ELECTION PETITION
MAKARAU JP: The hearing of
argument on the preliminary points arising from this election
petition was consolidated with hearings in seven other cases as the
issues raised in all eight petitions were similar to a large extent
and may very well call for the application of the same legal
principle.
In three of the petitions however, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
was cited as a respondent, prompting the Commission to raise an
objection, alleging mis-joinder. I could have issued one judgment in
all eight matters but have deemed it administratively convenient to
issue individual judgments in each of the election petitions.
BACKGROUND
The five petitioners in the above petition were candidates in the
harmonized elections that were held on 29 March 2008. The first
petitioner stood as a candidate for the senatorial seat in Mutoko.
The second petitioner stood as a candidate in the Mutoko South House
of Assembly Constituency. The third petitioner stood in the Mutoko
East House of Assembly Constituency while the fourth stood in the
Mutoko North House of Assembly seat. The fifth petitioner stood as a
candidate in Ward 10 for election to the Mutoko local authority.
They all belong to one political party.
Dissatisfied with the outcome of the poll, the five presented a
composite petition to this court, seeking to nullify the results on
several grounds, the details of which appear in their respective
affidavits filed with the petition.
The petition was duly presented to court on 14 April 2008. It was
purportedly served on 12 May 2008 by handing a copy thereof to one
Dzora, a personal assistant to the ZANU-PF Secretary for
Administration at the party's headquarters in Harare. The petition
was served together with a notice setting the matter down before a
Judge for a pre-trial conference and a letter offering security of
costs.
The respondents filed a notice of
opposition and opposing affidavits to the petition. In their
respective opposing affidavits, they all took the points in limine
that the petition had been served out of time and not at a place
provided for in the statute.
On the basis of this preliminary objection, they alleged that the
petitioners were non-suited for failing to comply with the provisions
of the Act in relation to the time within which to effect service and
the place of service of the petition.
Directions were subsequently
given to the parties at the pre-trial conference as to the filing of
heads of argument, culminating in the hearing of the points in limine
as described above.
In the heads of argument filed on their behalf, the respondents
contended that in view of the non-compliance with the provisions of
the electoral law in respect of the time and place of service of the
petition, the petitioners were non-suited and the petition should
accordingly be dismissed.
In opposition, the petitioners argued that service outside the time
limit and at the headquarters of respondent's party was proper and
in substantial compliance with the provision of the law. In
particular, it was argued that the petitioners delayed in serving the
petition as they were waiting for the amount of security to be fixed
by the Registrar since the law requires them to serve the petition
together with a list of their proposed sureties.
THE ISSUES
Argument in the matter and in the other petitions proceeded on the
basis that regarding the issue of service of the petitions, there
were two separate issues as follows:
1. whether service of the
election petitions outside the ten day period stipulated in section
169 is such non-compliance with the provision as to render the
petitions invalid; and
2. whether service of the
petition at the headquarters of the respondent's political party is
such non-compliance with the provision as to render the petition
invalid.
In my view, the two issues, while made up of two distinct components,
are essentially the two sides of the same issue.
Service of petitions is provided for in one section of the Act and
this requires that it be done within a certain specified period and
at certain specified places. It further appears to me that one cannot
assess whether there was substantial compliance with the provisions
of the statute by taking piece meal what the petitioners did and
establishing whether each separate act was in substantial compliance
with the law. A holistic approach is in my view what is called for.
However in view of the fact that argument was presented to me on the
two issues as if they are separate, I shall deal with each in turn.
Whether service of the election petitions outside the ten day
period stipulated in the Act is fatal to the validity of the petition
It is pertinent in my view that
at this stage I set out in full the relevant provision of the
Electoral Act [Chapter 2.13], that governs the service of election
petitions and the interpretation of which gave rise to the points in
limine
raised by the respondents.
Section 169 of the Act provides:
“Notice
in writing of the presentation of a petition and of the names and
addresses of the proposed sureties, accompanied by a copy of the
petition, shall, within ten days after the presentation of the
petition, be served by the petitioner on the respondent personally or
by leaving the same at his or her usual or last known dwelling or
place of business.”
It is common cause that the petition before me was not served within
the ten days stipulated in section 169. It ought to have been served
on or before 24 April 2008, having been presented to court on 14
April 2008. The petition was only served on 12 May 2008, twenty-eight
days after presentation.
The crisp and immediate issue that presents itself is whether service
of the petition twenty eight days after presentation is fatal to its
validity.
Before I proceed to deal with the merits of the matter, there is one
issue I feel constrained to comment on.
The respondents in this petition
were initially represented by Mr
Hussein who filed
detailed and most useful heads of argument supporting the contention
that the petition was invalid as its service was not in compliance
with the law. At the hearing of the matter, Mr
Mandizha purported to
appear for the respondents. I use the word “purported” very
deliberately as Mr
Mandizha effectively
abandoned the position adopted by the respondents in their opposing
affidavits and advanced on their behalf in the heads filed by Mr
Hussein. Instead, he
argued the case for the petitioners that the petition was properly
before the court.
The issue that exercised my mind
in this matter is whether in the circumstances I still had a dispute
between the parties to determine in view of the concessions made by
Mr Mandizha.
I proceeded to determine the matter as I am of the firm view that the
issue that falls for determination goes to the validity of the
petition before the court and thus, to the jurisdiction of this
court.
The issue I formulated for myself is whether the electoral court has
power to determine an election petition that has not been served in
compliance with the electoral law.
I am fortified in this approach
by the fact that Mr
Mandizha did not
formally withdraw the objection by the respondents but simply gave me
his opinion on the interpretation of section 169. Thus, the issue
remained alive before me for me to consider whether the concession
made by Mr Mandizha
was properly made.
Further as indicted above, the
hearing of this argument was part of the hearing of seven other
arguments and thus, the respondents were not prejudiced by the about
turn in stance displayed by Mr
Mandizha on the day of
the hearing. I have been able to rely on the submissions that were
made by other counsel for similarly placed respondents.
I now turn back to the merits of the mater.
As indicated above, there was no
argument advanced on behalf of the respondents in this matter as Mr
Mandizha for the
respondents argued that the provisions of section 169 could be
interpreted in such a way that it becomes directory rather than
peremptory. In this regard, he submitted that he was guided by the
decision in MDC and
Another v Mudede and Others
2000 (2) ZLR 152 (SC) where the approach of assessing whether there
had been substantial compliance with the statutory provision was
discussed and applied.
He further argued that in ascertaining the intention of the
legislature in enacting section 169, reference had to be made to
section 168(3), that deals with the issue of security.
The mainstay of his argument was that the petitioners could not serve
their petition upon the respondents before the amount of security had
been fixed by the Registrar of this court. He concluded by urging the
court to use Rule 4C of the High Court Rules 1971 to condone any
departure from the strict compliance with the provisions of the law.
Before I comment on the
submissions made by Mr
Mandizha, I deem is
desirable that I also summarise the argument by Mr
Uriri for the
petitioners seeing that the two were on the same side of the
argument.
Firstly, Mr
Uriri refered me to
the decision in Pio v
Smtih 1986 (3) SA 145
(ZH) where the learned judge, sitting as the High Court, had to
interpret a similarly worded section in the then Electoral Act. In
that case, the court held that the petitioner who served his election
petition two days out of time was non-suited as the part of the
provision dealing with the limitation of time within which service
had to be effected was peremptory and had to be complied with either
exactly or so substantially that the act done could stand on its own
and constitute service within ten days.
Mr Uriri was of the view that Pio
v Smith was wrongly
decided as the learned judge in that matter was relying on the old
and disfavoured jurisprudence of classifying statutory provisions as
either peremptory or directory.
Secondly, Mr
Uriri argued that the
degree of non-compliance in the petition before me was such that it
would not defeat the object of the provision to expeditiously
determine the election petition.
Finally Mr
Uriri argued that I
enjoy wide discretionary powers to grant dispensations and extend the
time within which the petition could have been served.
From the submissions by both counsel in this matter, I discern three
distinct propositions.
(i) The first one is that in
determining whether or not the non-compliance by the petitioners to
serve the election petition in terms of the provision renders the
election petition a nullity, I must be guided by the substantial
compliance approach.
That this is the current thinking
in this jurisdiction in matters as the one before me is settled. The
approach has been adopted and applied in a number of decisions of the
Supreme Court and of this court. (See Quinell
v Minister of Lands, Agriculture and Rural Resettlement
SC 47/04; MDC and
Another v Mudede and Others
(supra). Sterling
Products International Ltd v Zulu 1988
(2) ZLR 293 (S); Kutama
v Town Clerk Kwekwe
1993 (2) ZLR 137 (S); Chitungo
v Munyoro and
Another 1990 1 (ZLR)
52 (HC) and Pio v
Smtih (supra)).
I therefore agree fully with this submission from counsel.
It may be pertient at this stage
to deal specifically with the point made by Mr Uriri that Pio
v Smith ( supra) was
wrongly decided as the learned judge in that matter relied on the old
classification of statutory provisions into 'peremptory' or
'directory'.
I am unable to agree with this submission.
In my view, it is clear that the learned judge first found that the
wording of the statutory provision was peremptory. He then proceeded
to determine whether there had been substantial compliance with the
peremptorily worded section. In rejecting the contention that there
had been substantial compliance in the circumstances of the matter,
MFALILA J had this to say at page 165F;
“In
the present case Mr De Bourbon said that there was substantial
compliance with the provisions of s141 because the respondent was
made aware of the petition within 10 days, the time prescribed by the
section, when the petitioner personally telephoned him and through
his wife.
Did this action or actions by
the petitioner, the deputy sheriff or the office secretary amount to
substantial compliance with s141 in the sense in which I have stated,
namely were they enough to achieve the objectives of the provision?
The object of the requirement
that a written notice of the presentation of a petition shall be
served on the respondent within 10 days is to give notice to the
respondent in the shortest possible time so that he can start
preparing his defence papers in order to have the case finalized as
soon as possible.
Now, could the telephone
messages to the respondent and to his wife achieve these objectives?
I think not.”
I therefore do not accept that
Pio v Smith
was incorrectly decided for the reasons advanced by Mr
Uriri.
It is correct that the learned
judge found that the language used in the section under construction
was peremptory. He however did not stop there. He proceeded to
establish whether what had been done by the petitioner before him
could be regarded as substantially in compliance with the
requirements of the section. The approach that he took was
subsequently taken by the Supreme Court in Sterling
Products International Ltd v Zulu
(supra) where at page 301B GUBBAY JA ( as he then was) had this to
say:
“The
categorization of an enactment as 'peremptory' or 'directory',
with the consequent strict approach that if it be former it must be
obeyed or fulfilled exactly, while if it be the latter substantial
obedience or fulfillment will suffice, no longer finds favour. As was
pertinently observed by VAN DEN HEEVER J (as he then was) in Lion
Match Company Ltd v Wessels 1946
OPD 376 at 380, the criterion is not the quality of the command but
the intention of legislator, which can only be derived from the words
of the enactment, its general plan and objects.
The
same sentiment was expressed by MILNE J in JEM
Motors Ltd v Boutle and Anor
1961 (2) SA 320 (N) at 327 in
fine
-328B.
This
approach received imprimatur of the South African Appellate Division
in Maharaj
& Ors v Rampersad 1964
(4) SA 638 (A) where, after concluding that the provison with which
he was concerned was imperative, VAN WINSEN AJA went on to inquire
whether the failure in strict compliance therewith was fatal.”
(ii) The second distinct
proposition that I discern from counsels' submissions is the
argument advanced mainly by Mr Mandizha in this petition and by Mr.
Gijima in respect of
other petitions in the consolidated hearing, which submissions I
incorporate herein.
It is that in the circumstances of this matter, there was such
substantial compliance with the provisions of the Act such that the
validity of the petition is thus saved.
Mr Gijima
was quite clear and correctly so in my view, that the language used
in section 169 is peremptory and that my task is to establish whether
what had been done by the petitioners could constitute substantial
compliance with the peremptory provisions of the section.
He further submitted and again correctly in my view, that the
approach necessitates that I first establish what had to be done in
terms of section 169 and secondly, the object of the section. In the
third step, I have to establish what was actually done and finally,
assess whether what was actually done can stand alone and be
objectively viewed as amounting to substantial compliance with the
requirements of the section.
In the event that I find substantial compliance, I then have to
consider whether there was any prejudice as a result of the
non-compliance.
The above is the step by step
approach that was taken by McNally JA (as he then was) in MDC
and another v Mudede and Others
(supra).
It was further submitted on behalf of the petitioners that if I
follow the above four steps, I would find that what the petitioners
did was in substantial compliance with the object of the provision.
With respect, I find myself unable to agree with this submission.
If I take the above four steps I find myself stumbling and falling on
the fourth step as I shall demonstrate.
I now take the first step.
Section 169 is quite clear as it employs clear language that admits
of no ambiguity. It requires all petitioners to serve written notice
of the presentation of the petition and a list of proposed sureties
upon the respondent, personally, or by leaving it at his residence or
place of business, within 10 days of the presentation of the
petition.
This is what all petitioners ought to have done or were required to
do by the law.
The second inquiry I must now embark on is to establish the intention
of the legislature in enacting this provision.
It is pertinent in my view to note that the provision is not new and
has been part of our electoral law since at least 1985. It was part
of the law that governed the second elections in this country post
independence. It also pertinent in my view, to note that the
provision is not peculiar to our electoral law. With slight
modifications, it is part of the electoral law of most countries that
were once colonized by the British.
In Pio
v Smith supra, it was
held that the object of the requirement that a written notice of the
presentation of a petition shall be served on the respondent within
ten days is to give notice to the respondent in the shortest possible
time so that he can start preparing his defence papers in order to
have the case finalized as soon as possible.
In Nair
v Teik, [1967] 2 All
ER 34 (PC) it was stressed that it is in the public interest that
election petitions be speedily resolved.
In my view, it is beyond dispute that section 169 was enacted with
the object of containing the time frame within which election
petitions presented to court may be determined.
It is my further view that it is beyond dispute that election
petitions require urgent resolution as they have the effect of
disrupting the composition and the working of two of the three
pillars of State, the Executive and the Legislature.
That this is the intention of the legislature is not only to be read
from the section under construction but from the entire part of the
Act dealing with election petitions as it goes to provide the period
within which petitions have to be determined both at the first
instance and on appeal.
The third part of the inquiry requires me to establish what was
actually done. This is the easiest part.
It is common cause that written
notice of the petition was only served at the headquarters' of the
respondents' political parties on the 28th
day after presentation of the petition to court. Together with a copy
of the petition was served a letter giving the respondents security
for costs. A copy of the letter was not attached to the papers and I
therefore cannot comment on its nature and contents.
It has been argued that service could not be effected within the ten
days required by the Act as the amount of security had not been
fixed.
In the view of counsel, there was substantial compliance by the
petitioners in serving the applications late as the issue of security
had not been settled in strict compliance with the provisions of the
Act and thus petitioners could not serve the petitions without first
securing the requisite security in the form of proposed sureties.
Since the amount of security was not known, the argument proceeds,
they could not procure sureties as all the proposed sureties could
not stand as such until they knew the amount for which they stood
good.
It appears to me that the petitioners have erroneously interpreted
section 169 to intrinsically link the furnishing of security with the
presentation of the petition such that one cannot exist without the
other.
It is clear that the presentation of the petition, a thing in the
exclusive domain of the petitioner has no direct link to the
furnishing of security for the costs of the respondent, the fixing of
which is under the control of persons other than the petitioner, save
that the law requires the two to be served together.
The fact that the two are to be served at the same time does not make
them so intrinsically linked one to the other that service of one
could not be effected in the absence of the other.
In my view, the situation is analogous to the example of a situation
where driver is ordered by his employer to within the hour, proceed
to the airport and pick up the employer's wife. He is further
ordered to purchase a bouquet of flowers to give to the employers'
wife to reassure her of her husband's affection. The driver fails
to find flowers at the correct price in good time. After securing the
flowers, he delays for an unexplained reason while he is on his own
business and instead of driving to the airport, he decides to wait
for his employer's wife at the city offices of the airline, arguing
that she will catch a bus from the airport or the airline will ferry
her into town in due course since it is in the transport business.
Facing imminent dismissal by the employer, he strenuously argues that
he could not go to the airport in time as he could not find flowers
at the right price and in any event, the mistress would eventually
arrive home anyway as he (the driver) had substantially carried out
the order given him by the employer. He is dismissed.
As the purchase of the flowers by the driver in the analogy could
have clearly waited, in my view, the written notice of the petition
and a copy of the petition could have and should have been served
independent of the list of sureties pending the fixing of security.
In any event, even after the Registrar had fixed the amount of
security on or about 23 April 2008, the petitioners still hung back
and did not serve the petitions as required by law.
The delay of nineteen days after security had been fixed in my view
belies the genuineness of the petitioner's excuse that they could
not serve the petition before the amount of security had been fixed.
The further delay remains unexplained like the delay of the driver in
the analogy after purchasing the flowers.
In my view, the petitioners
simply did not make any reference to the Act in serving the petition
and when the point in limine
was raised, the absence of security was latched onto as a convenient
excuse to explain the fatal delays.
I am therefore unable to find that the service of the election
petition twenty eight days after presentation is such an act that can
be construed as substantial compliance with the law.
The provisions of section 169 of the Act are peremptory and require
exact compliance or substantial compliance.
In view of the failure by the petitioners to comply exactly or
substantially with the provision, their petition is a nullity and the
proceedings before the court are rendered a nullity.
As I have failed to pass the fourth step, I deem it unnecessary that
I consider whether there was prejudice or not as a result of the
non-compliance.
Although I have effectively found that the petition is a nullity, I
will proceed to deal with the rest of the submissions made by
counsel.
(iii) The third distinct
submission that I discern from counsels' submissions is that I have
inherent jurisdiction to condone departures from the provisions of
the Act.
Mr Mandizha
has submitted that I employ Rule 4C of the High Court Rules to
condone the late service of the petition. Mr
Uriri has made
reference to my inherent powers.
It is in my view trite that this court, being a creature of statute
can only exercise those powers that are expressly granted to it by
the enabling statute.
Section 169 does not grant this
court power on good cause, to extend the time within which petitions
can be served. Rule 4C of the High Court Rules is of no application
as I am not dealing with a time limit that has been set in terms of
the rules of court. This is a time limit set by parliament and the
doctrine of separation of state powers commands that I refrain from
amending a statute from the bench as that is not my function. (See
Chitungo v Munyoro and
Another ( supra)).
Whether late service of the petition at the headquarters of the
respondent's political party is such non-compliance with the
provision as to render the petition invalid
As stated above, the electoral law prescribes the proper manner of
serving election petitions. Service has to be personal or at the
residence or place of business of the respondent.
That is what the law requires.
In the petition before me, service was effected at the party
headquarters' of the respondents. It was argued for the petitioners
that this was substantial compliance with the provisions of the Act
as the party headquarters' can be regarded as the respondent's
place of “political” business.
Firstly, I regard this issue as an integral part of the first issue.
Thus, I am not determining the effect of serving the petition at the
party headquarters in isolation of the first issue. In my view, the
correct position is to determine the effect of serving the petition
at the party headquarters out of time.
I have already above expressed my views on the effect of failing to
serve the petition on time. The same principles that I applied in
arriving at the conclusion that the petition before me is a nullity
for failing to comply with the provisions of the Act apply in respect
of this issue with equal force. Service out of time is fatal to the
validity of the petition. Service out of time at a place not
designated by the statute can hardly save the invalid petition. In my
view, late service of the petition at the party headquarters of the
respondents, far from being in substantial compliance with the
statute, actually compounds the non-compliance.
In any event, the inquiry becomes idle if one has regard to the fact
that the Act has prescribed what constitutes proper service of a
petition.
“Political business” place is
not one of the places where proper service of an election petition
may be effected. Substituted service, again an aspect that is
regulated by the inherent powers of the High Court is not applicable
in election petitions.
On the basis of the above, I would hold that there was no substantial
compliance with the provisions of the act and that such
non-compliance renders the petitioners non-suited before this court.
In this regard, I find the
concession made by Mr
Mandizha on behalf of
the respondents to have been ill advised.
In the result, I make the following order:
1. the petition is dismissed.
2. The petitioners are to pay the
respondents' costs.
Mbidzo Muchadehama & Makoni, petitioners legal
practitioners
Hussein Ranchod & Company, respondents legal practitioners