Sammy chesumbai Law Firm and Serem advocates company.

Sammy chesumbai Law Firm and Serem advocates company. This is our fully legal acredited private company whereby it sharpens the lawyers into real vibrancy

11/07/2025

Can your WhatsApp Chats, text messages, audio recordings and videos be used in Court?

Yes — under Kenyan law, WhatsApp chats, text messages, audio recordings, videos, and other electronic communications can be admitted as evidence in court, but only if certain strict legal conditions are met.

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✅ 1. Legality under the Evidence Act

Section 78A of the Kenya Evidence Act explicitly provides that electronic messages and digital material shall be admissible in any legal proceedings, and it does not matter if they are not in their original form .

However, when the court weights the evidence, it must consider:

How the evidence was created, stored, or transmitted,

How its integrity was preserved,

How the sender was identified, and

Any other relevant factors .

Section 106B, which governs electronic records (including outputs like screenshots or printouts), states that such records are admissible as documents if certain conditions are fulfilled:

1. They were produced during regular use of the computer/device by someone in lawful control.

2. Data was regularly fed into the system in the course of ordinary business.

3. The device operated properly, or any malfunction did not affect the record’s accuracy.

4. The record faithfully reproduces the data fed into the system .

A certificate of electronic evidence must also be provided, signed by a person responsible for the system or its data. The certificate should detail how the record was produced, the devices used, the relevant technical conditions, and compliance with the above requirements .

🤝 2. Application to WhatsApp Chats, Audio, and Video

Courts have confirmed that WhatsApp messages fall under both Section 78A and 106B. But without a valid certificate, they cannot be admitted—even if screenshots or printouts are provided. In one case, the absence of a certificate led to the exclusion of WhatsApp messages altogether .

Even if a certificate is provided, courts scrutinize whether:

the messages’ source (e.g. phone, SIM) is authentic;

the chain of custody is unbroken;

the integrity of the data is verifiable;

and any disputes over sender identity have been addressed .

Audio recordings or videos shared through WhatsApp can also be admissible if the same legal requirements are met, including device integrity and certification. But again, courts are cautious due to risks of tampering or manipulation.

Additional Considerations

Privacy and legality of obtaining data: Although Kenya doesn’t generally prohibit using one’s own messages in court, other statutes such as the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act (2018/2020) may make unauthorized access or tampering a criminal offence if recorded without consent or by hacking.

Lack of original device: Courts may not accept exported chat logs or screenshots alone—possession and certification of the original device (e.g. phone) increases admissibility significantly .

Foreign cases (e.g. UK) likewise highlight the need for authentication and chain of custody, and note that screenshots alone may not convince judges without formal statements or affidavits.

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✔️ Practical Advice

1. If you plan to rely on WhatsApp or similar evidence, retain the original device.

2. Prepare or obtain a proper certificate of electronic evidence, detailing:

how and when the data was captured,

what device(s) were involved,

how integrity was maintained,

and signed by a responsible person.

3. Document the chain of events and transmission to show authenticity.

4. Engage a legal professional early, preferably with experience in digital evidence or cybercrime, to ensure full compliance.

10/07/2025

📜 Kenya Law on Inheritance: Baby Mama or Girlfriend

1. Living with a man (“come-we-stay”) does not automatically make you a wife in law.

Unless you solemnized the union under customary law, statutory law, or Islamic marriage and it’s recognized, you are not considered a legal spouse for inheritance under the Law of Succession Act (Cap 160).

2. Having his child does not give you rights to his estate as a partner.

✅ Your child has full inheritance rights under the Constitution and the Law of Succession Act.

❌ But as the mother (“baby mama”), you only benefit if:

He made a valid will naming you as a beneficiary.

Or you prove to the court that you were a dependent of the deceased (Section 29 of the Law of Succession Act).

3. Standing by him for years doesn’t count legally unless there’s marriage.

Kenyan law does not recognize “common law marriage” or cohabitation as automatically conferring spousal rights.

⚖️ Key Legal Provisions

✅ Law of Succession Act – Cap 160:

Defines a “spouse” as someone married under any recognized form of marriage (customary, Christian, Islamic, civil).

A “dependent” includes wives, children, parents, and anyone the deceased was maintaining immediately before death.

✅ Constitution of Kenya 2010 – Article 45(2):

Only recognizes unions where free consent to marriage exists under Kenyan law.

09/07/2025

Many people in Kenya misunderstand what “Next of Kin” really means.

👉 Under Kenyan law, being listed as a Next of Kin does NOT automatically make you the heir to someone’s property, money, or assets when they die. The term Next of Kin is mostly used:

For emergency contact purposes (e.g., hospital records, workplace forms, bank accounts).

To notify you about the person’s situation (e.g., illness, death).

To help identify the deceased’s family during succession.

✅ Inheritance in Kenya is governed by the Law of Succession Act (Cap 160). The property of a deceased person is distributed according to:

1. A valid Will (if they wrote one).

2. Intestate succession (if they died without a Will) – where the law sets out how spouses, children, parents, siblings, etc., inherit.

🛑 So even if your parent or relative listed you as Next of Kin on a bank form, the money in their account will not be released to you unless you go through succession procedures in court. The bank will require:

A grant of probate (if there’s a Will), or

A grant of letters of administration (if there’s no Will).

👀 Many people assume “Next of Kin” gives you direct rights to inherit or withdraw funds—it doesn’t. If your parent wants you to inherit property or money smoothly, they should write a valid Will or consider joint accounts, trusts, or gifting assets during their lifetime.

13/10/2023

Quacks in any profession often appear more credible and sometimes even "succeed" more than qualified persons because they have no skin in the game (don't pay for results). They can make grand claims (like the twitter masculinity coach, who has often been considered more credible than real doctors) and err without consequence (excluded from professional discipline or negligence suits) and provide easy "answers" (take a fundi versus an architect or engineer). The sky is the limit for those who don't pay for results.

10/10/2023

Let's keep soaring!

06/04/2020

Sale of Land: The Role of a Vendor's Advocate as a Stakeholder while Holding Deposit for the Purchase of Land

"... The advocates held the deposit for the purchaser as stakeholders. A stakeholder in a sale agreement and mostly the vendors advocates, hold the deposit until satisfaction and or competition of the sale transaction or unless, by agreement, the Advocates are instructed to release the same or part therefore, to the vendors or, to a third party.

20. No instructions as far as the plaintiff’s averments show, that she authorised release of the money or part of it to the vendors, or anybodyelse.

The Advocates were thus obligated to hold the deposit until authorised and/or upto completion of the sale transaction, or as they would be authorised to do.

21. If no completion is achieved for various reasons, the stakeholder is obligated to refund the deposit to the party who paid. Thus the sum of Kshs. 2.7 Million held by the 3rd Defendant ought to be refunded to the plaintiff as the sale agreement was frustrated by events well known by the vendors, even before they entered into the sale agreement.

22. In George Muriani Muhoro t/a A.M Muhoro Advocate -vs- Ndungu Kamiti, Civil Appeal No. 233 of 2003 the Court of Appeal held that

“ … A stakeholder is a person with whom money is deposited pending the decision of a bet or a wager or one who holds money or property which is claimed by rival claimants but in which he himself claims no interest.”

The court went further to render that

“… a stakeholder has a duty to deliver the money or property to the owner or owners once the right to legal possession or ownership has been established….”

06/02/2020

Limiting a Governor's Access to County Offices while Facing Trial for Corruption does not amount to Removal from Office.

"[T]he complaint is that denying the appellant access to the County offices during the period of the trial was tantamount to his removal from office as contemplated by Article 181, and hence contrary to the requirements of section 62(6). But limiting the governor's access to the County offices whilst he is facing trial for corruption offences cannot be construed or equated to a removal from office. He may access his office, but on the conditions imposed by the court. Though his access is limited, he remains the governor. Given the foregoing, our view is that the allegation that the imposition of bail terms barring the appellant from the County offices was tantamount to a removal from office is therefore unfounded. As such, we agree with the High Court that application of section 62(6) was unnecessary, and the learned judge was not compelled to apply that provision to the circumstances of this case..."

Court of Appeal of Kenya at Nairobi (Musinga, Gatembu & Murgor, JJ.A) in MOSES KASAINE LENOLKULAL vs. REPUBLIC (Nairobi Criminal Appeal No. 109 of 2019) [being an Appeal from the Ruling of the High Court of Kenya, Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Division at Nairobi (Mumbi, Ngugi, J.) in Nairobi ACEC Revision 25 of 2019]

03/02/2020

It's sad losing young souls following a stampede at Kakamega Primary School that has led to the death of 13 pupils and more others who are injured.

Mungu awape nguvu wakati huu mugumu na uponaji wa haraka kwa walio umia.

23/01/2020

Law Society of Kenya Council Elections are on 27.2.2020.

Friends & colleagues!

We must settle this matter once and for all. THAT the next president of the law society of Kenya must be:

i) A person who can comprehensively handle & advance the LSK objectives under sec 4 of the act & not just the first 4 but all 7 of them. (therefore this must be a person who has some basic understanding of money matters & property investments as well)

ii) a person of integrity. One who can frown and fight corruption in all its dynamics within & outside the council.

iii) a person able to unite the young and old advocates in equal measure to reverse the waning honour in the fraternity.

iv) a person who can strategically protect lawyers (from state & undue public aggression).

v) one who can uphold the rule of law for all. Not just by the state but by the advocates too.

vi) One who is not a mere activist or noise maker for publicity motives but for genuine interest for service to others.

vii) a mature networker- somebody who can also sit down with others in today’s changed dynamics in our country and negotiate for our welfare with other stakeholders.

viii) Nevertheless, this person must be of a tolerable legal mind; demonstrable from both his/her writings & past experiences as well as general character.

ix) This person will be someone who has somehow ‘arrived’, not somebody looking for fame or seeking for room to get a job now or in future. (it is not bad to look for a job, but I believe LSK president is too important a job to toy with.

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