National Hospital Insurance Fund Management Board v Kenya Union of Commercial Food and Allied Workers Another Attorney General (Interested Party) (Petition E024of2024) 2025KESC37(KLR) (30May2025) (Judgment)
National Hospital Insurance Fund Management Board v Kenya Union of Commercial Food and Allied Workers Another Attorney General (Interested Party) (Petition E024of2024) 2025KESC37(KLR) (30May2025) (Judgment)
Commercial Food and Allied Workers & another; Attorney General (Interested
Party) (Petition E024 of 2024) [2025] KESC 37 (KLR) (30 May 2025) (Judgment)
Neutral citation: [2025] KESC 37 (KLR)
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF KENYA
PETITION E024 OF 2024
PM MWILU, DCJ & VP, MK IBRAHIM, SC WANJALA, N NDUNGU & I LENAOLA, SCJJ
MAY 30, 2025
BETWEEN
NATIONAL HOSPITAL INSURANCE FUND MANAGEMENT
BOARD ...................................................................................................... APPELLANT
AND
THE KENYA UNION OF COMMERCIAL FOOD AND ALLIED
WORKERS ...................................................................................... 1ST RESPONDENT
SALARIES AND REMUNERATION COMMISSION .............. 2ND RESPONDENT
AND
ATTORNEY GENERAL .......................................................... INTERESTED PARTY
(Being an Appeal from the Judgment of the Court of Appeal at Kisumu (A. Makhandia, J.
Mohammed & S. Kantai, JJ. A) delivered on 26th April 2024 in Civil Appeal No. 156 of 2016)
JUDGMENT
Representation
Mr. Colbert Ojiambo for the Appellant (ACORN Law Advocates LLP)
Mr. Benjamin Bogongo and Mr. Jairus Ondiegi for the 1st Respondent
(Benjamin Bogongo & Associates Advocates)
Mr. Patrick Barasa holding brief for Mr. Paul Nyamodi for the 2nd Respondent
(V.A. Nyamodi & Co. Advocates)
Mr. Oscar Eredi for the Interested Party
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(The Oce of the Attorney General)
A. Introduction
1. The Appeal dated 7th June, 2024 and led on 24th June 2024 is premised on Article 163(3) of the
Constitution of Kenya, Section 19(a) of the Supreme Court Act, Act No. 7 of 2011 and Rules 38, 39
& 40 of the Supreme Court Rules, 2020. The Appeal revolves around the question of whether the
Appellant’s, National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) management board fell under the mandate
of the 2nd Respondent, the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (the Commission) and whether
the Commission’s advice on the remuneration and benets of State ocers and Public Ocers under
Article 230(4) of the Constitution was binding on NHIF.
B. Background
2. On 4th July, 2012, the Commission published and issued guidelines to all public institutions through
Circular No. SRG/CG/Vol. Vol III to the eect that the public service would adopt a 4-year
review cycle applicable to all public service organizations with eect from 1st July, 2013; public
service organizations were to immediately commence their remuneration analysis, collective bargaining
negotiations and make proposals to the Commission for analysis and advice and forward their
submissions by 31st December, 2012; that all existing collective bargaining agreements (“CBA”) would
expire on 30th June, 2013 to allow for new CBAs with a 4-year review cycle; and that all public service
organizations were to submit their annual remuneration benets data by December 2012.
3. In December 2012, the Appellant, NHIF, requested an extension of the deadline for submitting
proposals for review of remuneration of its sta because it needed to conclude a CBA with the 1st
Respondent, Kenya Union of Commercial Food and Allied Workers (the Union), for the period of
1st September 2012 to 30th June 2013. Subsequently, on 1st November, 2013, the NHIF forwarded
the negotiated remuneration proposals for its unionisable sta to the Commission. Notably, these
proposals were the result of negotiations between the NHIF and the Union through a CBA for
the period 1st July 2013 - 30th June 2015, which negotiations were conducted without seeking the
Commission’s advice.
4. Viewing the information provided by the NHIF as insucient to analyse the proposals, the
Commission, by a letter dated 15th November, 2013, requested to be furnished with the NHIF’s extract
of approved budget estimates for 2013/2014, a copy of the last audited nancial statements and the
current source of funding for personal emoluments.
5. Upon receiving the said information, by a letter dated 10th December, 2013, the Commission informed
the NHIF that it could not advise on the remuneration and benets review for unionisable sta because
the Report of the Presidential Taskforce on Parastatals Reform on State Corporations was at the time
in the process of being implemented. Further, it requested the NHIF to resubmit the matter through
its parent Ministry.
6. On 27th January, 2014, the NHIF resubmitted the CBA for the period 1st July 2013 - 30th June 2015
along with a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Health which communicated no objection to the
proposals in the CBA, provided there would be no nancial implications to the National Treasury
in implementing the proposals. Subsequently, the Commission on 13th February 2014 held a meeting
to analyse the CBA. In rejecting that CBA, the Commission observed that it did not comply with
the guidelines issued on 4th July 2012, especially on the 4-year review cycle. It directed that the NHIF
instead retain the existing remuneration and benets structure for its employees.
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7. On 9th April, 2014 and 7th May, 2014, the NHIF and the Union held joint meetings to renegotiate the
proposed remuneration for the unionisable employees to comply with the Commission’s guidelines.
The renegotiated CBA that resulted from the joint meetings was forwarded to the Commission for
approval by a letter dated 15th May, 2014.
8. The Commission held a meeting on 3rd July, 2014 to consider the said CBA. Upon considering the law,
the economy’s ination rate, the NHIF’s source of funds (that is, its members’ contributions) and the
NHIF’s nancial statements, it did not approve the CBA. Instead, it issued advice in its letter dated
16th July 2014 in the following terms: a one-o 5% increase for 2013/2014 for the management sta;
a 5% annual increase for the unionisable sta for the period 2013-2017; unionisable sta allowances
were to be awarded as per the 2013/2017 CBA and the management would get commuter and medical
allowances as per table 5 of the said letter. It also communicated that the implementation of such
directions was subject to the availability of funds.
9. However, this advice was not acceptable to the Union, which insisted on the execution and strict
performance of the CBA it had negotiated with the NHIF. Further, it was of the opinion that the
NHIF and its employees did not fall within the purview of the Commission and therefore its advice
was inconsequential.
10. The NHIF declined to sign the renegotiated CBA and eected the remuneration structure as directed
by the Commission. Aggrieved, the Union reported a trade dispute to the Ministry of Labour and
Social Security Services upon which a conciliation process was initiated, it also called for a shop
stewards’ meeting and resolved to le the claim in court which action the NHIF deemed to be an
unfair labour practice and meant to paralyse it’s operations. In the meantime, the conciliator issued a
certicate of unresolved dispute owing to the Union’s insistence to proceed to court.
11. Within 4 days of being issued with the certicate of unresolved dispute, the Union then issued a
notice dated 27th April 2015 for a strike that was set to commence on 18th May 2015. The strike notice
was issued because, according to the Union, the NHIF had declined to sign the renegotiated CBA.
Subsequently, by a letter dated 15th May 2015, the Union extended the strike notice by another seven
days to facilitate execution of the renegotiated CBA. However, by a Court order dated 18th May 2015,
the Employment and Labour Relations Court (Wasilwa, J.) in Petition No. 40 of 2015 restrained the
NHIF’s unionisable sta from participating in the strike.
C. Litigation History
a. A declaration that the strike notice issued by the 1st Respondent (Union) on 27th April 2015
was unlawful.
b. An order restraining the 1st Respondent from calling or proceeding with a strike in the
circumstances.
c. A determination by the Court on whether the Appellant fell under the mandate, province
and statutory supervision of the 2nd Respondent (Commission) under the Salaries and
Remuneration Commission Act, Cap 412D of the Laws of Kenya (SRC Act).
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d. A declaration that the Appellant as constituted under the Act did not fall under the mandate
of the 2nd Respondent.
e. A declaration that the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (Remuneration and Benets of
State and Public Ocers) Regulations, 2013 (SRC Regulations) oend the intent and object
of the Labour Relations Act, Cap 233 of the Laws of Kenya.
f. A declaration that the Appellant was at liberty to conclude the CBA reached in July 2013 with
the 1st Respondent.
13. By a replying adavit sworn by its Secretary General, Mr. Boniface Kavuvi, the 1st Respondent,
while admitting the existence of the SRC Regulations, posited that the Commission’s circular did
not require the Appellant to negotiate a CBA and seek nal approval from the Commission before
implementation; and certainly not after a draft CBA had been prepared and presented for signing.
Rather, the Appellant was required to consult the Commission before the CBA negotiations as per
Regulation 18 of the SRC Regulations, 2012. He also urged that a contrary interpretation would
ostensibly violate Regulations 6, 9, 10 and 18 of the SRC Regulations.
14. He added that the Appellant violated the law by purporting to implement a CBA that had not been
signed and registered with the ELRC under Section 60 of the Labour Relations Act.
15. It was the 1st Respondent’s case that upon seeking the Appellant’s permission, it called a shop stewards’
meeting in the midst of the conciliation process after it became apparent that the Appellant was not
committed to the conciliation process. Further, the conciliator issued a referral letter dated 21st April
2015 and therefore, the 1st Respondent’s actions were within the law. It was only when the Appellant
failed to respond to the 1st Respondent’s letters on the CBA, that it issued a strike notice.
16. The 2nd Respondent, through a replying adavit sworn on 24th June 2016 by Nicholas Pkech Siwatom,
the Director, Remuneration Analysis, outlined its functions among which include advising the
Government, including parastatals and State corporations, on the remuneration and benets of their
ocers. He deposed that this mandate informs Regulation 18 of the SRC Regulations, 2012 which
provides that the management of a public service organization must rst seek the 2nd Respondent’s
advice before commencing any CBA negotiations. While the public service organizations may
negotiate CBAs, the 2nd Respondent’s role is to ensure that the same is compliant with Article 230(5)
(a) of the Constitution on ensuring the scal sustainability of the total public compensation bill.
18. The ELRC (Abuodha, J.) by a Judgment delivered on 18th March 2016, crystallized the following issues
for determination: whether the Appellant fell under the mandate of the Commission, whether the
SRC’s Regulations 2012 oend the spirit of collective bargaining as envisaged by ILO Conventions,
the Constitution and the Labour Relations Act, and whether the Appellant ought to conclude the CBA
reached in July 2013 with the 1st Respondent.
19. On whether the Appellant fell under the mandate of the 2nd Respondent, the ELRC held that the
Appellant was not subject to the direction of the 2nd Respondent because it was not a public oce, since
Parliament did not appropriate its funds for payment of the salaries and benets of the Appellant’s
sta. Neither was the Appellant’s employees’ remuneration drawn from the Consolidated Fund.
Furthermore, the Appellant drew its funding from its members’ contributions, which membership
was drawn from both the public and private sectors and as such did not constitute public funds.
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The ELRC also found that the Commission’s role concerning public ocers was purely advisory as
opposed to directly setting the remuneration thereof.
20. On whether the SRC Regulations 2012 oended the spirit of collective bargaining, the ELRC held
that according to Article 230(4) of the Constitution, the SRC Regulations only oered a guideline as
opposed to binding parties, especially where the resultant negotiations were within the Commission’s
recommended margin. Therefore, the said regulations contradicted the spirit of collective bargaining as
they allowed the Commission to dictate how the Appellant would participate in the CBA negotiations.
21. In the end, the Learned Judge made the following orders:
a. A declaration that the Appellant as constituted under the National Health Insurance Act Cap
255 of the Laws of Kenya (NHIF Act) did not fall under mandate of the Commission.
b. A declaration that the SRC Act and SRC Regulations in so far as they purported to confer
on the Commission jurisdiction to set or restrict remuneration and benets for public ocers
other than State ocers are inconsistent with the Constitution hence null and void to that
extent.
c. The insistence by Commission that its advice to the Appellant was binding was counter to
the principle of collective bargaining as envisaged under the ILO Convention on the Right
to Organize and Collective Bargaining, 1949 (No. 98) and by virtue of Article 2(6) of the
Constitution, unconstitutional.
d. A declaration that the Appellant was at liberty to conclude the CBA reached in July 2013 with
the 1st Respondent.
a. Whether the Appellant as statutorily constituted fell under the mandate of the 2nd Respondent;
b. Whether the ELRC usurped, downplayed and interfered with the 2nd Respondent’s
constitutional mandate; and
c. Whether the advice given by the 2nd Respondent under Article 230(4) of the Constitution was
binding.
23. The Commission argued that the Appellant’s employees were public ocers as provided for under
Section 2 of the Public Ocers Ethics Act, Cap 185B of the Laws of Kenya (POEA) as the Appellant’s
major source of funding was statutory fees from members’ contributions. These funds translated
into public funds under the Exchequer and Audit Act, Cap 412 of the Laws of Kenya. Further, the
Appellant’s employees discharged a public function and were public ocers in line with the decision
in Kenya Union of Domestic, Hotels, Education and Allied Workers (KUDHEHIA Workers) vs
Salaries and Remuneration Commission (Constitutional Application 294 of 2013) [2014] KEHC
8148 (KLR).
As such, any negotiation or CBA concerning their compensation was subject to the Commission’s
approval.
24. The Attorney General supported the Appeal adding that Articles 260 and 232 of the Constitution must
be read together so that the values and principles of public service as set out in Article 232(2) of the
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Constitution were understood and read to apply to all employees of State organs and State corporations.
Citing Section 2 of the State Corporations Act, Cap 446 of the Laws of Kenya, the Attorney General
stated that the National Health Insurance Fund (Fund) was a State Corporation, and that since the
State had a controlling stake in it, it followed that the Fund, as a State corporation, was a public entity
and its ocers, public ocers. Lastly, he submitted that as per Regulations 18(1), (2) and (3) of the
SRC Regulations, the Commission oers advice to State corporations, State organs and public service
entities, but it did not engage directly with the 1st Respondent since trade unions are neither in the
public service nor are they State oces or organs.
25. In a Judgment delivered on 26th April 2024, the Court of Appeal allowed the Appeal and set aside the
Judgment of the ELRC. On whether the Appellant as statutorily constituted fell under the mandate
of the 2nd Respondent, the Court of Appeal held that persons working in State corporations are
public ocers according to Article 260 of the Constitution. Since the Appellant was a body corporate
established under an Act of Parliament as a State Corporation, the Appellant was deemed a public
service institution and its ocials and employees were public ocers. Therefore, pursuant to Article
230(4)(b) as read together with Article 260 of the Constitution and Section 11 of the SRC Act, the
Commission had jurisdiction over the determination of remuneration and benets of the Appellant’s
employees.
26. Regarding whether the ELRC usurped, downplayed and interfered with the 2nd Respondent’s
constitutional mandate, the Court of Appeal held that, while the Appellant and the 1st Respondent
could negotiate the terms and conditions of a CBA, the Appellant was under an obligation to consult
the Commission before completing the negotiations. Therefore, in holding that the Commission’s
advice was not binding on the Appellant, the ELRC disregarded the Commission’s constitutional duty
to manage the country’s compensation bill and keep it scally sustainable.
27. As to whether the advice given by the Commission under Article 230(4) of the Constitution was
binding, the Court of Appeal relied on its decision in Teachers Service Commission (TSC) vs Kenya
Union of Teachers (KNUT), Kenya Union of Post Primary Education Teachers (KUPPET), Salaries
and Remuneration Commission (SRC) & Hon. Attorney General (Civil Appeal 196, 195 & 203 of
2015) [2015] KECA 239 (KLR) where it held that the Commission’s advice was binding on state
bodies and that holding otherwise would paralyse the Commission in discharging its constitutional
functions. And that the Constitution provides for matters with the eect and force of the law, including
advice from a constitutional body, and such advice is binding and capable of being enforced with
attendant consequences.
a. Interpreting Article 260 of the Constitution, particularly the meaning of a ‘public ocer’,
‘public oce’ and ‘public service’.
b. Failing to recognize that the Appellant’s employees were not directly remunerated from the
Consolidated Fund, and hence excluded from the 2nd Respondent’s mandate.
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d. Failing to distinguish between public servants and public ocers and nding that all public
servants were under the mandate of the 2nd Respondent contrary to Articles 260 & 230(4) of
the Constitution.
e. Holding that the 2nd Respondent’s advice was binding on the Appellant in negotiating the
CBA with the 1st Respondent.
ii. The Judgment of the Court of Appeal in Civil Appeal No. 156 of2016 delivered and dated
at Nairobi on 26th April, 2024 be set aside in its entirety, and in its place the judgment of the
ELRC dated 18th March, 2016 be upheld.
iii. Any other reliefs that this Honourable Court may deem t to grant.
D. Parties’ Submissions
a. Appellant’s Submissions
30. In its submissions dated 28th August 2024 and led on 27th September 2024, the Appellant condensed
the issues into two: whether the Appellant as constituted fell within the mandate of the Commission
and whether the Commission’s advice was binding on the Appellant.
31. On whether the Appellant fell within the mandate of the Commission, the Appellant relied on Article
260 of the Constitution that denes a public ocer as:
b. Any person, other than a State ocer, who holds a public oce.
A public oce, on its part, is dened as ‘an oce in the national government, a county
government or public service if the remuneration and benets of the oce are payable directly
from the Consolidated Fund or directly out of money provided by Parliament’.
32. The Appellant faulted the Court of Appeal for widening this denition to include all persons serving
the people of Kenya, and by parity of reasoning, holding that the Appellant’s employees were public
ocers. While the Constitution denes a State organ to mean a commission, oce, agency or other body
established under the Constitution, the Appellant maintained that it was not a State organ since it was
not a creature of the Constitution but of statute, so the Appellant posited; it also insisted that it was a
private entity. Moreover, it urged that, since the Appellant’s employees were not remunerated directly
from funds drawn from Parliament or the Consolidated Fund, they were not public ocers and not
under the mandate of the Commission. The Appellant also faulted the Court of Appeal for relying on
the denition of ‘public ocer’ as provided for in the Public Ocers Ethics Act (POEA) as opposed
to the Salaries Remuneration Commission Act (SRC Act) which defers to the more limited denition
provided for in the Constitution. On that account, the Appellant asserted, that since the meaning in the
Constitution varied from the one in the SRC Act, then the latter ought to have prevailed.
33. The Appellant further submitted that the Court of Appeal erred in holding that Article 206(1)(b)
of the Constitution empowers State organs to retain money received to defray expenses as empowered
by an Act of Parliament. According to the Appellant, Article 206 of the Constitution denes the
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Consolidated Fund and provides that money received and retained by a State organ for defraying
expenses, is not part of the Consolidated Fund. Likewise, that Section 35 of the repealed NHIF
Act provided that the Board would cause the preparation of revenue and expenditure estimates,
including payment of salaries, allowances and other charges for the Appellant’s sta, for approval by
the Appellant, while Section 36 provided that it was the Appellant in consultation with the Cabinet
Secretary, which would determine what sum of money to withdraw from the Fund for purposes of it’s
estimated expenses for any given nancial year. On that basis, the
Appellant faulted the Court of Appeal for holding that the salaries of the Appellant’s ocers were paid
from monies provided by Parliament, through the annual national budget fund, or funds retained by
the Appellant under Article 206(1)(b) of the Constitution.
35. On whether the Court has jurisdiction, the 1st Respondent submitted that the Appeal was properly
before the Court since it touches on the proper interpretation of Article 260 of the Constitution and
the role of the Commission with respect to public ocers and the public service, whose remuneration
is not drawn from the Consolidated Fund.
36. As regards whether the Appellant was in public service and its ocers’ public ocers, the 1st
Respondent disabused this notion and urged that the Appellant did not draw funds from the
Consolidated Fund or from funds authorized by Parliament. It stated that, while Section 15(1) of
the NHIF Act provided that the Fund received contributions from the residents of Kenya who had
attained the age of 18 years, Section 2 of the State Corporations Act placed the Appellant under
the category of Commercial State Corporations, that is, corporations that generate income through
various means other than from funding by the National Treasury.
37. Relying on Article 2(6) of the Constitution, the 1st Respondent asserted that the right to collective
bargaining is a fundamental constitutional human right and that Kenya had ratied the ILO
Convention on the Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining, 1949 (No. 98). It argued that Article
41(5) of the Constitution, which provides the right of collective bargaining, should be construed
liberally, dynamically and progressively as guided by Hon. Justice Isaac Lenaola, SCJ and Arnold
Ochieng’ in their book, “Constitutional Law, Doctrines and Litigation of Fundamental Rights and
Freedoms”.
38. For that reason, and considering the Commission’s constitutional and statutory mandate, the
Appellant submitted that a nding that the Appellant was under the jurisdiction of the Commission
would greatly impede on Article 41(5) of the Constitution. It would also translate to imposing terms on
employees contrary to Article 2 of the Constitution of Kenya and ILO Convention No. 98, since both
the negotiations and collective bargaining between the NHIF and the Union would be dependent on
the advice coming from the 2nd Respondent.
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39. By the same token, the 1st Respondent further argued that since the Appellant was not under the
jurisdiction of the Commission, it (the Commission) had no right or mandate to interrogate the
Appellant’s CBA negotiations. In addition, this would be contrary to ILO Convention No. 98 to
which Kenya is a signatory to it, as well as the report of the Committee of Experts on the Application
of Convention and Recommendations (2013) which provides that interference by the authorities in
CBA negotiations violates the principle of free and voluntary negotiations.
41. The 2nd Respondent submitted that the Appellant was a State Corporation since it was mandated to
collect statutory deductions from the public and to protect the interests of contributors to the Fund.
Although the Appellant could pay sta from the monies in the Fund under Sections 35 and 36 of the
NHIF Act, those funds were public funds under Section 2 of the Public Finance Management Act
(‘PFMA’) Cap 412A of the Laws of Kenya. Similarly, the Appellant’s sta were public ocers pursuant
to Article 260 of the Constitution and Section 2 of the POEA, and therefore, the 2nd Respondent’s
advice ought to have been sought with regard to the Appellant’s sta’s salaries and remuneration. In
this connection, the Appellant was bound by the 2nd Respondent’s guidelines issued via circular no.
SRG/CG/Vol. III dated 4th July 2012.
42. In crafting the guidelines in the circular, the 2nd Respondent submitted that it considered the
economy’s ination rate for the period, which ranged between 4%-5.5%. The 5% increment was
therefore in addition to the annual increment that the Appellant’s sta were entitled to, noting that
the sta’s salaries and allowances had not been reviewed for some time.
43. Upon considering the Appellant’s nancial statements, budgetary provisions and nancial projections
for the period under review, the 2nd Respondent determined that the proposals in the CBA were
unsustainable. It also noted that in arriving at the proposals in the CBA, the Appellant and the 1st
Respondent erroneously interpreted the monies collected by the Appellant as constituting its income
that could be used to fund its recurrent expenditure.
44. On whether the Appellant’s employees were in the public service and therefore subject to regulation
by the 2nd Respondent, the 2nd Respondent posited that the Appellant was a State corporation and a
public service institution, established under the NHIF Act. Further, the Appellant’s Board members
were drawn largely from the civil service and the Government, with the chairman of the Board being
appointed by the President and the Chief Executive Ocer being appointed by the Appellant subject
to the advice of the 2nd Respondent. The Appellant’s Board members’ remuneration was subject to the
consultation with the Minister in charge of health, while the Appellant’s accounts were audited by the
Auditor General with the report being submitted to the relevant Minister who would then transmit it
to Parliament. To this extent, therefore, the 2nd Respondent argued that the Appellant held the status
of a parastatal.
45. Furthermore, the 2nd Respondent disputed the Appellant’s rendition of Article 260 of the Constitution
and submitted that by virtue of the NHIF Act, the Appellant collected funds from the public under
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the direction of Parliament. In the totality of its submissions and further relying on this Court’s
interpretation of a ‘public ocer’ in the case of Fredrick Otieno Outa vs Jared Odoyo Okello & 4
Others, Section 2 of the POEA and the Exchequer and Audit Act, it was the 2nd Respondent case that
the Appellant’s employees were in public service and were public ocers.
46. On whether the 2nd Respondent’s advice was binding on the Appellant, the 2nd Respondent asserted
that its advice was binding under Article 259(11) of the Constitution which provides that where certain
functions are to be exercised under the Constitution on the advice, recommendation, consultation or
approval of another body, the said function can only be exercised upon obtaining the said advice,
recommendation, consultation or approval.
47. It further submitted stated that the issue of the binding nature of the advice given by a constitutional
commission was properly settled in the case of In the Matter of the Interim Independent Electoral
Commission (Applicant) (Constitutional Application No. 2 of 2011) [2011] KESC 1 (KLR) and the
persuasive decision of the Court of Appeal in Teachers Service Commission (TSC) vs Kenya Union
of Teachers (KNUT), Kenya Union of Post Primary Education Teachers (KUPPET), Salaries and
Remuneration Commission (SRC) & Hon. Attorney General (Supra).
48. Therefore, according to the Commission, its advice was binding on the Appellant in accordance
with Articles 230(4) and 259(1) of the Constitution and as was held in the case of Teachers Service
Commission (TSC) vs Kenya Union of Teachers (KNUT), Kenya Union of Post Primary Education
Teachers (KUPPET), Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) & Hon. Attorney General
(Supra). As such, the CBA renegotiated by the Appellant and the 1st Respondent, was void to the extent
that it did not incorporate the advice of the 2nd Respondent’s. Finally, the Commission submitted
that the ELRC in its Judgment had misapplied and misinterpreted the Constitution by holding that
its advice was not necessary and not binding in the CBA negotiations between the Appellant and the
1st Respondent.
50. In opposition to this Appeal, the Attorney General associated fully with the 2nd Respondent’s
submissions. The Attorney General also relied on submissions dated 9th September 2024 and led
on 20th September 2024 delineating the following issues for determination: whether the Fund was a
public body; and whether the Appellant’s employees were public servants and therefore subject to the
mandatory advice of the 2nd Respondent on increments and allowances.
51. On whether the Fund was a public body, it was submitted that the Appellant was a public body
and its ocers were public ocers, because it was a statutory public body established to perform a
public function; operated under the supervision of the Ministry of Health and the policy direction
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of the Cabinet Secretary for Health; the Minister in charge of Finance provided for its administration
expenses; some of the Appellant’s board members were appointed by the President; the Appellant was
established pursuant to Section 28 of the Exchequer and Audit Act and therefore was subject to the
provisions relating to the collection, issuance, payment and audit of public monies; the Appellant had
to comply with the nancial reporting requirements as provided for under the PFMA; and lastly, that
the Appellant collected funds from employees in both the private and public sectors with the singular
aim of providing healthcare insurance for Kenyans aligned with state provision to the right to health
as provided under Article 43 of the Constitution.
52. The Attorney General urged that courts have previously held that a public body is one that is
established to serve public functions. To this end, counsel relied on several cases including John Mining
Temoi & Another vs Governor of County of Bungoma & 17 Others [2014] eKLR, Harrison Mumia vs
Public Service Commission & 2 Others [2018] eKLR, and Republic vs Kenya National Examination
Council & 2 Others, Ex-parte Audrey Mbugua Ithibu Judicial Review Case No. 147 of 2013; [2014]
eKLR among others.
53. As regards whether the Appellant’s employees were public servants, counsel for the Attorney General
stated that they were indeed public servants by virtue of performing public functions, but they were
not civil servants since they were not employed by the Public Service Commission (PSC). In this
way, the Appellant and its employees fell squarely within the denitions of public oce and public
ocer as espoused in Article 260 of the Constitution. Furthermore, para. 6(5) of the First Schedule
of the Transitional Provisions of the Social Health Insurance Act, Act. No. 16 of 2023, (SHIA)
provides that the Appellant’s employees, not appointed under para.6(2), could opt to either retire from
public service or be redeployed within the public service because they were public ocers. Moreover,
employees of statutory bodies, like the Appellant’s employees, were in eect public servants and as
such, were in the public service.
E. Analysis
54. Having considered the pleadings, and the parties’ respective submissions, we nd that the issues arising
for determination before this Court are:
ii. Whether the Appellant fell under the jurisdiction of the 2nd Respondent.
iii. Whether the 2nd Respondent’s advice was binding on the Appellant.
56. Article 163(3) of the Constitution of Kenya provides for this Court’s jurisdiction to hear and determine
disputes relating to presidential elections, appellate jurisdiction to hear Appeals from the Court of
Appeal and any other court or tribunal as prescribed by national legislation. Clearly, the Appellant
has however failed to narrow down and specically cite the jurisdiction under which it approaches
this Court. We have on numerous occasions underscored that parties must specically identify which
jurisdiction of the Court they are invoking. See Sonko vs County Assembly of Nairobi City & 11
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Others (Petition 11 (E008) of 2022) [2022] KESC 76 (KLR), Njihia vs Kimani & Another (Civil
Application 3 of 2014) [2015] KESC 19 (KLR), Ibren vs Judges and Magistrates Vetting Board & 2
Others (Petition 19 of 2018) [2018] KESC 75 (KLR) and Warrakah & 2 Others vs Mbwana & 5 Others
(Petition 12 of 2018) [2018] KESC 76 (KLR).
57. We reiterated the reason for specifying the jurisdiction being invoked in the case of Ibren vs Judges and
Magistrates Vetting Board & 2 Others (Supra) in the following terms:
58. We reiterate our rationale in Sonko vs County Assembly of Nairobi City & 11 Others (Supra), “…
90. It can never be the role of the court to wander around in the maze of pleadings and averments to
ascertain by way ofBeli ination which of the two limbs of Article 163(4) a party intends to rely on.”
The instant case is even more unsightly viewing as the Appellant has purported to invoke almost all the
limbs of jurisdiction of this Court. It is even more perturbing that the Appellant cited Section 19(a) of
the Supreme Court Act, which provision was repealed by the Supreme Court Act, (Act No. 26 of 2022),
Cap 9B of the Laws of Kenya.
59. We have consistently discouraged such a lackadaisical approach to drafting pleadings, especially at the
apex court, where serious constitutional matters and matters of general public importance nd their
way. In the Sonko vs County Assembly of Nairobi City & 11 Others (Supra), we held as follows:
‘ 95. In an apex court, there is no room for indolent and lackadaisical approach to preparation
and presentation of cases. We expect nothing but precision, diligence and above all,
professionalism. It is for these reasons that the court has repeatedly cautioned in several
decisions such as Hermanus Phillipus Steyn v Giovanni Gnecchi-Ruscone, SC Applic No, 4
of 2012; [2013] eKLR, Daniel Kimani Njihia v Francis Mwangi Kimani & another [supra],
Suleiman Mwamlole Warrakah & 2 others v Mwamlole Tchappu Mbwana & 4 others [supra],
and National Rainbow Coalition Kenya (NARC Kenya) Independent Electoral & Boundaries
Commission; Tharaka Nithi County Assembly & 5 others (Interested Party), SC Petition 1 of
2021; [2022] KESC 6 (KLR) (Civ) (17 February 2022), against sloppiness in the invocation
of the court’s jurisdiction.’
60. So important is this requirement that in the case of Njihia vs Kimani & Another (Supra), we held that
the issue is not a mere procedural technicality, but one that goes to the very jurisdiction of this Court.
Going by the time-honored words of Nyarangi, JA in Owners of the Motor Vessel ‘Lillians’ vs Caltex
Oil Kenya Limited [1989] KLR 1, jurisdiction is everything, and without it, a court must immediately
down its tools. To lay credence to these words, this Court has in the past, struck out suits where the
parties failed to specify the jurisdiction they sought to invoke. See Njihia vs Kimani & Another (Supra)
and Warrakah & 2 Others vs Mbwana & 5 Others (Supra).
61. That said, looking at the matter before us, we appreciate that it raises weighty matters that must be
set to rest nally by this Court, that is, the denition of a public ocer and public oce, and the
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place of the 2nd Respondent in the negotiation of CBAs aecting this cadre. Considering this Court’s
hierarchical rank in the judicial system, we have a constitutional obligation to settle weighty matters
such as this and develop rich jurisprudence. Indeed, in the Sonko vs County Assembly of Nairobi City
& 11 Others (Supra), we held:
“ 99. By the very nature of its position in the hierarchy of courts, the Supreme
Court has a constitutional obligation to develop jurisprudence and guide
the courts below it on matters of general public interest, as well as on those
involving the interpretation and application of the Constitution. This duty
cannot be curtailed by a decision of any court, just the way Justices of this
court cannot be rendered superuous, or their work made perfunctory and
mechanical. The function of the court in resolving questions of interpretation
and application of the Constitution is to remove any doubts and ambiguities
in the law; mitigating hardships and correcting wrongs and not avoiding
them. This was succinctly expressed in the following passage in the concurrent
decision of Mutunga, CJ & President of the court, In Re the Speaker of the
Senate & another v Attorney-General & 4 others [Supra] (paragraph 156):
‘Each matter that comes [up] before the court must be seized upon
as an opportunity to provide high-yielding interpretive guidance on
the Constitution; and this must be done in a manner that advances
its purposes, gives eect to its intents, and illuminates its contents
[Constitution- making] does not end with its promulgation; it
continues with its interpretation. It is the duty of the court to
illuminate legal penumbras that Constitutions borne out of long-
drawn compromises, such as ours, tend to create.’
The following passage drawn from the court’s judgment in Jasbir Singh Rai & 3 others v. Tarlochan
Singh Rai Estate of & 4 others, [supra] is equally instructive;
62. This should not be read to mean that this Court has gone beyond its jurisdictional dictates, rather,
this is an opportunity for this Court to develop rich and quality jurisprudence and settle with
nality, sensitive and weighty constitutional matters in adherence to its constitutional obligation. In
consonance with our rationale in the case of Sonko vs County Assembly of Nairobi City & 11 Others
(Supra), this Court will, in appropriate cases such as the instant one seize the opportunity to settle the
law and meaningfully conclude a dispute. Similarly, in Aramat & Another vs Lempaka & 3 Others
(Petition 5 of 2014) [2014] KESC 21 (KLR), this Court stated that it shall rise to the occasion and
settle all unsettled issues touching on the interpretation and application of the Constitution noting that
such an exercise is necessary to complete the anchoring pillars of constitutional governance.
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63. We believe we have said enough to demonstrate that, despite the infractions on the non-citation of
the correct provision of the Constitution, this Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine the instant
Appeal.
i. Whether the Appellant fell under the jurisdiction of the 2nd Respondent
64. Article 230(4) of the Constitution sets out the powers and functions of the 2nd Respondent. It reads:
‘(4) The powers and functions of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission shall be to—
a. set and regularly review the remuneration and benets of all State ocers; and
b. advise the national and county governments on the remuneration and benets of all
other public ocers.’
65. In addition, the SRC Act that operationalizes the 2nd Respondent provides as follows with regard to
the 2nd Respondent’s functions:
a. inquire into and advise on the salaries and remuneration to be paid out of public funds;
b. keep under review all matters relating to the salaries and remuneration of public
ocers;
c. advise the national and county governments on the harmonization, equity and fairness
of remuneration for the attraction and retention of requisite skills in the public sector;
e. determine the cycle of salaries and remuneration review upon which Parliament may
allocate adequate funds for implementation;
h. perform such other functions as may be provided for by the Constitution or any other
written law.’
66. It follows, therefore, that from the afore-mentioned powers and functions, it is discernible that for the
Appellant and its sta to have come under the jurisdiction of the 2nd Respondent, the following criteria
ought to have been met:
a. That the Appellant and its sta were in the public sector; or
b. That the Appellant and its sta were either State ocers or public ocers; or
c. That the Appellant and its sta’s remuneration was paid out of public funds.
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67. Our understanding of the impasse before us is that the Appellant has urged that its sta were not public
ocers neither were they in public service, so as to bring them under the 2nd Respondent’s jurisdiction.
To settle that issue, it is incumbent upon us to delve into the denition of a public ocer.
68. The bulk of the contention appears to be borne by the denition of ‘public ocer’ and ‘public oce’
as appears in Article 260 of the Constitution. The denitions are worded as follows:
b. any person, other than a State Ocer, who holds a public oce;
69. We are alive to our decision in Outa & Another vs Okello & 5 Others (Supra) which has also featured
prominently in the submissions during the instant Appeal. It is notable that the majority nding on
the denition of a public ocer was within the context of electoral law. In her concurring opinion,
Lady Justice Njoki Ndungu took a more encompassing approach, in which she stated that a public
ocer should not be viewed against a narrow lens but with a more comprehensive outlook in terms
of Article 259 of the Constitution. We do, in the present context, agree. This entails considering the
related concepts evinced in statute, legal dictionaries and case law. In this connection, Black’s Law
Dictionary, 9th Edition, denes public oce as “public oce is a position whose occupant has legal
authority to exercise a government’s sovereign powers for a xed period” and public service as “a
service provided or facilitated by the government for the general public’s convenience and benet.
Government employment; work
performed for or on behalf of the government; broadly any work that serves the public good,
including government work and public interest.”
70. Against this backdrop, we note that various statutes dene ‘public ocer’ in the following manner:
a. The Public Officer Ethics Act states that "public ocer" means any ocer, employee or
member, including an unpaid, part- time or temporary ocer, employee or member, of any
of the following— (a) the Government or any department, service or undertaking of the
Government; (b) the National Assembly or the Parliamentary Service; (c) a local authority; (d)
any corporation, council, board, committee or other body which has power to act under and
for the purposes of any written law relating to local government, public health or undertakings
of public utility or otherwise to administer funds belonging to or granted by the Government
or money raised by rates, taxes or charges in pursuance of any such law; (e) a co-operative society
established under the Co-operative Societies Act (Cap. 490): Provided that this Act shall apply
to an ocer of a co-operative society within the meaning of that Act; (f) a public university;
(g) any other body prescribed by regulations for the purposes of this paragraph;
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b. The Interpretation and General Provisions Act, Cap 2 of the Laws of Kenya- “public oce”
means an oce or employment the holding or discharging of which by a person would
constitute that person a public ocer;
“ public ocer” means a person in the service of, or holding oce under, the
Government of Kenya, whether that service or oce is permanent or temporary, or
paid or unpaid;”
c. The Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act, Cap 65 of the Laws of Kenya- "public ocer"
means an ocer, employee or member of a public body, including one that is unpaid, part-
time or temporary;“
71. Further we adopt the approach taken by Lady Justice Njoki Ndungu in Outa (Supra) when she stated
as follows:
‘186. Thus, in arriving at the true meaning of ‘public ocer’ under the Constitution, then, and in line
with the provisions of Article 259, one must then fully examine the dierent concepts carried
therein. In the instant matter, four key questions in determining whether any person is a public
ocer, within the meaning of the Constitution, will apply:
b. Does that person receive remuneration or benets payable by the Consolidated fund
or directly by moneys provided by Parliament?
c. Does that person perform a function within a state organ or a state corporation?
d. Was the person holding public oce under the terms of the former Constitution?
If one or more of those questions were answered in the armative, then the person concerned
would rightly be considered within the proper meaning of the term ‘public ocer’.’
72. We are further fortied in this approach in view of para. 129 of the majority decision in the said Outa
matter, where we stated that one must consider the plurality of laws relating to public service, that is
the Constitution, statute and regulations, and stated:
‘129. In ascertaining who a public ocer is, we have to take into account the plurality of laws
emanating from the Constitution, statutory law, and regulations in relation to public service.’
73. If we are to apply the foregoing questions to the present set of facts to the Appellant and its employees,
what conclusion would we arrive at? The rst issue to ascertain is whether the person concerned is in an
oce in the national government, the county government or the public service. In addition, whether
the Appellant and its employees perform a function within a state organ or a state corporation. Strictly
speaking and going by the denition of a State organ, the Appellant’s employees are not in any State
organ and therefore, not State ocers. However, Chapter 13 of the Constitution makes provision for
the public service, where at it outlines the values and principles of public service, which in accordance
with Article 232(2) applies to public service in all State organs at both levels of government and all State
corporations. In this regard, we agree with the High Court’s (Lenaola, J (as he then was)) decision in
Kenya Union of Domestic, Hotels, Education and Allied Workers (KUDHEHIA Workers) vs Salaries
Remuneration Commission (Supra) where he stated that the principles of public service govern both
employees of State organs and those of State corporations. It follows, therefore, that State organs and
State corporations are in public service, and that their employees are public ocers.
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74. In the above context, we note that NHIF is a State corporation under Section 2 of the State
Corporations Act by virtue of being established under an Act of Parliament, the NHIF Act. By parity
of reasoning, therefore the Appellant is bound by the values and principles of public service under
Article 232. Additionally, in a bid to interpret the Constitution holistically as per the edicts of Article
259 of the Constitution, it then follows, that Article 260 should be read together with Article 232 of
the Constitution. If there is any doubt as to the same, the preamble in Article 260, forties our view
as it reads: ‘In this Constitution, unless the context requires otherwise-….’ Furthermore, we have, in
a myriad of cases, underscored the need and importance of reading the Constitution as a whole. See
Communications Commission of Kenya & 5 Others vs Royal Media Services & 5 Others (Petition 14,
14A, 14B & 14C of 2014 (Consolidated)) [2014] KESC 53 (KLR; and In the Matter of the Principle
of Gender Representation in the National Assembly and the Senate (Advisory Opinion Application
2 of 2012) [2012] KESC 5 (KLR). For instance, in Law Society of Kenya vs Attorney General & 4
Others (Petition 45 of 2019) [2023] KESC 19 (KLR) we pronounced ourselves as follows:
‘46. The concept of holistic interpretation of the Constitution was explained in In the Matter of
Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, SC Reference No 1 of 2012; [2014] eKLR,
by the court as follows:
47. To construe the import and tenor of any provision of the Constitution, the entire Constitution
has to be read as an integrated whole, because the Constitution embodies certain fundamental
values and principles which require that its provisions be construed broadly, liberally and
purposively to give eect to those values and principles. Where words used in any provision
of the Constitution are precise and unambiguous then they must be given their natural and
ordinary meaning. The words themselves alone in many situations declare the intention of the
framers because, to borrow the words of Burton, J in Warburton v Loveland, (1832) 2 D & Cl
480, the language used “speak the intention of the legislature.”
48. Those values and principles reect our historical and political realities and the people’s
aspirations for a democratic State, built on the rule of law and respect for human rights.
In reading the Constitution holistically, we must conclude that the Fund, being a State corporation, is
in the public service and therefore, its employees who discharge their duties under the umbrella of a
State corporation would be ocers in the public service. Further, Regulation 6(5) of the First Schedule
of the SHIA, which repealed the NHIF Act, provides that the Appellant’s employees not employed
under SHIA could either opt to retire from public service or be deployed elsewhere within the public
service. The obvious conclusion to be made then, in answer to the rst issue is that they are ocers
working within the public service.
75. We turn now to the second question as to whether the Appellant and its employees receive funds
or remuneration or benets payable by the Consolidated fund or directly by moneys provided by
Parliament. We note that 1st Respondent argued that the funds the Appellant handled were sourced
from the contributions of its members, some of whom are not in public service, and therefore, did not
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constitute public funds. Is this indeed the case? Section 2 of the Public Audit Act, Cap 412B of the
Laws of Kenya, denes ‘public funds’ as:
‘(a) all money that comes into possession of, or is distributed by, a State organ including the
national or county governments and intergovernmental entities and money raised by a private
body under statutory authority;
(b) money held by State organ or public entities in trust for third parties and any money that can
generate liability for the government;’
Furthermore, the aforementioned Act denes a ‘public entity’ as ‘includes any department or agency
of the government and any authority, body or other entity declared to be a government entity under
the Public Finance Management Act (Cap. 412A)’.
76. Similarly, Section 2 of the Exchequer and Audit Act, Cap 412 of the Laws of Kenya, denes “public
moneys” to include:
‘(a) revenue;
(b) any trust or other moneys held, whether temporarily or otherwise, by an ocer in his ocial
capacity, either alone or jointly with any other person, whether an ocer or not;’
Correspondingly, in the aforementioned Act, an “ocer” is dened as ‘any person in the
employment of the Government.’
77. It is also noteworthy that Section 28 of the NHIF Act provided that the Fund would be deemed
to be a fund established under Section 28 of the Exchequer and Audit Act which section is under
Part VI (Audit of Accounts of Local Authorities). Section 28 of the NHIF Act proceeded to state
that the Fund was, therefore, subject to Part V of the Exchequer and Audit Act (Audit of Public
Accounts and Protection of Public Property). Notably, Parts V and VI of the Exchequer and Audit
Act were subsequently repealed in 2003 by the Public Audit Act. The Public Audit Act, on its part, was
enacted to provide for the audit of government, State corporations and local authorities to provide for
economy, eciency and eectiveness, including providing for certain matters relating to the Controller
and Auditor-General and the Kenya National Audit Oce. In both cases, that is the audit of local
authorities and State corporations under the Public Audit Act, the audit was undertaken by the
Controller and Auditor General. The resultant report was then submitted to the Minister responsible
for Finance and subsequently tabled before the National Assembly. Evidently, and in view of having
the Fund’s accounts audited under the various legislation regimes that ideally deal with public property
and public funds, the Legislature intended for the Fund’s members’ contributions to constitute public
funds.
‘(a) all money that comes into possession of, or is distributed by, a national government entity and
money raised by a private body where it is doing so under statutory authority; and
(b) money held by national government entities in trust for third parties and any money that can
generate liability for the Government;’
79. Correspondingly, Section 4(1) of the PFMA empowers the Cabinet Secretary for matters relating to
nance to declare, by publishing in the Kenya Gazette, a State corporation, authority or body whose
functions fall under the national government, to be a national government entity for the purposes of
the Act. Section 4(4) also empowers the Cabinet Secretary to publish when a national government
entity so declared ceases being one. Likewise, Regulation 211 of the Public Finance Management
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(National Government) Regulations categorises these national government entities based on whether
they are State organs, national Government owned enterprises, regulatory agencies among others.
Annexed to the aforementioned Regulations is an explanatory memorandum which provides the
purpose of the Regulations to be, inter alia:
‘(i) ‘to harmonize and standardize their application throughout government service in controlling
and managing the nances;
ii. to set out a standardized nancial management system for use in Government service which is
capable of producing accurate and reliable accounts free from errors, fraud and which will be
useful in management decisions and statutory reporting;
iii. to provide for the conduct of scal relations between the national and county governments;
and
iv. to ensure accountability, transparency and the eective, economic and ecient collection and
utilization of public resources.’
80. We note that the National Health Insurance Fund was declared a national Government entity
by Legal Notice No. 33 of 2015 contained in Kenya Gazette Supplement No. 31 published on
20th March 2015, under Schedule 4, category National Government Entities (Executive Agencies,
Research Institutions, Public Universities, Public Tertiary Education and Training Institutions,
National Referral Health Facilities, Boards and Commissions (Financed through the Exchequer),
Fund Management Corporations and any other Entity to Perform any other Public Functions. While
this categorization and designation occurred in 2015, we understand the same advanced the intention
of the Legislature to have established the Fund for purposes of, among other things, handling public
money.
81. As observed elsewhere in this decision, the Fund’s accounts were initially subject to the Exchequer and
Audit Act and later, to the Public Audit Act. Subsequently, Section 37 of the NHIF Act provided
that the Appellant’s accounts would be audited in accordance with the PFMA and the Public Audit
Act. The preamble of the PFMA reads that it was enacted to provide for the eective management of
public nances by the national and county governments; the oversight responsibility of Parliament
and county assemblies; the dierent responsibilities of government entities and other bodies, and for
connected purposes. The Public Audit Act’s preamble reads that it is a statute enacted to provide for the
functions of the oce of the Auditor-General in accordance with the Constitution, and for connected
purposes. This then raises the query as to why a private entity, as posited by the Appellant, would have
the Auditor General audit its accounts unless it was a public entity?
82. The PFMA, in particular, sets out intricately the obligations of State corporations and accounting
ocers of national government entities, like the Fund. For instance, Section 12(2)(j) of the PFMA
empowers the National Treasury to monitor the nancial performance of State corporations. Section
68 places an obligation on a national government entity’s accounting ocer to be accountable to the
National Assembly for ensuring that the entity’s resources are used lawfully, eectively, eciently,
economically and transparently. Section 68(2) of the PFMA proceeds to set out the factors that
the accounting ocer must consider including, preparing and submitting estimates of expenditure
and revenue to the Cabinet Secretary responsible for the State corporation for approval. Similarly, it
provides that a national government entity’s nancial statements for a given nancial year shall be
forwarded to the national Treasury. Part III of the PFMA, specically Section 86 thereof, provides that
a State corporation shall be established or dissolved with the prior approval of the Cabinet Secretary
for matters relating to nance. The Cabinet Secretary is also tasked with monitoring the nancial
performance of a State corporation and government-linked corporations under Section 88 of the
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PFMA. Further, the Cabinet Secretary is tasked under Section 88(2) of the PFMA to analyse the
nancial and other reports of a State corporation, report to the Cabinet and propose measures that
can improve a State corporation’s nancial performance. These are just a few of the provisions that
bound the Appellant in terms of its nancial reporting. The only logical conclusion to be drawn from
the foregoing is that the Appellant was required, under statute, to adopt these reporting standards by
virtue of handling public funds and being in the public service.
83. The foregoing settles several issues; Firstly, the Fund discharged public functions and was therefore,
ostensibly, in public service. Secondly, the Fund was a national government entity which explains why
the nancial reporting had to be in conformity with the PFMA and the Public Audit Act. It, therefore,
was not a private entity. Thirdly, under the PFMA, the Fund handled public money since the Fund’s
members remitted their contributions to it. In addition, it handled public funds under the Public Audit
Act since the Fund, being a national government entity, held the funds in trust for third parties, its
members. Similarly, under the Exchequer and Audit Act, the Fund handles public money by virtue of
being a national government entity that collected contributions from the public.
84. Moreover, a reading of the NHIF Act indicates that the Appellant collected contributions from the
Fund’s members. The Appellant held these monies for the purposes outlined in the NHIF Act,
including, but not limited to, paying out the members’ benets. Out of these contributions, the
Appellant’s expenses were met and its members’ needs were met. Specically, Section 36 of the NHIF
Act provides that the expenses for administering the Fund would, in consultation with the Cabinet
Secretary, be paid out of it (the Fund) while Section 35 of the NHIF Act provides for the annual
estimates of the Appellant's revenue and expenditure, which the Appellant would approve. These
monies no doubt came into the Appellant’s hands by virtue of the NHIF Act. In the circumstances, we
nd and hold that the Appellant handles public funds and as such, fell squarely within public service,
and its employees, by parity of reasoning, were public ocers.
85. As was stated earlier, in Outa (supra,) we stated that in ascertaining who a public ocer is, a court
ought to take into account the plurality of laws emanating from the Constitution, statutory law, and
regulations in relation to public service. We would add that the intersectionality with other public
bodies would also make a good indicator of the public service character of a body or person. In the
instant matter we would add that not only does the very title and nature of the Appellant speak to a
public character, but the interplay between the Appellant and other actors within the government is
so clear, that we cannot reasonably justify arriving at a dierent conclusion. For instance, according
to the NHIF Act:
b. the Appellant is constituted by persons drawn largely from public service, including but not
limited to, the Principal Secretaries for health and nance, two persons nominated by the
Council of County Governors who are not Governors themselves, and 2 ocers (who are not
public ocers) appointed by the Cabinet Secretary,
c. the Appellant advises the Cabinet Secretary (for health) on matters relating to national health
insurance;
d. the Appellant can only charge its immovable property subject to acquiring the approval of the
Cabinet Secretary;
f. the Cabinet Secretary, in consultation with the Appellant, may make regulations for
registration of members to the Fund;
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among other areas as listed in the NHIF Act and the PFMA.
86. Considering the specic provisions of the NHIF Act, Sections 1A,2,5 and 15(1), of the NHIF Act
provide that contributions to the Fund are mandatory, while Section 18 was a penal provision for
failure to remit or for late submission of contributions. Section 15(2A) of the NHIF Act provided
that an employer, other than the national government or county government, would be exempt from
paying a matching contribution equal to the employee’s deduction where the employer had in place
private health insurance for its employees whose benets were equal or better than what the Fund
oered. Section 22(5) proceeded to delineate the limits of what the Fund would cater for and the extent
to which private insurance would be applied. Clearly, the Fund and private insurance were separate
and distinct, and the Fund could not reasonably be understood to be a private entity as advanced by
the Appellant.
87. We are clear in our minds that the provisions as captured above and in the NHIF Act, were included
because it was the intention of the Legislature that the Appellant ought to be regarded as a public oce,
oering a public service, and its employees, public servants. We so hold.
88. We hasten to add that we are alive to the fact that the NHIF Act was repealed by SHIA. That said, we
note that not only does SHIA bear a striking commonality with the NHIF Act in terms of the majority
of the provisions, but Rule 3 of the First Schedule thereof which bears the transitional provisions,
stipulates that the Social Health Authority (SHA) shall absorb all the rights, powers, liabilities and
duties that vested with the Appellant, including all actions, suits or legal proceedings pending. To that
extent, we expect that no diculty will arise from the fact that the Appellant is now defunct.
iii) Whether the 2nd Respondent’s advice was binding on the Appellant?
89. Having established that indeed the Appellant is in the Public Service and its employees, public ocers,
then we can now address ourselves to the only outstanding issue, that is, whether the 2nd Respondent’s
advice was binding on the Appellant. The Appellant and 1st Respondent contended that the 2nd
Respondent’s advice was not binding on the Appellant, while the 2nd Respondent and Attorney
General advanced a contrary argument. The ELRC held that the decision of the 2nd respondent was
only advisory while the Court of Appeal was of the opinion that it was binding.
90. In addition to the 2nd Respondent’s constitutional mandate as set out elsewhere in this judgment, it is
equally guided by the following principles:
‘230.
5.) In performing its functions, the Commission shall take the following principles into
account—
a. the need to ensure that the total public compensation bill is scally sustainable;
b. the need to ensure that the public services are able to attract and retain the skills
required to execute their functions;
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consultation with, another person, the function may be performed or the power exercised only
on that advice, recommendation, with that approval or consent, or after that consultation,
except to the extent that this Constitution provides otherwise.’
92. Further, being a constitutional commission under Chapter 15 of the Constitution, the 2nd Respondent
is bound by the objectives set out in Article 249 of the Constitution. They are:
‘249.
(1) The objects of the commissions and the independent oces are to—
b. secure the observance by all State organs of democratic values and principles;
and
c. promote constitutionalism.’
93. In addition to the 2nd Respondent’s powers and functions as set out in the SRC Act which have been set
out elsewhere in this decision, the SRC Regulations 2013 provide for the procedure for the submission,
review and advise on the remuneration and benets of State and public ocers. Regulation 12 lists
the factors to be considered when communicating advice on the remuneration of public ocers.
They include: legal, social, economic and environmental issues; results of job evaluation, performance,
productivity and market studies; market rates from the result of comparative market surveys; CBAs;
cost of employment against the organization’s capacity to pay; salary structures in the public service;
equity and competitiveness among other factors. Before the 4-year-cycle review is conducted, the 2nd
Respondent is tasked under Regulation 5 to conduct a study that will establish the labour market
eciency and dynamics; prevailing economic situation; and a comprehensive job evaluation. This
study informs the basis for review. The review is then communicated to the Cabinet Secretary
responsible for matters relating to nance, the Judicial Service Commission, the Parliamentary Service
Commission and the National and County Governments for inclusion in the subsequent budgetary
estimates. The review is then implemented by Parliament in phases depending on the budgetary
allocations approved by Parliament.
94. Therefore, before rendering its advice on the remuneration and allowance of public ocers, the 2nd
Respondent is required by the law to engage in a rigorous exercise that determines the suitability of the
proposed remuneration and allowances all in a bid to ensure the country’s scal health is sustainable.
It would be absurd to have the 2nd Respondent, vested with ensuring the scal health of our country,
demoted to a mere advice-minting body.
95. In the case of Muthuuri & 4 Others vs Attorney General & 2 Others (Petition 15 (E022) of 2021)
[2023] KESC 52 (KLR), we upheld the Court of Appeal’s decision in Teachers Service Commission
(TSC) vs Kenya Union of Teachers (KNUT), Kenya Union of Post Primary Education Teachers
(KUPPET), Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) & Hon. Attorney General (Supra) and
held that, according to Article 259(11) of the Constitution, the National Police Service Commission had
to seek the advice of the 2nd Respondent herein before determining the remuneration and benets of
the National Police Service, which advice was binding. Similarly, having established that the Appellant
was in public service and was under the jurisdiction of the 2nd Respondent, it follows that the 2nd
Respondent’s advice was binding on the Appellant.
96. The rationale is rather apparent since the 2nd Respondent cannot reasonably discharge its
constitutional obligations if its advice were merely a suggestion that one may opt to adhere to or not.
Specically, the 2nd Respondent is tasked with ensuring that the total public compensation bill is scally
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sustainable, and this cannot reasonably be achieved without the attendant force of law. Indeed, the
ELRC noted in para. 35 of its judgment that the 2nd Respondent was formed to address the disparities
in wages and salaries in public service, and the amount of revenue the Government was spending on
the public wage bill at the expense of development and other essential programmes. As rightly held by
the Court of Appeal in the Teachers Service Commission Case, a contrary nding would constitute
going back to the pre-2010 Constitution era which would defeat the transformative constitutional
dispensation we are under.
97. We are further fortied in this nding in view of the composition of the 2nd Respondent which is drawn
from persons in the public service appointed by the President, which denotes that its advice should
be given high premium.
98. Further, in The Matter of the Interim Independent Electoral Commission (Applicant)
(Constitutional Application 2 of 2011) [2011] KESC 1 (KLR), faced with determining whether its
advisory opinion is binding, this Court held that given the fact that an advisory opinion aects the
legal, policy, political, social and economic landscape in Kenya, it would be inappropriate to hold that
an advisory opinion is not binding. By the same token, the advice from the 2nd Respondent aects the
economic, scal and even social landscape of the country and it would be remiss to hold that its advice
is merely advice, that may be adhered to or not.
99. By way of distinction, In the Matter of Council of Governors & 47 Others (Reference 3 of 2019)
[2020] KESC 65 (KLR), we appreciated that the impugned recommendation emanated from a
constitutional commission (Commission for Revenue Allocation) and as such, its recommendation
was not a suggestion. However, Article 218(2) of the Constitution specically provided that Parliament
can deviate from the Commission of Revenue Allocation’s recommendation with reasons and as such,
the said recommendation was not binding.
100. However, in the instant case, there is no proviso barring the binding force of the 2nd Respondent’s
advice. If anything, Regulation 21 of the SRC Regulations, 2013 provides that the 2nd Respondent’s
advice concerning the remuneration and benets of all other public ocers will hold and will only
be varied under the provisions of Article 259(11) of the Constitution. Therefore, from our exposition
hereinabove, there cannot be any other rational conclusion than that the advice of the 2nd Respondent
was binding.
101. As to the exact point in time when the Appellant was required to obtain the 2nd Respondent’s advice,
the relevant portion of the SRC Regulations, 2013 provides as follows:
3. Where the collective bargaining process referred to in paragraph (2) is successful, the
management shall, before the signing of the agreement, conrm the scal sustainability
of the negotiated package with the Commission.’
In this context, Rule 2 associates itself with the denition of public oce as provided under Article 260
of the Constitution while ‘public service organization as ‘a State organ, a state corporation or national
or county government entity and includes any organization in the public service established by law’.
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In this regard, it is manifestly evident that the Appellant was under a statutory duty to seek the 2nd
Respondent’s advice prior to entering any CBA.
102. It follows therefore, and we agree with the Court of Appeal, that the advice of the 2nd Respondent was
binding upon the Appellant. In addition, the Appellant ought to have sought the 2nd Respondent’s
advice before completing the CBA negotiations with the 1st Respondent. It therefore follows, that any
CBA entered between the Appellant and the 1st Respondent, absent the advice and approval of the 2nd
Respondent prior to entering the said CBA, was of no legal consequence.
104. Bearing in mind the circumstances of the matter at hand and the principles on the award of costs
enunciated in Jasbir Singh Rai & 3 Others vs Tarlochan Singh Rai Estate of & 4 Others, (Petition 4
of 2012) [2014] KESC 31 (KLR, we nd that due to the public interest nature of this matter, each
party should bear its costs.
FINAL ORDERS:
105. In the end, we issue the following orders:
a. The Appeal dated 7th June 2024 and led on 24th June 2024 is hereby dismissed.
b. The Judgment of the Court of Appeal delivered on 26th April 2024 is hereby armed.
d. We hereby direct that the sum of Kshs.6,000 deposited as security for costs upon lodging of
this Appeal be refunded to the Appellant.
Orders accordingly.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 30TH DAY OF MAY, 2025.
………………………………………………………….
PM MWILU
DEPUTY CHIEF JUSTICE & VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME COURT
……………………………………………… ………………………………………….
M.K. IBRAHIM JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
…………………………………………. …………………………………………….
S.C. WANJALA JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
…………………………………………. …………………………………………….
NJOKI NDUNGU JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
…………………………………………. …………………………………………….
I. LENAOLA JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
I certify that this is a true copy of the original.
REGISTRAR,
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SUPREME COURT OF KENYA.
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