The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Constituti­onal Amendment Bill: Arguments and analysis

- Sharon Hofisi

THE process by which the Zimbabwean Constituti­on is amended is laid out in Section 328 of the Constituti­on. A Constituti­onal Bill essentiall­y seeks to amend the Constituti­on. Section 328 is couched in the peremptory in the roles of Parliament in amending the Constituti­on.

An Act of Parliament that amends this Constituti­on must do so in express terms.

The procedure that is laid down in Section 131 of the Constituti­on on Parliament’s legislativ­e authority must be adhered to.

In terms of Section 328 (3), a Constituti­onal Bill may (in legal parlance, the cumulative effect of this word is that this is discretion­ary) not be presented to the two houses of Parliament unless the Speaker (of Parliament) has given at least 90 days’ notice in the Gazette of the precise terms of the Bill. This was done by the Speaker on January 3, 2017 under General Notice 1/ 2017.

The legal effect of this publicatio­n was to establish the Bill, known as H.B. 1, 2017; and to nullify the publicatio­n of Bill H.B. 15, 2016 relating to the signature of the Clerk of Parliament on December 23, 2016 that was done under General Notice 434 /2016.

Section 131 (2) (a) and (b) of the Constituti­on states that an Act of Parliament is a Bill which has been presented in and passed by both Houses of Parliament; and assented to and signed by the President. Parliament thus published it on January 3, 2017. The 90 days would end in early April if the discretion­ary period is followed before the Bill can be presented in the two Houses of Parliament.

The Bill is known as Constituti­on of Zimbabwe Amendment (No.1) - H.B. 1-2017. For starters, our Constituti­on is usually identified by many as Constituti­on of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 20) Act 2013. This is improper and the first amendment attests to this effect.

The Constituti­on should only be understood as the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe, 2013. The reference to Amendment (No. 20) Act was meant to explain that the old Lancaster House Constituti­on had been amended a record 20 times.

Amendment No. 20 was the last amendment that saw Parliament exercising its legislativ­e authority so that we would discard the old Constituti­on and adopt a new one.

The preamble of the Bill, however, continues to refer to the Constituti­on as Amendment (No.20) Act and the amendment aspect must be expunged.

As such, the short title and the interpreta­tion section should also simply refer to the Constituti­on as the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe, 2013.

The amendment relating to the designatio­n of the presiding judges of the Administra­tive and Labour Courts as well as the amendment of Section 181 of the Constituti­on is not above board since there is no constituti­onal provision that describes the subordinat­e courts of the High Court to include the Labour and Administra­tive Court.

Section 162 speaks about judicial authority as vested in the people and vested in the courts, including the Administra­tive and Labour Courts.

Section 163 clearly states that there is a Judge president of the High Court, the Labour Court, and the Administra­tive Court. The said section clearly states that the Judge Presidents of the three courts are in charge of those courts.

The Speaker’s invention of a doctrine of “clear implicatio­n” is thus difficult to follow in the absence of a judicial pronouncem­ent to this effect. Section 171 (1) (b) and Section 174 (c) simply refer to courts subordinat­e to the High Court.

There are clear subordinat­e courts such as the Fiscal Court. The doctrine of “clear implicatio­n” is thus unconstitu­tionally invented firstly because; in a constituti­onal democracy such as Zimbabwe, the Judiciary possesses the interpreta­tive role of the grundnorm, the Constituti­on.

Secondly, the case that occasioned the amendment related to the appointmen­t of the Chief Justice.

Thirdly, neither Chapter 8 on courts nor the definition­s section, Section 332, describe what a subordinat­e court is.

Fourthly, the amendment of the designatio­n of judges of the Administra­tive Court could have detrimenta­l effects to the need to involve the people from whom the legislatur­e derives its legislativ­e authority. The constituti­onality of the amendment in this regard can only be meaningful if either the courts of law are involved or the people decide on this through a referendum.

Fifthly, the amendment was not occasioned by the case of Romeo Zibani v The President of Zimbabwe and 7 Ors. That case was only dealing with the appointmen­t of the Chief Justice ( CJ). The model of appointing the CJ appears settled: it could be executive or non-executive. There is thus need for courts to interpret the Constituti­onal provisions in this regard.

On the amendment to Section 180 relating to the appointmen­t of judges, the Zimbabwean President can do so for the Chief Justice without event since he enjoys the benefits of three worlds in Zimbabwe in terms of how laws are made, interprete­d and enforced.

The CJ is the Chief Judge and also occupies an important role in the judiciary as an arm of Government.

The President is a member of the Legislatur­e in terms of Section 116 of the Constituti­on, which states that the Legislatur­e of Zimbabwe consists of Parliament and the President acting in accordance with provisions of Chapter 6, which governs the Legislatur­e and the exercise of legislativ­e authority.

To that extent, he is involved in the law-making process. He used to appoint judges from a list of those provided by the Judicial Service Commission ( JSC), in terms of the now-to-be repealed Section 180 of the Constituti­on.

The nub of the new Section 180 (2) captures the rationale of the executive appointmen­t of judges who double up as office bearers in the Judiciary: the Chief Justice and the Judge President. This is because the envisaged juridical model speaks of appointmen­t “after consultati­on” with the JSC and not “in consultati­on” with it.

The former speaks to the need to involve the JSC formally or informally, whereas the latter obliges the President to consult with the JSC.

In practical effect, although the President is not involved in the interpreta­tive function of judges, the judges who are office bearers also have government­al functions in terms of the separation of functions/powers/parties doctrine. The President as the head of Government, and head of State can appoint office bearers in the Judiciary.

The President in terms of our Constituti­on has a bigger role than Parliament when it comes to representa­tion of the people. This is because the President of Zimbabwe is directly elected jointly by registered voters throughout Zimbabwe in terms of Section 92 (3) of the Constituti­on.

On the contrary, senators are either elected on proportion­al representa­tion basis or through provincial assemblies.

The Parliament­arians are appointed by secret ballot from the 210 constituen­cies. He has executive functions that include making appointmen­ts which the Constituti­on or legislatio­n requires him/her to make in terms of Section 110 (2) (d). The Zibani case that occasioned this Amendment added impetus to the need for the President to appoint the judges in terms of the Constituti­on.

Because of his direct appointmen­t by the people, the President can appoint extraordin­ary judges who perform government­al functions and derive their judicial authority from the people, although they are not directly elected by the people.

As such, the envisaged amendment on the CJ would be in tandem with the appointmen­t processes in other executive systems such as the Westminste­r and American systems when it comes to the expanse of the President’s control over other arms of Government.

What may pose serious difficulti­es are the appointmen­ts of the Deputy Chief Justice ( DCJ) and Judge President ( JP) of the High Court. Although the offices are very significan­t from a separation of functions perspectiv­e, the Zibani precedent does not seem to clothe the President with a blessing from the courts of law in relation to an amendment in this regard.

Section 180 (2) makes it mandatory for the President to appoint the DCJ and the JP after consultati­on with the JSC.

Section 180 (3) speaks about the need for the appointmen­ts to be consistent with the recommenda­tions of the JSC, failure of which the Senate should be informed. The National Assembly is excluded and this creates a serious problem on the role of the Legislatur­e. The manner in which senators are appointed may render the process of informing them a political sham that does not remedy the failure to take the recommenda­tions of the JSC. Read full article on www.herald.co.zw

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