section 100(4) of the Act was unconstitutional for limiting the jurisdiction of the courts to 30 days.

4. Whether Section 100(4) of the Act was in tandem with the applicable law as regards the procedure in Judicial Review proceedings.

5. What is the public interest in the circumstances?

67.  In my determination of this matter, I shall only delve into whether this court has jurisdiction to hear the present judicial review application in view of the time lapse stipulated by the Act. As was in the Selex Sistemi Integrati case, it is still important to discuss in brief the significance of Judicial Review and or its basis   and where   the court derives its jurisdiction. The learned Judge  that:

“Judicial Review  plays  an important  role  in our society  which is  to check  excesses, omnipotence, arbitrariness abuse of power  and also accountability   and  maintainance of  constitutionalism and  the rule  of law.  As Chief  Justice  Marshall powerfully  argued in Marbury V Madison 5 US 137 [1803], Judicial Review provides the best  means of  enforcing  the people’s   will as declared  in the written  Constitution, without resort  to the  drastic  remedy of revolution.  He  warned that, without Judicial Review, the legislative  branch would enjoy a practical  and  real omnipotence and  would reduce  to nothing  what is deemed  the greatest.  Improvement on political institution a written constitution.  The  concerns  raised in Marbury V Madison  are still  applicable  in our  jurisdiction.  It should be observed that Judicial Review   is the cornerstone of the doctrine of separation of powers and the principle of the rule of law.  On the clear provisions of the law, the High court is the principal interpreter and guardian of the Constitution.  Section 65(2)of the Constitution provides:……

The High court has powers of Judicial Review arising from an Act of Parliament of Law Reform Act and the 1938 English Act, and Order 53 of the Civil Procedure Rule.  This jurisdiction is distinguishable from the constitutional Judicial Review.  The matter  before the court  fell  squarely under  ordinary  Judicial Review, which is a tool used by the  High Court   to ensure   that public  institutions  exercise  power in accordance with the law.

It is still within the jurisdiction of the High Court to review legislation in order to establish whether it complies with the Constitution.  Judicial Review also enables the High Court to review acts, decisions, and omissions of public authorities in order to establish whether they have exceeded or abused their power.

The essence of Judicial Review   was posited by Sir Professor Wade as follows:

“The powers of public authorities are essentially different from those of private persons.  A man making his will may subject to any right of his dependants dispose of this property just as   he may wish.  He may  act out of malice  or a spirit  of revenge  but  in law this  does not  affect his exercise of power.  In the same way a private person has absolute power to allow whom he likes to use his laid regardless of his motives.  This is unfettered discretion.

But a public body may do none of those things unless it acts reasonably and in good faith and upon lawful and relevant grounds of public interest.  The whole conception of unfettered discretion, is inappropriate to a public authority which possesses power solely in order that it may use them for the public good”

Michael Fordham in Judicial Review Hand Book [1994] argues that Judicial Review allows the High Court to supervise the activities of public bodies.  It brings to the judicial forum a wide range of subject matter and enjoys an increasing prominence in the English legal system.  The foregoing is true to the Kenyan Scenario.

68. On whether section 100(4) of the 2005 Act ousted the jurisdiction of the Court, the learned Nyamu J went on to hold as follows and I agree that:

“Ouster of jurisdiction

The High Court’s jurisdiction in Judicial Review matters inheres from the Law Reform Act and also Articles 23, 165(6) of the Constitution.

The Constitution is the Supreme Law of the land and   the will of the people of Kenya.  See Article  2(1)  of  Constitution.  It is  superior   to all  Laws  and any law  that is inconsistent with  it is  void to the  extent  of the  inconsistency(4).  The legality  of the Constitution cannot be challenged  before any  court  or state   organ (3).

Section 100  of the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2005 submits  decisions of the Review Board  to Judicial Review  by the High Court  but  imposes a time bar  of 30 days within which  the High Court must determine  the Judicial Review  otherwise  the  decision  of the Review Board  takes effect.

69. Indeed, Courts of law recognize that their  jurisdiction  may be  restricted  by the Constitution  ( see Article  165(5) (b) of the Constitution  as well as by other statutory enactments but they  also guard  their  jurisdiction  jealously so as  to do  justice, for a court of law exists  to do justice to the parties  ( see Article 159  of the Constitution).

70. It is also the same the same Constitution which commands the courts the exercise of judicial authority to ensure that justice is not delayed [Article 159 2(b)].

71. Therefore, the court when faced  with such a situation, must  deploy balancing  technicalities between what  appears  to be  the  ouster clause  and  the challenged decision so as to  ensure  that access to justice  is not impeded.  It must apply the principle of proportionality, for, a court of law does not exists to do an injustice. The court however acknowledges that where a stature is framed in a manner that ousts the jurisdiction of the court,  such provisions should be construed strictly and narrowly as was held in Smith v East ELLOE Rural  District Council [1965] AC 736 where Lord Viscount Simonds stated:

“ Anyone  bred  in the tradition of the law  is likely  to regard  with little sympathy legislator provisions for ousting the jurisdiction of the court, whether in order  that the subject may be deprived altogether of remedy or in order that  his grievance  may be remitted  to some  other tribunal.”

72. In Anisminic V Foreign Compensation [1969] 1 ALL ER 208 Lord Reid  stated:

“ It is a well established  principle  that  a provision ousting  the ordinary jurisdiction of the court must be construed   strictly meaning, I think, that, if such a provision is reasonably capable of having  two meanings, that meaning  shall be  taken which  preserves  the  ordinary  jurisdiction of the court.”

73. In the instant case, in my  humble  view, it  can safely  be said that  Section 175  of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act, 2015 cannot  possibly be effective  in ousting  the jurisdiction of this court.  This court  must  examine  the intention of Parliament in Section  2 of the Act, and  moreso, the  objectives  which were  intended  to be achieved   by the Act.

74. Whereas the court agrees that the ouster provision in terms of timelines is designed to ensure fairness, transparency, and accountability in procurement procedures, I am equally in agreement with the applicant that it is impracticable to determine  all public  procurement  Judicial Review  matters within  45 days from the date  of institution, bearing  in mind  the rate  at which  Kenyans  are challenging administrative actions taken, in view of the expansive  Bill of Rights  under the new constitutional order, and in the enforcement  of those rights and now that the right to fair administrative action is a fundamental right  espoused in Article  47 of the  Constitution and  implemented  by  the Fair Administrative  Action Act No. 4  of  2015.

75. The Constitution guarantees every person the right to administrative action that is expeditious, efficient, lawful, reasonable, and procedurally fair. The 1st respondent is an administrative body which, besides the jurisdiction granted to it is the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act, 2015, must also apply the provisions of Article 47 of the Fair Administrative Action Act   No. 4 of 2015 in making   any administrative decisions. Therefore, where the decisions of the review Board are subject of challenge before a court of law, the court must not only look at the time within which the challenge must be determined, but as to whether the public interest of finality in procurement procedures outweighs judicial adjudication.

76. The court must examine Section 3 of the Act on the purposes and objectives of the   Act in line with Article 227 of the Constitution. I agree that finality of public  projects   through  efficient, accountable and  expedition  is key  and  noble  intention of the legislature  which must be appreciated, and embraced if the development  agenda is to be  achieved. However, the court must consider the interests of the wider public as opposed to an individual’s  interest.

77. The integrity of the process  is which key  and  where there is a challenge then the court must  ensure that it accords  sufficient  time  to investigate  whether  the process  was done  in a transparent, accountable, fair manner.

78.  Integrity, transparency and accountability are national values and principles  of   governance  espoused  in Article  10 of  the Constitution and these cannot  be sacrificed  at the altar  of finality  and or  expedition.  There must be a balance.  Adjudication of disputes is a constitutional mandate which courts cannot escape.  If that were not the case, then the objectives of the Act will be lost.

79. Therefore, on whether Section 175 is unconstitutional for limiting the jurisdiction of the court to 45 days, as earlier stated, the fundamental basis for Judicial Review is both the Constitution and the Law Reform Act. Article 50 of the Constitution guarantees  all persons  a right  to have  any dispute  that can be resolved by the  application of law  decided in a fair and public hearing before a court or if appropriate, another independent  and impartial tribunal  or body. Under  Article  227(1) of the Constitution, when  a state organ  or any other  public entity  contracts  for goods  or services, it  shall do so  in accordance with a systemthat is far, equitable, transparent, competitive  and cost  effective.

80. There is  no Constitutional time limitation to the  court’s  determination of Judicial Review  in public  procurement matters.

81. In my  humble view, it is safe and sound to  construed that where  there is no specific time frame  provided  by the Constitution for the hearing and determination of a dispute, or where the  Constitution empowers Parliament  to provide for such timelines, then Parliament is expected to having regard to the nature of the case at hand provide for timelines that accord the  case  a fair hearing  within a reasonable time, having  regard to the command that justice  shall not be  delayed ; justice  shall be  done to all irrespective  of  status and therefore  the practicability  of the case, depending  on the circumstances  of the case   and  other relevant   factors. Those other factors include the fact that the court  regulates  its own  calendar  and  diary. In the United Kingdom, Judicial  Review is  determined  within 3 months, having  regard  to judge/population  ratio.

82. Sampling out the Nairobi  Milimani Law Courts, there were about 670 Judicial Review cases filed in 2016.  There are only 2 judges in the Division over a period of time.  These judges are not working robotic perfunctory machines. They are mortal men and woman of flesh and blood, not gadgets.  And even if they were machines, they would require servicing for efficiency and effectiveness hence the need for time-out in the form of leave, training, medical checkups and family engagements for they do not live in Mars lest they suffer from burn out and breakdown of their body systems and fail to function completely.

83. As I write this ruling, it is anticipated that about 90 files would have been opened by end of February, 2017 in the Judicial Review Division. In January 2017 alone, 32 files were opened. In February, and as at today-this afternoon, as I read this ruling, 70 files have been registered.

84. There is no time allocated to judges and judicial officers for judgment writing, unlike in some jurisdictions like South Korea where judges sit in open court for 3 days and   2 days   are dedicated, weekly, to judgment- writing.

85. The recess of between 4 weeks -6 weeks in a year for the High Court was removed by Parliament vide the High Court Organization and Administration Act, 2015.  Traditionally, that is the time when judges used to write judgments. However, due to some misnomer that judges were having a rosy affair during the recess, the vacation was removed from the Judicature Act.

86.  What the Act literally speaking contemplates is that decisions are expected to be delivered on the spot. Perhaps it requires Parliament to take a tour of duty of the Judiciary to appreciate the magnitude of the problem. And what about quality of the decisions expected within the stipulated timeframe? Should a court of law render a decision for the sake of it?

87. There are about 312 working days in a year thus 26 days per month x 12 months. On average, anecdotal evidence shows that each judge in the Judicial review Division handles 18. 5 cases per day.

88. A Kenyan judge of the High Court is never  on leave.  Those who take leave are in their chambers daily, writing judgments, due to the number of cases.  Majority of judges work for 18 hours a day.

89. It is now  1. 03 am  and  on a Saturday  night- Sunday  morning  and yet  I have not  gone to  bed because  of  writing judgments, this ruling  included. I provide this graphic image not because Iam in arrears or seeking any sympathy from anybody but painting the stark reality, noting  that in the Judicial Review Division, every case appears to be under certificate  of urgency with unsustainable pressure only equivalent to that of pregnant mother  who is due to deliver and therefore delay means a still birth.

90. Therefore, whereas this court appreciates  the objectives  of the Act, nonetheless, expedition  cannot override  justice  and if that  were not  to be  the case, illegalities  will be  countenanced by the court merely  because   an offending  party is over zealous to complete  the development  project  which might  go counter the objectives  of the Act in achieving   or promoting  integrity, fairness, transparency and  accountability  of procurement  and  asset disposal  procedures.  Deserving  litigants  are likely  to suffer injustice if time  in the determination of the dispute is limited to  45  days for all cases filed.

91. In addition, this court  finds that  in limiting  the period for  determination  of Judicial Review  applications to 45 days  the legislature was being  over ambitious  and  blind to  the doctrine   of separation of  powers. The 2nd  respondent is a self accounting state corporation and therefore a part of the executive and by strictly  calling upon it to   implement   the project   if the decision of the court is not  rendered  in  45 days by the High Court,   that is a deliberate  encroachment to the operational independence   of the judiciary.

92. According  to Sir Professor    William Wade   in Administrative  Law, 8th Edition  page  708,

“Parliament is mostly concerned with short term considerations and is  strangely indifferent   to the  paradox of enacting    law and  then preventing  courts from  enforcing it.  The judges, with their  eye on the long  term and  the rule of law, have made it  their business  to preserve  the deeper  constitutional logic, based on their  repugnance to allowing any subordinate authority to obtain  uncontrollable  power.”

93. Furthermore, the procedure applicable for the conduct of Judicial Review in public procurement matters, is Sections 8 and  9 of the Law Reform Act and  Order  53   of the Civil Procedure rules. Forty five days from 18th October, 2016 would have been on 2nd December, 2016.

94. InRepublic  Communications Commission of Kenya  & 2 Others Exparte Television Network Ltd  CA 175/2000 [2001] KLR  82; [200] 1  EA  199 the Court of Appeal stated:

“ The  proceedings  under Order  53  can only start after  leave has been obtained  and the  proceedings are then  originated  by the notice  of motion filed pursuant  to the leave granted…..”

95. Similarly in Mike  J.C. Mills  & Another   Vs The  Kenya Posts & Telecommunications  Nairobi  HC Miscellaneous Application  1013/1996, it  was  held inter alia :

“the application for leave does not  commence  judicial review  until such permission is  granted to institute  appropriate  Judicial Review  application”

96. As  was  correctly  observed by Nyamu  J  in the  exparte Selex  Sistemi Integrati case,  I find that  the procedure  for  Judicial Review  set out  by the  Public  Procurement  and  Disposal  Act  and more particularly  Section  175(3) and  (5) is  in conflict  with that  laid down  by the Law Reform   Act and Order  53   of the Civil Procedure  Rules.  For example, according  to Section 175(1)  of the Act,  Judicial Review  must be  commenced  within  14 days from the date of the decision of the Review Board   whereas under Order  53, of the Civil Procedural Rule, the applicant has to file the substantive motion  within 21 days  of the date  when leave   was granted.

97. And whereas  the Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act, 2015  sets out the  time line  within which the Judicial Review  proceedings must be  determined, the  Civil Procedure  Rules (Order 53)  does not.  It is therefore arguable that the novel procedure  introduced   by the  Public  Procurement  and  Asset Disposal  Act  is impractical  and is likely  to lead to  a miscarriage  of  justice.

98. In addition, it cannot be  gainsaid that  some Judicial Review proceedings raise extremely weighty issues that  need time be considered, in view of the bulky and  complex  issues   involved, no court of law  is  expected to pay lip service  to such serious  issues  merely because it  has  to beat the deadline  set by Parliament which is nonetheless  a key stakeholder in the  judicial process   but who do not the shoe of  a judge who,  on a  daily basis    comes  from the court room with 4-5  files reserved for judgments  and  or rulings,  with no extra  time allocated to him or her  to consider and write such decisions.

99. In Republic vs PPARB & Another Exparte Wajir County Government [2016]  e KLR,  although  the court observed that it is not  for the court to interpret  legislation  in a manner  that completely  altars   the legislative  intent by the  enactment  and   I agree that where  there  is a lacuna  in law, the recourse  is to move Parliament  to correct the same   and  not to urge the court to, in effect,  amend  the same  as  it is not  within the  competence  of the court to  assume  that Parliament  made a mistake  as Parliament is presumed not to make  mistakes, and that if  blunders  are  found in the legislation, they must  be corrected  by the  legislature  not  the functions of the court to repair  them, and  whereas  I agree that  one of   the objects  of the Act is speed hence public policy is geared  towards  expeditions resolution of disputes in public procurement  matters; regrettably, the presumption that the legislature  never goes  wrong  is a rebuttable presumption which existed  in the old order when Parliament  reigned supreme.

100. In the new  constitutional  dispensation, it is the  Constitution  which is supreme  as  espoused  in Article  2 of the Constitution. The  Constitution  all persons  and all state  organs  at both the National  and County  levels, and any law  that is  inconsistent  with the Constitution  is void  to the  extent  of the inconsistency  and any act or  omission in contravention of the  constitution is invalid.

101. It therefore follows that the court’s loyalty is to the Constitution, for, it is the same Constitution that gives the courts the power to strike down laws or policies that are inconsistent with the Constitution.

102. It is for that reason that I agree with Hon Odunga J’s declaration in the KRA case that:

“whereas Nyamu, J and Musinga, J in the above cases did not expressly carry out their opinions to their logical conclusion based on what Nyamu, J deemed the inability to make declaratory orders in the matter before him, on my part I have no hesitation in declaring which I hereby do that section 100(4) of the Public Procurement and Disposals Act, is unconstitutional and is therefore inconsequential. Since the enactment of the Fair Administrative Action Act, 2015, a piece of legislation which I must observe in passing suffers from a similar malady in its section 8, this Court now has the power, thanks to section 11 thereof, to make declaratory orders. It must also be noted that under Article 23 of the Constitution this Court has jurisdiction to issue declaratory orders.

93.  Consequently, I hold that this Court has the jurisdiction to entertain these proceedings and that the decision of the Respondent has not, by operation of law, taken effect.”

103. In the same vein, I have no hesitation in invoking Article 23 of the Constitution and holding that section 175(3) and (5) of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act No. 33 of 2015 is inconsistent with the values purposes, values and principles of the Constitution and therefore unconstitutional and inconsequential to these proceedings. Accordingly, the decision of the Review Board, the 1st respondent herein has not taken effect by operation of law as cited by the 2nd respondent.

104. Article 159(2)  of the Constitution is clear  that  in exercising  Judicial  authority, the courts   and  tribunals   shall be  guided  by the principles, among  others:

a. Justice shall be done  to all, irrespective  of  status;

b. Justice   shall not be delayed.

c. ….

d. …….

e. The purpose and principles of this Constitution shall be protected and promoted.

105. One such other principle  of the Constitution as espoused in Article  160 of the Constitution  is independence of judiciary in the exercise   of judicial authority   as  constituted  by Article  161, and to be  subject   only to the Constitution and the law and  shall not  be subject  to the control or direction of  any  person or authority.

106. The House  of Lords  in Regina V Soneji and Another  [2005]  UK HL 49, where the  question of  rigid mandatory and   directly distinctions of legislative enactments was considered  elaborately, it  was stated:

“ 23. Having  reviewed  the issue in  some detail I am in respectful agreement  with the Australian High Court  that the  rigid  mandatory  and directory distinction, and its  many artificial  refinements, have  outlived their  usefulness.  Instead, as held in  AG’s  Ref. No. 3/99,  the  emphasis  ought  to be on the  consequences of non compliance, and posing  the question whether Parliament  can fairly  be taken  to have intended  total invalidity.  That is how I would approach what is ultimately a question of statutory construction.  In my view it follows that the approach of the Court of Appeal was incorrect.”

107. Applying the above decision though  persuasively, I would  find,  without  hesitation that  such an interpretation would not  render wholly ineffective  the Parliamentary  intent of providing for  a specific   time  limit.  The  context  of this case requires a purposive  interpretation,  in line with statutory  provisions as a  whole  in order  to determine  whether  or not  the failure to determine the Judicial Review application  within the stipulated  45 days  is of such  great significance  as to make the whole  purpose of judicial review  proceedings  an nullity; and  having regard to the fact  that currently, there  are many  Judicial Review proceedings pending  in court undetermined  beyond the 30 days  of Section 100 of the  repealed  statute  and section 175  of the  2015  statute.

108. In my  humble view, this court  would not lose its   jurisdiction to make determinations  which are fair and  just  if it  decided   the Judicial Review proceeding after the  lapse  of  45  days from  the date of filing  of the Judicial  Review  application.

109. Iam fortified by Odunga J in MISC APP 250 of 2015in theKRA case citing several decisions where the learned Judge held, inter alia:

110. “It was accordingly held by Rawal, J (as she then was) in Charles Lukeyen Nabori & 9 Others vs. The Hon. Attorney General & 3 Others Nairobi HCCP No. 466 of 2006 [2007] 2 KLR 331that:

“Whereas the court is mindful of the principle that the Legislature has the power to legislate and Judges shall give due deference to those words by keeping the balances and proportionality in the context of fast progressing issues of human rights which have given birth to the enshrinement of fundamental rights in the Constitution, the Constitution should not represent a mere body or skeleton without a soul or spirit of its own. The Constitution being a living tree with roots, whose branches are expanding in natural surroundings, must have natural and robust roots to ensure the growth of its branches, stems, flowers and fruits.”

74.  In Chege Kimotho & Others vs. Vesters & Another [1988] KLR 48; Vol. 1 KAR 1192; [1986-1989] EA 57the Court of Appeal expressed itself as follows:

“The law is a living thing: it adopts and develops to fulfil the needs of living people whom it both governs and serves. Like clothes it should be made to fit people. It must never be strangled by the dead hands of long discarded custom, belief, doctrine or principle.”  SeeMidland Bank Trust Co. vs. Green [1982] 2 WLR 130.

75.  The law being a living thing, a court would be shirking its responsibility were it to say, assuming that there be no existing recognized remedy covering the facts of a particular case, “Why then, this must be an end to it”. The law may be thought to have failed if it can offer no remedy for the deliberate acts of one person which injures another. See Bollinger vs. Costa Brava Wine Co. Ltd [1960] 1 Ch. 262 at 238.

76.  That the law must of necessity, adapt itself to the changing social conditions and not lay still was similarly appreciated in Kimani vs. Attorney General [1969] EA 29.

77.  Therefore where a remedy provided under the Act is made illusory with the result that it is practically a mirage, the Court will not shirk from its Constitutional mandate to ensure that the provisions of Article 50(1) are attained with respect to ensuring that a person’s right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law decided in a fair and public hearing before a court or, if appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or body is achieved. As was rightly stated in Republic vs. Returning Officer of Kamkunji Constituency & The Electoral Commission of Kenya HCMCA No. 13 of 2008 it is the responsibility of the Court to ensure that executive action is exercised; that  Parliament intended and that the High Court has the responsibility for the maintenance of the rule of law; that there cannot be a gap in the application of the rule of law; that the Court must at all times embrace a willingness to oversee executive action and to refuse to countenance behaviour that threatens either basic human rights or the rule of law. Therefore where there is a lacuna with respect to enforcement of remedies provided under the Constitution or an Act of Parliament, or if, through the procedure provided under an Act of Parliament, an aggrieved party is left with no alternative but to invoke the jurisdiction of the Court and the Court is perfectly within its rights to investigate the allegations. To fail to do so would be to engender and abet an injustice and as has been held before, a court of justice has no jurisdiction to do injustice. See M Mwenesi vs. Shirley Luckhurst & Another Civil Application No. Nai. 170 of 2000 and Kenya Industrial Estates Ltd vs. Transland Shoe Manufacturers Ltd. & 2 Others Civil Application No. Nai. 364 of 1999.

111. I therefore  agree with the exparte  applicant  that Parliament  in its  wisdom  did not  intend  Judicial Review  proceedings to  fail in all cases  where the   time frame  contained   in Section 175 of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act  was not observed.  I would therefore  proceed to  hold that  failure to  keep the timeline  of  45 days   stipulated  in Section 175(3) of the Act does not  invalidate the final order of this  court in Judicial Review.

112. The Regina V Soneji (supra) case captured the above point more succinctly as follows a page 31 of the judgment that:

“65.  The traditional consequence of finding that a provision was merely directory was that substantial performance   would constitute a sufficient compliance with the statutory requirement.  This concept  can be more  readily  applied  where a  statute  prescribes  an exact method   of sequence   of carrying out  specific  acts  or a time  within  which they are  to be performed.  A minor and insubstantial deviation from the requirements will not make the resulting proceedings invalid.  A convenient  example  is to be  found in  Foyle, Carlingford and Irish  Lights  Commission V MC  Gillion [2002] NI 861  in which  it  was  held that  an appellant’s  failure to serve a copy of a case  stated  upon the opposite party  within the prescribed  time  was directory  and that  accordingly  late service  did not  bar his appeal.”

113. The court  in the above case approached  the determination  on the basis  of “exceptional  circumstances”  and  went  on to state  at paragraph 66  as follows:

“66. The present case may be approached via this broad construction of “exceptional circumstances.” The trial  judge, who was   best placed  to decide  the issue  of  confiscation, was not  available  to hear that issue within the sixth  month  period   laid down  by  Section 72A(3).  The reason was that he was committed to other cases because of the heavy lists in his court.  Other cases may arise where the judge is prevented   by illness or some other pressing reason from dealing with confiscation   within the prescribed period.  The judge  himself  said, in a  somewhat  resigned  fashion, that listing  problems   are not  exceptional, being   an unhappily  common  occurrence   in these  times.  He would  nevertheless  have heard  the case within time  if he  had been   free to do  so,  and I  consider that one   can properly  regard   the circumstances   as exceptional  for the purposes   of Section  72A(3).”

114. I cant  agree more with the above  holding and add that the  daily cause list  for  each  of the two  judges  in the Judicial Review  Division  at Milimani  Law  Courts   is  a minimum of 18 cases.  Besides  the cause  listed  matters, each   judge  is a duty judge per week  thereby  responsible  for handling  all certificates  of urgency  and  sometimes  encountering  highly  emotive  urgent   political  disputes   that require  exceptional  sacrifice  to  render  a  determination in a record time.  Each duty judge also takes away all the new matters adding them to his or her old matters. In a day, 5-10 certificates of urgency are filed.  I need not say more, for, that is not to say that the court would   nevertheless not hear the cases within time  if it  had been   free to do  so.

115. It is also not to say that the court should stretch the provisions of the law to say that Parliament would have so intended that time for determination of public procurement   matter is indefinite.

116. This is also not to say that an act done outside the statutory prescribed time is valid.  However, if the  court has done  its best  as I believe  I have  done in this matter and the record speaks for itself, with full and  active  participation of the parties advocates to  ensure  that the matter  is heard  and  determined expeditiously, in my view, in  the absence of any evidence of prejudice that would be occasioned to any  party  by regarding  the act  done  out  of time  as valid, then  in my view, this court is entitled to depart from the literal  interpretation of Section 175(3)(5) of the PPADA in order to render  justice  to the parties, which,  at all times, is the approach  which is  consistent  with the provisions of Article 159 of the Constitution and the  intention  of Parliament and that is  the  proper way of ensuring that  Parliament’s  intention is carried  into effect, so  that, as was held in  Savanna Development Company Ltd. vs. Mercantile Finance Company Ltd Nairobi HCCC No. 2113 of 1989 [1992] KLR 463.

…”litigation must be got on with at a reasonable speed – reasonable expedition, not too quickly; not too slowly, for, in the administration of justice proceeding at break-neck speed may work injustice in some cases; so may tardiness. Unreasonable haste aborts justice. Proceeding sluggishly fossilizes it.”

117. The court in the Selex Sistemi Integrati (supra) case was dealing with a novel, untested and complex situation to unravel and as stated by the learned judge:

“……….and perhaps  arising  for the first  time and  without  precedent ….with effect, both the legislative  and the draftsman  appear to have had  in view  only the interest  of sped, expediency, efficiency and  finality  in procurement  matters at  the expense  of justice  and the clear  objectives   set out  in Section  2 of the  Procurement Act.”  ……whether or not Section 100(4) is effective   as an ouster provision raises complex questions of law unsuitable for preliminary objection.”

118. The above decision of Justice Nyamu J (as he then was has never been overruled by the Court of Appeal.  It has stood the test of time since 2nd May 2008. It can safely be said that the decision should be rewritten in similar circumstances with necessary modifications as I have done herein.

119. It is  for the above reasons that I find that  indeed, determining  Judicial Review matters  arising  from  public procurement  should be  considered in line  with the wise  reasoning  of Honourable  Justice Nyamu J ( as he then  was) in the  exparte Selex Sistemi integrati case, having regard to the disproportionate  ratio of judges   vis avis  the population in this new constitutional dispensation  and that to achieve  the ideal of a timed determination of sometimes complex  procurement matters whose documents (mostly tender documents) are  invariably voluminous   and also accompanied  by complex technical  data, giving  a determination  within 45 days could have been achieved  at the expense of quality justice and other matters before the court.

120. Creation of Judicial Review as a division of the High Court in Nairobi was an extremely noble idea in the new constitutional order for, judicial review remedy has been elevated by the Constitution to a constitutional remedy and therefore sufficient time must be allocated to the courts to examine the applications brought before it for a judicious and well reasoned determination.

121.  In the end, I find that it is in the interest  of the overriding  objectives  of case   management  that no group  of litigants  are entitled  to more  judicial  time than others.  There  are, as earlier  stated, many more Judicial Review   cases  that have gone  beyond  the  45   days since the new Act was enacted and  to strike out this matter  would be to strike out  all other matters  filed over  45  days ago.

122. In order to inspire  confidence  in the court  users,  the court must be  proportional, fair  and  equitable  in the allocation  of judicial  time. Gravells 978 pages 383-4 stated as follows concerning striking of a balance   in fast tracking certain cases.

“ It is arguable  that (this) is  a fundamental  issue  underlying  much modern administrative law……ultimately, every challenge  to administrative  action can be  seen to  represent a conflict between on the one hand, the  constitutional  priorities  of expediency  and  finality.  Since however, there is  in reality  no typical administrator, it  follows that  the resolution of  those  conflicting  priorities will tend  to vary with the particular process  in question, different  considerations will apply in different contexts  and the reliance  of the same considerations will vary according to circumstances.  In other words there can be no such thing as   a general solution; rather there must be a series of particular solutions.”

123. It is  for the above reasons that I find  that  in determining the issues  raised in this  case, I fully  associate myself  with the decision in Selex Sistemi Integrati by Nyamu J and the KRA decision by Odunga J which  decisions are fit for re-writing in the same language.  Although the said decisions were in respect of the repealed Act and with Hon Nyamu J’s decision being delivered in the old constitutional order, I   find that the two decisions were written and considered in the spirit and letter of the new constitutional dispensation.  Section  100(4) of the repealed  Act, in my  view, is the  same  as   Section 175(3)(5)  of the new  2015  Act combined, with the difference being the number of days of  determining Judicial Review application in public  procurement matters.

124. Although  counsel for the  2nd respondent  vigorously   relied  on several decisions that  concern  limitation of time,  none of  those  cases had  the same circumstances or was  in pari materia  as this particular  case as the  Selex  Sistemi Integrati case.

125. The  Kiptoo (supra) case was  concerned  with  alternative  remedies  and procedures or mechanisms  and  not  time frames  stipulated in the Act hence  it is  useful  but irrelevant  in the circumstances  of this case.

126. Mr Muga  also  relied  on time lines  set  by the  Elections Act  and  applied  several  decisions of Christine  Talaam including  the Nigeria Supreme Court  cases but  again, the cases however  useful, were  irrelevant  as far as  this case is  concerned  as it is not  an election petition  grounded on Article  87 (1) of the Constitution which stipulates  that Parliament  shall enact  legislation to establish  mechanisms  for timely settling  of electoral  disputes.

127. The language of the Constitution in Article 227(1) is different   from that of Article 87(1).  Article 227(1) speaks of the system which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and  cost effective  and not  time bound.  it is for  that  reason that I agree with  Mr Kiplangat  that the limitation under the new procurement law is  unreasonable  and  therefore  the detailed interpretation that I have  given to it.

128. And as was held by Odunga J in the KRA (supra) case:

“It must be appreciated that election petitions are exceptionally special proceedings. They are special in the sense that such disputes do necessarily come with election cycles hence as opposed to procurement disputes, election petitions are not everyday disputes. They come once in every 5 years as stipulated in the Constitution  and therefore must of necessity be determined before the next election cycle in order to promote democratic principles. Accordingly, they are disputes which are capable of being determined within the statutory timelines by reorganizing the judiciary for the limited period of the petitions. The same cannot be said of procurement disputes which arise on a daily basis and which have become the bulk of the litigation in this High Court Division. Accordingly, I find that the decisions arising from election petitions though express the law in that field are not necessarily applicable to procurement disputes and I am reluctant to adopt them line, hook and sinker.”

129. The learned judge further stated:

“92. It is therefore clear that the Constitution itself imposed an obligation on Parliament to enact legislation to ensure that election disputes are settled timely. This position is traceable to our past history where it was not unheard of for election disputes to spill over to the next cycle of elections thus defeating the whole purpose of filing election petitions. The timelines enacted under the Constitution and the Elections Act relating to electoral disputes settlement are therefore justified by our history and experience, which led the people of Kenya to deem it fit that specific timelines be set for the determination of electoral disputes. Accordingly the timelines in settling election petitions ought to be seen in light of the historical context.” As was held in Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Menon [1985] KLR 104; [1976-1985] EA.

130. Similarly, the issues  raised in the Republic Vs  Wajir County Government  case related  to  Section  175(1)  of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act which provides for time for instituting or commencement  of Judicial Review  challenging  the decision of the Review Board  and not  for  determination of  the Judicial Review  proceedings  once commenced  hence  the case is not applicable  to this  instant  case,  where there  is no issue  with  commencement  of the proceedings.

131. As  correctly observed  by Honourable   Odunga J  in Republic vs  KRA  Exparte  Webb Fontaine  Group  FZ-LLC & Others (KRA) (supra) )case, to adopt  a literal  interpretation of Section 175  (3)  & (5)  of the  Act  as proposed  by the  2nd  respondent  under the current  judicial set  up would  amount to punishing  persons  who come to court to seek  justice for  reasons beyond their control.  To do so would abet impunity.

132. In addition, to subject judges to timeframes within which to determine public procurement or judicial review matters that come to court on a daily basis throughout the year, unlike election petitions which only appear once in five years in an electoral cycle, is, in my humble view, to subject judges and staff working under them to outright slavery, servitude and forced labour in violation of Articles 30 and 41 of the Constitution which espouses that a person shall not be held in slavery or servitude and or be required to perform forced labour; and the right to fair labour practices which include the right to reasonable working conditions.

133. Judges are servants of the people yes, but they ought not to be subjected to unfair labour practices by being made and or forced to work for more than 18 hours without rest throughout the year in order to deliver on their mandate. To demand that all public procurement matters and or judicial review cases be heard and determined within the stipulated timeframes without regard to the available judicial time and human and other resources that are available for such exercise will be subjecting the judges to conditions that will no doubt negatively impact on their physical and mental health, as the existing structure already makes them work beyond the 12 hours in a given day.

134. Qualitative research conducted  by Ronald R. Grunstein, & D Banerjee, of Woolcock Institute of Medical Research, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, Sydney NSW, Australia on “The Case of “Judge Nodd” and other Sleeping Judges—Media, Society, and Judicial Sleepiness”, whose objective was to Review cases of judicial sleepiness and subsequent outcomes, including media and community attitudes, revealed that extended work hours resulting in sleep deprivation and sleep disorders, such as obstructive sleep apnea has been found to affect judges’ performance not only in the courtroom but behind the motorized wheel.

135. In addition, a study in 2014 by Akira Bannai &Akiko Tamakoshi on The association between long working hours and health: A systematic review of epidemiological evidence concluded that working long hours is associated with depressive state, anxiety, sleep condition, and coronary heart disease, blood pressure, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, and therefore an all cause high mortality rate.

136. It is therefore an opportune time for the people of Kenya and moreso, the honourable lawmakers who are representatives of the people to appreciate that judges are human beings and deserve to live and work not to work and live, for, they might never live to work. Perhaps the lawmakers ought to make some tour of duty of the judiciary to appreciate the magnitude of the issues before setting timeframes for determination of cases. In addition, if the Public Procurement Administrative Review Board did its work well in resolving disputes between parties then there would be minimal applications for judicial review of their decisions.

137. The Constitution  having placed  the  duty of  exercising  judicial authority  on the judiciary on behalf of the people, the courts ought to be permitted to work in  an atmosphere  that is conducive  to the  realization of its mandate  without  being  seen to be at  the  sufferance  of the legislature; and to carry  out its  judicial mandate  to advance   the constitutional  principles, while trying to cope  with the pressure  to give  rulings  and  judgments  within  a reasonable  time frame, in the midst of a myriad  of challenges   that I have  exposed  in this  ruling.

138. Therefore, a party to such proceedings who is a genuine litigant ought not to suffer the consequences of the court’s inability to hear and determine the dispute in the stipulated timeframe as that would out rightly render disputants mere explorers in the judicial process thereby their right to accessing justice as stipulated in Article 48 of the Constitution being desecrated. This is not to say that judges will sit back and give themselves a holiday to hear and determine cases, but that in view of the scenario described in this ruling, they should be given latitude to hear and determine cases, with dedication and commitment, within reasonable time, having regard to the circumstances of each case.

139. The decision by Nyamu J in Selex Sistemi Integrati and the one by Hon Odunga J in Republic vs  KRA  Exparte  Webb Fontaine  Group  FZ-LLC & Others are in my  humble  view, is in  pari materia  with  this case  and although this court is not bound by those two decisions, nonetheless, as  I  have no reason  to differ from the holdings by the learned distinguished judges or to distinguish the two decisions with this case, I wholly adopt  the reasoning in the two decisions with necessary modifications.

140. Accordingly, I find  that the preliminary  objection  raised by  Mr Muga counsel  for the  2nd respondent is not  well  founded and  flies  in the  face of  very  authoritative  decisions  which have stood the test of times.  The preliminary objection which sought to oust the jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine this matter to its logical conclusion is hereby found to be misconceived and not in touch with the reality.  I decline to   uphold the preliminary objection and dismiss it. I find that this court has jurisdiction to hear and determine the judicial review proceedings herein which were filed over 45 days ago.

141. Costs shall be in the main motion which motion shall forthwith be set down for hearing on the next available date.

142. This ruling shall apply to Judicial Review 502/2016 with necessary modifications as to the parties and legal representation, as far as section 175 (3)(5) of the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act is concerned.

Dated, signed, and delivered at Nairobi this 22nd day of February, 2017.

R.E. ABURILI

JUDGE

In the presence of:

Mr Kiplangat for the exparte applicant

Mr Muga for the 2nd respondent

Mr Odhiambo h/b for Miss Maina for the 1st respondent

CA: George