Patrick Ouma Onyango & 12 others vs Attorney general & 2 others: a classtcal case of mis-applying and disapplying Jurisprudence
Abstract
When a historian with a genuine bias in favour of matters re~ating to the
constitution will finally and incisively document, in a sequential manner, the
rowdy character of Kenya's attempt at the Constitution making process, the
Kenyan judiciary may not be credited with bringing the sanity of law to the
process. To the contrary, the judiciary may be accused of having bent
backwards to provide a forum for the tramps in the theatre of the absurd to
trivialize the entire process.
This case review attempts to lend credit to the above averments. The review
makes a critical evaluation of the court's reasoning in High Court Mise. Civil
Application No. 677 of 2005(0.5).
For purposes of this analysis, the term jurisprudence is employed in its French
sense to refer to case law and its English sense to refer to the general
speculations about the meaning, nature and character of law-, It is contended
that the three judges dis-applied existing jurisprudence on constitutional
litigation in the former sense and misapplied jurisprudence in the latter sense .
Citation
East African Law Journal Vol 2 2005Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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