Prevoius Post Foundations in Kenya: A Simple Guide to Registration, Law and Purpose
Home > Defining Personal Status: A Landmark Step for Children in Kadhi’s Court Jurisdiction.
Some of the most important legal developments do not come from what the law says, but from what it finally understands.
In a recent High Court appeal: ASY VS ZZI [2024] eKLR, Civil Appeal No. E1383 of 2024 (High Court at Nairobi, Milimani Law Courts, Civil Appellate Division) (A.C. Mrima J.), the Court was asked to determine what seemed, at first glance, to be a straightforward challenge to a decision of the Kadhi’s Court. But beneath the appeal lay two deeper and unresolved questions:
What exactly is “personal status”? And more importantly, who has the authority to decide matters concerning children within that framework?
The answers, now firmly articulated in this judgment, may well shape Kadhi’s Court jurisprudence for years to come.
The appeal arose from a decision of the Kadhi’s Court involving disputes rooted in a marital relationship. Touching not only on the parties themselves, but also on issues of maintenance and custody of children.
The Appellant (the husband) challenged the Kadhi’s Court’s findings on several grounds, chief among them being jurisdiction. He argued, in essence, that matters concerning children, particularly custody, fell outside the scope of the Kadhi’s Court and properly belonged before the Children’s Court. Sky Advocates LLP acting for the Respondent advanced arguments to support that Kadhi’s Court indeed has jurisdiction to hear and determine Children’s matters in lieu of the Constitution of Kenya, Children’s Act,2022,Kadhi’s Court (Procedure and Practice)Rules,2020 and Islamic Law jurisprudence. What followed was not just a resolution of that dispute, but a careful judicial unpacking of the meaning of personal status.
In paragraphs 24 to 29 of the judgement, the Court does something both simple and profound, it redefines the lens.
Article 170(5) of the Constitution has often been narrowly understood to cover matters such as marriage, divorce, and inheritance but the term “personal status” ignored as if it is not there.
In paragraph 29, the Court firmly interprets personal status within a broader legal understanding, one that concerns the legal position of a person in relation to rights, duties, and obligations arising from family relationships. And here is the shift:
Matters such as maintenance and custody of children are not separate from personal status, they are part of it.
This is not just interpretation; it is clarification. It recognizes that family life cannot be artificially divided into neat legal compartments. The rights and responsibilities that define a parent do not exist outside personal status, they are expressions of it.
In that sense, the judgment does not stretch the law. It grounds it.
Once personal status is understood in this broader way, the jurisdiction question begins to answer itself.
In paragraphs 25 and 26, and culminating in paragraph 30, the Court addresses the tension between the Kadhi’s Court and the Children’s Court. The argument against jurisdiction rested heavily on the fact that the Constitution and section 5 of the Kadhi’s Courts Act do not explicitly mention “children” when defining the Kadhi’s Court’s mandate. But the Court resists a rigid reading.
Instead, it adopts a contextual approach: If matters relating to children, such as custody and maintenance, arise within the framework of personal status under Islamic law, then they fall within the jurisdiction of the Kadhi’s Court. This is a crucial point.
The absence of the word “children” in the statute does not amount to exclusion. The Court recognizes that jurisdiction is not determined by isolated words, but by the nature of the dispute as a whole. And in real life, family disputes do not arrive in fragments. They come as complete stories: marriage, breakdown, responsibility, care, and continuity. The law, as this judgment affirms, must be able to hear that story in full.
What emerges from this decision is stare decisis in motion, a clear judicial position that:
It is a development that brings coherence to an area that has long sat in quiet uncertainty.
So, what does this mean going forward? It means that:
Sometimes, the law evolves not by adding new words, but by giving deeper meaning to the ones already there. Here, “personal status” has found its voice, and in doing so, it has made room for children within it. And that changes everything!
By Swaleh K.Yusuf
Advocate of the High Court and Islamic Investment Consultant
We at Sky Advocates LLP pride ourselves in providing comprehensive legal services in both conventional law and Shariah law, with a focus on family law, succession, commercial and corporate matters, dispute resolution, and client centered solutions.
To discuss how a family trust may work for you, contact us below.
Email: [email protected]
Call or WhatsApp: 0705443999