Case Law[2022] LSHC 164Lesotho
Independent Electoral Commission v Speaker of the National Assembly (Const. No. 0022/2022) [2022] LSHC 164 (1 December 2022)
High Court of Lesotho
Judgment
# Independent Electoral Commission v Speaker of the National Assembly (Const. No. 0022/2022) [2022] LSHC 164 (1 December 2022)
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##### Independent Electoral Commission v Speaker of the National Assembly (Const. No. 0022/2022) [2022] LSHC 164 (1 December 2022)
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Independent Electoral Commission v Speaker of the National Assembly (Const. No. 0022/2022) [2022] LSHC 164 (1 December 2022) Copy
Media Neutral Citation
[2022] LSHC 164 Copy
Court
[High Court](/judgments/LSHC/)
Court registry
[Constitutional Division](/judgments/LSHC/LSHC-constitutional-division/)
Case number
Const. No. 0022/2022
Judges
[Mahase J, Makhetha J, Kopo J](/judgments/all/?judges=Mahase%20J%2C%20Makhetha%20J%2C%20Kopo%20J)
Judgment date
1 December 2022
Language
English
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_**IN THE HIGH COUR OF LESOTHO**_
**HELD AT MASERU CONSTITUTIONAL CASE NO. 0022/2022**
In the matter between:
**INDEPENDENT ELECTORAL COMMISSION 1****ST****APPLICANT**
**DIRECTOR OF ELECTIONS 2****ND****APPLICANT**
**BASOTHO NATIONAL PARTY 3****RD****APPLICANT**
**BASOTHO PATRIOTIC PARTY 4****TH****APPLICANT**
**TEFO MAPESELA 5****TH****APPLICANT**
**And**
**SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY 1****ST****RESPONDENT**
**CLERK OF THE NATIONAL ASSESMBLY 2****ND****RESPONDENT**
**HIS MAJESTY KING LETSIE III 3****RD****RESPONDENT**
**DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS 4****TH****RESPONDENT**
**ALLIANCE FOR DEMOGRATS 5****TH****RESPONDENT**
**MORAPELI MOTOBOLI 6****TH****RESPONDENT**
**MALETSEMA LETSOEPA 7****TH****RESPONDENT**
**KATLEHO MOSOTHO 8****TH****RESPONDENT**
**LEBOHANG MOCHABA 9****TH****RESPONDENT**
**UNITED FOR CHANGE 10****TH****RESPONDENT**
**LESOTHO PEOPLE’S CONGRESS 11****TH****RESPONDENT**
**ATTORNEY GENERAL 12****TH****RESPONDENT**
**REVOLUTION FOR PROSPERITY 13****TH****RESPONDENT**
_Neutral Citation:_ Independent Electoral Commission and 4 others v Speaker of the National Assembly and 12 others [[2022] LSHC 319](/akn/ls/judgment/lshc/2022/319) Const. (1st December 2022)
**CORAM: M. MAHASE J**
**M. KOPO J**
**M. MAKHETHA J**
**HEARD: 16****TH****AND 17****TH****NOVEMBER 2022**
**DELIVERED: 01****ST****DECEMBER 2022**
_**SUMMARY**_
_Constitutional provisions for decision of questions as to membership of parliament- Procedure to be followed where allocation of proportional representation seats is in issue – Discussion on section 69 of the Constitution and its reference in the Electoral Act._
_**Annotations**_
_**Articles**_
Hoolo ‘Nyane. A critique of proceduralism in the adjudication of electoral disputes in Lesotho _[https://www.eisa.org/pdf/JAE17.2Nyane.pdf](https://www.eisa.org/pdf/JAE17.2Nyane.pdf)_
_**Cases**_
_**Lesotho**_
Basotho National Party v The Principal Secretary Ministry of Law, Parliamentary and Constitutional Affairs and 30 others CIV/APN/240/93
Attorney General v Matlakeng and Anor CIV/APN/63/89
_**South Africa**_
Olufsen V Klisser (1959) 3 SA 351
De Villiers v Louw (1930) AD 426
_**Statutes**_
The Constitution of Lesotho
Constitutional Litigation Rules of 2011
Elections Results Notice of 2022
National Assembly Electoral Act 2011(the Electoral Act)
Seventh Amendment to the Constitution Act, 2011
_**RULING**_
**[A] INTRODUCTION**
1. On the 07th day of October, 2022, this country held the General Elections. As is procedural, the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), a body or institution entrusted with overseeing to the process of the General Elections, counted the votes and published the results of the Constituency Candidates Votes and the Party Votes. The IEC then proceeded to calculate and eventually publicise the compensatory or proportional representation seats (PR seats). The publication was done in **Elections Results Notice of 2022 1**.
2. On the 22nd day of October 2022, an urgent application filed on behalf of IEC and Director of Elections was moved in this court in its constitutional jurisdiction before Justice Ralebese for the following prayers;
1. _Dispensing with the rules as to form and service on account of urgency of this matter._
2. _That the rule nisi be and is hereby issued returnable on the date and time to be determined by this honourable court calling upon the respondents to show cause, if any, why the following order shall not be made absolute:_
1. _An order interdicting the summoning of the Special Meeting of the National Assembly of the 11_ _th_ _Parliament of the Kingdom of Lesotho scheduled to meet on Tuesday 25_ _th_ _October, 2022, at 10:00 am at Parliament Buildings, pending the determination of this application._
2. _An order interdicting the operationalisation of any convening the special meeting of the National Assembly of the 11_ _th_ _Parliament of the Kingdom of Lesotho pending the finalisation of this application._
3. _An order reviewing, the correcting and setting aside Legal Notice No. 100 of, 2022, as irregular._
4. _An order reviewing, correcting and setting aside the allocation of compensatory seats made following the General Elections of the 7_ _th_ _October, 2022, published in Legal Notice No, 100 (Election Results Notice) of 2022 in so far as that allocation gave 4_ _th_ _Respondent 11 compensatory seats in state of 8 compensatory seats._
5. _An order granting the applicants leave to amend the, allocation of compensatory seats, allocated to 4_ _th_ _respondent, from 11 compensatory seats to 8 compensatory seats._
6. _An order reviewing, correcting and setting aside the allocation of compensatory seats made following the General Elections of the 7_ _th_ _October, 2022 published in Legal Notice No. 100 (Elections Results Notice) of 2022 in so far as that allocation gave the 5_ _th_ _respondent 3 compensatory seats in state of 2 compensatory seats._
7. _An order granting the applicants leave to amend the allocation of compensatory seats, allocated to 5_ _th_ _respondent, from 3 compensatory seats to 2 compensatory seats._
8. _An order granting leave to recalculate the compensatory seats due to parties that contested elections of 7 October, 2022, and reallocate such compensatory seats to deserving parties as reflected on annexure IEC2 to the founding affidavit._
9. _Further and/or alternative relief as the court may deem fit._
10. _Directing that prayers 1 and 2 (a) operate with immediate effect as interim reliefs._
3. The matter was, on record, initially opposed by the DC (4th Respondent). The record shows that per agreement, the parties were put to terms on periods of filing and on when the matter will be heard. Several other parties joined as Applicants and Respondents to eventually cause the litigants to be as they are now. Two intervention applications (by Basotho National Party (BNP), Basotho Patriotic Party (BPP), Tefo Mapesela and Revolution For Prosperity (RFP)) were moved and granted at different times.
4. The matter was eventually set down to proceed on the 16th day of November for deliberation of the preliminary issue relating to jurisdiction as DC and RFP had raised it. This judgment is therefore on whether the matter should have been instituted constitutionally or under the **National Assembly Electoral Act 2011(the Electoral Act). 2**
**[B] SUBMISSIONS**
**[I] FOR DC AND RFP**
5. Advocate Teele KC appeared and argued the case for the DC while Advocate Molati argued the matter for the RFP. Their argument was that the matter should not have been moved in this court sitting in its constitutional jurisdiction was more or less the same and therefore will be looked at together. Where they differ, clarity will be provided.
6. It was argued for both DC and RFP that the procedure followed by the Applicants in instituting this matter is ultra vires the provisions of section 69 of the **Constitution** 3 as amended read with section 125 of the Electoral Act. It was argued further that the manner in which the procedure on how a matter instituted under section 125 of the Electoral Act is designed is meant to allow even for calling of _viva voce_ evidence which is a different procedure to that provided for under the **Constitutional Litigation Rules (the Rules)** 4.
7. In the alternative, Advocate Teele KC argues that should the court find that the procedure to challenge the allocation of the PR seats is allowed even under the Constitution, it should not be followed as there is a non-constitutional remedy available. Advocate Molati supported the principle of subsidiarity too.
**[II] FOR THE APPLICANTS**
8. Advocate Letuka for the 1st and 2nd Applicants argued that since the IEC is saying it committed an error, it committed that error in exercising its constitutional mandate. Secondly, in correcting that error, the IEC will be changing the parliament, which is a constitutional creature and therefore the matter has been properly instituted under the jurisdiction of this court sitting in its constitutional capacity.
9. Advocate Letuka argued further that section 69 of the Constitution has elaborately provided the procedure for instituting the matter such as the present one and reference to the High Court in that section refers to this court sitting in its constitutional jurisdiction hence the **Rules** as issued by the Chief Justice.
10. Another ground upon which the Applicants argue that the matter could not be instituted under the procedure as envisaged in the Electoral Act is that the procedure under this Act is meant for disputed returns. It was argued that in this matter there are no election results that are disputed.
11. The applicants buttress their point further by arguing that the self-review application is inherently a rule of law application and therefore constitutionally based. For that reason, this matter could not be moved under the Electoral Act.
12. On subsidiarity, both Advocate Letuka and Mr. Rasekoai are in harmony that it is only under section 22 of the Constitution that this court can decline to hear a matter constitutionally where there is a redress elsewhere. As Mr. Rasekoai put it, the present application is not a rights-based application as envisaged under section 22 and therefore this court cannot decline to hear it.
13. Advocate Lephuthing at one point argued that it does not matter if the matter was moved under the constitutional litigation rules or under the Electoral Act. For that reason, therefore, he argued, this court is rightly seized with the matter.
**[C] ANALYSIS OF THE SUBMISSIONS**
14. Upon a closer perusal of the submissions, three (3) issues come to the fore. They are the following;
* Has the Electoral Act provided for the procedure to be followed for the relief sought by the applicants?
* Can the matter be instituted under section 69 of the Constitution? And if so;
* In a situation that the Electoral Act can also be relied on for the relief sought, can the principle of subsidiarity also be relevant in as far as section 69 of the Constitution is concerned?
15. In tackling these issues, this court will deal with the first and second issue jointly as they involve interrogating both the provisions of the Constitution and the Electoral Act mutually.
16. It may not be necessary to quote the entire relevant provisions of both the Constitution as amended by the **Seventh Amendment to the Constitution Act, 2011 5** and the Electoral Act due to their lengths. They will, however, be paraphrased and then compared and contrasted them.
17. Section 69 (1) (d) of the Constitution provides that the High Court shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine any question on whether the PR seats have been properly allocated. Section 69 (4A) then provides that an application for an issue envisaged under 69 (1) (d) may be made by any registered voter, a political party that participated in the elections or the IEC. Sub-section (5) enjoins the parliament to make provisions upon which an application under this section may be made to the High Court and its powers thereto.
18. Section 125 (c) of the Electoral Act on the other hand provides that in accordance with section 69 mentioned in the preceding paragraph, the High Court has jurisdiction to determine whether PR seats have been properly allocated. Section 126 (1) goes further to provide that IEC can apply to the High Court to effect section 125.
19. It is this court’s considered view that the answer to the interpretation of Section 69 of the Constitution hinges around sub-section (5). It is therefore, apposite to quote the entire section verbatim. It states thus;
“ _(5) Parliament may make provision with respect to-_
_(a) the circumstances and manner in which and the conditions upon which any application may be made to the High Court for the determination of any question under this section; and_
_(b) the powers, practice and procedure of the High Court in relation to any such application,_
_but, subject to any provision in that behalf made by Parliament under this subsection, the practice and procedure of the High Court in relation to any such application shall be regulated by the Chief Justice.”_
This sub-section is clear that from the onset, the **Constitution** makes it clear that the implementation of Section 69 shall be through the promulgation of an Act of parliament. This point is buttressed further by the opening text of Section 125 of the Electoral Act itself that the powers conferred on the High Court therein are in accordance with section 69 of the Constitution.
20. Prior to the coming into existence of the Electoral Act, the Chief Justice made the Rules in the year 2000. Rule 14 of the said rules provides for the procedure of an application brought under Section 69 of the Constitution. These Rules, and Rule 14 in particular, seem to give credence to the argument that questions as to the membership of parliament can be made under the constitutional jurisdiction of this court. However, a closer scrutiny of Section 69 (5) of the Constitution and the advent of the Electoral Act may require of us to re-assess the issue. Section 69 (5) provides that the Rules made by the Chief Justice shall be subject to an Act of Parliament. This means that whatever the Rules made by the Chief Justice say pertaining to Section 69 of the Constitution, they have to be interpreted subject to what the Electoral Act says. For that reason, Rule 14 cannot be followed as it is inconsistent with the Electoral Act.
21. The decision that issues relating to section 69 of the Constitution should be through the predecessor to the Electoral Act (which was similar to the Electoral Act in many respects) had already been reached in the case of **Basotho National Party v The Principal Secretary Ministry of Law, Parliamentary and Constitutional Affairs and 30 others 6**. In this case, Cullinan CJ, with Molai J and Kheola J concurring, had this to say on the subject;
“… _the High Court’s powers in the matter, have been expressly_ _provided for by Parliament, namely that any such_ _question,_ _or any_ _matter ancillary to such question, can only be determined by the_ _High Court sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns, upon an election_ _petition.__”_
This court agrees with that decision in as far as it relates to the fact that section 69 of the Constitution is implemented by an Act of parliament.
22. Advocate Lephuthing referred this court to an Article by Professor Hoolo ‘Nyane titled **A** **CRITIQUE OF PROCEDURALISM IN THE
ADJUDICATION** **OF ELECTORAL** **DISPUTES IN** **LESOTHO 7** criticising the **BNP case 8** among others. Professor ‘Nyane in opining that the High Court in its constitutional jurisdiction could preside over elections disputed returns had this to say;
“ _The Hight Court of Lesotho is empowered by the Constitution to adjudicate the electoral petitions. The fact that a provision of the electoral statute… provides that the High Court shall be a Court of Disputed Returns should not be interpreted in a manner that undermines the Constitution.”_
23. While this court agrees with most parts of this article by Professor ‘Nyane, it does not agree that interpreting the Electoral Act to say that it confers powers to the High Court to hear disputed returns undermines the constitution. In fact, the Electoral Act upholds the Constitution. The very core of Professor ‘Nyane’s article and the critique on the High Court that it is overly following form over substance, can only be avoided through the Electoral Act. The Electoral Act prescribes that the procedure should be by way of a petition. Moreover, the Act provides for the relaxation of the strict rules of the law of evidence. Finally, according to professor ‘Nyane Electoral Act supports the inquisitorial approach as opposed to the adversarial one that we follow in our jurisdiction. In fact, Advocate Teele KC had rightly argued that under the constitutional jurisdiction, there is no provision for leading viva voce evidence and procedure is by way of Motion Proceedings. Indeed, in staying true to the nature and history of the disputed returns petition, Curlewis J.A in the South African case of **De Villiers v Louw 9** that was cited with approval by Cullinan C.J in the **BNP case** , said the following:
“… _it is well to bear in mind that a Court of law can have jurisdiction in connection with an election petition only in so far as jurisdiction has been conferred upon it by the Electoral Act, and that the power either of the court below or of this court to deal with an election petition in the first instance or on appeal, and the extent of the power, must be found within the four corners of the Act. The provisions of the Act clearly indicate that the trial by a court of law of an election petition cannot be regarded as a trial of any ordinary action before a Court, but as something special and distinct.”_
When the history (which has been expertly narrated by Professor ‘Nyane) that the disputes of election returns were originally the purview of parliament itself is considered and we accept that historically election returns did not follow a legalistic approach, such procedure cannot be achieved through motion proceedings and strict legal forms envisaged under the Rules. There is therefore no doubt in this court’s mind that reference to the High Court under section 69 of the Constitution means the High Court sitting to determine disputed returns under the Electoral Act. Furthermore, and again with reference to the history of disputed returns, the Constitution had to be specific that the High Court will have jurisdiction to hear disputed returns. By so saying, it was not necessarily saying in its constitutional jurisdiction. In the South African case of **Olufsen V Klisser** 10, which has been cited with approval in **Attorney General v Matlakeng and Anor 11** and in the **BNP case 12**, Harcourt A.J still in resonance with the history of the adjudication of disputed returns, puts it thus;
“… _Legislature, in transferring the supervision of elections from itself to the Courts, must be taken to have granted to the Court no more of its jurisdiction than is expressly conferred by the Act”_
24. It has been argued for the respondents that the election returns are not disputed and therefore this is not a matter for the court of disputed returns. However, section 125 (c) is clear that allocation of PR seats is the terrain of the High Court under the Electoral Act. This argument therefore stands to be dismissed on that ground alone.
**[C] CONCLUSION**
25. Having come to the conclusion that section 69 of the Constitution does not necessarily inherently confer constitutional jurisdiction on the High court directly but gives the High Court jurisdiction to hear disputed returns under the Electoral Act and that the determination on the question of allocation of PR seats is catered for under section 125 (c), there is no longer need to look into the other issues mentioned in paragraph **[14]** above. For that reason, therefore, the following order is made:
This matter should not have been instituted by way of Motion Proceedings following the Constitutional Litigation Rules. The matter is struck-off the roll of this court sitting in its Constitutional jurisdiction. It is accordingly ordered that it is to be instituted under the Electoral Act procedure.
There is no order as to costs
**_______________________**
**M. S. KOPO**
**JUDGE**
**I CONCUR_____________________**
**M. MAHASE**
**JUDGE**
**I CONCUR________________________**
**M. MAKHETHA**
**JUDGE**
**For 1****st****and 2****nd****Applicants: Adv. Letuka**
**For 3****rd****and 5****th****Applicants: Adv. Lephuthing**
**For 4****th****and 6****th****Applicants: Mr. Rasekoai**
**For 4****th****Respondent: Adv. Teele KC**
**For 13****th****Respondent: Adv. Molati**
1 Legal Notice No. 100 of 2022
2 [Act No. 14 of 2011](/akn/ls/act/2011/14)
3 The Constitution of Lesotho
4 Legal Notice No. 194 of 2000
5 [Act No. 15 of 2000](/akn/ls/act/2000/15)
6 CIV/APN/240/93
7 _<https://www.eisa.org/pdf/JAE17.2Nyane.pdf>_
8 Supra
9 (1930) AD 426
10 1959 (3) SA 351
11 CIV/APN/63/89
12 Supra
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