Days of sporadic protests erupted after President Uhuru Kenyatta, 55, was declared the winner of the August 8 vote with 54 percent, leading to the deaths of at least 21 people.
Opposition candidate Raila Odinga, 72, alleged fraud and took his complaints to the seven Supreme Court judges, and some Kenyans fear renewed protests if he loses his attempt to overturn the result.
It is the third time in a row that Odinga has cried foul, after claiming he was cheated out of rightful victories in 2007 and 2013.
After hearing closing arguments Tuesday from lawyers for the National Super Alliance (NASA) opposition coalition, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) and Kenyatta, Chief Justice David Maraga said a judgment would be delivered today.
The court's ruling is final and will lead to either confirmation of Kenyatta's victory, after which he will be sworn in on September 12, or an annulment of the result that would require a new election within 60 days.
But lawyers for the election commission and Kenyatta countered that errors were simply "clerical" mistakes and technicalities that did not affect the outcome of the vote.
A report filed by the court registrar found a number of errors in the 41,451 polling station tally sheets -- known as form 34A -- and in the 291 form 34B constituency tally sheets, some of which were unsigned, not stamped, illegible or lacking serial numbers or watermarks.
The opposition also argued that in the days between the election and the publication of all the forms, as required by law, the tallies were doctored to fit a pre-determined result handing Kenyatta victory.
Having failed to win his case at the Supreme Court in 2013, Odinga had initially ruled out legal action this time around, but after the resulting violence that killed at least 21 people, mostly by police, he changed his mind.
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