Social media has lit up with celebration and messages of support for Samantha Mwesigye after the High Court ruling delivered on 12 June 2026. Yet the law student’s outcome sits in a more complex space. The law student finds herself in a classic case of winning the battle but not yet winning the war.
The judgment has been widely praised online as a victory for student rights. Still, a closer reading of the ruling shows a different picture. Many reactions focus on the final pages of the 34-page decision, missing key details within the full judgment.
While Samantha walks away with a notable financial and moral win against Uganda Christian University (UCU), the court did not grant her core demand of unhindered graduation with the July 2026 cohort.
In the judgment, the High Court declared that UCU’s handling of Mwesigye’s credit transfer from King’s College London was tainted by serious flaws.
“The respondent’s failure to transfer the credits obtained by the applicant in respect of her first year of study towards the degree of Bachelor of Laws at King’s College London, United Kingdom, was tainted by irrationality and procedural impropriety,” Justice Namanya ruled.
He further declared that UCU’s actions “amounted to a breach of the applicant’s legitimate expectation.”
The court condemned the university’s late reversal after four years of allowing Mwesigye to progress through the LLB programme, serve as Guild President, and be presented as a student “awaiting graduation.”
Crucially, Justice Namanya highlighted critical lapses both in the Universities and Other Tertiary Institutions Act and in UCU’s own admission process. The judgment noted that the Act does not expressly require a transferring student to produce a certificate of equivalence from the National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) for credit transfers.
This legal gap placed a duty on the university to clearly communicate any such requirement in writing at the point of admission. UCU’s admission letter failed to do so.
The court stated that had the requirement been expressly written in the 30 August 2022 admission letter, Mwesigye would have had the opportunity to obtain the certificate early. Instead, the university’s silence in the official document, followed by its sudden demands four years later, was ruled unfair and irrational.
Despite these findings, Justice Namanya stopped short of issuing the forceful orders Mwesigye needed most. He declined to compel immediate credit transfer or guarantee her place on the graduation list, stating explicitly that the court would not “usurp the powers” of the university or the National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) in academic matters.
I have declined to interfere with with the respondent’s statutory mandate in matters concerning the formulation of academic policy and the making of decisions leading to the award of academic qualifications. Those are matters falling squarely within the respondent’s specialised competence, to be exercised through its duly constituted organs, including the University Senate,” the ruling reads in part.
For Mwesigye personally, the ruling delivers tangible relief alongside painful uncertainty. She will receive 100 million shillings in general damages, interest at 25% per annum from the date of judgment, and full costs.
This compensates for the “loss, suffering, inconvenience and damage” caused by UCU’s conduct. However, with graduation weeks away, she still faces the possibility of having to complete four additional first-year courses or obtain an NCHE certificate of equivalence.
The financial award, while substantial, cannot fully erase the disruption to her career timeline, postgraduate plans, and emotional toll at this critical stage.
Justice Namanya captured the university’s contradictory behaviour. It had admitted her explicitly “based on Transfer of Credits,” permitted her full academic progression, yet later demanded extra courses and equivalence “at the tail end of the applicant’s course of study.”
He noted that such conduct was “arbitrary, unjust, and amounts to abuse of power.”
What This Means Moving Forward for Students
This judgment sends a strong signal to universities across Uganda about how they manage credit transfers and student expectations. By affirming that private institutions performing public functions are amenable to judicial review, and by heavily criticising last-minute changes to a student’s academic status, the ruling strengthens the doctrine of legitimate expectation in higher education.
Students who rely on clear admission letters and years of consistent university conduct now have powerful precedent to challenge unfair reversals.
The case also highlights the limits of judicial review. Courts will police process, fairness, and rationality on issues like vague communication, contradictory affidavits, and failure to document decisions, but they remain reluctant to dictate specific academic outcomes.
As Justice Namanya emphasised, matters of credit recognition, course requirements, and degree awards fall within the university Senate’s specialised competence.
For broader student bodies, particularly transfer students from international institutions, the ruling encourages greater vigilance. Universities must communicate any conditions clearly and in writing at admission, not years later.
Policies on credit accumulation, however well-intentioned, carry little weight if they contradict an official admission letter or long-standing conduct. At the same time, students are reminded that winning on grounds of irrationality and procedural impropriety does not automatically translate into automatic graduation; substantive academic disputes may still require negotiation, NCHE involvement, or further proceedings.
At this stage, just days after the judgment and with July 2026 graduation approaching, Mwesigye’s path remains unclear. UCU must now respond to the court’s scathing findings while exercising its remaining academic discretion. Mwesigye may need to engage directly with the university or NCHE to resolve the outstanding requirements, or consider further legal steps if the process drags on.
The Shs100 million provides meaningful redress and validation, yet the absence of a clean order confirming her eligibility leaves a bitter aftertaste.
In higher education circles, many are celebrating the judgment as a victory for accountability and student rights. For Samantha Mwesigye herself, however, it is a win that feels incomplete. It is a win that rewards her perseverance with cash and principle, but still denies her the full academic closure she sought as she stands on the cusp of graduation.

































