It is also referred to as the law of inheritance 
i.e. transmission of property rights from the dead to the living. Most of the 
dependants are family members but this is not an aspect of family law. This 
area of law deals with the transmission of property from the dead to the 
living. Inheritance is common in all human societies and is a concept of 
universal application. It is driven by the desire to acquire property. It is 
one of the ways of acquiring property because when a person dies, the right to 
enjoy property dies with him.
Control is another aspect such as giving 
instructions on how the property will be divested after their death. Most 
people exercise this control. Philosophical decisions behind succession are the 
right of the owner to control that property even after death and he can do so 
through a will. The main function of succession is to provide mechanisms for 
the transmission of property from the deceased to those who survive him. It 
involves:
a. 
Identifying the legal claimants who can claim the property i.e. who are the 
rightful claimants
b. 
The procedures of which such rightful claimants or dependants succeed to the 
property of the deceased i.e. what steps they need to take so as to acquire the 
property of the deceased.
c. 
Mechanisms for dispute resolution are provided so as to resolve any conflicts 
between persons who claim to be rightful claimants.
Each community or society has its own set of rules 
though inheritance is a universal concept. In Kenya, we have the Law of 
Succession Act (LSA), which is of general application, but other laws do 
apply such as Islamic law and customary law, which have been exempted by the 
Act. Although the Hindu law has not been exempted by the Act, it still applies 
informally in practice. A uniform law has not been achieved because of the 
diversity of Kenyans.
During the colonial period different laws applied. 
Various statutes applied to the various communities at that time such as to the 
Europeans, Africans, Hindus and Muslims. The advent of independence saw an attempt 
at moving towards uniformity i.e. an attempt to consolidate the laws of 
succession into one statute catering for the various peoples of Kenya. This 
culminated in the enactment of the LSA in 1972. This was an attempt to bring to 
an end differential treatment of people carried out during the colonial period. 
After independence, emphasis was on equality and enactment of the LSA was an 
attempt at this equality. It was brought into effect in 1981. The Marriage Bill 
was not accepted.
As for the LSA, the Bill was passed in 1972 but 
because some of its provisions were dependent on the Marriage Act it had to 
wait until the Marriage Bill was passed e.g. customary law is recognized which 
is a concept alien to English Law. The law on the matrimonial bill introduced 
concepts that would have harmonized it with the LSA e.g. provisions in the 
Matrimonial Bill allowed a statutory monogamous marriage to be converted to a 
polygamous marriage. This was not allowed by S 37 of the Marriage Act.
The LSA was intended to protect such wives who were 
married under customary law by husbands already married under statutory law 
like the cases of Re Ruenji’s Estateand Re Ogola’s Estate. 
Section 3(5) of the LSA states that such wives can be said to be wives of 
succession irrespective of what section 37 of the Marriage Act states.
The Affiliation Act was repealed in the 1960s as it was to cater for children born out of 
wedlock. The failure to pass the law on the Matrimonial Bill has rather caused 
an untidy situation as the current Marriage Act and Matrimonial Causes Act are 
not in harmony with the LSA i.e. are inconsistent. This is based on the fact 
that most dependants are family members, the Act should be in harmony. 
Inconsistency is evident in S 3(5) LSA, S 37 Marriage Act, and ACMDA. The 
statutes deny men the right to contract other marriages by virtue of the 
interpretation in Re Ogolla’s Estate and Re Ruenji’s Estate. 
This means that once they marry under the statute, they cannot contract 
marriage under customary law.
Under S 3(5) of the LSA, it states that during the 
lifetime of the deceased, they are not considered as wives but once he dies 
then they are considered as wives for purposes of succession. The statutory 
wives are put at a disadvantage because the woman who is not recognized as a 
wife during the lifetime of her husband is given recognition as a wife after 
his death. This situation would have been avoided had the Matrimonial Bill 
passed. The Bill states that before a husband takes a second wife he would need 
the consent of the first wife.
See: Muigai v Muigai – S 3(5) LSA was 
interpreted as circumventing S 37 Marriage Act and S 4. It was held S. 37 
Marriage Act only bars the husband from subsequently contracting other 
marriages but does not bar wives subsequently married from inheriting from the 
deceased’s estate.
Therefore, whereas the LSA is ready to 
embrace the traditional African principles the Marriage statutes remain as they 
were during the colonial period espousing English principles of Marriage and 
Divorce. In practice, courts tend to resolve such conflicts in favour 
of customary law.
Irene Njeri Macharia v Margaret Wairimu Njogu and 
Anor Court of 
Appeal held: An earlier decision by the High Court in the case of the estate 
of Reuben Nzioka Mutua was bad law.
See: HC Probate & Administration No. 
843/1986 The deceased had contracted a statutory marriage in 1961. In 
1980, he purported to contract another marriage during the subsistence of an 
earlier marriage. He left a will giving his entire estate to his statutory wife 
and left out his latter wife. His second wife challenged this under S 3(5) LSA 
arguing she was a wife.
Held: By virtue of S 37 Marriage Act and S 4 Cap 
151, the deceased had no capacity to marry a second wife under customary law 
and therefore she was not a wife, following the decision i.e. for purposes of 
succession.
The inconsistency remains because the Marriage 
statutes have not been amended to bring them in line with the Succession Act . Areas closely related to Succession Law are Property Law, Family 
Law etc. The relationship of the deceased and the person claiming to be a 
dependant are relevant e.g. if a wife or a child, you have to look at the 
system of Marriage if any or whether the child is a dependant under the Children’s 
Act.
Trust law is also 
relevant especially when it comes to the Administration/Management of 
deceased’s property. It entails 1) the collection of assets 2) settling debts 
and 3) settling the estate/distribution to dependants. The administrator stands 
in a fiduciary relationship in carrying out his functions therefore he is a 
trustee. The Trustee Act covers both administrators and trustees, so does the 
Trust for Land Act. Equitable remedies e.g. Tracing are often used by 
administrators and beneficiaries to recover property of the estate that may 
have been paid out wrongly i.e. to people who are not beneficiaries of the deceased.
TECHNICAL TERMS USED IN SUCCESSION LAW
Succession may be by will or if there is no valid 
will under the law of intestacy. The process of disposal of property when there 
is a valid will is known as testate succession. The person making the will is 
called the testator if male and the testatrix 
if female and the instrument called a will is referred to as a testament.
Intestacy refers 
to a situation of dying without having made a will or having made a will which 
is subsequently rendered void or invalid. Intestacy leads to intestate 
succession and the rules of intestacy are intended to determine the relatives 
of the deceased who are entitled to inherit his property. Here only blood relatives 
inherit apart from the spouse. The person who dies intestate is known as an intestate.
Administration of the estate refers to:
a. collection and presentation of 
assets
An administrator is the person appointed by the court in intestacy or in a will to 
manage the estate of a deceased person. Representation refers to 
the role of a person who is authorized in law to dispose off the property of 
the deceased. This is the role of an administrator and the two terms are 
used interchangeably.
The administrator is said to represent the 
deceased. The assets of the deceased vest in the administrator. He acquires 
legal title to the property and can do anything the deceased would have done 
e.g. sue, mortgage, sell etc The person who represents the deceased and acts as 
the administrator is also referred to as the personal representative of 
the deceased. However, the term administrator is usually confined to the 
person appointed in the event of intestacy. The administrator appointed 
under the terms of the will is referred to as the executor as he 
executes the wishes of the deceased as set out in the will.
A beneficiary is the person who is to benefit by receiving a gift 
under the will or testament. It is used in connection with testate succession. 
A person who inherits in intestacy is known as an heir.
Estate : means the total property both real and personal owned by someone and 
therefore, the property available for distribution upon death.
Dependant this is a technical term employed in circumstances where an heir or 
beneficiary has not been adequately provided for and makes an application to 
court. S 29 defines dependant but does not necessarily mean an heir or 
beneficiary it is limited by section 2 of the Act. Only those persons who fall 
under this definition can take advantage of this provision.
Bequest: gift of personal property in a will. The gift is named i.e. ‘specific 
bequest’. It can also be residual if it refers to the estate of the giver. It 
is not specific, it is a general gift of what remains. Legacy: another 
term that refers to a bequest. The beneficiary of a legacy normally called a legatee.
Grants of Representation: Issued by the courts to the administrator or 
personal representative of deceased. Take form of an order that a particular 
person is to act as the personal representative of the dead person.
In testate succession it is called a Grant of 
probate. In Intestacy there are Letters of Administration (grant of 
letters of administration)
The distinction is that in testate succession, the 
executor derives his authority from the will. Grant Of Probate is not 
the source of the Executor’s authority. It merely confers or authenticates the 
authority of the executor, thus it is merely evidence. In intestacy: the Grant 
of letters of administration is the source of the administrator’s authority. 
The “administrator” is appointed by the grant. His power to act derives from 
the grant itself, without which there would be no power for him to represent 
the deceased.
Executors can take up their responsibilities 
immediately after death of the deceased BUT in intestacy the 
administrator cannot act till he acquires a Grant of Letters of Administration 
(disadvantage since process of obtaining Grant of Letters of Administration 
takes about two months). The terms probate refers to the process through 
which a will is proved to be genuine and by which the executors are authorized 
to dispose off the estate of the deceased.
HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE LAW OF SUCCESSION IN 
KENYA
History of law of succession in Kenya
Law of succession before 1981
Appling to Africans
The 1897 Order-in-Council provided under article 
52 that African customary law was to apply to Africans as long as it was 
not repugnant to justice or morality. Matters of succession were 
therefore to be governed by African customary law. The above legislation did 
not, however, provide for the law applicable to the so called ‘westernized’ 
Africans who had converted to Christianity, got western way of life, seeking to 
divorce themselves from the operation of African customary law. Such 
converts felt that western law should govern their personal matters such as 
marriage and succession.
An attempt to address the problem presented by 
these Africans was made through the passing of the 1897 Native Courts 
Regulations, Article 64 of which provided that the African 
Christians were governed by the law that governed Indian Christians. 
Interestingly, the regulations did not say what law this was i.e. whether it 
was the Indian law of succession or the English Law of succession since both of 
these two laws applied to Christians in India. The position was clarified in 
1902 with the passing of the African Christian Marriage and Divorce 
Ordinance, section 39 of which provided that the English law of succession 
would apply to Christian Africans because after contracting a statutory 
marriage, the African was presumed to have discarded the African way of life 
and thereby ceased being governed by African customary law.
The ‘up-grading’ of the African by the above 
legislation was short lived for in 1904, the Native Christian Marriage and 
Divorce Act Order No. 9 was passed, providing that the African customary 
law of succession applied to all Africans irrespective of their religion. The 
argument being that land tenure is still communal and since the Act envisaged 
individual land ownership it cannot apply in such places. The matter of these 
Africans with regard to the applicable personal law came up for judicial 
determination in the case of Benjawa Jembe vs. Priscilla Nyondo 4 EALR 
160 (1912) where Barth J held that succession of a native Christian’s estate 
followed the law of the tribe to which such Christian native belonged. 
The judge said: “The fact that the deceased married a wife according to the 
rules of the Anglican Church does not affect the succession to his 
property. Such succession must be regulated by native law or custom”
This remained the position until 1961 when the African 
Wills Ordinance was passed to enable the Africans to make written wills. 
Testate succession became subject to this statute while intestate succession 
continued being governed by the respective customary law of the deceased. The 
African Wills Act originated from the recommendations made by one Dr. Arthur 
Phillips in his Report on Native Tribunals. In the chapter dealing with 
succession, Phillips underscored the then urgent need to provide the 
African with suitable legal machinery through which he could dispose of his 
modern property, which may not be adequately disposed of under customary law. 
He argued that colonialism had brought with it new forms of market economy and 
property ownership modes which were unknown to African customary law and which 
that law could not be adjusted to deal with e.g. shares in companies, insurance 
policies, premium bonds, bank accounts etc. He recommended that a law 
similar to the English Inheritance (Family Provisions) Act of 1938 be 
passed to enable the westernized African to deal with such property.
Most of the above provisions were incorporated in 
the 1961 Act that remained in force until 1981 when it was repealed upon the 
coming into operation of the LSA. Intestate succession continued being 
governed by African customary law provided it was not inconsistent with 
justice, morality, and the statutes of general application e.g. the Probate 
and Administration of Estates Act of 1898 as in Re Maangi (1968) E.A 
337. In the 1960’s the High Court held that even where Africans died intestate, 
customary law could be avoided if it was inconsistent with justice and 
morality. In Re Kibiego (1977) E.A 129 an estate was contested between 
deceased’s widows and his brothers. The brothers said women had no right in 
administration of estate. It was held that customary law denying women rights 
to administer the property of the deceased husband was repugnant to justice and 
morality and found that the Probate and Administration Act was to apply.
Applying to Muslims
There was no specific mention of the Muslims in the 
1897 Order in Council and it was assumed that reference to ‘natives’ 
also included the Muslims. The problem was that many Muslims were Arabs 
who did not consider themselves as ‘natives’. The position was clarified in the 
1897 Native Courts Regulations Ordinance. Article 57 of this 
ordinance provided that the law of succession for Muslims was the law contained 
in the Quran. These regulations were re-enacted in the 1907 Native Courts 
Ordinance, which established the liwali courts. These had 
jurisdiction to hear and determine matters arising out of Islamic law, 
including succession.
This remained the position until independence when 
the government reaffirmed the position to the Muslims as part of a 
constitutional bargain to counter their threat to break away or secede from the 
rest of Kenya. The government assured them that under the new 
constitutional order, they would be allowed to keep their own personal 
law. This guarantee was given constitutional backing by section 66 of 
the Constitution, which provided for the establishment of the Kadhi’s 
courts. These courts were mandated to decide matters arising out of 
Islamic law where such matters related to personal law.
That remained the position until 1981 when the Law 
of Succession Act became operational. This Act repealed all the then 
existing laws on succession and became applicable to all persons domiciled in 
Kenya regardless of their religion. Section 99 of the Act repealed, among 
other laws, the Mohammedan Marriage, Divorce and Succession Act (Cap.156) section 
4 that dealt with succession. Note: Not the whole Act was repealed, only 
sec. 4 which dealt with succession.
Between 1981 and 1990, there was intense agitation 
by the Muslims who regarded the government’s act of passing the Law of 
Succession Act as a repudiation of the assurance given at independence. 
Their case was that the Quran or a statute embodying the provisions of the 
Quran must govern matters of personal law for Muslims. They sought to be 
exempted from the LSA which conflicted with the Koranic principles e.g.
~ S 5 of the LSA on Freedom of Testation 
i.e. discretion of Testator to dispose off property as one wishes to persons he 
wishes. No obligation to provide for dependants BUT under Islam, only 1/3 
of the Muslim’s estate can be disposed off by will. 2/3 
should be dealt with according to Koranic principles i.e. shares were fixed for 
particular heirs.
~ S 3(2), which defines children, and S 29, which 
defines dependants, were contentious. S 3(2) defines a child to include adopted 
and illegitimate children. Also S 29 includes adopted and illegitimate 
children, also step children BUT under Islam, stepchildren have no right of 
inheritance from their deceased father. They can only inherit through their 
mothers. Illegitimate children cannot inherit through their biological fathers.
The government gave in to the pressure mounted by 
the Muslims in 1990 when government keen to have the Muslim support in view of 
the clamour for multi-partyism and the Law of Succession Act was amended by 
Statute Law (Misc. Amendment) Act No. 2 of 1990, which disapplied the Act to 
persons who, at the time of their death were Muslims. Instead, Islamic 
law as contained in the Quran would govern such persons and it introduced S 
2(3) and (4) & S 48(2)
S 2(3) 
disapplies the substantive provisions of the Act to the estate of a deceased 
Muslim (both testate and intestate). The estate of a deceased Muslim is 
exclusively subject to Muslim law. S 2(4) applies the procedural aspects 
of the Act, i.e. the provisions relating to the administration of the estate of 
a deceased Muslim as long as the provisions are not inconsistent with Islamic 
law.
S 48(2) confers 
the Kadhi’s Court with jurisdiction to determine questions relating to 
succession in accordance with Islamic law. In effect, S 5 of the LSA no longer 
applied to Islam BUT the act applies with respect to management of the estate 
i.e. a Muslim can take out letters of administration.
Applying to Hindus
The 1897 Order-In-Council was silent on which law 
applied to the estate of deceased Hindus. Order No. 22 of 1898 that 
applied to Kenya the Hindu Wills Act that was a mere adaptation of the 
1865 Indian Succession Act clarified the position. The Hindu Wills 
Act was applied to Kenya to provide for testate succession for the Hindus 
living in Kenya. With regard to intestate succession, no law had been specified 
as being applicable to the Kenyan Hindus. The Hindu customary law that 
governed the subject until 1946 automatically filled this vacuum.
In 1946 the Hindu Marriage, Divorce and 
Succession Ordinance No. 43 was passed. Its effect was to confirm the 
matters of intestate succession for the Kenyan Hindus were to be governed by 
the Hindu customary law. The 1946 legislation applied to those Hindus who had 
died domiciled in Kenya but was silent on what law applied to those who died in 
Kenya but domiciled elsewhere. Another restriction in the scope of the 
ordinance was that it only applied to the Hindus whose marriages had been 
contracted in the colony as in Bessan Kaur v. Rattan Singh 25 KLR 24. In 
1961, the 1946 ordinance was amended by being split into two statutes – the 
Hindu Succession Ordinance and the Hindu Marriage and Divorce Ordinance.
The Hindu Succession Ordinance provided for 
intestate succession while the Hindu Wills Act provided in testate succession. 
These two statutes remained in force until 1981 when the LSA repealed them 
making Hindus in Kenya exclusively subject to LSA.
Applying to Europeans
Article 11 (b) of the 1897 
Order in Council provided that for the European settlers in Kenya, the law 
to govern the succession to their estates was the Indian Succession Act, 
1865. This statute was primarily passed in India to govern succession 
matters for British settlers in India. It provided for both testate and 
intestate succession and dealt with substantive matters. It also introduced the 
Probate Administration Act in Kenya. The 1865 Act reflected the position 
of succession laws in England at that time. It provided for both testate 
and intestate succession. The Act was amended several times in Kenya. The 
first such amendment was through Order No. 12 of 1932 that repealed section 105 
of the Act restricting testamentary freedom but this was re-amended. A 
testator was then enabled to leave his estate to whomever he felt like without 
limitation on time.
The other major amendment to the 1865 Act was 
through Order No. 48 of 1956, which resulted in the present day Law Reform Act 
Cap 26. With respect to succession, this amendment provided that where a 
person died leaving a cause of action in existence at the time of his death, 
the cause of action survived his death and could proceed against or on behalf 
of his estate.
Law of succession after 1 July 1981
Until 1st July 1981, there were four 
systems of law of succession in Kenya applying to the four different 
socio-ethnic groups of people in Kenya. The Law of Succession Act was 
passed with the intention of merging and consolidating all the four systems of 
law of succession and their support legislation into one comprehensive statute 
in order to give the country a uniform law of succession applicable to all 
sections of the Kenyan population.
The Law of Succession Act came about because of a 
report compiled by a commission appointed by the late President Kenyatta in 
1967, to look into the problems concerning the succession regime in Kenya. The 
purpose and scope of the Act is stated in its preamble. It is an Act of 
parliament to define and consolidate the law relating to intestate and 
testamentary succession and the administration of estates of persons and for 
connected purposes.
S 2(1) of the 
Act states that the Act constitutes the law of Kenya in respect of and shall 
have universal application to all cases of intestate or testamentary succession 
to the estates of deceased persons dying after the commencement of the Act. S 
2(1) however also allows for application of other laws (Except as otherwise 
expressly provided in this Act or any other written law)
S 99 of the 
Act repeals all the then existing statutes on the law of succession and these 
are listed in the 8th schedules. They are as follows:-
1. The Indian 
Succession Act of India 1865.
2. The Hindu Wills 
Act of India, 1870.
3. The Probate and 
Administration Act,1888.
4. The Hindu 
Succession Act.
5. The African Wills 
Act, 1961.
6. The Administration 
of Estates by Corporations Act.
7. The Commonwealth 
Probate Act.
8. The Colonial 
Probate Act, 1892.
Section 100 
provides for the amendment of the other existing statutes, among them being the 
Mohammedan Marriage, Divorce and Succession Act, which was harmonized 
with the LSA by the deletion of its S 4, which dealt with matters of 
succession.
With respect to African customary law, the Act 
allows its application in sections 2(2), 5(1) and 33. S 2(2) 
applies customary law to persons dying before commencement of the Act i.e. 
before 1981. Applicable law is the law that was in force at the time of 
death.
S 5(1) allows 
a testator to dispose of his property by reference to any secular or religious 
law. This would allow the testator to provide that his estate should devolve in 
accordance with a particular law in which event the requirements of that 
customary law will be determined. This is a general law and the testator has 
not specifically divided his property but directs an administrator to do so. S 
32 exempts certain classes of property from intestacy provisions of the Act 
e.g. agricultural land, crops on such land and livestock as per gazette notice 
specified by the Minister. The following areas were specified by the gazette 
notice No.94/1981 Marsabit, Narok, Tana River, Samburu, West Pokot, Turkana, 
Isiolo, Mandera, Wajir and Kajiado The property listed in those 
areas was exempted from the intestacy provisions pursuant to S 32 where the 
property owners died intestate. S 32 only covers land in the designated areas. 
S 33 applies customary law to such property. The administration of such estates 
does not fall under LSA. Since S 44(1) of the Act provides that part 7 of the 
Act does not apply to the intestate estate subject to S32 of the Act. Such estates 
are to be administered in accordance with the provisions of the Magistrates 
Courts Act (Cap 10). S 5& 9 of this Act give power to the court to exercise 
jurisdiction in proceedings of a civil nature where the proceedings are of a 
claim under customary law. S 2 of this Act defines a claim under customary law 
to include a claim concerning intestate succession and a claim for 
administration of intestate estates.
Sections 32 and 33 do not provide a blanket 
exemption covering all African intestates. However, the CA has interpreted 
sections 32 and 33 to mean that all Africans intestates are exempt from the 
intestacy provisions of the LSA. In Mwathi vs. Mwathi and another 
(1995-1998) 1 EA 229, the deceased died in 1987 and was unmarried. A 
brother (the appellant) and two sisters (the respondents) survived him. 
He hailed from Kiambu District. His will was declared invalid by the High 
Court, which ordered the estate to be shared equally between the appellant and 
the respondents in terms of Part V of the Act. The appellant aggrieved 
by the order appealed to the Court of Appeal, which upheld the High Court 
decision with respect to the invalidity of the will and confirmed that the 
appellant had died intestate. It, however, differed with the High Court 
by holding that the applicable law was customary law and not the intestacy 
provisions in Part V of the Act. A portion of the Court of Appeal 
judgement asserts- “….the intestate succession of a deceased Kikuyu is 
governed by the Kikuyu Customary Law. The asset involved is a piece of 
land and the matter must therefore be determined by Kikuyu Customary Law 
relating to land inheritance…..”
There is no basis at all in law for the CAs 
decision in Mwathi vs. Mwathi. The deceased died after the Act came into 
force and customary law was not applicable since it was excluded from operation 
by S 2(1) of the LSA, unless allowed by the minister through sections 32 and 33 
of the LSA. Besides, the property in question was situate in Kiambu district, 
which is not one of the districts specified in Legal Notice No. 94 of 
1981. It is regrettable that such an erroneous decision came from the 
highest court in the land. It is binding on the High Court and the subordinate 
co’urts: it has not been overruled to date.
The Court of Appeal’s decision in Mary Rono vs. 
Jane Rono and another Nairobi CACA No. 66 of 2002 is the first by that 
court where Ss 32 and 33 of the Act were correctly applied and interpreted. The 
land in dispute was situated in Uasin Gishu district in the Rift Valley province. 
The court found that section 2(1) LSA excludes the application of African 
customary law unless the Act makes provision for it. It does so under 
sections 32 and 33, but the exclusion is limited to property exempted for Part 
V of the Act by virtue of S 32. LN No. 94 of 1981 does not exclude property in 
Uasin Gishu district and therefore Keiyo customary law could not apply to the 
intestate of a resident of Uasin Gishu district.
Unfortunately, some of the male members of the High 
Court bench still apply customary law in determining questions of distribution 
of estates as between male and female children, in spite of the very clear 
provisions in sections 35 and 38 of the Act. In In the Matter of the Estate 
of Mutio Ikonyo (deceased) Machakos HCP&A No. 203 of 1996, the deceased 
had died in 1988, and the court held that a married daughter of the deceased 
was not entitled to a share of the estate. According to Mwera J the 
married daughter, being a Mkamba, ought to have known that under Kamba customary 
law only unmarried daughters or those divorced (and dowry returned) can claim 
to inherit. With respect, customary law is of no application at all; its 
application having been ousted by sections 2(1), 35 and 38 of the Act.
With respect to Islam, S 2(3) and 2(4) allows the 
application of Islamic law to the estate of a deceased Muslim i.e. it 
effectively disapplies the LSA to the estate of a Muslim. The only applicable 
provisions are those in Part 7 dealing with administration of the estate. In Chelang’a 
vs. Juma (2002) 1 KLR 339 (Etyang J) it was held that under Islamic law a 
non-Muslim cannot inherit the estate of Muslim. In that matter a daughter and 
siblings of the deceased Muslim, who confessed to be Christians, were excluded 
from benefit by reason of their being non-Muslims. It was, however, held that 
the mother of the deceased who was a non-Muslim was nevertheless entitled to a 
share of the estate under Islamic law as a dependant. It is, however, 
permissible for a Muslim to benefit a non-Muslim by will.
Other statutes apart from African customary law and 
Islam are applied to succession matters. S 101 refers to statutes in force 
before 1981 that are applicable:
2. Public Trustee Act
3. Trust of Land Act 
Cap 290
4. S.218 – 222 Armed 
Forces Act Cap 199
The Trustees Act deals 
with powers and duties of a Trustee. The Personal representative defined in the 
LSA includes a Trustee. Part 7 of the LSA deals with the powers and duties of 
personal representatives i.e. S 82 & 83 of the LSA. These provisions are 
not exhaustive because there are other provisions that deal with these duties 
extensively. A personal representative exercises powers under Cap 160 and 167 
and therefore should read the LSA in conjunction with the Trustees Act. So 
where the LSA is silent on a matter, The Trustees Act will apply e.g. Cap 160 
does not deal with investments of funds as extensively as Cap 167.
The Public Trustee Act on the other hand deals with the administration of estates by the 
Public Trustee. The Public Trustee is an office in the AG’s office to deal with 
administration of estates. The Public Trustee acts as a personal representative 
in cases where he has been appointed by the court as such OR where the deceased 
does not have relatives OR where no one has applied for administration of the 
estate, OR where the will does not appoint an Executor OR where the executor 
appointed under will is unwilling to act OR where the court feels that the 
appointed executor is not suitable.
The Public Trustee is usually appointed where a family cannot agree on who to apply to be 
administrator. Under this Act, the Public Trustee may apply for representation 
in respect of any estate brought to his attention e.g. traditionally he 
administers estates of deceased civil servants i.e. if government notifies the 
public trustee that they had the deceased civil servants terminal benefits and 
no grant of letters of administration has been taken out.
Trust of Land Act has 
similar provisions to the Trustee Act. It deals with powers and duties of a 
Trustee. It gives powers relating to investments and related matters.
Ss 218 – 222 of the Armed Forces Act deals 
with estates of deceased soldiers i.e. who is to be paid, how a soldier should 
make his will e.g. a will made by a soldier in the presence of one witness 
(instead of 2) who is an officer is a valid will.
Knowledge Tree Law Notes