FULL JUDGMENT
MALABA CJ:
On 24 August 2018 the
Constitutional Court (“the Court”) handed down the abridged
version of the judgment in the case in which the applicant challenged
the validity of the Presidential election held on 30 July 2018. The
order made was in these terms -
“The application ought to be
dismissed. In the result, the following order is made –
(1) The court application is
dismissed with costs.
(2) Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa
was duly elected as President of the Republic of Zimbabwe.
(3) In terms of section 93(4)(a)
of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa is
declared the winner of the Presidential election held on 30 July
2018.
(4) The papers filed by the
fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth
respondents are expunged from the record of proceedings with no order
as to costs.
(5) The application for
condonation of non-compliance with the procedural requirements of
section 93(1) of the Constitution, as given effect to by Rule 23(2)
as read with Rule 9(7) of the Rules, is granted.
The Court indicated that the full
reasons would be issued in due course. These are they. The full judgment incorporates the reasons
that formed the basis of the abridged version.
BACKGROUND
On 30 July 2018 the Republic of
Zimbabwe held harmonised Parliamentary, Local Authority and
Presidential elections. The applicant and the first respondent
participated as candidates in the Presidential election together with
twenty-one other candidates.
On 3 August 2018 the
twenty-fourth respondent, acting in terms of section 110(3)(f)(ii) of
the Electoral Act [Chapter 2:13] (“the Act”), declared the first
respondent, as the candidate who had received more than half the
number of votes cast, to be duly elected as President of the Republic
of Zimbabwe, with effect from that date.
The applicant was aggrieved by
the declaration of the first respondent as having been duly elected
as President. He lodged a court application in terms of section 93(1)
of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 20) 2013 (“the
Constitution”), challenging the validity of the election of the
first respondent as President.
Section 93 of the Constitution
provides in part as follows:
“93
Challenge to presidential election
(1) Subject to this section, any
aggrieved candidate may challenge the validity of an election of a
President or Vice-President by lodging a petition or application with
the Constitutional Court within seven days after the date of the
declaration of the results of the election.
(2) The election of a
Vice-President may be challenged only on the ground that he or she
was not qualified for election.
(3) The Constitutional Court must
hear and determine a petition or application under subsection (1)
within fourteen days after the petition or application was lodged,
and the court's decision is final.”
The applicant sought the
following relief:
“1. A declaratur to the effect
that -
(i) The Presidential election of
2018 was not conducted in accordance with the law and was not free
and fair.
(ii) The election results
announced by the Commissioners of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
on the 3rd
of August 2018 and the concomitant declaration of that same date by
its chairperson to the effect that Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa was to
be regarded as the duly elected President of the Republic of Zimbabwe
with effect from the 3rd
of August 2018, is, in terms of section 93(4)(b) of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe as read together with section 111(2)(b) of the Electoral
Act [Chapter 2:13], declared unlawful, of no force or effect and
accordingly set aside.
(iii) The applicant, Nelson
Chamisa, is, in terms of section 93(4)(a) of the Constitution of
Zimbabwe, declared the winner of the presidential election held on
the 30th
of July 2018;
2. An order to the following
effect –
(i) The twenty-fifth respondent
shall publish in the Government Gazette this order and the
declaration of the applicant to the office of the President of the
Republic of Zimbabwe; alternatively -
(ii) In terms of section 93(4)(b)
an election to the office of the President of the Republic of
Zimbabwe shall be held within sixty days of this order; and
(iii) Costs of this application
shall be borne by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission and any such
respondent as opposes it.”
THE DECISION TO BROADCAST THE
COURT PROCEEDINGS
Before considering the issues
raised by the challenge to the validity of the Presidential election,
it is necessary to explain the decision made to have the Court
proceedings broadcast live on national television.
Ordinarily, court proceedings in
Zimbabwe are not televised. Court sessions are, however, open to
members of the public, save for cases in respect of which the law
expressly requires that proceedings be conducted in camera. However,
even where members of the public are allowed to attend court
proceedings, video recording of the proceedings is prohibited.
Arguments have been advanced for
and against live streaming through television of court proceedings.
Those who support live broadcasting through television of court
proceedings argue that it promotes transparency and public confidence
in the justice system. They argue that fear of sensationalism is
allayed through strict regulation of the broadcasting process so as
to protect the dignity of the proceedings. The factors often referred
to in argument in support of live streaming through television of
court proceedings are transparency, accountability, responsiveness
and justice.
In New Brunswick Broadcasting
Corporation v Nova Scotia (Speaker of the House of Assembly) [1993] 1
SCR 319 CORY J provided a useful insight into the factors that may be
taken into account in deciding whether court proceedings should be
broadcast live or not through television. He said:
“The television media
constitute an integral part of the press. Reporting in all forms has
evolved over the ages. Engraved stone tablets gave way to baked clay
tablets impressed with the cuneiform writing of the Assyrians and the
papyrus records of the Egyptians. It was not so long ago that the
quill pen was the sole means of transcribing the written word.
Surely, today, neither the taking of notes in shorthand nor the use
of unobtrusive tape recording devices to ensure accuracy would be
banned from the press gallery. Nor should the unobtrusive use of a
video camera. The video camera provides the ultimate means of
accurately and completely recording all that transpires. Not only the
words spoken but the tone of voice, the nuances of verbal emphasis
together with the gestures and facial expressions are recorded. It
provides the nearest and closest substitute to the physical presence
of an interested observer.
So long as the camera is neither
too pervasive nor too obtrusive, there can be no good reason for
excluding it. How can it be said that greater accuracy and
completeness of recording are to be discouraged? Perhaps more
Canadians receive their news by way of television than by any other
means. If there is to be an informed opinion in today's society, it
will be informed in large part by television reporting. Nor should we
jump to the conclusion that if the media are granted broader rights,
those rights will be abused. Hand in hand with increased rights go
increased responsibilities. The responsibility of the press is to
report accurately, fairly and completely, that which is relevant and
pertinent to public issues. It may be argued that the television
media will only broadcast that which is sensational. That same
argument could be advanced with regard to all forms of media. Yet no
one would consider barring the print media from a public session of
the Assembly on the grounds that they tended to be sensationalist.
The public today is too intelligent, too discerning and too well
informed to accept unfairly slanted or sensational reporting.”
Others have advocated for the
live streaming through television of court proceedings on the
rights-based approach. It is argued that live streaming through
television of court proceedings accommodates rights such as the right
to freedom of expression and freedom of the media, the right of
access to justice, and the right of access to information. When it
comes to access to justice, it is accepted that any person can attend
court proceedings, as long as the proceedings are not required to be
conducted in camera. It is argued, however, that it is one thing to
allow access to justice; it is another to allow easy access to
justice. Televising court proceedings is thus said to facilitate easy
access to justice.
Proponents of live broadcasting
through television of court proceedings argue that televising the
proceedings allows the public to know what happens during the
exercise of judicial power, which is derived from the people. The
public have an opportunity to see for themselves and learn how courts
function in the process of hearing and determining disputes between
citizens on the one hand and citizens and the State on the other.
The most important rider to the
rights-based approach is that live streaming through television of
court proceedings must take into account the principle that the
individual litigants have a right to a fair trial. See South African
Broadcasting Corporation Limited v The National Director of Public
Prosecutions and Ors 2007 (1) SA 523 (CC).
It is universally accepted that
no one fundamental human right is superior to the other. There must
be a balance between public interest, and the interests of the
litigants and their legal representatives, and respect for the
court's decorum when administering justice.
In South African Broadcasting
Corporation Limited v Thatcher and Others, [2005] 4 All SA 353 (C) at
para [63], the Constitutional Court of South Africa quoted a
statement by Lord Falconer of Throroton, the Lord Chancellor of
England and Wales. In the foreword to the United Kingdom Consultation
Paper 28/04, which was the basis of the “Broadcasting Courts
Seminar” held in the United Kingdom in 2005, the Lord Chancellor
said:
“Justice must be done and
justice must be seen to be done. That notion exactly catches the
argument about television and the courts.
The justice system exists to do
justice. If it does not do justice in public it risks slipping into
unacceptable behaviour, and losing public confidence. With a few
exceptions, our courts are open to the public, but very few people
who are not involved in cases ever go near a court. Most people's
knowledge and perception of what goes on in court comes from court
reporting and from fictionalised accounts of trials. The medium which
gives most access to most people, television, is not allowed in our
courts. Should that change? Is there a public interest in allowing
people through television to see what actually happens in our courts
in their name? In a modern, televised age, I think there is a case to
be considered here.”
In Scott v Scott [1913] AC 417
(HL) at 447 the House of Lords quoted with approval a statement by
Jeremy Bentham, an English philosopher and jurist, to the effect
that:
“Publicity is the very soul of
justice. It is the keenest spur to exertion and surety of all guards
against improbity.”
On 26 September 2018 the Supreme
Court of India decided that proceedings of “constitutional
importance having an impact on the public at large or a large number
of people” should be live streamed in a manner that is easily
accessible for public viewing. The Supreme Court of India made the
decision in a hearing concerning four consolidated matters. The cases
were Tripathi v Supreme Court of India Writ Petition (Civil) No. 1232
of 2017; Jaising v Secretary General and Ors Writ Petition (Civil)
No. 66 of 2018; Nedumpara and Ors v Supreme Court of India and Ors
Writ Petition (Civil) No. 861 of 2018; and Center for Accountability
and Systemic Change and Ors v Secretary General and Ors Writ Petition
(Civil) No. 892 of 2018.
In delivering the main judgment A
M KHANWILKAR J alluded in paras 8 and 9 to the benefits of live
streaming through television of court proceedings. HIS LORDSHIP said:
“8. Indubitably, live streaming
of Court proceedings has the potential of throwing up an option to
the public to witness live court proceedings which they otherwise
could not have due to logistical issues and infrastructural
restrictions of Courts; and would also provide them with a more
direct sense of what has transpired. Thus, technological solutions
can be a tool to facilitate actualisation of the right of access to
justice bestowed on all, and the litigants in particular, to provide
them virtual entry in the Court precincts and more particularly in
Court rooms. In the process, a large segment of persons, be it
entrants in the legal profession, journalists, civil society
activists, academicians or students of law will be able to view live
proceedings in propria persona on real time basis. There is unanimity
between all the protagonists that live streaming of Supreme Court
proceedings, at least in respect of cases of Constitutional and
national importance, having an impact on the public at large or on a
large number of people in India, may be a good beginning, as is
suggested across the Bar.
9. Live streaming of Court
proceedings is feasible due to the advent of technology, and, in
fact, has been adopted in other jurisdictions across the world. Live
streaming of Court proceedings, in one sense, with the use of
technology is to 'virtually' expand the Court room area beyond
the physical four walls of the Court rooms. Technology is evolving
with increasing swiftness whereas the law and the courts are evolving
at a much more measured pace. This Court cannot be oblivious to the
reality that technology has the potential to usher in tangible and
intangible benefits which can consummate the aspirations of the
stakeholders and litigants in particular. It can epitomise
transparency, good governance and accountability, and, more
importantly, open the vista of the Court rooms, transcending the four
walls of the rooms to accommodate a large number of viewers to
witness the live Court proceedings. Introducing and integrating such
technology into the Court rooms would give the viewing public a
virtual presence in the Court room and also educate them about the
working of the Court.”
The main arguments against live
streaming through television of court proceedings have ranged from
the expressed fear that televising court proceedings sensationalises
and degrades the justice system, resulting in reduced public respect
for the courts, to fears that trials would be turned into media
circuses, with the result that Judges may end up making populist
decisions which are not grounded in justice and the law.
Fears have also been expressed of
the possibility that the actors in the court proceedings may be too
distracted by the live streaming media presence, taking away their
utmost attentiveness to the court proceedings. Some also argue that
televising court proceedings may expose a litigant to the public eye,
thereby violating the litigant's right to a fair trial and the
protection of the witnesses.
The first point to note is that
live streaming of court proceedings through television is not a
universal principle. Whether or not to have court proceedings
streamed live will depend on the laws of a particular jurisdiction.
It is a matter that is dependent on the manner in which each
jurisdiction decides to manage and regulate its own proceedings,
taking into account various circumstances of the case. The overriding
consideration is the principle of transparency. There is an
acceptance of the principle that each case has to be considered on
the basis of its own circumstances.
The decision to broadcast live on
national television the proceedings in this case was made by the
Court on the basis of consideration of the interests of justice. The
Court took into account the fact that the matters in the Presidential
election dispute at the centre of the proceedings were of
constitutional and national importance, impacting on the interests of
the public at large. The Court also considered the fact that it has
under the Constitution inherent power to protect and regulate its own
process, taking into account the interests of justice.
Section 176 of the Constitution
provides for the inherent power of the Court to protect and regulate
its own process. It provides:
“176
Inherent powers of Constitutional Court, Supreme Court and High Court
The Constitutional Court, the
Supreme Court and the High Court have inherent power to protect and
regulate their own process and to develop the common law or the
customary law, taking into account the interests of justice and the
provisions of this Constitution.”
Openness of justice, embodied in
the principle that justice must be seen to be done, is not limited to
ensuring that the whole country is afforded the opportunity to watch
court proceedings as they unfold. The common law principle is subject
to limitations imposed by the demands of the application of the
principle that every case must depend on its own facts and
circumstances. See Assistant Commissioner Michael James Condon v
Pompano (Pty) Ltd [2013] HCA 7. This explains the differences in the
exercise of discretion by courts in deciding whether or not to permit
live streaming through television of the proceedings.
In Tripathi v Supreme Court of
India Writ Petition (Civil) supra in para 5, CHANDRACHUD J commented
on the concept of open justice in the context of a request for live
streaming of court proceedings through television relating to matters
of constitutional importance. HIS LORDSHIP said:
“5. Legal scholars indicate
that the principle of open justice encompasses several aspects that
are central to the fair administration of justice and the rule of
law. It has both procedural and substantive dimensions which are
equally important. Open justice comprises of several precepts: i.
The entitlement of an interested person to attend court as a
spectator; ii. The promotion of full, fair and accurate reporting of
court proceedings; iii. The duty of judges to give reasoned
decisions; and iv. Public access to judgments of courts.
The principle of an open court is
a significant procedural dimension of the broader concept of open
justice. Open courts allow the public to view courtroom proceedings.”
The factor that the Court took
into account in arriving at the decision to permit live streaming of
the proceedings through television was the extraordinary nature of
the proceedings before it. An application lodged in terms of section
93(1) of the Constitution is a sui generis procedure.
The remarks of the Court in
Tsvangirai v Mugabe and Ors CCZ 20/17 at pp 10-11 of the cyclostyled
judgment in that regard are apposite. The Court said:
“Section 93(1) of the
Constitution is based on a presumption of validity of the election of
the President forming the subject of the petition or application
lodged with the Court. Challenging the validity of the election of a
President in terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution is as much an
act of democratic self-government as acting in accordance with the
Constitution and the Electoral Law to ensure free, fair and credible
elections. The investigation by the Court in terms of section 93(3)
of the Constitution to establish the truth of what happened in the
election and the giving of a final and binding decision on the
validity or invalidity of the election is a protection of the right
of every Zimbabwean citizen to a free, fair and credible election of
a President.” (the underlining is for emphasis)
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
limits the locus standi to challenge the validity of the Presidential
election to aggrieved candidates who participated in the Presidential
election. The limitation of locus standi is not indicative of just
the personal interest on the part of an aggrieved candidate who files
a Presidential election petition or application under section 93(1)
of the Constitution.
In Tsvangirai v Mugabe and Ors
supra, the following remarks at pp 13-14 of the cyclostyled judgment,
on the meaning of section 93 of the Constitution, are worth quoting
to contextualise the decision to allow the live streaming of the
Court proceedings through television by the public broadcaster. The
Court said:
“The right of petition or
application is conferred on an aggrieved candidate and protected
under section 93 of the Constitution as a legal remedy for the
protection of the right guaranteed to every citizen under section
67(1) of the Constitution to free, fair and regular elections for any
elective public office established in terms of the Constitution or
any other law and exercised in accordance with the provisions of the
Electoral Law. The office of President is an elective public office
established by the Constitution. Every Zimbabwean citizen, regardless
of voting status, has a fundamental right to a free, fair and
credible Presidential election. In other words, he or she has a right
to a valid election of a President held in accordance with the
relevant provisions of the law governing the conduct of the election.
An aggrieved candidate is a registered voter who shares with all
other Zimbabwean citizens the right to a free, fair and credible
election of a President. It is the alleged commission by the
respondents in the election of corrupt practices and/or
irregularities prohibited under the provisions of the Electoral Law
which materially affects the validity of the election in violation of
the fundamental right of every Zimbabwean citizen to a free, fair and
credible election of a President that constitutes the subject-matter
of the petition or application lodged with the Court under section
93(1) of the Constitution.
… The Court is enjoined in the
discharge of its duties under section 93(3) of the Constitution to
hold firmly in its mind, and act in accordance with, the value
fundamental to any democratic society, that the basis of authority of
a representative Government to govern is free, fair and regular
elections.”
Once it is accepted that the
proceedings before the Court were not only limited to the parties'
interests but extended to those of all citizens to a free, fair and
credible Presidential election, it is clear that it was in the
interests of justice to allow the live streaming through national
television of the proceedings. Members of the public had an interest
in having knowledge of the evidence produced by the disputants. They
had an interest in witnessing how the Court handled the matter and
what decision it reached. They had an interest in deciding whether,
in their own objective assessment, the decision of the Court was fair
and just.
THE COURT APPLICATION
The court application was opposed
by the first, the fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the eighteenth,
the twentieth, the twenty-third, the twenty-fourth and the
twenty-fifth respondents.
EXPUNGING OF PAPERS FILED BY
THE FIFTH, THE SIXTH, THE SEVENTEENTH, THE EIGHTEENTH AND THE
TWENTIETH RESPONDENTS FROM THE RECORD
On the date of the hearing, the
Court ruled that the papers filed by the fifth, the sixth, the
seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth respondents were -
(i) not properly before the
Court; and
(ii) should be expunged from the
record with no order as to costs.
The sixth and the eighteenth
respondents indicated that they would abide by the decision of the
Court.
The following are the reasons why
the Court ordered that the papers filed by the fifth, the sixth, the
seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth respondents be expunged
from the record.
In terms of section 93(1) of the
Constitution, any aggrieved candidate may challenge the validity of
an election of a President by lodging a petition or application with
the Court within seven days after the date of the declaration of the
result of the Presidential election. The section means that grounds
on the basis of which an aggrieved candidate challenges the validity
of the Presidential election result must be placed before the Court
within seven days of the declaration of the result.
Once the seven-day period has
lapsed, the ground cannot be entertained by the Court. In addition,
the grounds on which the validity of a Presidential election result
is challenged must be placed before the Court in the form of a
petition or application. They cannot be placed before the Court under
the guise of the procedure prescribed for opposition to the petition
or application lodged in terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution.
The process for lodging an
application for relief based on a complaint of an undue return or
undue election of a person to the Office of President by reason of
irregularity or any other cause whatsoever is prescribed by Rule 23
of the Constitutional Court Rules, S.I. 161 of 2016 (“the Rules”).
Rule 23(1) of the Rules provides
that an application in which the election of a President is in
dispute shall be by way of court application. The use of the
peremptory word “shall” is of significance. A “court
application”, as a process for instituting court proceedings, has
prescribed requirements, failure to comply with which attracts legal
consequences. The word “petition”, as used in section 93(1) of
the Constitution, must be construed to mean “court application”.
It is important to note that Rule
16(1) of the Rules provides that, save where otherwise provided, in
any matter in which an application is necessary for any purpose, such
application shall be by way of a court application in Form CCZ1,
which shall be served on the other parties.
Rule 16(3) provides that a court
application shall be supported by an affidavit deposed to by a person
who can swear positively to the facts, which details the facts and
the basis on which the applicant seeks relief, together with any
supporting documents which are relevant. The affidavit contains the
facts the applicant would need to prove to be entitled to the relief
sought and the evidence required to prove the allegation made against
the respondent.
Rule 16(3)(d) provides that a
court application shall request the respondent to file and serve his
or her notice of opposition within ten days of being served with the
application. Rule 17(1) of the Rules provides that the respondent
shall, within the time stipulated in the application, file with the
Registrar and serve on the other parties a notice of opposition in
Form CCZ2. Rule 17(2) provides that the notice of opposition shall be
supported by an affidavit deposed by a person who can swear
positively to the facts, which details the facts and the basis on
which the respondent opposes the application, together with any
supporting documents which are relevant.
The Court noted that the fifth,
the seventeenth and the twentieth respondents failed to comply with
the law by filing papers as respondents that supported the court
application. More particularly, the twentieth respondent went on to
seek his own relief, which was substantially different from that
sought by the applicant, although he effectively supported parts of
the allegations that were made in the court application.
Being of the view that the
procedure adopted was improper, the Court invited the fifth, the
seventeenth and the twentieth respondents to make submissions on
whether their papers were properly before it. They had to satisfy the
Court of their right to be heard on the basis of their papers.
ARGUMENTS BY THE FIFTH, THE
SEVENTEENTH AND THE TWENTIETH RESPONDENTS ON THE PROPRIETY OF THEIR
NOTICES OF OPPOSITION
The Arguments of the Fifth
Respondent
Ms Mabwe argued that the fifth
respondent had a real and substantial interest in the application
before the Court because he was a candidate in the Presidential
election. She said the fifth respondent had a right to respond to
the application before the Court.
In Ms Mabwe's view, section
93(1) of the Constitution only indicates that, unless there is
provision to the contrary, any aggrieved candidate can file a
petition with the Court. She argued that what was before the Court
was a challenge to the validity of the Presidential election and the
fifth respondent had participated in the Presidential election as a
candidate. The mere participation in the Presidential election as a
candidate, according to Ms Mabwe, endowed the fifth respondent with
locus standi to appear as a respondent and make submissions on the
issues raised before the Court. According to Ms Mabwe, it mattered
not whether the response to the court application was in his favour
or not. She further argued that the fifth respondent had a right to
file a notice of opposition, notwithstanding the fact that what he
averred in the affidavit was in support of the court application
filed by the applicant and the relief sought.
Ms Mabwe urged the Court to avoid
adopting a “strict interpretation” of section 93(1) of the
Constitution and Form CCZ2 of the Rules in favour of a purposive
approach. This was regardless of the purpose of a notice of
opposition itself which is to oppose an application made in terms of
section 93(1) of the Constitution.
Ms Mabwe contended that the Court
should not close the door on the fifth respondent, on the ground that
he ought to have challenged the validity of the Presidential election
result as an aggrieved candidate, rather than appear before the Court
as a “respondent”.
Ms Mabwe further contended that
section 93(1) of the Constitution invites a candidate aggrieved by
the Presidential election result to file a petition and then invites
all other candidates to file their papers. She argued that section
93(1) of the Constitution uses the word “may”, meaning that there
is a discretion to be exercised by an aggrieved candidate in filing
the application. In her view, “may”, as used in section 93(1) of
the Constitution, means that an aggrieved candidate is not obliged to
file a petition or application in terms of that section. In the event
that another equally aggrieved candidate files his or her own
application, the inactive aggrieved candidate can then file any
papers, whether he or she supports or opposes the application.
The Arguments of the
Seventeenth Respondent
The seventeenth respondent
appeared in person. He submitted that, as a party served with
papers, he had an obligation to respond to the papers served on him.
He argued that he was a candidate in the Presidential election and
remained so until the Court made a determination on the validity of
the Presidential election result.
The seventeenth respondent
accepted that his papers were not properly before the Court. He,
however, argued that the issue before the Court was of national
importance. According to him, it was necessary that every
Presidential candidate be heard by the Court. He contended that it
was important that he and other respondents in his position be heard
as they would enrich the broad issues, making sure that no
information was hidden from the Court. He submitted that the
information in his “opposing papers” had the potential of
assisting the Court to arrive at a fair and just decision.
The Arguments of the Twentieth
Respondent
Mr Manjengwa argued that the
notice of opposition filed was properly before the Court. He
submitted that, although he was in support of certain aspects of the
applicant's case, the twentieth respondent was seeking an
alternative relief, which was different from that sought by the
applicant. He argued that the twentieth respondent opposed the relief
sought by the applicant on the basis that he did not get enough votes
to be declared the winner of the Presidential election. He wanted the
Presidential election result announced by the twenty-third respondent
(“the Commission”) audited by independent qualified auditors. He
added that the Court was enjoined to consider the contents of the
opposing affidavit.
SUBMISSIONS IN RESPONSE BY THE
APPLICANT, THE FIRST, THE TWENTYTHIRD, THE TWENTY-FOURTH AND THE
TWENTY-FIFTH RESPONDENTS
The Applicant's Response
Mr Mpofu invited the Court to
consider that the essential question before it was whether a
respondent in a section 93 application was confined to opposing an
application. He argued that an application deals with interested
parties. This means that they can all be heard. He expressed
disagreement with the position of the first respondent, the
Commission, the twenty-fourth and the twenty-fifth respondents. He
argued that Rule 235 of the High Court Rules allows a respondent to
seek leave to file any document. The argument was that those
respondents who had filed papers in support of the applicant had a
right to be heard.
The First Respondent's
Response
Mr Uriri argued that the purpose
of a notice of opposition is to oppose an application, not to support
it. He further contended that substantive relief could not attach to
a notice of opposition, as had been done by some of the respondents.
He relied on the case of Indium Investments (Pvt) Ltd v Kingshaven
(Pvt) Ltd and Ors 2015 (2) ZLR 40 (S) for this proposition of law.
He took the argument further and
said that a plea is a shield and not a weapon. He argued that the
fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth
respondents were in essence aggrieved candidates who did not file
court applications within the seven days prescribed by section 93(1)
of the Constitution.
Mr Uriri contended that the
answer to the question whether a respondent is entitled to agree with
the application in a notice of opposition is to be found in Rule
17(2) of the Rules. He submitted that Rule 17(2) of the Rules calls
upon the respondents to oppose the application. He argued that if the
respondents wished to challenge the Presidential election result they
should have done so through section 93(1) of the Constitution rather
than support the applicant's application under the guise of a
notice of opposition filed in terms of Form CCZ2.
The Twenty-Third, The
Twenty-Fourth and The Twenty-Fifth Respondents
Mr Kanengoni argued that the
papers filed by the fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the eighteenth
and the twentieth respondents should be expunged from the record, as
they were not opposing affidavits at law. He referred to Forms CCZ1
and CCZ2. He argued that Form CCZ1 calls upon a respondent to oppose
the application. He submitted that Form CCZ2 is given particularity
by Rule 17(2) of the Rules. He submitted that if the fifth, the
seventeenth and the twentieth respondents wished to be heard on the
arguments they placed before the Court, they ought to have filed
their own court applications in terms of section 93(1) of the
Constitution.
Mr Kanengoni submitted that the
twentieth respondent's draft order made it clear that he was making
a counter-application under the guise of a notice of opposition. He
contended that the fifth, the seventeenth and the twentieth
respondents could have joined the applicant in filing the
application, as any other papers that they filed were essentially
counter-applications. He argued further that Rule 235 of the High
Court Rules, referred to by Mr Mpofu, related to filing of papers
after the filing of the answering affidavit. Against this background,
Mr Kanengoni argued that the fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the
eighteenth and the twentieth respondents could not relate to each
other inter-se, as suggested by the argument that all the other
respondents could file additional papers to answer the allegations
made in support of the application.
THE LAW ON THE NATURE OF A
NOTICE OF OPPOSITION
In resolving the legal question
that arose from the fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the eighteenth
and the twentieth respondents' papers, the Rules are instructive.
The starting point is Rule 23, which governs disputes relating to the
election to the Office of President. It prescribes the process and
progression of a Presidential election petition or court application
filed in terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution.
Rule 23(3) of the Rules
prescribes two important requirements. The first is that a person
cited as a respondent by the applicant in a court application filed
in terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution is under an obligation
to show that he or she intends to oppose the application.
Secondly, the respondent must
comply with the procedural and substantive requirements of defending
himself or herself against the allegations made against him or her in
the founding affidavit filed in support of the court application.
The respondent has to file with
the Registrar a notice of opposition and serve it on the applicant
within three days of service of the application upon him or her,
failing which he or she shall be barred. Under Rule 23(3) of the
Rules, a respondent is the person against whom allegations of
irregularity or electoral malpractices, on the basis of the
occurrence of which the validity of the Presidential election is
challenged, are made.
At the time a court application
is served on a respondent he or she is notified of the relief that
the applicant seeks and that should he or she intend to oppose the
application, he or she should file a notice of opposition, supported
by an affidavit setting out details of the facts on which he or she
opposes the application. He or she is not afforded the opportunity to
depose to an affidavit setting out detailed facts on the basis of
which he or she supports the application. This is clear when one
considers that even the one who intends to do so but does not oppose
the application within the prescribed time-frame becomes barred from
filing such opposition. The bar places him or her in the position of
any other person who does not oppose the granting of the relief
sought in the application.
The preamble to Form CCZ1 directs
the respondent on the contents that a notice of opposition and the
opposing affidavit must contain. The preamble reads:
“TAKE notice that the applicant
intends to apply to the Constitutional Court for the Order in terms
of the Draft annexed to this notice and that the accompanying
affidavits and documents will be used in support of the application.
If you intend to oppose this
application you will have to file a Notice of Opposition in Form
CCZ2, together with one or more of the opposing affidavits, with the
Registrar of the Constitutional Court at … within … days after
the date on which this notice was served upon you. … Your
affidavits may have annexed to them documents verifying the facts set
out in the affidavits. …” (the underlining is for emphasis)
Rule 17(2) of the Rules clearly
states that the notice of opposition shall be supported by an
affidavit, deposed to by a person who can swear positively to the
facts, which details the facts and the basis on which the respondent
opposes the application, together with any supporting documents which
are relevant. The Rules require that a notice of opposition be in
terms of Form CCZ2. The preamble to Form CCZ2 is an extension of Rule
17(2). It states as follows:
“TAKE NOTICE THAT the
Respondent intends to oppose the application on the grounds set out
in the supporting affidavit and supporting documents attached hereto
…”.
A reading of the preamble shows
that the contents of the supporting affidavit must oppose the relief
that is sought by the applicant. The intended respondent is warned in
advance as to the objective of filing the opposing papers.
The object of an opposing
affidavit is to oppose the relief sought by an applicant. The
respondent's position in the opposing affidavit must be clear that
he or she is opposing the relief that is sought by the applicant.
Once the opposing affidavit supports the relief sought by the
applicant, then it ceases to be an opposing affidavit.
The face of Form CCZ2 expressly
states that the respondent filing the form has the intention to
oppose the application. It does not provide for an intention to
support the application.
It is, as the name implies, a
notice of opposition and its contents have to be in opposition to the
application, as the Rules provide.
Rules 16, 17 and 23 of the Rules
have to be considered in the context of section 93(1) of the
Constitution. Section 93(1) of the Constitution provides that any
aggrieved candidate has to lodge a petition or application within
seven days of the date of the declaration of the Presidential
election result. There is an opportunity for any of the aggrieved
candidates to file such an application within the prescribed time
limit.
CONTENTS OF THE AFFIDAVITS OF
THE FIFTH, THE SEVENTEENTH AND THE TWENTIETH RESPONDENTS
The applicant called upon any of
the respondents who intended to oppose the court application to do so
by filing a notice of opposition in Form CCZ2.
The fifth respondent's
affidavit
The fifth respondent's notice
of opposition reads as follows:
“TAKE NOTICE that the fifth
respondent intends to oppose this application on the grounds set out
in the Affidavit annexed to this notice, …”.
The facts detailed by the
affidavit attached to the notice of opposition tell a different
story. The fifth respondent was in fact supporting the applicant,
contrary to the notice of opposition. The affidavit contains the
following:
“1-3 …
INTRODUCTION
4. While I am cited as a
respondent, I support Mr Chamisa's application to invalidate the
recent presidential elections. The purpose of this affidavit is
briefly to set out the basis for my support of this application.
5. …
6… my contribution will
primarily take the form of advancing legal submissions in support of
the applicant, both in heads of argument and at the hearing. I will
advance three propositions:
6.1 First, the validity of a
presidential election depends on whether it was free and fair at all
stages of the process.
6.2 Second, the presidential
election was not free or fair on the basis that:
6.2.1 There is clear evidence
that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission manipulated the election
results.
6.2.2 There was a pattern of
irregularities and unlawful conduct during the election campaign and
on voting day.
6.3 Third, the just and
appropriate remedy is to declare that the elections were not free and
fair, to invalidate the presidential elections, and to order fresh
elections. These fresh elections must be subject to a structural
interdict to ensure that the ZEC delivers a truly free and fair
presidential election on its second attempt. (italics added for
emphasis)
7-82 …
JUST AND APPROPRIATE REMEDY
83 I substantially support the
relief set out in the draft order submitted by the applicant.
84 First, I support the
declaratory order that the presidential elections were not free and
fair.
84.1 This declaration is
necessary to vindicate the constitutional and statutory rights to a
free and fair election which have been unjustifiably infringed.
84.2 It is just and equitable for
this Court to grant this declaration to ensure that the ZEC and other
implicated respondents are under no illusions as to the unlawful
nature of their conduct and to provide proper guidance for the
conduct of future elections.
85 Second, I also support an
order invalidating the presidential elections under section 93(4)(b)
of the Constitution and/or section 117 of the Electoral Act.
85.1 This order is the just and
appropriate remedy under section 93(4)(b) of the Constitution as the
irregularities in the election process resulted in an election that
was not free and fair. I submit that the absence of a free and fair
process is sufficient to establish grounds for invalidation.
85.2 This order is also justified
under section 177 of the Electoral Act as the irregularities in the
election process were in breach of the principles underlying the
Electoral Act and affected the result of the election. But for these
irregularities, Mr Mnangagwa would not have won the election.
85.3 Any difference between the
two tests for invalidation under section 93(4)(b) of the Constitution
and section 177 of the Electoral Act will be addressed in argument.
86 Third, I further support the
order directing a new presidential election within 60 days. This
order follows as a matter of course from an order invalidating the
election under section 93(4)(b) of the Constitution.
86.1 I submit that this election
should take the form of a run-off election between the applicant and
Mr Mnangagwa.
86.2 Alternatively, there should
be an entirely new presidential election, if it is found that the
election results are too compromised to allow for any accurate
identification of the candidates for a run-off.
87 Finally, I submit that it
would be just and appropriate for this Court to exercise its broad
remedial discretion to grant a structural interdict directing the ZEC
to take appropriate steps to ensure that the fresh election is truly
free and fair and to report to this Court on its progress. I submit
that there are ample grounds for this structural interdict on the
basis that:
87.1-87.2 …
87.3 There is clear evidence
that the presidential elections were not free and fair …”.
(italics added for emphasis)
The seventeenth respondent's
affidavit
The seventeenth respondent's
affidavit captured his position as follows:
“1-1.1 …
1.2. I have read the founding
affidavit of NELSON CHAMISA, the applicant in this matter.
1.3. In the main I agree with the
application, but I do wish to be involved in these proceedings and
would want my views to be considered by this Honourable Court.
1.4.-1.7. …
(b) NATURE OF THE APPLICATION
Ad paragraph 3.8
1.8. It is admitted that this
application is a challenge of the Presidential election which
announcement the applicant deems to have been irregular and illegal.
I concur with the applicant's averment that the announcement by the
twenty-third and twenty-fourth respondents was ultra vires the
prescripts of the Electoral Act and the Constitution.
1.9. To the extent that the
announcement of the election results was irregular, I wish to
associate myself and my party with the second relief sought that the
declaration by the twenty-third respondent and that the first
respondent is the duly elected Presidential Candidate falls to be
challenged as well …”. (italics added for emphasis)
The twentieth respondent's
affidavit
The twentieth respondent went
further to make a specific prayer in the affidavit he filed together
with the notice of opposition. The relevant part of the affidavit
reads as follows:
“1. …
2. To start with I do confirm
that I duly received a copy of the petition filed on behalf of the
applicant. The petition consists of the application and a bundle of
documents. I have carefully and diligently read the contents thereof
and wish to state that I am opposed to the granting of part 2 of the
relief sought for the reasons that will more fully appear in the body
of my opposing affidavit. Given the gross irregularities and the
margin that was wrongly attributed to the first respondent it is
improper to declare either the applicant or the first respondent the
winner without a full audit by independent qualified auditors. I wish
to place it on record that I did not file a petition of my own
because I believe that I did not earn reasonably sufficient votes to
warrant making a petition. But this is not to say I am in agreement
with the manner in which the elections were conducted by the
twenty-third respondent. Far from it. I therefore wish to make the
following averments to enable this Court to make an informed
determination of this important matter whose implications will be
felt by everyone for the next five years. …
3. The elections were not
conducted by the twenty-third respondent in accordance with the
principles of fairness set out in the Electoral Act and the
Constitution. The election was also not free from gross electoral
malpractices, which tainted the whole process to such an extent that
the election cannot be deemed credible. Basically, the results
announced by the twenty-third respondent are not accurate,
verifiable, secure and transparent as contemplated in the
Constitution as I will demonstrate below.” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
In the same affidavit, the
twentieth respondent also challenged the Presidential election
result, by alleging that some votes that were counted in favour of
the first respondent were from non-existent polling stations. He
claimed that there was bias by the State media towards the first
respondent's campaign, contrary to the Act. His substantive relief
was couched as follows:
“I accordingly pray as follows:
(a) The Presidential election of
2018 was not conducted in accordance with the laws of Zimbabwe and
was not credible and fair;
(b) In terms of section 93(4)(b)
an election to the office of the President of the Republic of
Zimbabwe shall be held within sixty (60) days of this order.
(c) The twenty-third,
twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth respondents be ordered to pay costs of
the petition on a higher scale.”
As already indicated, the
twentieth respondent had the right to approach the Court in terms of
section 93(1) of the Constitution. The term “aggrieved candidate”
is not qualified by the number of votes the aggrieved candidate
received in the Presidential election. There is no merit in the
twentieth respondent's submission that he could not have lodged his
own court application because he did not earn sufficient votes to
warrant making the application. The misconception does not validate
the procedure he adopted.
When a person acts as a
respondent in terms of Rule 17(2) of the Rules, he or she does so for
the specific purpose of opposing the granting of the relief sought by
the applicant and challenging the veracity of the grounds on which
the application is based. He or she must meet the procedural and
substantive requirements, compliance with which confers on a
respondent the right to appear before the Court and be heard in his
or her own cause.
It is plain that the Rules
adequately provide for the procedure to be followed when filing a
notice of opposition.
The fifth, the sixth, the
seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth 'respondents' were
not respondents within the meaning of Rules 16(3)(d), 17(1), 17(2),
23(2) and 23(3) of the Rules.
DISPOSITION ON THE EXPUNGING
OF THE OPPOSING PAPERS OF THE FIFTH, THE SIXTH, THE SEVENTEENTH, THE
EIGHTEENTH AND THE TWENTIETH RESPONDENTS
The fifth, the sixth, the
seventeenth, the eighteenth and the twentieth respondents failed to
comply with the requirements of the law relating to the substance of
an opposing affidavit. They had no locus standi and the papers they
purported to file were not properly before the Court. An order that
the papers filed by the fifth, the sixth, the seventeenth, the
eighteenth and the twentieth respondents be expunged from the record
of proceedings was accordingly made by the Court.
WHETHER THE APPLICATION IS
PROPERLY BEFORE THE COURT
THE LODGING OF THE COURT
APPLICATION
The first respondent, the
Commission, the twenty-fourth and the twenty-fifth respondents took
points in limine. One of the points in limine was that the court
application was not properly before the Court.
Although filed within seven days,
as is stipulated by section 93(1) of the Constitution, the court
application was served on the respondents on the eighth day, in
violation of Rule 23(2) of the Rules. In addition, the applicant
served the application only on the first respondent on his own,
rather than through the Sheriff as required by the Rules.
The first respondent was declared
to be duly elected as President of the Republic of Zimbabwe on 3
August 2018. In terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution, as read
with Rule 23(2) of the Rules, the applicant had until 10 August 2018
to file and serve the court application on the respondents.
The applicant appears to have
been cognisant of the reckoning of days and times prescribed by the
Constitution. He waited until the last day before filing the court
application with the Registrar shortly before close of business on 10
August 2018. He was entitled by law to do so.
Having filed the court
application with the Registrar, the applicant was required by Rule
23(2) of the Rules to serve the court application on all the
respondents within the prescribed period.
Rule 9(7) of the Rules required
the court application, as process initiating litigation in the Court,
to be served by the Sheriff within the period prescribed for the
service of the process.
The respondents submitted that
the applicant instructed the Sheriff to serve the court application
outside the period prescribed for service of process.
The contention advanced on behalf
of the applicant was that the Sheriff was given the instruction to
serve the documents on the respondents eight hours before the expiry
of the prescribed period. The allegation was made that the Sheriff
executed service of the court application and the supporting
documents on the respondents outside the prescribed period. The
applicant put the blame for failure to serve the respondents
timeously on the Sheriff.
The affidavits submitted by the
respondents show that the applicant had attempted to effect service
of the court application and the supporting documents without the
involvement of the Sheriff on 10 August 2018.
It is common cause that the court
application was eventually served on the respondents on 11 August
2018, outside the period prescribed by the Rules. Service was outside
the period of seven days prescribed in section 93(1) of the
Constitution as the period within which a petition or application by
an aggrieved candidate challenging the validity of a Presidential
election had to be lodged.
The notices of opposition would
have been due within three days from that date, being 14 August 2018.
In terms of section 336(2) of the
Constitution:
“Subject to this Constitution,
whenever the time for doing anything in terms of this Constitution
ends or falls on a Saturday, Sunday or public holiday, the time
extends to and the thing may be done on the next day that is not a
Saturday, Sunday or public holiday.”
The dies induciae having expired
on 14 August 2018, which was a public holiday in Zimbabwe, the
notices of opposition had to be filed on the next business day, being
15 August 2018. They were duly and properly filed with the Registrar
on that date.
WHETHER THE COURT APPLICATION
WAS FILED OUT OF TIME
Mr Uriri and Mr Magwaliba
submitted that the court application was filed out of time. The
submission was that to successfully lodge an application in terms of
section 93(1) of the Constitution, as read with Rule 23(2) of the
Rules, it was imperative to file and serve the court application on
the interested parties within seven days of the declaration of the
Presidential election result.
The first respondent also argued
that the seven-day period as contemplated by the Constitution
included weekends.
Mr Uriri argued that the purpose
of section 93(1) of the Constitution was to afford an aggrieved
candidate an opportunity to challenge the validity of the
Presidential election at the earliest time possible, bearing in mind
the importance of the Office of President.
Mr Kanengoni also submitted that
the court application was served out of time. It was his position
that “lodge”, as contemplated by section 93(1) of the
Constitution, meant that the court application had to be filed and
served on all the respondents within seven days. He submitted that,
for service of the court application to be effective, it had to be
executed by the Sheriff.
According to the applicant, the
word “lodge”, as used in section 93(1) of the Constitution, means
to file the court application with the Registrar.
Counsel for the applicant sought
to rely on section 169 of the Act to support the contention that the
court application was timeously filed and served on the respondents.
Section 169 of the Act sets out the time-frame for service of
election petitions presented to the Electoral Court where one
complains of an undue return or an election of a Member of Parliament
by reason of want of qualification, disqualification, electoral
malpractice, irregularities, or any other cause.
In terms of section 169 of the
Act, the petition shall be served on the respondents within ten days
after the presentation of the petition, either personally or by
leaving the same at his or her usual or last known dwelling or place
of business.
Mr Uriri submitted that section
169 of the Act was of no relevance to the construction of section
93(1) of the Constitution, which begins with the words “Subject to
this section”. The effect of the use of the words “Subject to
this section” is that any provision on time limits within which
anything is required to be done which is contrary to what is
prescribed under section 93(1) of the Constitution would have to be
subservient to the provisions of section 93(1) of the Constitution.
THE LAW GOVERNING THE FILING
AND SERVICE OF A COURT APPLICATION MADE IN TERMS OF SECTION 93(1) OF
THE CONSTITUTION
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
provides that any aggrieved candidate may challenge the validity of
an election of a President by lodging a petition or application with
the Court within seven days after the date of the declaration of the
result of the Presidential election. Subsection (3) of section 93
enjoins the Court to hear and determine the petition or application
lodged in terms of subs (1) within fourteen days after the
application is lodged.
The meaning of the word “lodge”
was the point of departure for the parties.
The applicant's view was that
it meant simply filing the application with the Registrar. The
respondents, on the other hand, contended that “lodge” means to
file the application with the Registrar and serve it on the
respondent within seven days after the date of the declaration of the
result of the Presidential election.
It is not possible to find the
true meaning of “lodge”, as used in section 93(1) of the
Constitution, without having regard to the relevant provisions of the
Rules. The general principle is that when one interprets a
constitutional provision, any law that is subsidiary to the
Constitution must be read together with the constitutional provision
in question. The subsidiary law must be given effect as long as it is
constitutionally valid.
It is common cause that the
constitutionality of the Rules was not questioned. They are valid and
fully applicable.
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
simply states that an aggrieved candidate may lodge an application
within seven days after the date of the declaration of the
Presidential election result. If he or she decides to do so, the
lodgment of the petition or application must be effected within seven
days of the declaration of the Presidential election result. The
finer details of how the petition or application is effectively
lodged are left to be prescribed by the Rules.
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
confers on an aggrieved candidate the right to challenge the validity
of a Presidential election. It confers on the aggrieved candidate the
right of access to the Court. Where there is a right, there is a
remedy. The remedy is the provision for the institution of
proceedings in the Court by way of a petition or application to
vindicate the right to challenge the validity of a Presidential
election. The right to the remedy is conditional upon the petition or
application being lodged with the Court within seven days of the
declaration of the Presidential election result.
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
makes provision for both substantive and procedural rights. The
question of filing and serving process is a question of procedure
which falls within the purview of the Rules.
In Tsvangirai v Mugabe & Ors
supra the Court held that section 93 of the Constitution must be
considered as one whole. All other provisions which have a bearing on
its true meaning must be considered so as to enforce the spirit and
underlying values of the Constitution. At p 14 of the cyclostyled
judgment the Court said:
“What is not to be overlooked
when interpreting the provisions of section 93 of the Constitution is
the fact that they set up a procedural mechanism, the purpose of
which is the protection of the fundamental right of every Zimbabwean
citizen to a free, fair and credible election for the public office
of President. It is a procedural mechanism, the implementation of
which is intended to uphold the fundamental principle of the rule of
law on which Zimbabwe is founded.” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
Rule 23 of the Rules provides in
relevant part as follows:
“23.
Dispute relating to the election to the office of President or Vice
President
(1) An application where the
election of a President or Vice President is in dispute shall be by
way of court application.
(2) The application shall be
filed with the Registrar and shall be served on the respondent within
seven days of the date of the declaration of the result of the
election.” (the underlining is for emphasis)
Rule 23(2) of the Rules explains
the meaning of the word “lodge”, as contemplated by section 93(1)
of the Constitution.
In terms of the subrule, to
“lodge” means to file and serve the application made in terms of
section 93(1) of the Constitution within seven days of the
declaration of the Presidential election result.
There is no merit in the
applicant's contention that “lodge”, as used in section 93(1)
of the Constitution, means to place the application in the
Registrar's office. That interpretation would negate the effect of
the intended relationship between the constitutional provisions and
the Rules that are intended to give effect to them.
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
cannot stand on its own because it sets up a general procedural
mechanism, the specifics of which are grounded in the Rules. The law,
as sanctioned by the Constitution itself, requires that the
application be filed and served within seven days of the declaration
of the Presidential election result.
THE APPLICABILITY OF SECTION
169 OF THE ACT
It is also important to highlight
that section 169 of the Act does not apply to a court application
that is brought to the Court in terms of section 93(1) of the
Constitution. This is so because section 169 of the Act applies to
election petitions presented to the Electoral Court. More
importantly, the Act itself recognises the distinction between
petitions presented to the Electoral Court in terms of the Act and
petitions brought to the Court in terms of section 93(1) of the
Constitution.
Section 111 of the Act
specifically provides for election petitions in respect of the
election to the Office of President.
Consistent with section 93(1) of
the Constitution, section 111(1) of the Act provides as follows:
“(1) An election petition
complaining of an undue return or an undue election of a person to
the office of President, by reason of irregularity or any other cause
whatsoever, may be presented to the Constitutional Court within seven
days of the declaration of the result of the election in respect of
which the petition is presented, by any person —
(a) claiming to have had a right
to be elected at that election; or
(b) alleging himself or herself
to have been a candidate at such election.” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
In the light of the provisions of
section 111(1) of the Act, there was no merit in Mr Mpofu's attempt
to persuade the Court to apply section 169 of the Act to purge the
applicant's non-compliance with the requirements of section 93(1)
of the Constitution. The applicant had to file and serve the
application on all the respondents within seven days of the
declaration of the Presidential election result by the twenty-fourth
respondent.
COMPUTATION OF DAYS
There was also no merit in the
applicant's computation of days. The Constitution does not refer to
weekdays but days. This is to be taken to mean seven calendar days
and includes Saturdays and Sundays.
In terms of Rule 23(2) of the
Rules, the court application shall be lodged with the Registrar and
shall be served on the respondent within seven days of the
declaration of the result of the Presidential election.
The applicant's interpretation
of section 93(1) of the Constitution does not accord with the
importance that is attached to the declaration of a Presidential
election result, and the need for certainty as to who is the
President soon after the Presidential election result is declared.
The intention behind section 93 of the Constitution is that the
Office of President be filled immediately after a declaration of the
Presidential election result. In the event that the validity of the
Presidential election is challenged, it is the will of the people, as
expressed in section 93(3) of the Constitution, as read with Rule
23(7) of the Rules, that the challenge be determined within fourteen
days after the application is lodged.
The importance of the Office of
President and the reason why the determination of who holds that
office should be finalised as soon as possible after a declaration of
the Presidential election result were highlighted by the Court in
Tsvangirai v Mugabe and Ors supra at pp 24-26 of the cyclostyled
judgment. The Court said:
“Every constitutional democracy
sets great value on the office of President in the distribution of
the powers of the State. By the Constitution, the people in the
exercise of their sovereign authority designated the office of
President as one of the most important offices. They assigned to the
office of President powers by the lawful exercise of which they
committed themselves to be governed in accordance with the conditions
they prescribed. An election of a President is therefore a central
institution for securing democratic self-government. By the election,
the people choose the person who will exercise the powers of
self-government for their benefit. …
An election of a President in
Zimbabwe is a popular affair, in that every citizen registered on a
voters roll at ward and constituency level countrywide is eligible to
vote for a President. … Once chosen in a free, fair and credible
election, a President assumes an office with enormous powers which he
or she is required to exercise in accordance with the Constitution or
any other law. …
An election of a President is
bound to generate profound public interest, not necessarily measured
by the number of votes cast in the election. Stakes are very high and
political tensions may rise to levels that threaten public order and
national security. The election of a President is not just about
finding an answer to the question who of the candidates should be the
leader of the Government. It is about choosing a leader who will have
the interests of all Zimbabwean citizens at heart and has the
intellectual ability to exercise the powers of the office in
accordance with the fundamental principles and values on which a
democratic society is based to change the lives of the people for the
better.
By the very nature of the
circumstances in which it arises, a petition or application
challenging the validity of an election of a President alleging that
the President-elect stole the election requires effective and urgent
determination on the merits. It is indicative of simmering political
tension and potential disturbance of public peace and tranquility.
The cause is the very fact that those who would have voluntarily
taken part in the electoral process, convinced that the rules by
which they act guarantee the validity of the electoral outcome,
challenge it as losers.” (the underlining is for emphasis)
It is because of the essential
nature of the Office of President and the emotions surrounding a
Presidential election that the requirement to file and serve a
challenge to the election result must be strictly honoured. It is
after the filing and service of the application within seven days of
the declaration of the Presidential election result that all other
procedures for the filing of opposition papers and heads of argument
in the matter start to kick in.
The time-frames set out in Rule
23 of the Rules are computed from the day that the court application
is filed and served. From that day, the Court, the opposing parties
as cited in the application, and the nation at large, begin to
prepare themselves for the hearing and determination of the question
whether the Presidential election was free, fair and credible.
It follows from all of the
foregoing that, although the application in casu was filed within the
prescribed seven-day period, it was not served on the respondents
within that time-frame.
Accordingly, it cannot be held to
have been duly lodged in accordance with the applicable provisions of
the Constitution and the Rules.
APPLICATION FOR CONDONATION
FOR NON-COMPLIANCE
An application for condonation of
non-compliance with the procedural requirements prescribed by section
93(1) of the Constitution, albeit opposed by the respondents, was
made by the applicant.
Mr
Magwaliba specifically argued that non-compliance with the
Constitution could not be condoned.
Despite opposition to the
application for condonation, the Court was prepared to, and did,
grant the application. It considered the importance of the matter in
dispute and the public interest involved. The detailed reasons for
granting condonation are as follows.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR DEPARTURE
FROM THE RULES
The Court is imbued with a wide
discretion when deciding a constitutional matter within its
jurisdiction. The wide discretion includes the power to condone a
departure from the Rules.
The question whether the Court
has power to condone non-compliance with procedural requirements
prescribed by a constitutional provision given effect to by the Rules
of the Court is a constitutional matter. Non-compliance with the
Rules in relation to a procedural matter provided for under the
Constitution is non-compliance with the relevant procedural
requirements prescribed by the Constitution.
In Grootboom v National
Prosecuting Authority and Anor 2014 (2) SA 68 (CC) at paras [20] and
[35], the Constitutional Court of South Africa had occasion to
consider the question of the power to condone non-compliance with
court rules. It said:
“[20] … It is axiomatic that
condoning a party's non-compliance with the rules of court or
directions is an indulgence. The court seized with the matter has a
discretion whether to grant condonation. …
[35] … the granting or refusal
of condonation is a matter of judicial discretion. It involves a
value judgment by the court seized with a matter based on the facts
of that particular case.”
In terms of section 175(6)(b) of
the Constitution, the Court, in deciding a constitutional matter
within its jurisdiction, has a general power to “make any order
that is just and equitable.”
Consideration of what is in the
interests of justice is paramount. A court exists to do justice. It
also exists to act fairly. Ordinarily, once a court finds that it is
just and equitable to allow a matter to be brought to it outside the
procedural requirements, it follows that it would be in the interests
of justice to allow the matter to be heard. Minister of Justice v
Ntuli 1997 (3) SA 772 (CC) para [31].
If justice and fairness would
best be served or advanced by the employment of an available remedy,
then it ought to prevail as a constitutionally sanctioned solution to
the procedural issue. The Court must not lose sight of the
substantive values in the light of which procedural requirements are
made.
Where the Court considers that it
is in the interests of justice to condone a departure from the
procedural requirements, it is entitled to remedy non-compliance by
giving an indulgence to the defaulting party. The order granting
condonation is itself a form of a just and equitable remedy that the
Court can grant in terms of section 176(5)(b) of the Constitution.
The consideration of what is
“just and equitable” and what is in the “interests of justice”
involves giving effect to the values of procedural justice and
fairness. It is for this reason that section 176 of the Constitution
provides that the Court has inherent power to protect and regulate
its own process. Allowing a departure from the Rules is a form of the
exercise of the Court's constitutional power to regulate its own
process to give effect to and achieve justice.
Rule 5 of the Rules provides as
follows:
“5.
Departure from rules and directions as to procedure
(1) The Court or a Judge may, in
relation to any particular case before it or him or her, as the case
may be —
(a) direct, authorise or condone
a departure from any provision of these rules, including an extension
of any period specified therein, where it or he or she, as the case
may be, is satisfied that the departure is required in the interests
of justice;
(b) give such directions as to
procedure in respect of any matter not expressly provided for in
these rules as appear to it or him or her, as the case may be, to be
just and expedient.
(2) The Court or the Chief
Justice or a Judge may —
(a) of its, his or her own accord
or on application and on sufficient cause shown, extend or reduce any
time period prescribed in these rules and may condone non-compliance
with these rules;
(b) give such directions in
relation to matters of practice or procedure or the disposal of any
appeal, application or other matter as the Court or the Chief Justice
or Judge may consider just and expedient.” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
Rules deal with procedural
matters only. Procedural matters prescribed in section 93(1) of the
Constitution are embodied in the Rules. They can be the subject of
the exercise by the Court of the discretionary power provided for
under Rule 5 of the Rules.
In Marco Ltd v Newfoundland
Processing Ltd (1995) 130 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 308, as referred to in
Duhaime's Law Dictionary, the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and
Labrador, Trial Division, said:
“The Rules of Court … set out
procedural pathways or guidelines for the conduct of litigation. The
court, in the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction to control its
own process and under the Rules themselves, may modify the strictures
of particular procedural requirements to meet the exigencies of a
specific case provided always, of course, any such modification can
be done without encroaching on the rights of other parties to a fair
and proper hearing.” (the underlining is for emphasis)
In Mukaddam v Pioneer Foods (Pty)
Ltd and Others 2013 (5) SA 89 (CC), the Constitutional Court of South
Africa relied on the same principle. In para [39] it said:
“[39] Flexibility in applying
requirements of procedure is common in our courts. Even where enacted
rules of court are involved, our courts reserve for themselves the
power to condone non-compliance if the interests of justice require
them to do so. Rigidity has no place in the operation of court
procedures. Recently in PFE International and Others v Industrial
Department Corporation of South Africa Ltd [2013 (1) SA 1 (CC)] this
Court reaffirmed the principle that rules of procedure must be
applied flexibly. There this Court said:
'Since the rules are made for
courts to facilitate the adjudication of cases, the superior courts
enjoy the power to regulate their own processes, taking into account
the interests of justice. It is this power that makes every superior
court the master of its own process. It enables a superior court to
lay down a process to be followed in particular cases, even if that
process deviates from what its rules prescribe. Consistent with that
power, this Court may, in the interests of justice, depart from its
own rules.'”
It is on the basis of the
principle behind the purpose of the inherent power of the Court to
control its own process provided for in section 176 of the
Constitution that Mr Magwaliba's submission, that non-compliance
with a requirement of a rule giving effect to a constitutional
provision cannot be condoned, must fail.
Once a procedural matter is made
the subject of a rule of court, and there is a general rule giving
the Court the power to condone non-compliance with the procedural
requirements when it is in the interests of justice to do so, the
fact that the procedural matter has its origin in the Constitution is
no bar to the Court exercising its discretionary power in terms of
the Rules.
The one-day delay in serving the
application on the respondents through the Sheriff was not
inordinate. The respondents did not allege any prejudice arising from
the applicant's non compliance with the procedural requirements of
Rule 23(2), as read with Rule 9(7), of the Rules. The national
importance of the dispute cannot be overlooked. It has been held that
where the delay is relatively short and no prejudice is suffered, the
court is likely to grant condonation of non-compliance with
procedural requirements. See Oriani-Ambrosini MP v Sisulu MP, Speaker
of the National Assembly 2012 (6) SA 588 (CC) at paras 15 and 17-19.
THE EFFECT OF GRANTING
CONDONATION
THE INTRODUCTION OF NEW
DOCUMENTS BY THE APPLICANT AFTER SERVICE OF THE COURT APPLICATION ON
THE RESPONDENTS
Having been granted condonation
for failure to file and serve the court application on time, the
applicant sought to produce a new set of documents.
It was common cause that the new
set of documents had not been filed and served on all the respondents
within the seven-day period as required by section 93(1) of the
Constitution. Previously, the applicant had attempted to file the new
set of documents which were not part of the application with the
Registrar. The applicant knew that he was barred from doing so,
having failed to have the documents as part of the application.
The Court declined to allow the
introduction of the new set of documents on the date of the hearing
for the following reasons.
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
requires a complete case to be made at the time the court application
is lodged. In Tsvangirai v Mugabe and Ors supra, the Court made it
clear that the application must be complete at the time it is lodged.
The application must contain all the necessary documents supporting
the grounds on which the challenge to the validity of the
Presidential election is based.
In Hove v Gumbo (Mberengwa West
Election Petition Appeal) 2005 (2) ZLR 5 (S), the Supreme Court held
that an election petition must be complete at the time of
presentation. At 92FG it said:
“For a court to set aside an
election the cause of the complaint should have been pleaded in the
petition at the time of its presentation and established by evidence
… . The duty of the court is to determine whether the petitioner
has, by evidence adduced, established the cause of his complaint
against the election result. The effect of section 132 of the Act is
that a petitioner complaining of an undue election must state the
nature of the cause of his or her complaint. The cause of complaint
must be clearly and concisely stated at the time of presentation of
the petition … .
The respondent is entitled to
know the reason why his or her election is being challenged so that
he or she can be able to answer the case.”
The aggrieved candidate is the
best person to know what it is that the respondent did during the
Presidential election which has given him or her the cause of action
to challenge the validity of the Presidential election. He or she
cannot expect to be given an opportunity to build a case against the
respondent at the hearing. The respondent must receive and have
knowledge of the case he or she must answer at the time the court
application, the founding affidavit and all the supporting documents
are served on him or her.
The Court granted the applicant
condonation for failure to file and serve the court application and
all the documents that he had at the time the dies induciae expired.
The Court did not grant the applicant condonation to place documents
before it which were not part of his case at the time that he should
have filed and served the court application together with the
supporting evidence.
No application for condonation
and upliftment of the bar in respect of the documents that were not
part of the court application was ever made by the applicant. He
could not seek to produce and rely on documents which had not been
part of the court application at the time it ought to have been filed
and served.
As a court application is the
process by which proceedings in terms of section 93(1) of the
Constitution must be instituted, its procedural and substantive
requirements ensure that there should be a complete and clearly
defined cause of action at the time the application is lodged with
the Court. The evidence of the allegations made against the
respondent in the form of the founding affidavit and supporting
documents must be filed and served on all the other parties at the
time the court application is lodged with the Court.
A proper interpretation of the
provisions of Rule 14(4) of the Rules confirms the principle that an
application stands or falls on the facts or averments set out in the
founding affidavit at the time the application is filed and served.
The subrule makes it clear that only documents which verify the facts
or averments set out in the founding affidavit shall accompany the
affidavit. As the documents verify the facts or averments set out in
the founding affidavit, they form part of the founding affidavit. The
founding affidavit must be construed as including all such documents.
An aggrieved candidate
challenging the validity of a Presidential election should not make
serious allegations of commission of irregularities or electoral
malpractices against a respondent when he or she has no evidence to
prove the allegations.
Section 93(3) of the Constitution
requires the Court to hear and determine the application lodged in
terms of section 93(1) within fourteen days of its lodgement. The
Court must deal with the applicant's case, as revealed in the court
application at the time it is lodged.
SUBPOENA DUCES TECUM
It is necessary to deal with the
issue of the subpoena duces tecum the applicant sought from a Judge
in chambers.
A subpoena duces tecum is a
subpoena issued under an order of a court compelling a person to
produce documents which the court is satisfied are relevant evidence
of a matter under determination. A court must first decide whether or
not the documents sought to be produced under the force of a subpoena
duces tecum are relevant as proof of the matter in issue. See Poli v
Minister of Finance and Economic Development and Anor 1987 (2) ZLR
302 (SC); NetOne Cellular (Pvt) Ltd and Anor v Econet Wireless (Pvt)
Ltd and Anor SC 47/18.
On 20 August 2018 the applicant's
legal practitioners sent copies of a subpoena duces tecum to the
Registrar, with an accompanying written request that it be issued.
The subpoena sought to compel the Commission to produce its server at
the hearing of the court application. The request that the subpoena
be issued by the Registrar was placed before the Chief Justice. He
gave the following direction:
“The decision whether or not
the subpoena is to be issued is for the full Court to make after
weighing the issue of relevance of the evidence to be produced.”
The decision was communicated to
the applicant's legal practitioners by the Registrar by an
accompanying letter on 21 August 2018 and received on the same day at
11.05 am.
The evidence showed that the
applicant believed that the Commission had a server into which
polling station returns (the V11 Forms) were electronically
transmitted and stored.
On 02 August 2018 the applicant's
legal practitioner and his chief election agent met with the Chief
Elections Officer on the issue of the alleged existence of the
server. They were advised that the Commission had no server for the
transmission of election results. The law of elections does not have
a provision requiring the electronic transmission of polling station
returns to, and storage in, a server. The applicant intended to use
the process of the subpoena duces tecum for a purpose for which it
was not designed. It appears that the applicant intended to use the
subpoena for the purpose of searching for evidence.
In the NetOne Cellular (Pvt) Ltd
case supra at p 13 of the cyclostyled judgment, the Supreme Court
said:
“It is trite that any document
may be made the subject of a subpoena duces tecum if it is or may be
relevant to the conduct of the litigation by the party seeking its
production. That said, a subpoena duces tecum must have a legitimate
purpose. (The unreported judgment of MARAIS J in the WLD Wachsberger
v Wachsberger on 8 May 1990 in case No 8963/90 and the unreported
judgment of PLEWMAN J in the WLD on 6 October 1993 in the case of
Lincoln v Lapperman Diamond Cutting Works (Pty) Ltd 17411/93.)
What can be gleaned from the
above remarks is that a court should not permit a subpoena duces
tecum to be used to pursue a motive other than the securing of
evidence by the party requiring it which is important to advance its
case. In other words, the party seeking to issue a subpoena duces
tecum should show that it has a legitimate purpose.”
The question of legitimacy of the
subpoena sought was never determined by the Court. It remains
unanswered, as no application for the subpoena was made to the Court
to determine the matter, despite the applicant having been notified
that this was required.
No-one knows what, in the
circumstances, the decision of the Court would have been had the
application been made for the subpoena duces tecum to be issued
compelling the Commission to produce its server at the hearing of the
application. No-one knows what the responses of the respondents would
have been to such an application had it been made, considering the
requirements of sections 93(1) and 93(3) of the Constitution.
The applicant would have been
required to show that he was not on a “fishing expedition”. Only
specific documents relevant to the case would have been requested.
In the NetOne Cellular (Pvt) Ltd
case supra at pp 15-16 of the cyclostyled judgment, the Supreme Court
said:
“A subpoena duces tecum cannot
be used indiscriminately, as though one was on a 'fishing
expedition'. Only specific documents relevant to the case can be
requested. General, sweeping requests are improper and this is one
such request. As the Second District Court of Appeal in America said
in Walter v Page, 638 So. 2d 1030 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994):
'We agree with the appellant
that the subpoena duces tecum was too broad. The rule authorising a
subpoena duces tecum requires some degree of specificity, and the
documents or papers sought should be designated with sufficient
particularity to suggest their existence and materiality. Palmer v.
Servis, 393 So.2d 653 (Fla. 5th DCA 1981); Fla.R.Civ.P. 1.350(a). The
subpoena in the instant case was too broad in seeking virtually all
of appellant's personal financial documents. The subpoena duces tecum
is not the equivalent of a search warrant, and should not be used as
a fishing expedition to require a witness to produce broad categories
of documents which the party can search to find what may be wanted.'
These remarks are apposite.
A court should be wary of
permitting litigants to use the machinery of a subpoena duces tecum
to request large amounts of information in the hopes that some of it
may prove useful. An order for the production of documents under such
subpoena should not be given unless the court is of the opinion that
the documents are necessary for disposing fairly of the cause or
matter.”
SUMMARY
OF THE APPLICANT'S CASE
The issues for determination in
this segment of the judgment relate to the following matters –
(a) The case as pleaded and
presented;
(b) The locus of the burden of
proof;
(c) The standard of proof;
(d) The kind of evidence required
for proof; and
(e) The discharge of the burden
of proof.
There was evidence of ambivalence
in the applicant's mind as to the grounds on which he wanted the
Court to determine the question of the validity of the Presidential
election. The substance of the relief sought in para 1(i) of the
order sought shows that the case the applicant was alleging, and on
the proof of which the order would be granted, was the failure by the
Commission to deliver free, fair and credible harmonised elections,
including the Presidential election.
The ground was that the
harmonised elections were not conducted in accordance with the law.
The applicant alleged, and would
have had to prove, that the Commission through its officers had
committed irregularities, or the Commission had failed to act against
the commission of electoral malpractices by others where it was under
the duty to act. The allegation was that as a result of the
commission of irregularities or the omission to act against the
commission of electoral malpractices by others the Commission failed
to deliver free, fair and credible harmonised elections.
The appropriate relief upon a
finding of the facts alleged by the applicant would have been a
declaration of invalidity of the whole election process and the
setting aside of the Presidential election result.
Paragraph 1(ii) of the order
sought by the applicant reveals a case based on a different
allegation. The allegation, on the proof of which relief was sought
to be granted by way of para 1(ii) of the order, was that the
applicant won the Presidential election.
The allegation was that officers
of the Commission corruptly manipulated the Presidential election
result in such a manner that the first respondent's win was rigged.
The allegation was that the officers of the Commission awarded the
first respondent fictitious votes. The allegation was not that the
Commission had by commission of irregularities failed to deliver a
free, fair and credible Presidential election. The allegation was
that the electorate voted freely and delivered a win to the
applicant.
It followed logically that the
appropriate relief that would have been granted by the Court upon
proof by the applicant of the allegation that he won the Presidential
election would have been a declaration that the Presidential election
result announced by the Commission was an undue result. The Court,
upon a finding of the due result as contended for by the applicant,
would declare him the winner.
On the basis of the allegation
that he won the Presidential election, the applicant's case could
not be that the harmonised election was not free and fair. It would
be ironic to claim to be the winner of an election which is claimed
to be not free and fair in terms of the law of elections.
Whichever case the applicant
sought to be put before the Court, it had to be evidence based.
Although Mr Mpofu indicated that
the case presented to the Court was not based on the allegation of
malpractices before the declaration of the results, it is necessary
to refer to the allegation that the Commission failed to deliver a
free, fair and credible Presidential election.
The alleged violations said to
have been committed by the Commission and the twenty-fourth
respondent, directly or as a result of failure to enforce the
relevant provisions of the Act in the conduct of the harmonised
elections, are now referred to.
The High Court of Zimbabwe was
seized with and determined some of the allegations, on the basis of
which the ability of the Commission to conduct a free, fair and
credible harmonised election was impugned. The issues related to the
following matters -
(i) The conduct of postal voting;
(ii) The design of the
Presidential ballot;
(iii) The release of voters rolls
with voters' photographs to the parties; and
(iv) The Commission's
obligation to facilitate voting by civil servants engaged in election
duties on election day.
The High Court held in favour of
the Commission in respect of the matters raised against it. No appeal
was made against these decisions. They remain extant. The Court will
address the applicant's contentions in respect of these issues to
show general lack of seriousness in the allegations made against the
respondents.
In the abridged version of the
judgment, the Court did not address the totality of the allegations
made by the applicant, as listed above, reserving them for the main
judgment. In order to deal with them now, the Court will first
outline the applicant's case as pleaded in the founding affidavit
and thereafter set out the responses by the respondents. It will then
set out the arguments that were made by the applicant, the first
respondent, the Commission, the twenty-fourth and the twenty-fifth
respondents on the day of the hearing of the application. There will
then be an assessment of the evidence to determine the question
whether the allegations against the respondents have been proved,
and, if so, what impact the conduct had on the Presidential election
or result.
The dynamics of the case, as
pleaded by the applicant, involved making as many allegations against
the respondents as possible without regard to the probabilities.
Every unnecessary allegation of irregularity or electoral
malpractices made against a respondent in an election petition
subtracts cogency from the grounds on which relief is sought.
THE APPLICANT'S CASE IN
DETAIL
1. Lack of independence of the
Commission
The applicant alleged that the
conduct of the Commission showed that it lacked independence,
especially through the conduct of its Chairperson. He alleged that
the lack of independence, transparency and accountability of the
Commission was meant to and did benefit the first respondent.
2. Failure of the State-owned
media to comply with section 61(4) of the Constitution
The applicant alleged that,
although section 64(1) of the Constitution requires the State media
to be impartial and objective, the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(“ZBC”), The Herald and The Chronicle were media for propaganda
on behalf of the first respondent during the entire duration of the
Presidential election campaign. He contended that 60% of the
electorate in the rural areas only receive information from the ZBC.
The applicant alleged that the ZBC had a profound effect on the
electorate's outlook and information on the first respondent's
opponents in the Presidential election. The applicant alleged that
the Commission failed to bring the State media to book, thereby
failing to ensure an impartial and fair coverage of the harmonised
elections.
3. Conduct of traditional
leaders and rogue security elements
The applicant alleged that he had
evidence to show that traditional leaders were involved in the
electoral process as election agents on behalf of the first
respondent. He contended that there were people who identified
themselves as security officers. They went about campaigning on
behalf of the first respondent. He alleged that these people were
threatening villagers. The allegation was that the Commission failed
to condemn the conduct of the traditional leaders and the rogue
security agents.
4. Failure to abide by general
principles affecting the conducting of elections
The applicant said the Act gives
every political party the right to have reasonable access to all
material and information for it to participate in an election. He
alleged that only the first respondent's political party obtained
access to the unique combination of voters' ward details and
cellphone numbers of registered voters. Thereafter, the first
respondent is said to have sent out messages to members of the
electorate, encouraging them to vote for his political party.
Cellular network providers denied the allegation that they had given
out the cellphone numbers to the first respondent's political
party. The applicant concluded that it was the Commission that gave
the information to the first respondent's political party.
5. The Commission's failure
to compile a Voters Roll
The applicant stated that the
Commission has the duty to compile the roll of registered voters in
terms of the Constitution and the Act. According to the applicant,
audits that were carried out showed that 11% of voters on the voters
roll could not be found. The applicant alleged that the 11% amounts
to some 625,000 voters. He said additional audits done by civic
organisations found serious discrepancies, including duplicate
voters, false ID numbers and false surnames. He alleged that the
Commission permitted persons to vote who were not registered voters.
6. Wearing of partisan
clothing
The applicant alleged that the
twenty-fourth respondent wore the first respondent's campaign
regalia in the form of a scarf after her appointment as the
Commission Chairperson and was photographed wearing the regalia.
According to the applicant, the conduct showed that the twenty-fourth
respondent was tainted as the umpire in the harmonised elections.
7. Failure by the Commission
to provide a complete Voters Roll
The applicant stated that the
voters roll that he was furnished with did not contain biometric
data, such as photographs and fingerprints. According to him, this
was a violation of section 20(2)(c) of the Act by the Commission.
Section 20(2)(c) of the Act states that the voters roll shall specify
other information as may be prescribed or as the Commission considers
appropriate.
8. Voter education
The applicant alleged that the
ZANU-PF political party (“ZANU-PF”), of which the first
respondent is a member, was allowed to use sample ballot papers to
engage in its own voter education. He said the sample ballot papers
were widely distributed to ZANU-PF Members of Parliament in breach of
the law. According to the applicant, the use of the material provided
fertile ground for rigging through ballot swapping and stuffing.
9. Design of the ballot paper
The applicant alleged that the
ballot paper was designed in a manner that favoured the first
respondent. Section 3(1) of the Electoral Regulations provides for
horizontal segments to equate to the number of candidates on the
form. He alleged that the Commission produced a Presidential election
ballot paper that was not equally balanced according to the number of
candidates on the vertical columns. This was allegedly done to afford
the first respondent a material advantage.
10. Fixing of polling station
returns (V11 Forms) on the outside of polling stations
In terms of section 64(1) of the
Act, after counting of ballot papers is conducted, the presiding
officer at a polling station shall without delay, in the presence of
such candidates and their election agents as are present, record on
the polling station return (the V11 Form) the votes obtained by each
candidate and the number of rejected ballot papers in such a manner
that the results of the count for each ballot box are shown on the
return. The presiding officer is obliged to display the completed
polling station return to those present and to afford each candidate
or his or her election agent the opportunity to subscribe their
signatures thereto. He or she must provide each candidate or his or
her election agent with a copy of the completed polling station
return. The presiding officer must affix a copy of the polling
station return on the outside of the polling station so that it is
visible to the public and ensure that it remains there so that all
members of the public may inspect it and record its contents.
The applicant alleged that at 21%
of the polling stations no V11 Forms were affixed on the outside as
prescribed by law. It was contended that this was done to assist the
Commission in rigging the Presidential election result in favour of
the first respondent.
11. Postal ballots
The applicant alleged that the
postal ballot was not cast in secret, as required by the law.
According to him, members of the police were summoned by their
commanding officers and ordered to vote. He stated that the
Commission transmitted the ballots to the commanding officers and not
to the applicants for postal ballots. A total of 7,500 ballots were
said to have been processed in this manner. It was alleged that the
effect was to invalidate the entire postal vote.
12. Counting of Presidential
ballots
The applicant stated that the
collation and verification of the constituency returns was done at
the national command centre. He alleged that the manner in which the
returns were collated and verified was in breach of the law. He
contended that his chief election agent was not notified of the date
and place of verification and that he was not given an opportunity to
record the proceedings. He alleged that the entire process of the
collation and verification of the constituency returns at the
national command centre was done under a cloud of secrecy.
13. Threats to voters of
injury, damage, harm or loss
The applicant alleged that,
throughout the campaign, soldiers and ZANU-PF operatives threatened
rural inhabitants with injury or loss of their property or withdrawal
of food aid if their communities did not vote for the first
respondent. He alleged that the Commission took no action against
such acts. Relying on these allegations, the applicant said the right
to vote freely and voluntarily was not protected.
14. Bribery, provision of seed
and fertiliser packs
According to the applicant, the
first respondent and ZANU-PF candidates distributed seed and
fertiliser packs, allegedly purchased with public funds, to rural
communities. He said the intention was to induce the electorate to
vote for the first respondent and his political party. The applicant
contended that the alleged conduct violated section 136(1)(c) of the
Act, which prohibits the making of a gift to any person in order to
induce such person to vote for a candidate at an election.
15. Failure by the Commission
to deliver a free, fair and credible harmonised election
All in all, the applicant
contended that the Commission failed to adhere to or follow the
procedures prescribed by the law for conducting a free, fair and
credible election. He said the alleged failures by the Commission to
act against those who committed the malpractices prohibited by the
law of elections had the effect of undermining the legitimacy of the
entire harmonised elections, including the Presidential election.
16. Stopping of counting of
the Presidential election ballots
The applicant alleged that as
copies of the V11 Forms (the completed polling station returns) were
being affixed on the outside of various polling stations across the
country they showed that he was winning the Presidential election. He
alleged that the information alarmed the first respondent and the V11
Forms ended up not being completed on the day of the election. He
said the exercise of completing the V11 Forms was done on 31 July
2018.
17. Verification of the
Presidential election result
The applicant complained about
the delay in the announcement of the Presidential election result. He
alleged that the process of the verification of constituency returns
and adding together the number of the votes received by each
Presidential candidate took over two days to complete. He said that
the number of votes received by each Presidential candidate was
arrived at in the absence of his chief election agent. He alleged
that, after the number of votes received by each Presidential
candidate had been ascertained through the procedure he said was
irregular, the Commissioners and not the Chairperson of the
Commission announced them.
The applicant, however, did not
dispute the fact that it was the Chairperson of the Commission who
declared the first respondent to be duly elected as President of the
Republic of Zimbabwe.
18. Other general allegations
made by the applicant
The applicant also alleged that
wrong results were announced. He said the figures announced by the
Commission did not tally with the number of registered voters. The
allegation was that the Commission deflated the number of votes he
received.
The applicant contended that
about 40,000 teachers were not allowed by the Commission to vote. He
alleged that there were irregularities in the manner in which
illiterate or physically handicapped voters were assisted. The
applicant alleged that the first respondent had 5,396 votes from what
he called “ghost polling stations” credited to him. According to
him, there were unusual voting patterns which resulted in 352,897
votes being added to the first respondent's number of votes as
announced by the Commission. He alleged that there were pre-signed
V11 Forms which did not have any information on them.
SUBMISSIONS AT THE HEARING
THE APPLICANT
Mr Mpofu indicated that the
applicant's case did not depend on what was alleged to have
happened before the events surrounding the announcement of the
Presidential election result. The argument by counsel was directed at
showing that the number of votes counted by the Commission as having
been received by the first respondent, and on the basis of which he
was declared to be duly elected as President of the Republic of
Zimbabwe, was not accurate. The contention was that the first
respondent was declared the winner of the Presidential election on an
undue return.
Mr Mpofu relied on a report that
was compiled by the Commission after the addition of the number of
votes received by each Presidential candidate and the declaration of
the first respondent as the winner of the Presidential election. He
argued that the Commission admitted making errors in the presentation
of the number of votes it said were received by the first respondent
and the applicant.
In analysing the Presidential
election result as announced by the Commission, Mr Mpofu aimed at
proving that 0.8% of the votes credited to the first respondent had
not been won by him. Mr Mpofu sought to advance the proposition that
the first respondent benefitted from fictitious votes, on the basis
of a number of allegations.
The first allegation was that the
Commission had admitted in the report it compiled after the
declaration of the first respondent as the winner of the Presidential
election that 4,491 votes had been taken from the applicant and 4,453
votes irregularly counted as having been won by the first respondent.
According to him, there was a difference of 8,944 votes.
Mr Mpofu also informed the Court
of the existence of a report by a journalist on national television,
to the effect that about 900 people had voted in Norton yet the same
town had about 600 registered voters. Without producing proof of the
veracity of the report, he argued that the inconsistency in that
regard was sufficient to show that the Presidential election result
was undue.
Mr Mpofu also asked the Court to
take note of a television report made on the polling day, to the
effect that in Mashonaland Central Province about 300,000 people had
voted in a space of one-and-a-half hours. According to him, the
report was sufficient to show that the Presidential election result
was not correct. He informed the Court of reports of the voter
turnout patterns in Masvingo, which he alleged were clear evidence of
anomalies in the Presidential election result.
According to Mr Mpofu, it was
impossible for a voter turnout of 6% at 6am to escalate to 84% at the
close of the polling station. Mr Mpofu urged the Court to disregard a
24% voter turnout in an hour in Masvingo.
Mr Mpofu also alleged that about
40,000 teachers who were involved in the election process were not
allowed to vote by the Commission. According to him, the Commission
had an obligation to ensure that all the 40,000 teachers cast their
vote, in terms of a High Court order which directed that all those
who were involved in the voting process be allowed to vote. In his
view, the figure of 40,000 teachers who did not cast their votes
potentially had an effect of reducing the first respondent's win.
Questioned on whether the failure
to vote by the 40,000 teachers automatically meant that those votes
would translate to the applicant's votes, Mr Mpofu submitted that
the 40,000 votes were evidence that the Presidential election result
could have been materially affected.
Mr Mpofu made reference to the
involvement of traditional leaders, who allegedly threatened some
members of the electorate to vote for the first respondent. He
alleged duress as an element that questioned the validity of the
first respondent's win. In the same breath, it was alleged that
there were instances where there had been undue influence and bribery
of the electorate by the distribution of “freebies” to them,
which resulted in an unfair advantage to the first respondent and
worked to the disadvantage of the applicant, thus impacting on the
Presidential election result.
Mr Hashiti referred the Court to
its decision in Tsvangirai v Mugabe and Ors supra in support of the
argument that the test for setting aside a Presidential election
result is not that the result was materially affected but that the
election process was materially flawed. He argued that the Commission
had not recanted the flaws in the election process. Its failure to do
so was sufficient to have the Presidential election result set aside.
THE FAILURE BY THE APPLICANT
TO REQUEST THE RE-OPENING OF THE BALLOT BOXES AND THE SEALED PACKETS
The Court questioned Mr Mpofu on
why the applicant had sought to prove the alleged invalidity of the
Presidential election result using secondary evidence when primary
evidence, in the form of used ballot papers and duly completed V11
Forms, was available. The Court referred Mr Mpofu to the provisions
of section 67A of the Act, which allows an aggrieved candidate to
request the Commission to conduct a recount of votes in one or more
of the polling stations when he or she believes that there was a
miscount of votes which would have affected the result of the
Presidential election.
The Court further asked Mr Mpofu
to explain why the applicant had not sought an order from the
Electoral Court in terms of section 70(4) of the Act to have the
closed and sealed ballot boxes containing used ballot papers, the
separate sealed packets containing the unused and spoilt ballot
papers and the counterfoils of the unused ballot papers, the separate
and sealed packets containing the counterfoils of the used ballot
papers, the separate and sealed packets containing all the postal
ballot papers cast in the harmonised elections, and a separate sealed
packet containing the register of assisted voters, re-opened. This is
particularly the case in the light of the specific provision that the
packets referred to, containing primary evidence of matters relating
to the conduct of the Presidential election by the Commission, must
be opened for the purpose of a petition questioning an election or
return upon an order by the Electoral Court.
Mr Mpofu's argument was that
the primary evidence in the sealed ballot boxes and sealed packets
could not be used because the containers were “poisoned chalices”.
According to him, the procedure under section 67A of the Act did not
offer an effective remedy because there had allegedly been doctoring
of the ballot papers and the V11 Forms. He based his argument on
allegations that some V11 Forms had been tampered with, and that some
had not been signed and stamped after the ballot papers had been
counted.
Mr Mpofu could not explain how it
could be argued that the Commission had tampered with real evidence
of the procedure of conducting the election contained in the closed
and sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets, when the procedure of
closing and sealing the ballot boxes and the sealing of the packets
is taken into account. He could not explain how the Commission could
be accused of manipulating the contents of the closed and sealed
ballot boxes and the sealed packets considering the procedure of
conducting the election prescribed in sections 56(2), 56(3), 56(4),
57, 59, 61, 63 and 64 of the Act.
Mr Mpofu was also questioned on
what percentage of the Presidential election result the V11 Forms
placed before the Court would constitute. Counsel was unable to
answer the question.
He said that the seven days
within which the court application had to be lodged in terms of
section 93(1) of the Constitution did not give the applicant enough
time to fully collect relevant evidence that related to the validity
of the Presidential election result that was declared.
THE FIRST RESPONDENT'S
ARGUMENT
Mr Uriri submitted that had the
applicant invoked the remedy prescribed by section 67A of the Act he
would have been able to establish by real and reliable evidence the
inconsistencies, if any, between the actual votes cast in favour of
both the applicant and the first respondent and the number of votes
announced by the Commission as having been received by each
candidate. The contention by Mr Uriri was that what carries the day
in an application of this nature is the adduction of credible
evidence to prove the allegations made.
Mr Uriri argued that the
applicant bore the onus of proving the criminal allegations that he
levelled against the first respondent. In his view, bald allegations
were not enough to impugn the validity of the Presidential election
result. He referred to the Court's decision in Tsvangirai v Mugabe
and Ors supra as authority for the proposition that sufficient and
clear evidence had to be placed before the Court in order to properly
prove the applicant's case. He argued that there was a presumption
that the Commission had acted in terms of the law when it declared
the first respondent to be duly elected as President of the Republic
of Zimbabwe. The presumption had to be rebutted by clear and credible
evidence which, so his argument went, the applicant had failed to
place before the Court.
Mr Uriri took issue with the fact
that the applicant's case, as argued before the Court, was premised
on a report which was contained in a set of documents that had not
been placed before the Court. The report had not been served on the
first respondent within seven days of the declaration of the result
of the Presidential election in respect of which the application was
presented in terms of section 93(1) of the Constitution.
In that regard, Mr Uriri
submitted that the application had to stand on its founding
affidavit. It failed to do so.
It was Mr Uriri's argument that
the applicant's challenge to the validity of the Presidential
election result should have been pleaded with specificity and
particularity. It had to be pleaded on the basis of all relevant and
admissible evidence that would have been placed before the Court
within the seven days stipulated by section 93(1) of the
Constitution.
Mr Uriri went on to submit that
the applicant's case failed on the best evidence rule. He argued
that, since the best evidence rule excludes reliance on secondary
evidence where primary evidence is available, the applicant ought to
have proved his case by way of physical evidence which would show the
commission of the irregularities or malpractices he alleged. He
argued that primary evidence in the form of the actual used ballot
papers, the original completed polling station returns (the V11
Forms) and other residue ought to have been produced if the
applicant's case was to be successful. He submitted that that
evidence was preserved by operation of law. It had been available to
the applicant, but he deliberately chose not to rely on it to prove
his case.
Mr Uriri challenged the
reliability of a report prepared by one Dr Otumba, which was
submitted on the applicant's behalf to show inconsistencies in the
Presidential election result as declared by the twenty-fourth
respondent. In that report, Dr Otumba analysed the Presidential
election result and concluded that they were irregular.
According to Mr Uriri's
submission, that document was inadmissible. He said the integrity of
the document by Dr Otumba was highly questionable as it was created
and based on V11 and V23 forms which were collected by the
applicant's political party only, thereby being a product of
evidence of an interested party.
Mr Uriri referred the Court to
the judgment of the Supreme Court of the United States of America in
Bush v Gore 531 U.S. 98 (2000) as authority for the proposition that,
unless it is shown that the alleged irregularities had the effect of
changing the will of the people, the Court should not declare the
Presidential election result undue. He also relied on that decision
to support the submission that the change in the Presidential
election result figures would not invalidate the declaration of the
first respondent to be duly elected as the President of the Republic
of Zimbabwe.
The contention was that,
notwithstanding the revision of the figures reflecting the results,
the number of votes received by the first respondent remained more
than half the number of votes cast in the Presidential election.
Mr Magwaliba submitted that the
applicant had failed to prove his case. He submitted that the
applicant failed to present his case in a manner that would have
enabled the Court to make an informed decision in his favour. In
light of the criminal allegations that were made against the first
respondent, it was incumbent upon the applicant to prove the
allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. Mr Magwaliba further submitted
that the applicant's case had been premised on bare and bald
allegations, which were insufficient to set aside the Presidential
election result.
THE TWENTY-THIRD, THE
TWENTY-FOURTH AND THE TWENTY-FIFTH RESPONDENTS' ARGUMENT
Mr Kanengoni submitted that the
applicant's case ought to have been pleaded with sufficient clarity
based on primary evidence. He argued that the applicant could not
rely on responses from the Commission, the twenty-fourth and the
twenty-fifth respondents to argue his case on the date of the
hearing. He stressed the principle that an application stands or
falls on its founding affidavit.
Mr Kanengoni also took issue with
the fact that the applicant's case, as argued on the day of the
hearing, was based on the Commission's report, which was placed in
a set of documents that had not been served on all the parties within
the stipulated time-frame.
Mr Kanengoni argued that the
applicant had mischaracterised the Commission's report as being
evidence of inconsistencies in the Presidential election result that
declared the first respondent as the winner of the 2018 Presidential
election. Contrary to the applicant's submissions, Mr Kanengoni
submitted that the errors in the figures were then shown to amount to
an insignificant 0.1% error margin, which was insufficient to justify
a decision to set aside the Presidential election result, as prayed
for by the applicant.
According to Mr Kanengoni, the
allegation that 40,000 teachers were allegedly not allowed to vote by
the Commission did not in any way add to the irregular returns that
were indicated in its report. He further submitted that the
affidavits that were filed by the applicant to substantiate the
figure of 40,000 did not have any empirical basis. The affidavits did
not state whether the 40,000 teachers were registered to vote or not.
If they were registered to vote, it was not shown how many of those
teachers' votes would have been for the applicant. Mr Kanengoni
argued that the affidavits used by the applicant did not in any way
prove that the Commission had formed a systematic policy to
disenfranchise the teachers. He argued that, if anything, the
Commission did everything it could to facilitate voting by the civil
servants in question.
Mr Kanengoni further submitted
that the applicant's allegations relating to what was said to be
700,000 votes unaccounted for resulted from an analysis based on a
wrong voter turnout. Mr Kanengoni submitted that, contrary to the
applicant's allegations, the 700,000 votes were fully accounted for
by the Commission. He also submitted that there was no proof of
over-voting. The bald allegations of over-voting were not
substantiated. He further submitted that the applicant failed to meet
the standard of proof of the allegation of rigging, especially having
regard to the fact that the allegation was not in any way linked to
the actual ballot papers.
Mr Kanengoni submitted that if
the applicant was genuinely unhappy with the Presidential election
result he ought to have requested a recount of the votes in terms of
section 67A of the Act. He could have applied to the Electoral Court
for an order directing the unsealing and re-opening of the closed and
sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets to have access to primary
evidence for the purpose of the application.
Mr Kanengoni submitted that the
applicant did not place sufficient evidence before the Court to
challenge the validity of the Presidential election result announced
by the twenty-fourth respondent in terms of the law.
ISSUE ARISING FOR
DETERMINATION
The only issue arising for
determination was whether the applicant produced sufficient and clear
evidence to prove his case.
Where the grounds for challenging
the validity of an election result are allegations of irregularities
committed by officers of the body charged with the responsibility of
conducting the election or electoral malpractices committed by others
who took part in the election process, the duty of a court is to
satisfy itself by sufficient and clear evidence produced by the party
bearing the onus of proof of the allegation that the alleged acts
occurred.
If a court finds as a matter of
fact that the irregularities or electoral malpractices occurred, it
must go further. It must make a finding on the question whether the
irregularities or electoral malpractices were of such a nature and
effect that they substantially undermined the ability of the
electoral body to deliver a free, fair and credible election.
Section 177 of the Act provides
that, where the ground for seeking invalidation of an election is
commission of a mistake or non-compliance with the provisions of the
Act, it must appear to the court, after proof of the mistake or
non-compliance, that as a result thereof the election was not
conducted in accordance with the principles laid down in the Act and
that such mistake or non-compliance did affect the result of the
election.
It must follow that in the
discharge of its duty, and in the interests of fairness and justice,
a court must insist upon the production by the party alleging
commission of irregularities against the electoral body, or electoral
malpractices against any other participant, of primary evidence of
proof of the allegations made. There has to be a reasonable and
acceptable explanation for resorting to the use of secondary evidence
when primary evidence is available and accessible.
A court must be conscious of the
detailed requirements of the provisions of the Electoral Law
allegedly breached, because compliance with the requirements is the
guarantee of a free, fair and credible election. The court must be in
a position to hold not only the officers of the electoral body to
account to the law of elections. It must be able to hold the
challenger of the validity of the election or election result to
account to the requirements of the law of elections as well. The
challenger must show that he or she or his or her chief election
agent or election agents acted in accordance with the standard of
behaviour prescribed by the relevant provisions of the law of
elections.
Elections are the foundation of a
system of democratic government. The principles forming the basis of
representative democracy are given effect to by the provisions of the
law and the conduct of elections. They demand that those
participating in the election must at all times before, during and
after the election, act in good faith.
The reason why a court hearing
and determining an application challenging the validity of an
election result must adhere to the principles of cogency of proof of
the allegations levelled against the respondent is that it is under a
duty of impartiality. A genuine challenge to the validity of an
election result must comply with well-known legal standards.
Before the reasons for the
resolution of the issue for determination are given, it is important
to set out the legal requirements governing the conduct of an
election. Reference is made particularly to the voting process; vote
counting at polling stations; verification of constituency returns;
adding together of the number of votes received by each Presidential
candidate; and the declaration of the winner to be duly elected as
President of the Republic of Zimbabwe. The exercise will provide the
basis for a better appreciation of the fact that the Court dismissed
the application for lack of sufficient and clear evidence of the
allegations made against the respondents.
THE VOTING PROCESS
Section 157(1) of the
Constitution provides that an Act of Parliament must provide for the
conduct of elections to which the Constitution applies. The Electoral
Act [Chapter 2:13] is the Act enacted by Parliament to provide for
the conduct of the harmonised elections. It is the Act that sets out
how the electorate exercises the right to vote. The voting process
becomes a juristic act, the conduct of which is measured against the
provisions of the Act which give effect to the Constitution.
The Act provides for remedies to
be adopted in the event of a candidate being aggrieved by the manner
the election has been conducted affecting the validity of the
electoral process or the results. The appropriate remedies are set
out in the Act for purposes of effectively guaranteeing the right to
free, fair and credible elections.
The right to free, fair and
credible elections for any public office established in terms of the
Constitution or any other law is a fundamental right guaranteed to
every Zimbabwean citizen.
The connection between elections
and the fundamental human right of everyone to take part in the
Government of his or her country, directly or through freely chosen
representatives, underscores the obligation on the Court to ensure
that the elections are conducted in accordance with the principles
that guarantee free, fair and credible elections.
Sections 54 to 70 of the Act
contain measures that give effect to the principles that govern the
conduct of elections in Zimbabwe. In terms of section 155 of the
Constitution, elections must be peaceful, free and fair. They must be
conducted by secret ballot and based on universal adult suffrage and
equality of votes. As a matter of principle, the elections must also
be free from violence and other electoral malpractices. Electoral
malpractices include corrupt practices, illegal practices,
intimidatory practices, and other offences under the Act.
Transparency of the election
process lies at the heart of its credibility. Section 54 of the Act
requires that a presiding officer must ensure, not more than thirty
minutes before the commencement of the poll at any polling station on
the day of the vote, that the ballot box is empty.
The check must be carried out in
full view of other election officers present for the performance of
their official duties, the candidates, the election agents and
accredited observers. The ballot box itself is required to be
translucent, a measure that is aimed at ensuring transparency in the
voting process. The presiding officer is nonetheless required to show
the interior of the ballot box to the persons present before sealing
it, leaving open the aperture for the purpose of dropping the marked
and folded ballot papers into the ballot box.
The voting process starts with a
prospective voter entering a polling station and approaching the
presiding officer to apply for the ballot paper. Section 56(2) of the
Act gives the presiding officer a discretionary power to put to an
applicant for a ballot paper such questions as he or she considers
necessary to ascertain whether or not the applicant is registered as
a voter on the voters roll for the ward in which the polling station
is situated.
The presiding officer is obliged
to require an applicant for a ballot paper to produce his or her
voter's registration certificate or proof of identity. If the
applicant is registered as a voter on the voters roll for the ward,
and there is no indication that he or she has previously received a
ballot paper or postal ballot paper for the election, the presiding
officer is required to mark or otherwise deal with the certificate or
proof of identify in a manner prescribed by the Chief Elections
Officer.
After that, the presiding officer
must hand the applicant a ballot paper for the Presidential Election,
the Parliamentary Election and the Local Authority Election.
Before handing an applicant a
ballot paper, a presiding officer is obliged to require the applicant
to submit to an examination specified by the Chief Elections Officer
to ascertain whether or not he or she has previously received a
ballot paper at that election. If the applicant refuses to submit to
such examination or if such examination shows that the applicant has
previously received such a ballot paper, the presiding officer shall
not hand him or her the ballot paper.
After handing an applicant a
ballot paper, the presiding officer is required to mark him or her in
the manner specified by the Commission. The applicant would usually
be required to dip his or her index finger in indelible ink. Before
the ballot paper is handed to the applicant, the presiding officer is
required to mark the ballot paper with the official mark.
The interaction between the
applicant for a ballot paper and the presiding officer from the time
he or she enters the polling station is under the observation of the
candidate if he or she is present, the election agent, accredited
observers, police officers and other electoral officers present for
the performance of their official duties in the polling station.
When the person claiming the vote
has received the ballot paper, he or she is required to take the
ballot paper to the compartment provided for the purpose (“the
booth”). The booth is designed to ensure that the voter can vote in
secret. Once alone in the booth, the voter is free to signify the
candidate for whom he or she votes by secretly placing a cross in the
rectangle opposite the name of the candidate on the ballot paper.
After voting, the voter is required to fold the ballot paper so that
the official mark is visible but the names of the candidates and the
cross made by him or her are not visible. He or she is required to
drop the ballot paper in the translucent box placed in front of the
presiding officer.
Section 59 of the Act recognises
the needs of registered voters who may be unable to cast votes on
their own. These include illiterate persons or physically handicapped
voters.
A presiding officer may allow
these persons to be assisted in exercising their right to vote
through another person of their choice. In terms of section 59(2)(a)
and (b), a person permitted to assist a voter need not be a
registered voter, but shall not be a minor, electoral officer,
accredited observer, chief election agent, election agent or a
candidate in the election.
The person providing assistance
to a voter is required to identify himself or herself to the
presiding officer by producing proof of identity. In the event that
the voter concerned does not have a person to assist him or her, the
presiding officer shall assist the voter to exercise his or her right
to vote in the presence of two other electoral officers or employees
of the Commission and a police officer on duty.
The person assisting another to
vote shall there and then mark the ballot paper in accordance with
the voter's wishes and place the ballot paper in the ballot box. In
the event that the wishes of the voter as to the manner in which the
vote is to be marked on the ballot paper are not sufficiently clear
to enable the vote to be so marked, the presiding officer may cause
such questions to be put to the voter as, in his or her opinion, are
necessary to clarify the voter's intentions.
The presiding officer must keep a
special register in which shall be recorded the name of every person
whom the presiding officer permits to assist a voter, relevant
particulars of the proof of identity produced by that person, and the
name of the voter assisted by that person. The presiding officer
shall also cause the name of every voter who has been assisted, and
the reason why that voter has been assisted, to be entered on a list.
It is important to emphasise the
fact that all that the presiding officer is required to do in terms
of the procedure of voting by illiterate or physically handicapped
members of society is done in the full view and observation of the
candidates present, the election agents, accredited observers, and
other electoral officers present for the performance of their
official duties.
Not only does the system ensure
that the voting process is transparent and fair, the presence of the
persons who have an interest in the election and its outcome ensures
that the electoral officers adhere to the highest standards of
accountability for what they do.
It is imperative that the vote be
cast in a clear manner. This is to avoid the rejection of ballot
papers that are improperly marked with the voter's choice in terms
of section 63(3) of the Act. In terms of the subsection, a presiding
officer shall reject and not count any ballot paper which does not
bear his or her official mark, which is not marked by the voter, or
which does not indicate with certainty the candidate for whom the
voter intended to vote.
COUNTING, VERIFICATION AND
COLLATION OF THE VOTES AND DECLARATION OF THE ELECTION RESULTS
Immediately after the close of
the poll, the presiding officer shall, in the presence of such
candidates and their chief election agents or election agents as are
present, close and seal the aperture in the ballot box. He or she
shall thereafter make up into separate packets sealed with his or her
own seal and with the seals of those candidates and election agents,
if any, who desire to affix their seals -
(i) the unused and spoilt ballot
papers and counterfoils of the unused ballot papers placed together;
(ii) the counterfoils of the used
ballot papers, including the counterfoils of the spoilt ballot
papers;
(iii) the register of assisted
voters.
As soon as the last packet is
sealed, the presiding officer shall open and unseal the ballot boxes
and begin to count the votes. The ballot papers in each ballot box
shall be counted separately.
At the time of counting the
votes, the presiding officer shall also open each sealed packet
containing the unused and spoilt ballot papers and the register of
assisted voters.
The count is done in the presence
of the following persons -
(i) the presiding officer and
such polling officers as he or she may consider necessary and not
more than the prescribed number of monitors and observers;
(ii) the candidates, and every
chief election agent and election agent of each candidate or, in
certain circumstances, of each political party who, at the time of
the commencement of the counting, is present within the polling
station or in the immediate vicinity of the polling station. A
candidate or his or her chief election agent or election agent need
not be present at the counting of the votes at an election for which
that candidate was not nominated; and
(iii) any roving political party
election agent who, at the time of the commencement of the counting,
is present within the polling station or in the immediate vicinity of
the polling station.
As indicated earlier, a presiding
officer is entitled to reject as invalid a ballot paper for one
reason or another. Where he or she does so, section 63(7) of the Act
requires that he or she shall endorse the word “Rejected” on the
ballot paper. He or she shall add to the endorsement the words
“Rejection Objected To” if an objection to his or her decision is
made by a candidate or his or her chief election agent or election
agent. All ballot papers rejected as invalid shall be placed together
in an envelope within the packet containing the rejected ballot
papers.
If the presiding officer accepts
as valid a ballot paper, he or she shall endorse the words
“Acceptance Objected To” on the ballot paper if an objection to
his or her decision is made by a candidate or his or her chief
election agent or election agent. All such endorsed ballot papers
shall be placed together in an envelope within the packet containing
the accepted ballot papers. All this is done during the counting
exercise.
Section 64 of the Act clearly
articulates the procedure after the counting of votes at a polling
station. The section provides:
“(1) After the counting is
completed the presiding officer shall without delay, in the presence
of such candidates and their election agents as are present —
(a) close and seal the aperture
in the ballot box; and
(b) make up into separate packets
sealed with his or her own seal and with the seals of those
candidates and election agents, if any, who desire to affix their
seals —
(i) the unused and spoilt ballot
papers and counterfoils of the unused ballot papers placed together;
(ii) the counterfoils of the used
ballot papers, including the counterfoils of the spoilt ballot
papers;
(iii) the register of assisted
voters; and
(c) record on the polling station
return the votes obtained by each candidate and the number of
rejected ballot papers in such a manner that the results of the count
for each ballot box are shown on the return; and
(d) display the completed
polling-station return to those present and afford each candidate or
his or her election agent the opportunity to subscribe their
signatures thereto; and
(d1) provide each candidate or
his or her election agent with a copy of the completed
polling-station return; and
(e) affix a copy of the
polling-station return on the outside of the polling station so that
it is visible to the public and shall ensure that it remains there so
that all members of the public who wish to do so may inspect it and
record its contents.
(2) Immediately after affixing a
polling station return on the outside of the polling station in terms
of subsection (1)(e), the presiding officer shall personally transmit
to the ward elections officer for the ward in which the polling
station is situated —
(a) the ballot box and packets
referred to in subsection (1)(a) and (b), accompanied by a statement
made by the presiding officer showing the number of ballot papers
entrusted to him or her and accounting for them under the heads of
used ballot papers, excluding spoilt ballot papers, unused ballot
papers and spoilt ballot papers; and
(b) the polling-station return
certified by himself or herself to be correct:
Provided that if, by reason of
death, injury or illness, the presiding officer is unable personally
to transmit the ballot box, packets, statement and polling station
return under this subsection, a polling officer who was on duty at
the polling station shall personally transmit these, and in that
event any statement or certification required to be made by the
presiding officer for the purposes of this section may be made by the
polling officer concerned.”
After receiving the polling
station returns, the ward elections officer is required to verify and
collate the polling station returns at the ward centre and count the
postal votes. Verification and collation of the returns is done upon
giving reasonable notice in writing to each candidate or his or her
chief election agent, each political party whose party-list
candidates are contesting the election in the ward, and such
observers as can readily be contacted, of the time that the process
will be done. The ward elections officer displays each polling
station return to those present and thereafter verifies each polling
station return by ensuring that it is duly certified by the presiding
officer of the polling station concerned. The ward elections officer
may, upon request, allow any candidate, election agent or accredited
observer to make notes of the contents of any polling station return.
Section 65(3) of the Act provides
that when the ward elections officer has displayed and verified the
polling station returns, he or she shall add together the number of
votes received by each candidate as shown in each polling station
return and record the result on a ward return.
Having recorded the results of
the polling station returns, the ward elections officer, in the
presence of such candidates, election agents and observers as are
present, shall verify the postal ballots if they have not already
been verified, count the postal votes and record separately on the
ward return the number of such votes received by each candidate. He
or she must enter on the ward return the total number of votes
received by each candidate, including postal votes and then close and
seal the aperture in the postal ballot box.
The ward elections officer is
then enjoined to provide a copy of the completed ward return to every
candidate, election agent and observer who requests one. He or she
must also ensure that a copy of the ward return is displayed
prominently outside the ward centre, so that all members of the
public who wish to do so may inspect it and record its contents.
Immediately after causing a copy
of the ward return to be displayed outside the ward centre, the ward
elections officer must cause the return, certified by himself or
herself to be correct, to be transmitted to the constituency centre
for the constituency in which the ward is situated.
Any reference to a constituency
centre or a constituency elections officer shall be construed in
respect of the Presidential election as reference to a Presidential
constituency centre or a Presidential constituency elections officer.
In relation to the Presidential
election, the number of votes received by each candidate as shown in
each polling station return is added together and the resultant
figure added to the number of postal votes received by each
candidate. The constituency elections officer shall forthwith record
on the constituency return the votes obtained by each candidate and
the number of rejected ballot papers in such a manner that the
results of the count for each polling station are shown on the
return. He or she is required to display the completed constituency
return to those present and afford each candidate or his or her
election agent the opportunity to subscribe their signatures thereto.
He or she must then transmit to the Chief Elections Officer by hand
through a messenger the constituency return or a copy thereof,
certified by the constituency elections officer to be correct.
Immediately after arranging for
the constituency return to be transmitted to the Chief Elections
Officer, the constituency elections officer is required to affix a
copy of the constituency return on the outside of the constituency
centre so that it is visible to the public.
Immediately after receiving all
the constituency returns transmitted to him or her, the Chief
Elections Officer is required to verify them, having given reasonable
notice to each candidate or to his or her chief election agent of the
time and place at which the returns are to be verified.
At the time and place notified
for the verification of the constituency returns, and in the presence
of such candidates, their chief election agents and such accredited
observers as are present, the Chief Elections Officer shall display
each constituency return to those present. He or she shall, upon
request, allow a candidate or the chief election agent of a candidate
to make notes of the contents of each constituency return.
When the Chief Elections Officer
has completed the verification of the constituency returns, he or she
shall, in the presence of the candidates or their chief election
agents and such accredited observers as are present, add together the
number of votes received by each candidate as shown in each
constituency return.
After the number of votes
received by each candidate as shown in each constituency return has
been added together, the Chairperson of the Commission or, in his or
her absence, the Deputy Chairperson or, in his or her absence, a
Commissioner designated by the Chairperson shall, where there are two
or more candidates, forthwith declare the candidate who has received
more than half the number of votes cast to be duly elected as
President of the Republic of Zimbabwe with effect from the date of
such declaration.
A declaration of a candidate who
has received more than half the number of votes cast to be duly
elected as President of the Republic of Zimbabwe shall be made not
later than five days after the polling day or the last polling day,
as the case may be, in the Presidential election concerned. Where a
recount has been ordered in terms of section 67A of the Act, the
declaration must be made not later than five days after completion of
the recount. The Electoral Court, on application by the Commission
for good cause, shall extend the ten-day period.
A declaration of the candidate
who received more than half the number of votes cast where there are
more than two candidates to be duly elected as President of the
Republic of Zimbabwe is final. The finality of the declaration is
subject to reversal on application to the Court by an order that such
declaration be set aside or that the proceedings relating to the
Presidential election are void.
Section 67A of the Act makes
provision for the recounting of votes in one or more of the polling
stations in a constituency. Any political party or candidate that
contested the election in a ward or constituency may request the
Commission in writing to conduct a recount of votes. The request must
state specifically the number of votes believed to have been
miscounted. If possible, the request should show how the miscount may
have occurred. It must state how the result of the election has been
affected by the alleged miscount. The Commission is required to
immediately notify all the other political parties and candidates
that contested the election of the nature of the request and of the
date and time on which it was received by the Commission.
If the Commission considers that
there are reasonable grounds for believing that the alleged miscount
of votes occurred and that, if it did occur, it would have affected
the result of the election, it shall order a recount of votes in the
polling station or polling stations concerned.
It is important to note that the
Commission may, on its own initiative, order a recount of votes in
any polling stations if it considers that there are reasonable
grounds for believing that the votes were miscounted and that, if
they were, the miscount would have affected the result of the
election.
Where the Commission orders a
recount of votes, it shall specify the polling station or polling
stations whose votes are to be recounted and, where appropriate, the
votes that are to be recounted. The Commission must also specify the
date on which, and the place and time at which, the recount is to
take place. The procedure to be adopted for the recount must be
specified.
The Commission is required to
take all necessary steps to inform accredited observers and all
political parties and candidates that contested the election of its
decision and of the date, time and place of the recount. Accredited
observers and representatives of candidates and political parties
that contested the election are entitled to be present at any recount
ordered by the Commission.
The Commission is required to
ensure that any recount of votes is completed within five days after
the announcement of the last result in the Presidential election and
that the result of the recount is announced within twenty-four hours
of its completion. As indicated, under section 110(3)(4)(ii) of the
Act where a recount has been ordered in terms of section 67A of the
Act, a declaration of a candidate who has received more than half the
number of votes cast to be duly elected as President of the Republic
of Zimbabwe shall be made not later than five days after the
completion of the recount.
Section 70 of the Act provides
for the custody of ballot papers and other papers. Upon receiving
such material, the constituency elections officer is not allowed to
open any closed and sealed ballot box or sealed packets prepared by a
presiding officer in terms of section 64(1) (a) and (b) of the Act.
He or she is not allowed to open any sealed packet containing all the
postal ballot papers cast in the election. The constituency elections
officer may not open all unopened ballot paper envelopes which have
been endorsed “vote rejected”, and all unopened ballot paper
envelopes which have been endorsed “vote rejected” but whose
rejection has been objected to, while such ballot boxes and packets
remain in his or her custody.
All the closed and sealed ballot
boxes and packets referred to above must be transmitted to the places
designated by the Chief Elections Officer by the constituency
elections officer soon after he or she has received them into his or
her custody. He or she shall also endorse on each packet a
description of its contents and the date of the election to which it
relates.
Where an election petition or
application is not lodged in relation to the ward or constituency
concerned, the Chief Elections Officer shall cause to be destroyed
all the documents relating to the ward or constituency not earlier
than the fourteenth day after the end of the election period. If an
election petition is lodged in relation to any constituency within
fourteen days after the end of the election period to which the
election relates, he or she must retain for six months all the
materials relating to that ward or constituency and then, unless
otherwise directed by an order of the Electoral Court, shall cause
them to be destroyed.
In terms of section 70(4) of the
Act, all sealed ballot boxes and sealed packets cannot be opened
except in terms of an order of the Electoral Court. The order may be
granted when the Electoral Court is satisfied that the inspection or
production of the contents of a sealed ballot box or a sealed packet
is required for the purpose of a petition or application questioning
an election or return.
Section 70(3)(a) of the Act
ensures that the evidence which is sealed and safely kept in terms of
the Act is available for the purposes of conducting a recount of the
election votes forty eight hours after the declaration of the
election result in terms of section 67A(1) of the Act. Section 70(4)
of the Act, however, requires that an application be made to the
Electoral Court for an order to have the closed and sealed ballot
boxes opened. The Electoral Court may also order that the separately
sealed packets that contain the unused and spoilt ballot papers and
counterfoils of the unused ballot papers, the counterfoils of the
used ballot papers, including the counterfoils of the spoilt ballot
papers, and the register of assisted voters, be opened for purposes
of a recount.
WHETHER THE APPLICANT PRODUCED
SATISFACTORY EVIDENCE TO PROVE HIS CASE
THE BURDEN OF PROOF IN
ELECTION PETITIONS
In order to determine the issue
before the Court, it is necessary to first determine who between the
applicant and the respondents bore the burden of proving the
allegations that were made by the applicant in this matter.
According to the applicant, the
Commission bore the burden to disprove the allegations made by him.
He argued that it was the Commission which came up with the disputed
number of votes cast for the first respondent after it counted the
votes. On the other hand, the respondents argued that the applicant
bore the onus of proving his case beyond a reasonable doubt. The
reason given for the standard of proof was that the allegations that
the applicant levelled against the first respondent were mainly
criminal in nature.
The declaration of the result of
a Presidential election in terms of section 110(3)(f)(ii) of the Act
gives rise to a presumption of validity of the election result. An
election is presumed to have been regularly conducted. The burden of
proof of the allegations on which the relief sought was based lay
with the applicant. It is standard procedure that the one who alleges
a fact on the basis of which his or her cause of action depends bears
the onus of proving that fact.
It was for the applicant to prove
to the satisfaction of the Court that the irregularities he alleged
were committed by the Commission and its officers in the conduct of
the election were as a matter of fact committed. It was for the
applicant to produce sufficient and clear evidence to establish the
grounds of the application to entitle him to the granting of the
relief sought.
It would not have been enough,
for the purposes of the discharge of the onus on the applicant, to
prove the commission of the alleged irregularities by the Commission.
He had to show that the irregularities were of such a nature and
effect that they either substantially undermined the electoral
process, thereby disabling the Commission from delivering a free,
fair and credible Presidential election, or materially affected the
result.
In Abubakar v Yar'Adua [2009]
All FWLR (Pt. 457) 1 S.C, the Supreme Court of Nigeria held that the
burden is on the petitioner to prove non-compliance with electoral
law, and to show that the non-compliance affected the results of the
election.
In Buhari v Obasanjo (2005) CLR 7
(k) (SC) the Supreme Court of Nigeria decided the question of who
bears the burden of proof in election petitions. It said:
“He who asserts is required to
prove such fact by adducing credible evidence. If the party fails to
do so its case will fail. On the other hand, if the party succeeds in
adducing evidence to prove the pleaded fact it is said to have
discharged the burden of proof that rests on it. The burden is then
said to have shifted to the party's adversary to prove that the
fact established by the evidence adduced could not on the
preponderance of the evidence result in the Court giving judgment in
favour of the party.”
The same position was adopted by
the Supreme Court of Kenya in Raila Odinga and Five Ors v Independent
Electoral and Boundaries Commission and Three Ors (Petition 5,3 and 4
of 2013) [2013] eKLR where the court explained as follows at paras
[195] and [196]:
“[195] There is, apparently, a
common thread in the foregoing comparative jurisprudence on burden of
proof in election cases. Its essence is that an electoral cause is
established much in the same way as a civil cause: the legal burden
rests on the petitioner, but, depending on the effectiveness with
which he or she discharges this, the evidential burden keeps
shifting. Ultimately, of course, it falls to the Court to determine
whether a firm and unanswered case has been made.
[196] We find merit in such a
judicial approach, as is well exemplified in the several cases from
Nigeria. Where a party alleges non-conformity with the electoral law,
the petitioner must not only prove that there has been non-compliance
with the law, but that such failure of compliance did affect the
validity of the elections. It is on that basis that the respondent
bears the burden of proving the contrary. This emerges from a
long-standing common law approach in respect of alleged irregularity
in the acts of public bodies. Omnia praesumuntur rite et solemniter
esse acta: all acts are presumed to have been done rightly and
regularly. So, the petitioner must set out by raising firm and
credible evidence of the public authority's departures from the
prescriptions of the law.”
In Amama Mbabazi v Museveni and
Ors (Presidential Election Petition No. 01 of 2016) [2016] UGSC 3 the
Supreme Court of Uganda said at p 6:
“An electoral cause is
established much in the same way as a civil cause: the legal burden
rests on the petitioner to place credible evidence before the court
which will satisfy the court that the allegations made by the
petitioner are true. The burden is on the petitioner to prove …
non-compliance with election law but also that the non-compliance
affected the result of the election in a substantial manner. Once
credible evidence is brought before the court, the burden shifts to
the respondent and it becomes the respondent's responsibility to
show either that there was no failure to comply with the law or if
there was any non compliance, whether that non-compliance was so
substantial as to result in the nullification of the election.”
The same position was later
adopted in Apolot v Amongin (Election Petition Appeal No. 0060 of
2016) [2018] UGCA 18 where, speaking generally on the evidence
required in election petitions, the Ugandan Court of Appeal held at
pp 11-12:
“It is now trite law in
election petitions that the petitioner must adduce cogent evidence to
prove his or her case to the satisfaction of the Court. In Masiko
Winifred Komuhangi v Babihuga J. Winnie Election Petition Appeal No.
9 of 2002, JUSTICE MUKASAKIKONYOGO DCJ, (as she then was) held in her
lead judgment that:
'As I have already stated
above, the decision of Court should be based on the cogency of
evidence adduced by the party who seeks judgment in his or her
favour. It must be that kind of evidence that is free from
contradictions, truthful so as to convince a reasonable tribunal to
give judgment in a party's favour.'” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
The above authorities present a
clear trend that in an election petition it is the petitioner or the
applicant who bears the onus of proving his or her case first. It is
the petitioner or the applicant who seeks to have the election result
annulled.
It was incorrect for the
applicant to suggest that since the Commission came up with the
figures that were announced as the Presidential election result, the
Commission bore the onus of proving that the figures were indeed
correct. That position is unsustainable, most fundamentally in the
light of the presumption in favour of the validity of the
Presidential election.
THE STANDARD OF PROOF IN
ELECTION PETITIONS
The general rule is that an
election is not declared invalid by reason of any act or omission by
a returning officer or any other person in breach of his or her
official duty in connection with the election. It, however, has to
appear to a court that the election was conducted in accordance with
the law governing elections and that the act or omission did not
affect the result.
The exception to the general rule
is that a court will declare an election void when it is satisfied
from the evidence provided by an applicant that the legal trespasses
are of such a magnitude that they have resulted in substantial
non-compliance with the existing electoral laws.
Additionally, a court must be
satisfied that the breach has affected the result of the election. In
other words, an applicant must prove that the entire election process
is so fundamentally flawed and so poorly conducted that it cannot be
said to have been conducted in compliance with the law.
Additionally, an election result
which has been obtained through fraud would necessarily be
invalidated.
The Supreme Court has had
occasion to set out the relevant principles in Moyo and Ors v Zvoma
N.O. and Anor 2011 (1) ZLR 345 (S). It was held at 385E-F as follows:
“The general rule is that a
declaration of nullity must be confined to the conduct in respect of
a particular vote or class of votes, the invalidity of which has been
established, unless the non-observance of the requirements of the law
governing the specific duty is of a character which is contrary to
the principle of an election by a secret ballot and is so great that
it might have permeated the process and affected the result of the
election: Phillips v Goff (1886) 17 QB 805. There are numerous cases
in which courts have struck off the invalid votes and declared
conduct in respect of them void without affecting the election.”
(emphasis added)
The essence of the principle that
a Presidential election result will only be set aside when the
irregularity is so great that it goes to the heart of the
authenticity of the result was set out in the dissenting judgment at
386A-C. It was said:
“The purpose of voting is not
only the differentiation of the electorate and the expression of the
will of the individual voters but also the ability to accept such
decisions based on the will of the majority. In my view, the
principle of majority rule, on the basis of which results of
democratic elections are determined, requires that courts should
refrain from interfering with the will of the majority of voters
expressed in accordance with the requirements of the law, on the
ground that the official entrusted with the responsibility of
conducting the election by a secret ballot unlawfully counted non
secret ballots as secret ballots, especially where there would be no
confusion at all as to who is the winner following the discounting of
the invalid votes. An election may be set aside if it is not clear
upon determination of the conduct forming the ground on which the
validity of the election is impugned who was the winner. In this
case there is clear evidence of the election of the Speaker of the
House in accordance with the mode of voting prescribed by the law
governing the election concerned.” (the underlining is for
emphasis)
At 386D-387A the judgment in the
Moyo and Ors case supra quoted a passage from Woodward v Sarsons
(1875) LR 10 CP 733, where LORD COLERIDGE CJ said:
“As to the first point, we are
of opinion that the true statement is that an election is to be
declared void by the common law applicable to parliamentary
elections, if it was so conducted that the tribunal which is asked to
void it is satisfied, as matter of fact, either that there was no
real electing at all, or that the election was not really conducted
under the subsisting election laws. As to the first, the tribunal
should be so satisfied, i.e., that there was no real electing by the
constituency at all, if it were proved to its satisfaction that the
constituency had not in fact had a fair and free opportunity of
electing the candidate which the majority might prefer. This would
certainly be so, if a majority of the electors were proved to have
been prevented from recording their votes effectively according to
their own preference, by general corruption or general intimidation
or to be prevented from voting by want of the machinery necessary for
so voting, as by polling stations being demolished, or not open or by
other of the means of voting according to law not being supplied, or
supplied with such errors as to render the voting by means of them
void, or by fraudulent counting of votes or false declaration of
numbers by a Returning Officer, or by other such acts or mishaps. And
we think the same result should follow if, by reason of any such or
similar mishaps, the tribunal, without being able to say that a
majority had been prevented, should be satisfied that there was
reasonable ground to believe that a majority of the electors may have
been prevented from electing the candidate they preferred. But, if
the tribunal should only be satisfied that certain of such mishaps
had occurred, but should not be satisfied either that a majority had
been, or that there was reasonable ground to believe that a majority
might have been, prevented from electing the candidate they
preferred, then we think that the existence of such mishaps would not
entitle the tribunal to declare the election void …”.
The dissenting judgment in the
Moyo and Ors case supra at 387G-388B went on to state as follows:
“It would, in my view, be
contrary to fairness and justice to say as a matter of principle that
the Legislature intended that the election of the Speaker conducted
by a secret ballot in terms of the law be nullified on account of,
say, a single invalid vote counted by the official conducting the
election as a secret ballot. The intention of the Legislature must be
that only irregularities which undermined the achievement of the
object or purpose of the legislation of ensuring an election of the
Speaker based on universal, equal, direct and personal vote freely
expressed by a secret ballot should vitiate the election. In the
exercise of review powers, the court a quo came to the conclusion
that the improper counting of invalid votes as secret ballots was not
an irregularity of the class the Legislature intended would vitiate
the election. The conclusion is, in my view, not evidence of a
misdirection on the part of the court a quo. It is when the
irregularity affected the actual discharge of the positive duty to
conduct the election by a secret ballot and not by any other type of
vote that it may be used as a ground for challenging the validity of
the election by a secret ballot.” (the underlining is for emphasis)
The position is the same in a
number of other African jurisdictions.
Ghana
In Re Election of First President
– Appiah v The Attorney General, reported at pp 1423 1436 “A
Sourcebook of Constitutional Law of Ghana”, 1970, BANNERMAN ACJ,
citing Medhurst v Lough Casquet [1901] 17 LTR 210 per KENNEDY J,
stated at p 230 as follows:
“'An election ought not to be
held void by reason of transgression of the law committed without any
corrupt motive by the returning officer or his subordinate in the
conduct of the election where the court is satisfied that the
election was, notwithstanding those transgressions, an election
really and in substance conducted under the existing election law,
and that the result of the election, that is the success of the one
candidate over the other, could not have been affected by those
transgressions. If on the other hand the transgressions of law by the
officials being admitted, the court sees that the effect of the
transgressions was such that the election was not really conducted
under the existing election laws, or it was open to reasonable doubt
whether these transgressions may not have affected the result and it
[was] uncertain whether the candidate who has been returned has
really been elected by the majority of persons voting in accordance
with the laws in force relating to elections, the court is then bound
to declare the election void. It appears to us that this is the view
of the law which has generally been recognised and acted upon by the
tribunals which have dealt with election matters.'” (the
underlining is for emphasis)
In Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo
and Ors v John Dramani Mahama & Ors [2013] (J1/6/2013) GHASC, the
petitioners claimed -
(1) that the election had been
marred by irregularities and electoral improprieties such as
over-voting, lack of signatures on the declaration forms by the
presiding officers, lack of biometric verification of voters,
duplicate serial numbers, unknown polling stations and duplicate
polling station codes;
(2) that the said malpractices
were alleged to have affected the election. They contended that the
irregularities vitiated the Presidential results in eleven thousand
nine hundred and sixteen (11,916) polling stations by four million
six hundred and seventy thousand five hundred and four votes
(4,670,504); and
(3) that if these votes were to
be annulled, the first petitioner would receive three million seven
hundred and seventy-five thousand five hundred and fifty-two votes
representing 59.69% of votes cast, while the first respondent would
receive two million four hundred and seventy-three thousand one
hundred and seventy-one votes representing 39.1% of votes cast.
The Supreme Court of Ghana at p
98 of the judgment held as follows:
“… a petitioner is not
entitled to an order quashing election results merely upon
establishing some form of non-compliance with the rules governing the
poll; the noncompliance must further either be of a substantial
proportion or the non-compliance must produce a different outcome in
the election, namely, result in some person emerging victor who would
but for the non-compliance not secure such victory.”
In the words of the majority of
the panel, compliance failures do not automatically void an election,
unless explicit statutory language specifies the election is voided
because of the failure.
It was also held by a majority of
5 to 4 that if the elections were conducted substantially in
accordance with the principles laid down in the Constitution and all
governing laws, and there was no breach of law such as to affect the
results of the elections, the elections would have reflected the will
of the Ghanaian people.
The Supreme Court of Ghana at p
40 of its judgment further held that the Judiciary in Ghana, just
like its counterparts in other jurisdictions, does not readily
invalidate a public election but often strives, in the public
interest, to sustain it. At p 42 of the same judgment, it went on to
find that, in deciding whether to disturb the outcome of the
Presidential election, the broad test to guide the court was whether
the petitioner clearly and decisively had shown the conduct of the
election to have been so devoid of merit as not to reflect the
expression of the people's electoral intent.
The Supreme Court of Ghana also
relied on Halsbury's Laws of England 4 Ed Vol 15 (4) at para 670,
where it is stated as follows:
“No election is to be declared
invalid by reason of any act or omission by the returning officer or
any other person in breach of his official duty in connection with
the election or otherwise of the appropriate elections rules if it
appears to the tribunal having cognizance of the question that the
election was conducted substantially in accordance with the law as to
the elections, and that the act or omission did not affect the
result. The function of the court in exercising this jurisdiction is
not assisted by consideration of the standard of proof but, having
regard to the consequences of declaring an election void, there must
be a preponderance of evidence supporting any conclusion that the
rule was affected.”
Kenya
Headnote 13 of the Raila Odinga
case supra reads as follows:
“13. The conduct of the
presidential election was not perfect, even though the election had
been of the greatest interest to the Kenyan people who had
voluntarily voted. Although there were many irregularities in the
data and information captured during the registration process, they
were not so substantial as to affect the credibility of the electoral
process, and, besides, no credible evidence had been adduced to show
that such irregularities were premeditated and introduced by the
first respondent, for the purpose of causing prejudice to any
particular candidate.”
Uganda
The Supreme Court of Uganda, in
Col. Dr Kizza Besigye v The Attorney-General (Constitutional Petition
No.13 of 2009) [2016] UGCC 1, considered the question whether the
2006 Ugandan Presidential election could be annulled for
irregularities and malpractices proved to have occurred. According to
ODOKI CJ, to annul an election on the basis that some irregularities
had occurred, without considering the impact of the irregularities,
would be tantamount to the court usurping the will of the people in
their determination of who their leader should be.
The Supreme Court of Uganda
unanimously found that in the conduct of the Presidential election
there was non-compliance with the provisions of the Constitution, the
Presidential Elections Act and the Electoral Commission Act. It was
the unanimous finding of the court that some voters had been
disenfranchised by the deletion of their names from the voters
register and that the counting, and at some polling stations the
tallying, of results had been marred by irregularities. Further, the
court made a unanimous finding that in some areas of the country the
principle of free and fair elections had been compromised by
incidents of bribery and intimidation and that in some areas the
principle of equal suffrage, transparency of the vote, and the
secrecy of the ballot were undermined by multiple voting and vote
stuffing.
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court
of Uganda held by a majority of 4 to 3 that it had not been proved by
the petitioner that the failure to comply with the provisions of the
law governing the Presidential election had affected the results of
the election in a substantial manner. It held that although the
conduct of the election could not be said to have been perfect, the
broad test that guided the court in deciding whether it should
“disturb” the outcome of the election was:
“Did the petitioner clearly and
decisively show the conduct of the election to have been so devoid of
merit as not to reflect the expression of the people's electoral
intent?”
The Supreme Court of Uganda
opined that, in a democracy, the election of a leader is the preserve
of the voting public and that a court should not tamper with results
which reflect the expression of the population's electoral intent.
Inherent in the judgment is the philosophy that the fundamental
consideration in an application challenging the validity of an
election should be whether the will of the people has been affected
by the irregularities or non-compliance with the provisions of the
law governing the conduct of the election. It said at p 27:
“In a democratic system
constituted strictly on the basis of majoritarian expression through
the popular vote, the essence of an election is that the people
should be governed by individuals of their choice. It is the
individual preferred by the majority that has the legitimacy to be in
leadership. The constitution gives power to voters to choose who is
to govern them …”.
At p 29 of the judgment, it went
on to hold as follows:
“Annulling of presidential
election results is a case by case analysis of the evidence adduced
before the court. Although validity is not equivalent to perfection,
if there is evidence of such substantial departure from
constitutional imperatives that the process could be said to have
been devoid of merit and rightly be described as a spurious imitation
of what elections should be, the court should annul the outcome. The
courts in exercise of judicial independence and discretion are at
liberty to annul the outcome of a sham election, for such is not in
fact an election. Although Morgan and Others v Simpson and Another
(supra) was not a presidential election petition, but rather a
challenge to the validity of results of a local government election,
I am persuaded by the principle enunciated in the words of STEPHENSON
LJ which I will adopt. HIS LORDSHIP said:
'For an election to be
conducted substantially in accordance with the law there must be a
real election… and no such substantial departure from the procedure
laid down by Parliament as to make the ordinary man condemn the
election as a sham or a travesty of an election.'”
Nigeria
In Muhammadu Buhari v Independent
National Election Commission and Four Ors (2008) 12 SC (Part I) 1 the
Supreme Court of Nigeria at p 75 quoted with approval the following
remarks of BELGORE JSC in Buhari v Obasanjo (2005) 13 NWLR (Part 941)
1:
“It is manifest that an
election by virtue of section 235(1) of the Act shall not be
invalidated by mere reason that it was not conducted substantially in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. It must be shown clearly
by evidence that the non-compliance has affected the result of the
election. Election and its victory is like soccer and goals scored.
The Petitioner must not only show substantial non-compliance but also
the figures, i.e. votes that the compliance attracted or omitted.”
(the underlining is for emphasis)
England
In Morgan and Others v Simpson
and Anor [1975] Q.B. 151 it was held as follows at p 164E-G:
“1. If the election was
conducted so badly that it was not substantially in accordance with
the law as to elections, the election is vitiated, irrespective of
whether the result was affected or not … [that is, for example,
where two out of 19 polling stations were closed all day].
2. If the election was so
conducted that it was substantially in accordance with the law as to
elections, it is not vitiated by a breach of the rules or a mistake
at the polls – provided that it did not affect the results of the
election.
3. But, even though the election
was conducted substantially in accordance with the law as to
elections, nevertheless if there was a breach of the rules or a
mistake at the polls – and it did affect the results – then the
election is vitiated.”
Canada
In Ted Opitz v Borys Wrzesnewskyj
2012 SCC 55, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 76 at para 46, the Supreme Court of
Canada held in an election petition that:
“The practical realities of
election administration are such that imperfections in the conduct of
elections are inevitable. As recognised in Camsell v Rabesca, [1987]
N.W.T.R. 186 (S.C.), it is clear that 'in every election a
fortiori, those in urban ridings, with large numbers of polls,
irregularities will virtually always occur in one form or another'
(p 198). A federal election is only possible with the work of tens
of thousands of Canadians who are hired across the country for a
period of a few days or, in many cases, a single 14-hour day. These
workers perform many detailed tasks under difficult conditions. They
are required to apply multiple rules in a setting that is unfamiliar.
Because elections are not everyday occurrences, it is difficult to
see how workers could get practical, on-the-job experience.'”
One of the headnotes in the
judgment reads:
“Lower courts have taken two
approaches to determine whether votes should be invalidated on
account of irregularities. Under the strict procedural approach, a
vote is invalid if an official fails to follow any one of the
procedures aimed at establishing entitlement. Under the substantive
approach, an election official's failure to follow a procedural
safeguard is not determinative. Only votes cast by persons not
entitled to vote are invalid.
The substantive approach should
be adopted, as it effectuates the underlying right to vote, not
merely the procedures used to facilitate that right.
The substantive approach has two
steps under section 524(1)(b). First, an applicant must demonstrate
that there was a breach of a statutory provision designed to
establish the elector's entitlement to vote. Second the applicant
must demonstrate that someone not entitled to vote, voted. He may do
so using circumstantial evidence. This second step establishes that
the 'irregularity affected the result' of the election. Under
this approach an applicant who has led evidence from which an
'irregularity' could be found will have met his prima facie
evidentiary burden. At that point the respondent can point to
evidence from which it may be reasonably inferred that no
'irregularity' occurred or that, despite the 'irregularity',
the voter was in fact entitled to vote. After-the-fact evidence of
entitlement is admissible. If the two steps are established, a vote
is invalid.
Finally, although a more
realistic test may be developed in the future, the 'magic number
test' is used for the purposes of this application. It provides
that an election should be annulled if the number of invalid votes is
equal to or greater than the successful candidate's plurality.”
(the underlining is for emphasis)
From the above persuasive foreign
decisions, a court will only invalidate a Presidential election in
the following circumstances -
1. Upon proof of commission of
electoral malpractices of such a nature and scale as to make it
impossible for the court to hold that the result of an election
represents the will of the electorate.
2. The Presidential election was
so poorly conducted that it could not be said to have been conducted
in accordance with the principles for conducting a free, fair and
credible election prescribed by the Constitution and the law of
elections.
3. The proved irregularities,
whilst showing non-compliance with particular provisions of the law
of elections, are of such a nature and effect that they affected the
result of the Presidential election.
It was for the applicant to prove
to the satisfaction of the Court the commission of the alleged
irregularities by the officers of the Commission and that the
irregularities affected the Presidential election result.
There is a controversy on whether
the standard of proof to be applied in election petitions should be
the civil standard of balance of probabilities or the criminal
standard requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt. This is based on
the fact that often the allegations relating to electoral
malpractices include criminal and quasi-criminal allegations, such as
bribery, fraud, corruption and violence.
In the decision of the Supreme
Court of Kenya in Odinga and Anor v Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission and Ors Presidential Election Petition No. 1 of
2017 [2017] eKLR, the court struck a balance between the criminal and
civil standard of proof. It said at para [148]:
“… where no allegations of a
criminal or quasi-criminal nature are made in an electoral petition,
an 'intermediate standard of proof', one beyond the ordinary
civil litigation standard of proof on a 'balance of probabilities',
but below the criminal standard of proof 'beyond reasonable doubt
is applied'.”
The purpose of election laws is
to obtain a correct expression of the will of the voters.
Where the allegations of
electoral malpractices do not contain allegations of commission of
acts requiring proof of a criminal intent, such as fraud, corruption,
violence, intimidation and bribery, the standard of proof remains
that of a balance of probabilities. In allegations that relate to
commission of acts that require proof of criminal intent, the
criminal standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt would apply. There
is no basis for departing from settled principles of standards of
proof to hold a petitioner to a higher standard of proof in electoral
petition cases simply by reason of their sui generis nature. In the
view of the Court, there is no justification for an “intermediate
standard of proof” to be applied in election petitions.
THE NEED FOR THE APPLICANT TO
HAVE PRODUCED PRIMARY EVIDENCE
A significant part of the
applicant's challenge related to the results and the figures
announced by the Commission. Allegations were made that the results
announced were incorrect and did not reflect the true will of the
people of Zimbabwe.
In so doing, the applicant
alleged irregularities relating to voter patterns, polling station
returns, inflation of votes, over-voting and ghost-voting, among
other infractions, which will be dealt with. In short, it was alleged
that there was rigging of the Presidential election result.
The applicant made general
allegations against the first respondent. No direct allegations of
personal manipulation of the process were made against the first
respondent. All allegations were made without particularity and
specificity. Evidence would have been required to prove allegations
of complicity with the Commission by the winner of the Presidential
election, alleged to be the deliberate beneficiary of the allegedly
improper Presidential election.
Nevertheless, if the applicant
had proved that the Commission committed irregularities and had met
the legal requirements of such a petition as to the requisite
standard of proof, this alone would have been sufficient to
invalidate the Presidential election even in the absence of direct
involvement by the first respondent.
PRIMARY EVIDENCE RULE
It is important at this juncture
to discuss the primary evidence rule to clearly show that the
applicant's failure to resort to section 67A, as read with section
70(4), of the Act was detrimental to his case.
The primary evidence was required
to be produced in order to prove that the Presidential election
result had indeed been rigged. The evidence was to be found in the
sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets.
The earliest statement of the
primary evidence rule was in Ford v Hopkins (1700) 1 Salk. 283, 91
E.R. 250, as referred to in Duhaime's Law Dictionary, where it was
stated that “the best proof that the nature of the thing will
afford is only required”.
In Omychund v Barker (1745) 1 Atk
21 at 48, as referred to in Duhaime's Law Dictionary, it was said:
“The judges and sages of the
law have laid it down that there is but one general rule of evidence,
the best that the nature of the case will allow.”
The primary evidence rule
disallows the use of evidence other than the primary evidence where
that evidence is in existence. This was stated in Doe D Gilbert v
Ross (1840) 7 M. & W.102 at 106, as referred to in Duhaime's
Law Dictionary, as follows:
“The law does not permit a man
to give evidence which from its very nature shows that there is
better evidence within his reach, which he does not produce.”
The reason behind the primary
evidence rule was explained in 1754 by Gilbert “The Law of
Evidence” (1st
ed 1754). In that textbook, the author stated at pp 3-4 that:
“The first therefore, and most
signal rule, in relation to evidence, is this, that a man must have
the utmost evidence, the nature of the fact is capable of; for the
design of the law is to come to rigid demonstration in matters of
right, and there can be no demonstration of a fact without the best
evidence that the nature of the thing is capable of; less evidence
doth create but opinion and surmise, and does not leave a man the
entire satisfaction, that arises from demonstration.” (the
underlining is for emphasis)
As stated by Gilbert in “The
Law of Evidence” supra, the duty of a court in a matter where
factual issues are heavily disputed is to establish the truth. The
court becomes a trier of fact. The dispute is, however, between the
parties who have the duty to place evidence before the court in order
for the truth to be established.
It has already been established
that the duty lay on the applicant to prove the factual allegations
that he made regarding the authenticity of the Presidential election
result that was declared in favour of the first respondent. He had
the onus of providing evidence that would best facilitate the central
task of accurately resolving the disputed Presidential election
result. The applicant ought to have gone to the used ballot papers in
terms of section 67A of the Act and sought the truth of the matter.
The truth sought lay in the determination of the question whether or
not the votes as declared by the twenty-fourth respondent tallied
with what was contained in the ballot boxes.
Section 67A of the Act was
enacted upon the realisation that it is only the used ballot papers
themselves that are clear, sufficient, direct and credible evidence
of what actually transpired when the electorate made their choices in
a Presidential election. The counterfoils from which the ballot
papers are torn are the evidence of residue. They remain sealed in
separate packets at the end of the poll. They are the evidence of
residue of what actually transpired as to the number of persons that
participated during the vote.
The purpose of the remedies
provided for under sections 67A and 70(4) of the Act is to ensure
that a decision to embark on unnecessary litigation challenging the
validity of a Presidential election is not made. The remedies also
ensure that a litigant who embarks on litigation has the necessary
evidence with which to establish his or her case. In that way, any
doubt as to whether or not the Presidential election itself was
properly conducted, and whether the true expression of the will of
the voters was announced, would have been addressed by the parties
before the court application was lodged.
The remedies provided for by the
Electoral Law do not only protect the right of an aggrieved candidate
to information, they direct him or her to the source of the kind of
evidence that would be required to prove the allegations of
irregularities committed by the Commission in the conduct of the
Presidential election. These are not remedies for the respondent's
benefit. They are meant to protect the rights of those who are
aggrieved by the result of a Presidential election.
When the Presidential election
result was declared in the early hours of 3 August 2018 the applicant
knew he was an aggrieved candidate. He may not have known the exact
or precise reason why he was aggrieved, but the law-makers in their
wisdom created an avenue for the applicant to ensure that he had all
the evidence necessary to prove his case if he wished to exercise his
right to challenge the result. Time was on his side to obtain such
evidence from the Presidential election residue.
The applicant did not exercise
his right in terms of section 70(4) of the Act as an aggrieved
candidate in the Presidential election. His main reason for not
resorting to section 70(4) of the Act was that “he could not drink
from a poisoned chalice”. One wonders how he knew that the chalice
was poisoned without establishing if indeed it was poisoned. It was
the Court that needed to be satisfied from real evidence that the
sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets were indeed “poisoned
chalices”.
There was no evidence that the
closed and sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets had been
tampered with, save for the assumption by the applicant that the
ballot boxes were “poisoned chalices”. Evidence of the contents
of the ballot boxes compared to the announcements by the Commission
and the evidence within the applicant's knowledge would have given
the Court a clear picture of any electoral irregularities or
malpractices if any had occurred. No such proof was adduced by the
applicant to support his allegations.
Without the primary evidence, the
applicant did not have proof of the reality of what actually
transpired on the day of the vote. He did not have the evidence that
is required by the law as cogent evidence for challenging the
validity of a Presidential election result.
In order to prove fraud,
collusion, lack of secrecy, and failure to properly conduct assisted
voting, the applicant ought to have gone to the sealed ballot boxes
and the sealed packets. The applicant's election agents would have
lodged complaints as the irregularities occurred. They were entitled
to do so by the law. The applicant's election agents signed the V11
Forms to indicate that they agreed with what was contained therein.
Armed with the evidence, either
from a recount where the figures are alleged to be incorrect, or an
examination of the contents of the sealed boxes and the sealed
packets, the applicant would have had a clear picture of the true
result of the Presidential election. He would have been clear as to
whether allegations of any malpractices and irregularities regarding
the actual votes cast and the results announced would be
substantiated.
An applicant for a declaration of
invalidity of a Presidential election result is, of course, not bound
to resort to the remedies for accessing the real evidence contained
in the closed and sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets for the
purpose of the court application he or she intends to lodge with the
Court. He or she is free to decide how to plead the case and choose
what evidence to adduce to prove the allegations on the basis of
which the application is made.
In the Raila Odinga (2017) case
supra, the Supreme Court of Kenya nullified the Presidential election
result, among other reasons, on the allegation by the petitioners
that the electronic server used to transmit and store the results had
been hacked or deliberately tampered with in favour of the winner of
the presidential election. It had been argued by the petitioners that
section 39(1C) of the Elections Act, which provided for simultaneous
electronic transmission of results from the polling stations to the
Constituency Tallying Centre (CTC) and the National Tallying Centre
(NTC) immediately after the counting process at the polling station,
had been violated.
What had transpired in the Raila
Odinga (2017) case supra was that, contrary to the mandatory
provisions of section 39(1c) of the Elections Act, after polling
stations were closed on 8 August, 2017 the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (“IEBC”) inordinately delayed in the
transmission of the results. It is reported that on 17 August 2017
(nine days after the elections) the IEBC's Chief Executive Officer,
allegedly admitted that IEBC had not received all scanned Forms 34A
and 34B (which contained results from the polling stations). The
court concluded at paras [262] to [265] of the majority judgment that
section 39(1C) was mandatory and provided the imperative for
electronic transmission of results from the polling station to the
National Tallying Centre.
Section 39(1c) of the Elections
Act of Kenya reads:
“For purposes of a presidential
election the Commission shall -
(a) electronically transmit, in
the prescribed form, the tabulated results of an election for the
President from a polling station to the Constituency Tallying Centre
and to the National Tallying Centre;
(b) tally and verify the results
received at the national tallying centre; and
(c) publish the polling result
forms on an online public portal maintained by the Commission.”
The delay by the IEBC to avail
the scanned copies of the Forms 34A and 34B formed the basis for a
conclusion that the security of the electronic system had been
compromised, thus exposing it to unlawful interference and
manipulation of results by third parties. This rendered the
presidential election a sham.
The Raila Odinga (2017) case
supra is distinguishable from the present matter on two grounds.
First, section 39(1C) of the
Elections Act of Kenya provided for simultaneous electronic
transmission of results from the polling stations to the Constituency
Tallying Centre (“CTC”) and the National Tallying Centre (“NTC”)
immediately after the counting process at the polling station.
It meant that whoever required
access to the presidential election results or copies of the polling
station logs would have to access the IEBC server upon request. The
IEBC server was, by operation of the law, the repository of the
primary evidence the petitioners needed for proof of the allegations
they made against the respondents.
In Zimbabwe, the counting and
transmission of the results is wholly manual.
The process involves counting of
all the ballots at the polling station in the presence of election
agents of candidates who participated in the election. A polling
station return, the V11 Form, is completed and countersigned by the
election agents. The import of sections 64-65B of the Act is that
they lay down the processes and procedures for the counting of votes,
securing of the voting material and transmission of the polling
station returns together with the election residue.
The results obtained at the
polling station, together with the election residue, are transmitted
physically to the ward centre, where a similar process of collating
all the results from different polling stations is repeated. The
results from the ward centre are then transmitted to the constituency
centre. A similar process is repeated, culminating in the collated
results for the constituency again being physically transmitted to
the constituency centre and, finally, to the National Command Centre.
This distinction in the processes
is important, in that it brings to the fore the fact that in the
Kenyan system election results, together with the residue thereof,
are to be transmitted electronically and received almost
instantaneously from the polling station to both the Constituency
Tallying Centre and the National Tallying Centre.
Second, and even more
importantly, the IEBC had been requested to provide access to its
server where the election results and residue were stored
electronically. It refused, neglected or failed to provide the access
to the petitioners. Further, an order of the court compelling the
IEBC to allow the petitioners access to the requested material had
not been complied with. On account of this failure to comply with the
requests and order of the court, the Supreme Court of Kenya concluded
at paras [279] and [280] that the IEBC had denied the petitioners
access to primary evidence which could have debunked their claims. It
said:
“[279] It is clear from the
above that IEBC in particular failed to allow access to two critical
areas of their servers: its logs which would have proved or disproved
the petitioners' claim of hacking into the system and altering the
presidential election results and its servers with Forms 34A and 34B
electronically transmitted from polling stations and CTCs. It should
never be lost sight of the fact that these are the Forms that Section
39(1C) specifically required to be scanned and electronically
transmitted to the CTCs and the NTC. In other words, our Order of
scrutiny was a golden opportunity for IEBC to place before Court
evidence to debunk the petitioners' said claims. If IEBC had
nothing to hide, even before the Order was made, it would have itself
readily provided access to its ICT logs and servers to disprove the
petitioners' claims.
But what did IEBC do with it? It
contumaciously disobeyed the Order in the critical areas.
[280] Where does this leave us"
(?)
It is trite law that failure to
comply with a lawful demand, leave alone a specific Court Order,
leaves the Court with no option but to draw an adverse inference
against the party refusing to comply. In this case, IEBC's
contumacious disobedience of this Court's Order of 28th August,
2017 in critical areas leaves us with no option but to accept the
petitioners' claims that either IEBC's IT system was infiltrated
and compromised and the data therein interfered with or IEBC's
officials themselves interfered with the data or simply refused to
accept that it had bungled the whole transmission system and were
unable to verify the data.”
In terms of the Electoral Law of
Zimbabwe, if a Presidential candidate requires that a recount of
votes in a Presidential election be conducted by the Commission, he
or she must make a written request for the recount to the Commission
within forty-eight hours of the announcement and before the
declaration of the winner. The applicant had the opportunity to do so
but consciously took a decision not to follow the law and make such a
request. He was also free to apply to the Electoral Court in terms of
section 70(4) of the Act for an order which would have given him the
right of access to the primary evidence contained in the closed and
sealed ballot boxes and the sealed packets. As a result, unlike in
Kenya, there was no basis for the Court to conclude that the sealed
residue contained different results from those announced by the
Commission or that such ballots had been tampered with in favour of
the first respondent.
The ground on which the
application challenging the validity of the Presidential election was
premised was the allegation that officers of the body responsible for
conducting and managing the election acted unlawfully and rigged the
election result. It was said that the officers did so by crediting
the first respondent, who was declared to be duly elected as
President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, with votes not generated from
the polling stations officially designated.
It would defeat the purpose of
section 70(4) of the Act if the Court failed to hold to account an
applicant who lodges a court application challenging the validity of
a Presidential election, on the allegation that the Commission rigged
the election result, for failure to use primary evidence to prove the
alleged rigging of the election result. The reason is that the
purpose of the requirements of the provisions of sections 56 and 57
(on the verification of the identity of the voters and the manner of
voting), section 59 (on the procedure for voting by illiterate or
physically handicapped voters), section 63 (the counting and
rejection of votes), section 64 (the procedure after counting of
votes at polling stations) and section 110 (the verification of
constituency returns by the Chief Elections Officer and the
declaration of the result of election to the Office of President), is
to ensure that cases of rigging of the election result do not occur.
The Legislature made provision
for strict compliance with the procedures of voting, counting of
votes and verification of the constituency returns to guarantee
transparency of the actions of the officers of the Commission at
every stage of involvement in the processes. The intention was that
the products of the processes should constitute real and credible
evidence of compliance with the law and a guarantee of the
credibility of the election result.
The persons the applicant accused
of rigging the Presidential election result are the same that the
relevant provisions of the Electoral Law subject to rigorous rules of
conduct during the voting process, the counting and rejection of
votes, the verification of the constituency returns, and the
declaration of the result. The demand of strict compliance with the
relevant provisions of the Act under circumstances of transparency
and accountability ensures the fairness and credibility of the
processes concerned.
Transparency and accountability
in the performance of duties by officers of a body responsible for
conducting an election are essential elements of a credible election.
Public officials performing their official duties under a high degree
of scrutiny and observation, as prescribed by the provisions of the
Act set out in this judgment, are unlikely to slip into the
unacceptable behaviour of rigging the election results.
The applicant did not allege
specifically that officers of the Commission, who were under the
obligation to act in accordance with the requirements of the
provisions of the statute referred to, did not so act.
If the applicant had placed
before the Court the V11 Forms from all the polling stations where he
had election agents, a simple analysis of those V11 Forms and
comparison with the V11 Forms from the sealed packets would easily
have achieved a number of positive results. The exercise would have
resulted in the following benefits -
(a) It would have disposed of any
questions regarding the number of votes for any given polling station
or constituency;
(b) It would have addressed any
question of over-voting;
(c) It would have debunked
allegations of upsurges of voters after a particular time, as for
instance what is alleged to have happened in Mashonaland Central
Province;
(d) It would have addressed
issues of differences in voting patterns and numbers of votes for
Parliamentary and Presidential elections;
(e) It would also have addressed
issues of improbability of similar and identical results at polling
stations; and
(f) It would have addressed
questions regarding the accuracy of the results and data provided by
the Commission.
The entire challenge to the
correctness of the figures relating to the result of the Presidential
election would have been easily resolved. If there was any
irregularity, it would have been easily detectable.
Assuming the applicant did not
have election agents at every polling station, a sample constituency
could have been used. If there were instances where for one reason or
another the V11 Forms were not recorded as they should have been,
specific evidence detailing the gaps or discrepancies would have had
to be produced to the Court. Such evidence could then have been used
to support the allegations of irregular conduct levelled against the
Commission. Whether the evidence adduced was sufficient proof of the
allegations of irregular conduct made against the Commission would
have become a separate question for determination.
AN ANALYSIS OF THE CASE
PRESENTED BY THE APPLICANT ON ALLEGED IRREGULARITIES
It is important to state at this
stage that the Commission was not alleged to have failed to conduct
peaceful harmonised elections. The Commission put in place measures
which ensured that the harmonised elections were conducted in a
peaceful environment before and during voting. The peaceful
environment in the period before voting ensured that candidates and
political parties enjoyed freedom of association, assembly and
expression. They were able to campaign freely.
Ensuring that an election is held
in a peaceful manner is one of the fundamental principles of good
governance. Acting in accordance with the principle of ensuring that
there is peace during the period preceding the polling day as well as
on the polling day and after the polling day is an important factor
in the determination of the question whether an election was free and
fair.
The applicant made several
generalised allegations of irregularities against the Commission. He
made a startling submission that these generalised allegations would
suffice to prove the case without having recourse to the primary
source evidence. The Commission nonetheless took time to analyse the
allegations against it and produced clear evidence to refute the
allegations, making it incumbent on the applicant to discharge the
onus which was on him. The onus to prove the case is not on the
person accused. The accused person does not have to prove his or her
innocence. The respondents in this case needed only to respond.
Signed and unannotated V11
Forms
The Commission proved through the
V11 Forms produced that the allegations that some forms had been
signed and not populated was false. There appeared to have been a
deliberate fabrication of evidence with an intent to mislead the
Court. Without access to the sealed ballot boxes residue, this
allegation simply remained as refuted.
Disenfranchisement of 40,000
teachers
The applicant alleged that some
40,000 teachers were denied the right to vote on the election day and
that this had a direct effect on the result. The allegation was very
general and unsubstantiated. It is not evident how the figure of
40,000 was calculated. There was no evidence from the teachers
themselves that they were registered voters who wanted to exercise
their right to vote and were posted to other constituencies against
their will. On the contrary, it was shown by the Commission that some
teachers had deliberately opted not to vote in favour of being posted
to stations where such right could not be exercised.
The letter dated 17 July 2018,
addressed to the Amalgamated Rural Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe by
the Chief Elections Officer, is telling. It shows that, contrary to
the allegations made by the applicant, the Commission put in place
measures to allow civil servants seconded to it during the harmonised
elections to cast their votes. The letter advises the leadership of
the organisation of the measures put in place by the Commission to
ensure that civil servants voted on the polling day. The measures
included posting them to polling stations where they were registered
to vote. If that was not possible, an officer was deployed to wards
with the polling stations where he or she was registered to vote. If
that was also not possible, the officer was deployed to a
constituency with the polling station where he or she was registered
to vote. In the case of officers deployed to wards or constituencies,
the Commission provided them with transport on the polling day to go
and cast their votes and return to their duties.
The Commission produced
affidavits by members of the Civil Service, confirming that the
exercise of their right to vote was in fact facilitated by the
Commission. The Commission also produced declarations by members of
the Civil Service seconded to it, signifying that they were
forfeiting their votes in preference to being posted as polling
officers.
The allegations made by the
applicant were too bald and general to form the basis for the relief
sought.
The Constitution gives every
Zimbabwean citizen who is eligible to vote a right to vote. It is not
an obligation under the Constitution to vote. There was no evidence
of how many of these teachers were registered voters. There was no
evidence of the effect the allegation, even if it were proved, would
have had on the result. There was no guarantee that every teacher
would have voted for the applicant.
Ghost polling stations
The allegations relating to ghost
polling stations and polling stations created at the time of voting
lacked specificity and particularity. They were in any case disproved
by the evidence adduced for the Commission and the twenty-fourth
respondent. These are the kind of allegations that would have been
easily proved by the evidence in the closed and sealed ballot boxes
and the sealed packets.
The allegation by the applicant
that some polling stations disappeared was unfounded. For one to
allege disappearance of polling stations, one should have had
first-hand knowledge of the places where the polling stations were
located before they were dismantled. The applicant did not state the
names of the polling stations that he alleged disappeared on the
polling day. It would have been easy to identify the polling
stations, as they would have formed part of the list of polling
stations officially made public by the Commission.
The applicant sought to present
misleading evidence to prove the allegation that polling stations
were created on the polling day. He pointed to what are referred to
as “1HRDC” and “2HRDC” as examples of created polling
stations. It turned out that these were in fact not polling stations.
They were Ward 1 Hurungwe Rural District Council and Ward 2 Hurungwe
Rural District Council.
The applicant sought to rely on a
document titled “Collation of ward returns in respect of National
Assembly constituency election”. It is not clear why he would seek
to present the document as a return showing polling stations.
To the extent that the allegation
that polling stations were created was based on false information, it
remained an unfounded allegation.
Bribery of rural voters
The allegations made by the
applicant in relation to voters in the rural areas are unfortunate.
In an effort to show that the harmonised elections were not free,
fair and credible, the applicant rehashed the allegation which has
had pride of place in previous applications challenging the validity
of elections in the country. The essence of the allegation is that
voters in the rural areas vote for food aid or grain they receive
from Government. If they are not voting for food aid, they are voting
under the undue influence of traditional leaders who allegedly ensure
that they vote for ZANU-PF.
Rural voters are not respected as
independent human beings capable of rationalising about the use of
the vote to protect and advance their own social, economic and
political interests.
Whether living in rural or urban
areas, Zimbabweans are educated people who are capable of
understanding the meaning and use of the right to vote.
The bald and unsubstantiated
allegation that rural voters cast votes for food aid distributed by
Government or voted under the undue influence of traditional leaders
to vote for ZANU-PF was made without reference to any developmental
programme the applicant and the political party that sponsored his
Presidential candidature put to the rural populace to persuade them
to vote for him. The applicant campaigned freely in the rural areas.
One must assume that he was able to put to the rural people the
promises of his programme of development on the basis that they were
rational people capable of deciding who to vote for in the privacy of
the booth designed to guarantee and protect the secrecy of the
ballot.
The standard of measures
prescribed by the Commission and the law of elections is that there
be a vote of equal weight to any other signified on a ballot paper by
a registered voter in the secrecy of a compartment designed for the
purpose of expressing the preference of the candidate of the voter's
free choice. Nowhere does the law require that the voter and the
ballot be described as “rural”. If the vote is the product of
strict compliance by the officers of the body tasked with the
responsibility of conducting the election with the procedures of
processing the applications for ballot papers prescribed by the law
to ensure transparency and accountability, it deserves equality of
treatment.
No evidence was produced by the
applicant of specific occasions where there was distribution of food
or agricultural inputs geared at inducing the electorate to vote for
a particular political party or candidate.
The influence of traditional
leaders
The influence traditional leaders
were alleged to have exerted on voters in rural areas to vote for the
first respondent is not borne out by the facts. The allegation of
involvement of traditional leaders was not linked to any other
relevant information.
If traditional leaders had the
influence the applicant alleged they had over voters in the rural
areas during the harmonised elections, the number of votes received
by a candidate in the Parliamentary election sponsored by ZANU-PF
would tally with the number of votes received by the ZANU-PF
Presidential candidate at every polling station situated in a rural
area.
It was common cause that there
were many polling stations situated in rural areas where the
Parliamentary candidate sponsored by ZANU-PF received far more votes
than the first respondent received. The difference between the
Parliamentary and the Presidential votes in rural areas demonstrates
the exercise by voters in these polling stations of the freedom of
choice of candidates by secret ballot.
The closeness of the votes
received by the applicant and the first respondent testifies to the
enjoyment by the voters of the right to freely exercise the right to
vote. The high number of Presidential candidates meant that the
voters in rural areas were free to vote for a Presidential candidate
of their choice.
It is also possible that some
voters exercised the right conferred on a voter by section 56(3a) of
the Act. The subsection provides that, if polling in two or more
elections is being conducted simultaneously at the polling station,
an applicant for a ballot paper may decline to accept a ballot paper
for any one or more of those elections. If an applicant declines to
accept a ballot paper for an election the presiding officer is
required not to hand the applicant a ballot paper for the election.
He must, however, record in such
manner as may be prescribed or directed by the Commission that the
applicant did not, at his or her request, receive the ballot paper or
ballot papers.
All this evidence would have
assisted the Court in determining the truth of the allegation about
the influence traditional leaders had on voters in rural areas. The
evidence formed part of the sealed packets.
The Commission indicated that the
applicant did not complain to it in terms of section 239(k) of the
Constitution about specific cases of traditional leaders actively
influencing their subjects to vote for a particular political party.
Section 281 of the Constitution
imposes a duty on a traditional leader not to be a member of any
political party or in any way participate in partisan politics. He or
she must not act in a partisan manner or further the interests of any
political party or cause.
Accusations of undue influence
made against traditional leaders have their basis in the personal
behaviour of individual traditional leaders. The allegations had to
be specific and particular. The applicant remained content with
making bald and generalised allegations against traditional leaders.
Lack of independence of the
Commission
The allegation that the
Commission lacked independence was without foundation. It was made
for the sake of making it. It must have been known to the applicant
that the Commission is one of the Independent Commissions established
under Chapter 12 of the Constitution. One of the general objectives
for which Independent Commissions were established is to support and
entrench human rights and democracy.
Apart from the Chairperson of the
Commission, who is appointed by the President after consultation with
the Judicial Service Commission, the other members of the Commission
are appointed by the President from a list of not fewer than twelve
nominees submitted by the Committee on Standing Rules and Orders.
Needless to say, the Committee on Standing Rules and Orders includes
Members of Parliament from the applicant's political party.
One of the specific functions of
the Commission under section 239 of the Constitution is to prepare
for, conduct, and supervise elections to the Office of President and
to Parliament. The Commission is under a duty to ensure that the
elections are conducted efficiently, freely, fairly, transparently
and in accordance with the law.
The Constitution makes it clear
that the Commission is independent. It is not subject to the
direction or control of anyone. It must exercise its functions
without fear, favour or prejudice. The only control over the exercise
of its functions is that it must act in accordance with the
Constitution.
In fact, no person may interfere
with the functioning of the Commission.
Members of the Commission are
required to be non-political. They are not to act in a partisan
manner. They are not to further the interests of any political party
or cause.
Wearing of partisan clothing
The applicant took issue with the
fact that the Chairperson of the Commission appeared in a photograph
with a scarf containing colours of the national flag hanging over her
shoulders. He alleged that she supported the first respondent, who
usually wears a similar scarf.
To then suggest, without more,
that because the Chairperson of the Commission had the scarf over her
shoulders when a single photograph was taken of her she would be
biased towards the first respondent and influence the whole electoral
process to be conducted in favour of the first respondent is not to
take the Court seriously. The applicant ought to have known that a
challenge to the validity of a Presidential election could not be
successfully mounted on flimsy allegations of this nature.
The facts show why the applicant
ought not to have made the allegations of bias against the
Chairperson of the Commission based on the incident of the photograph
depicting her wearing the scarf. The Chairperson of the Commission
was photographed wearing the scarf bearing the colours of the
national flag on 05 February 2018. The Nomination Court for the
harmonised elections sat on 14 June 2018. The photograph was taken
during the pre-election period. There was no connection at the time
with any Presidential election campaign.
It is in the public domain, and
is a matter of fact, that the scarf first appeared when it was being
worn by all members of the Zimbabwe delegation at the World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland, held from 23 to 26 January 2018. At that
time, it was not a partisan but a national symbol. It could not have
morphed from being a symbol of national pride to a symbol of a
Presidential election campaign within ten days to the time the
photograph was taken.
It was baseless to assert that
the wearing of the scarf by the Chairperson of the Commission in the
circumstances is evidence of bias on her part in favour of the first
respondent.
Failure of the State-owned
media to comply with section 61(4) of the Constitution
The applicant alleged that the
State-owned media followed the ruling political party and by
extension the first respondent in its programmes. That is all he
could say.
It was a bald and general
allegation.
There was no attempt at all to
show any connection between the alleged favouritism extended to the
first respondent in the programmes and the outcome of the
Presidential election.
The applicant did not, however,
deny that he and the MDC-Alliance were given access to the State
owned media.
Section 61(4) of the Constitution
imposes on the State-owned media the duty to afford fair opportunity
for the presentation of divergent views and dissenting opinions
without compromising the independence to freely determine the
editorial content of their broadcasts or other communications.
Acceptable evidence produced by
the Commission showed that the applicant and the MDC-Alliance were
free to buy airtime from the ZBC. During the period extending from 02
July to 09 July 2018 political parties and candidates contesting the
harmonised elections were invited to take up advertising airtime on
the ZBC platforms. The applicant and the MDC-Alliance bought
advertising time on 14 July 2018. After having advertising material
flighted on 14, 16, 24 and 28 July 2018 on radio, no more advertising
material was forwarded to the ZBC because the applicant and the
MDC-Alliance could no longer afford to pay for the advertising
airtime on the ZBC platforms.
The evidence produced by the
respondents showed that the applicant and the MDC-Alliance had their
manifesto and programmes recorded and transmitted through the ZBC-TV.
The applicant and the MDC-Alliance also took part in political
debates on national radio.
Evidence produced by the
respondents showed that the applicant and the MDC-Alliance were
invited to place advertisements in Zimpapers newspapers. They
indicated willingness to place advertisements in the newspapers in
the last week of July 2018. They did not fulfil the promise.
In terms of section 10 of the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Media Coverage of Elections)
Regulations SI 33 of 2008 (“the Regulations”), remedies are
provided to participants in an election who allege malpractices or
breach of the law by the State-owned media.
It was open to the applicant in
terms of the Regulations to lodge an appeal with the Commission
against any decision of any State-owned media institution that he
considered to be outside the parameters of the law. This included any
questions of bias, as alleged by the applicant.
A further right to appeal to the
Electoral Court from any decision of the Commission on the issue is
afforded. All the remedies are provided in the interest of speedy and
effective resolution of any grievances that may arise during an
election period relating to media coverage.
It was common cause that the
Commission did not receive any appeal from the applicant with respect
to media coverage during the electoral period in terms of the
Regulations.
Threats to voters of injury,
damage, harm or loss
On the allegations of the
presence of “rogue elements”, who identified themselves as being
from the security sector, who went about “campaigning and
threatening villagers”, nothing more was provided.
It remained a bald allegation.
There was no indication as to
where this happened, when it happened, or which of the candidates in
the harmonised elections the alleged “rogue elements” were
campaigning for. There was no indication in the founding affidavit
whether a report was made to the police. There was no attempt to show
the relevance of the allegation to the court application challenging
the validity of the Presidential election.
The averment lacked particularity
in an application seeking relief declaring an election or the result
invalid. There was need to have specific incidents of actions of the
alleged rogue elements referenced. Affidavits by the affected people
ought to have been furnished. This was important as there was no
guarantee that the people concerned were members of the security
sector.
Investigations would have had to
be carried out to establish the true identity of the people vaguely
described as “rogue elements”. All that was presented to the
Court were bald averments.
Failure by the Commission to
provide a complete Voters Roll
It was not easy to understand why
the applicant found it necessary to make the allegation that he
received a voters roll that did not contain any biometric data on it,
such as photographs and fingerprints. Photographs are not biometric
data. It is not clear why a candidate in an election would seek to
have a voters roll in his or her possession containing the
fingerprints of all the registered voters.
The MDC-Alliance had been a party
to the case of Mpezeni v ZEC and Ors HH-475-18. The High Court
granted an order interdicting the Commission from publishing
photographs of voters in the voters roll. It was held that doing so
would violate the voter's right to privacy, as protected in the
Constitution. The applicant would have been well aware, before the
election, that the voters roll which he was going to receive would
not contain photographs. He could not blame the Commission for acting
in terms of the law.
There is a court order which was
not appealed against. The contents of the order remain extant. The
effect of the order was to dispose of the issue of publication of
photographs in the voters roll. For some reason the applicant brought
the matter before the Court as if it was a fresh issue to be decided
upon.
Discrepancies in the Voters
Roll
The applicant made bald and
unsubstantiated allegations that the Commission produced a voters
roll riddled with discrepancies. He alleged that reports indicated
that 625,000 voters were missing from the voters roll. The reports
that formed the source of the allegation were not named.
On 10 June 2018 the Commission
called on stakeholders who wished to conduct independent audits of
the voters roll to do so. They were asked to share their findings
with the Commission. The Zimbabwe Election Support Network (“ZESN”)
conducted an independent audit of the voters roll. It gave a positive
assessment of the voters roll prepared by the Commission.
Section 28(1) of the Act gives
the right to a voter to object, in writing to a voter registration
officer, to the retention of any name on the voters roll of the
constituency in which the objecting voter is registered. A voter may
object to the removal of his or her name from a voters roll.
The applicant did not state
whether, upon receiving the reports he referred to, he or the
compilers of those reports availed himself or themselves of the
remedies outlined in the Act to redress the alleged anomalies. He did
not say whether he or the compilers of the reports caused properly
placed voters to take up such processes as are provided for under
section 28 of the Act.
There was no connection shown by
the applicant between the allegation of the 625,000 voters missing
from the voters roll and the Presidential election result. The fact
that the applicant did not attempt to show why such a large number of
voters could have been allowed to vote without the system detecting
the fact that they were missing from the voters roll proves that he
knew that the allegations were baseless.
Voter education
The allegation by the applicant
to the effect that the Commission allowed only ZANU-PF to conduct
voter education using sample ballot papers for the purposes of
rigging the harmonised elections was unfounded.
In terms of section 40C(1)(c) of
the Act, political parties are permitted to conduct voter education.
The twenty-fourth respondent
averred that ZANU-PF requested that it be provided with a sample
ballot paper relating to each ward or constituency under contestation
in the harmonised elections.
The request was refused.
All the political parties
contesting the harmonised elections, including the MDC-Alliance, were
given three sample ballot papers. One sample ballot paper was
provided for each election. The sample ballot papers were given to
each political party for the purpose of enabling it to conduct voter
education in terms of the law of elections.
There was no evidence produced by
the applicant for the bald and general allegation that the giving of
the sample ballot papers to ZANU-PF “created fertile ground for
rigging through ballot swapping and stuffing”. The applicant did
not say why the same allegation could not be levelled against the
MDC-Alliance. It had also received three sample ballot papers for the
purpose of conducting voter education.
The Court understood that ballot
swapping would involve marking sample ballot papers to signify votes
for the first respondent. The marked sample ballot papers would be
placed in the ballot boxes as substitutes for used ballot papers in
favour of the applicant. The ballot papers in favour of the applicant
would be removed from the ballot boxes. Stuffing would involve
putting in ballot boxes sample ballot papers marked with votes for
the first respondent.
A number of questions arise from
these unsubstantiated allegations.
The first relates to the fact
that all the sample ballot papers were clearly endorsed “SAMPLE”.
The applicant did not have any evidence to show how such a sample
ballot paper could be swapped and passed for the actual ballot paper
used in the election. The applicant did not relate to the rigorous
process of voting prescribed by the Act. He had to relate to the
process to show the stage at which the ballot swapping or stuffing
would have occurred. He did not do what was expected of him because
he must have known that the allegations he was making were baseless.
The number of ballot papers
received is recorded on the V11 Forms as well as the number of ballot
papers used. The latter number is determined by counting the
counterfoils of issued ballots. Once that number is ascertained, the
ballot boxes are then opened and the actual ballots in the boxes
counted. If there had been stuffing of ballots, as the applicant
suggested, the number of ballots in the boxes would be more than the
number of issued ballots according to the counterfoils.
If the applicant held a
well-grounded fear that there could be ballot swapping or stuffing in
the harmonised elections using the sample ballot papers, he had the
opportunity to seek the unsealing and re-opening of the election
residue. The election residue would have been inspected for the
presence, if any, of sample ballot papers.
Postal ballots
The applicant's premise that
7,500 police officers voted through the postal ballot system in the
2018 harmonised elections was not correct. Acceptable evidence
produced by the Commission showed that the total number of people who
were permitted to cast a postal ballot paper in the 2018 harmonised
elections was 7, 464. Police officers constituted 4,482 of the total
number of postal ballot voters. It was misleading for the applicant
to aver that 7,500 postal ballots for police officers were processed
in the 2018 harmonised elections and ought to be invalidated.
The issue was still whether there
was any evidence that the secrecy of the vote in respect of the 4,482
police officers who voted by postal ballot was not maintained.
The twenty-fourth respondent
indicated in the opposing affidavit that the Commission did not
receive complaints from any of the police officers who participated
in the postal vote. No-one complained that he or she was not allowed
to mark his or her ballot paper in secret and in the manner he or she
wished in respect of choice of candidate.
The applicant did not place
before the Court any affidavit from a police officer alleging that
there was a coercive process by which postal voters were made to vote
other than by secret ballot.
In Movement for Democratic Change
v Zimbabwe Electoral Commission and The Commissioner-General of
Zimbabwe Republic Police EC 01/18, a challenge to the validity of the
postal voting process for the 2018 harmonised elections was lodged
with the Electoral Court. The application was dismissed on the ground
that the applicant had failed to put before the Electoral Court any
evidence in the form of affidavits by affected voters showing that
the postal voting process had been compromised. There was no appeal
against the decision of the Electoral Court.
The grounds for the dismissed
application in the case before the Electoral Court were the same as
those taken up by the applicant in the present application. There was
still absence of evidence to prove the bald allegations made.
Design of the Presidential
ballot paper
The allegation that the
Commission designed a Presidential election ballot paper with the aim
of affording the first respondent an advantage in respect to votes
over other candidates had no legal or factual basis. It ought not to
have been made, because the same allegation had been the subject of
litigation in the Electoral Court.
In People's Democratic Party v
Chairperson of ZEC and Anor EC09/18, the design of the Presidential
election ballot paper had been challenged on the same grounds on
which the applicant's allegation is based. The Electoral Court
found that the Presidential election ballot paper, as designed by the
Commission, was in compliance with the law.
There was no appeal against the
decision of the Electoral Court.
The design of the Presidential
election ballot paper having been found by the Electoral Court to be
in accordance with the law, it could not give rise to a bona fide
allegation of bias against the Commission.
A ballot paper designed in
accordance with the law cannot be said to give an unfair advantage in
respect of voters to one candidate over another. The applicant should
have stopped to reflect on what the founding affidavit contained,
lest he be accused of making frivolous and vexatious allegations
against the Commission.
Allegation that 21% of polling
stations had no V11 Forms affixed on the outsides
Common sense and caution required
that before the applicant made the bald allegation that the
Commission had failed to have affixed completed polling station
returns on the outsides of 21% of the total polling stations on the
polling day, he should have fact-checked the allegation.
The mere making of the allegation
would under normal circumstances mean that the maker has identified
and counted the polling stations affected. The applicant did not
indicate at which polling stations the V11 Forms were not affixed on
the outside. He did not say whether he had election agents stationed
at such polling stations. If the applicant had election agents at
every polling station, as he should have had, he did not say why no
affidavits were deposed to by such election agents attesting to the
fact that no V11 Forms were affixed outside their polling stations.
The process of voting at a
polling station involves a number of clearly defined procedures with
which a presiding officer is bound to comply. Each procedure relates
to specific duties, the contents of which are acts the presiding
officer must perform. Section 64(1)(c) of the Act provides that,
after the counting of the votes in accordance with the procedure
prescribed in section 63(1) of the Act, the presiding officer shall
start completing the V11 Form. He or she is required to record on the
V11 Form the votes obtained by each candidate and the number of
rejected ballot papers in such a manner that the count for each
ballot box is shown on the return.
Section 64(1)(d) of the Act
requires the presiding officer to display the completed V11 Form to
those present and afford each candidate or his or her election agent
the opportunity to subscribe their signatures thereto. The presiding
officer is required to provide each candidate or his or her election
agent with a copy of the completed V11 Form. Section 64(1)(e) of the
Act then requires the presiding officer to affix a copy of the V11
Form on the outside of the polling station so that it is visible to
the public. He or she is required to ensure that the V11 Form remains
there so that all members of the public who wish to do so may inspect
it and record its contents.
A few minutes of reflection by
the applicant on the nature, content and purpose of the duties
imposed on the presiding officer by the procedures prescribed under
sections 64(1)(c), (d) and (e) would have dissuaded him from making
the rather outlandish allegations against the Commission under oath.
An applicant in motion
proceedings ought to make out his or her full case in the founding
papers. If he or she, as the applicant did, makes bald and
unsubstantiated allegations his or her application cannot possibly
succeed.
The applicant had election agents
at the unidentified polling stations he alleged did not have
completed V11 Forms affixed on the outside. The election agents would
have been given completed V11 Forms. The applicant did not present
the completed V11 Forms given to his election agents. If he had done
so, he would have been in a position to contend that the V11 Forms
that the Commission had were different from the ones he had in his
possession. If the applicant did not have election agents at the
unidentified polling stations, how was he able to conclude that a
failure to affix V11 Forms on the outside of polling stations
occurred in 21% of the polling stations set up by the Commission in
the harmonised elections? The claim is, with respect, outrageous.
Verification of the
Presidential election result
The allegation by the applicant
that his election agents were not present during the verification of
the Presidential result is false.
An e-mail was sent by the
Commission to all Presidential chief election agents, including that
of the applicant, inviting them to come and take part in the
verification of the Presidential election result. The twenty-fourth
respondent averred in the opposing affidavit that she personally
called, in a live ZBC broadcast, on all chief election agents for
candidates in the Presidential election to come for the verification
of the Presidential election result.
The acceptable evidence proved
the fact that the applicant's election agents, Mr Morgan Komichi
and Mr Jameson Timba, were present. Mr Komichi was the applicant's
chief elections agent. Both men had full access to the room where
verification of the result was conducted.
The twenty-fourth respondent
stated that the two requested and were furnished with V11 and V23
Forms for them to check and verify any issues that they wished to
verify during the verification process.
Over the two-day period of the
verification of the Presidential election result, the applicant's
election agents had unlimited access to all the original V11 and V23
Forms relating to the Presidential election. They had the opportunity
at their own discretion to make notes from those V11 and V23 Forms.
They had the opportunity to raise any queries with the Chief
Elections Officer where they had problems with information that was
on the V11 and V23 Forms being used by the Commission when compared
with what they had collected from their election agents from various
polling stations.
It was not correct to say that
the verification of the Presidential election result was done under a
cloud of secrecy. The applicant's chief election agent initially
attended and observed the initial stages of the verification but
later left and became unco-operative. He refused to sign the form
showing the number of votes received by each candidate. He disrupted
the proceedings in which the Presidential election result was
declared.
In para 5.1 of the founding
affidavit, the applicant admitted that his chief elections agent and
Mr Timba were invited to attend and witness the verification of the
constituency results. He admitted that the two men attended and took
part in the verification process that went on for two days.
It is clear from the evidence
that the attitude of the applicant's chief election agent was that
he would co-operate with the Chief Elections Officer only if the
applicant won the Presidential election. The only reasonable
inference to draw from the conduct of the applicant's chief
election agent is that his deplorable behaviour was premeditated.
By withdrawing from the process
of the verification of the Presidential election result when they
realised that the applicant had lost the election, his election
agents thought that the process would not continue to completion
without their presence.
They were wrong.
The provisions of section 110 of
the Act are such that the absence of any candidate or his or her
chief election agent does not stop the prescribed process from
proceeding to its conclusion. An illustration can be found in the
provisions of section 110(3(d) and section 110(3)(e) of the Act. The
subsections require the Chief Elections Officer to act in the
presence of those election agents as are present.
Section 110 of the Act does not
therefore mandate that a declaration in terms of section 110(3)(f)
shall only be done where the candidates' election agents have
signed off on the result of the Presidential election. The purpose is
to ensure that the process outlined in section 110 of the Act is not
susceptible to being taken hostage by any of the candidates
contesting the Presidential election.
It was also misleading for the
applicant to accuse the Commission of deliberately delaying the
announcement of the Presidential election result when he knew that in
terms of section 110(3)(h)(i) of the Act the Commission had five days
within which to declare the Presidential election result.
The voting ended on 30 July 2018.
The Presidential election result was declared on 03 August 2018. The
applicant must have known that the Commission had acted lawfully.
Stopping of counting of the
Presidential election result
There was nothing placed before
the Court to support the allegation by the applicant that the
counting of votes at polling stations stopped in response to what he
alleged were the results from polling stations showing him as leading
in the Presidential election. Election agents did not file affidavits
stating that the counting was stopped. No observer reports recording
the occurrence of the event alleged by the applicant were made.
The only reasonable inference is
that the counting of votes at polling stations across the country
proceeded as prescribed by the Act, without any stoppages as alleged
by the applicant.
Failure to produce V11 Forms
The applicant alleged that, at
the close of voting at 19.00 hours on 30 July 2018, sample results in
the form of completed V11 Forms were released. He said they were all
over social media. According to the applicant, the results showed
that he was well ahead of the first respondent in all the Provinces
of the country. He said when it was realised that he was leading in
the Presidential election, the polling station returns were not
released until 31 July 2018. To buttress the allegation that the V11
Forms circulating in the social media showed him leading in the
Presidential election, the applicant attached to the founding
affidavit only five V11 Forms.
There was a total of 10,985
polling stations in operation during the 2018 harmonised elections.
There are ten Provinces in Zimbabwe. That meant that at least five
Provinces were not represented on the V11 Forms produced by the
applicant. Five V11 Forms out of 10,985 polling stations was by no
means representative of the pattern that the applicant alleged.
The samples of the V11 Forms
produced by the applicant were meant to buttress the hypothetical
postulation that he won the Presidential election. Where the actual
data on the Presidential election was available and accessible, the
hypothetical postulation was unnecessary.
The fact that the V11 Forms were
sourced from social media raised doubt about their authenticity.
Polling stations returns are obtainable in terms of the provisions of
section 64(1)(d1) of the Act.
The applicant ought to have
produced authentic completed V11 Forms collected from his political
party's election agents and compared what they established to the
Presidential election result with the figures announced by the
Commission. He did not do so.
Mashonaland Central voting
The applicant claimed that there
were 200,000 votes created in Mashonaland Central Province. He said
less than 200,000 people voted in the Province, yet the Commission
announced votes in excess of 400,000. He said he based the conclusion
that less than 200,000 people voted in Mashonaland Central Province
on information emanating from a ZBC reporter, who said the Commission
had announced that at 17.30 hours 105,000 people had cast their
votes.
The applicant did not state where
he got the figure of 200,000 as the number of people who voted in
Mashonaland Central Province. The Commission proved that the Province
has a total voter population of 531,984. With a voter turnout of
85.1% in the Presidential election, the number of votes cast in the
Province would exceed 400,000.
The question whether more than
400,000 voters cast their votes in Mashonaland Central Province in
the Presidential election could easily have been answered by
consideration of the election residue. Without access to the evidence
of the election residue, the applicant's allegations remained bald
and unsubstantiated allegations.
Over-voting
The allegation by the applicant
that there were more votes announced for some polling stations than
the voters registered for the polling station was unsubstantiated.
Every V11 Form has a ballot paper
account. Immediately before the unsealing of the ballot boxes and
commencement of counting, the presiding officer at every polling
station accounts for the ballot papers received at the beginning of
the poll.
The applicant did not put before
the Court V11 Forms that showed higher numbers of counted ballots to
those issued at the polling station. He did not place before the
Court any affidavits from his election agents stating whether at
certain polling stations the count yielded a higher number of cast
ballots than those issued.
The Commission proved that there
were no polling stations where more people voted than appeared on the
voters' roll for the polling station.
The allegation on over-voting was
based on what the applicant described as G-series documents. The
falsity of the nature of the information in the applicant's
G-series was easy to expose.
The applicant's G-series
alleged that a polling station at Mandara Primary School in Bikita
West Constituency had 809 people who voted in the Presidential
election out of a total registered voter population of 447. Contrary
to the applicant's assertions, the V11 Forms in respect of Mandara
Primary School polling station recorded that 371 people voted in the
Presidential election.
The applicant's G-series
alleged that at a polling station at Bikita Minerals Primary School
in Bikita West Constituency 831 people voted in the Presidential
election when the voter population was 341. Contrary to the
applicant's assertions, the V11 Form for Bikita Minerals Primary
School polling station recorded that 309 people voted in the
Presidential election.
The applicant's G-series
alleged that at a polling station at Nharira Primary School in Gutu
North Constituency 536 people voted in the Presidential election out
of a voter population of 271. Contrary to the applicant's
assertions, the V11 Forms for Nharira Primary School polling station
recorded that 236 people voted in the Presidential election.
The trend was the same in respect
of polling stations in the G-series, which was produced as proof of
the allegations of over-voting. The conclusion by the Court was that
the information contained in the documents produced as G-series was
false.
Identical votes
The allegation by the applicant
to the effect that identical figures of results in respect of polling
stations can only be explained in terms of manipulation of votes
proves nothing.
The actual returns from the
polling stations concerned were available and accessible. They would
have shown that identical results of votes cast at different polling
stations were a real occurrence. In other words, there were polling
stations that returned identical results.
To show that identical results do
not have to be a result of manipulation, the Commission produced
copies of two V11 Forms, one for Mapengula Tent polling station in
Tsholotsho North and one for Mashala Top Butiti Pre-school polling
station in Hwange East. Each V11 Form for the respective polling
station was signed by election agents for the Presidential election
candidates.
The V11 Forms showed that at each
polling station the applicant received 86 votes against the first
respondent who received 52 votes. If the applicant's allegation of
identical results being products of manipulation, the Commission
would have manipulated the results of the Presidential election at
the two polling stations in his favour.
THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
RESULT AND THE ADMISSION BY THE COMMISSION
On 3 August 2018 the Commission
announced that the first respondent had received more than half of
the votes cast in the Presidential election. The first respondent was
declared to be duly elected as President of the Republic of Zimbabwe
in terms of section 110(3)(f)(ii) of the Act.
The declaration, as set out in
the relevant provisions of the law, is a legal event. It follows upon
any candidate reaching the 50% plus one vote threshold. Whether a
candidate has received 50% plus one vote of the number of votes cast
in the Presidential election is a question of fact.
The declaration can only be
changed or altered by the Court in terms of section 110(3)(i) of the
Act, which reads:
“(i) a declaration by the
Chairperson of the Commission (or, in his or her absence, the Deputy
Chairperson or, in his or her absence, a Commissioner designated by
the Chairperson) under paragraph (h) shall be final, subject to
reversal on petition to the Electoral Court that such declaration be
set aside or to the proceedings relating to that election being
declared void; …”.
The declaration itself is final
subject to the requirements of reversal.
The Commission made the admission
that the figures initially announced had mathematical errors. Minor
adjustments were made after data capturing errors were corrected. It
was submitted that this affected the figures relating to the first
respondent's win by 0.1% but did not affect the result of the
Presidential election.
The applicant alleged that there
were discrepancies between the Presidential election result as
announced by the Commission and that arrived at by adding figures on
the V11 and V23 Forms.
The calculations by the applicant
were wrong. They were based on an incorrect figure of voter turnout.
The total voter population for the purposes of the 2018 harmonised
elections was 5,695,936. It was not 5,659,583 as indicated by the
applicant.
The previously announced number
on the polling day had been 5,695,706. The figure was adjusted by the
addition of 230 voters who had been registered during a BVR
registration exercise in Chegutu, Mashonaland West Province, prior to
the cut-off date for the registration of voters for the 2018
harmonised elections. The number of 230 voters had not been uploaded
into the database.
The final voter turnout in the
Presidential election was 85.1%. When applied to the total voter
population, it equated to 4,847,233. The results of the Presidential
election announced by the Commission totalled 4,847,996. There was a
variance of 763 votes from the actual 85.1%. The variance was
accounted for by mathematical errors in the data capturing exercise.
The computation by the applicant
was based on a voter turnout of 72%. This did not yield a correct
result, reflective of what happened on the polling day. As a result
of the use of 72% as the final voter turnout in the Presidential
election instead of the correct 85.1%, the applicant arrived at the
figure of 700,000 votes that he alleged were unaccounted for.
Using 72% of the total voter
population to calculate the voter turnout, the applicant arrived at
the figure of 4,032,000. By necessary implication, the figure would
include votes that would, during the counting process, be deemed to
be invalid for one reason or another. The applicant then gave the
figure of 4,775,640 as votes announced by the Commission.
The figures of 4,032,000 on the
one hand and 4,775,640 on the other represented two different things.
The former figure included all votes, whether valid or invalid. The
latter figure would have represented valid votes only. The applicant
proceeded to subtract in turn the elements of the latter category of
votes from the former category of votes. As a result of the use of
72% as the final voter turnout in the Presidential election instead
of the correct voter turnout of 85.1%, the applicant fell into error
and made wrong conclusions on figures that he brought to Court as the
basis of his argument. The error by the applicant in the computation
of the total voter turnout, amongst other errors, would have caused
him to come up with the variance of the figure of 700,000. He did not
take into account in the computation the difference between the two
sets of votes he had subtracted from each other.
The applicant's computation did
not establish the 700,000 allegedly unaccounted for votes.
In terms of the applicant's
G-series documents, he identified a variation in the result of the
Presidential election of 0.1%. That gave him 44.4% of the total votes
cast. The first respondent received 50.7%. The variation did not
affect the outcome of the Presidential election. The first respondent
still passed the statutory threshold of 50% plus one vote.
Any mathematical error that may
have occurred in the process of verification of the Presidential
election result in terms of section 110 of the Act was not gross or
sufficient to overturn the outcome of the election. It cannot be a
ground for the vacation of the declaration made in terms of s
110(3)(f)(ii) of the Act.
It is important to understand
what the result of the Presidential election is within the meaning of
section 93(1) of the Constitution and section 110(3)(f)(ii) of the
Act. The result of the Presidential election is the declaration of a
winner having received more than half of the votes cast in the
election. The winner only has to receive 50% plus one vote of the
number of votes cast in the Presidential election. Any votes after
that point have no bearing on the question whether or not one must be
declared the winner of the Presidential election.
The correction of the
mathematical errors in the number of the votes announced as having
been received by the first respondent by the Commission had no effect
at all on the result of the Presidential election and the declaration
of the first respondent to be duly elected as President of the
Republic of Zimbabwe.
An error in counting and
amendment of figures is envisaged by the Act itself, which makes the
provisions of section 110 subject to those of section 67A. Section
67A(4) provides that the Commission may, on its own initiative, order
a recount of votes in any polling stations if it considers there are
reasonable grounds for believing that the alleged miscount of votes
occurred and that, if it did occur, it would have affected the result
of the Presidential election. The law allows for the adjustment,
where it is found necessary to do so.
If the applicant was aggrieved by
the verification, he should have utilised the remedies availed to him
by statute to get the relevant evidence. The applicant needed more
evidence than just the mere admission by the Commission of the
mathematical inaccuracy of the figures to show that the result was
affected.
ESSENCE
OF THE APPLICANT'S CASE
The applicant did not so much
rely on the allegation that the Presidential election was not free,
fair and credible on the basis of the generalised and unproved
allegations he made against the Commission. The essence of the case
was that the applicant was the winner of the Presidential election.
That is the allegation he failed to prove.
CONCLUSION
In the final analysis, the Court
found that the applicant failed to place before it clear, sufficient,
direct and credible evidence to prove the irregularities he levelled
against the Commission. He also failed to prove the allegation of
electoral malpractices he levelled against the first respondent. The
applicant did not prove the alleged irregularities as a matter of
fact. It would be unnecessary in the circumstances to ask and answer
the question whether the alleged irregularities affected the result
of the Presidential election.
It is an internationally accepted
principle of election disputes that an election is not set aside
merely on the basis that an irregularity occurred. There is a
presumption of validity of an election. This is so because as long as
the election was conducted substantially in terms of the constitution
and all laws governing the conduct of the elections it would have
reflected the will of the people. An election can only be set aside
if it is proved on a balance of probabilities that the irregularities
shown by clear and credible evidence to have been committed by
officers of the body charged with the duty to conduct the election in
accordance with the law of elections affected the result. It is not
for a court to decide elections; it is the people who do so. It is
the duty of the courts to strive in the public interest to sustain
that which the people have expressed as their will.
GWAUNZA DCJ: I agree
GARWE JCC: I agree
MAKARAU JCC: I agree
HLATSHWAYO JCC: I agree
PATEL JCC: I agree
BHUNU JCC: I agree
UCHENA JCC: I agree
MAKONI JCC: I agree
Atherstone & Cook, applicant's legal practitioners
Dube, Manikai & Hwacha, first respondent's legal practitioners
Mafume Law Chambers, fifth respondent's legal practitioners
Ncube Attorneys, sixth respondent's legal practitioners
Mbidzo, Muchadehama & Makoni, eighteenth respondent's legal
practitioners
Wintertons Legal Practitioners, twentieth respondent's legal
practitioners
Mutatu & Partners, twenty-second respondent's legal
practitioners
Nyika, Kanengoni & Partners, twenty-third, twenty-fourth and
twenty-fifth respondents' legal practitioners