Supreme Court Decision Objective Views

Kigui

Village Elder
#21
But the reasoning behind the 4 is a mystery. We do not even a summary
The chief justice said the elections were a process and not an event. Electoral processes are designed to be reversible,
and stand alone. When you find fault with one stage, you can fall back on the previous one and restart.
 

Soprano

Village Elder
#22
I personally did not understand why the dissenting judges gave reasons for their dissent but the four thought it below them to atleast give their reasons.
As it is,I think they are are writing a decision to support their rulling. The end justifying the means..
Kithi explained that in a case like this one, only dissenting judges explain their reasons for dissenting. The majoritys are read by one them.
 

Kigui

Village Elder
#23
The court had been told in no uncertain terms that this case was put their way as a chance for them to atone the sins they committed in 2013. They did not disappoint.


Night of intrigues: Uninvited guests, unwanted calls and a short-lived tie
By Sunday Standard team | Saturday, Sep 2nd 2017 at 23:13


A night of long knives, a missing star lawyer and stubborn judges who wouldn’t relent.

This is the sum of the intrigues that preceded the historic Supreme Court decision invalidating Kenya’s August 8 presidential election.

On the morning the court delivered its decision, one of the star lawyers for one of the respondents was missing from the courtroom.

Unable to come to terms with losing the case after deploying all his wits to the defence, he did not show up alongside his political associates.

In contrast, the petitioner’s lawyers literally swung into the courtroom, their benefactors in tow, beaming with pregnant smiles. The court’s decision had somehow leaked to boardrooms the night before.

“We knew we were done in by Thursday evening. There was no point (of turning up at Supreme Court),” a Jubilee operative who participated in the process and who kept off the court told Sunday Standard.

At a city hide-out hotel on Thursday night, weary judges switched off their phones to ward off stray calls from influencers and operatives of the parties after braving them for hours. One of them is said to have faced off with a delegation sent out to appeal to their mercies and told it off in no uncertain terms.

Initial reports indicate that of the six judges in the conference, a pair had already made up their minds to uphold the election while two were determined to invalidate it. The two undecided eventually spread themselves even, leading to a 3:3 situation. But not for long.

In what lawyers in the petition attribute to lobbying by colleagues but denied by those who were present, one of the judges switched sides on conscience grounds to support the invalidation of the election.

The Chief Justice, it is said, had initiated the “vote on conscience” movement which afflicted his deputy and spilled over to two colleagues. At the vote, the judges were also weighed down by criticism of the court’s 2013 verdict.

Three of the four majority judges who invalidated the election — Chief Justice David Maraga, Deputy CJ Philomena Mwilu and Justice Isaac Lenaola — are new recruits from the 2013 bench.

The other judge Justice Smokin Wanjala sat in the 2013 petition.

As the clock struck midnight, the minority judges began writing their dissenting briefs.

The majority judges also concluded their small brief and began to worry on the impact of not delivering the full judgment the following day.

On the morning of the judgment day, Maraga spoke to their ill colleague Justice Ibrahim Mohamed to inform him of the decision and to wish him well. Ibrahim had been taken ill earlier in the week.

When he walked into the courtroom 21 minutes past 11 with his colleagues, Maraga found a tense-packed atmosphere.

Siaya Senator and NASA lead counsel James Orengo happily introduced his team, reading them one by one in line with the tradition of the court.

In contrast, lawyers for the respondents appeared subdued, so much so that Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) lead counsel Paul Muite attempted to skip introducing his colleagues on account of saving time.

“The first and second respondents are represented by the same team of lawyers whose names you have on record already. I think in the interest of saving time....” Muite said before he was stopped on his tracks and ordered by the CJ: “Read them out.”

He proceeded to look out for the list and to read them aloud as ordered. Ahmednasir Abdullahi for President Uhuru Kenyatta also introduced his team and announced that his colleague Fred Ngatia would be joining them later.

“Before I read the determination, I want to say this. The greatness of a nation lies in its fidelity to its constitution and its strict adherence to the rule of law, and above all, the fear of God,” Maraga signalled the events of the day.

Other reports painted the picture of judges under immense pressure, fall out among legal teams involved in the process and disappointment with a section of the bench. The strong disapproval of the judges by President Kenyatta in his Burma market roadside address exposed the latter.
The court didn't have to 'redeem' itself. It just needed to do the right thing, @saprano, would you be OK with the current or 2013 decision? Why?
 

Kigui

Village Elder
#25
Kithi explained that in a case like this one, only dissenting judges explain their reasons for dissenting. The majoritys are read by one them.[/QUOTE ]
I don't think so, both parties of the court work under the same rules. You can't have rules for the minority and some for majority. After all, they are all equals.
 

threetatu

Village Elder
#28
When doing a major exam, say KCSE, you the examinee do you part, the invigilator does theirs and some teachers mark the exam. Sasa mwenye ana invigilate and the one marking screw up, do you subject the student to do the exam again?
 

Kigui

Village Elder
#31
BTW, you guys have not addressed the issue of which proof you would like us to have. If you were elected mp today, and your opponent brought à case. Refer to my first post.
 
#33
When doing a major exam, say KCSE, you the examinee do you part, the invigilator does theirs and some teachers mark the exam. Sasa mwenye ana invigilate and the one marking screw up, do you subject the student to do the exam again?
Irrelevant example, why?.
Unlike exams, election is a process not a single event, if one part fails the entire process fails
 
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